'Gomez?' the Captain said in a lowered voice.
'We're pretty sure he made a pass at an au pair a couple of years ago,' BR said.
'A what?'
'A foreign nanny. Icelandic girl, twenty-one, named Harpa Johannsdottir. She's back in Iceland. I have a man over there now looking for her. It may take some time. The Icelandic phone book is listed by first name and—'
'Can I interject?' Nick said. 'Much as I regret to say it, I think we need to start planning, and now, for a post- skull and bones labeling environment.'
'That's Appomattox talk.' The speakerphone filled the room with the Captain's coughing. He didn't sound well at all. There was talk of installing a new fetal-pig heart valve.
Nick felt badly for the old boy and wished he had more positive thoughts for him. 'Maybe,' he said, 'there's some way we could make it
'What does
'I don't know yet. Let me get with our creative people and try to work something up. In the meantime, maybe Gomez's man in Reykjavik will come up with an Icelandic love child with buck teeth.'
Gazelle was waiting for him outside BR's office, looking worried. 'It's them,' she whispered.
'Them who?'
'FBI.'
'Well don't look so guilty,' Nick said, annoyed.
They were in his office. Monmaney, to Nick's considerable annoyance, was looking over the top of his desk. Airman — the more humane of the two — was looking with bemusement at the Lucky Strike doctor.
Nick closed the door behind him and said, 'So, you've found them.'
'Who?' Allman said pleasantly. 'My kidnappers.'
'Oh,' Allman said.
'Are you planning to travel, Mr. Naylor?' Monmaney asked.
'What?'
'Travel.'
'No.'
Agent Monmaney read aloud off the memo paperclipped to Nick's plane tickets. 'Dulles-LAX. Mahmoud will meet you at the gate.'
'Oh, that. Business. I thought you meant pleasure.' Agent Monmaney gave Nick his timber wolf stare.
'Why are you asking me this?' Nick said.
'Don't worry,' Allman said. 'He's just that way. Could we see your apartment?'
'My apartment?'
'Yes.'
'Well… are you looking for something?'
'In cases where there's loss of memory due to trauma, it makes sense to take everything into account.'
'You understand,' Agent Monmaney said, 'that this is a request. You're not required to comply with it.'
'I'm not?'
'No. You're only required to comply with a search warrant.'
'Right,' Allman said. 'But we don't have a warrant.'
Nick thought: was there anything in his apartment he needed to worry about? Anything indelicate? No. Jeannette was so meticulous about picking up the limp love zeppelins. Oh Christ.
Agents Monmaney and Allman were looking at him.
'Uh, yeah, sure. When would you like to stop by?'
'What about right now?'
'Now?' Nick said looking at his schedule. 'Now… today… kind of. How about tomorrow?'
That look again. Monmaney said, 'You're going to Los Angeles tomorrow.'
'Right.' He took out his keys and handed them over. 'Help yourself.'
Monmaney shook his head. 'It would be preferable if you were present.'
'I'm trying to help, but it's kind of hard to run a staff meeting and give two interviews and prepare for a panel on secondhand smoke but… fine.' He buzzed Jeannette and asked her to cover for him.
He drove in the back of their sedan, imagining his next ride in it, handcuffed, on the way to being booked for possession of drugs. He foresaw it all:
'I don't see why you're so worried,' Polly said.
Nick had convened an emergency meeting of the Mod Squad. Bobby Jay had been a bit put out since this was his bowling-prayer-and-pizza night with the born-agains, but recognizing the note of panic in Nick's voice, he was here. At night, the flames from the fake fireplace looked slightly more realistic.
Nick was sucking down his third vodka negroni.
'You're kind of guzzling that,' Polly said.
'You still haven't explained what the problem is,' Bobby Jay said. 'Since they didn't find your
'Shh,' Nick said. 'Jesus.'
'Let's leave Jesus out of this.'
'He had his hand right
'Found
'I don't know. It was this silent thing between G-men. Whatever it was, Monmaney caught it. He stopped feeling around in my freezer. They said goodbye and left.'
'But what could they have found?'
'You're sure you didn't have any more
'Will you please shut up, Bobby. And what happened to all that male bonding at the firing range? Instead I call you up and you're out bowling for Jesus.'
'I'm
'Well work harder, would you, please? If this is the best you can do, no wonder the handgun control lobby is getting the upper hand.'
23
The next night, Nick was riding in Mahmoud's great white whale, on the way from the airport to the Encomium, when he looked out the window at the Los Angeles skyline and saw the billboard, bold as one of his lies. It showed a huge skull with crossbones. The copy beneath read: don't smoke death cigarettes.
Nick knew all about Death cigarettes. Everyone at the Academy kept a pack, with its distinctive skull and bones logo, despite the fact that the industry's official attitude toward Deaths was not exactly collegial. It was the