He followed Wohl's father across the room to Wohl's bar.
It was covered with takeout buckets from a Chinese restaurant. Chief Wohl reached over the bar, came up with a fifth of Johnnie Walker and a glass, and poured the glass half full. He added ice cubes from a plastic freezer tray and handed it to him.
"Dilute it yourself," he said cheerfully. "There's soda and water."
"Thank you," Matt said.
Peter Wohl, in the act of closing his zipper, came out of his bedroom.
"What we have here is obviously the best-dressed newspaper boy in Philadelphia," he said. "Have you and Dad introduced yourselves?"
He's not feeling much pain, either, Matt decided.
"Yes, sir."
"And I see he's been plying you with booze," Wohl went on. "So let me see whatThe Ledger has to say, and then you can tell me how you fucked up."
Matt handed him the newspaper, which Wohl spread out on the bar, and then read, his father looking over his shoulder.
"It could be worse," Chief Wohl said. "
I think Nelson is being very careful. Nesfoods takes a lot of tomato soup ads in his newspapers."
"So how did you fuck up, Matt?" Peter Wohl asked.
Matt told him about his confrontation with H. Richard Detweiler, fighting, he thought successfully, the temptation to offer any kind of an excuse for his inexcusable stupidity.
"You're sure, son," Chief Wohl asked, "that Detweiler's girl has a drug problem?"
"If Washington has the nurse in Hahneman, Dad-" Peter Wohl said.
"Yeah, sure," Chief Wohl said. "What about the girl's relationship with DeZego? How reliable do you think that information is?"
"It's secondhand," Matt said. "It could just be gossip."
"You didn't tell her father about that, anyhow, did you, Matt?" Peter Wohl asked.
"No, sir, I didn't," Matt said. But that triggered the memory of his having told his father. And, shamed again, he felt morally obliged to add that encounter to everything else.
"Well, fortunately for you," Chief Wohl said, looking at Matt, " Jerry tried to belt the photographer. Or did he belt him? Or just try?"
"The paper said 'a scuffle ensued,' " Peter Wohl said.
"It was more than that," Chief Wohl said, went to the bar and read, somewhat triumphantly from the newspaper story: "… 'a scuffle ensued during which aLedger photographer was knocked to the ground and his camera damaged.' " Don't you watch television? A cop is supposed toget the facts."
" 'Just the facts, ma'am.' " Peter Wohl chuckled, mimicking Sergeant Friday onDragnet.
"Carlucci is going to be far more upset about that picture being on every other breakfast table in Philadelphia, son," Chief Wohl said, "than about you telling Detweiler his daughter has a drug problem."
"That was pretty goddamn dumb," Peter Wohl said.
"Yes, sir, I know it was. And I'm sorry as hell," Matt said.
"He was talking about Jerry Carlucci," Chief Wohl said.
"But the shoe fits," Peter Wohl said, "so put it on."
Matt glanced at him. There was a smile on Peter Wohl's face.