Jan soon heard him leave the apartment. She lay there a while longer, hugging her knees, but at last she got up, left Quentin’s bedroom, and headed into the living room.
The furniture was nicer than any she’d ever owned; everything in her place had been named for some damn Swedish lake or river and had been assembled with an Allen key. But this stuff—the coffee table, the bookcases, the cabinets, all in what she guessed was cherrywood—was
Besides numerous hardcover books—a luxury Tony had never let her buy—there were objects on the bookshelves: an Eskimo soapstone carving of a bird, a quill pen, a bronze medallion with the word “Champ” engraved into it, a white marble chess piece. Each of them doubtless had a story behind it—they were keepsakes, mementos—but they meant nothing to her.
But there
It was a distinctive-enough name, Jan thought, although, if she were married, it might be her husband’s first name that was in the phone book.
Jan exhaled noisily.
She went into Eric’s office. He had a MacBook Air sitting on a glass-topped workstation, with a Safari browser window open. She typed “Nicky Van Hausen” into Google, but that produced too many hits to be useful. But adding “real estate” to the string quickly turned up pay dirt, thanks to Google’s offering the correct spelling of the first name: her website, but also, Jan was surprised to see, an article from this morning’s
Her website—which offered “2% commissions” and “free home appraisals”—gave her phone number. Jan picked up the handset in this room, then set it back down; she didn’t want the Caller ID to show Eric’s name. She went to the marble entryway, got her purse, dug out her cell—and saw that she had four voice messages from Tony. She shuddered, ignored them, and placed the call.
“Nikki Van Hausen Realty,” said a perky voice.
“Is this—” Christ, she still didn’t know if it was Miss or Mrs. “Um, is this Nikki?”
“Speaking.”
“Nikki, this is Janis Falconi.”
There was silence for three or four seconds. “Oh.”
“I need to talk to you,” Jan said.
“What about?”
Jan’s turn to hesitate. “Sharing Eric’s memories.”
“Look, about that article, I didn’t—”
“No, no. I don’t care about the article; I don’t care that you know
“Umm. Okay. Maybe.”
“Could we get together this afternoon?”
“Um, where?”
“Well, I’m sure you know I’m staying at Eric’s place, and I don’t have a car or a key. Could you—could you come by his home?”
“Ah, will he be there?”
“No. No.”
Nikki sounded relieved. “Yeah, I guess I could do that.” A pause. “He’s in the Potomac Palace, right?” she said, naming his condo development. “Penthouse two?”
Jan shivered slightly. “Yes.”
“I’m showing a place near there this afternoon. About 4:30, okay?”
“Fine,” said Jan. “Thanks.” They ended the call, and she held her cell phone in her trembling hand.
Bessie hadn’t had much to do with the military since her husband had come back from Korea all those years ago. She was amazed at how high-tech everything had become: here at the base there were all sorts of computers, complex screen displays, and sundry gadgets that she couldn’t begin to identify, and—
And, well, no, that wasn’t right. She
And the word
And as they continued on into the plane and were shown to their seats, details about it came to her—horrible, horrific details. Her hands were shaking so much that she had to ask Darryl to do up her seat belt for her.
Yes, the US had been pushed too far by terrorists; there was no doubt about that. But this—this was…
Of course, a response was necessary; yes, leaders had to lead.
But
The plane started rolling down the runway. She had four hours until they’d land.
Four hours to decide what she was going to do.
Chapter 40
At 4:54 P.M., Eric’s phone emitted a strange double tone. Jan had heard his phone ring earlier, when Dr. Griffin had called, and it had made a normal sound, but—