The Solomon Scandals A Washington newspaper novel by David Rothman

Chapters 1–3

Fore­word
By Rebecca Kitiona-Fenton, Ph.D.,
of the Insti­tute for the Study of Pre­vir­tual Media

image Just what to make of my great-great-uncle’s news­pa­per memoirs?

When Aunt Erica first told me of them, I did not know what to anticipate—they might, for all I knew, have been about whal­ing. I almost expected to read of har­poons and blub­ber boilers.

Type­writ­ers existed out­side muse­ums back then. And those quaint old chron­i­cles known as blogs had yet to bewil­der and hor­rify the élite.

imageWash­ing­ton, D.C., in skin color, was not so mul­ti­hued. Rich, pale ladies born in the 1800s, the very cen­tury of Moby Dick, lin­gered on in gar­goyled apart­ment build­ings. Civil War wid­ows still breathed.

Even before first see­ing Uncle Jon’s mem­oirs about the Solomon scan­dals, I had known of George McWilliams. He had been Jon’s edi­tor at the Wash­ing­ton Telegram and lorded over the most skilled of har­poon­ers. Then one day his Ahab-like cap­taincy ended with a bloody dénoue­ment in the park­ing lot.

No mat­ter where Uncle Jon is these days, and regard­less of the usual aca­d­e­mic stric­tures against sen­ti­men­tal­ity, I wish him the hap­pi­est and most accu­rate of harpooning.

–Rebecca Kitiona-Fenton, Ph.D., of the Insti­tute for the Study of Pre­vir­tual Media, Wash­ing­ton, D.C. Jan­u­ary 4, 2081

Chap­ter 1

Wendy Blevin’s obit­u­ary in the Wash­ing­ton Telegram ran only 578 words—a notably miserly length. As much as any­one, she was a nat­ural for a long fea­ture in the “She had every­thing to live for” vein. I say this despite the Solomon scandals.

She was thirty-three, slen­der, and WASP-pretty, with pale blond hair that matched the coat of her Afghan hound. She earned $75,000 a year, as one of Washington’s best gos­sips in print and in per­son. She’d been pres­i­dent of her class at Sid­well Friends School while lead­ing an un-Quaker-like social life. She won a short-story con­test spon­sored by one of the snob­bier women’s mag­a­zines. She edited the year­book at Vas­sar and was the first colum­nist on the stu­dent news­pa­per to use the word “fuck” with impunity.

Wendy marched against the Viet­nam War. She lob­bied for the envi­ron­ment, a cause made all the more attrac­tive when a ticky-tacky devel­op­ment encroached on her family’s man­sion in Potomac, Mary­land. She was as highly pedi­greed as her dog; she was eccen­tric rather than crazy. She jumped to her death off a bal­cony at the Watergate.

The day before her sui­cide, she was the sub­ject of an exposé in her own paper—one, I am pleased to say, I had no part in writing.

And hav­ing said that much, I’ll stop. The Blevin obit­u­ary was a cover-up, all right, but no more than the Telegram’s treat­ment of the scan­dals that pre­ceded it. I’ll never for­get how George McWilliams wavered on his way to jour­nal­is­tic immor­tal­ity, how McWilliams the edi­tor warred with McWilliams the friend.

■                ■               ■

Inside the glass booth in the mid­dle of the news­room, I saw a wrinkle-faced man in a dowdy plaid jacket.

Mac was small and had a slop­ing fore­head and reced­ing chin. But when he started speak­ing to you, quizzing you, try­ing to out­ma­neu­ver you, you felt as if he were a shark, prepar­ing to steal din­ner off the flesh of a larger fish.

I’ll always remem­ber the glass shark tank that one of Mac’s foes sug­gested for the Sans Souci restau­rant on Sev­en­teenth Street, a VIP-gawker’s Eden. An embit­tered politi­cian, he wanted the tank’s occu­pant to be named “Lit­tle Mac.” The Sans Souci orig­i­nally threat­ened to ban­ish the man to Lit­tle Tav­ern ham­burger shops, but McWilliams caught wind of the customer’s mal­ice and was cap­ti­vated. Mac said he would only lunch at the Sans Souci if it brought in the baby shark.

■                ■               ■

Frown­ing, McWilliams lit up a Corona and leaned back in a plushly padded swivel chair.

My imme­di­ate boss and I sat on hard seats. E. J. Rawson—“E.J.” around the office, not just in his byline—was a national edi­tor. He wore bifo­cals and had fled to Wash­ing­ton eons ago from a gothic-grim rail­road town in West Virginia.

