It didn’t occur to Martin until just that moment that his mother might be every bit as embarrassed as he was at being caught in the middle of a possible romantic liaison. He noticed that her hair was freshly done, her make-up applied perfectly and her outfit brand new. He looked at his mother and smiled ackwardly. “Hi, Mom. I’m just having dinner with some friends. What are you doing here?”
Jean looked around nervously, peaked around Martin and peered up at him. “Is that Sharla?” she asked in a stage whisper. Martin sighed and nodded, and Jean asked, “Who is the other woman?” Martin leaned closer to his mother and answered her, slightly annoyed, “That’s Shirley Campbell. She works with me at The Sentinel.”
Jean stood up. “Will you introduce them to me?” she asked timidly. At that moment, Martin felt something for his mother he didn't recognize right away - some affection. He rolled his eyes at her. “Of course I’ll introduce you, Mother. Do you think I'm rude?” He put his hand on her shoulder and walked her over to the table where Shirley and Sharla were waiting expectantly.
“Mother, I would like to introduce you to two of the best people I know.” He held his hand out to Shirley and said, “This is Shirley Campbell.” Jean moved quickly around the table to face Shirley and held out her hand. “So nice to meet you. I’m Jean Lundeen.” Shirley shook Jean’s hand and smiled at her.
“And this is Sharla Whitefeather,” Martin said, pulling her slightly away from Shirley. Jean gently shook off Martin's hand, turned to Sharla and looked at her face intently. No one said anything for a few moments, and then Jean moved around the table. Jean pulled the empty chair next to Sharla, sat down and took her hands. “You dear girl, I am so happy to finally meet you.” Jean pulled Sharla into an ackward hug and held her tightly. Sharla looked up at Martin over Jean’s shoulder and gave him a little smile. She patted Jean’s back a little, pulled away and took her hands. “It’s nice to meet you, too, Mrs. Lundeen.” She gave Jean a big smile. “Are you here for dinner? Do you want to join us?”
Martin shook his head violently, but before he could verbally protest, Jean said, “Oh no, I have a date with...Don.” She gave a thrilled little shudder, wrinkled her nose and giggled. “Where is he? He said I should get here at 8:00 p.m.”
As if on cue, the room suddenly filled with Dean Martin singing “That’s Amore”, and Don came out into the dining area, sans apron, with a bouquet of flowers. He walked directly over to Jean, as if no one else was in the room, bent dow so that his face was right next to hers and whispered into her ear, “You have no idea how glad I am to see you, Jean.” She giggled again, and seemed to forget that her grown son was in the room with his two friends. “Oh Don, you are just so sweet. These flowers are beautiful,” she said in a low, almost sexy voice, looking up into his eyes. Martin couldn’t have been more uncomfortable or embarrased as he watched Don take Jean's hand and walk away with her, arm in arm, over to a table in the back corner of the dark restaurant.
Martin watched them, shook his head and then saw that Sharla and Shirley were looking at him with very amused looks on their faces. “Well, Martin, should we get back to work?”
+ + +
Another hour passed and another pitcher of beer was consumed by Martin and Shirley as they discussed with Sharla different rationale for getting the truth out about Talbot and arguing a bit whether it was worth exposing him at all. "He's retiring, he'll be gone in two months, what's the point in damaging the credibility of the entire Burnett County educational system?" Martin asked and instantly regretted it. Sharla shook her head angrily at him, and Shirley punched him in the arm. "I don't believe you, Martin. You're drinking the Clark Grayson Koolaid." He apologized. "I know, I know, we have to make this right for all the people he hurt. But how are we going to do that?" Shirley answered him quietly, "We'll figure it out. I just want him to get what's coming to him." They seemed to be getting nowhere when Don and Jean suddenly appeared at the table. “So,” Don said, “Jean and I have been watching you and think you three need some fresh thinking.”
Sharla and Shirley looked up at them, pleased to have some help, but Martin frowned and snorted. “Fresh thinking…right.”
Jean sat down at the empty seat at the table, and Don pulled up another chair. “Martin, I filled your mother in over dinner on some of the details you've uncovered over the last few weeks." Jean nodded her head quickly as he talked. "We just had an idea or two that we'd like you to consider." Jean piped in, "From the looks of it, you didn't seem to be getting anywhere."
