His customer, a tall, slender, light-skinned black man dressed impeccably in a well-tailored tan suit, white shirt, and muted patterned green tie, and carrying a tan trench coat over his arm, had immediately pulled out a pair of half-glasses and opened a newspaper; no historical chitchat with this dude, Jenks knew. The man’s shoes were expensive two-toned leather, pointy and with perforations across the toe. Jenks pegged him as an outlander, a visitor to D.C., his judgment helped by the New York Times in the man’s hands.

The customer looked up occasionally from the newspaper to check the arrivals board.

“Meeting somebody?” Jenks asked as he put the finishing touches on the mirror shine he’d accomplished with his polish and brushes and rags.

“No. What do I owe you?”

Uppity, Jenks thought. Probably owns a couple of slums. “Six dollars, sir,” he said.

The man stood, reached in his pocket, and pulled out a ten-dollar bill. Jenks went to give him change, but he’d already walked away in the direction of gate A-8, where the Metroliner from New York ’s Penn Station would be arriving.

“What he give you, man, four bucks?” asked a younger bootblack who’d watched the transaction.

“Yeah. Sometimes you can’t figure a man up front, you know? Sometimes the really talky ones stiff you.”

“I’d like to catch me about ten or twenty a those today,” the younger man said with a laugh.

Jenks ignored him and watched his generous customer saunter toward the arrival gates. What’s he all about? he wondered. Then passersby diverted his attention. That was one of the pleasures of shining in Union Station. Seventy thousand people passed through every day, a fascinating parade of humanity, and Joe Jenks had a front-row seat.

“You available?” a casually dressed white man asked.

“Yes, sir, jump right up in the chair.”

“Been working here long?”

“Three years,” Jenks said, pulling out the appropriate polishes.

“What’s the best restaurant?”

“Oh, now, let me see. Lotsa good ones. Got about fifty casual places, you know, and seven or eight places for finer dining. You know, gourmet-type food. Back when it opened, there was the Savarin Restaurant, where… ”

SIX

As Joe Jenks shined shoes in Union Station, dispensing historical insights to his customers, business as usual was being conducted in the J. Edgar Hoover Building, home to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. President Teddy Roosevelt created the FBI in 1908 to fight political corruption. Fortunately, the federal law enforcement agency eventually went on to focus on more manageable crime.

This day, a meeting took place in a secure room in the rear of the unlovely beige concrete Hoover Building, dedicated in 1975 and immediately branded a prime example of the architectural school known as New Brutalism. Two of the three men in the meeting were FBI special agents. The third, Timothy Stripling, had been a CIA operative, or still was; it was hard to know with such men, who spent their professional lives functioning in the shadows. Chain of command could seldom be applied to people like Stripling. He was one of many who worked for that gray entity known as the government, his various official titles not necessarily indicating his true affiliations.

“Where was he last seen?” Stripling was of medium build, medium height, moderately balding, almost nondescript. He was so average-looking that he didn’t stand out in or out of a crowd.

“Tel Aviv,” an agent answered.

“So much for the world-renowned crack Israeli Mosad,” the other agent said.

“They’re certain he’s left the city?” Stripling asked.

“They are now. A little late at the switch. When we heard he might be coming here-your people told us that-we set up surveillance through the Mosad. But-”

“My people?” Stripling said, smiling.

“Yeah. Over at the Company.”

“My former employer,” Stripling said. “You know why I’m here. You know who I’m working this for. Your leader.”

Murder at Union Station pic_8.jpg

He’d received a call at home from Mark Roper, his last boss before he had officially retired from the CIA.

“Wake you?” Roper asked.

“No. It’s eight-thirty. I’ve been up for hours.”

Roper chuckled. “Now that you’re a man of leisure, I figured you might be catching up on all the sleep I caused you to lose over the past year.”

“You only thought I lost sleep, Mark. I took more naps on the job than you knew. What’s up?”

“I thought you might be interested in some freelance work. Supplement the pension.”

Stripling cradled the cordless phone between shoulder and ear, poured fresh coffee into his cup, and resumed his chair at the kitchen table in his Foggy Bottom town house. He was honest when he said he’d been up for hours, only he hadn’t bothered getting dressed. He wore a robe over his pajamas, and slippers. The morning paper sat half read on the table.

“What’s it pay?” he asked. “Minimum wage?”

“Slightly better. How’s your love life?”

Stripling grimaced and looked out the window onto E Street N.W. Unlike those in colder climates who fall into a February depression and hibernate, Washingtonians tend to have the same reaction in summer. Heat and humidity fray tempers and wilt the psyche. This late July day promised to wilt even the heartiest of souls.

Roper’s question about Stripling’s love life had various meanings, Stripling knew. Because he’d never married, there was the natural unreasonable speculation. There had been women in his life, plenty of them, but none had stuck. The truth was, he enjoyed female companionship but only in short bursts; he had limited patience with relationships that lingered beyond the initial phase. He knew what was behind Roper’s question and ignored it. Under Roper’s affable facade was a nasty disposition that he put to good use when wanting to get beneath someone’s skin.

“Tell me more about this freelance assignment,” Stripling said.

Three hours later, dressed in a lightweight blue suit, white shirt, and gray tie, he sat with a deputy attorney general in the Department of Justice building at Constitution Avenue and Tenth Street N.W. The middle-aged woman, whose dress and hairstyle reminded Stripling of actresses in the Hope-Crosby road movies of the forties, briefed him on what the attorney general expected. Stripling masked his annoyance at her tone. He was Tim, she was Mrs. Klaus; she never referred to her boss by name, always as the attorney general, never as Wayne Garson or Wayne or Mr. Garson or Garson.

“Tim, the attorney general expects you to-”

He noted on her ID tag that her first name was Gertrude, and called her that when they parted. She didn’t look pleased. The hell with her, he thought as he walked from Justice to the Hoover Building, where the next meeting was scheduled. By the time he got there, his shirt and pants felt like they were glued to him, and the building’s efficient air-conditioning turned everything clammy against his skin. He was not in a good mood.

Murder at Union Station pic_9.jpg

“So let me ask you something,” Stripling said to the two FBI agents in the room. “Why the interest in this guy Russo? What is he, a terrorist?”

A smile crossed one of the agent’s faces. “The president might think so,” he said.

Stripling started to ask another question but was cut off. “Look, Tim, we’re not sure what this is all about. Need to know. What we do know is that Garson wants to know where this Mr. Louis Russo is.”

“Why the assumption he’s headed this way?” Stripling asked.


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: