Excalibur Editions -
Where
the pen is mightier
Prologue
Austin, Texas Return
They all
favored The Hearth, just north of the glittering Capitol dome; the highly
visible Legislators, and the almost always invisible Brokers of
Power...the real shapers of success and destiny for that "select
few." The elected would always come and go with a planned
obsolescence rivaled only by the automobile industry, while the real powers
become even stronger with each election washout. On any given day
around noon, there was enough wealth represented in The Hearth's continental
dining room to run a small country. But then, Texas was a small country,
both literally in the past tense and figuratively in the present.
"The
sheer power and the goddammed glory...!"
Ryland
Whitley had to smile at the regional flavor of his luncheon guest's
conversation. At the same time, he did not underestimate the big
Texan. There were some who said that Farris Dodge had survived the
vicissitudes of eight administrations because his political brutality shook
your hand by day, and your convictions by night. Ryland knew it was
true. Dodge was the most respected of the fat cats, if for no other reason
than his uncanny ability to spot political winners. A candidate wanting
to know whether to plan on a four year stint in Austin, had only to ask
Farris. Deep within, they knew that he could make or break the chances of
even the incumbents. What chance then, for a mere tenderfoot? A
hopeful? Run the gamut from monarchy to democracy, and it matters not a
whit! There would always be the puppets, and, just as surely, always the
puppeteers.
"I'm
tellin' you, Ryland, that's what it's all about! Most of those nit-wits we've
got down on the floor don't know how to blow their noses, let alone finance a
budget for the whole damned state, now that oil is down. It's just about
enough to make a grown man cry, then climb up on his horse and ride plumb across
the border."
Ryland
nodded thoughtfully. "I know exactly what you mean. If they
had any brains at all, they'd be floating municipal industrial revenue bonds
and setting up incentives to bring in new industries to diversify what
economy we've still got left. They'd concentrate on broadening the tax
base, instead of raising taxes on a people close to being
destitute. Now is the time that they need to point out to world
industrialists that our deflated housing costs, surplus office space, cheap
land, and unemployment of the highly skilled make the timing perfect for
moving in and investing in the future of our state."
"Son,
you're absolutely right! All those boys do is cry about the
status quo and try to make everybody think they're not to
blame." Farris Dodge leaned his long body back from the table
and laughed with the hollow echo of certain disappointments; a lifetime's
worth. "It never changes, Ryland. I guess you know that,
now. The Democrats blame the Republicans. The Republicans blame the
Democrats, and together, they both blame 'Oil,' as if the ground owes us all
those megabucks. The dinosaurs have been feeding this state's tax
coffers for a lot longer than I've been around."
Ryland
Whitley's dark eyes sobered. There was often irony in the way things
turned out in life. It would be extremely funny, if it didn't cause
so many people so much pain. Still, he couldn't help but feel that
it was strange knowing exactly what this man of power thought, and
somehow strangely wonderful that they were in agreement. "You know,
Farris, the ridiculous part of this is that there's so damned much about Texas
for them to sell. For example, there isn't even any state income tax --
personal or corporate -- to take a bite out of any of their profits. Very
few states can make that claim. But what do these cretins do? They
cry so damned loud that they're wetting the handkerchiefs in every major city
in the western world, and scaring away the new business and investment that is
the only real answer to the problems...most, at least, if not all of
them. They're making sure their prophesies of doom become
reality." From the look on Dodge's face, it was easy for the
impassioned attorney to see he'd made headway in impressing this politician's
politician. He was on a roll, and he knew it.
"Young
man, you're talking my kind of language, now! I tried to get the Governor
to appoint a task force of leaders from different industries and Chambers
of Commerce to help bring in new industry and create jobs. Look how well
George Wallace did it in Alabama. We laughed at them, you know,
but when
it came right down to it, they led the entire sun belt in attracting the
new business that they needed, and they have for three years now."
Ryland
nodded to acknowledge Farris Dodge's grasp of things, but there was a vital
concept the senior statesman wasn't mentioning. "Frankly, Farris, a
college freshman in economics knows that any city, state, or country
dependent on one industry, whether it's cars in Detroit or tourism on Miami
Beach, will eventually suffer from that industry's cyclical
downturns. I don't know one industry that's immune, in all reality, to
cyclical gyrations. Let's face facts. That's one of the main
reasons that the smarter corporate directors started to diversify and, many
years ago, sought out compatible but different businesses to smooth
things and take up slack during the downturns in their main
businesses. That's been the simple rationale behind companies going the
conglomerate route from day one.
If these
idiots don't watch their step, they'll get killed in the next election.
They deserve it, of course, but they're taking the whole damned state down with
them." Even as he spoke, Ryland studied Dodge's face; the epitome of
a power broker's face, as smooth of expression, as inscrutable as a Buddhist
monk's. Sometimes, you just had to wait for the words to be said.
And Farris Dodge complied.
"I've
tried telling 'em. The state wouldn't be in this mess if we had men like
you in there. But we don't!"
The older
man had heard the rumor, after all! Despite his complaining, Dodge
loved to play the game, and no one baited hooks any better than he
did. But Ryland Whitley had been a top attorney and officer of the court
much too long to take bait, unless it suited his own plan.
He didn't
mind letting his campaign plans be put out on the table, though. After
all, his main purpose in being here was to test the political waters with
Dodge.
"Farris,
you just might get your wish. I suppose you've already heard. I've
been asked to run for State Attorney-General. In fact, I've been wanting
to talk to you about it."