“Stone,” Mac said, after the third puff, “I hear you want to go after Sey­mour Solomon.”

“Not go after him. Inves­ti­gate him.” Offi­cially, the Telegram was objective—Mac kept his shit list only inside his head. “Jeez, he’s got fifty per­cent of the leases locked up in the D.C. area. A lit­tle pay­back for polit­i­cal donations?”

Vulture’s Point, Solomon’s rick­ety com­plex, hous­ing no small num­ber of IRS and CIA employ­ees, never really came up in the begin­ning. I had yet to learn of the cracks in the slabs, the sex­ual black­mail from the Oval Office, the Papu­doian con­nec­tion, Wendy’s role in the scan­dals, or the other heads of the Hydra. The white-sheeted corpses existed just within the realm of the unthinkable.

Mac glanced at his gold Rolex, with which he per­son­ally timed reporters writ­ing sto­ries or pump­ing news sources on the phone. After six months on the job, you were safe from the more lethal aspects of the Rolex Treat­ment, although the watch served the entire news­room as a reminder of the Telegram’s role as a high-speed word mill.

“I know Sey­mour Solomon—he’s a good friend.” McWilliams puffed an “O” and, with his fierce, dark eyes, stared at me as if hop­ing he could elicit a good flinch. “What I’m dri­ving at, pal, is he’s not the sort to steal from anyone.”

So Mac had Solomon hooked up to a poly­graph twenty-four hours a day?

“Includ­ing the gov­ern­ment,” McWilliams blus­tered on. “Espe­cially the government.”

I was touched. “Gov­ern­ment” included Pres­i­dent Eddy Bullard, Mac’s fel­low OSS alum who, like him, had majored in French lit­er­a­ture. At Burn­ing Tree Coun­try Club, they glee­fully for­sook reg­u­la­tion shoes for ragged sneak­ers. I could just imag­ine them in pri­vate, jab­ber­ing away in obscenity-laced French about Rousseau and putt shots.

“Do you know how much Solomon gave Wash­ing­ton Stage last year so they could build that new children’s the­ater in Reston?” McWilliams asked me. “Two mil­lion. Now that’s Sy. How many mil­lion­aires do you know who drive 1970 Mavericks?”

Mac him­self drove a non­de­script gray BMW. His job, Rolex, and the antiques in his mini-Versailles pro­vided enough daz­zle in his life to suit him; well, those and the Power Peo­ple he’d befriended out­side his word mill.

“Take it from me, pal,” Mac said, as if audi­tion­ing for a Humphrey Bog­art movie, “Sy is a reg­u­lar guy. Look, isn’t Judge Philips one of his investors?”

“That’s reas­sur­ing,” I said. “I’ll remem­ber that next time he rules in a zon­ing case.”

Not once did E. J. Rawson—Ezekiel Jerome Raw­son back in Thur­mond, West Virginia—speak up for me. He was in his fifties, with crew-cut white hair, a weak­ened heart, and pru­dent decency toward his reporters despite fits of boss-man rhetoric. We had met through one of my par­ents’ neigh­bors in north­ern Vir­ginia, when I’d returned for Passover from my news­pa­per job in Ohio and accepted an invi­ta­tion to E.J.‘s home.

The first thing that struck me was his exces­sive for­mal­ity before he knew you. “I would like,” he said, “to dis­cuss your career in the news­pa­per busi­ness.” No con­trac­tions, no “I’d.” Even in the ivy-covered brick Colo­nial he shared with his wife—a short, buxom Mis­sis­sip­pian who had turned the base­ment into a seven-thousand-book library with thir­teen dictionaries—he wore a white shirt and tie. It was as if he were dis­tanc­ing him­self from the dust and grit of Thurmond.

I don’t remem­ber drink­ing Scotch as E.J. went on about Dos­to­evsky, Melville, Faulkner, and the edi­tor of the Sat­ur­day Review, and some odd but log­i­cal par­al­lels among the four. Still, I could not imag­ine any other bev­er­age in his off-hours life.

By the time E.J. was through, a dozen writ­ers later, hav­ing dis­cussed George McWilliams in the same rev­er­ent tones, I hadn’t the least doubt of my future as Mac’s successor.

My own father, a “pub­lic affairs” man for a PR and lob­by­ing firm on K Street, toiled in a bazaar, not an edi­to­r­ial cathedral.

