Electing To Murder (10 page)

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Authors: Roger Stelljes

BOOK: Electing To Murder
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“Do you have a picture of Sally in a bikini on your phone?” Lich always egged Mac on about Sally’s figure, which was fantastic and which usually pissed Mac off. He constantly begged for an invite to Mac’s boat on the St. Croix so he could see her in a two-piece.

“Pictures? Of her individually in a two-piece? No. There are a few of her and I together and she’s in a two-piece.”

“Show me and I’ll try sushi.”

Mac contemplated Lich’s counter for a few minutes. Then he gave in, but with an added condition: “You’ll eat sushi and you’ll do it with chopsticks. And partner, if you ever tell Sally I showed you these pictures, I swear to God I will put the entire clip from my Sig in your ass.”

“Deal.”

For the last six months, every Friday Mac bought sushi for lunch at Sakamura’s. And for the last six months there had been nothing funnier in Mac’s life than watching Dick Lick try to eat sushi with chopsticks. No matter how many times he showed Dick the technique with his thumb and index finger, and his partner, to his credit, tried every single time, the man simply lacked the dexterity.

Mac put the last of his six pieces in his mouth and pulled out his American Express card while Lich chewed on his last piece. “Six months, Dicky Boy, and you keep coming back.”

Lich liked the place so much he and his lady friend Dot were now coming twice a week. “Mac, I love this stuff and I’m even losing some weight.”

“Really, I hadn’t noticed,” Mac deadpanned. Lich, with a well-developed beer gut, looked as round as ever.

“Asshole.”

“That’s Mr. Asshole Sir who pays for this spread every week.”

“Thanks, Mr. Asshole Sir.”

Lunch at Sakamura’s made particular sense this day because it was located across the street from their next stop. Mac signed the receipt, slipped his credit card back in his wallet and he and his partner pushed themselves away from the lunch bar and stepped out into the cool autumn air. The sky was overcast and a cool northerly breeze threaded its way through the office towers of downtown St. Paul. Mac checked his smart phone and clicked on the weather icon which informed him the temperature was a brisk forty-six degrees. “This weather reminds me of high school football weather,” Mac said, thinking back to his days quarterbacking at Cretin Derham-Hall High.

“Friday night lights,” Lich responded. “Will you be going to the Cretin playoff game tomorrow?”

“I’m planning on it. They’ve got the Stillwater Ponies.”

The dark green glass façade of the Landmark Tower rose twenty-five stories in front of Mac and Lich as they crossed St. Peter Street. Mac opened the glass door and let Lich walk through as they entered the lobby for the Landmark Tower.

“This is a rough day for you,” Lich mentioned lightly.

“How so?” Mac asked, not picking up on his partner’s comment.

“Not only did you have to buy me lunch, but now we have to meet with a bunch of political operators. Sucks to be you.”

Mac exhaled, and uttered, “A politician will never …”

“… Find a better job,” Lich finished. They must have said it to each other a thousand times.

Mac didn’t care for politicians or their aides. In most cases, he could barely conceal his disdain for them. It didn’t matter the political party, Democrat or Republican, most of them failed in his eyes. There was the occasional politician he ran across who seemed more interested in getting something done than fighting political battles. Mac usually voted for those politicians, regardless of party. Those types of politicians weren’t overly liberal or conservative. Sure they were on one side or the other, but they were pragmatic, willing to compromise, make a deal and solve a problem. Those politicians got Mac’s support because that’s the way he looked at problems. In fact, that’s the way most people looked at problems. Find a solution and get it done. To McRyan, it didn’t matter if it was his solution or someone else’s, if it would work, do it. That’s what the best and the brightest did, whether it was politics, business or education. The best saw a problem, evaluated the possible solutions, picked what they thought was the best one and went with it.

Unfortunately, the best and the brightest rarely ran for public office in these polarized political times and the country ultimately suffered for it. Sally, the love of Mac’s life, a top notch county prosecutor, was still idealistic enough to believe in the political process. She’d readily jumped at the chance to work with her old college friend Kate Shelby on Governor James Thomson’s campaign for president. That experience had given Sally an up close and personal view of why great people, brilliant minds, the best and the brightest, avoided politics.

