Leigh,” Will said. “If I didn’t get the Escobar prediction, which didn’t seem important enough to putup on the Site, I might not have had anything left for you to prove you met me.”

Leigh shivered involuntarily.

“What does that mean, Will?” she asked.

“If you figure it out, let me know. I stopped thinking about it a long time ago,” he lied.

“There was something else,” Leigh said. “Back at the Waldorf. You were about to tell me something important that you thoughtthe world needed to know.”

Will looked at her for a long moment.

“I’m not sure what you mean,” he said.

Will hoisted his bag over his shoulder and stepped past Leigh into the living room.

“Miko, can you come in here for a second? I want to talk to you and Hamza.”

Miko stepped out of the bathroom, wiping her hands on her pants. Hamza looked up from the computer, his face frustrated.

“Come on, Will. We need to get this done and get the hell out of here. This is the one place people can connect to you. Ifwe didn’t have so much Oracle-related stuff here, I’d never have let you come back to your apartment. We need to get it cleanedand get gone.”

“The safe house will be nice,” Miko said. “Almost a vacation. New York sucks in the summer, anyway.”

“No,” Will said.

Hamza gave Will a questioning look.

“Are you thinking the Republic?” he asked.

“No,” Will repeated. “I’ll go to the safe house, but you two need to take your stuff and go someplace else, someplace I don’tknow about. Set up a new life for yourselves, have your baby, forget you ever knew me.”

Hamza and Miko turned to look at each other. They were silent for a moment, then looked back at Will.

“Are you sure?” Hamza said.

“Yes. Go. It’s all right. I’ll figure the rest of this out on my own.”

“Oh, Will,” Miko said.

“It’s all right,” Will repeated. “I’ll be fine.”

Miko reached out and took Will’s hand. After a pause, Hamza did the same. Will held his friends’ hands for a long moment.Leigh watched, quiet.

“Thank you,” Miko said.

“We’ll all be back together before you know it,” Hamza said. “My kid needs a godfather. Once this is all over.”

Will released their hands.

Once this was over. He couldn’t even picture it.

Will’s cell phone rang. He reached for it without thinking and checked the caller ID.

“It’s my mom,” he said.

“You aren’t home,” Hamza said. “No time.”

Miko snatched the phone from Will’s hand. She gave him a disapproving look.

“You’re about to vanish for God knows how long,” she said. “Don’t be a dick.” She answered the phone.

“Mrs. Dando, hello!” she said. “It’s Miko Sheikh. We haven’t spoken in ages. How are you?”

Mom, Will thought. He hadn’t spoken to her in . . . what? He’d called once or twice since the Oracle dream, but the conversationshad always been short. Two months ago? he thought. Three?

Miko wasn’t talking. Whatever Will’s mother was saying, she didn’t like it. A deep frown cut across her face. Will raisedan eyebrow. What? he mouthed at Miko.

“Yes, he’s right here,” Miko said. She held out the phone.

Will didn’t want to talk to his mother anymore. This felt like a bad-news call—a someone-just-died call. But he took the phone.

Miko turned to Hamza and pointed at the computer.

“Finish. Now,” she said, her voice ice cold.

“Hi, Mom,” Will said, hearing Hamza begin a burst of intense typing.

“Is it true?” his mother asked him. “Are you the Oracle?”

Will’s veins turned to glass.

“It’s on CNN, Will. Is it true?”

Will could hear fear in his mother’s voice.

For me, or of me? he thought.

He held the phone away from his mouth.

“Miko, turn on CNN, quick.”

Miko nodded. She picked up the remote from Will’s coffee table and turned on Will’s fifty-five-inch television, far too bigfor his apartment, one of the things he’d bought for himself in the early days of the Oracle windfall.

An anchor was speaking, over a news ticker running across the bottom of the screen: “BREAKING NEWS—Presidential spiritualadviser Rev. Hosiah Branson identifies the Oracle . . .” Footage appeared in a window over the anchor’s shoulder, of HosiahBranson standing in some sort of television studio, in front of an easel that held a blown-up photograph that Will recognized.

The glass in Will’s veins shattered.

He used one picture for everything—Facebook, Twitter, dating sites—always the same image, the one time he thought he’d beenphotographed decently well, at a gig a few years back. His hair was a bit long, and he was smiling, and it looked like hethought he should look. And there it was, on CNN.

“According to Branson, the Oracle is a New York City resident named Will Dando,” the newscaster was saying. Will’s motherspoke in his ear, but he couldn’t hear her.

“Reverend Branson issued his announcement, which included descriptions of an Indian or Arab man, an Asian woman, and a dark-skinnedwoman with dark hair and eyes that he claims are associates of the Oracle. Beyond that, we’re waiting for developments. Ihave one of CNN’s legal advisers here with us this morning, Sarah DeKoort. After the break, we’ll get her opinion on whetherReverend Branson is opening himself up to liability by essentially having outed the Oracle.”

“That MOTHERFUCKER!” Will screamed at the television.

“Will!” his mother said in his ear, shocked.

“Listen, Mom, I’ll be fine. Don’t worry about me. You need to take care of yourself—you and Dad. It won’t take them long totrack you down. I’m going to send you money, to you and everyone else in the family. A lot of money. Take it and disappearfor a while, and tell Emily to do it, too. Go overseas, if you can.

“I’ll get back in touch soon, I promise.”

“Oh, Will. Oh my God,” his mother said, almost sighing into the phone. “Why didn’t you tell me?”

She sounded stunned. Hurt.

“I didn’t want you to worry, and I didn’t want to have to deal with questions that I don’t know the answers to. I’m . . .I’m sorry, Mom.”

“Oh, Will,” she said. Her voice seemed stronger. “I don’t understand how this all happened, but I’m so proud of you. The peopleyou saved with your predictions—you’re doing something good, Will,

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