“But?”
“Well, there’s this woman I know…”
“Yes?”
“I
“Her name?”
“Nikki Van Hausen,” said Jono. “Well, Nicola, but she goes by Nikki. N-I-double-K-I.”
“And she’s here at the hospital? A patient?”
“Not a patient. Oh! Well, not originally, anyway.”
“What do you mean?”
“She was here to visit her brother, but they’ve locked her up.”
“Where?”
“The psychiatric ward.”
“Where’s that?”
He told her, and she headed toward it. As she approached the main door to it from one direction, a thin, bald man wearing a doctor’s smock arrived there from another. Susan was always absorbing everything around her and habitually read name badges; this fellow’s said, “E. Redekop, M.D.” She hadn’t recognized his face—because, she suddenly realized, she hadn’t yet seen it, except for the eyes, and those only from a distance.
“You’re Eric Redekop.”
He lifted his eyebrows. “Not again!”
“Pardon?”
“Sorry. It’s just that you’re the second person today to recognize me that I don’t know.”
“Actually,” said Susan, “I just read your badge—and Dr. Griffin had told me your first name. I’m Susan Dawson, the Secret Service agent-in-charge here. I watched you save the president today.” She paused, trying to think of what else to say, but couldn’t come up with anything better than, “Thank you.”
“My pleasure,” said Redekop, looking a bit relieved.
Susan’s job was all about noticing things that were out of place. “What’s a surgeon doing in the psychiatric ward?”
Redekop’s handsome face was still for a few moments, as if he was thinking about what—or how much—to say. Finally, he lifted his narrow shoulders a bit. “Well, it’s like I said. Someone recognized me earlier, but I didn’t know her. She seemed quite upset.”
“Let me guess,” said Susan. “Nikki Van Hausen, right?”
Redekop looked astonished. “I don’t know her last name, but, yes, her first name is Nikki.”
“Come with me.”
Secret Service agent Dirk Jenks slipped away from the crowd of fellow agents swarming the interior of the Lincoln Memorial. He headed down the wide marble stairs and then went around to the back. Only three thousand people had come out on this cold morning to hear Jerrison’s speech, but now that he’d been shot, many thousands more were swarming onto this part of the Mall, hoping to see the site of the assassination attempt—and an even greater number were scurrying to see the ruins of the White House: lemmings rushing headlong into dust and nothingness, into the end of history.
Jenks briskly walked the hundred-odd yards to the nearest road and caught a cab that had just disgorged two people. He told the driver to take him to Reagan National Airport, four miles away in Virginia.
“Hey,” said the driver, “were you here earlier? Did you see the guy take a shot at Jerrison?”
“No.”
“What about the White House? Did you see that go up? Jesus!”
Jenks shook his head, and, mercifully, the driver shut up. Traffic was almost at a standstill—the journey was going to take forever. Jenks glanced anxiously out the car’s right side and saw the Jefferson Memorial for what he imagined would be the last time.
Chapter 13
Nikki Van Hausen was supposed to show two houses this afternoon, but that wasn’t going to happen. After her encounter in the hallway with Drs. Sturgess and Redekop, the security guard had taken her to a room that she only belatedly realized was in the psychiatric ward. A few other people seemed to have been here for a while, and two more were brought into the ward shortly after her—wailing and screaming over the terrorist attack.
Her room was cubic, with a high ceiling, and was empty except for a couch bolted to the wall. She wasn’t suicidal—but this was where they put people who were, so there was nothing that a makeshift noose could be hung from, no glass over pictures that might be smashed and used to slit wrists—and no way to open the door from the inside. There was also no bathroom. She was just about to press the buzzer that would summon a guard to let her out so she could use the one across the hall when the door opened and in came Eric Redekop accompanied by a pretty blue-eyed brunette with shoulder-length hair. She was wearing a black jacket, black pants, and black leather shoes with flat heels.
“Hello, Ms. Van Hausen,” Eric said.
She tried to match his formality—after all, she wanted out of here. “Dr. Redekop,” she replied, and nodded politely.
Eric indicated the woman. “This is Susan Dawson, a Secret Service agent.”
Nikki felt her heart beginning to pound. “Hello.”
“You seemed to know me out in the corridor earlier,” Eric said.
Nikki nodded. “I know we’ve never met, but…”
“But you knew things about me—or was it Dr. Sturgess?—that you wouldn’t normally know.”