report, and even more after the newspaper comes out tomorrow.”

“Mr. Boyer, what about the report that you interfered with the investigation into your father’s murder?”

“I only urged the governor’s office to not interfere with it.”

“May I schedule an interview?”

“No. I’ll schedule it.”

“Soon?”

“That depends on how well you cover the whole story. I might also talk with some people higher up in your organization first.”

“I understand.” Which meant she knew how far the field was tilted.

“I’ll look forward to talking to you later.”

I set the phone down and looked back to my listeners.

“I don’t get it,” Eric said, finally.

It wasn’t fair to him, either of them, to do it this way. Katie had had some warning, and Eric maybe had a clue, but neither of them were ready for what they were about to see.

And the clock was about to strike six.

We watched Channel Six, with Channel Five up in the corner of the screen. Six led with the story and Five gave it the “coming up later in the show” treatment. They wanted to hear Six’s report first.

We settled comfortably into our chairs, Rosita’s little appetizer snack close by, as the war began.

The opening salvo was massive. The talking head stared us straight in the eye and spoke his words of destruction.

“Good evening, I’m Bill Sandoff. Today we begin with a report on corruption in state government that could reach our highest elected officials, and involves some of the biggest names in the construction industry. Channel Six has obtained key information from knowledgeable sources that details a longstanding system of bribes and kickbacks that has cost the taxpayers millions of dollars and lined the pockets of many senior members of Governor Harry Bright’s administration.

“First, Jill Abernathy reports on the businesses involved, and the man behind the system, the late Melvin Boyer. Before we begin, we have to disclose that the Boyer family is a major stockholder in First Media, the owner of this station. Jill?”

Step by step, they laid it out. Melvin’s death and the cleaning of the corporate house by his son Jason (unavailable for comment on this day). The outline of the bid fixing schemes and a list of the larger state projects and the profits reaped from them. Calls late in the day to the specific Boyer businesses to speak with the named executives, and the reply that those individuals were no longer employed.

Then back to the deaths of Melvin and then Angela-the brief details and the bombshell information that the deaths were being investigated as murders.

There were pictures and video, location shots, even a university expert on state politics. The big guns were leveled at the governor’s mansion, and every shot was blasting another gaping hole.

“Governor Bright’s press secretary has only promised that the governor will make a statement later this evening. Channel Six will bring it to you live,” Bill promised us.

“And finally,” he said in his And finally voice, “even as the governor and his administration are caught in the center of this unfolding scandal, what about the man who opened this Pandora’s box?”

And there I was. It was the same three-year-old wedding shot Channel Five had used a month ago. “Jason Boyer, who inherited his father’s position as the wealthiest and most powerful industrialist in the state, appears to be making a bold move to transform that position.”

And that was it. Bill poured one more bucket of words all over us and he was done. Seventeen minutes of talking, and it was done. The governor was done, Melvin was done-who knows what else. I couldn’t tell how I felt. Well done, maybe.

Channel Five’s report began five seconds after the other ended. It was a very flat version of the murders, mostly the evidence of the brake line and forged suicide note. The victims were portrayed as community pillars, and the perpetrator as obviously an insider who stood to gain from their deaths. Only at the end was there just a brief sentence about some unfounded allegations concerning Melvin’s business dealings. It would have been interesting to see the original version.

We changed venue and sat down to our dinner of salmon quiche. It was quiet at first. Eric was the first to word a question.

“Did you know all of that?”

I nodded. “Yeah. I gave them most of it. They were doing what I told them to do.”

“They said you just found out what he was doing when you looked through his papers.”

“The details. But I’ve always known.”

“I didn’t know.”

What a day he was having-gaining a mother and losing a father. “Fred Spellman was in on it for years. He helped Melvin put it all together.”

“Uncle Fred, huh.”

“‘Uncle Fred’ is about as real as Santa Claus. And Stan Morton, who runs the newspaper and Channel Six, has always known. Senator Forrester got elected in a deal with Melvin. Basically everyone in state government has either known what Melvin was doing, or was even on his payroll.”

Eric was still struggling. “Why didn’t they do anything about it?”

“Why should they? They were all making a lot of money from his deals.”

“It was illegal.”

“Well,” I said, “that’s why I’m stopping it all.”

I felt good saying that, and it was true. Just not the whole truth.

Eric was still getting all the pieces put together. “So that’s why you’re doing all this.”

“I want it to end. I don’t want to be a criminal. This is the best way.”

He stared at me, maybe with respect. “Okay. I guess I see.”

“It was probably all going to come out anyway, sooner or later. I wanted to control it, instead of letting the governor.”

“Yeah, the governor…” Eric had the edges of the puzzle together now, and he was starting on the middle. “He must be pretty mad right now. What will he do?”

“I don’t know. I think he should resign.”

“I guess so. I see what you meant, that you’re firing him.”

He would have said more but it was Katie’s turn.

“Not everything Melvin did was wrong,” she said.

“No, not at all,” I said. “A lot of his business was straight.”

“So what will all this do to us, Jason?”

Katie had never believed in Santa Claus, but she was wondering about the Christmas presents.

“I’m not sure,” I said. “It’ll be hard getting through it. But you don’t need to worry.”

“What would they do to us? If it was illegal, would they want the money back?” Katie needed assurance.

“We’ll be fine,” I said.

She preferred anxiety. “What if the governor tries to fight back?”

“Fred and I have discussed that.”

“What will you do?”

Apparently Katie had not completed her training in how to be a billionaire’s wife, at least the course on what not to ask about her husband’s business affairs.

“It depends on what the governor does. I don’t think he can do very much.”

“Everything is ready to move to the new house next week.” That was the big thing on her mind. She had mastered the How to Spend Money sections of the curriculum.

“It’s fine. Nothing will stop us from getting into the new house. It’s more important now than ever.”

“Everyone’s heard of us now,” she said, putting her own pieces together. “We’re famous.” She didn’t mind that, but she wanted to be ready first. “I don’t think we should wait to move.”

“Could we do it tomorrow?” I asked.

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