“Well?” I asked the priestly shark in the plaid jacket. “I’m not a reg­u­lar guy, I’m a bas­tard, and I’m just enough of one to turn Stone loose on my friend Sy”—McWilliams glared at E.J.—“at your direc­tion, pal.”

I wished that just once Mac would gulp down a tran­quil­izer or reach for some ulcer med­i­cine or do any­thing else that would con­firm his mor­tal­ity. As if dis­miss­ing a pair of menials, McWilliams waved us out of the booth, the Shark’s Cage, as every­one called it, and I decided I was con­fus­ing mor­tal­ity with humanity.

■                ■               ■

Rex­wood Garst, renter of a con­verted car­riage house in George­town, filled in for me on the national hous­ing beat. He had a pen­chant for pipes and attaché cases and the other imped­i­menta of Wash­ing­ton stereotypes.

Garst knew he’d soon rise beyond his beat in Prince George’s County. “Serbo-Croatian,” he had told me, “that’s the key.” Pause. “I know how to speak it.”

“So?”

“It’s how I’ll become East­ern Euro­pean Correspondent.”

“Why not Polish?”

“Because Serbo-Croatian’s more unique.”

I’d shaken my head. “The real future’s in Korean.”

“How do you know?”

“Suit your­self,” I’d said, “but you’ll never make it big here if you don’t know Korean.”

McWilliams rejoiced in assign­ing two peo­ple to one task and see­ing who’d come out on top. If Garst dug up too much at the Depart­ment of Hous­ing and Urban Devel­op­ment while I was away, I might have to share my muck with him in the future.

■                ■               ■

The Telegram was that kind of a place—a whole news­pa­per re-made to reflect Mac’s ambi­tions for him­self and the rest of us.

Mac had been born sixty-three years ago, the only son of a Scot and a Jew, and he’d put him­self through Colum­bia Uni­ver­sity while report­ing mur­ders for the New York Daily News.

He had grad­u­ated summa cum laude; he had gone on to awe the dons of Oxford. In his thir­ties, after his days as a Her­ald Tri­bune prodigy and time in Wash­ing­ton with two secre­tive spy agen­cies, he had made a for­tune as a bond and cur­rency trader, out­smart­ing the Brah­mins of Wall Street and beyond.

Mac’s econo-Versailles on the fringes of Mary­land hunt coun­try dwarfed his publisher’s Vic­to­rian man­sion on the Chesa­peake Bay.

No one could fathom why Mac had returned to news­pa­per­ing as a flunky rather than doing the gen­teel thing and buy­ing Knopf or The New Yorker. He might still be alive today if enough peo­ple had got­ten curi­ous and saved him from himself.

When McWilliams blew up at an under­ling, he might take a catcher’s mitt from his bat­tered wooden desk and smack a base­ball against it. The object of his tem­per would inevitably recoil, as if con­vinced McWilliams were about to bean him. Mac didn’t use the mitt that often but kept it on a shelf behind him, so that you might as well be a horse look­ing at a whip.

The Rolex, too, had inspired a few sto­ries. McWilliams had bought it just a few years out of Colum­bia, an ever-ticking, ever-gleaming assur­ance that he had left Brook­lyn behind.

His par­ents, a ware­house­man and a nurse, were long dead, but his sis­ter, crip­pled from polio, still lived in the old neigh­bor­hood. As divulged by a six-thousand-word pro­file in the Sun­day mag­a­zine of the New York Times, she could barely sup­port her­self as a seam­stress doing piecework—relentlessly paced by a dime-store watch.

Mac’s ambi­tions and quirks were fod­der for the dili­gent ladies at The Ele­phant, the big-eared gos­sip col­umn of a rival paper, which mailed its vic­tims quarter-pound bags of Vir­ginia peanuts. The Ele­phant sounded off enough about McWilliams for him to amass enough bags to feed half the denizens of the Wash­ing­ton zoo.

■                ■               ■

Dri­ving home, I could see my obses­sions all around me. Up and down Con­necti­cut Avenue, the build­ings of Sey­mour Solomon and asso­ciates loomed—each reach­ing Washington’s com­mer­cial height limit, each grab­bing every dol­lar of space in the sky, each look­ing as if a giant George Bab­bitt had been at work with Scotch tape and an Erec­tor Set.

