The top left drawer of the desk slides open on near silent rollers. Inside are two metal rods running perpendicular to the drawer face, over which rest the metal hooks of perhaps ten green cardboard files. John pulls out the second and third drawers on the left side of the desk, and finds another ten or so cardboard files in each. Every file folder is labeled inside a raised plastic window.
As an agent, Wayfarer committed little to paper, less to disc. He was hyper-organized, exceedingly neat. When I think of his desk, I see a large blotter pad of graph paper with not a single mark on it except for the grids. He kept his tapes and interview transcripts in the Bureau safe.
The labels are perfunctory and uninformative. In the three left-side drawers are a total of only thirty file folders, the first twenty-six labeled A through Z, in alphabetical order. The remaining four are all labeled MISC. Some appear to have substantial contents, some appear empty.
John pulls the C folder and sets it on the empty blotter. It contains a single sheet of good quality, high-rag writing paper, 8V2 by 11 inches, and one newspaper clipping. The sheet of paper has a date handwritten near the upper left corner, and below the date only one word, also handwritten:
Anita
Across from the name is what looks like a seven-digit telephone number.
The newspaper article is from the Journal and is dated roughly one year ago. It is a large, 'County Section' story about an 18-year old girl found murdered. The girl's mother is named Anita. The family's last name is Carpenter.
John returns the folder and pulls another, then another. Each contains a similar sheet of high quality paper with sparse, handwritten notes, but no news clips. The 'S' folder holds ten pages of notes-mostly just first names, and an occasional phrase:
'Hus. Karl capped…'
'Locate Sean, son… Mex surf?'
'Help in I.D., location and? of perp.'
John closes them and returns them to their rod holders. Sparks, he thinks, just little jump-starters for Wayfarer's closed-system memory. Access codes is what they are, like PIN's for an automated teller. Anything vital is in his head. Anything incriminating. Anything private. Everything secret. He pulls the B file and searches it for any hint of Baum. He replaces it, then scans the H file for some scintilla of information about Rebecca. It is a waste of time and he knows it.
John sets the folders back in place, then looks at his watch. It is three o'clock. He can still hear the muted trills of Valerie's whistle from down in the meadow, between the dull pounding in his ear.
In the right-side drawers he finds more files, but they are brown and more conclusively labeled: Banking, Insurance, Citrus, Guns. Some are fat with material. He pulls the Boone amp;c Crockett folder and scans the club's letter of congratulations to Vann Holt, upon completion of his third 'Grand Slam'-ram trophies on four continents. The Kreel file is dedicated Kreel, Dr. Alfred J., whom John sees led the surgical team treating Carolyn's gunshot wound. John looks in vain for a file labeled Baum. He sees none, and knows he will see none.
So John is shocked to find the 'Harris' file pregnant with clippings on the death of his secret lover. The infamous picture in which John forms part of the tragic chorus is collected from the Journal, Time, the Wall Street Journal, and several other papers.
Wayfarer's usual reading list? John wonders.
There are articles about her death, follow-up articles, follow-ups to the follow-up articles; op-ed pieces; magazine features. At least half of the clippings are not about Rebecca at all, but about Susan Baum.
John feels the sweat and the shirt on his back.
The last clip is an entire page of the Journal. John looks it over twice before he finds the relevant article, which is a simple notice in the 'Listings' calendar under Lectures, which reads:
– November 22, 'From John Kennedy to Rebecca Harris- The Assassination of the Spirit,' syndicated columnist Susan Baum, presenter.
John photographs it. He spreads a few of the representative clips across the blotter, and shoots them, too. His hands are so tense and sweaty he can hardly grasp the little penlight head well enough to advance the film. He knows he's taking too many exposures, but he doesn't want to lose anything. No accidents.
It seems to take an hour to shoot four pictures. He is wondering if what he has found is good or not as he picks up the cordless phone and leaves the library. He is surprised to be so nervous. He feels a thousand eyes on him as he descends the stairs, puts the handset back in its cradle and walks across the cool foyer toward the front door.
He feels a big breath of relief coming, until, through the glass he sees Valerie stepping onto the porch.
He backs out of her line of sight and eases into the kitchen again, again taking up the phone. He tries to wipe the sweat off his forehead but his palm is sweaty, too. He hears the door open and slam. He hears the soft pad of her boots on the tiles, then he feels the kitchen fill with her presence.
John is standing with the phone in his left hand, his right hand poised above the keypad, a puzzled expression on his face.
He hears her gasp.
'Can you please tell me how to make a simple phone call on this thing?' he asks. His voice sounds thin, starved of truthfulness.
'John. Jesus, you scared me.'
'I'm sorry. I knocked and rang and called for you.'
'We had a three o'clock date, didn't we?'
'I've spent the last five minutes trying to have thirty seconds of conversation with my editor. Sorry I'm late, but this is the most complex piece of home communication equipment I've ever seen.'
She looks at him with an odd expression now, partly suspicious, partly surprised, and partly hurt. She looks like she's just been slapped.
'Well, you do have to be smarter than the phone, John. Try pushing three-nine-nine.'
'Is this okay? I mean-'
'-It's okay. Make your call.'
'Thank you.' He smiles. But his nerves are scalding and his scalp is oozing sweat. At this moment, John loathes himself. It is the first time in his life he has detested his own being so intensely. But he keeps the duplicitous smile in place, like a shield. The penlight in his pants pocket seems to weigh five pounds.
'Well, what do you know-a dial tone.”
Five minutes later they are in the meadow. It is flat and carpeted with wild fescue, soft cheat and bluegrass, all nourished by a spring that flows from the center and makes the ground damp under John's feet. The meadow is behind the Big House and Liberty Ops buildings. Beyond it rise the hills and scrub that roll for a mile toward the electric fence. There is just a touch of sweetness in the air because the Santa Ana’s are almost gone, and the smell of moist earth and grass can now waver up in the heat.
Valerie leads him to the edge of the meadow, where her dogs are still waiting on a 'stay' command. Their little springer tails vibrate when they see her. She's wearing khaki shorts, a faded red plaid shirt with the sleeves cut out and a red wool cycling cap under which her hair is loosely bunched and falling out.
'Here,' says Valerie, pointing to a burlap bag left in the shade. 'Dizzy a bird and hide him over there by that clump of razor grass. I'll keep Lewis and Clark distracted. When I do this alone, they just watch.'
'Can do.'
Valerie holds open the bag. John looks down at the pigeons waiting in feathered plumpness at the bottom. He lifts one out with both hands and Valerie ties the bag and places it back in the shade. The bird is warm and heavy and looks at John with alert but unfrightened eyes.
'So, are you enjoying your stay?' she asks.
'It's a beautiful place, but I'd like to get back to work soon.'
'Dad wants you around for a while longer.'
'He's overly generous.'
Valerie lifts a little Remington 28 gauge from where it leans against a small oak tree. 'I think he might offer you some work.'
John tucks the bird against his chest with his arm, like a football, but gently. He strokes its smooth back.
