Read All the Things You Are Online
Authors: Declan Hughes
âIt was the Bicentennial, wasn't it?' Gene says, a false smile suddenly appearing on his face, his voice a little loud.
âI don't think that mattered to us. Anyway, Ralph would have known immediately what to think of a name like Claire Bradbury. Claire being my wife's name. But then you know that, don't you, Gene?'
Silent now, Gene tries to hold Danny's gaze, breaks it, his eyes flickering to his laptop screen and to whatever else is on his desk.
âRalph said we'd all agreed it was me who threw the fire bottle at the wall of the house. At your insistence. He said your voice was the loudest, your memory was the clearest, your opinion the surest. You prevailed. And Ralph went along with it for a while. But something just didn't sit right with him. It began to niggle away at him. See, Ralph was behind me when I ran into the tree, he had shoved me, to get me out of the blazing skull. And he never saw me throw the fire bottle.'
âWhat did Dave say?' Gene snaps.
âHe said he saw me throw it, but it was clear it was by accident, it was because I was trying to keep my balance. But Ralphâ'
âYou know what Dave says, and you know what I say, but the one you want to believe is Ralph, who said, what, let me guess, you didn't throw it?'
âHe said he went back a year or so ago and got access to the report of the original investigation. There was one fire bottle found on the site. We didn't bring but four. Ralph said he threw his, after he got me out of the fire. By which time I was unconscious and in no condition to throw anything. He said the other two bottles were thrown then, one by an F and one by a P.'
Gene frowns. âAn F and a P?'
âWe were the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, remember? Fire, Famine, Pestilence and Plague. I was Fire, Dave was Famine, Ralph was Pestilence, and you were Plague. He remembers yours because as soon as he knew you were a P, that's what he had to be too. Him being your little shadow. And I remember being Fire, so by a process of elimination, Dave was Famine.'
Gene looks at Danny and then towards the window, his mouth opening and closing as if he is having difficulty breathing. He forms his lips into the shape of a word, but Danny doesn't let him speak.
âRalph said the one who threw the bottle, and it looked quite deliberate, had a P on his shirt. It wasn't him. So it must have been you.'
A phone rings and Gene answers it. âYes. Yes. All right. I'll be out now.' He snaps shut his laptop and rises. âDanny, I'm sorry about this, I have to ⦠if you want to wait here, it shouldn't take long.'
âNow?'
âIt really can't wait, I'm afraid. But listen to me: Ralph may have got closer to the truth, but it's still not the final version. I hope I can help you, Dan. I really do.'
Gene's phone chimes out again and he puts it to his ear as he leaves the office. There's the sound of voices down the corridor. Danny wanders across to the desk and opens the laptop. Mail, the email program, is the front window on the screen. The message it opens to has the subject line:
DANNY BROGAN WANTED,
and in the body of the message, a link that has already been clicked. Danny clicks it himself, and arrives at Madison.com, a news source for the city, to find himself today's top story.
BOLO FOR BROGAN,
runs the headline. The intro goes:
MADISON BAR OWNER WANTED IN CONNECTION WITH TWO MURDERS.
Oh, Christ. That was what Gene was reading. Where has he gone, to get the cops? Danny perches on a chair and peers out through the glass panel at the top of the exterior office wall. He can't see anything, but he can hear men's voices, and the crackle and beep sound of what could be police or security two-way radios. Danny leaps off the chair, flings opens the door and looks in the other direction. There's a door at the end of the corridor. He paces out and tries the handle. It opens on to a small room with a sink and a fridge for making tea and coffee. He hears a heavy tread coming from reception and retreats back into the office. The only thing he can think of is the clothes rail. He stands on the wall side of the heavily laden rail with one end nudging up towards the door and waits. Either it will work or it won't, he thinks, along with how the fuck did things come to this?
The door opens and Danny sees Gene enter at pace, followed by two uniformed cops. Immediately he rams the clothes rail against the opposite wall, blocking the doorway, with himself on the door side and Gene and the cops on the other. Does he have even ten seconds? He doesn't think, he just runs, along the corridor, through reception, down a couple of sets of stairs. He's grabbed some sportswear off the rail and he throws it behind him as he goes, partly because it reminds him of something he's seen in a movie and partly because it might catch someone in the face or under foot. Go.
