fact,
those aren’t fair comparisons. There might have been some sort of a tug, those times. Some sort of intuition. But this thing?
That train was in your imagination, brother. Nothing else.
Eric was actually pleased to have Kellen Cage walking alongside him now. Cage promised something valuable—a distraction. Talk
to him, have a few drinks, forget this moment. Forget this trembling in the gut, this foolish, ominous sense.
“What’re you having?” Cage said when they reached the bar.
“Grey Goose on the rocks with a lemon.”
Cage turned and spoke to the bartender and Eric eased ontothe stool, turned and looked back at the sprawling atrium and took a deep breath. He just needed to relax. This thing, well,
it wasn’t anything, really. Not even worth analyzing. Just forget it.
“So, I’m truly happy to hear you’re interested in Campbell Bradford,” Kellen said, “because he’s one of the biggest question
marks I’ve got left. The old boy just disappeared when he left town.”
“Made a pile of money after he went,” Eric said. “His daughter-in-law’s the one who hired me. Said he’s worth two hundred
million or somewhere in that neighborhood.”
“You mean he
was
worth that much,” Kellen said. “Not is. Was. Has to be dead.”
“No, but he’s close.”
Kellen tilted his head back and arched an eyebrow. “The man is alive?”
“He was when I left Chicago, at least.”
Kellen shook his head. “No way. Not the same Campbell.”
Eric frowned. “His daughter-in-law told me he’d grown up here and then ran away as a kid.”
“The Campbell Bradford I know of ran away from town, too. But he was a grown man, left a wife and kid behind. And he was born
in eighteen ninety-two, which would put him at, what, one hundred and sixteen now? Your man can’t be
that
old, right?”
“He’s ninety-five.”
“Then he ain’t the same guy.”
“Well, must be two people with that name. Maybe my guy is your guy’s son?”
“He had a son named William who stayed in town.” Kellen’s face was tinged with disappointment. “Hell, you’re not going to
be able to help me. We got two different people.”
“They have to be connected,” Eric said. “Name like that, town like this? Have to be related somehow.”
Kellen took a drink, then said, “The Campbell I know of, he was a dark man.”
“How so?”
“There was a time this area was a gambler’s paradise, back in the twenties. Bunch of money poured in, bunch of debts piled
up, and Campbell Bradford was the man who saw to balancing the scales.”
“Some sort of enforcer?” Eric said.
“You got it. He was the muscle, the debt collector. People were
terrified
of the man. Thought he was evil. The story I’m interested in, the way this guy intersects with my own project, is that there’s
a legend he murdered Shadrach Hunter after the stock market collapsed in 1929, just as this town dried up. It’s unreal how
fast this place emptied out after Black Tuesday. One day this was among the world’s elite resorts, a year later it’s empty
and on its way to being a ruin. Pretty damn fast change, you know?”
“Who was Shadrach Hunter?”
“Ran the black casino,” Kellen said. “And, yes, there was such a thing. Started out as a small poker game in a shitty back
room, and grew. There were so many blacks down here working at the hotels, but they couldn’t socialize there, so they threw
dice and played cards down at Shadrach’s. Before long, though, the thing grew some legs. Campbell Bradford was helping control
all the gaming in the valley for white people—working with Ed Ballard, who owned this hotel, only Campbell was a lot dirtier
than Ballard, who was far from clean himself—but he didn’t have anything to do with Shad’s game. According to the legend,
Shad was a miser, skimmed money from every game and saved it, just stockpiled. Always wore a gun in his belt and had a couple
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