Bureau­crats occu­pied Solomon’s build­ings, along with stock­bro­kers, trade asso­ci­a­tions, and other sta­ples of the local rental mar­ket. Every now and then rumors wafted about. The drones next to Barb’s Sec­re­tar­ial Service–were they Agri­cul­ture or CIA? Was another Man­hat­tan Project aborn­ing above Menkov’s Ladies’ Wear?

At Dupont Cir­cle, I saw half a dozen cou­ples play­ing catch, just as Eddy Bullard did with his wife. A police­man strut­ted near the foun­tain there, his walkie-talkie squawk­ing in some mys­te­ri­ous mix of cop lingo and Cit­i­zens Ban­dese. I remem­bered Dupont when it had been the ter­ri­tory of beats and hip­pies and junkies: an Allen Gins­berg poem writ in life on Con­necti­cut Avenue.

In recent years, how­ever, it had become too expen­sive to be degen­er­ate close to the Cir­cle. Sy Solomon’s crowd had bull­dozed away many of the cheaper room­ing houses in the area, and they had priced the new apart­ments for the upper-level civil ser­vants and lob­by­ists who worked in his office build­ings. Wash­ing­ton was a ver­i­ta­ble white-collar fac­tory town run for management.

My own apart­ment build­ing was a jum­ble of sooty red brick, a semi­s­lum named Cam­bridge Tow­ers. I won­dered how many years would creak by before Solomon’s crowd tore it down in favor of their kind of ugliness.

I tried to envi­sion myself a com­pe­tent white-collar crim­i­nal. The clos­est I nor­mally came to Dynamic Exec­u­tive­hood, the local rob­ber barons’ most com­mon guise, was when I donned my suit from Garfinckel’s to infil­trate the stock­hold­ers’ meet­ings of the com­pa­nies I exposed in my articles.

Never could I have passed for Solomon him­self, and not sim­ply because he was older by sev­eral decades. We were both tall, but I was reporter-thin, as I liked to style myself, and he was businessman-heavy. He had wide shoul­ders and thick limbs and looked as if, by sheer bulk, he could bully the rest of the world. I remem­bered the huge hands I’d seen in news­pa­per pho­tographs. Both phys­i­cally and finan­cially, Solomon struck me as a born grabber.

Chap­ter 2

“We’ve talked to you moth­ers already, and we’re tired of your bull­shit. You know about Solomon’s fuck­ing dime, don’t you?”

Lew Fen­ton, a union leader and source of the only crit­i­cal quotes about Sey­mour Solomon in the Telegram’s library, was eager to add to his distinction.

Solomon had quar­reled with Fenton’s con­struc­tion local over pay­ing the men a dime more an hour. The upshot was a fed­eral case, going up to the Supreme Court and inspir­ing editorial-page apolo­gia for Sy along the way.

“Well,” Fen­ton jabbed at me over the phone, “that’s about it, mis­ter, except one of his buildings’ll fall down. He’s just as cheap with his mate­ri­als as he is with us. The floors—Vulture’s Point.”

I remem­bered that fif­teen hun­dred clerks and bureau­crats worked for the Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice there. But I spoke not a word back to Fen­ton. More than once in my days as a reporter, I’d heard false alarms, whether about impend­ing earth­quakes likely to top­ple the Wash­ing­ton Mon­u­ment, or anthrax in the mashed pota­toes at the Kingswood Ele­men­tary School cafeteria.

“The slabs,” Fen­ton said. “He cheated on the rebars. It’s the dif­fer­ence between a build­ing that’ll stay up and one that’ll fall. And the dif­fer­ence of a mil­lion bucks to put the mother up. And that’s just one thing—the con­crete, the gird­ers, you name it, mis­ter, he cut it cheap all the way around.”

“But why,” I asked, “would Solomon gam­ble with human life?”

I was lost in my work, unmind­ful of the evening ahead with Donna Stack­el­baum, an old friend with charms beyond the anatomy sug­gested by her name.

“The banks,” Fen­ton said. “His loans. The inter­est rates went up just before the loan, and he had to cut it real close.”

“How do you know?”

“The suit, mis­ter. Buried in the mid­dle of the trial records. All I know is that there’s cracks on the sev­enth floor, and a lot of fat-assed bureau­crats are gonna fall on their behinds. One of our guys knows some­one in main­te­nance. At GSA.”

image GSA was the Gen­eral Ser­vices Admin­is­tra­tion, the government’s busi­ness and record­keep­ing agency. It had doled out so many leases to Solomon that I sus­pected Pres­i­dent Bullard of being his silent partner.

