I arrived at Paul's house about an hour later. I'd stopped off at the office and talked with Adriana and explained that if Deanna called, I was out of the office on a local job. She'd raised her eyebrow at that, but not asked questions -- her famous 'I don't give a fuck' demeanor in full force.
I knocked on the door to Paul's house and there was Solomon, tired, bleary eyed and obviously just gotten up. He recognized me and shouted, "Uncle Ryan!" and embraced me. He was just wearing shorts and we were on the porch of Paul's very expensive house in a gated neighborhood. In a way, it was funny. God only knew the rumors that would flow from this.
I disengaged and gestured to Solomon to go inside.
I knew Solomon would recognize me. I'd bought him his first video game console, and some games to go along with it. Sometimes Paul gave me shit, saying I'd started Solomon on his path, but I don't regret it. He'd been kicked out of three different schools and the poor kid just needed an outlet, and I gave him one. We'd been friends ever since.
We went inside and Solomon was making coffee. He gestured with the jug and said, "Want some?"
I nodded, sure. Paul had all the gourmet stuff. Solomon poured me a coffee and plonked himself down on the other side of the kitchen island, where we sat, sipping the hot blue mountain java.
"So what's up, uncle Ryan? You didn't come here just for the coffee."
I didn't look at him immediately, just smelled the hot coffee. Then I blurted out, "Deanna is having an affair."
Solomon immediately put down his coffee, got off his stool and came around and just hugged me. It might not have been appropriate, but it was a nice gesture. My body racked with sobs for just a minute, and then he released me and I got control again.
"So...that sucks man. Big time. Are you sure... oh wait. That's why you are here. You want me to... I get it."
Solomon more than made up for Paul's lack of acumen. Honestly, it was like they were one divided person. Paul got the looks and the charm and Solomon got the brains and the social issues.
I looked doe eyed at Solomon. "Would you? I need... details. I need to know more and you know how to get that stuff...I know you aren't supposed to touch a computer but..."
Solomon just smiled at me. "Of course, Uncle Ryan. You don't even need to ask. We'll find out and then we'll take that fucker she's doing to the cleaners. It's all possible."
So that's what we did. Out came his laptop and online he went. It was an instructive morning -- I learned a lot about how hackers work and what goes on. I was expecting a lot of little windows on screen opening with code streaming through them, like you see on the movies. Lots of countdowns and stuff.
Turns out Hollywood lies. Most of the time was spent in chat rooms. Turns out that most hackers are lazy. You want to get into any given system? Chances are, someone else already has. What you need to do is find that person, and get them to either tell you how they did it, or give you the credentials they used. There are hacking chat channels all over the world were people share this info. It's all tit for tat though. You have to give them what they want. Turns out Solomon, with his online name of "Scorbius", was well known and people fell over themselves to give him what he asked for.
Firstly, we needed to get into the booking system at Wrigley field. Simon had been convinced that they were sitting in a season ticket box, so we needed to see. Solomon spent some time talking to some people on line -- turns out none of them had been into the booking system at Wrigley field; it's a sport. They are nerds. Why would any of them care? But it was based on the same software used by various parts of Ticket Master, and they
had
been in there. Solomon got the instructions, set about the task and was in within twenty minutes.
While he was doing that, I was looking on the MLB website for the game in question -- there were lots of small clips online and I caught one where the camera panned across the crowd and there they were. Thankfully they didn't have the Kiss Cam segment online. I don't think I could have handled that.
From a still of that, we cross referenced the seating plan and worked out where they were sitting. From there, it was a simple matter to interrogate the database and find out if those seats were allocated to a season ticket holder. And they were.
Jordan Lawler. The name of my nemesis. No, my mortal enemy. Nemesis implied he'd already won. And there I went again. Changing my mind. Was I going to fight, or just bury them? I still didn't know.
We got his home address -- it was an apartment building downtown. Unlikely he was married then -- it wasn't the kind of place you'd raise a family. We didn't get his credit card information. That was more learning I got from this experience -- most websites that take credit card information to then charge on them don't actually store those details themselves.
There are a ton of rules and regulations about how credit card details have to be stored -- servers with specific configurations, and access methods and so on, and most places that want to offer stuff for sale over the internet don't have the time, money or experience to put that together, so almost all contract it out to credit card storage companies whose major expertise is that. When you go to a website and put in your credit card details to buy, say movie tickets, that part of the website is actually handled by someone else. All the movie ticket company gets is an index id number that they use to communicate with the credit card company.
