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The President sneered at the windows.

Coal continued. “Okay, you’re right. There could be a thousand copies out there by now. But it’s harmless, unless of course our friend actually did these dirty deeds, then—”

“Then my ass is cooked.”

“Yes, I would say our asses are cooked.”

“How much money did we take?”

“Millions, directly and indirectly.” And legally and illegally, but the President knew little of these transactions and Coal chose to stay quiet.

The President walked slowly to the sofa. “Why don’t you call Grantham? Pick his brain. See what he knows. If he’s bluffing, it’ll be obvious. What do you think?”

“I don’t know.”

“You’ve talked to him before, haven’t you? Everyone knows Grantham.”

Coal was now pacing behind the sofa. “Yeah, I’ve talked to him. But if I suddenly call out of nowhere, he’ll be suspicious.”

“Yeah, I guess you’re right.” The President paced on one end of the sofa, and Coal on the other.

“What’s the downside?” the President finally asked.

“Our friend could be involved. You asked Voyles to back off our friend. Our friend could be exposed by the press. Voyles covers his tail and says you told him to chase other suspects and ignore our friend. The Post goes berserk with another cover-up smear. And we can forget reelection.”

“Anything else?”

Coal thought for a second. “Yeah, this is all completely off the wall. The brief is fantasy. Grantham will find nothing, and I’m late for a staff meeting.” He walked to the door. “I’ve got a squash game for lunch. Be back at one.”

The President watched the door close, and breathed easier. He had eighteen holes pla

He punched numbers on his phone, waited patiently, and finally had Bob Gminski on the line. The director of the CIA was a terrible golfer, one of the few the President could humiliate, and he invited him to play this afternoon. Certainly, said Gminski, a man with a thousand things to do but, well, it was the President so he would be delighted to join him.

“By the way, Bob, what about this pelican thing in New Orleans?”

Gminski cleared his throat and tried to sound relaxed. “Well, Chief, I told Fletcher Coal Friday that it was very imaginative and a fine work of fiction. I think its author should forget about law school and pursue a career as a novelist. Ha, ha, ha.”

“Great, Bob. Nothing to it then.”

“We’re digging.”

“See you at three.” The President hung up, and went straight for his putter.

Riverwalk runs for a quarter of a mile along the water, and is always crowded. It is packed with two hundred shops and cafes and restaurants on several levels, most under the same roof, and several with doors leading onto a boardwalk next to the river. It’s at the foot of Poydras Street, a stone’s throw from the Quarter.

She arrived at eleven, and sipped espresso in the rear of a tiny bistro while trying to read the paper and appear calm. Frenchmen’s Bend was one level down and around a corner. She was nervous, and the espresso didn’t help.





She had a list in her pocket of things to do, specific steps at specific moments, even words and sentences she had memorized in the event things went terribly wrong and Verheek got out of control. She had slept two hours, and spent the rest of the time with a legal pad diagraming and charting. If she died, it would not be from a lack of preparation.

She could not trust Gavin Verheek. He was employed by a law enforcement agency that at times operated by its own rules. He took orders from a man with a history of paranoia and dirty tricks. His boss reported to a President in charge of an Administration run by fools. The President had rich, sleazy friends who gave him lots of money.

But at this moment, dear, there was no one else to trust. After five days and two near misses, she was throwing in the towel.

New Orleans had lost its allure. She needed help, and if she had to trust cops, the Fibbies were as clean as any.

Eleven forty-five. She paid for the espresso, waited for a crowd of shoppers, and fell in behind them. There were a dozen people browsing in Frenchmen’s Bend as she walked past the entrance where her friend should be in about ten minutes. She eased into a bookstore two doors down. There were at least three stores in the vicinity from which she could shop and hide and watch the front door of Frenchmen’s Bend. She chose the bookstore because the clerks weren’t pushy and killing time was expected of the customers. She looked at the magazines first, then with three minutes to go she stepped between two rows of cookbooks and watched for Gavin.

Thomas said he was never on time. An hour late was early for him, but she would give him fifteen minutes and she’d be gone.

She expected him at precisely noon, and there he was. Black sweatshirt, red baseball cap, folded newspaper. He was a bit thi

She held a cookbook to her eyes and peered over it. He had gray hair and dark skin. The eyes were hidden behind sunglasses. He fidgeted and looked irritated, the way he sounded on the phone. He passed the newspaper from hand to hand, shifted his weight from foot to foot, and glanced around nervously.

He was okay. She liked the way he looked. He had a vulnerable, nonprofessional ma

After five minutes, he walked through the door as he was told, and went to the right rear of the store.

Khamel had been trained to welcome death. He had been close to it many times, but never afraid of it. And after thirty years of expecting it, nothing, absolutely nothing, made him tense. He got somewhat excited about sex, but that was it. The fidgeting was an act. The jittery little movements were contrived. He’d survived face-offs with men almost as talented as he, and he could certainly handle this little rendezvous with a desperate child. He picked through the safari jackets and tried to appear nervous.

He had a handkerchief in his pocket, because he suddenly had caught a cold so his voice was a bit thick and scratchy. He had listened to the recording a hundred times, and he was confident he had the inflection and rhythm and slight upper Midwest accent. But Verheek was a bit more nasal—thus, the handkerchief for the cold.

It was difficult to allow anyone to approach from the rear, but he knew he must. He did not see her. She was behind him but very close when she said, “Gavin.”

He jerked quickly around. She was holding a white Panama hat and speaking to it. “Darby,” he said, pulling the handkerchief out for a fake sneeze. Her hair was a gold color and shorter than his. He sneezed and coughed. “Let’s get out of here,” he said. “I don’t like this idea.”

Darby didn’t like it either. It was Monday and her classmates were going about their business of clawing through law school, and here she was camouflaged to the max and playing cloak and dagger with this man who could get her killed. “Just do as I say, okay? Where’d you get the cold?”

He sneezed into the handkerchief and talked as low as possible. It sounded painful. “Last night. I left the air on too low. Let’s get out of here.”

“Follow me.” They left the store. Darby took his hand, and they walked quickly down a flight of stairs leading to the boardwalk.

“Have you seen them?” he asked.

“No. Not yet. But I’m sure they’re around.”

“Where the hell are we going?” The voice was scratchy.

They were on the boardwalk, almost jogging, talking without looking at each other. “Just come with me.”

“You’re going too fast, Darby. We look suspicious. Slow down. Look, this is crazy. Let me make a phone call, and we’ll be safe and secure. I can have three agents here in ten minutes.” He was sounding good. This was working. They were holding hands, ru