Dodge
grinned, setting his double scotch down to reach over and shake Ryland's
hand. "Son, I'd say that's an honor. Yessiree! That's
big time! And if you work it right, it could be just the beginning.
Attorney-General can be a dammed good launch pad. High visibility, you
know? I've always said you remind me of the Kennedy boys...God rest their
souls!"
Ryland
shook his head. "I think you're giving me more credit than I
deserve, Farris. At any rate, Camelots are illusions which are hard for
someone like me to create. If I run, I want to win, and if I win, I want
it to be real."
Dodge was
quick to agree. "And I know you'd get an awful lot
accomplished. You've got the brains and the energy, God knows, not to
mention your integrity. This state needs more bright, young men like you
around to guide it through these rougher times. I'd say you've got a
helluva future ahead of you, but when you play your cards, you've got to play
'em right. If you want to make some changes, you'd better play them
right!" The expression in Dodge's eyes was piercing, now.
"Well,
some changes that absolutely must be made, could be effected through the
courts, with the precedence of certain cases on appeal, but that takes a damned
long time. And even then, judicial decisions rarely impact the overall
economic and the fiscal policies of city-state. You, also, have to
have the right kind of case and grounds to take all the way to the Supreme
Court. Sometimes, you're doomed to lose the case, because the law that's
on the books has to be changed before the courts can rule differently, no
matter what the justice or the logic of the cause is shown to be."
For the
first time, Dodge seemed a little less convinced. "Your ideals are
truly admirable. I'll say that for you! But, Ryland,
out there in the real world, plenty of the same stupidity, greed, and
narrow-mindedness that we've elected to legislative offices, has also been
elected to judicial positions
all over
the state, and at all levels of the courts. Son, don't you feel like the
Lone Ranger! This isn't just a Texas disease, but our concern, right now,
is here at home. And I say that, of course, knowing that it doesn't
change the fact that it's the damnedest of the problems that we've got, here
and now. Don't get me wrong. If anybody could make a difference, I
believe you could!"
Ryland's
dark head lowered imperceptibly. "I do feel that I'm achieving a
modicum of public good through some of the cases that I try in court. I
just don't think it's quite enough; at least, not by the standards that I've
set for myself. I don't think I really have to be in office to do a little
for the people...but it may not be enough!"
"God,
that sounds like you; a real straight shooter and a damned good attorney, to
boot! Well, if you do decide to run, you take care. You hear
me?" The baby blue innocence left Dodge's eyes. His
spectacles magnified the underlying shrewdness in his slightly narrowing eyes
now.
Ryland
absorbed Dodge's ominous warning in calm silence. The words
reverberated. After fifteen years of listening to verdicts, he knew both
the sound and the smell of a death sentence. Dodge, apparently, thought
he didn't stand a chance of winning. If that was how it was to be, he
could live with it. He had meant what he'd said earlier.
Still,
a pulse throbbed at his right temple where early silver threaded through his
dark hair. His luminous dark eyes reflected an ambivalence, too.
"Now,
you've aroused my curiosity, Farris. Which one of the other five
candidates for Attorney-General do you think will take it?"
"Son,
I didn't say you couldn't win. You've got what it takes. I just
said, 'be careful.' There's a lot of baseness underneath all the gold on
that Capitol dome. When you think about all the clout that goes with
political office...well, I don't have to tell you, men have been known to
murder for a helluva lot less!" Dodge leaned back with a cigar he
chewed and never smoked.
"Why
do I get the distinct feeling that you're trying to tell me something,
Farris?" Ryland worked to keep impatience from his voice.
"Cat and mouse" was wearing thin.
"Maybe
'cause I am," Dodge drawled at last. He'd taken time to flag down a
waiter to order coffee and dessert. "Phelps is an idiot, but the way
I hear it, he's hell-bent and determined to win."
"So
what?"
"I
talked to him the other day. He was sizing up his chances. The
incumbent, Jim, is damned good and well-liked. And, although he hasn't
officially announced, everyone knows that he'll probably run for Governor,
leaving the field wide open for Attorney-General.
Until your
name came up, Phelps was at the top of the list of favorites, and considered a
shoo-in.
He said he didn't want to play dirty, but if he has to, he will. He's
gonna try to carry the vote on a morality issue." Dodge's voice
dropped dramatically to a bare whisper. His betrayal of a political
confidence was dynamite in itself. Was he playing favorites, or being
superbly manipulative?
Ryland
shook his head in confusion. "You've lost me. What morality
issue?"
For the
first time, Dodge managed to look abashed. "Somewhere, Phelps got
the idea that pretty, little wife of yours might come in for some adverse
publicity and make you look bad. Now, let me say here and now, Ryland, I
don't know if he's got anything or not, but you might want to take a slow walk
around the situation before your family gets dragged through the mud. I
told you, Phelps is a determined son-of-a-bitch."
"So
am I, Farris. So am I," Ryland said at last, his words carried on
the wave of a heavy exhalation. "Just for the hell of it, what could
they possibly say about Jessica?"
Dodge's
big, smooth face twisted in pain. "That she'd had some
affairs."
"Some
affairs? More than one?"
"More
than one." Dodge's voice carried the apologetic sound of a banker
turning down a loan. "Whether it's true or not, you know it's enough
to bury you, politically. Come on, Son! What do you say, we have
another drink?"
Ryland's
lips twisted into a bitter smile. "Do I look like I need one?"
Dodge
nodded sadly. He recognized the signs. After all, he had survived
the administrations of three community property wives.
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