the reporter continued to write. I finished my burger, then my beer. Jacobs snapped the cell shut and stood up.
“You want to know what Woods does?”
I nodded.
“Let’s go.”
Jacobs headed to the door. I followed. A primer, apparently, was in the offing. On how problems got fixed in Chicago.
CHAPTER 4
We got in my car, drove back around the block, and stopped short of the Tribune building. Jacobs went inside and came back out with a black duffel bag. Then we drove south on Michigan.
“Head down to the Loop,” the reporter said.
I cruised up and over the Michigan Avenue Bridge. Jacobs picked at his teeth with a toothpick and talked.
“That was one of Woods’ buddies on the phone.”
“Another fixer?”
“This guy actually works for Woods, but it’s all the same thing. He dropped me a bit of information only a guy like him would have. Could be good.”
We were into the Loop now, heading south on Wells Street. Taxis cruised by on our left and right. An El train clattered overhead, throwing a shower of sparks down onto the street.
“Pull up to the corner of LaSalle and Washington,” Jacobs said. “Then we wait.”
I pulled the car over and wondered what it was exactly we were waiting for. My passenger filled in the blanks.
“Like I told you, these guys get their orders from the mayor. Do all his dirty work. Sometimes it’s a private thing. Sometimes, however, they use the media.”
“The machinery?”
“Exactly. Reporters like me who need a story. Someone like Woods puts out a call. We get our headline, and a problem gets fixed. Very efficient, very convenient. Keep your eyes peeled for a guy in a light blue Crown Vic. He’ll be driving on municipal plates.”
Jacobs checked the napkins he had brought with him from the Billy Goat.
“Tag number M 3457.”
“Who’s this guy?” I said.
“The guy in the Vic?”
I nodded. Jacobs’ smile conjured up the ghosts of Chicago muckrakers past.
“Name’s David Meyers. Vice chairman for the mayor’s Department of Aviation.”
“Never heard of him.”
“That’s because he doesn’t do a fucking thing. Patronage job: pull down a hundred and a half a year and take lunch at the Union League Club every day, buy a summerhouse down in Grand Beach, and kiss the mayor’s ring whenever summoned.”
“Nice.”
“Yeah. But David’s got what we call an issue. Actually two issues.”
Jacobs raised two lengths of bone he probably called fingers.
“First goes by the name of booze. Guy likes to drink his breakfast.”
“And?”
“Second involves a young lady named Margaret Hurley. Graduated last year from DePaul. Masters’ in public service. Not particularly smart. Not particularly charming. She is, however, the mayor’s niece.”
“I’m not following you.”
“Pretty simple. The mayor wants to give her a job, David Meyers’ job. Thing is, he can’t just fire Meyers. Piss off too many people. To be specific, one of the VPs at Boeing. Got Meyers his gig in the first place. Contributes some heavy cake to the Wilson war machine.”
“So?”
“So one of the mayor’s fixers steps in. Calls a guy like me. I get a story. They get an excuse to can the guy without pissing off the folks with the checkbooks.”
Jacobs pointed as a car exited from an underground garage onto LaSalle. “Here’s our boy.”
The Crown Vic with city plates pulled out and headed north.
“Stay a couple car lengths back,” Jacobs said.
“I know how to do this, Fred. Where’s he headed?”
“According to my source, the boozer. ’Course, I’ve heard that before.”
“You tailed this guy before?”
“Three times.”
“Nothing?”
“Not yet. He drives around a lot. Likes to follow fire engines. Sits at the fire and watches them work.”
“Must have a scanner in his car.”
“Yeah, well, I told my guy on the phone. This is it. If Meyers doesn’t get drunk today, I’m taking a pass.”
“What did your source say?”
“He said today’s the day. Damn sure. So I go.”
We followed the Crown Vic west on Randolph, south on Halsted, and then onto Taylor Street.
“Looks like it’s Little Italy,” I said.
Jacobs nodded. We cruised past the University of Illinois at Chicago and into a block full of pasta, spiced with espresso and smoke shops, over-the-counter delis, and stands selling Italian ice. Just past the corner of Taylor and Racine, the Crown Vic pulled into a pay lot, and a middle-aged man in a suit got out. He gave his keys to an attendant and walked down the street to a tavern called Hawkeye’s.
“He’s going in.” Jacobs said it like tumblers rolling, gears shifting, and the fate of one David Meyers falling into its predestined slot. From his duffel, the reporter pulled out a camera and snapped off a couple of quick shots as his man walked into the bar. Then he put the camera down and sat back in his seat.
“Now we wait.”
“How long?”
“Long as it takes. You okay with that?”
“Sure,” I said. “You going to ruin this guy’s life?”
Jacobs lit up another Camel and looked at me across the cut of smoke. “You think this is dirty?”
I shrugged.
“Let me ask you something,” Jacobs said. “You pay taxes. You like the fact this guy is going to sit in that bar all afternoon and drink the day away? On the city dime?”
“I hear you.”
“Sure you do. Let me tell you something else. Those guys downtown, they play rough. But hell, this is a big town and if you don’t know that, then get the fuck back to Iowa or wherever it is you come from. Fact is, David Meyers opened himself up to this.”
Jacobs held up his camera, two fingers pinching the cigarette as it burned down.
“If he didn’t have his nose in the booze bag all day, the Fifth Floor wouldn’t be able to put out the call to guys like me.”
“Doesn’t mean they wouldn’t take him out. Somehow.”
“Maybe,” Jacobs said. “But they wouldn’t be able to use me. Or any other journalist worth his salt. If the guy’s clean…” Jacobs shrugged. “Like I said, it’s a big town. Tough town. And the Fifth Floor plays it that way.”
I knew that from hard experience and decided to let the whole thing lie. So we watched the front door of Hawkeye’s and waited. Two hours later, Meyers was still inside. Jacobs had gone in to check on things. Now he slid