“You want another Sky­line?” Fen­ton asked.

Not far from Vulture’s Point, in Fair­fax County, the next county over, the cen­ter sec­tion of a huge condo build­ing had caved in after the col­lapse of the twenty-fourth floor and a domino-like effect below. Many blamed the weight of a con­struc­tion crane. What­ever the case, the offi­cial story was that a sub­con­trac­tor had removed the concrete’s shoring too early.

Fines had added up to just $300 for the shoring prob­lem and $13,000 for vio­la­tion of worker safety codes. Manslaugh­ter charges hadn’t stuck against the man­ager who had over­seen the shoring at Sky­line Plaza. Crimped by a local court rul­ing, pros­e­cu­tors could not hold Skyline’s owner crim­i­nally respon­si­ble for the lapses of subcontractors.

I remem­bered a line from A Prairie Home Com­pan­ion, one of my favorite pub­lic radio pro­grams: “Wel­come to Lake Wobe­gon, where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the chil­dren are above aver­age.” Yes, yes—welcome to Fair­fax County, Vir­ginia, where all the build­ings are strong enough, and the busi­ness cli­mate is always superior.

Sky­line had killed four­teen work­ers and injured thirty-four. But could another col­lapse hap­pen, in the adja­cent county and the same decade? When it came to bad luck on such mat­ters, north­ern Vir­ginia had already exceeded its quota.

“How come the peo­ple in the build­ing aren’t bitch­ing?” I asked about Vulture’s Point.

“Because GSA and Solomon have a cover-up going,” Fen­ton said, “a real cover-up. A lit­tle rein­force­ment, pour more con­crete, and plop down a car­pet. Prob­lem gone, and your upstairs stor­age area looks pret­tier. Just a lit­tle rou­tine maintenance.”

I was get­ting much closer to being shocked, and I remem­bered the smashed corpses I had seen after a mine col­lapse in Sloans­ville, Pennsylvania—the blood­ied, black­ened men iden­ti­fied by their den­tal work and wed­ding rings.

“You dis­ap­point me,” E.J. said when I shared Fenton’s alarm. “We had Swin­burn check it out.”

“Before or after he went to the Real Estate sec­tion?” Or became a PR man for the Cham­ber of Commerce?

“You remem­ber Sky­line, don’t you?” I asked.

“Come on, Jon,” E.J. protested in the infor­mal lan­guage he used with the already-hired, “that was a con­struc­tion acci­dent. A dif­fer­ent ani­mal altogether.”

“Maybe there’s some inter­breed­ing,” I said. “Cracks are cracks.”

I recalled an essay that E.J. had writ­ten about grow­ing up in Thur­mond, where, as a fore­man for the Chesa­peake & Ohio, his father had bossed the Coal­ing Tower crews.

Like father, like son? I won­dered what either would have done as a com­pany man in Sloansville.

“Noth­ing to worry about,” E.J. per­sisted. “Rou­tine stuff. Your story, it would fall apart long before the build­ing did.”

■                ■               ■

Arriv­ing in my apart­ment that night, I took off my Dynamic Exec­u­tive suit, then headed toward the shower, where I could hear the water already run­ning. Behind the steamed-up glass stood a tall, auburn-haired woman with enough curves for the most demand­ing of black­mail work. Gen­eral Motors might well have used her as bait against Ralph Nader, in the Safe­way cookie aisle, to try to drive him off his Cor­vair exposés.

“Sweetie,” said this fan­tasy come to life, my life, “your mom called. Seven-thirty Sun­day: din­ner with the Maxwells.”

No black­mailer, no slimy oper­a­tive, pri­vate or pub­lic, needed to lure me into bed with the cor­po­rate sec­tor or its gov­ern­ment stooges. I’d already been there—on and off, between other affairs—for years. Donna Stack­el­baum and I had gone to ele­men­tary and high school together, and reli­gious school and the Uni­ver­sity of Vir­ginia, too, or UVA as most referred to it. Nowa­days she was a ris­ing young lawyer-bureaucrat with an almost orgas­mic eager­ness to do the bid­ding of the nuclear power indus­try. Our par­ents had always hoped we would marry some­day. They were touch­ingly unaware of the bal­lots her friends had stuffed to elect her as trea­surer of the Stu­dent Gov­ern­ment Asso­ci­a­tion at Lan­g­ley High.

