“Just heard about Matthew,” Barry says. “I can’t believe it. I’m… I’m so sorry.”
“Who told you?”
“Cheese. Why?”
I shut my eyes and curse my assistant.
“Harris, where are you?” Barry adds.
It’s the second time he’s asked that question. For that reason alone, he’s not getting an answer.
Climbing to my feet, I brush the dust from my pants. My head’s still spinning. I can’t do this now… but… I have to. I need to find out who else knows. “Barry, have you told anyone else about this?”
“No one. Almost no one. Why?”
He knows me too well. “Nothing,” I tell him. “What about Matthew’s office mates – they heard yet?”
“Actually, that’s who I just hung up with. I called to pass the word, but Dinah… Trish from the Senate… they already knew. Somehow, they got the news first.”
I look down at the page’s nametag in the palm of my hand. In all the time we were playing the game, it was never important who we were betting against. That was the fun of it. But right now, I’ve got a bad feeling it’s the only thing that matters.
“Barry, I gotta go.”
I press the End button and dial a new number. But before I can finish, there’s a soft crunch of gravel behind the Dumpster. I race around to the back of it, but no one’s there.
Keep it together, I tell myself.
I take a deep breath and let it wash down to my abdomen. Just like my dad used to do when the bills came. My finger once again dives for the keypad. Time to go to the source. And when it comes to the game, the only source I know is the person who brought me in.
“Bud Pasternak’s office – how can I help you?” a female voice answers. Barry’s boss. My mentor.
“Melinda, it’s me. Is he in?”
“Sorry, Harris. Conference call.”
“Can you get him out?”
“Not this one.”
“C’mon, Melinda…”
“Don’t even try with the charm, pumpkin. He’s pitching a big client.”
“How big?”
“Rhymes with Bicrosoft.”
Behind me, there’s another crunch of gravel. I spin around to follow the sound. Farther up the driveway, behind a scrubby bunch of bushes.
That’s it. I’m gone.
“Wanna leave a message?” Melinda asks.
Not about this. Matthew… the FBI… It’s like a tidal wave, arched above my head, ready to crash down. “Tell him I’m coming by.”
“Harris, you’re not interrupting this meeting…”
“Wouldn’t even think it,” I say as I shut the phone. I’m already jogging back toward the overpass. It’s only a few blocks to First Street. Home of Pasternak & Associates.
10
“NICE TO SEE YOU,” Janos said, blowing through the lobby of Pasternak & Associates and throwing a quick wave to the female security guard.
“Can I have you sign in for me?” the guard asked, tapping her finger on the three-ring binder that was open on her desk.
Janos stopped midstep and slowly turned back to the guard. This wasn’t the time to make a scene. Better to play it quiet.
“Absolutely,” he replied as he approached the desk. With a flick of his pen, he scribbled the name Matthew Mercer onto the sign-in sheet.
The guard stared up at the letters FBI on Janos’s blue and yellow windbreaker. To seal the deal, Janos quickly flashed a shined-up sheriff’s badge he got in an old Army-Navy store. When Janos made eye contact, the guard looked away.
“Nice day outside, huh?” the guard asked, staring out through the lobby’s enormous plate-glass window.
“Absolutely,” Janos repeated as he headed for the elevators. “Pretty as a peach.”
11
“NICE TO SEE YOU, BARB,” I say, plowing through the lobby of Pasternak & Associates and throwing an air kiss to the security guard.
She grabs the kiss and tosses it aside. Always the same joke. “How’s Stevens?” she asks.
“Old and rich. How’s… how’s your hubby?”
“You forgot his name, didn’t you?”
“Sorry,” I stutter. “Just one of those afternoons.”
“Everybody has ’em, sweets.” It doesn’t make me feel any better. “You here to see Barry?”
I nod as the elevator dings. Barry’s on the third floor. Pasternak’s on the fourth. Stepping inside, I hit the button marked 4. The moment the doors close, I slump against the back wall. My smile’s gone; my shoulders sag. In my pocket, I fiddle with the page’s nametag. The elevator rattles upward. All the way to the top.
With a ping, the doors slide open on the fourth floor, and I squeeze outside into the modern hallway with its recessed lighting. There’s a receptionist on my right. I go left. Pasternak’s assistant’ll never buzz me through. There’s no choice but to go around. The hallway ends at a frosted-glass door with a numeric keypad. I’ve seen Barry enter it a hundred times. I punch in the code, the lock clicks, and I shove my way inside. Just another lobbyist making the rounds.
Decorated like a law firm but with a bit more attitude, the halls of Pasternak & Associates are covered with stylish black-and-white photos of the American flag waving over the Capitol, the White House, and every other monument in the city – anything to show patriotism. The message to potential clients is clear: Pasternak lobbyists embrace the system – and work within it. The ultimate inside job.
Wasting no time, I avoid all offices and make a sharp right toward the back, past the kitchenette. If I’m lucky, Pasternak will still be in the conference room, away from his-
“Harris?” a voice calls out behind me.
I spin back and paint on a fake grin. To my surprise, I don’t recognize the face.
“Harris Sandler, right?” he asks again, clearly surprised. His voice creaks like a loose floorboard, and his green hangdog eyes have a silent darkness to them. They lock on to me like a bear trap. Still, the only thing I’m concerned with is the blue and yellow FBI windbreaker he’s wearing.
“Can I talk to you a moment?” the man asks as he points me back toward the conference room. “I promise… it’ll only take a second.”
12
“DO I KNOW YOU?” I ask, searching for info.
The man in the FBI windbreaker puts on his own fake smile and rubs his hand along his buzzed salt-and-pepper hair. I know that move. Stevens does it when he meets constituents. A poor attempt to warm things up. “Harris, maybe we should find a place to talk.”
“I-I’m supposed to see Pasternak.”
“I know. Sounds like he’s been a good friend to you.” His body language switches in the most imperceptible way. He’s smiling, but his chin pitches toward me. I make my living in politics. Most people wouldn’t see it. I do.
“Now, do you want to have this discussion in the conference room, or would you rather discuss it in front of the whole firm?” he asks. Ramming his point home, he nods a quick hello to a middle-aged redhead who steps into the kitchenette for some coffee. Talking without saying. Whoever this guy is, he’d be a great Congressman.
“If this is about Matthew…”
“It’s about more than Matthew,” the man interrupts. “What surprises me is Pasternak trying to keep your name out of it.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Please, Harris – even a nongambling man would bet against that.”
The reference is as subtle as lighting my chest on fire. He doesn’t just know about Matthew. He knows about the game. And he wants me to know it.
I stare at him coldly. “Pasternak’s in the conference room?”
“Right this way,” he says, motioning up the hallway like a fine maître d’. “After you…”
I lead the way. He falls in right behind me.
“Sounds like you two have known each other a long time,” he says.
“Me and Pasternak, or me and Matthew?”
“Both,” he says as he straightens a black-and-white photo of the Supreme Court that’s hanging in the hall. He’s asking questions, but he doesn’t care about the answers.