medicating his bruised cervical vertebrae with Jim Beam and Vicodin, dozed beside her on a folding lawn chaise. The last touch was a solitary figure on the towpath-just a vertical dab of black against the horizon, with the thinnest penumbra of violet her finest brush could manage, to give it that magical twilight shimmer.
Neither of them felt much like going to Pool’s Halloween party that evening. Like soldiers after a battle, they found they preferred each other’s company, partly because they could talk about what they’d been through with someone who’d been there and would understand, and partly because they didn’t have to. (For the same reason, Pender had put off his meeting with the real Arthur Bellcock for at least another week.) In the end the decision was made by default, one of those, “I’ll go if you want to go; well,
* * *
Pool’s roommate met them at the front door of the frame house near Annandale. Slender, late forties, clinging black dress, waist-length gray polyester wig. Pender introduced her as Bunny.
She corrected him. “Tonight it’s Morticia. I’m glad you came, Ed. I’ve never seen her so down. I’ve tried everything-maybe you can talk to her.”
“Where is she?”
“In the bedroom.” Bunny turned to Dorie, who was wearing the same outfit she’d worn the night she and Pender had met, and gave her the once-over. “Hag or drag?”
“Beg pardon?”
“Costume. There’s a gorgeous decollete witch outfit we could stuff those into, or I could loan you a tuxedo like Julie Andrews wore in
“Tuxedo,” said Dorie.
“Spoilsport,” said Pender.
Pender rapped on the bedroom door.
“Go away.”
“It’s Ed Pender.”
The door opened. The woman who ran the FBI was costumed as Gomez Addams, to Bunny’s Morticia. Tuxedo with absurdly wide lapels, dark hair slicked down and parted in the middle, pencil mustache, penciled in.
Pender gave her a hug. He’d always thought of Pool as an iron woman and was surprised how light and fragile she felt in his arms. “She was the first one, Ed.”
“The first one?” They disengaged, sat on the edge of the bed together.
“The first one I ever lost.”
Pender thought back, realized she was right. It was in 1979 that he had joined Steve McDougal in Washington to help set up the Liaison Support Unit. Pool arrived a year later, and no, the LSU had never lost an agent in the line of duty. “Do you want to hear about it?”
“I read the file. I meant to tell you, I was so sorry to hear about your sister.”
“Thanks,” said Pender. “Finding out about it the way I did, somehow it’s still not real to me. I mean, part of me knows Ida’s dead, but part of me still feels like I could pick up the phone and call her.”
“I kind of feel like that about Abruzzi-as if when I open her office door tomorrow, she’s going to be there behind the desk as usual, grinning up at me from behind a stack of autopsy reports. She never complained, Ed- sometimes she was so tired I had to help her up from her chair, but she never let up and she never complained.”
“She saved our lives,” said Pender simply. “Mine and Dorie’s.”
“I know.” Pool brightened a little. “Hey, guess what’s in the works? Hall of Honor. She’s going in as a Service Martyr.”
“No shit!” Pender was impressed. The Hall of Honor was for special agents killed in the line of duty; the Service Martyr plaque was reserved for those who died as a direct result of adversarial action. As of three days ago there’d been only thirty-three Service Martyrs in the entire history of the Bureau; now there were thirty-four. “There’s not gonna be any problem about her not being an SA?”
“There’d better not be. She told me once that the day she got to write
“I’ll bet.” There used to be a saying among LSU agents: If you can’t get God on your side, get Pool.
“Speaking of the highest echelons, I have it on good authority that the OPR is going along with your story about how Childs pulled a knife on Miss Bell, and you had to shoot him to save her.”
“What do you mean, going along with my story?”
“I mean,
Pender leaned forward confidentially. “This doesn’t leave the room, but the truth is, if I hadn’t shot him when I did, Dorie would have used that knife to cut his throat.”
“The more I learn about that woman, the better I like her,” said Pool.
Talking to Pender must have helped-Pool decided to attend her own party. They found Dorie downstairs, giving out trick-or-treat bags to the vampires, ghosts, and Power Rangers as they emerged from the haunted house in the basement. She had changed her mind about the tux and was wearing a witch costume cut so low and sexy it would have convinced Billy Graham to convert to Wicca.
“Oh, Pen,” she cried, from under her conical hat. “Aren’t they cute?”
“They sure are,” said Pender, waggling his eyebrows.
“The kids, you lech-I mean the kids. Especially the little girls, the ballerinas and the fairy princesses-my God, I just want to eat ’em up.”
“This is all new to you, isn’t it?” asked Pool.
“It’s my first Halloween since-I guess since I was three.”
“No problem with the masks?”
“There
Pender laughed, raised his glass. “To Halloween,” he said. “To ghosties and ghoulies and long-legged beasties, and things that go bump in the night.”
“That’s not how it goes,” said Dorie. “First of all, it’s not
“Amen,” said Pool.
“I’ll drink to that,” said Pender.