those same endless summers when my friends and I kept our ears cocked for the Good Humor truck while we jumped rope.
âSo what brings you to Chicago when you could be in Charleston getting just as hot, and visiting your old haunts in the bargain?â
He smiled again. âSince the grandmother who raised me died, there hasnât been anything to take me back. Iâm looking for my father. Someone told me heâd retired to Chicago. I didnât see him in any of the phone books, so I thought Iâd better get an investigator. The folks at the Herald-Star said you were good.â
That was enterprising: an out-of-towner going straight to the dailies for advice. âWhen did you last see him?â
âWhen I was eleven. When my mother died, I guess he couldnât stand it. He left me at my grandmotherâsâmy motherâs motherâand took off. I never even got a postcard from him after that.â
âAnd why do you want to find him now? After what, fifteen years?â
âA pretty good guess, Ms. Warshawski. Iâm twenty-four. When my grandmother died, I started thinking I wanted more family. Also, wellââhe played with his fingers as if embarrassedââI wondered if he didnât have a side to his story I ought to hear. I grew up listening to my granny and my auntâher unmarried daughter, who lived with herârepeat what a bad old bag of bones my old man was. They blamed him for my mamaâs death. But I began to see that was impossible, so I started wondering about all the rest of what they had to say about my folks. I guess every man likes to know what kind of person his own old man wasâwhat heâs got to measure himself against, so to speak.â
Iâm no less human than the next womanâI couldnât resist the self-deprecating smile or the wistful yearning in his blue-gray eyes. I printed out a contract for him and told him I needed a five-hundred-dollar advance. Under the floor lamp, his helmet of ash blond hair looked like spun gold; as he leaned forward to hand me five hundreds in cash, I could almost imagine the money to be some conjurorâs trick.
âI do accept checks and the usual credit cards,â I said.
âI donât have a permanent address these days. Cash is easier for me.â
It was odd, but not that odd: Plenty of people who visit detectives donât want a paper trail. It just made me wonder.
His story boiled down to this: His father, also named Hunter Davenport, was a photographerâat least, he had been a photographer when young Hunterâs mother died. Hunter Senior had been a freelance journalist in Vietnam, where my clientâs mother had been an army nurse. The two met, married, produced young Hunter.
âThatâs why I lived in Europe as a child: After the war my father covered hot spots in Africa and Asia. My mother and I lived in Paris during the school year and joined him on assignment during the summer. Then she died, in a car wreck in South Africa. It had nothing to do with whatever conflict he was covering. I donât even know where he was workingâwhen youâre a kid, you donât pay attention to that kind of thing. It was just the ordinary dumb kind of wreck she could have had in Paris or Charleston. He wasnât with herâin the car with her, I meanâbut my grandmother always blamed him, said if he hadnât kept her half a world away, it never would have happened.â
He stumbled through the words so quickly, I had to lean forward to make out what he was saying. He stopped abruptly. When he spoke again it was in a slow, flat voice, but his knuckles showed white where he gripped his hands against his crossed legs.
âI was with her when she died. My mother was so beautiful. You never will see a woman as beautiful as her. And when she was covered with bloodâ It was hard. I still see her in my dreams that way.â He took a deep