“You two haven't been knee deep in this stuff like we have. How can you possibly help?” Martin asked, somewhat offended and annoyed because he knew they were right.
“Well, maybe a little objectivity is in order,” he replied with a chuckle. “Come on, Jimmy Olson, give us five minutes. If what we have isn't helpful, we'll go back to our table in the back."
Martin looked from Don to Jean to Sharla to Shirley and shrugged his shoulders. "Okay, fine, what are you thinking?"
Don and Jean looked at each other as if a bit surprised to be included so easily, and snuggled into each other, he putting his hand on her back and patting her. "Honey, you start."
Jean ignored Martin's look to the ceiling and launched in. "Well, from what Donnie tells me ('Donnie?' Martin thought), this Talbot person likes to do his business in secret and with young girls who won't fight back." Martin looked down from the ceiling and over at Sharla, who nodded back at him. "He can't be proud of what he does. He's probably afraid of getting caught. He doesn't pick fights with strong people, just people he thinks are weak." She sat back, satisfied with herself.
Martin looked at her expectantly. "And? What else?" He was ready to shoo them back to their table, when Don jumped in. "Hold on, Martin. Here's the point. It will probably scare the crap out of him if someone, especially someone in authority, called him on his behavior. He'd hate that more than losing his pension." Jean added, "And I bet he doesn't have a soul who'd defend him, so he probably wouldn't fight back."
The group all hung on Don's next words. "So, you need to change your focus. The issue isn't calling Talbot out on his misdeeds, the issue is doing in a way that gets Talbot what he's got coming with as little fallout as possible for the school district and for you personally. You need to bring the big guns in on this, Martin. You have to talk to Howe and Daniels, and get them to think it's their idea to expose Talbot." Martin squirmed in his seat. "What if they complain to Clark?" he whined. Jean was about to pounce on his lack of bravery. But Don cut in. "Martin, let me ask you a question, do you think Howe and Daniels are going to want anyone to know, especially Clark Grayson, the Editor of the Sentinel, that they've been covering this up for years?"
Shirley looked intently at Don and then over to Martin. "It's not just getting the job done, it's doing it in such a way that everyone looks like a hero except Talbot. Don and Jean are right, your next interviews have to be with Jeff Howe and Dayton Daniels. Do it at the same time, and be vague about the interview so they can't compare notes beforehand. You'll have to use your best acting skills to hide how much you really know."
When Martin filled Don and Jean in on Karen Howe being half Indian and probably one of Talbot’s victims, Jean gasped and Don drummed his fingers on the table and sat forward on his chair. “Do you think Jeff Howe knows about his wife and Talbot? Do you think she would have told him?”
The table was quiet considering the question. “If Jeff did know, how could he not do something about it?” Shirley asked. Then Sharla chimed in, “Especially since he is on the school board.”
Martin nodded. "How can that guy still have a job after everything he's done?"
The table was silent again until Jean said very quietly, “All I know is, if my husband was in a position to punish someone who had hurt me the way you think Frank Talbot hurt Karen Howe, I'd expect him to do it.”
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Chapter 31
Sharla walked through the door of Risky Dick’s at exactly 7:30 p.m., followed by Shirley Campbell. The two women were laughing and talking as they came in, and Martin was sure they had introduced themselves to each other in the parking lot.
Martin jumped off his bar stool, and hurried over to the door. “Hi, Guys, I see you’ve met.” Sharla and Shirley laughed together. “We sure did, Martin,” Sharla said, smiling at him. “What a great idea to invite Shirley to join us. But you know, if I didn’t know any better, I’d think you were afraid to be alone with me!”
Martin’s face turned beet red. ‘No, hey, no, I just..” he struggled to find some words that wouldn’t give him away. Sharla giggled, and Shirley shook Martin by the shoulder. “Oh Martin, relax. She’s kidding,” Shirley assured him. “I think we all know you’d love to be alone with Sharla, if you just could finish this story.” She moved quickly to a table, pulled out a chair, and sat down. “Well come on, you guys, let’s get at it. I don’t have all night, and if we hurry, you just might salvage some of this date, Martin.”
Before Martin could feel any more embarrassed, Sharla took his hand, pulled him toward the table and said, “Come on, Martin, let’s get at it!”
