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The Unknown Beloved(123)

Author:Amy Harmon

Should something happen to Darby, no one would know who he was.

“Darby. Wait,” she called. “Just wait for a minute, please. I have something for you.” She’d slipped on the St. Christopher medallion Darby had given her that morning. It’d been hanging over the corner of the photograph; she’d been afraid of losing it and rarely wore it. It’d been a whim, but now she wondered if she’d been expecting him with Malone gone so much.

Darby turned around and walked back toward her, almost shy. She pulled the chain over her neck and extended it to him.

“Wear this. Please. It would make me happy if you did.”

“You tryin’ to protect me, Dani girl?”

“You are dear to me.”

“You wear it,” he insisted. “That’s why I gave it to you.”

“I have a copper to keep me safe. Remember?” She smiled. He smiled too, and took the chain, slipping it over his head and dropping the medallion beneath his collar.

He whistled as he walked away, a new bounce in his step.

25

Cowles started an official interrogation on the fourth day, but Francis Sweeney sulked and stormed and refused to answer. He’d taken a dislike to Cowles and wanted Eliot’s attention.

“I don’t want to be questioned by an underling.”

“Do you know your name?” Cowles inquired.

Sweeney’s mouth opened and closed, like a fish in a tank, and he didn’t answer.

“Please state your name for our records,” Cowles repeated.

“Ask Eliot Ness!” the man bellowed. “The man who got Al Capone but can’t catch the Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run. What a disgrace. Cleveland deserves better.”

“What is your name?” Cowles repeated, weary.

“You know my name. My question is, What is your name? You can be assured I will be shouting it from the rooftops when we are through here.”

“Do you understand why you are here, Dr. Sweeney?” Cowles asked him for the umpteenth time.

“Because Eliot Ness has an axe to grind. Do you know who I am?”

By the sixth day, Sweeney was considerably less manic, but they were running out of time. They were already on very shaky legal ground, and the longer they occupied that room, the more likely word would get out to the press.

Leonarde Keeler began a round of testing, trying to coax cooperation from a very unmotivated subject. Sweeney was connected to the device, his arms folded, his expression petulant.

“I want Mr. Ness to ask me questions,” Sweeney said. “I want to match wits with the director himself.”

Eliot ignored him.

“Or Mike. I want Mike to ask me questions. He’s hardly said two words. My feelings are hurt.” Sweeney used Malone’s name with glee.

The interrogators had been careful not to address each other, but over five days, it was bound to happen.

Malone rose to leave; he was obviously a distraction, and he could hear just fine from the adjoining room. Eliot followed him.

“Don’t leave, Mike. Where are you going?” Sweeney protested. “Do you have a lady you need to get home to? I heard you and Eliot talking about her. You love her, don’t you, Mike?”

Malone’s heart lurched. Sweeney was indeed wily. But Malone continued through the door, Eliot on his heels.

“Are you a T-man too, Mike? A famed Prohibition agent from the glory days? Is that how you know Eliot Ness? We met once, Mike. At the Lexington Hotel. Don’t you remember? You wore the same suit you wore the other night at the gala.”

“What the hell?” Eliot whispered.

“You aren’t in the papers like Eliot. Eliot enjoys being in the papers, don’t you, Eliot?” Sweeney’s voice grew more boisterous, projecting so they would not ignore him.

“I followed the Capone case. And the trial. Fascinating. That’s when I became a fan of our boy, Eliot. When the government sets its sights on you . . . it’s over, isn’t it?” He chuckled.

“I wanted to come up and shake your hand at the gala. But I thought maybe you were undercover. I did tell Martin and Marie I thought you might be a spy. I’m not sure they believed me. Were you there watching me? This is so exciting.”

Eliot was frowning. Malone was rigid. And they stood, facing each other, listening to the man in the other room. Sweeney kept talking.

“Martin got me into the trial. Did you know he was a judge? He has lots of pull, Martin does. Our fathers were brothers. Martin and I are like brothers. You know his father wanted him to be a doctor and my father wanted me to study law? We both disappointed our fathers. We laugh about that.”