“Hello?
Â
Alan?”
“Yeah, it's me.
Â
Listen, Rachel, I'm sorry forâ”
“I couldn't find that Seagraves guy,” she interrupted.
“Forget that, Sis, I
alrea
â”
“But I talked to that other guy.
Â
The one in Cedar Rapids.”
“Jim Thurman?”
“That's right.
Â
It was an unlisted number, but I claimed an emergency like you said to do.
Â
The operator wouldn't give me the number, she just connected me instead.”
“And?”
“And Jim said he never heard of Seagraves, or you.
Â
He wanted to know what I wanted, and I didn't know what to say.
Â
It was a very weird twenty seconds there.”
“I'll bet.
Â
Did you get his number?”
“I did.
Â
It wasn't easy.
Â
I had to give him mine first.
Â
Was that okay?
Â
What's going on, Alan?”
“Later.
Â
Listen, if anyone calls you asking about me, you haven't talked to me in weeks.
Â
Got it?”
“Anyone?”
“That's right, anyone.
Â
Not even the FBI.”
Her voice took a sudden upward arc.
Â
“The FBI?”
“Yeah.
Â
But if I call you back from Langley, Virginia, you can tell them what you know.”
“But I don't know anything, Alan!” Rachel complained, as if arguing with Mom.
“Good,” I said.
Â
“Now give me Jim's number.”
I memorized the number by repeating it five times to myself.
Â
Then I thanked my way through another awkward goodbye, and hung up.
Â
Finally, I called the number I'd memorized.
Â
A sleepy yet audibly disturbed voice growled, “Yeah?”
“Mr. Thurman?”
“Who is it now?”
“It's Alan Dyson.
Â
You don't know me, sir, but I know your sister Jean.
Â
Have you heard from her yet tonight?”
“Why?
Â
What, is there something wrong?”
Â
His voice lost its hostility.
“Yes, but your sister is fine.
Â
She, her boy, and my friend may be coming to stay with you soon.
Â
I was hoping they were already there.”
“Why?”
“I can't tell you right now, there isn't time.
Â
But please tell Julie I'll call back soon, and I'm sorry I had to strand them at the airport.”
“Julie?”
“And . . . Jim?
Â
No matter what you hear on the news shortly, when I last saw your sister and her son, they were out of danger.”
“What danger?”
Â
His hostility returned, from frustration.
Â
“What the hell do youâ”
“Later,” I told him, and hung up.
Checking my watch, I wondered with anxious guilt what had happened to Julie.
Â
She should have been in Cedar Rapids by now.
Â
Unless they got a hotel room, which was likely.
Â
I bought a hot pretzel and lemonade, more out of nervous agitation than hunger, then returned to the bank of aluminum phone cubicles to place another call.
Â
The phone rang only once before it was picked up at the other end this time.
“Hello,” said the same computer generated voice I'd heard earlier, attenuated by a slight buzzing sound as though a recording device had been activated.
“It's me,” I announced.
Â
“You there, Seagraves?”
“But of course,” Seagraves replied, replacing the computer voice.
Â
“And call me Cliff.”
“I'm walking on the edge of a cliff, Cliff.
Â
What have you got for me?”
“Not over the phone,” Seagraves insisted.
Â
“It may be compromised.”
“That bad, huh?”
Â
I looked through the dark glass opposite the phone bank at the adjacent concourse, where a jet was being directed to its gate.
Â
My shuttle to Washington.
Â
“What do I do?” I asked, flustered.
Â
“Come to you, or . . .”
“There is a ticket waiting for you at American Airlines under your middle name,” Seagraves said.
“But I have a ticket.”
“And a new destination, now.
Â
Call me when you get there.”
“Where?”
There was a click, and then a dial tone.
Â
I hung up slowly, stunned.
Â
What was going on? I wondered.
Â
Had I been framed so expertly that even computer hackers couldn't extricate me?
Â
No way was I going to leave the country and cool my heels in Barbados waiting to find out.
Â
Jeffers was getting away with murder.
Â
Julie wasn't safe yet, either.
Â
No.
Â
I would go to the
Tactar
plant as planned, search my office, and find out what Roger had discovered in my apartment.
Â
I would go to the FBI if I had to, as well, and demand they put out an APB across state lines on a blue El Dorado with Virginia plates.
Â
Even if I didn't think Jeffers was stupid enough to drive to California or Mexicoâor wherever he was goingâin the same car.
Â
That is, unless he thought he was home free, and was headed home . . . which might explain why he drove in the first place, so as not to have a flight record into Des Moines.
I was almost to the gate, where the shuttle to Washington prepared for takeoff, when curiosity got the better of me.
Â
I ran with considerable effort and pain toward the American Airlines ticket counter, having to dodge only a few fellow passengers in the predawn hours.
