Fletch and the Man Who Read online

Page 8


  “Probably not.”

  “After all I just told you?”

  “Not much. You said so yourself.”

  “Now I have a question for you.”

  “You just asked one.”

  “Walsh has never married, has he?”

  “Yes, he likes girls.”

  “Oh, I can see that. Why don’t you introduce me to him? You’re his friend.”

  “You don’t know him?”

  “Not really. I mean, I’ve never been introduced as a woman to a man. As a reporter I know him.”

  “I see.”

  “He looks like he might go for the homebody type.”

  “You’re a homebody?”

  “I could be. If the home had a nice address on Pennsylvania Avenue.”

  “Sixteen-hundred block.”

  “Right.”

  “Lots of rooms to clean.”

  “You’ve never seen me with a mop.”

  “No, I haven’t.”

  “Pink lightning. Flushed with excitement. Ecstasy. You ought to introduce us.”

  “I will.”

  “Somebody in a presidential family ought to marry a Ginsberg. We do nice table settings.”

  “Agreed.”

  “Tell him you and I worked together in Atlanta.”

  The bus slowed. The bus driver was looking through the rearview mirror at Fletch.

  “I never worked in Atlanta.”

  “I did.”

  “Oh. Okay.”

  “Irwin!” the bus driver shouted.

  “Irwin!” Roy Filby echoed. “I’d rather see one than be one!”

  “Telephone!” the bus driver shouted. In fact, a black wire led from the dashboard onto his lap.

  Fletch said, “We have a telephone?”

  “Not for the use of reporters,” Betsy said. “Staff only. Want to hear what James said about the duplicating machine?”

  “I’ve heard.”

  Fletch went forward. The bus driver handed him the phone from his lap.

  “Hello?” Fletch said. “Nice of you to call.”

  Barry Hines said, “You’d better come forward, Fletcher.”

  “I’ve always been forward.”

  “I mean into this bus. Watch the noon news with us.”

  “Sure. Why?”

  “Just heard from a friendly at U.B.C. New York that something unsavory is coming across the airwaves at us.”

  “What?”

  The phone went dead.

  Brake lights went on at the rear of the campaign bus. It headed for the soft shoulder of the highway.

  Fletch looked for a place to hang up the phone.

  “Guess we’re stopping for a second. Got to go to the other bus.”

  The press bus was following the campaign bus onto the soft shoulder.

  “Just put the phone back in my lap,” the driver said. “I’m not expecting any calls at the moment.”

  Fletch put the phone in the bus driver’s lap.

  “How did you know my name is Irwin?” Fletch asked.

  The bus driver said: “Just guessed.”

  13

  “We’re almost late for the rally in Winslow,” The Man Who commented.

  “A band will be playing, Dad.”

  Again the governor tried to see the world through the steamy bus window. “But it’s cold out there.”

  The buses pulled back onto the highway and were gathering speed.

  On the campaign bus a small-screened television set had been swung out behind the driver, high up. It faced the back of the bus. A commercial was running for feminine sanitary devices.

  “My apologies, ma’am,” the presidential candidate said to the congressperson, “for the bad taste displayed by my television set. Not a thing I can do about it.” They were sitting next to each other on an upholstered bench at the side of the bus. “Not a damned thing.”

  Fletch stepped over the governor’s feet. He stood near Walsh. “What is it?” He hung on to a luggage rack.

  The television newsperson came on and mentioned the news leads: “Coming up: Senator Upton’s advance man killed in automobile accident in Pennsylvania; aftermath of a hockey riot, numbers injured and arrested; presidential candidate Caxton Wheeler hands out money to schoolchildren on the campaign trail.”

  “Jeez!” Fletch turned toward the back of the bus. Arms akimbo, Flash Grasselli stood against the stateroom’s closed door. “Would you believe this?”

  “Sure,” Walsh said. “It’s true.”

  “At least I’m not the number-one news lead,” the governor said. “Guess they don’t think too badly of bribing schoolchildren.”