Donna drew me against her, and we hugged enthu­si­as­ti­cally, both of us, while I enjoyed the volup­tuous­ness around me, my hand glid­ing over the well-defined waist­line, then squeez­ing her grace­fully rounded back­side. Its firm­ness hinted of reg­u­lar work­outs at the health club that one of Sey­mour Solomon’s real estate part­ners owned a few blocks away.

I smelled Donna’s freshly sham­pooed hair, nuz­zled into her gen­er­ous breasts, and almost didn’t care if sex with her kept me out of Muckraker’s Heaven. How could I have resisted her good inten­tions? Donna’s future had been as pal­pa­ble to her, ever since high school, as the ripe nip­ple I’d just tick­led. If a prospec­tive hus­band did not make enough money, and she was talk­ing mil­lions, not just upper-middle-class respectable, then she would do so her­self with­out the has­sles of sugar daddies.

Noth­ing mer­ce­nary impelled us, how­ever, just a car­nal fond­ness for each other in defi­ance of a val­ues gap dwarf­ing the Mar­i­ana Trench.

At the Nuclear Reg­u­la­tory Com­mis­sion, Donna radi­ated a sunny obtuse­ness toward moral complexities—she regarded her work there as just a warm-up for her future lob­by­ing duties for Cor­po­rate Amer­ica. But she was more Civil Service-smart, more exam-smart, than bril­liant in the Machi­avel­lian style of energy lob­by­ists. The stuffed bal­lots were child’s play by Wash­ing­ton stan­dards. With my job and world­view, I never could under­stand why she had cho­sen me as a con­fi­dant, except for our fam­i­lies’ propin­quities, her lust for extra-tall, skinny men, and a bizarre and endear­ing appre­ci­a­tion of my quirks.

“Heard the lat­est on Papudo?” It was the set­ting of America’s lat­est oil-driven exigency.

“Sweetie, you’re run­ning out of soap.” This response from a woman jug­gling a bud­get of tens of millions!

I rubbed the shrunken bar all over her, and she returned the favor while I silently reflected on her urge, off the job, for domes­tic­ity. Putz! I scolded myself—don’t let Papudo dis­tract you. The bed­room awaited us. But even amid the ecstasies in the shower, I couldn’t help ask­ing myself if Donna was criminal-brainy enough to reach a sleazy pin­na­cle as a lob­by­ist rather than slip off a cliff and into a prison cell.

My father, by con­trast, had come by his public-affairs job hon­estly, the result of sheer can­ni­ness and dili­gence. No bribes need he dis­pense or receive. Most of his rou­tine con­sisted of sim­ply tutor­ing the guilty to avoid indictment—he might as well have been work­ing in one of the cleaner jobs in a stock­yard. He didn’t slaugh­ter or clean up after the ani­mals. Rather, he just herded the cat­tle along, except that his mis­sion actu­ally was to steer them away from the blades.

If Donna wanted to be a real­is­tic sell­out, then she should work for my father’s well-lawyered firm, a nice, safe pseudo–Civil Ser­vice, so to speak, for careerists keen on abet­ting the more obnox­ious of the cor­po­rate profiteers.

Heated pleas from me notwith­stand­ing, Donna failed to acknowl­edge her lim­its as a poten­tial influence-peddler. And so in time we became sim­ply “love bud­dies,” as she euphemisti­cally called us—still good friends and happy with the joys of the moment but not look­ing far beyond. That was even before I learned of her pre­em­ploy­ment deal with Quad-State Atomic. Risky career move. For the deal to fly, Donna had to enlist the help of enough com­pat­i­bly ambi­tious cowork­ers to “adjust” fed­eral over­sight of Quad. At least for now, though, as with the stuffed bal­lots, Donna was get­ting her way. No one had squealed yet. Fish kept dying in hot dis­charges from Quad, while anti­ra­di­a­tion pre­cau­tions slack­ened to the level at which I expected the peo­ple nearby to be glow­ing a bright green.

To Donna’s hor­ror, I glommed more on to the haz­ards of nuclear melt­downs and cooked fish than the crinkly kind of green des­tined for her three-hundred-dollar hand­bag. So we agreed to clam up about each other’s work, all the less for me to have to share with a grand jury some­day, and all the more chance for her to retreat into pseu­do­domes­tic­ity. Though she had the key to my apart­ment, I warned her that it was not her fate to be for­ever domes­tic with me.

