He lifted his shoulders slightly and tipped his head toward the glass doors leading out of the lobby, leading back to the crazy world outside. “As well as anyone, I suppose. Couldn’t sleep last night.”
She nodded. “Me, neither.”
He had a big cloth bag with him. In addition to a dark suit and white blouse, he’d also brought along her red ski jacket, since the blood-soaked coat she’d used yesterday was too horrific to wear.
She desperately wanted to have a coffee with him at the Starbucks here in the lobby, but her BlackBerry vibrated. She pulled it out and read the message from Darryl. Bessie Stilwell had remembered what Leon Hexley had said. Darryl had typed it in, but the words and numbers didn’t make any sense to Susan. Still, she was delighted that the memory had been recovered.
Darryl’s message noted that they were going to take a military jet back. Susan thought about texting that Jerrison had wanted them to take civilian flights, but then, now that she thought about it, he’d actually only said to make sure they flew to L.A. on a commercial plane; he hadn’t said anything about the return, and—
“Everything okay?” Paul asked, indicating her BlackBerry.
She looked up and smiled at him. He worked in security at the Smithsonian; they often went jogging together on the Mall. “Yes, baby—it’s fine. But I gotta go.” She quickly kissed him and headed out of the lobby, taking the bag he’d brought. She went by Singh’s office, which was empty—the Canadian was down the hall in his lab—and quickly changed into the fresh clothes, feeling a little more civilized for having done so. She then took a yellow pad—this one had some of Kadeem’s doodles on the top sheet, which she tore off—and wrote out in big letters the words and numbers Bessie had remembered Hexley saying. Then she hurried back down to visit the president.
When the lockdown had ended yesterday, she’d sent a number of the Secret Service agents who had been here home and ordered others to come take their places. The two on duty out front of Prospector’s door were ones she’d had transferred from the detail that looked after visiting dignitaries—in other words, ones who would never normally have direct access to the president and thus were less likely to be involved in any conspiracy against him. She’d also had two FBI agents brought in, and they were there as well—watching the watchers.
“Hello, may I please speak to Maria Ramirez?”
“Speaking.”
“This is—”
“Hello, Professor Singh.”
“Is my voice that distinctive?”
“I’m afraid so, Professor. Is there—is something wrong?”
“No, no. But I have a question, if I may.”
“You can read the memories of Darryl Hudkins, one of the Secret Service agents, correct?”
“Do you recall him meeting anyone…interesting, shall we say, today?”
“No.”
“Are you sure, Maria?”
“Nothing comes to mind.”
“An actor, perhaps…?”
“Oh!
“Yes, he did.”
“But…but why is this important?”
“Just confirming something. It proves that the links remain intact even over distances of thousands of kilometers.”
“My thought exactly.”
Seth Jerrison’s previous nurse Sheila had been replaced by one named Kelly. He liked her better. She wasn’t as stern, and she laughed at his little jokes. Earlier, she’d read him the most recent batch of get-well-soon and sympathy messages from foreign leaders, and she was now rearranging the vast collection of flowers that had been placed on a table by the window; they were a tiny fraction of those that had been delivered to the hospital since the shooting.
The press had been making noises about a transfer of power under the Twenty-Fifth while Seth was recuperating. Seth would be damned if he’d let that happen; this was a time of crisis, and he intended to lead. He’d insisted on being given another stimulant half an hour ago, and he was feeling, if not chipper, at least more alert and energetic than he had when he woke up.
The door to the room opened, and in came Susan Dawson. “Pay dirt,” she said.
“Kelly, will you excuse us?” Seth asked.
The nurse nodded. “I’ll be just outside.”
“That’s fine.”
Susan took the vinyl-covered chair next to Seth’s bed and she held up a lined yellow notepad so he could see it. “Yes, yes!” he said once. “That’s it—that’s it exactly. ‘Tell Gordo to aim 4-2-4-7-4 the echo.’ ”
“The ‘aim’ part is certainly suspicious,” Susan said. “But it’s not conclusive.”
“True,” Seth said. “Call it in to the NSA decoding desk; see what they make of it.”
Susan nodded and took a minute to do that. When she was off the phone, Seth motioned for her to show him the sheet again. “What do you make of the ‘4-2-4-7-4’ bit?” he asked.
“Forty-two thousand four hundred and seventy-four,” said Susan. “Does that mean anything to you?”
“No.”