by Nayt on Mon Feb 09, 2009 4:06 pm
The clerk at the courthouse, busy as she was, allowed Cyril access to the public records. It certainly helped that he had a profession that dealt with this sort of thing--investigation and the like. A detective made his money on finding people, information about people, stolen goods, and things along those lines, and it all required names and history. Sometimes, all one of them had to do was say who they were, and a court clerk wouldn't even give a second thought to giving them access to these sorts of things or not. That was Cyril's case this morning.
The amount of cases accessible to the public was pretty expansive, especially the ones dealing with Chicago. Oddly enough, there were several dealing with situations and larger cases outside of Chicago, but things such as divorce hearings, petty theft, and misdemeanors in general didn't have any merit or reason to hold record in a Chicago court building. After all, this was a city dealing with felonies, and city officials and the law enforcement knew that. If someone like, say, Al Capone were to have committed a crime in downstate Illinois, it was unlikely to be a simple misdemeanor, and something worth investigating, but Joe Shmoe in New York City swiping cigarettes from a convenient store just wasn't worth the time of officials this far from New York.
Unfortunately for Cyril there was nothing. No traces of Kiosnas or Uematsus or Tetsukens as litigants or co-litigants. If they had been involved in a lawsuit of some kind, then it certainly didn't take place in Illinois (as Hinan suggested, they were centered 'round New York City, and Chicago was a fairly new place to them), and couldn't have been a big enough case to merit record in Chicago. Either that or they were clean, and despite Hinan Kiosna's shady nature, they hadn't gotten their noses dirty.
"Great!" a voice declared from behind Cyril.
Behind Cyril, standing in the doorway of the record room, was a man whose only visible details were a thin frame, a gray long coat, and a gray fedora. His face was obscured behind a camera, professional pop-and-go bulb flash attached to the top; no expense was spared. It was very professional--top of the line stuff, the sort of merchandise that people were still going to seek out in the next fifteen years.
He hadn't taken a shot yet, though. "I'm here to snap one of the public records, and there's already someone here! This'll make a good'n. Hey, would you mind bendin' down a little bit to open that bottom drawer right there? And look to the camera a bit, sort of like I snuck up on you, y'know?"