Don came from back in the kitchen, and upon seeing Sharla and Shirley, hustled over to their table with a wet rag. “Ladies, let me make sure that table is clean for you.” He wiped down the sticky surface, stepped back to admire his work and then made a dramatic bow. “Ms. Whitefeather, Mrs. Campbell, I am at your service.”
Martin groaned, but Sharla and Shirley laughed out loud, obviously pleased to be fussed over by Don Wardle. Shirley whacked Martin on the arm and said, “Martin, you could learn a few things from Don.” She winked at Don and continued, “He knows how to treat women.”
Don grinned wickedly at Martin, bowed slightly again to Sharla and Shirley, and replied with mock modestly, “I only know that is the most wonderful thing in the world to be in the company of such beautiful women.” He threw the rag back to the bar and rubbed his hands together. “Okay, what can I get you folks.” It was almost as if Don suddenly remembered that his beautiful woman of the moment would be walking into Risky Dick’s at any moment, wanting his full attention. “How about a pitcher of Grain Belt? Are you in the mood for burgers tonight? I also have some pulled pork and barbeque sauce for sandwiches, if you’re interested.”
The group all agreed in unison that burgers were the meal of choice, and Don moved quickly to the kitchen. Martin could hear the sizzling of the ground beef on the griddle as he looked around the restaurant, taking in who of Burnett County’s citizenry was in the house. The place was unusually empty, something Martin was thankful for, though he didn’t know exactly why.
Don was back to the table with a pitcher of beer and three frosty mugs. “Here you go, Ladies, Martin.” He poured a mug for each of them, and went back to the bar to fill the pitcher up to the top again. “Here, this should keep you going for a while.” And he was gone again, back to the kitchen.
Martin picked up his mug and held it up. “To making sure Frank Talbot doesn’t hurt one more Indian girl.” Shirley and Sharla raised their mugs and clunked them into Martin’s. “To making sure Frank Talbot doesn’t hurt one more girl,” Shirley reiterated. “Indian or otherwise.”
+ + +
By the time Martin, Sharla and Shirley finished their burgers and had a couple of beers each, they had reviewed all they knew about Talbot’s activities, how the Sentinel had documented each incident (“or covered it up”, as Shirley liked to refer to it) and what they thought Martin should do next to corner him and wrap up his story at the same time.
“I think you should just interview Talbot and ask him point blank just what he thinks he’s been doing all these years,” Shirley suggested, indignantly. “And make sure you do it in public so lots of people can see him squirm.”
Martin shook his head. “I don’t know, Shirley. That seems a little too confrontational, and he’d probably cry ‘fowl’ to Clark.”
Sharla cut in. “And he’s such a snake, he’d deny it and probably pretty convincingly.” Shirley nodded. “You’re right. He’s a great liar.”
Each woman grew quiet as they each recalled their own humiliation and how Talbot had acted as if nothing happened in the limited aftermath. Martin got up and went to the bar to refill the pitcher. "Martin, would you bring me a Coke?" Sharla called after him. He looked around, craned his neck to see into the kitchen and couldn’t see Don anywhere. He called out, “Don, I’m refilling our pitcher and getting a Coke,” hoping he’d hear, and heard a muffled response from the store room behind the kitchen, “Help yourself.”
Martin moved toward the table and saw Sharla and Shirley deep in conversation. They shut up quickly when they saw him approach. “Here you go, Girls. If my journalism job doesn’t work out, I can be a bartender.” They looked at each other and began laughing. “Martin, you are a riot,” Shirley smiled up at him and held up her mug. “Fill me up, bar keep. I’m thirsty.”
Martin filled Shirley’s mug, set Sharla's Coke in front of her and was going to fill his own mug when he heard he heard the door open to Risky Dick’s. Jean Lundeen walked through the door, let out a gasp and said, “Martin, what are you doing here?”
Martin jumped off his bar stool, and hurried over to the door. “Hi, Guys, I see you’ve met.” Sharla and Shirley laughed together. “We sure did, Martin,” Sharla said, smiling at him. “What a great idea to invite Shirley to join us. But you know, if I didn’t know any better, I’d think you were afraid to be alone with me!”
Martin’s face turned beet red. ‘No, hey, no, I just..” he struggled to find some words that wouldn’t give him away. Sharla giggled, and Shirley shook Martin by the shoulder. “Oh Martin, relax. She’s kidding,” Shirley assured him. “I think we all know you’d love to be alone with Sharla, if you just could finish this story.” She moved quickly to a table, pulled out a chair, and sat down. “Well come on, you guys, let’s get at it. I don’t have all night, and if we hurry, you just might salvage some of this date, Martin.”
