“Then Mama will have somebody for company that's her friend.” Rush smiled. “So we should be glad about that.”
“Greg loved you. He was so proud of how grown-up you are. He said so the other day. Here's the thing,” Winter said. “The plane didn't accidentally crash. It was hijacked and blown up by some men who didn't want the witness to testify. The men who did it got away. That's the biggest secret.”
Rush contemplated the direction the conversation was taking. “Are you going to go catch them?”
“The FBI is supposed to do that. They are trying to blame Greg to explain how the bad men found the witness.”
“It's not fair, to blame someone who can't defend himself. And Uncle Greg wouldn't do anything wrong on purpose.”
“I agree. The FBI has some evidence they say proves Greg did what they say he did. I know it's a lie, but it looks like they might make it stick.”
“You can't stop them?”
“There's nothing I can do. Sometimes, no matter how bad we want to, we just can't set things right.”
“Why don't you try-tell the FBI that Greg was good? Go get some evidence.” Rush seemed confused.
“I'm not an investigator. I just wanted to tell you that even if people say it's true, we know it isn't. We know Greg was a good guy.”
“Yeah, sure. What else?”
“That's all I had to tell you. And that I love you more than anything on earth.”
Winter hugged his son to him.
“I'm sorry you feel so sad, Daddy.”
Rush reached into his pocket and handed Winter a folded red bandana, one of Eleanor's cotton handkerchiefs. “I want you to take this one.”
“That's yours.”
“It'll make you feel less sad, like it does me.”
60
Richmond, Virginia
Wire Dog found a space and parked his cab a block from the Second National Bank of Eastern Virginia. Sean walked to the bank's entrance and strolled inside. When it was her turn, she handed the young teller a one hundred-dollar bill.
“Could I have that in tens and fives?”
The teller reached into her drawer and swiftly counted out ten fives and five tens.
Sean asked, “Is Paul Gillman still with the bank?”
“Mr. Gillman's our president.”
“Is he in today?”
“I think so.” The teller looked up and across the lobby. “There he is.”
Sean turned. She saw Paul Gillman standing in an office door holding some papers. Paul had gained a few pounds in the five years since she had seen him, the blond hair was thinner on top, and he looked as though he didn't smile as much as he once had. Tucking her money into her purse, she started across the lobby, and her old friend from college looked straight at her, or through her, then turned and went back to his desk. She stopped at a kiosk, scribbled a note on a deposit slip, and crossed to Gillman's secretary.
“Excuse me. I'm an old friend of Paul's. I know he's busy, but could you give this to him?”
The secretary stared at Sean with a look teetering between hostility and curiosity. Sean suddenly realized how alien she must look to the middle-aged woman who spent her days focusing on numbers. It amused and excited Sean to see how people responded to superficial differences between themselves and others. Had Sean Devlin, instead of Sally McSorley, appeared in the bank, the secretary would have been tripping over herself to accommodate her.
The secretary took the note reluctantly and went into his office.
Paul Gillman beat his secretary out of the room. Looking right past Sean, he scanned the lobby with a hopeful look on his face.
“Paul,” Sean said. “Here.”
The banker turned and stared at her. “Sean?” he stared in disbelief.
“Who else?”
He grinned with delight. “God, you look like Billy Idol!” He hugged her and actually lifted her off the floor.
The secretary stared down at her desk and shuffled some papers.
“What brings you to Richmond?” Paul remarked, finally setting Sean back down.
“Business.”
“How's Olivia?”
“Mother passed away.”
“Sorry. I really liked her.”
Sean smiled. “She liked you, too.”
“How long will you be in town?”
“I'm on the ground for three hours and I thought I'd say hello, take care of a loose end.”
“Come into the office.”
“The presidential office.”
“What's with you and the getup?” he demanded as she settled into a leather chair. “What happened to Sean Marks, the little debutante?”
“I married this guy a while back. I was crazy about him. He's a federal agent whose temper is legendary.” She touched her bruised lip and grimaced.
“Son of a bitch. Aw, Sean, I'm sorry. What can I do?”
“I need to get something from my lockbox.”
“Of course.” He reached into his desk and sifted through the contents until he found an envelope with SEAN MARKS typed on it and an address over a year out of date. “I labeled it so you'd get it back if the sky fell on me or something. You never know.”
“The address is no good,” she admitted. “Guess I haven't been much of a friend, not staying in touch.”
“You always were mysterious, Sean. But this punk thing is quite a departure from your old look.”
He handed her the envelope, which she opened and removed the key. “You and Ally still happily married?” she asked.
“Well, I am as happy as a man with three little boys running amok all over the house can be. Everything is great. But I'd throw it all away and do something insane if you only crooked your little finger.”
Sean smiled warmly at her old friend. “I envy you.”
Before they entered the vault, Paul asked Sean to sign her name on an index card. She had signed it once before, five years earlier, so the signature could be verified. The signature above was looser, from a less stressful time. He located the box, inserted his and then her key, opened the door, pulled out the box, and carried it to a cubicle. “Take as long as you want. I'll be right outside.”
She opened the box, which she had in case of an emergency. At the time it had seemed silly, but her mother had insisted. Olivia Marks had subscribed to the belief that everyone should have mad money, a secret stash in a safe place to draw on. Olivia Marks had been a woman who had lived her entire adult life in quiet terror.
No one but Paul knew Sean had the lockbox, and she alone knew what was inside it. Paul had never asked about its contents. She had made few very close friends-had rarely let anyone get close emotionally. She listened carefully, patiently, but she rarely volunteered information. She evaded. If pressed, she lied. And she lied with an ease that prevented her friends from being certain they ever really knew her. Sean had been raised to be a survivor. There had been a price and she had paid it. For the first time in her life she was glad she had.
There were only two objects inside the box. She lifted out the stack of fifty hundred-dollar bills held together with a rubber band. The second object was a passport in the name of Sally McSorley. She reached into the bottom