The practical upshot of which, we didn't get his credit card details. Solomon assured me he could get it in time, if I really wanted it, but I didn't know yet, so we let that go.
What I did want was some information that Solomon couldn't get. I didn't get how often he'd used the season tickets. I didn't get who he took with him. I didn't get that which I wanted most -- concrete details of this affair. It was a step in the right direction and I knew more now than I had, but I still didn't know what I wanted to know.
We took a break and I suggested lunch. Solomon just waved his hands at me and said he'd do some digging if I went to Burger King and got him the burger he liked. So off I went. I was back in half an hour, and found out that what that kid could do in half an hour, when I wasn't breathing down his neck, was astounding.
He'd compiled a dossier on Mr. Lawler that any PI company would have been proud of. Alright, it was all gained illegally, but I wasn't about to use it in court anyway, so who cares?
As we ate, I went through it. Turns out Mr. Lawler WAS married -- I was wrong. He actually lived in Philadelphia. He had two kids and a wife, and he was in Chicago as point man for a company buy out. He worked for a corporate raider and he was in Chicago negotiating to buy out a large confectionery making company there. He'd been there for at least eight months already, and it looked like he'd be there for another two or three, closing the deal. He'd bought a condo there since he was spending so much time in Illinois -- he thought that he could sell it, make his money back and then not have spent anything on the time he was there. The condo was currently up for sale.
He was also, we discovered, a customer of Royals Realty. Which is where Crystal worked. Connection made. That's how they'd met -- Deanna was staging his condo.
At one point, when I was engrossed in the documents, Solomon gestured at the file and said, "That was fun, putting that together. Deanna needs to cheat more often!"
I just stopped, didn't say anything and let Solomon work out what he'd just said. It took him a second and then he just went, quietly, "oh shit. I'm so sorry man... I didn't think."
Social issues, you see. Not thinking what he was saying. Oh well. Need to move on. I glanced at him, said, "Don't worry about it," and carried on reading.
We were making inroads here, but I still wasn't getting the details I wanted. But then I had a brainwave. Crystal. She
had
to know.
There was one way to find out. I pulled out my phone, gestured to Solomon to be quiet and made a call. The phone rang and after three rings, Crystal answered.
"Hi Ryan. How are you? Feeling better?" Deanna had spoken to her. Good. Boded well. They were sharing.
"Somewhat. Hey Crystal, you know where Deanna is? I think there's some issue with her phone. I tried calling her yesterday and got no answer, and same today. It doesn't even ring. I think there's some setting or something that got flipped? Maybe she's in a place where there is no service? You got any idea?"
"Oh, I don't know Ryan. She's at a staging downtown today, in an apartment complex off Lower Wacker Drive. She said she needed to get some things from storage, so she's probably on her way out to Crystal Lake right now. I can tell her you called though, if she calls me? Get her to get in touch?"
"Yeah, that's fine. It was like this yesterday too -- do you know where she was then? I was wondering if location had something to do with it."
The $64000 question.
"Oh, she was with me at a showing. We were downtown again. We've got four different apartments I'm showing right now."
Bingo. That was a direct lie. Crystal therefore knew at least something and was covering for Deanna, which means she was my new line of attack.
"Ok, well, not to worry. I'm sure she'll call at some point. Thanks Crystal. Say hello to Charlie for me."
"Sure, Ryan. Feel better, ok?"
Her husband, Charlie Riggs, was a local hero on talk radio. He was half comedian, half right wing mouthpiece. Very popular in Chicago, and I knew he held political aspirations for the future, but right now, he was just happy making people laugh and subtly poisoning their minds with the Tea Party agenda. In some ways, Charlie Riggs was more dangerous than anyone else I knew. When you laugh, you find yourself agreeing subconsciously. I do the same in some of my sales techniques.
Strangely though, even though we were polar opposites in our political leanings, Charlie and I got on. As long as we stayed away from certain subjects, we had a lot of fun. He'd even called me on his show a few times.
So, now I needed leverage on Crystal. She was obviously covering for Deanna and I needed information from her that she had to give me and then not tell my duplicitous soon to be ex-wife. Boom, that pendulum had swung right back again. Now I was divorcing her. At some point soon I would need to get settled on how I felt and what I was going to do. But not yet.
So back to Crystal. How was I going to get leverage? Well, one thing was for sure, I wasn't going to get it sitting around here. But Solomon might.