Before Martin could feel any more embarrassed, Sharla took his hand, pulled him toward the table and said, “Come on, Martin, let’s get at it!”
Don came from back in the kitchen, and upon seeing Sharla and Shirley, hustled over to their table with a wet rag. “Ladies, let me make sure that table is clean for you.” He wiped down the sticky surface, stepped back to admire his work and then made a dramatic bow. “Ms. Whitefeather, Mrs. Campbell, I am at your service.”
Martin groaned, but Sharla and Shirley laughed out loud, obviously pleased to be fussed over by Don Wardle. Shirley whacked Martin on the arm and said, “Martin, you could learn a few things from Don.” She winked at Don and continued, “He knows how to treat women.”
Don grinned wickedly at Martin, bowed slightly again to Sharla and Shirley, and replied with mock modestly, “I only know that is the most wonderful thing in the world to be in the company of such beautiful women.” He threw the rag back to the bar and rubbed his hands together. “Okay, what can I get you folks.” It was almost as if Don suddenly remembered that his beautiful woman of the moment would be walking into Risky Dick’s at any moment, wanting his full attention. “How about a pitcher of Grain Belt? Are you in the mood for burgers tonight? I also have some pulled pork and barbeque sauce for sandwiches, if you’re interested.”
The group all agreed in unison that burgers were the meal of choice, and Don moved quickly to the kitchen. Martin could hear the sizzling of the ground beef on the griddle as he looked around the restaurant, taking in who of Burnett County’s citizenry was in the house. The place was unusually empty, something Martin was thankful for, though he didn’t know exactly why.
Don was back to the table with a pitcher of beer and three frosty mugs. “Here you go, Ladies, Martin.” He poured a mug for each of them, and went back to the bar to fill the pitcher up to the top again. “Here, this should keep you going for a while.” And he was gone again, back to the kitchen.
Martin picked up his mug and held it up. “To making sure Frank Talbot doesn’t hurt one more Indian girl.” Shirley and Sharla raised their mugs and clunked them into Martin’s. “To making sure Frank Talbot doesn’t hurt one more girl,” Shirley reiterated. “Indian or otherwise.”
+ + +
By the time Martin, Sharla and Shirley finished their burgers and had a couple of beers each, they had reviewed all they knew about Talbot’s activities, how the Sentinel had documented each incident (“or covered it up”, as Shirley liked to refer to it) and what they thought Martin should do next to corner him and wrap up his story at the same time.
“I think you should just interview Talbot and ask him point blank just what he thinks he’s been doing all these years,” Shirley suggested, indignantly. “And make sure you do it in public so lots of people can see him squirm.”
Martin shook his head. “I don’t know, Shirley. That seems a little too confrontational, and he’d probably cry ‘fowl’ to Clark.”
Sharla cut in. “And he’s such a snake, he’d deny it and probably pretty convincingly.” Shirley nodded. “You’re right. He’s a great liar.”
Each woman grew quiet as they each recalled their own humiliation and how Talbot had acted as if nothing happened in the limited aftermath. Martin got up and went to the bar to refill the pitcher. "Martin, would you bring me a Coke?" Sharla called after him. He looked around, craned his neck to see into the kitchen and couldn’t see Don anywhere. He called out, “Don, I’m refilling our pitcher and getting a Coke,” hoping he’d hear, and heard a muffled response from the store room behind the kitchen, “Help yourself.”
Martin moved toward the table and saw Sharla and Shirley deep in conversation. They shut up quickly when they saw him approach. “Here you go, Girls. If my journalism job doesn’t work out, I can be a bartender.” They looked at each other and began laughing. “Martin, you are a riot,” Shirley smiled up at him and held up her mug. “Fill me up, bar keep. I’m thirsty.”
Martin filled Shirley’s mug, set Sharla's Coke in front of her and was going to fill his own mug when he heard he heard the door open to Risky Dick’s. Jean Lundeen walked through the door, let out a gasp and said, “Martin, what are you doing here?”
