© Copyright 2006, 2007
Chapter 7—Strategies
"You're kidding, of course!" Bob Jackson sneered as Nathan winced as they sat together in the closed-door office.
"It all seemed so innocent at the time—it still does in a way," Nathan answered. "I never saw this coming, Bob."
"I know, I know!" a tired Jackson sat back in his chair and sighed deeply. "So you were trying to back-door the tutoring program fees and got Ed Cassidy to run interference for you on the behalf of the union?"
"That's about the size of it, Bob," Nathan admitted.
"Right motive—wrong method, Nathan," Jackson scolded. "If you had come to me I could have gone to the Chamber of Commerce or the Rotary Club. Someone would have come up with the fees."
"Sorry, Bob. It seemed so easy at the time and O'Toole was happy to do it. The student's placement was important, too. It's my fault; I should have thought it through better!"
"Alright, alright!" Bob replied. "Breast beating session is over. Now we have to figure out how to manage this. I can't go out to my sources now. This thing with Chandler is too controversial. Everyone would avoid it like the plague. Besides, if I tried that it would be only a matter of time before O'Toole's name came out, and the student's name along with it. We can't have that."
"O'Toole offered to take a polygraph," Nathan added.
Jackson thought for a moment, scratching his chin. "Interesting! It's premature, of course. We'll let Chandler get himself out on a limb and then put O'Toole on the machine, and that will be the saw that cuts the limb off behind him."
"Good thinking, Bob!"
"You're sure that O'Toole is okay—we checked him out and everything?"
"I told the agency to be extra careful on any sign of this kind of problem, just on account of his quitting the priesthood," Nathan assured Jackson. "I can have Henry Thompson monitor the student. Henry's smart and I trust him to be confidential." Jackson nodded again. "If there are any doubts about O'Toole I want him dropped like a hot potato," Jackson warned. "...and I mean yesterday!"
"Bob, this new guy, O'Toole, is really good. He's the answer to the Math Department that we need. His Trig classes are two chapters ahead of all the other sections. His tests are more difficult, but his students' scores are much better—and he doesn't curve. I've checked this out personally."
"Impressive! That's why we've got to protect him on this Chandler thing—if we can." Bob replied.
"Sure enough, Bob!" Nathan agreed.
"Nathan, keep Cassidy on your side on this issue. You may need him at some point. Do any thing you can to keep it all under wraps," Jackson ordered.
Nathan stood to leave. "I understand, Bob," he said
"And one more thing, Nathan," Jackson ordered as Nathan was about to open the door to leave. "Get that kid out of O'Toole's apartment!"
*************
Nathan returned to his office right after his meeting with Bob Jackson. Abby was at her desk.
"I need to have a meeting with James O'Toole and Henry Thompson as soon as you can put it together," Nathan said as he walked past her on his way to the inner sanctum. "See if you can get Henry in about fifteen minutes ahead of O'Toole."
"I'll get on it right away," she answered calmly. "While I do that, I suggest that you take a look at the Sentinel. It was just delivered. Look at the editorial page."
Nathan's eyebrows arched in sudden interest. He picked up the newspaper and carried it into his office with him. He turned to the editorial page. He didn't have to look hard to find what Abby was talking about. The featured op-ed piece proclaimed the headline. "Oh, Brother!" Nathan thought to himself as he read it.
MINISTER AND SCHOOL MUST COME CLEAN From his pulpit, Reverend Ethan Chandler, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Bates, has made scurrilous, yet vague, accusations about the personnel teaching in Bates Schools. If his claims prove true, it presents a clear danger to our children. Yet, the Reverend has been curiously silent on details. If he knows something specific, this paper urges him to bring his information fully into the public eye.
Bates School officials, on the other hand, have done nothing to answer Chandler's charges. If there is nothing to hide, then they should say so publicly. Yet, Bob Jackson, School Superintendent declined to comment when this paper gave him the opportunity. If they are hiding a sexual predator, then shame on them. If the charge is false, they should be happy to let the truth come out. The controversy is ripping at the seams of our close-knit community. In the opinion of the editors, both Rev. Chandler and the School Board owe the people some answers. This paper stands ready to afford either party the opportunity to allow the public to know the truth.
Nathan finished reading the short piece and let out an exasperated gasp. "Freedom of the Press!" he muttered to himself sarcastically. He called out to Abby, who was making calls at her desk. "You better get Ed Cassidy in here, too," he sighed.
Just then Nathan's phone rang. "I'll get it, Abby," he called out to her. "I'd bet a month's pay that it's Bob Jackson." Nathan's hunch was correct.
Nathan: I just read it, Bob.
Jackson: This changes all our plans!
Nathan: Not necessarily—at least not right away. I think that I can get Ed Cassidy to help us.
Jackson: I'm listening!
Nathan: I'll get him to have the union insist that confidential personnel files remain sealed. You can insist to the press that it's paramount to protect the identity of the student.
Jackson: I like it, Nathan. It won't stop them for long.
Nathan: Every day that it does is a win for us.
Jackson: What about that tutor in the apartment problem?
Nathan: I'm taking care of it as soon as we hang up.
Jackson: Good! Keep me posted.
************
Harvey English's Barber Shop was full of patrons. It was always good for business when there were big doings in town. Harvey's shop was the center of Bates' political and philosophical debate.
"Ethan has been around a long time," Harvey argued to Brice Barlow, a local lawyer, as the listener sat in the chair and Harvey clipped away. "He's part of us."
Charley Hancock, Village Police Officer chipped in. "All I know is that I haven't received any sex offender notifications from the State."
"But you have to be convicted to get on that list," Barlow objected. "A lot of these guys are never caught."
"See?" Harvey seconded the point.
"Still, we've only got Ethan's word for it," Barlow jumped to the other side of the fence.
Bert Hodges operated the Feed Mill. "Like the paper says, they should all just lay their cards on the table. The truth would come out one way or another."
"Ethan should go first—he brought it up." Charley asserted.
"Ethan's pretty stubborn about what he will or won't do. He figures that he's got...you know...the Man Upstairs on his side," Harvey reminded them.