“Mac, you wouldn’t believe the scrutiny Thomson is under, the questions that are asked, the parts of his life he has to expose. The microscope he is under. It is all so intrusive. Basically his life is an open book. I can understand why so few good people are willing to subject themselves to it. This country needs the best and the brightest, but why, if you’re worth millions, would you put yourself through all of this?”

So the government ended up with extremely liberal and conservative politicians more interested in ideological purity than getting anything accomplished. All around them Rome was burning, yet the politicians spent all their time fighting each other, constantly jockeying for political position for the next election, all the while problem after problem, whether it was health care, Social Security, Medicare, the tax code, the environment, infrastructure, the budget deficit or the national debt, went unaddressed.

The only thing that gave Mac some solace was that Governor James Thomson was one of the few politicians he admired and Judge Dixon was as good a man as there was. Those two men gave Mac a modicum of hope. He knew his vote on Tuesday would be for a good man.

James Thomson was a Democrat but for eight years he’d run the state of Minnesota in a pragmatic and practical fashion. The state had its share of problems like the rest of the country, but he had success bringing people together across the aisle to get things done and was smart enough to let all share in the credit. Minnesota had universal health care, a balanced budget and the third lowest unemployment rate in the country. The state’s economic growth rate far exceeded the national average and Minnesota was one of the few Midwestern states to come through the recession in good shape. It was that level of success that allowed a governor, little known outside his own state eighteen months ago, to capture the nomination. Of course, it didn’t hurt that Judge Dixon was running his campaign, not a, but
the
master political operative.

“So you think these guys will have heard of Stroudt?” Lich asked as they waited for the elevator to open.

“Probably,” Mac answered. “Collins and Brach up in the sixth were familiar with him from his writings, particularly Brach, since Stroudt has written thoroughly …”

“ … and negatively she added …”

“… on the Republican Super PACs,” Mac finished. “But they didn’t know him or why he’d be here.”

They’d spent the morning following up on Mac’s to do list items and had struck out. Mac had Paddy McRyan review the surveillance cameras from the Grand Brew on Snelling. The footage showed Stroudt sitting at a table for two hours, using his laptop and making one phone call. There was nothing otherwise remarkable on the surveillance footage. Strike one. The GPS for Stroudt’s rental car that was rented in Nashville and returned in St. Louis showed they traveled to Lake Barkley in western Kentucky. The car stopped for a little over an hour in a driveway for a cabin owned by Hugh and Mabel Curran. The Curran’s were unfamiliar with either Stroudt or Montgomery, had no idea why they would park in their driveway and the elderly couple hadn’t been to their cabin since Labor Day, having moved early down to Fort Myers, Florida, for the winter. Strike two. Finally, a review of the security cameras around the Rosedale Mall failed to pick up Stroudt’s rental car prior to its being dropped at the Penalty Box. Strike three. In addition, Mac and Lich went up to the campaign headquarters for the candidates in the Sixth Congressional District, a hotly contested election involving a firebrand Republican congresswoman, and neither her campaign nor that of her opponent were familiar with Stroudt or Montgomery. All in all, the morning was a bust. Mac hoped their visit to the Thomson campaign would prove more helpful.

Mac and Lich walked off the elevator on the fifteenth floor for the Becker, Marino and Oliphant law firm. Sally was waiting for them in the lobby of the thirty-two-attorney law firm that had been an early legal home for Judge Dixon. The Thomson Campaign Headquarters were five floors above. However, with the election less than a week away and the razor thin lead, having a locally recognizable homicide detective walking through the campaign offices and meeting with campaign staffers would raise questions, even if there was no reason that it should.

“Hey there,” Sally said, walking up and giving Mac a soft kiss on the lips.

“Hey yourself,” Mac answered, smiling as Sally wiped some of her lipstick from his lips. They smiled longingly at each other.

Lich rolled his eyes. “After two years I would have thought the PDAs would have stopped.”

“It feels like two years since we saw each other,” Sally retorted, last night notwithstanding.

“Just a few more days,” Mac added, “and maybe we can get back to normal.” Then Mac got things on track. “So where are we meeting, the conference room?” He pointed to the ornate conference room with black leather chairs, dark paneled walls and the majestic view out over the Mississippi River.