  “‘Bribing schoolchildren,’” echoed Fletch.

  Phil Nolting said, “That’s what they’re gonna make out of it.”

  A commercial was running for “Sweet Wheat, the breakfast cereal that makes kiddies yell for more.”

  “Yell with the toothache,” Paul Dobson said. “They’re yelling because it makes their teeth hurt!”

  “Make ’em hypertensive with sugar at breakfast,” Phil Nolting intoned, as if quoting, “then slap ’em down at school.”

  Except for Barry Hines, who was talking quietly on the telephone, those aboard the campaign bus suffered silently as a few more details were given of Victor Robbins’s death, film was run; of the hockey riot, film was run. Then: “This morning at Conroy Regional School Governor Caxton Wheeler, while on his campaign for the presidency, handed out coins to the primary school students.” Film was run. The Man Who, surrounded by excited children, was doing some trickery with his hands. Then the camera zoomed in to show in close-up the governor’s hand pressing a coin into the hand of a child. “Some received dimes, others quarters, others half dollars. And some got none at all….”

  “Did one run all the way home?” Phil Nolting asked.

  “Must have,” Paul Dobson said. “Somebody must have told on us.”

  On screen the newsperson was sitting with an extremely thin, hawknosed, nervous-looking woman. “Here in our studio with us is the distinguished pediatric psychiatrist, Dr. Dorothea Dolkart, author of Stop Resenting Your Child and Face Up to Bed-wetting.”

  “Jeez,” said Paul Dobson. “How can these experts get to the television studios so fast? It’s only been an hour. Don’t they have other jobs?”

  “Doctor Dolkart, you’ve just seen here on our studio monitor presidential candidate Caxton Wheeler handing out coins to some of the pupils at Conroy School. Can you assess for us the effect this would have upon the pupils?”

  “Extremely damaging. Traumatic. First, there is the point that here we have an adult who is making himself popular, or trying to, by the device of handing out money.”

  “Setting somewhat the wrong standard, you think?”

  “An absolutely materialistic standard.”

  “In fact, he’s teaching the children you can buy friendships.”

  “And this happened in a school setting, where children are used to learning things. With authority, if you understand me.”

  “Yes. The effect upon the children who didn’t receive any money …?”

  “Disastrous. Very few people in this country have greater prestige in the eyes of children—in the eyes of any of us—than a presidential candidate. Maybe the President himself, a few football players, what have you. Meeting, even seeing, a man who might become the most powerful leader on earth, is one of the most memorable experiences of our lives. For those who did not receive any coin at all from Governor Wheeler, the implied rejection is severe. These children this morning were scarred for life and, I might add, totally unnecessarily.”

  On the campaign bus The Man Who said, “Oh, my God.”

  “And the children who did receive the coins? Do they feel better about things?”

  “No. If anything, they feel worse. Because completely arbitrarily they were singled out for this special attention, this gift, from a grownup of the greatest prestige. It would have been one thing if the candid
ate had handed out coins to children who had won the honor through some sort of an academic or athletic contest. As it is, the children who actually got the coins from the governor have been burdened with terrible guilt feelings because they received something which they know they didn’t deserve, while their schoolmates got nothing at all….”

  “I guess James would have stopped me from doing that.” The Man Who hung his head in his hands. “He would have known how it would look to the press. What they could make of it. Handing out money to kids. Gee. I guess ol’ James is laughing up his sleeve at this moment, wherever he is.”

  Fletch said to Walsh, “I’m beginning to suspect I have a short career as a press representative.”

  “It’s an impossible job,” Walsh said.

  The television was offering the usual variety of weather reports.

  “Well.” The governor put his hand on the hand of the grandmotherly congressperson. “Guess I just wrecked the life of every school-child in your district.” He smiled at her. “Do you agree?”

  She lifted her hand from under his on the divan. “Yes, Caxton. It was totally irresponsible of you. Damned insensitive.”

