The Pelican Brief (Page 47)

"Why not?"

"We almost got caught this morning by his cleaning lady. We’ll try again tomorrow."

"Don’t get caught, Barr. Remember Watergate."

"They were morons, Fletcher. We, on the other hand, are quite talented."

"That’s right. So tell me, can you and your quite talented associates bug Grantham’s phone at the Post?"

Barr turned and frowned at Coal. "Have you lost your mind? Impossible. That place is busy at all hours. They have security guards. The works."

"It could be done."

"Then do it, Coal. If you know so damned much, you do it."

"Start thinking about ways to do it, okay? Just give it some thought."

"Okay. I’ve thought about it. It’s impossible." Coal was amused by this thought, and his amusement irritated Barr. The limo eased into downtown.

"Tap his apartment," Coal instructed. "I want a report twice a day on all his calls." The limo stopped, and Barr climbed out.

Breakfast at Dupont Circle. It was quite chilly, but at least the addicts and transvestites were still unconscious somewhere in their sick little worlds. A few winos lay about like driftwood. But the sun was up and he felt safe, and anyway he was still an FBI agent with a shoulder harness and a piece under his arm. Who was he to fear? He hadn’t used it in fifteen years, and he seldom left the office, but he’d love to yank it out and blast away.

His name was Trope, a very special assistant to Mr. Voyles. He was so special that no one except he and Mr. Voyles knew about these secret little chats with Booker from Langley. He sat on a circular bench with his back to New Hampshire, and unpacked a store-bought breakfast of banana and muffin. He checked his watch. Booker was never late. Trope always arrived first, then Booker five minutes later, and they always talked quickly and Trope left first, then Booker. They were both office boys now, far into their twilights but very close to their bosses, who from time to time grew weary of trying to figure out what the hell the other was doing, or perhaps just needed to know something quick.

His real name was Trope, and he wondered if Booker was a real name. Probably not. Booker was from Langley, and they were so paranoid even the pencil pushers probably had fakes.

He took an inch off the banana. Hell, the secretaries over there probably had three or four names.

Booker strolled near the fountain with a tall white cup of coffee. He glanced around, then sat down next to his friend. Voyles wanted this meeting, so Trope would speak first.

"We lost a man in New Orleans," he said.

Booker cuddled the hot cup and sipped. "He got himself killed."

"Yeah, but he’s still dead. Were you there?"

"Yes, but we didn’t know he was there. We were close, but watching others. What was he doing?"

Trope unwrapped the cold muffin. "We don’t know. Went down for the funeral, tried to find the girl, found someone else, and here we are." He took a long bite and the banana was finished. Now to the muffin. "It was a clean job, wasn’t it?"

Booker shrugged. What did the FBI know about killing people? "It was okay. Pretty weak effort at suicide, from what we hear." He sipped the hot coffee.

"Where’s the girl?" Trope asked.

"We lost her at O’Hare. Maybe she’s in Manhattan, but we’re not certain. We’re looking."

"And they’re looking." Trope sipped cold coffee.

"I’m sure they are."

They watched a wino stagger from his bench and fall. His head hit first with a thud, but he probably felt nothing. He rolled over and his forehead was bleeding.

Booker checked his watch. These meetings were extremely brief. "What are Mr. Voyles’ plans?"

"Oh, he’s going in. He sent fifty troops last night, with more today. He doesn’t like losing people, especially someone he knows."

"What about the White House?"

Chapter Sixteen

"Not going to tell them, and maybe they won’t find out. What do they know?"

"They know Mattiece."

Trope managed a slight smile at this thought. "Where is Mr. Mattiece?"

"Who knows? In the past three years, he’s been seen little in this country. He owns at least a half-dozen homes in as many countries, and he’s got jets and boats, so who knows?"

Trope finished the muffin and stuffed the wrapper in the sack. "The brief nailed him, didn’t it?"

"It’s beautiful. And if he’d played it cool, the brief would have been ignored. But he goes berserk, starts killing people, and the more he kills the more credibility the brief has."

Trope glanced at his watch. Too long already, but this was good stuff. "Voyles says we may need your help."

Booker nodded. "Done. But this will be a very difficult matter. First, the probable gunman is dead. Second, the probable bagman is very elusive. There was an elaborate conspiracy, but the conspirators are gone. We’ll try to find Mattiece."

"And the girl?"

"Yes. We’ll try."

"What’s she thinking?"

"How to stay alive."

"Can’t you bring her in?" Trope asked.

"No. We don’t know where she is, and we can’t just snatch innocent civilians off the streets. She doesn’t trust anyone right now."

Trope stood with his coffee and sack. "I can’t blame her." He was gone.

Grantham held a cloudy fax photo sent to him from Phoenix. She was a junior at Arizona State, a very attractive twenty-year-old coed. She was listed as a biology major from Denver. He had called twenty Shaws in Denver before he stopped. The second fax was sent by an AP stringer in New Orleans. It was a copy of her freshman photo at Tulane. The hair was longer. Somewhere in the middle of the yearbook, the stringer had found a photo of Darby Shaw drinking a Diet Coke at a law school picnic. She wore a baggy sweater with faded jeans that fit just right, and it was obvious the photo was placed in the yearbook by a great admirer of Darby’s. It looked like something out of Vogue. She was laughing at something or someone at the picnic. The teeth were perfect and the face was warm. He had tacked this one onto the small corkboard beside his news desk.

There was a fourth fax, a photo of Thomas Callahan, just for the record.

He placed his feet on the desk. It was almost nine-thirty, Tuesday. The newsroom hummed and rocked like a well-organized riot. He’d made eighty phone calls in the last twenty-four hours, and had nothing to show but the four photos and a stack of campaign finance forms. He was getting nowhere, and, really, why bother? She was about to tell all.

He skimmed the Post, and saw the strange story about one Gavin Verheek and his demise. The phone rang. It was Darby.

"Seen the Post?" she asked.

"I write the Post, remember?"

She was not in the mood for small talk. "The story about the FBI lawyer murdered in New Orleans, have you seen it?"

"I’m just reading it. Does it mean something to you?"

"You could say that. Listen carefully, Grantham. Callahan gave the brief to Verheek, who was his best friend. Friday, Verheek came to New Orleans for the funeral. I talked to him by phone over the weekend. He wanted to help me, but I was scared. We agreed to meet yesterday at noon. Verheek was murdered in his room around eleven Sunday night. Got all that?"

"Yeah, I got it."

"Verheek didn’t show for our meeting. He was, of course, dead by then. I got scared, and left the city. I’m in New York."

"Okay." Grantham wrote furiously. "Who killed Verheek?"

"I do not know. There’s a lot more to the story. I’ve read the Post and the New York Times from front to back, and I’ve seen nothing about another killing in New Orleans. It happened to a man I was talking to and I thought was Verheek. It’s a long story."