It was Saturday, not a day for business cold calls. I put work behind me for the weekend, but Monday morning, I took the L to the Loop. Maybe because of the iron girders down the middle of the block, this stretch of Wabash still looked tawdry. Arnie’s Steak Joynt was still flashing its neon on one corner, and the bar that used to make me think I was catching some bad disease was still in business across the street from it.
This made the rehabbed lobby of the Pulteney all the more striking when I went inside. I’d always wondered what lay under the decades of grime that crusted the mosaic floor. Pharaohs, elongated cats, boats on the Nile. The Pulteney apparently went up in the 1920s, at the height of the Egyptian craze that followed the discovery of King Tut’s tomb.
In addition to legal odd jobs, Judge Grigsby worked as a docent for the Chicago Architecture Foundation; his shift started at ten, his wife had told me when I’d called earlier. He could give me forty-five minutes before strolling over to Michigan Avenue to start his tour.
The doorman, in white gloves so as not to smudge the Art Deco figurines when he held the brass elevator doors open for me, phoned upstairs to confirm the appointment. White gloves, polished brass, even an indie coffee bar in the lobby, while management had sucked up my rent money for fifteen years without bringing the electrics up to code. I rode to the seventeenth floor, trying not to let sour grapes make me sour-faced.
I had done as much research on Grigsby as I could without talking to anyone. I didn’t want him to know I was asking questions, since even a retired judge in Cook County has a lot of people owing him favors. Grigsby had been elected—over and over—with a “Qualified” rating from the Illinois Bar Association. Sort of like being a reliable C or B student. He and his wife, Marjorie, had been married forty-seven years next month; they had five children and seven grandchildren. Besides his judge’s pension, he had a nice little portfolio that brought in almost four hundred thousand a year, letting him maintain condos in Scottsdale and Chicago.
I’d found photos of Grigsby online at all sorts of regular Democratic Party functions. He’d been at fund-raisers with Illinois House Speaker Spike Hurlihey, with ward committeemen, the head of Streets & San—crucial for getting out the vote, even in these supposedly post-patronage years—and various senators, representatives, corporate leaders. Even Darraugh Graham, my own most important client, had been in one shot. I was pretty sure Darraugh voted Republican, but in Cook County, anyone trying to do business shows up at Democratic political functions.
Grigsby’s apartment was in the southeast corner of the building. The judge, in an open-necked shirt and soft sports jacket, had the door open and called to me to come to the front room. He was looking out across the Art Institute at the fringe of trees along Lake Michigan. The south view showed the L tracks that used to run past my office window—I’d been on the fourth floor, where I could look into commuters’ faces as the trains rattled by.
“Ms. Warshawski? A good Chicago name. I never get tired of watching the city from up here. I grew up in Back of the Yards and Gage Park and I never imagined back then that I would be living among the chardonnay drinkers downtown. How about you?”
“South Chicago,” I obliged. “And I still don’t live among the chardonnay drinkers.”
We picked our way through each other’s career highlights—me, University of Chicago Law Review, clerking for a judge in the Seventh Circuit, my time with the criminal public defender (“Step down for a Law Review student, wasn’t it?” the judge commented). Him, DePaul University law, assistant state’s attorney, partner at a big downtown firm, followed by thirty-three years on the bench. Prosecutors move up, defenders move down, law of the jungle.
I told Grigsby about the decade I’d spent in this building, and my envy of the space as it looked now. He threw back his head, laughing, as if delighted that he had something I couldn’t afford. It didn’t surprise me: growing up behind the old stockyards, you competed for every beam of sunlight that filtered through the haze of blood and smoke.
He was drinking coffee but didn’t offer me any. Power play, assertion of status, obliviousness, maybe all three.
“Judge, I know you’re busy, and this is a long shot, but an old South Chicago murder has been rattling cages lately. The case was tried in your court.”
He nodded over the rim of the cup. “Stella Guzzo. I looked her up when I saw the news—Boom-Boom War— Oh. Your family? Cousin? That explains why you’re nosing around the story.”
I eyed him thoughtfully. “I wonder who told you I was ‘nosing around’?”
“It’s not a secret. You’ve been talking to some of the lawyers that I’ve known for decades.”
“I haven’t been talking to Nina Quarles, because she’s in France. Sol Mandel is dead, his partner’s retired. Ira Previn come to you?”
“He didn’t come to me, but we eat breakfast at the same restaurant when he has an early court date. He’s worried you digging up old dirt might hurt his son.”