Monday, October 12, 2009
Chapter 30
Martin sat at of Don Wardle’s bar at 7:10, sipping a Grain Belt, nervously waiting for his dinner with Sharla and Shirley. Other than Don, Sharla hadn’t met any of his friends or family, which Martin knew was only a handful of people, but still. He felt like this was a big step, and he didn’t want to give anything away to anyone who would be sitting with him at Risky Dick’s, discussing the story and enjoying a meal.
When he asked Sharla to meet him for dinner, it felt like the most normal thing in the world. He liked her, that he knew for sure. And she seemed to like him. So why not get together?
But adding Shirley made it less like a date, and Martin hoped he hadn’t ruined whatever was developing between him and Sharla by missing a cue or acting on impulse. Inviting Shirley to join them felt pretty natural, too. He had a feeling that Shirley and Sharla would like each other. But maybe Sharla thought their dinner was a “date” date.
Martin looked up at the ceiling, closed his eyes and let out a big sigh. Don came up from the basement, carrying a full keg of beer and letting it drop with a “clunk” on the old linoleum behind the bar. He wiped his hands on his apron, put his hands on his hips and looked at Martin. “You know, Jimmy Olson? One of these days I’m going to figure out what the hell it is you keep seeing on my ceiling that makes you let out a sign like that.” Martin jerked his head down, opened his eyes and smiled at Don. “It isn’t your ceiling, Don, it’s me.”
Don chuckled. “You? What is it about you that makes you let out that sigh too deep for words?”
Martin gave a mock frown at Don’s Biblical poetry, then shook his head. “I don’t know. It just seems like every time I just go with the flow, I mess things up.” Don took Martin’s beer, and topped it off. “Like what?” he asked.
“Like I asked Sharla to meet me for dinner here tonight and made it almost seem like a work thing where we could talk about the story and Talbot. But it feels sort of like a date,” Martin explained. Don nodded. “So what’s wrong with that? It’s about time you started making some moves on that little cutie.”
Martin gave a slight shutter and continued. “Well, that’s kind of what I thought, but I don’t want to be too pushy, you know?” Don rolled his eyes.
“Don, cut it out! This isn’t easy for me, you know? I’ve never had a real date before, and I’ve never been particularly good with girls. I’m having a little trouble reading the cues…”
Don patted Martin’s hand. “Does she seem happy to see you when you stop by at Wild Bill’s?”
Martin nodded. “But she’s friendly, Don. She’s nice to everyone.”
Don shook his head. “Yeah, she’s friendly, but every time you ask her to do something or help you or whatever, she’s there, Martin, ready for action. I don’t see her doing that with the other guys that stop in to Wild Bill’s to pay too much for gas. She likes you, I can tell.”
Martin scratched his head and took a drink of his beer. “Well then, I think I messed this up,” he said. “I asked Shirley to join us to discuss the story. They will both be here at 7:30.”
Don let out a big whoop and slapped the bar. “Martin, you are something else.” He came around the bar and grabbed Martin’s shoulders from behind and shook him a little. “You think way too much, man, and you are way too sensitive. Relax! Okay, so you missed a chance to get your romance with Sharla jumpstarted tonight. You’re being natural and cool, and a go-getter. Women like that, trust me. No woman likes some guy mooning over them. The chase goes both ways, you know.”
Martin shook Don’s hands off his shoulders and turned around on his stool to face him. “The chase, Don? The chase? For God’s sake, please, no more advice. I’ll take it from here.” He smiled at Don and said, “Thanks, I appreciate the encouragement. Clearly, you have had more practice at this than I have.”
Don wiggled his eyebrows and winked at Martin. “Speaking of romance, guess who else is coming in for a burger and a beer tonight?” Don turned his back on Martin and sashayed back behind the bar. “The lovely Jean Lundeen will be joining us this evening at 8:00 p.m., and I plan to wow her once again with my charm and personality.”
Martin almost fell off the bar stool. “My mother...having dinner...with us?” he asked in a horrified tone that said he wasn’t looking forward to seeing her, not here, not tonight.
Don straightened up, put his hands on the bar and leaned over to get his face closer to Martin’s. “She’s not having dinner with ‘us’, Martin. She’s having dinner with me.” Don was so close to Martin, he could smell cologne and noticed he had shaved and was wearing a clean, white Polo shirt instead of a greasy Risky Dick’s T-shirt. He slapped his hands on the bar, flashed Martin a big grin and moved toward the kitchen. “Make sure you stay out of our way, Martin. I want that gorgeous woman’s full attention.”