Go
.
Three floors down, he bolts along the corridor in the opposite direction from the tea and coffee room side of the building. He can hear the pounding of heavy cop feet continuing on down the stairs as he goes. There must be a service elevator somewhere in the Ainslie building, and there's nowhere else for it to be. He sees a pair of swing doors at the end of the corridor, and hears another pair smash open behind him.
âHold up or I'll shoot!'
He'll shoot? Fuck that. Bluffing. Danny flings a couple baseball shirts in the air behind him and powers on towards the door. A shot rings out. Warning. Bluffing. Fuck it. He's not stopping. A shot? No. It was a door slam, a furniture crash. And he's through the doors, and there it is, gray doors and a gray metal meal trolley beside it. He leans on the button, down, down, and the footsteps are getting closer, and the elevator is coming, thirty-two, thirty-three, thirty-four. As it pings and the doors open, he swings the metal meal trolley across and jams it beneath the handles of the swing doors and makes the service elevator door just as it's closing and hits the lower-ground-floor button.
As he's going down, his phone rings. He must have left it on after he called Gene to set up the meet. Well, no sense in turning it off again; he's been well and truly traced by now. He looks at the screen, and answers. âMrs Brogan?'
âYou remembered. Well done. Mr Brogan.'
âDid you remember?'
âAll the time.'
âI was there, Claire. The Allegro Hotel. Room four-three-five?'
âYou were in Chicago?'
âJust ⦠passing through.'
âPassing through? What does that mean?'
âIt means ⦠Claire, I know we need to talk, but right now, there are cops after me.'
âYou're in Gene Peterson's office, right? I'm in Chicago too, in the Old Town? Can you make it over here? You can get the El, faster than a cab.'
âWhat station? I'm on North Mich here.'
âYou're on North Mich ⦠go north one block to Grand Avenue, it runs under so you've got to use the steps, then ⦠west two blocks, no, three, Grand and State. It's the red line, ride north to Fullerton.'
âThank you. I've done nothing wrong, Claire.'
âNeither have I, Danny. Neither have I.'
Danny closes the call as the elevator hits the lower-ground floor. If no one has done anything wrong, just how have they managed to land in so much shit?
D
etective Nora Fox is at her desk at the West District station house on McKenna Boulevard. She has passed the Miraculous Medal on for fingerprinting: crosschecking with the alleged murder weapon may tell if there is a third party in the frame, or if the evidence points to Danny Brogan. She has checked in with Ken Fowler, who tells her that Jeff Torrance's red '76 Mustang was spotted parked on North Clark Street in Chicago by a CPD beat officer, and that the vehicle is now under surveillance ready for the suspect's return. Ralph Cowley was unmarried, but he had a sister living in Milwaukee; she's expected tomorrow to identify the body. He ran a preliminary financial check on Danny Brogan's finances, and found them to be in as heinous a condition as you might imagine of someone against whom the bank had initiated foreclosure proceedings, and far worse than his wife had thought. On top of the money borrowed to invest with Jonathan Glatt ($205,000 on top of the $50,000 in savings) there is a further $5,000 monthly cash withdrawal, which raises the question: who needs five grand a month, on top of all other average household spending? Elton John for fresh flowers? No documentary or anecdotal evidence points to Brogan being a degenerate gambler.
Having delivered his report, Nora expects that Ken will, as usual, want to go home, but no, he's happy to stay at his desk. Halloween is not a night to be in the house. Now Nora is back at her desk, examining the file her friend Cass Epstein from the Wisconsin Department of Children and Families has left for her.
There's a birth certificate for Claire Bradberry, DOB 2/9/1973, with the relevant details: her father's name, her mother's maiden name (Howard), their ages, their states of birth (father Wisconsin, mother Illinois).
There's a report from the social worker who handled the case in November 1976, after the fire, detailing the contacts made with Claire's two surviving brothers (the child having been placed in temporary foster care with a family in the Milwaukee suburb of River Hills that had experience of dealing with potentially traumatized infants). Neither brother expressed any wish to stand in
loco parentis
to Claire, or to have any say in her fate. In fact, it's noted, âsubjects expressed zero interest even in meeting the child, whom neither had seen since she was a baby.'
