“So you can go to the police and blame this poor dead girl some more? Thank you, no.”
I smiled grimly. “So there is a desk file—I wasn’t sure. If we could go see it, we’ll find in it the reason for Howard Fepple’s death, and for her own. Not because she had—”
“I don’t have to listen to this.” Bigelow turned on her heel.
I shouted over her own raised voice. “Not because she had anything to do with his death. But because the documents were dangerous in a way that she didn’t understand.”
Ralph walked into his office at that unfortunate moment. “Vic!” he snarled in fury. “What the hell are you doing here? No, don’t bother answering. Karen, what’s Warshawski trying to persuade you to do?”
The other six supervisors had come to the conference-room door at my shout. The expression on Ralph’s face made them scuttle back to their seats before he had time to order them to move.
“She wants to see poor little Connie’s desk file on the Sommers case, Ralph,” Karen Bigelow said.
Ralph turned a ferocious glare onto me: someone must have been chewing him out down in the chairman’s office. “Don’t you ever dare—dare—come into this building and try to suborn my staff behind my back again!”
“You have a right to be angry, Ralph,” I said quietly. “But two people are dead and a third is in critical condition because of whatever scam the Midway Agency was working around the Aaron Sommers claim. I’m trying to find out what it was before anyone else is shot.”
“The Chicago cops are working on it.” His mouth was tight with anger. “Just leave them to it.”
“I would if they were getting anywhere close, but I know things they don’t, or at least I’m putting together things that they aren’t.”
“Then tell them about it.”
“I would if I had any real evidence. That’s why I want to see Connie’s desk file.”
He stared at me bleakly, then said, “Karen, go back to the conference room—tell the rest of the team I’ll be with you in two minutes. Denise, do we have coffee, rolls, whatever? Could you get on that, please?”
Anger was still making a pulse throb in his temple, but he was trying hard not to take it out on his staff. He motioned me to his inner office with a jerk of his head—I didn’t need nice treatment.
“All right. Two minutes to sell me and then I’m meeting with my staff.” He shut the door and stared pointedly at his watch.
“The agent who originally sold Aaron Sommers his policy in 1971 was involved in something illegal,” I said. “Howard Fepple apparently didn’t know about it until he looked up Aaron Sommers’s file. I was in the office with him when he did: it was clear it held something—documents, notes, I don’t know what—that grabbed his attention. When he faxed his agency material to Connie, I’m presuming he included something that he thought gave him a way to blackmail the company.
“No one knows what the original agent, Ulrich Hoffman, was up to. All the copies of the original Sommers policy documents have disappeared. The only thing left is the sanitized version. You yourself said yesterday that there should be handwritten notes from the agent in it, but those have all disappeared. If Connie kept a desk copy, it’s gold. And it’s dynamite.”
“So?” His arms were crossed in an uncompromising attitude.
I took a deep breath. “I believe Connie was reporting directly, privately, to Bertrand Ros—”
“Goddamn you, no!” he bellowed. “What the hell are you up to?”
“Ralph, please. I know this must seem like déjà vu all over again, me coming in, accusing your boss. But listen for just one minute. Ulrich Hoffman used to be an agent for Edelweiss in Vienna during the thirties, back when it was called Nesthorn. He sold burial policies to poor Jews. Came the war, who knows what he did for eight years, but in 1947 Ulrich landed in Baltimore, somehow moved on to Chicago, and started doing the only work he knew, selling burial policies to poor people, in this case African-Americans on Chicago’s South Side.”
“I’m sure all this history is fascinating,” Ralph interrupted me with heavy sarcasm, “but my staff is waiting for me.”
“Old Ulrich kept a list of his Viennese clients. The life-insurance policies that Edelweiss claims they never sold,” I hissed. “Their line has been they were a small regional company, they weren’t involved with people who died in the Holocaust. Edelweiss was a small company back then, but Nesthorn was the biggest player in Europe. If Ulrich’s books come to light, then this charade Rossy and Janoff played in Springfield on Tuesday—getting the legislature to kill the Holocaust Asset Recovery Act—is going to cause a backlash the size of a tidal wave.”