“No, we’re going to a back conference room,” Sally said as she laced her fingers through Mac’s and led them back. “One that people can’t see into.”

As they scrambled in the kitchen this morning, Mac told Sally what he knew about Stroudt. She didn’t know who Stroudt was but thought Sebastian McCormick or Kate Shelby might know him or have some idea as to why he would be in town. That had been Mac’s hope in planting the seed with Sally. He figured she could get him in to ask questions quicker than if he contacted the campaign on his own and had to wade through fifteen layers of bureaucracy to get to the top.

Sally opened the door into the conference room and led them in. Kate Shelby was standing just inside the door. “Hey Mac,” she said as she gave him a quick hug.

“Kate, this is my partner Richard Lich,” Shelby extended her hand to Lich. Sally was an attractive woman but Shelby looked like a lingerie model. Mac smirked as Lich tried not to drool.

Sally guided Mac to the other side of the conference table, “Mac, this is Sebastian McCormick, our deputy campaign manager,” Mac recognized him from television, having seen him on
Meet the Press
two weeks ago. The two men shook hands. Then a deep voice came booming out of the telephone on the conference table.

“Michael MacKenzie McRyan, is that you, son?” Judge Dixon’s unmistakable voice came over the conference call phone in the middle of the table.

Mac went on alert. He didn’t expect Judge Dixon. “Judge, where are you calling in from?”

“Ohio, my boy. The only place to be during election season.”

“How are you, sir? It’s been a long time.”

“I’m fine, young man, and you’re right, it has been a while.” The Judge and Mac chatted for a minute or two about friends and acquaintances with the Judge finishing by asking about Mac’s mom and talking up Sally. “Thank you for loaning us Sally these last three months,” Dixon said. “She’s really doing a phenomenal job for us, just phenomenal, a real natural.” Mac looked over to Sally who beamed.

“I’m not sure I was left much of a choice, Judge,” Mac replied smiling back at her. “But my better half is scary smart, isn’t she?”

“Indeed, son, indeed.” Mac and Lich took a seat on one side of the large table, and Shelby and McCormick on the other. Sally sat on the end to Mac’s right. “So what can we do for the St. Paul Police Department?” Dixon asked.

“Judge, I’m working a murder that happened yesterday at The Snelling and I’m wondering if you or the campaign can help me. The reason I’m asking you about it is the victim was Jason Stroudt.” Mac spent a minute giving the ten-thousand-foot version of what they knew about Stroudt and his trip to the Twin Cities. “So do any of you know Mr. Stroudt?” Mac looked to Shelby first.

“I know of him but I don’t know him, Mac,” Kate replied. “I’ve read some of his articles but other than that, I don’t know him.”

“I know Jason, or should I say I knew him,” McCormick volunteered. “I went to law school with him.”

Mac’s eyebrow shot up. He didn’t know McCormick well and hadn’t done any research on him, although he had on Stroudt. “So you went to the University of Virginia Law School then?”

“Yes.”

“How well did you know him, Mr. McCormick? Was he in your class? Your law school section? Did you graduate together?”

“All of those.”

“Really? Was he a friend?”

“I would say he was. Not a real close one but we certainly knew each other and ran in similar circles.”

“Did you stay close after law school?”

“No, we really didn’t,” McCormick answered, shaking his head. “I moved back here and got into state politics and he stayed out east, moving up to DC.”

“When was the last time you saw him?”

“It was a couple of years ago. It was at a UVA law school reunion back in Charlottesville. I saw him then, chatted for a bit, talked some politics and that was that.” Mac noted the matter-of-fact nature of the response from McCormick, as if he had planned for it and knew the question would be coming. And there was no emotion. The political operative leaned back in the leather chair with one leg crossed over the other. There was no shock at the death of a friend. Even if he hadn’t seen the friend in two years, even if it wasn’t that close a friend, he should have registered some emotion. Instead, Mac saw nothing but ice.

“Have you seen or spoke with him since?”

“I haven’t.”

“He was here in St. Paul, Mr. McCormick, and you didn’t hear from him? I find that kind of hard to believe.”

“He didn’t call me and I didn’t see him, Detective,” McCormick answered casually.

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