forms at the New York State Assembly-of a former Peace Corps volunteer was having to listen occasionally to these people converse not about the complexities of development in the third world-although they sometimes did that, too-but nearly as often, it sometimes seemed, about their memories of their exotic stools. When JFK spoke of tens of thousands of Peace Corps men and women bringing back their relatively sophisticated views of Africa, Asia, and Latin America to enrich our nation, could this have been what he had in mind?

Timmy suddenly said, 'Hey, look, it's the quilt,' and reached over and turned up the volume on the television set.

There it was, this gorgeous, heart-swelling mosaic of lost lives-lost but well-remembered-spread across acre upon grassy acre of some of Washington's most historic open space. These were the lawns where the Bonus Army had encamped, the hunger marchers had been ignored by Herbert Hoover, Marian Anderson had sung, Martin Luther King had had a dream. The television coverage of the AIDS quilt opened with some voice-over statistics and a slow, panning shot from the air. Then a Names Project volunteer was interviewed, as were several men, women, and children who had come to see the panels they had sewn for people they loved and who were gone. Finally there were sound bites from some sympathetic strangers, people who simply found this great monument to loss beautiful and moving.

Back in the studio, the news anchor concluded the quilt report by saying,

'Today's display was also marred by a mysterious act of vandalism. Late this afternoon, just before the quilt panels were folded up for overnight storage, two men ripped a section off of one panel. The men escaped before security personnel could intervene. Typed pages coming out of the picture of a typewriter were taken from a quilt panel memorializing Jim Suter, of Washington. Police would not speculate on a motive for the vandalism. But a Names Project official said that earlier in the day questions had been raised about the Suter panel and the display organizers planned to investigate.' The news reader had been somber, but now he looked instantly delighted, as if he were deranged, and said, 'Today's balmy weather should con-linue, according to Flavius, and after a short break…'

Timmy turned down the TV sound and we all looked at each other.

Maynard's brown eyes were shining and he said, 'Betty Krumfutz!'

'If the only parts of the quilt that the vandals took were the typed pages from the Krumfutz campaign bio,' I said, 'there does seem to be a connection to Mrs.

Krumfutz's hurried, discreet appearance at Suter's panel.'

'Hurried, not to say panicked,' Timmy said. 'That woman was in a complete state.'

I asked Maynard, 'Did you read what was on the pages? They were slugged

'Suter/Krumfutz,' but are you sure that what was actually typed on them was Jim's Krumfutz campaign bio?'

'That's what it looked like. I saw some stuff there about Betty's antiabortion record in the Pennsylvania legislature. And another page had a paragraph on school prayer and getting patriotism back into history textbooks. I didn't read any of it with care. It just looked like standard religious-right boilerplate. But the pages I saw seemed to be exactly what the page slugs said they were, Jim's Krumfutz campaign bio.'

'I'm surprised,' I said, 'that that stuff doesn't move directly from the printer to the recycling bins. But I guess it must have some effect, or politicians wouldn't spend their campaign millions on it.'

'A small percentage of voters-usually the slower, more gullible folks-actually read campaign handouts as if they were as imperishable as Alexander Hamilton,' Maynard said. 'And often all it takes to swing an election is one or two percent of the vote. So it's not a waste of money when a candidate churns that stuff out.'

'But,' I said, 'there must have been something on those sheets of typescript on the quilt panel that somebody badly wanted to keep out of public view. And when I looked at the pages, I saw what you both saw, and there was nothing remarkable about any of it on the surface. Maybe there was something revealing on the backs of the pages-although it's hard to imagine why anyone would be afraid of any words or pictures that weren't visible.' I asked Maynard, 'Did Jim Suter actually use a typewriter, and not a word processor or computer?'

'As a matter of fact, he did-does,' Maynard said. 'Jim is one of those writers who are sentimental about their old Underwoods and Smith-Coronas and are scared to death that if they throw over the machine they've always written on, they'll never write again. It's a karma thing, and I understand it. I compose on a Mac, but I keep a fresh ribbon in my IBM Selectric. I'm prepared for the day when I look into my video terminal and I can imagine nothing there besides I Dream ofjeannie reruns. And if the IBM quits-hey, I once lost my notebook in Eritrea and scratched out some notes with my Swiss army knife on a slab of sandstone. In fact, that's it right there on that shelf.'