Once again, Martin felt ill and his head started to spin. He couldn’t decide what upset him more – Don’s in-your-face courtship of his mother, or Jean and Sharla meeting for the first time. Either way, he knew it wasn’t going to be good.
When he asked Sharla to meet him for dinner, it felt like the most normal thing in the world. He liked her, that he knew for sure. And she seemed to like him. So why not get together?
But adding Shirley made it less like a date, and Martin hoped he hadn’t ruined whatever was developing between him and Sharla by missing a cue or acting on impulse. Inviting Shirley to join them felt pretty natural, too. He had a feeling that Shirley and Sharla would like each other. But maybe Sharla thought their dinner was a “date” date.
Martin looked up at the ceiling, closed his eyes and let out a big sigh. Don came up from the basement, carrying a full keg of beer and letting it drop with a “clunk” on the old linoleum behind the bar. He wiped his hands on his apron, put his hands on his hips and looked at Martin. “You know, Jimmy Olson? One of these days I’m going to figure out what the hell it is you keep seeing on my ceiling that makes you let out a sign like that.” Martin jerked his head down, opened his eyes and smiled at Don. “It isn’t your ceiling, Don, it’s me.”
Don chuckled. “You? What is it about you that makes you let out that sigh too deep for words?”
Martin gave a mock frown at Don’s Biblical poetry, then shook his head. “I don’t know. It just seems like every time I just go with the flow, I mess things up.” Don took Martin’s beer, and topped it off. “Like what?” he asked.
“Like I asked Sharla to meet me for dinner here tonight and made it almost seem like a work thing where we could talk about the story and Talbot. But it feels sort of like a date,” Martin explained. Don nodded. “So what’s wrong with that? It’s about time you started making some moves on that little cutie.”
Martin gave a slight shutter and continued. “Well, that’s kind of what I thought, but I don’t want to be too pushy, you know?” Don rolled his eyes.
“Don, cut it out! This isn’t easy for me, you know? I’ve never had a real date before, and I’ve never been particularly good with girls. I’m having a little trouble reading the cues…”
Don patted Martin’s hand. “Does she seem happy to see you when you stop by at Wild Bill’s?”
Martin nodded. “But she’s friendly, Don. She’s nice to everyone.”
Don shook his head. “Yeah, she’s friendly, but every time you ask her to do something or help you or whatever, she’s there, Martin, ready for action. I don’t see her doing that with the other guys that stop in to Wild Bill’s to pay too much for gas. She likes you, I can tell.”
Martin scratched his head and took a drink of his beer. “Well then, I think I messed this up,” he said. “I asked Shirley to join us to discuss the story. They will both be here at 7:30.”
Don let out a big whoop and slapped the bar. “Martin, you are something else.” He came around the bar and grabbed Martin’s shoulders from behind and shook him a little. “You think way too much, man, and you are way too sensitive. Relax! Okay, so you missed a chance to get your romance with Sharla jumpstarted tonight. You’re being natural and cool, and a go-getter. Women like that, trust me. No woman likes some guy mooning over them. The chase goes both ways, you know.”
Martin shook Don’s hands off his shoulders and turned around on his stool to face him. “The chase, Don? The chase? For God’s sake, please, no more advice. I’ll take it from here.” He smiled at Don and said, “Thanks, I appreciate the encouragement. Clearly, you have had more practice at this than I have.”
Don wiggled his eyebrows and winked at Martin. “Speaking of romance, guess who else is coming in for a burger and a beer tonight?” Don turned his back on Martin and sashayed back behind the bar. “The lovely Jean Lundeen will be joining us this evening at 8:00 p.m., and I plan to wow her once again with my charm and personality.”
Martin almost fell off the bar stool. “My mother...having dinner...with us?” he asked in a horrified tone that said he wasn’t looking forward to seeing her, not here, not tonight.
Don straightened up, put his hands on the bar and leaned over to get his face closer to Martin’s. “She’s not having dinner with ‘us’, Martin. She’s having dinner with me.” Don was so close to Martin, he could smell cologne and noticed he had shaved and was wearing a clean, white Polo shirt instead of a greasy Risky Dick’s T-shirt. He slapped his hands on the bar, flashed Martin a big grin and moved toward the kitchen. “Make sure you stay out of our way, Martin. I want that gorgeous woman’s full attention.”