  He looked at her a moment to see if she was serious. She was. He stood up and wandered to the back of the bus where Walsh and Fletch were standing.

  “Sorry,” Fletch said to him. “I thought it looked nice. Was nice.”

  “Got to be aware of how things look to the press,” Walsh said. “Every damned little thing. What they can make of it.”

  “How do we pick up from here?” Fletch asked the governor. “Make a statement …?”

  The governor smiled. “Naw. Let them hang themselves on their own silliness. Psychiatrists be damned. I don’t think the American people are apt to consider an older man handing out coins to little kids as Beelzebub.” He beckoned Flash forward with his finger and called Barry Hines. When they came, he said, “Listen, guys. In Winslow I don’t want that old bitch on the platform with me.”

  “The congressperson?” Barry asked in surprise.

  They were speaking softly.

  “Body-block her. Trip her. Hide her purse. Slow her down. I don’t care what you do. Just keep her off the platform.”

  “This is her district, Dad.”

  “I don’t care. She’s lookin’ to speak against me, anyway. Let’s not give what she has to say against me the prestige of pictures of her standin’ with me.”

  “Okay,” Flash said.

  “We’ll show the old bitch exactly how sensitive I am.”

  The governor opened the door to the stateroom. “Come here, Fletch.”

  “Yes, sir?”

  “Close the door.”

  Fletch did so. “Again, I’m sorry about that. I never dreamed the press—”

  “I’m not about to chew you out.”

  “You’re not?”

  “‘Course not. Who was the first one to say ‘If you can’t stand the heat get out of the kitchen’?”

  “Uh—Fred Fenton?”

  “Who was he?”

  “Cooked for Henry the Eighth.” The governor gave him a weird look. “Buried under the chapel at the Tower of London. Forgot to take the poultry lacers out of roast falcons.”

  The governor chuckled. “You’re making that up.”

  “Sure I am.”

  “Got anything for me?”

  “Anything …?”

  “You’ve been on the press bus most of the morning.”

  “Oh. Yeah. Lansing Sayer says Upton’s team is going to hit you with some evidence of welfare fraud in your state. As soon as you climb back over thirty percent in the popularity polls.”

  “That so? Good for them. That’s smart. There’s welfare fraud in every state. Also housebreaking and vandalism. I’ll get Barry on that. Have his people put together my record on stopping welfare abuse. Also, let’s see: the amount of welfare fraud in other states. I’ll make an issue of it myself as soon as I get near thirty percent in the polls.”

  “Amazing how things become campaign issues.”

  “Anything else?”

  “Andrew Esty wants an exclusive interview with you.”

  “The Daily Gospel guy?”

  “Yeah. He’s trying to develop something. If people are allowed to pray together in federal prisons, why not in public schools?”

  “Wow. ‘Take Prayers out of Prisons.’”

  “I think he means ‘Put Prayer back in Schools.’”

  “No foolin’.”

  The bus was going slowly, obviously in traffic. It was stopping and starting, probably at red lights.

  “What do we do for him?” Fletch asked.

  “Pray for him,” the governor said. “Anything else?”

  “Found out more about the woman murdered last night. An intelligent, apparently unattached, lonely woman.”

  “How do you know she was intelligent?”

  “She was a reader. From her reading.”

  “Political reading?”

  “No.”

  The bus was inching forward. A band could be heard playing.

  “Very quickly I’m going to get tired of that topic.” The governor leaned over and looked through the steamy window. Instinctively he waved at the crowd outside with the flat of his hand. Fletch was sure no one outside could see the candidate through the windows. “Someday I’d love to have a Klezmer band playing for me,” the governor said. “I love Klezmer bands.”

  The bus stopped.

  “Walk out with me.” The governor took Fletch’s arm in his fist. “Stay between me and that congressbitch. Paddle her backward. Got me? Give it to her in the ribs, if you have to.”

  “Gotcha.”