Maynard indicated a long, flat rock with scratches all over it. It sat next to a framed photograph of Maynard in the company of several slender Africans holding AK-47s, looking righteous and determined, and surrounding a Mobil Oil tanker truck. Next to this picture was one of Maynard and his lover of eleven years, Randy Greeley, who had been a Unicef field organizer and had died in a poorly aimed rocket-propelled-grenade attack by somebody-no one was sure who-in Somalia in 1993.

I said, 'Maynard, it looks as if whoever designed the quilt panel for Jim knew him well enough to know he uses a typewriter instead of a computer.'

'It does,' Maynard agreed. 'But of course that's a lot of people. Jim is among the more prolific hacks in the District. He's always been a writer who gets around, professionally and otherwise. Writer-slash-operator is a more apt description of what Jim does.'

Timmy said, 'Do you think Betty Krumfutz saw something on Jim's panel today that freaked her out and she sent some goons over to rip those pages off the quilt?'

Maynard said, 'Well, yeah, it does look as if she did,' and then he shook his head, as if he was both baffled and apprehensive and had no idea what to make of any of the afternoon's peculiar events.

We sat silently for a minute, deep in thought, the television jabbering in the background.

'I'm wondering,' Maynard finally said, 'what-if anything- I ought to tell the Names Project. Or even the police. I guess I can't tell anyone that I heard from Jim, or where he is. Not if it might actually endanger his life-or mine.' Maynard smiled nervously, and we smiled nervously back.

'No,' Timmy said, 'and you specifically are not to tell the D.C. police where he is.

Or anybody on the Hill. I take it that means Capitol Hill the national legislative establishment, not Capitol Hill the neighborhood.'

Maynard said, 'It probably means both.'

'Has Jim ever had problems with the law?' 1 asked. 'Of a political nature or otherwise?'

Maynard looked doubtful. 'Not that I've ever heard about. And if he'd been mixed up in the Krumfutz scandal, that would have come out in court. I'd guess no. His ethics are malleable, but Jim has plenty of lawyer friends, and my guess is lie's been able to stay a centimeter or two on the nonindictable side of the law.'

Timmy sat up straight. 'Then that probably means that- jeez! It might well mean that the D.C. cops are actually involved in whatever the conspiracy is that Jim knows about!'

'Conspiracy?' I said. 'What conspiracy?'

'Well, what would you call it?'

'Timothy,' I said, 'it seems to me unlikely that the entire District of Columbia Police Department would conspire to assassinate a political writer.' I told Maynard, 'Timothy, as you know, is overall a rational man. But when he 'was a boy in Poughkeepsie, the nuns told him stories about Masons plotting to snatch and devour little Catholic children, and to this day Timothy's imagination occasionally runs away with itself.'

Timmy gave Maynard a look that said, 'I've told you about how off-the-wall Don can be on the subject of my Catholic background, and now you've seen it for yourself.' What he said out loud was, 'Some cops are corrupt, and often dirty cops are dirty together. Word of this phenomenon has even reached some lapsed New Jersey Calvinists, I think.'

Maynard, already unsettled by the letter from Jim Suter and the strange vandalism of the even stranger quilt panel, now looked alarmed over the possibility that his houseguests might be headed for a spat. He said, 'Don, Jim did say explicitly that I shouldn't mention his whereabouts to the D.C. police, and he seemed to be saying not any D.C. cop.'

'Right,' Timmy piped up. 'That was in the letter.'

'I get the point,' I said. 'The point, it seems to me, is this: be careful of the D.C. cops because one or some of them may be connected to threats against Jim Suter or even attempts on his life. Let's just not become unduly paranoid, imagining some Oliver Stone-style plot against Jim Suter that everybody from the D.C. meter maids to the

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