I spotted two of the watchers high-fiving each other out of the corner of my eye. Gem slipped all four singles off the table and tried in vain to stuff them in the back pocket of her shorts.

“Ah, Christ. You’re a pro,” the blond guy said, not mad anymore.

“What was that all about?” I asked Gem, as soon I had the Subaru out of the lot and aimed back toward Portland.

“What do you mean?”

“Were you trying to start a fire?”

“I only wanted to race. I thought it would be fun.”

“Uh-huh. So, when I cut that short, you …”

“Oh, don’t be so foolish. I would never do anything to endanger you.”

“No? Well, you’ve got a pretty bratty way of playing, then.”

“Oh, you liked it,” she said, bending her face forward and nipping at my hand on the gearshift knob.

We were in the middle of keeping my windows closed when the cellular trilled next to the bed.

“Damn!” Gem hissed over my shoulder. “I should have—”

I thumbed the phone open, said: “What?”

“We got the gen,” Byron said.

“And …?”

“And it wants analysis. Doesn’t speak for itself. At least not clearly.”

“When do you want to—?”

“We’re way south of you. How’s breakfast tomorrow work?”

“Perfect.”

Somewhere in space, a satellite synapse snapped, leaving the phone dead in my hand.

“Do you remember where we were?” Gem whispered. “My … mind does. But—”

“I can fix that,” she said, pivoting on her knees and sliding toward me across the sheets.

“The one on the left is Robert Alton Timmons,” Brick told us, tapping the photograph on the table. It was one of the surveillance shots, now hyper-digitized, as sharp as a studio portrait. “His partner’s Louis B. Ruhr.”

“You had them on record?” I asked him.

“Half the agencies in the country probably have these two on record. Timmons served two terms for arson.”

“A pro torch? Or a pyro?”

“Neither. He was a cross-burner. Graduated to synagogues and individual dwellings back in the days before we called stuff like that ‘hate crimes.’ He was AB on the inside, but that doesn’t mean much—white guy locked down anywhere in California better link up, he wants to serve out his whole bit.

“Timmons is a floater, a maggot looking for fat corpses. He’s been with the abortion-clinic bombers—still a suspect in a major arson of one in Buffalo—but he’s also put in time with the Klan, survivalists, the common-law courts people, couple of those bizarro true-white religions. Even claimed to be a Phineas Priest for a while—”

“What is that?” Gem interrupted.

“Phineas was a Biblical character who killed a race-mixing couple,” Brick said, his eyes on Byron, “so it doesn’t take a genius to see what their program is. The thing about them is that they operate as individuals, not in groups, so infiltration has been next to impossible. The ‘priest’ thing is a self-awarded title. Like the spiderweb tattoos for skinheads that’re supposed to signify you killed one of the ‘mud people.’ Or a Jew. Or anyone gay.” He took a breath. Let it out. “The original Nazis tattooed their targets so they could always find them later. The new ones tattoo themselves. So we can find them. Hitler’d be ashamed of the morons.”

“You make Timmons for a hustler?” I asked Brick.

“Could be. When it comes to extremists on either side, it’s always hard to separate the true believers from the profiteers. He’s never stuck anywhere, but he’s been everywhere. Held rank in one of the Identity religions, worked security inside a couple of compounds. You’d think they would have made him for an agent, as many groups as he’s joined and left. But I guess his torch work’s been the credential—no undercover’s going to burn down a building with people in it, and they know it. Besides, he’s a fanatical polygamist.”

“What’s that got to do with—?” Byron asked.

“I know what you’re saying,” Brick cut him off. “You can be into polygamy without being a white supremacist. Sure, there’s all this ‘Breed an Aryan baby for the race’ stuff, but they’re not the only ones practicing.

“The thing about Timmons is, he’s supposed to have shot one of them over the guy’s daughter. Timmons claimed the girl had been ‘promised’ to him, so he wanted her handed over. The father said she wasn’t old enough yet—she was around twelve—and Timmons blasted him and tried to snatch the girl.”

“He wasn’t prosecuted for that?” I asked. Not suspicious, just trying to add it up.

“The guy he shot wouldn’t testify. Said it was an accident. And Timmons never got away with the girl, so there really wasn’t any pressure. Or any publicity. But it sure convinced them all that he wasn’t working for ZOG, you know?

“Anyway, he’s not the boss of that two-man team. That’d be Ruhr. Straight-up pure; hardcore, not some poser or wannabe. Timmons sports the typical ‘88’ tattoo, but Ruhr, the only number on his skin is ‘14.’ You following me?”

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