The Third Brother. Andrew Welsh-Huggins
know, like get back with her. Like, romantically and stuff.”
I looked at him. He returned the look, face full of innocence.
“Why are you asking me this?”
“Just curious. So, will you?”
“Probably not,” I said, after a moment.
“How come? I thought you liked her.”
“I did. But things just didn’t work out.”
“How come?”
A man, his son, his dog, and a Sunday morning inquisition about his failed love life. Could it get any better than this?
“Sometimes my job makes it hard for me to pay attention to people the way I should. Not a lot of ladies like that. It’s hard to blame them.”
“That’s what I thought.”
“Really?”
“Yeah. Plus she’s got a new boyfriend.”
“She does?”
He nodded, reaching down to thump Hopalong.
My stomach shrank a little. “How do you know that?”
“I met him. I was playing with Amelia the other day. He was at her house.”
Against all odds, Joe and Anne’s daughter had stayed friends even after Anne broke up with me, tired of too many dropped balls and missed dates. An English professor at Columbus State, she’d been the first girlfriend in years I hadn’t treated like a doormat with boobs. But I hadn’t been there the times she needed me, either. Call it a draw, I guess.
“I’m glad to hear that.”
“Amelia says he’s not as funny as you.”
“Probably a good thing.”
We sat for a couple of minutes longer, listening to the sound of German Village waking up. Birds singing, cars juddering down the brick streets of the neighborhood south of downtown, the two Kevins having a just-shy-of-heated discussion across the alley about whose turn it was to clean the grill. A moment later Joe wiggled off my lap and planted himself atop Hopalong. The dog sighed in protest but didn’t move from his Labradorean repose. I shifted in my chair and realized my right leg was asleep. I picked up my cup and took a drink of lukewarm coffee and retrieved my book and read a chapter without absorbing a single word. I put it down, got up stiffly, and went inside, trailed by Joe and the dog. It was time to start mixing pancake batter and frying bacon and figuring out the best places to swim for free on a Sunday in Columbus.
3
CUNNINGHAM’S LAW OFFICE WAS A TWO-story brick building on Front in the Brewery District. A maple tree shaded the front yard, so tall and thick-limbed it might have been there when Cunningham’s grandfather was a bellboy in the long-gone Neil House hotel. “Offices of Burke Cunningham III, Attorney-at-Law,” said the weathered brass plaque set into the brick to the right of the door. At one minute to nine the next morning I rang the bell, looked up at the camera, and waited for his secretary to buzz me in. At the click of the lock I pushed open the door and walked inside, grateful for the crisp chill of the air conditioning on the already humid morning.
LaTasha sat at her computer at her desk in the small, wood-paneled lobby. It being summer, she was in her Egyptian period, meaning ankh earrings and a beaded gold necklace and a tan sleeveless vest adorned with hieroglyphic figures. Executive legal secretary, Queen Nefertiti style.
“Good morning. You’re looking very Cradle of Civilization today.”
“Good morning, Andy,” she said, too brightly. There was something wrong with her face, as if she were trying to decide how she felt about the terminal illness of an unpleasant relative.
“Everything all right?”
“Everything’s fine. Why do you ask?”
“No reason, other than you look like you just swallowed a mayfly.”
“What a thing to say. Besides, it’s June. Burke’s ready for you,” she said, gold bracelets clicking as she waved her right hand down the hall. “Go on in.”
“Thanks, warden.”
She laughed nervously. I walked around the corner to Cunningham’s office and stepped inside.
“Jesus Christ,” I said involuntarily.
“Oh, very funny,” Freddy Cohen said.
“What are you doing here?”
He was leaning against the far wall, favoring his back. He didn’t reply right away. First he glanced at Cunningham, sitting behind his mahogany desk, then at the ceiling, and then at me again.
“I need your help.”
“My help?” I said.
A pause, during which galaxies spun and tectonic plates shifted. “I need help with a case,” Cohen said. He shifted his position. He was standing between Cunningham’s framed law degree and the “Whites Only” sign Cunningham hung up as part of his rotating display of Jim Crow memorabilia. “Lest we forget,” he liked to say.
“What kind of case?”
“I’m getting to that.”
“I can hardly wait.”
“Don’t take that attitude with me—”
Cunningham cleared his throat.
We both looked at him. His hands were folded atop his desk like a pastor at a mandatory counseling session. “Why don’t you take a seat, Andy?”
I walked to the leather chair to the left of his desk and sat. I knew it hadn’t been a request.
“Nice weather we’re having,” Cunningham said.
“Indeed,” I said.
“Though perhaps a little warm.”
“Very humid.”
“You know what they say. It’s not the heat. Good weekend?”
“Too short.”
“They always are. Especially when you’re saving damsels in distress. Which brings me to the matter at hand.”
Before he could continue, LaTasha entered with a silver tray bearing large white porcelain coffee mugs, a tall carafe, and cut-glass containers of sugar and cream. If a plastic swizzle stick or a Styrofoam cup had ever despoiled the inside of Cunningham’s office, I wasn’t aware of it. We sat in silence while LaTasha poured our coffee; mine black, Cunningham’s light, Cohen’s with both cream and sugar. She left as gracefully as she’d entered. My eyes followed her out, admiring the thick, pleated cotton skirt completing her Nile ensemble. I hoped my figure held up as nicely when I was a mother of four someday.
“Go ahead, Freddy,” Cunningham said.
Cohen picked up his mug, took a sip of coffee, and placed it back on the edge of Cunningham’s desk beside a carved African fertility statue. He was still standing, which meant his back was bad again. Which was my fault, depending on how you felt about blaming messengers. Thin, gray hair receding, wire-rimmed glasses pushed down on his nose, he’d grown a trim salt-and-pepper beard, heavy on the sodium, since the last time I saw him. He wore a tailored, dark-gray suit, black shoes that uncharacteristically needed shining, and a frown suitable for an infant’s funeral.
“Hassan Mohamed,” he said. “Name mean anything to you?”
“No. Should it?”
“Try reading the news instead of making it for a change. Columbus man killed in Syria last month. Made CNN for five seconds between Cialis commercials.”
The headline came back to me. Stories of radicalized