“A little background work for a story-nothing we can run with yet, but maybe it will go somewhere if you find a connection. Go down to the morgue…” I stopped, seeing his face go pale. “You can’t avoid going in there forever, Ethan.”

“No.”

“All right, use the public library, then, but be careful not to mention to anyone else exactly what it is you’re looking for. Find out if a company named Eden Supply, which was operating around here in the 1940s, was owned by anyone else-a larger company, for example. The city might have a record of it, although only with luck would that still be available. Try the ads for it first.”

“Okay. If you don’t mind my asking, what does this have to do with O’Connor?”

“It’s the company Harmon worked for.” I told him about the possible connections to Maureen’s murder. “While you’re at it, read up on her disappearance.” I gave him some dates.

We talked about O’Connor for a while. I told him about the papers in the storage locker, and that O’Connor’s brother Dermot would be visiting the States soon. It became clear to me, as he mentioned O’Connor’s work, that he had read a great deal of it, and his enthusiasm for it made conversation easy between us.

I paid for our breakfasts, over his protests. The rain had let up, and it looked as if the skies were clearing. We walked back to the paper in a companionable silence. He seemed lost in thought, but at least he was lost with better posture. He was keeping his head up.

I thought he’d follow me into the newsroom, but he went downstairs to the morgue instead.

Until that moment, I wasn’t really sure-for all my speeches over breakfast-that much could be made of Ethan Shire.

62

F OR A WHILE, I THOUGHT THAT GIVING ETHAN A CHANCE WAS GOING TO cause a bigger fight between Lydia and me than the one we had over him before. Somewhere along the line we both saw that, pulled back a bit, and she (a little gleefully, I thought) told me she thought it would be a good thing if I took him under my wing. “He’s all yours,” she said.

Not exactly what I had in mind, but I couldn’t really back down.

Mark Baker, who was too tied up with writing stories about current criminal activities to be very active in the historical ones, told me that he wouldn’t mind working with Ethan if I didn’t want to be his scoutmaster.

“If it doesn’t work out,” I said, “you’re my backup.”

“He’s not going to be your problem,” Mark said. “Hailey is going to pitch a fit.”

He was right. When I told Hailey that we were going to share our research with him, she told me I was crazy, that he was using me, and went on and on about it. “Ethan is going to be working with us,” I said, interrupting her. “If you don’t want to work with him, you can find something else to do.”

She stood up. She didn’t quite go so far as moving to the door, but I wouldn’t have laid money on her staying. The success of the interview with Helen had produced a foreseeable side effect-Hailey, not exactly humble to begin with, now thought fairly highly of herself. I found myself half-wishing she’d walk away.

“Why should I be forced to put up with him?” she asked.

“You’ve never needed a second chance, I suppose? Or maybe you’re looking for an excuse to go home earlier in the day.”

She sat down, but said, “I love what we’re doing, but-I don’t trust Ethan!”

“I can’t make you trust him. Not going to try. But if you want to keep working on stories with me, you’re going to work on stories with Ethan.”

He met us late that afternoon in a conference room just off the morgue. I learned that he had kept up with our stories about the old cases of 1958 and 1978, which had been running in the Express as a series in the weeks before Max’s DNA test results were known. Hailey recapped what we had been looking into now-stories about the business connections between the Ducanes, the Linworths, and the Yeagers, as well as whatever personal backgrounds we could come up with.

“We think the Linworths and Ducanes screwed Mitch Yeager out of some money while he was under arrest in 1936,” Hailey said. “His bail was set high, and he needed cash. He needed money to pay his attorneys, too.”

“Wasn’t his family wealthy?” Ethan asked.

“His family had been involved in rum-running,” I said, “but Prohibition had recently ended, so bootlegging wasn’t profitable.”

“Barrett Ducane offered to help Yeager raise cash by buying some of his assets, assets that were worth much more than Ducane paid for them,” Hailey said. “Linworth bought a few things as well, and those deals were in his favor, but not as lopsided as Ducane’s. Ducane and Linworth both knew that money was going to be made from the coming war in Europe and elsewhere-so they chose companies that could be easily retooled to make aircraft parts and munitions and things like that.”

“What did you find out today?” I asked Ethan.

“It’s probably not worth anything,” he said.

Hailey smirked.

He took a deep breath and explained to her why he had been researching Eden Supply. “It was owned by Granville Enterprises. Granville owned a lot of smaller, agriculturally related companies. Granville was a family name- Mitch Yeager’s grandfather.”

“Who was dead long before 1945,” Hailey said, “so the company was Mitch’s in those years.”

“Which doesn’t prove he knew that one driver in one subsidiary was taking a truck out to that particular orange grove after hours,” Ethan said. “Or that he knew Harmon was killing and burying women all around a four-county area. If Yeager did know, it will be hard to show it.”

“This is always the problem with him,” I said. “He’s there, but just out of reach.”

“What do you mean?” Ethan asked. “I thought it was his nephews and minions who did all the killing.”

“Which is why he’s out of reach,” Hailey said impatiently.

I tried giving her a look that told her to back off. Hailey doesn’t really get the whole “back off” thing, which helps her as a reporter but makes working with her a pain.

“Tell me more about this,” he said, looking at me.

“You’ve read the original confessions Eric and Ian made, the ones they recanted?”

“Yes.”

“O’Connor said something to me about the statements they made-their theories about how to best punish someone. He called it the Yeager catechism.” I flipped to a page in my notes and read, “‘You want to make your enemy suffer, you kill the people he loves and hide the bodies-you make him wonder if they’re alive or dead. Nothing is worse than that.’”

“That was Eric,” Hailey said, pulling out her own notes. “Ian was almost word for word the same-‘If you kill the people he loves and hide the bodies, you kidnap them and never let them be found-you make him wonder if they’re alive or dead, if he’ll ever see them again, and he starts to think about what might be happening to them. Then your enemy suffers all his life. Nothing you could do to him is worse than that. Nothing.’”

“O’Connor once told me that when he heard those statements, he wondered if he could have become Mitch Yeager’s enemy before he was eighteen,” I said.

“He was seventeen when his sister disappeared,” Ethan said. “I spent some time reading about that today. But what could he have done to harm Mitch Yeager?”

“He was a reporter,” Hailey said. “He could have written something to harm Yeager’s businesses.”

“None of his early stories were about Yeager,” Ethan said. “He seldom had any stories published with a byline until late 1945.”

“You’re the expert on O’Connor, all right,” Hailey said.

Ethan looked mortified.

“Grow up or go upstairs,” I snapped at Hailey.

She cast a dark look at Ethan, as though he were to blame for my loss of temper.

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