time, I ignore
“This guy Gyrich from us?” I ask as I pull open my top drawer and start flipping through our staff list. A… B… C… G… H… I… No one named Gyrich.
“I don’t think he’s a pro either,” Tot adds, referring to the professional researchers people can hire by the hour.
Across the office, the door again swings open. “Beecher, you here!?” a familiar voice shouts.
Even without raising periscope, I smell the pipe smoke on Dallas. On most days, he ignores me. Today, his footsteps head right for me.
“Beecher?” he adds, sounding almost concerned. “You there or not?”
“Yeah… right here,” I say, stepping out from my cube.
“Dammit, then why didn’t you say something!? Security’s worried-After Orlando-Don’t
Dallas cuts himself off, stopping midstep as he reaches my cube. He’s not looking at me anymore. He’s looking at what’s behind me. I spin around, worried he sees the dictionary. But the dictionary’s already gone-tucked away by the person still sitting at my desk.
“Hey, Tot,” Dallas offers, scratching at his starter beard. “Didn’t realize you were there.”
Tot doesn’t say a word. He just stares at Dallas, unblinking. It’s nothing personal. When he turned seventy, Tot decided there were ten rules for living a happy life. The only one he’s shared with me thus far is that, as an archivist, he won’t make friends with anyone who says FDR knew about the impending attack on Pearl Harbor, since there’s not a single sheet of paper in our building to back up that claim. I know another of his rules has something to do with white cotton panties and the keys to a great sex life (I made him stop talking because-just the thought of it made me want to be blind). And from what I can tell, there’s a third rule that enshrines a venomous hatred for bullies-especially those who curse at Tot’s friends.
The best part is watching Dallas take a half-step back. Even the most stubborn of cubs knows when the big cat’s around.
“I was just saying…” Dallas stutters, “… I was telling Beecher I was worried about-”
“How’d you know someone was calling him?” Tot challenges.
“Pardon?”
“When you came in,” Tot says. “You said Security was calling. How’d you know they were calling?”
“I–I was there,” Dallas says.
“In the Security Office?”
“No… at sign-in… with the detectors,” he says, referring to the check-in desk on the Penn Avenue side of the building. “They have a visitor for Beecher who’s pretty insistent that she see him…”
“
“Your friend. From yesterday. The one with the nose pierce…”
Tot shoots me a look. He’s already called her the daughter of Lee Harvey Oswald. The last thing he wants is me bringing her in again.
“Clementine’s downstairs right now?” I ask.
“Why do you think they keep calling you?” Dallas says. “They saw you check in at the garage, but when you didn’t answer your phone-”
I glance at Tot, who doesn’t need help putting the rest together. The only way to get Clementine into this building is if I personally go down and sign her in. And while the last thing I need right now is to put myself higher on the suspect list because I’m helping out the daughter of a killer, the less time I let her spend with Security, the safer I’m gonna be.
“
“I’m old and hate small talk,” Tot tells Dallas as he turns back to my computer. “You need to leave right now.”
As Dallas heads back to his desk, I pick up speed and make a sharp left toward the office door. But as I pull it open and bound into the hallway, I nearly smash into the chest of the tall man. And his shiny Security badge.
“Beecher, you know the one thing that really ticks me off?” Deputy Security Chief Venkat Khazei asks as I crane my neck up to see him. “When people here-people sitting right at their desks-don’t return my calls.”
He puts a hand on my shoulder, but all I can think is that he’s the only other person in the entire building who knew Orlando was in that SCIF.
“Is there something I can help you with?” I ask.
“That’s generous of you, Beecher,” Khazei says. “I thought you’d never ask.”
21
'You tell me what’s easier,” Khazei offers, trying hard to keep it nice. “We can talk out here, or at your desk, or-”
“Out here’s fine,” I blurt, determined to keep him far from the book.
“Where you headed anyway?”
“Wha?”
“You were running, Beecher. You almost smashed into me. Just wondering where you’re headed.”
“Stacks,” I say with a nod, realizing that while Khazei was calling for info, it was the front-desk security guys who were calling about Clementine. “Just pulling a record from the stacks.”
He looks down at my empty hands. “Where’s the pull slip?”
Now he thinks he’s being smart.
“Right here,” I say, pointing to the side of my head and being smart right back. But the way his broad eyebrows knot together, Khazei doesn’t like me being smart right back.
“Y’know…” he says, smoothing his thinning black hair to the side, “you were also running yesterday when you found out about Orlando.”
“He’s my friend. I shouldn’t run when I hear my friend’s dead?”
“I’m just saying… for a place that gets the gold medal for slow and quiet, you’re rushing around a lot lately.”
He watches me carefully, letting the silence of the empty hallway sink in. But all I’m really focused on is the thought of Clementine still waiting for me downstairs.
“You said you had a question, Mr. Khazei.”
“No, I said I had something I was hoping you could help me with,” he corrects, scratching his chin with the back of his hand. “I’m just wondering if you were able to look at your calendar… for when you were with Orlando.”
“I looked, but I can’t really nail it down. I saw him in the hallway. Maybe about a half hour before he… y’know…”
Khazei nods, but doesn’t otherwise react. “Anything else you might’ve thought of? Anything that might be helpful as we look into his death?”
“I thought the paramedics said it was a seizure-that he had sleep apnea.”
“They did. That’s why they’re paramedics, not coroners,” Khazei says. “Now. Again. Anything at all-anything Orlando might’ve said, anything he did-that you think we should know about?”
I don’t pause. “Nothing that I can think of,” I tell him.
“I thought you said you guys were close.”
“I said he was