There was a crunching, the blade snapped off, and the door came away. I pulled the door back as far as I could, and looked inside, heart in my mouth.
The book was in there.
It had to be the book. It was ancient. Big, with gray leather covers, mold greening the corners.
The banging on the door turned to thumping. Someone was throwing their body against it.
I took the book out gingerly, and laid it on the desk. The second it touched the surface, my head started swimming, like I’d taken a heavy toke off a strong joint. I shook it off and opened the book. The front cover touched the desk surface and it happened again. I felt my eyes widen and my head kind of lurch to attention, going light.
I took out my phone, found the number I wanted, and hit redial.
“It’s McGill,” I said. “I’m sure you know where I am. I have what you want. Send in the cavalry. And that’s
“We’re outside,” rasped the voice I’d learned to hate. “Three minutes, Mr. McGill.”
Three minutes. Probably not enough time. But I had to try it.
I took out the handheld computer.
Chapter 55
Mr. McGill,” came the voice. From the door.
I walked to it, gun in hand. “Are we all clear?”
“Of course. Open the door.”
“Hold on,” I said. I pulled the makeshift lockpicker out of the door, very quietly slid the chair away, and walked back to the desk. “Come on in.”
The chief of staff entered with two men in black. He took two steps and stopped.
I had the Ruger pressed to the closed book.
“What exactly is transpiring here, Mr. McGill?”
“Insurance,” I said, much more calmly than I expected. “Pick up the handheld device on the desk there.”
“You can’t possibly expect to shoot me before these people unload into your body, Mr. McGill.” The two Secret Service men had both drawn on me, rock steady and aimed at my eyes.
“I’m not aiming at you, sir. Look at me. I’m aimed at the book.”
“What is this?”
“The book’s not going to be a whole hell of a lot of use to you with five large holes in it. Pick up the handheld. I want to see my money transferred into my account before I hand the book over.”
“This is stupid. I’m the White House chief of staff. I don’t lie.”
“There’s no way your boys can take me out before I fire into the book. I’ve already taken first pressure. If I cough, bullets go through this book. Destroying words. Destroying whatever crap is really in the covers. It’ll be useless to you. And after the week I’ve had, I really, really couldn’t give a shit what happens next.”
“We have your friend Trix, you know. Her lawyer friend bolted the second the alarm went off.”
“She’s not my friend. She’s someone I was sleeping with until she slept with someone else.”
He smiled his awful smile. “Yes, I’m aware of that. I did try to warn you.”
I smiled back at him. “Yes, you did. Pick up the handheld.”
“Yes,” he said. “I will. A job well done, Mr. McGill, against astonishing odds.”
He took the device, and his long fingers began playing its keyboard.
“Mike?” came a voice from outside.
“Bring her through,” the chief of staff absently muttered, working the device. Trix, with a foul look on her face, emerged from the outer offce.
“So you’re doing it,” she said to me.
“You’re damn right I am. And I don’t care if you’re disappointed.”
“Meh. It’s been a day of disappointments. It’s not like you’re surprising me with your spinelessness, Mike.”
“Yeah, well. The one thing my life has taught me is that there’s always space for surprise.”
“An excellent lesson to end the day with, Mr. McGill.” The chief smiled. He put the device on the desk and swiveled it around to show me the screen. “A completed, irrevocable transfer of funds, available immediately for your use. You have lived up to your peculiar reputation and my faith in you, Mr. McGill. Now, the book, if you please.”
Watching the Secret Service men, I slowly laid the Ruger on the book and backed away.
“You can keep the gun, too.” I smiled. “I’m done with it.”
I walked around the table and picked up the handheld. The chief walked around the other side and laid his hands on the book, reverently.