Chicagoland Gail Martin (best novels to read for students TXT) š
- Author: Gail Martin
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āWeāll let you know what we hear,ā West assured him. āDid you have any other questions you want us to ask if heās in a talking mood?ā
āThe disappearances are the main thing,ā Ness replied, mollified at being asked. āWeāve gone up the chain of command from the shift supervisor to the vice president of the company, and they either donāt know or are scared to talk about it. At first, we thought it was a gang war, but itās gotten worse since Caponeās been locked up, and he doesnāt benefit from disrupting operations.ā
āSo either itās a rival gang muscling in on his turf and faking the cause of death to scare people, or itās a monster who slipped his leash,ā I mused.
Ness nodded. āYeah. And itās a toss-up which is worse.ā
āI canāt breathe in this thing.ā Monkey suits always bring out the worst in me. Tight collars, made even tighter by a bowtie, and a perfectly fitted bespoke jacket tailored to make room for my gun made me feel claustrophobic.
āPoor baby.ā
Sarah McAllen Harringworth tut-tutted as she finished tying my tie. West had taken care of his own tie in the mirror on the other side of the parlor that separated our shared room from hers in one of The Drake Hotelās luxury suites. Thatās another perk of traveling with Sarahāshe believes life is too short not to have the best of everything, which she can afford, and she is generous enough to take West and me along for the ride.
Since Sarah likes to have me accompany her to eventsāeither as a bodyguard or a mysterious male companionāshe has her late husbandās tailor whip up the latest style of tux for me when the whim strikes. She makes sure the tuxes are in one of the steamer trunks she travels with when we go on a job, and I do my best to be gracious about looking like an organ grinderās pet.
Iād feel like a kept man, but the relationshipāat least between Sarah and meāis strictly professional. My Agata was the only woman for me, and while I donāt look it, Iām a good seventy-five years older than Sarah. If there is or was anything between her and West, itās mutually casual and none of my business. On a job, theyāre all business.
āYou do clean up well, Joe,ā Sarah said with a teasing glint in her eyes.
āAt least until something blows up,ā West observed. āIāve lost a lot of good suits that way.ā Our ventures did have a habit of ending in explosions and blood.
Sarah wore a navy blue beaded silk dress in the most fashionable cut, which I knew because she had mentioned it several times. West and I might not be married men, but we were savvy enough to nod and smile at comments like that. She was a beautiful womanāblond, trim, athletic, and thoroughly modern. I might not be interestedāshe was far out of my leagueābut I had eyes.
The good thing about walking into any room with Sarah was that everyone looked at her. West and I werenāt noticed, a benefit in our line of work, although I knew it irked West a bit since he enjoyed being in the spotlight much more than I did.
āHereās a quick history, so youāre not completely lost at dinner,ā Sarah said as she powdered her nose and touched up her red lipstick. āKirkās father went to Northwestern with my late father-in-law.ā
āKirk?ā It took me a moment to realize she meant Jonathan Kirkpatrick, the coal baron.
She chuckled. āHe hates āJonā or āJonathan.ā Anyhow, the two fathers stayed friends, and the families often vacationed togetherāhunting or skiing out in the Rockies, hiking and fishing in the Adirondacksā¦that sort of thing. So when I married Henry, Kirk was always around. Weāve stayed in touch, and we have dinner together if weāre in the area. Iām widowed, and his wife left him for a ski instructor in Jackson Hole, so we can be seen together without a scandal.ā She grinned. āWhich, of course, is also where the two of you come in.ā
āChaperones?ā West teased.
Sarah looped her arm through his. They made an attractive couple. āNo, silly. Arm candy.ā
I knew my jobābe quiet and look dangerous. This wasnāt the first time Iād played bodyguard. I didnāt mind. The food was good, and I got to see how the other half lived.
Too bad we were here at the behest of Chicagoās staunchest defender of Prohibition. Iād have to wait until I got back to the room and Sarahās illicit stash for an after-dinner slug of bathtub gin.
āKirkā sent a car for us, which happened to be a sleek black Maybach Zeppelin. I held the door for Sarah and West to get in the back, then rode up front with the driver. Light traffic made the ride even shorter than I expected, and we pulled up in front of the stone exterior of The Standard Club before Iād barely had a chance to settle into the comfortable leather seats.
Sarah thanked the driver, I got out to open the back door, and the clubās doorman stepped forward to check credentials.
āGuests of Jonathan Kirkpatrick,ā Sarah said, slipping into the role she had been raised to play.
I was as fascinated watching Sarah recreate herself to suit the situation as I was when West shed his flashy image to go undercover. Mostly, it intrigued me because I was pretty much the same wherever I went. Iād never needed to be anyone else, and now I generally didnāt give a damn. Other than using what my mother would have called ācompany mannersā on nights like this, I was just me.
Of course, ājust meā included owing my soul to an ancient god. Maybe I wasnāt quite as uncomplicated as I liked to think.
The Standard Club didnāt disappoint. Inlaid floors, wood-paneled walls, leather furniture, and fancy ceilings with gold accents screamed wealth and privilege. Crystal chandeliers glittered overhead. Formally
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