Страница 83 из 84
As the story unfolded over time, most of the deductions made by Stone and the others proved correct. Bradley was killed because he was about to force Trent to leave the committee staff, making it impossible for him and Seagraves to continue their seemingly i
They also learned from Chambers’ account that one of Trent’s men, who had gotten a job at Fire Control, Inc., had gone into the reading room vault and placed a small camera in the air duct under the pretense of adjusting the gas nozzle located there. A
A man had been posted in the basement halon storage room waiting for DeHaven to draw into the kill zone. On the second day he unfortunately had, and his life ended before he told anyone what he’d seen. Chambers had admitted to having gone into the vault later and retrieving the camera.
Milton had given the coded letters to representatives from the NSA, and they had already decrypted it. From the little Stone and the others learned, the code was based on a centuries–old encryption formula. It was easily breakable by modern–day decryption techniques with their massive computing power, but Seagraves had no doubt assumed that no one would ever suspect Monty Chambers, Norman Janklow and Jewell English of being spies. And modern–day ciphertexts were all electronically generated, requiring keys consisting of massively long numbers to remain secure against brute–force assaults and other attacks by computers, which would have been impossible to replicate in an old book.
Trent had recovered from his wounds and was busily talking, especially when he learned that the government was trying mightily to pin the death penalty on him. This information included Roger Seagraves’ prominent role as the head of the spy ring. Now that they knew of Seagraves’ involvement, the FBI was investigating everyone remotely co
They’d also searched Seagraves’ house and found his “collection” room. While they hadn’t quite figured out what these items represented yet, when they eventually did, things would really get complicated, since many of them belonged to victims killed by Seagraves as part of his past CIA duties.
Stone had met at length with Ford, members of the FBI and the same two D.C. detectives who’d confronted Caleb at the library.
An FBI agent said, “We knew there was a spy ring operating in the city, but we could never run it down to its source. We certainly never figured the Library of Congress to be involved.”
Stone said, “Well, we had an asset you didn’t.”
The agent looked surprised. “What was that?”
Alex Ford answered, “A highly skilled librarian named Caleb Shaw, that’s who.”
One of the D.C. detectives’ eyes twinkled. “Right, Shaw. Good, is he? He struck me as a little, uh, nervous.”
Stone replied, “Let’s just say his lack of personal courage is more than outweighed by his —”
The detective cut in, “Dumb luck?”
“Attention to detail.”
They’d thanked Stone for his help and left the door open for future cooperation.
“You ever need any help, just let us know,” one of the FBI agents had said, handing Stone a card with a phone number on it.
Stone put the card in his pocket thinking, I hope to God I never need help that badly.
After things had calmed somewhat, they all met at Stone’s cottage. And that’s when Caleb had held up the Psalm Book and demanded that A
She took a deep breath and started explaining. “I knew how much Jonathan loved books, and one day I asked him that if he could have any book in the world, which one would it be? He said the Bay Psalm Book. Well, I read up on it and found that all of them were in institutions, but one seemed the best choice to hit.”
“Let me guess, Old South Church in Boston?” Caleb prompted.
“How’d you know?”
“Easier to crack than the Library of Congress or Yale, at least I hope.”
“Anyway, I went up there with a friend of mine and told them we were college students doing a paper on famous books.”
“And they let you look at it,” Caleb said.
“Yes. And take pictures of it, all that. Then I had another friend who was really good at making bad pa — I mean, good at making things.”
“So he forged a Bay Psalm Book?” Caleb exclaimed.
“It was great, you couldn’t tell them apart.” A
“You did a little switcheroo?” Caleb said, his face turning very red. “With one of the rarest books in the history of this country you did a little switcheroo?”
“Why didn’t you just give DeHaven the excellent copy?” Stone asked.
“Give a fake book to the man I loved? I don’t think so.”
Caleb collapsed into a chair. “I don’t believe what I’m hearing.”
Before he got more wound up, she hurried on with her story. “When I gave him the book, Jonathan was stu
“Really? What a stu
She ignored him. “But since the church didn’t know their book was a fake and no Psalm Books were missing, I guess Jonathan finally assumed I was telling the truth. It made him so happy. And it was just an old book.”
“Just an old book!” Caleb was really about to erupt when Stone put a hand on his shoulder. “Let’s not beat a dead horse, Caleb.”
“A dead horse?” Caleb sputtered.
“I’ll put it back,” A
“Excuse me?” Caleb said.
“I’ll take the book back and do another switcheroo.”
“You can’t be serious.”
“I’m completely serious. I switched it once, I can switch it again.”
“What if they catch you?”
She looked at Caleb with pity. “I’m a lot better now than I was back then.” She looked over at Milton. “Want to help me do it?”
“Sure!” Milton exclaimed enthusiastically.
Caleb looked apoplectic. “I absolutely forbid your participation in a felony!”
Milton exclaimed, “Will you loosen up, Caleb? And it’s not a felony if we’re putting the real book back, now is it?”
Caleb started to say something and then rapidly calmed. “No, I guess it isn’t.”
“I’ll take care of the details,” A
He immediately clutched it to his chest. “Can’t I keep it until you really need it?” he asked, his hand lightly ru
“You told Monty Chambers it was just a dumb book,” Reuben reminded him.
Caleb looked miserable. “I know. I haven’t slept a wink since I said it. I think the book fairies have cursed me,” he added glumly.
“Okay,” she said. “You can keep it for now.”
Reuben looked at A
She smiled. “Can I take a rain check, Reuben? But I appreciate the offer.”
“It won’t be the last one, may–dam.” He kissed her hand.
After the others had left, A
As he washed off a tombstone, she gathered weeds in a plastic bag.