Once again, Martin felt ill and his head started to spin. He couldn’t decide what upset him more – Don’s in-your-face courtship of his mother, or Jean and Sharla meeting for the first time. Either way, he knew it wasn’t going to be good.
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Chapter 29
Martin got back to the Sentinel building about 1-1/2 hours later then he’d told Sam he would. He and Sharla just kept talking, and before he knew it, it was almost 4:20 p.m. He raced back to the Sentinel office and rushed into the building, just in time to run into Shirley leaving for the day. “Gotta get to my mom’s and…”. Shirley stopped mid-sentence. She could see Martin was lost in thought, and checked the front parking lot to see if anyone was coming in with him. “Hey, Martin, are you okay?” She moved closer to him and looked him right in the eyes. He looked back at her with a look that told her he had just gathered an important piece of information. “You’ve found something out about Talbot,” she whispered, urgently. “What’s up?”
He pushed past her gently and said, “Come back to my cube. I want to look at some of the old papers from the early 80s.”
Shirley followed him back to his desk, trying to keep her Swedish clogs from clomping too loudly across the old wooden floors. “Don’t worry, I don’t think anybody here,” Martin reassured her. For 4:30 in the afternoon on a Monday, the place was unusually dead, not a soul in sight. And most of the lights had been turned off. “Jeez,” Martin muttered, “doesn’t anyone work a full eight hours anymore?”
“You should talk, Lover Boy,” Shirley replied. “Where the heck have you been for the past hour and a half? Smooching it up with your honey?”
Martin stopped dead in his tracks, and turned to face Shirley so quickly, she almost ran into him. She leered up at him, a satisfied smirk on her face. “For your information, Shirley, I was not smooching up Sharla Whitefeather…” Shirley’s face changed to one of shock. “Sharla Whitefeather. Hoohoo, Martin, I was just kidding. You were with Sharla Whitefeather?” She said it in such shock and amazement that Martin thought she didn’t think he had a prayer with Sharla. He tried to mask his hurt, and continued through her laugher, “Shirley, knock it off. I went to see Sharla, who is a friend of mine, by the way, to get some information on the Tribal Community.” Shirley stopped laughing, and listened. “I was interviewing Karen Howe today and something about her reaction when I mentioned Talbot made me think she might be one of his victims.”
Martin moved into his cube, sat behind his desk and motioned her to sit down on the folding chair next to his desk. He could see Shirley was confused and getting ready to pooh pooh his idea, but he held up his hand. “Let me finish. I know what you’re going to say, ‘he only preys on Native American girls’. Well, I got to thinking, what if Karen was part Indian? And that’s why I went to Wild Bill’s. I knew Sharla would know.”
Shirley looked at him and squinted her eyes. “Karen Howe? No way…,” she said, and then saw Martin nodding his head. “Karen Howe, an Indian?”
Martin kept nodding. “Yep, on her mother’s side. 50%. An ethnic fact hidden by her father’s money and power in Burnett County.” Martin slapped his hand on his desk. “Now, if I can just find something from around the time he attacked her, something that would prove he made a move on her, a bad one.” He dug through his pile of papers, found a batch from the 1980s and handed half of them to Shirley. “I remember something about Karen’s family in the papers from when we looked before,” Martin said, half to himself. “Something about their family or their kids or something…”
“Martin, I can’t do this right now,” Shirley protested. “I told you, I have to go to my mother’s and make her dinner tonight. Her Meals on Wheels volunteer is on vacation, and I need to make sure she gets something to eat.”
Martin looked up from digging in his pile, and slumped back in his seat. Then, he sat up again and shook his head. “Don’t worry about it, Shirley. I’m going to find something, and will report back.” He smiled at her. “Say, what are you doing for dinner tonight? Are you just fixing dinner for your mom or staying to eat with her?”
Shirley thought a minute. “I was going to stay and eat with her, but what did you have in mind?”
“Sharla and I are having a burger at Risky Dick’s. We’re going to talk over the story and throw some ideas around for how we can trap Frank Talbot.” His eyes looked eager as he talked. “If you join us, it will be one more brain for us to tap into. And Don will be there, too. He knows what’s going on. I figure you can all help me figure out my next steps.”