Despite our friend­ship, and despite her Men­sian IQ, the crip­pled golden retriever she had res­cued from the D.C. pound, the vol­un­teer duties for the Humane Soci­ety, her prowess as a sail­boater on Chesa­peake Bay, the sta­mina both on the Appalachian Trail and in the bed­room, the curly auburn locks, the milky com­plex­ion, the lit­tle snub nose, the high cheek­bones, the strong but fem­i­nine chin, the end­less legs, not to men­tion the twin won­ders so art­fully hid­den under the well-cut suits she affected at the Nuclear Reg­u­la­tory Commission—despite all her assets, I just could not stand the prospect of some­day lim­it­ing my sex life to con­ju­gal visits.

■                ■               ■

After our first trip to my bed­room that evening, Donna warmed up some lasagna in the kitchen while I watched Pres­i­dent Bullard lie away on CBS News. He had shaggy gray hair, thick eye­brows, and deep wrin­kles that looked as if a car­toon­ist had drawn them after too many mar­ti­nis. The Telegram’s edi­to­ri­al­ists had mar­veled at the com­pas­sion and con­cern for us all that the president’s fur­rowed fore­head bespoke; I myself sus­pected the wrin­kles were whiskey lines.

Wal­ter Cronkite announced that the pres­i­dent was flunk­ing the Gallup and Har­ris polls—the elec­tion was next year—and the Repub­li­cans were pounc­ing on him for being too soft on some on-again, off-again Reds in Papudo. Of course, Bullard was react­ing like most other prac­ti­cally lib­eral Democ­rats in the White House. His lat­est speech had been bel­li­cose enough to please the owner of a tank factory.

I was ingest­ing microwaved lasagna, and Walter’s lat­est on stocks, tum­bling because of Papudo, when our pub­lisher sud­denly came to mind. Vic­to­ria Simp­son owned the Telegram, but the real objects of her affec­tions were a con­cert pavil­ion in sub­ur­ban Mary­land, the Amer­i­can Vivaldi Foun­da­tion, and invi­ta­tions to the White House. She’d orig­i­nally had a few mis­giv­ings about Eddy Bullard, a cocky com­moner from Chicago, until he’d shown up at a pic­nic ben­e­fit for her pavil­ion. When one of the offi­cial White House pho­tog­ra­phers snapped a pic­ture of the pres­i­dent that some­how made it seem as if he were rak­ishly leer­ing her way, van­ity over­came snobbery.

Mac had gone through eight music crit­ics in five years, and I rejoiced that Bullard’s GSA was not a con­cert pavilion.

Chap­ter 3

Larry Zumwelt­nar, chief PR man at GSA, was a relic from the Nixon days with a sten­to­rian growl and a fleshy, pouty face—the look of a fat teenaged bully turned bald and dressed in a dark blue suit and tie.

Briefly avoid­ing his dour­ness, I sneaked past his Mag­inot Line, the agency’s inept cen­tral switch­board, and even­tu­ally reached a junior bureau­crat named Margo Danial­son. As a rule I mis­trusted Mar­gos; too many seemed to be man-hating prep­pies or hook­ers. But this Margo pleased me, the way she was “really” sorry for hav­ing to buck me back to Mr. Pouty. So I indulged in the hunch that the voice belonged to a nice, rounded woman with long hair of the kind that delighted men. I hoped her post­gov­ern­ment ambi­tions were suf­fi­ciently innocuous.

“I don’t mean to be nasty,” Margo said, “but why are you ask­ing all these ques­tions? You’re not quot­ing me in the papers, are you?” I told her I’d stick her name at the end of one of the let­ters in the lonely hearts column.

“Let’s just say we’re doing a story on cer­tain real estate trends,” I said. That was no lie: There could be a trend–more and more leases going to Sy Solomon.

Margo and I ban­tered a lit­tle more, promis­ing each other a cel­e­bra­tory lunch after GSA coughed up the leases. I couldn’t believe my luck. A sym­pa­thizer in the Augean Sta­bles? So I wanted to think. With all the guile lurk­ing within the mounds of shit, I might never know for sure.

I was about to dial another call when a news aide walked up with panic on her face. She looked as if she’d just heard McWilliams smack his mitt.

“You poor woman,” I said, know­ing who must be on the line. I reached into my pocket for two quar­ters. “Here-buy your­self a Coke and drink up to the fact that nei­ther of us works for him.”

I picked up the phone, wish­ing I’d had time to sneak in a mar­tini at the Telegram Tav­ern across the street.