There's the documentation detailing the contacts between the Wisconsin DCF and the Family Future adoption agency on Miflin St, starting with the rationale for choosing Family Future over any other agency (usually there would have been an attempt to match, socially, culturally, ethnically, the background of the child to the adoptive family, but in the case of the Bradberrys, âother factors may and should be considered.' In other words, and despite the fact that social services had failed to catch the Bradberry family while they were alive, the level of dysfunction present in the house was such that it was thought better to make a clean break of it.
And there are the records of the adoption: the Consent to Adoption form signed on the child's behalf on February 4, 1977, and the Adoption Confirmation form, signed on Claire Bradberry's fourth birthday, February 9, 1977, by Barry and Janet Marshall of Kenosha, Wisconsin. And although, in the light of the DCF's willingness to dispense with any attempt to match the backgrounds of adoptive parents and child, it would be stretching it too far to describe it as an irony, Barry Marshall's profession is noted as that of medical doctor.
In September, 1980, there are a number of reports and minutes of case conferences between Kenosha Department of Human Services, the Family Future Adoption Agency and Wisconsin DCF following the cardiac arrest and sudden death of Barry Marshall. Case workers agree that, while in some respects Janet Marshall is considered eccentric (she has an interest in spiritualism, and one of her neighbors reported seeing her sunbathing in the nude, although upon investigation, it emerged a) that the sunbathing took place while the child, now called Deirdre Marshall, was in school, and b) that in order for this neighbor to have seen Janet Marshall naked, he would have had to climb up on his roof as far as the chimney pot â which, it subsequently emerged, was exactly what he had done), she and the child have formed an extremely strong bond. A testimonial from Janet Marshall, which is littered with flaky-to-the-max references to birth signs and gem stones and reincarnation but is obviously warm and loving and, as importantly, intelligent and otherwise sensible, and an account of an interview conducted with the seven-year-old Deirdre, in which she displays considerable affection towards Janet, whom she calls Mommy, and recurring gratitude (to whom it is unclear, but it appears to be some indeterminate spiritual power or entity) that while Daddy was taken away, Mommy is still here.
Recommendation: That Janet be entrusted to raise Deirdre as a lone parent.
In 1985 there's a further sheaf of case notes and conference reports between the agencies already dealing with the case and the California DCF and Department of Human Services. Janet Marshall intended to marry another doctor, Thomas Adler, with a family practice in Santa Monica, and to move herself and Deirdre out to live in Los Angeles. Background checks were run on Adler (even though he had no stated intention of adopting Deirdre) and testimonials were recorded once more. Janet's is even flakier than the last time, as if the West Coast is already working its counter-cultural magic in her brain; Nora particularly enjoys Janet's analogy between her imminent wedding and the partial eclipse of one planet by another. But the baseline is still that Deirdre will attend an expensive private school, she will go to university, she will make the best of herself. Deirdre, by now a mature twelve, alternately enthuses about the school she will attend and the fact that she's getting out of Hicksville at last, and worries, in a humorous manner, that California might not only turn her mother into even more of a hippie than she is already, it could start to work its dubious spell on herself. Much discussion is devoted to whether drugs play any part in the Marshall household, and if medical reports and even a police investigation are required, but it is decided that there is insufficient evidence to support this approach, and that, while it is clear that Deirdre is increasingly looking on her mother as, if not a liability, certainly an embarrassment, this is not an unusual development in the relationship between adolescent females and their mothers.
There are several further pieces of documentation. In 1994, requests are made when Deirdre is twenty-one through the Wisconsin Adoption Registry for genetic and medical information on her birth family, and for their identities. There follows another raft of paperwork on the rights and wrongs of releasing the names of her birth parents without their having issued consenting affidavits, notwithstanding the fact that the Bradberrys didn't voluntarily surrender their daughter: they died. There is a strong argument made by several of the case workers to the effect that the circumstances of Deirdre's family's death are so distressing and potentially disturbing that it might well prove more beneficial to her if the knowledge is withheld. Countering this is the position that this would in effect be to play God, and that none of the statutory bodies have this right. Psychiatric assessments and psychological profiles are requested. Eventually, it is concluded that, on balance, the identities of the birth parents should be disclosed. A series of further meetings and consultations ensue, and it is considered that, given the circumstances, the subject is bearing up remarkably well. A few further details of Deirdre's life at this time are noted.