He stopped and looked satisfied with himself. Shirley looked at him intently, got up and started moving out of the cube. “Martin, you are something,” she said, laughing a little. “Okay, I’ll be there. It will be fun.” She groaned. “What time?”
“7:30 sharp,” Martin replied.
“Okay, 7:30 sharp it is then,” Shirley said as she turned to walk out of the newsroom. “And you can pay for dinner since I’m sure you were planning on treating Ms. Whitefeather to dinner as well?” She looked back at him and winked. “Don’t worry, Martin, the secrets of your love life are safe with me.”
He pushed past her gently and said, “Come back to my cube. I want to look at some of the old papers from the early 80s.”
Shirley followed him back to his desk, trying to keep her Swedish clogs from clomping too loudly across the old wooden floors. “Don’t worry, I don’t think anybody here,” Martin reassured her. For 4:30 in the afternoon on a Monday, the place was unusually dead, not a soul in sight. And most of the lights had been turned off. “Jeez,” Martin muttered, “doesn’t anyone work a full eight hours anymore?”
“You should talk, Lover Boy,” Shirley replied. “Where the heck have you been for the past hour and a half? Smooching it up with your honey?”
Martin stopped dead in his tracks, and turned to face Shirley so quickly, she almost ran into him. She leered up at him, a satisfied smirk on her face. “For your information, Shirley, I was not smooching up Sharla Whitefeather…” Shirley’s face changed to one of shock. “Sharla Whitefeather. Hoohoo, Martin, I was just kidding. You were with Sharla Whitefeather?” She said it in such shock and amazement that Martin thought she didn’t think he had a prayer with Sharla. He tried to mask his hurt, and continued through her laugher, “Shirley, knock it off. I went to see Sharla, who is a friend of mine, by the way, to get some information on the Tribal Community.” Shirley stopped laughing, and listened. “I was interviewing Karen Howe today and something about her reaction when I mentioned Talbot made me think she might be one of his victims.”
Martin moved into his cube, sat behind his desk and motioned her to sit down on the folding chair next to his desk. He could see Shirley was confused and getting ready to pooh pooh his idea, but he held up his hand. “Let me finish. I know what you’re going to say, ‘he only preys on Native American girls’. Well, I got to thinking, what if Karen was part Indian? And that’s why I went to Wild Bill’s. I knew Sharla would know.”
Shirley looked at him and squinted her eyes. “Karen Howe? No way…,” she said, and then saw Martin nodding his head. “Karen Howe, an Indian?”
Martin kept nodding. “Yep, on her mother’s side. 50%. An ethnic fact hidden by her father’s money and power in Burnett County.” Martin slapped his hand on his desk. “Now, if I can just find something from around the time he attacked her, something that would prove he made a move on her, a bad one.” He dug through his pile of papers, found a batch from the 1980s and handed half of them to Shirley. “I remember something about Karen’s family in the papers from when we looked before,” Martin said, half to himself. “Something about their family or their kids or something…”
“Martin, I can’t do this right now,” Shirley protested. “I told you, I have to go to my mother’s and make her dinner tonight. Her Meals on Wheels volunteer is on vacation, and I need to make sure she gets something to eat.”
Martin looked up from digging in his pile, and slumped back in his seat. Then, he sat up again and shook his head. “Don’t worry about it, Shirley. I’m going to find something, and will report back.” He smiled at her. “Say, what are you doing for dinner tonight? Are you just fixing dinner for your mom or staying to eat with her?”
Shirley thought a minute. “I was going to stay and eat with her, but what did you have in mind?”
“Sharla and I are having a burger at Risky Dick’s. We’re going to talk over the story and throw some ideas around for how we can trap Frank Talbot.” His eyes looked eager as he talked. “If you join us, it will be one more brain for us to tap into. And Don will be there, too. He knows what’s going on. I figure you can all help me figure out my next steps.”
He stopped and looked satisfied with himself. Shirley looked at him intently, got up and started moving out of the cube. “Martin, you are something,” she said, laughing a little. “Okay, I’ll be there. It will be fun.” She groaned. “What time?”
“7:30 sharp,” Martin replied.
“Okay, 7:30 sharp it is then,” Shirley said as she turned to walk out of the newsroom. “And you can pay for dinner since I’m sure you were planning on treating Ms. Whitefeather to dinner as well?” She looked back at him and winked. “Don’t worry, Martin, the secrets of your love life are safe with me.”
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