Then I countered back, and fairly quickly he admitted he
There’s almost always a right price.
Montello told me he’d get in touch with his source and see what he could do. It might take a while. He wasn’t sure. I offered a twenty percent premium on my already generous offer if he could get me something that afternoon.
Even before I’d finished talking to Montello, Dorothy had put a website up on the projection screen. It was the gossip site TMZ. The lead story, in a box with a red border, had a headline in big black type: HIJINKS IN THE HIGH COURT. This was over a big picture of Justice Claflin with a wild, leering look on his face. I recognized the photo. It had been taken at a party for his sixtieth birthday when he was about to blow out the candles.
I put down the phone and groaned.
“The story’s starting to spread big-time,” she said. She pulled up the Drudge Report
“Shit.” Drudge was a gossip site, but it had first broken the story about Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, so it had a certain residual credibility. “What about the
“Nothing there. Not yet.”
“Good. How about Perez Hilton?”
“Nothing. But check this out.” She clicked on Politico. On its front page was a small box with a photo of Claflin, apparently at a State of the Union speech. Over it was the headline CLAFLIN IN POSSIBLE CALL GIRL SCANDAL?
“That’s not good,” I said. “Politico is mainstream. At least it’s a question mark.”
Probably the best headline was the one in Vox: JUSTICE SERVED?
BuzzFeed ran a listicle about the top ten DC sex scandals, from Monica Lewinsky in 1998 to Senator Gary Hart and his girlfriend Donna Rice in 1987. A congressman caught sending lewd messages to young male pages in 2006, and a senator arrested in a Minneapolis airport bathroom in 2007 soliciting sex from an undercover police officer.
It must have been hard to narrow the list down to just ten. I could think of quite a few more.
“How much time do we have?” I asked Dorothy.
“Just about six hours.”
“Six hours to blow this story up.”
“Nick, this story is spreading like wildfire. Way faster than I expected. I think we have enough to go to Slander Sheet and demand a retraction.”
I cupped my chin in my hand and thought. True, the Claflin story was going big faster than I’d expected. None of the standard bearers of the old-guard legacy print media had picked up on it yet, but it wouldn’t have surprised me if their online versions ran something with a question mark, and soon. It was just too explosive a story to ignore.
“I’m going to talk to Gideon,” I said.
27
I wandered through the maze of hallways until I found Gideon Parnell’s office. His door was closed. His admin, Rose, sat at a desk right outside. She was on the phone. She nodded, smiled at me, held up an index finger.
When she hung up I said, “Rose, I need five minutes of Gideon’s time.”
She looked at his closed door, then back at me. “His phone hasn’t stopped ringing. Can it wait till things slow down?”
“I don’t think they’re going to slow down any time soon,” I said.
“He’s on the phone with the chief justice. I’ll let him know you’re here.”
She tapped at her keyboard. I sat down in one of the visitor chairs lined up outside his office.
After a moment, I remembered about the bald man who’d been following Kayla, Curtis Schmidt. I had a source within the Washington, DC, Metropolitan Police who I’d worked with on a previous case, involving my brother, Roger. The last I knew, Detective-Lieutenant Arthur Garvin was with the Violent Crime branch, on a retirement waiver. When I worked with him, a few years back, he was just past the department’s mandatory retirement age of sixty, though they made exceptions in certain cases. But only up to sixty-four. He had to be retired by now.
I called him on his personal cell number. He answered right away, crisp like the cop he was for so long. “Garvin.”
“Art, it’s Nick Heller,” I said.
A pause. “Heller!” he said. “Uh-oh. You in some kind of trouble?”
I laughed and got right to it. “Do you happen to know a retired police sergeant named Curtis Schmidt?”
There was a pause. “Not that I can recall.”
“I need to find out what I can about the guy. What he’s up to, who he’s working for, whatever you can get.”
“I can make some calls, maybe dig around. What’s this about?”
Gideon’s office door opened and he emerged.
“I gotta go, Art. I’ll fill you in next time we talk. I owe you.” I ended the call and stood up. “You got two minutes?” I asked Gideon.
“Of course. Come on.” He led me into his office and closed the door behind him. “You have something?”
I nodded. “How’s the chief justice holding up?”