  “And tell Lansing Sayer he can have an exclusive interview with me anytime he wants it.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  When Fletch opened the stateroom door, their ears were assaulted by the band’s playing “Camptown Races.”

  “‘Jacob, make the horse go faster and faster,’” the candidate said. “‘If it ever stops, we won’t be able to sell it.’”

  14

  “It’s nice of you all to come out and give me a chance to talk to you, on such a cold, raw day,” The Man Who said. The noontime crowd was crammed into the smallest intersection in Winslow. Advance man Willy Finn had planned the rally for the smallest outdoor space in Winslow deliberately. A small crowd looks bigger in a small space; a larger crowd looks huge. The presidential candidate had attracted a good-sized crowd. “You know, a presidential campaign is just a crusade of amateurs. I can tell you, my friends in Winslow, this campaign to let me serve you the next four years in the White House needs your help.”

  Standing in slush at the edge of the crowd, Fletch said to himself, “Wow.”

  At his elbow, Freddie Arbuthnot said, “He said something new.”

  The mayor, the city council, the chief of police, the superintendent of schools, a judge, the city’s oldest citizen (standing up at ninety-eight, bundled well against the cold), probably two dogcatchers and the fence-viewer were the reception committee awaiting the candidate as he got off the bus. A band was playing “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Not moving from the bottom of the bus steps, Governor Wheeler shook hands with each member of the committee, said a few words to each. The mayor then led him through the crowd to the platform set up on the comer of Corn Street and Wicklow Lane, gestured to the band for quiet, and did his Man-Who speech, peppered with many references to his own efforts to gain control of the city budget.

  Fletch watched Barry Hines and Flash Grasselli escort the short congressperson in entirely the wrong direction, right into the middle of the crowd, where she got bogged down shaking hands and listening to her constituents’ griefs.

  Fletch introduced himself to the local press. He handed out position papers on the crop subsidy programs. He and the local press and only some of the national press stood in a roped-off area to the right of the platform.

  Some members of the national press, Roy
Filby, Stella Kirchner, Betsy Ginsberg, Bill Dieckmann—who seemed completely recovered —had spotted a bar-café half a block up and decided to go there for drinks during The Speech. “Tell us if he gets shot, or hands out money to the crowd or something, Fletch.”

  Three television cameras were atop vans and station wagons. News photographers stood near the platform.

  Hanging from the second-floor windows of the First National Bank of Winslow at the comer of Corn and Wicklow was a huge American flag. It had forty-eight stars.

  Now The Man Who was saying, “The world has changed, my friends. You know it and I know it, but the present incumbent in the White House doesn’t seem to know it. His brilliant advisors don’t seem to know it. None of the other candidates, Republican or Democrat, who want to see themselves in the White House the next four years seem to know it….”

  “This isn’t his usual speech,” Freddie said. “This isn’t The Speech.”

  “… It used to be that what happened in New York and Washington was important in Paramaribo, in Durban, in Kampuchea. Nothing was more important. Well, things have changed. Now we know that what happens in Santiago, in Tehran, in Peking is terribly important in New York and Washington. Nothing is more important.”

  Fletch said: “Wow.”

  “… The Third World, as it’s called, is no longer something out there—separate from us, inconsequential to us. Whether we like it or not, the world is becoming more sensitive. The world is becoming covered with a network of fine nerves—an electronic nervous system not unlike that which integrates our own bodies. Our finger hurts, our toe hurts and we feel it as much as if our head aches or our heart aches. Instantly now do we feel the pain in Montevideo, in Juddah, in Bandung. And yes, my friends in Winslow, we feel the pains from our own, internal third world—from Harlem, from Watts, from our reservations of Native Americans …”

  Fletch said: “Wow.”

  Freddie was giving him sideways looks.

  “… There is no First World, or Second World, or Third World. This planet earth is becoming integrated before our very eyes!”

  “He’s not going to …”

  “He’s not going to what?” she asked.