Authors: John Donohue
Jackson thought of his vision of the coyote loping ahead in
the shimmering distance, tongue wagging as if in mockery. He
sighed and radioed for help.
96
8
Lair
I was summoned to the dragon’s lair a few days later. I’d
been working steadily, putting together a picture of Eliot West-
mann and the process he used to write his books. In the eve-
nings after I came back from Hasegawa’s
dojo
, I worked my
way through the hidden journals as well. They weren’t directly
relevant to the issue of authenticity in his books, but they gave
me an insight into the man and, as an aside, also fleshed out
what he had been up to just before he joined the Martini Div-
ing Team.
I got a call from Roy just before 10 pm to let me know that
Ms. Westmann would expect me in her office tomorrow morn-
ing to present a status report. In my mind’s eye, I could picture
Roy, poised with quivering pen over a checklist of tasks he had
to complete for his mistress.
“A status report?” I said, and my tone must have betrayed
something of my amusement. It was not an emotion that Roy
associated with his employer, however.
“Ms. Westmann is very eager to hear the details of your
work to date, Dr. Burke,” he told me earnestly. “A brief written
synopsis should do—Ms. Westmann is extremely busy—along
with an oral report. Please let me know whether you’ll require
anything from our business center—a projector for a presenta-
tion, copying services. We’re at your disposal.”
“How nice,” I answered but I could sense that I was going
to be a real disappointment to Roy. There wasn’t going to be a
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John Donohue
PowerPoint presentation in my briefing. No handouts. I toyed
with the idea of multicolored pie charts, but dismissed that
as well. I could pretty much deliver a report on my progress
without audiovisual aids. The only thing I had to work on was
to find a nicer word than “shyster” to describe Eliot Westmann.
I did show up as requested—time has mellowed me some-
what. The Burkes have a lifelong issue with authority. It may
come from the unique cultural experience of being raised as
Irish Catholics. It was composed, in part, of a dramatic emo-
tional oscillation between struggling to stand on your own two
feet and being forced to sink to your knees. Either way, some-
one was always pushing you around.
I had made some quick notes for the meeting, but I left
my laptop in the room. Bad enough that I had to show up
when ordered. There was no sense in appearing eager or overly
efficient—an attitude that is responsible for my notable lack of
career advancement.
Charlie Fiorella was waiting for me outside Lori Westmann’s
executive suite. He was as dapper as ever; looking relaxed and
fit in a lightweight tan suit. He seemed at ease in the corri-
dors of power. The office suites of the powerful smell faintly of
good cologne and furniture polish. There’s a subdued, efficient-
sounding hum pulsing out from secretarial cubicles. The air is
heavy with importance.
I’m always suspicious that the people in these sorts of places
have invited me there to help move furniture. It’s delusional,
of course. The people there are just people, but they’re work-
ing franticly to prove that they are smarter and better than
everyone else. Some of them may be smarter than I am, I don’t
know—I’ve ceased evaluating people in that way. What I do
know is that in places like this, generating a collective sense
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Kage
of importance is vital. The alternative is often too painful for
these folks to contemplate.
Lori Westmann was as smooth and well coiffed and hard as
ever. She was wearing a dark blue business suit with a pink col-
larless shirt of what looked like silk. Her large office was finely
appointed, but the curtains were drawn and muted lights set in
the ceiling created pools of brightness amidst a general gloom.
She sat strategically in a cone of light that made her appear to
glow. We were relegated to a less brilliant zone. Westmann gave
me a cursory smile from the other side of her large desk. Roy
pointed me to a seat. Charlie followed me in and sat down,
crossing his leg casually but being careful to hike up the trouser
leg to preserve the line of the crease. His socks matched his
suit color perfectly. I wasn’t sure what color my socks were. I
couldn’t even remember whether I was wearing any. It seemed
to me that our chairs were slightly lower than Lori Westmann’s.
We exchanged ritual pleasantries. Roy brought us all cof-
fee, but once the fidgeting with cups was over, his boss simply
turned an inquiring look my way. I launched into an overview
of my activities. When Westmann concentrated, a small crease
appeared at the top of her nose, pulling her well-plucked eye-
brows closer together.
“So,” she interrupted at one point, “your work to date has
been in large part a re-reading of my father’s works as well
as commentary from various reviewers?” Her tone was not
pleased. She was a woman in a hurry and the sooner I could
complete my analysis, the better.
“In part, yes,” I answered. “The structure and themes and
images your father employed in his work are central to any
analysis of his …” I hesitated for a moment trying to find the
correct word, “… authenticity.”
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John Donohue
“And?” I thought she seemed a little testy so early in the
morning, but I suppose that a chief executive’s work is never-
ending. Then again, I did notice that her nails appeared freshly
manicured.
“His writing is highly creative, certainly,” I offered. “But
any evaluation of his claims to have used primary sources is
going to be built on a comparison of his writing to published
sources available at the time.” She looked at me skeptically. Her
eyes were very blue, like the slick underbelly of an iceberg. “I’m
not disputing the fact that your father was a talented writer,
Ms. Westmann. That’s not what you hired me to do. I’m look-
ing for elements in his books that could or could not have been
lifted from other sources. It’s the only way to begin to prove any
original scholarship.”
