The Parting Glass. Emilie Richards

The Parting Glass - Emilie Richards


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time for a consultation with our agent.”

      “Don’t think about that now.”

      “When you vowed for better or worse, I bet you weren’t thinking the big guy upstairs might take you up on that last part so soon.”

      “Megan, this is the better part. It’s a miracle no one was killed. If the twister hit us directly, it would have taken the whole building and everyone in it. We probably caught the tip of the tail.”

      That wasn’t lost on Megan. Miracle was not too strong a word, particularly if help arrived quickly and cleared an exit.

      She edged in front of him. “Better let me go first. I know the layout. I can feel around for a flashlight.”

      “I see light down below.” He stepped aside.

      Megan felt a rush of gratitude. Light meant Rooney was downstairs. Now she was only afraid they might find him in a state of terror.

      She felt along the wall to the rack where the flashlights were kept and found only one, snapping it on to illuminate the path. “Rooney,” she called. “Don’t be afraid. Nick and I are coming to get you.”

      She started down, shining her light just in front of her so that Niccolo could find his way, as well. Halfway there she saw her father below them, banging ineffectually on a paneled wall with his palms. He was a slight man and—she noted—paler than usual. She wondered if he really believed that his meager weight was any match for the saloon foundation.

      “He must have panicked,” she said so that only Niccolo would hear. She moved faster and hoped that her new husband could still see well enough to keep up. At the bottom she started toward Rooney.

      “Hey, Rooney, it’s okay. The fire department will get here soon. And they’ll get us out. But you need to come upstairs with Nick and me. You shouldn’t be alone down here.”

      Rooney turned to examine her. He did not look panicked. He looked, in fact, disturbed by the interruption. “Here somewhere.”

      She was often puzzled by her father’s attempts to communicate. There had been a time when almost everything he’d said was a mystery. More recently, though, all the other changes in his life had led to clearer, more precise exchanges. They’d had real conversations where both of them were heard and understood. She was afraid this wasn’t going to be one of them.

      “Yes, you’re here,” she said. “But it would be better if you were upstairs.”

      He gazed at her as if she were a little girl again. “No way out.”

      “Maybe not this minute, but the fire department—”

      “No way out there.” He shook his head and pointed above him. He looked annoyed, as if Megan just didn’t understand.

      “No, but there will be.”

      He turned around and began banging his palms on the wall again. Megan imagined that prisoners pounded cell walls the same way. “Rooney, that’s not going to help. Come on upstairs with me, okay?”

      “Are you looking for something?” Niccolo asked him.

      Megan wished Niccolo would stay out of the exchange. She was afraid Rooney was going to become even more distracted. “Nick, I—”

      “Here someplace.” Rooney moved down an arm’s length and continued pounding.

      “Megan, he’s not upset. He’s looking for something,” Niccolo told her. “Do you know what it might be?”

      “I don’t think—”

      “Listen…” Rooney stopped pounding a moment, then started up again.

      She was growing more disturbed. She didn’t like being away from the others. Maybe someone had gotten through to the fire department. She wanted to know if help was on the way. She wanted to figure out strategy. She wanted to see to her guests. “Rooney, I don’t hear anything! Please come up.”

      “It sounds hollow.” Niccolo took her arm. “Do what he says and listen.”

      “So what if it’s hollow? Who can tell why…” But she fell silent, aware that nothing she could say was going to turn the tide.

      “What’s behind there, Rooney?” Niccolo asked.

      Rooney grinned. “Jail time.”

      Megan caught Niccolo’s eye and shook her head. Niccolo was expecting too much.

      “Jail time?” Niccolo asked. “Jail for who?”

      Rooney was picking at a sheet of paneling now, trying to pry it loose with fingernails that weren’t up to the task.

      “For who?” Niccolo repeated.

      Rooney stepped back, obviously frustrated. “Tools. Hammer might do.”

      “What will we find if we pry the panel loose?” Niccolo asked.

      “Nick, please don’t continue this,” Megan pleaded.

      “Jail time,” Rooney said. He paused. “For bootleggers.”

      Megan faced her father, Niccolo’s part in the conversation forgotten. “Bootleggers?”

      Rooney smiled. “I wasn’t born.”

      “Megan, do you know what he’s talking about?” Niccolo asked.

      She was ashamed. She had been so sure Rooney was just talking crazy. “When I was a little girl the grown-ups talked about tunnels down here. Not when they thought we could hear them, of course. We weren’t really supposed to know. It was a family secret. But I haven’t thought about that for years. I thought the tunnels were probably just a story, a Donaghue fairy tale.”

      “Bootleggers?” Niccolo asked.

      “I don’t know for sure, but if there are tunnels, maybe they were built to smuggle in bootleg whiskey during Prohibition. There’s another bar on the West Side that claims they have tunnels that lead all the way to the water.”

      “The Shoreway would make that impossible here.”

      “It wouldn’t have then, because the Shoreway wasn’t there in the twenties. Besides, if there are tunnels under the saloon, maybe they led out to a road on Whiskey Island where liquor was brought in from the water. I do know Cleveland had its share of rum runners. Canada’s right across the lake, and Canada never bought into Prohibition.”

      “So if it’s true, the tunnels might still be here?”

      “Could be, although in what kind of shape, I don’t know. If they exist, they’ve been walled away my whole life. I guess it depends on how sturdy they were to start with.”

      “Sturdy enough, I bet. If they were built for bootleggers, they wouldn’t have taken any chances. Liquor was a profitable business.”

      “Yeah, for people like Al Capone. This is Cleveland.”

      “Elliot Ness came here after Prohibition to clean up the city,” Niccolo said. “There must have been some business here to draw him.”

      Obviously he’d been listening to Jon, for whom Cleveland history was a favorite subject. “Are you thinking we might tear out this wall and see what’s here?” she said.

      “Rooney, does the tunnel lead outside?” Niccolo put his hand on the old man’s shoulder. “Can we get out this way?”

      Rooney gave a slight nod.

      That was enough affirmation for Niccolo. The possibility existed. “Can you get my kids and get us some tools?” he asked Megan. “And more flashlights, if you have them?”

      “The kids?”

      “Do you know anybody more talented at destruction?”

      She left the two men below and raced up


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