“Stone, what are you doing harass­ing our peo­ple again?” Most “infor­ma­tion direc­tors” at least feigned friend­li­ness with trou­ble­some news­peo­ple, but Zumwelt­nar was forth­right enough to let you know from the start that he hated your guts.

“You should talk, Zumwelt­nar. You’re the most accom­plished bully of sec­re­taries on the East Coast.”

“I’m get­ting tired of this, Stone. How many times have I told you—if you have any ques­tions, just work through me, and I’ll do every­thing I can to help you. Okay?”

Zumwelt­nar spat out the “Okay?” as if he were kick­ing me karate style in the groin.

“Look,” I said, “maybe I feel masochis­tic enough to see you in per­son today. Three o’clock?”

“All right,” Zumwelt­nar said in his gloomy way, “but I’m doing this only because I believe in the free flow of information.”

I hung up, typed out a final copy of my request for the leases, stat­ing where and how they were stored, and left for the GSA build­ing at Eigh­teenth and F, one of the uglier lega­cies of the Wil­son administration.

■                ■               ■

In the world of cor­rup­tion, this neo­clas­si­cal blight was a land­mark. Once the build­ing had housed Inte­rior and a good num­ber of those involved in the Teapot Dome scan­dal. GSA had been in exis­tence and in the build­ing only since the late for­ties. The Pub­lic Build­ings Ser­vice and var­i­ous sup­ply agen­cies had been con­sol­i­dated then, so that as much of the pork as pos­si­ble was in one bar­rel. A huge agency plaque cov­ered half the door of Zumweltnar’s office. I saw in bronze a pub­lic works project of another time, a pyra­mid, and it reminded me of many of GSA’s creations-imposing and wasteful.

The office itself was appointed in stan­dard GSA exec­u­tive mod­ern; it looked like a cross between a Howard Johnson’s and the inside of an Amtrak Metro­liner. Room C900 was long and nar­row, with red­dish orange cloth par­ti­tions. I won­dered if they could ever muf­fle Zumwelt­nar enough when he was chew­ing out inquis­i­tive reporters.

I winked at Zumweltnar’s deputy, a Southern-polite blond woman with a bet­ter dis­po­si­tion than he deserved. As she greeted me, I peered into her pen­cil tin and saw an empty bot­tle of tranquilizers.

Her boss was typ­ing away on his own IBM, and that tick­led me. It was a reminder of the grubby work he’d left for $49,000 a year and the priv­i­lege of lying as an offi­cial spokesman. Zumwelt­nar had actu­ally been a news­man once, a bureau chief for one of the second-tier chains that were always boost­ing them­selves in pro­mo­tional ads in Edi­tor & Pub­lisher.

“All right, Stone,” he said. “What’s the smear you’re work­ing on now?”

“Who says it’s a smear? Maybe I’m writ­ing a man-bites-dog story about your agency doing some­thing right.”

“I’m told you want to see every lease in the Wash­ing­ton area.”

I nodded—I wanted to find out how much Solomon and friends might be rip­ping off the tax­pay­ers com­pared to the competition.

“You’re talk­ing three ninety-seven, okay?” said Zumwelt­nar, and hap­pily informed me that the “pro­fes­sional and cler­i­cal fees” would come to $2,000.

■                ■               ■

My mind wan­dered as I drove back to the Telegram from GSA. It was mid­spring in Wash­ing­ton, a blessed break between the March mon­soons and the sum­mer mug­gi­ness. I saw myself tak­ing a lit­tle time off to hike on the Appalachian Trail south of Snick­ers Gap with my old friend Al Bergmann of the Asso­ci­ated Press.

E.J. had pro­posed me for an assis­tant edi­tor­ship on the National Desk, and I felt as smug as any flunky in an insur­ance com­pany. George McWilliams paid me $26,000 a year, which in those days was more than I could have earned at any paper other than the New York Times or The National Enquirer. I wasn’t money-mad, but I’d grown up in McLean, Vir­ginia, where the Kennedys lived, and while I didn’t run with that crowd, I wasn’t ready for a tum­ble to Beltsville.

Para­dox­i­cally, the Solomon inves­ti­ga­tion might pro­pel my career for­ward, given McWilliams’s fond­ness for chutz­pah within bounds. If I didn’t make too much of a nui­sance of myself about Mac’s friend Solomon, I’d be show­ing just the right amount of brashness.

Copy­right infor­ma­tion for the above text itself, noth­ing more: © 2009 by David H. Rothman.

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