“Your opinion, Dr. Burke,” she put a sarcastic emphasis
on the doctor part. “After reading the material, what is your
opinion?” She began to tick points off one by one, tapping a
forefinger on the desk for emphasis. The pink of the nail polish
matched her blouse. “The whole description of the mountain
temple, the prevalence of deep red color symbolism, fox stat-
ues. Even the name for the trainees there…”
“
Kitsume
,” I supplied. “Shape shifters.” I began to suspect
she knew more about her father’s work than she had let on.
“Precisely,” she said. “I’ve done my homework, Dr. Burke,
“she said scornfully. “I expected something more from you.”
I probably let a little too much energy seep into my answer,
but she was beginning to annoy me. “They’re the type of details
I can dig up in about thirty seconds using the Internet. When
your father wrote his books, it probably took a bit more dig-
ging, but I’ll bet there were sources available that he could have
drawn from. Not his own experience.”
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“Prove it!” she demanded.
“I will. But there are other things that don’t fit with my
knowledge of the literature. Sure, the Shinto deity Inari was
sometimes thought of as the patron god of sword smiths. But
there’s no record that I know of that speaks of a secret cult of
nature worshipping ascetics training in warrior systems up in
Hokkaido.” I now had a full head of steam up. “And I’m a little
disappointed at the resources in your father’s library. Most of
the stuff there seems to be copies of manuscript pages…”
“My father was very protective of his life’s work. He rou-
tinely made copies and sent the originals off to an archive,” she
noted dryly.
I waived it away. “I can live with the copies. That doesn’t
matter. But the types of notes a scholar would make before
getting to the point of a completed manuscript aren’t present.
Some marginal notes relating to sources appear occasionally,
but not enough to permit a reconstruction. And there are fre-
quent notations that simply say ‘PO’. What’s that all about?”
“My father told me that meant ‘personal observation.’”
“It’s not enough for scholars. Without field notes or jour-
nals from the time to back it up, it’s going to look like it means
‘permanently obscure.’” I couldn’t be positive, but out of the
corner of my eye, I thought I saw Charlie’s lips twitch in a sup-
pressed smile. Roy looked appalled. I had leaned forward in
my chair as my temper got the better of me, so I sat back and
waited.
Lori Westmann took a little sipping breath, swung her chair
around so she could look out at window of her office, perhaps
expecting her laser-like executive glare to pierce the curtains.
She swung back to me, her face flat, but her eyes piercing.
“What else do you need to make the complete assessment?”
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John Donohue
“I need access to whatever field notes or journals he kept
at the time. I know your father kept a personal journal pretty
faithfully…”
“He seems to have stopped that in recent years,” she told
me.I shook my head. “No, he never stopped,” I corrected her.
“I’ve seen them.”
“What!” she demanded. The discovery seemed to shake her.
At the time, I thought it was that she simply disliked being
surprised. She was, after all, a woman who prided herself on
being informed and in control. Not much happened in her
little universe that she didn’t know about.
I described finding the journals, careful to point out that
they shed light on Eliot Westmann, the way he thought, and his
approach to life, but really had not contributed much toward
my analysis of his contested works. Lori made careful notes
about the journals and their location. She looked at Charlie for
the first time that morning. “I’ll want those journals secured,”
she ordered. He nodded in silent agreement.
She turned back to me. “Do you have a report for me?”
I was puzzled for a moment, and then I realized that she
was expecting some sort of formal document. “You just got it,”
I answered.
She was seething, but kept it pretty tightly under control.
“I’d like a written summary of your activities to date and your
observations on my desk by this evening.” The words were pro-
nounced carefully and flew out like bullets from a gun. “Plus a
concrete list of what other resources you’ll need to access and a
timeline for completion. A
short
timeline.”
“I’ll need to see his journals from back then,” I countered.
“The ones you say are in the archives…”
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“His agent maintains them,” she snapped.
“Fine, I’ll go see him,” I said cheerily. It was fun needling
her. Dangerous, but fun.
“He’s in New York City.” She glanced at Roy. He made
some notes.
“Even better,” I said, my voice bright.
Home
. “The library at
Columbia should give me the other resources I need.”
Lori gave Roy a string of orders. I was dismissed with a curt
nod and Charlie and I sauntered back out into the daylight.
We strolled along the pathways, bordered in the deep emer-
ald of well-manicured lawns.
“You are some piece of work,” he said with a slight smile.
I shrugged. “She hired me to do a job. I know my work. She
ought to let me run with it.”
“She’s used to getting her way,” he noted. “Not many peo-
ple don’t fold when she pushes hard at them.”
“And another thing,” I said, not even bothering to com-
ment on Charlie’s observation, “she’s skewing the data I’ve got,
trying to steer me to certain conclusions—she’s holding back
sources that I need to make an objective assessment. As if I
wouldn’t notice.”
“She’s paying you,” he said simply. “She figures she owns
you.”
“She figured wrong,” I told him.
Charlie smiled again. “I think she realizes that now.”
As we walked up the path toward my suite, I looked at him.
“How do you stand it? Working for her?”
He shrugged. “She needs me and she knows it. She tends
to stay out of my way and I let her pretend she’s in charge.
She’s unpleasant to be around, but the salary is good and every
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morning I can almost count on…”
“…getting in a full round of golf,” I finished for him.
He patted me on the shoulder. “You got it.”
I stopped and faced him. “I’m assuming I should probably
start packing?”
“That would be a safe assumption. Old Roy will make sure
you turn in your little book report tonight and probably have