Â
A statuesque blond stared at me panting in front of her.
“You're quite early, I assure you,” she said, noting the Arrival/Departure monitor.
Â
“Ticket?”
“That's what I'm here for,” I gasped.
Â
“You have it.
Â
Name's Edward Dyson.”
“Destination?”
I said nothing, pretending I hadn't heard.
“Could you spell your last name, sir?”
I did.
Â
She searched computer records, found the name, and began to print out my ticket.
Â
“Please hurry,” I said.
“What's the rush?
Â
Your flight doesn't leave for an hour and forty-five minutes yet.”
“I . . . have to use the restroom,” I told her, bleakly.
She smiled, despite herself.
Â
“Here you go, sir.
Â
May I see your ID, please?”
“You . . . don't need my passport?”
“No, sir.
Â
A driver's license will do.”
I showed her the ID, and then looked down at the ticket in my hand.
Â
It was for American Flight 189, a Boeing 727 from Washington DC to Miami, FL, with a stop in Atlanta.
Â
Departure was at 6:29 a.m..
Â
Breakfast would be served.
The story broke en-route to Atlanta.
Â
I picked it up on the in-flight news channel.
Â
Until I heard the word “Zion” mentioned, I wasn't paying attention.
Â
I was busy wondering what the hell I was doing, and whether Seagraves had another ticket waiting for me at the Air Chile ticket counter at Miami International.
Â
From the tone of the reporter's voice on the headphones, one might guess a thermonuclear device had just gone off in Hollywood, taking out the movie industry.
Â
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
Looking around at the other passengers, I tried to remain calm, but felt my Adam's apple bobbing like an arsonist at his first parole hearing.
Â
Breakfast croissants and juice were served as I listened to the casualty reports on my headset.
Â
A running tally of the rising body count was being vectored to a central statistician, as though from pollsters to Census Headquarters.
Â
When the number reached thirty dead, mass madness was cited as a possible cause of all the homicides and suicides.
Â
But why a sleepy, tiny Midwest town had suddenly gone
apeshit
they didn't yet know.
Â
FEMA and the FBI were on the way, with assistance for the survivors.
Â
That was the important thing, after tallying the body count for all the networks seeking coverage ratings.
When the reporter I listened to finally took a break for a news report of rescue helicopters being sent to typhoon victims in Kenya, I doffed my headset and found that my hands were shaking.
Â
I had no appetite, so I ordered a Screwdriver instead, then downed it and ordered another.
Â
The stewardess started to ask me if I was feeling okay, but then she decided against it.
Â
Perhaps she'd correctly interpreted the torture in my eyes as fear, not physical pain.
Â
Although, considering my bandaged hand, the alcohol was a better clue.
Â
I'd read somewhere that many women were sensitive even to minute variations in facial expressions or body language, so I had to be careful not to appear too suspicious.
Â
Especially in this newly dangerous hijack-crazed era.
When the stewardess moved away I eyed the
airphone
in the seat back in front of me, and thought about Julie.
Â
I considered calling Jim Thurman in Cedar Rapids again to find out if she'd arrived yet.
Â
But how would I explain being on a flight to Miami?
Â
And what might be going on in Washington with Seagraves and
Tactar
?
Â
A chill spread along my upper arms to flash across my face as I suddenly considered a new possibilityâthat Seagraves had been involved with Jeffers or the CIA from the beginning, unknown to Darryl.
Â
Which would mean Seagraves was only burying me deeper, and had sent me to Miami to buy time while he re-obtained the evidence that had been planted in my apartment.
Â
Then he'd replant it.
Â
Hadn't I given him Roger's name?
Â
Like a desperate fool, in blind trust, I had.
Â
Now he could tip off the police to pick me up at the Miami airport, where a ticket awaited to take me out of the country!
In a panic I punched the Eject button on the
airphone
, and I nabbed it as it came off into my good hand.
Â
Activating it with my credit card, I imagined Rachel just getting the news on TV, stunned by the images from Zion.
Â
Although I couldn't imagine what Julie might be doing.
Â
I couldn't remember Jim Thurman's number, either, and realized that I should have written it down instead of trying to memorize it.
Â
Because if I did possess a photographic memory, it was not a Polaroid but a daguerreotype, which took hours to fix an image.
Â
But no matter.
Â
I could always get the number from Rachel again, and I wasn't calling either of them until I had an explanation or excuse for myself.
My neighbor Roger answered the phone wearily.
Â
“Yeah?”
“It's Alan.”
“Oh yeah?
Â
Where's my money, honey?”
“Why?” I asked, with suspicion.
“Why?
Â
Whatdaya
mean, why?
Â
I risk myâ”
“Has someone been to see you?”
Â
There was a pause as I felt my throat tighten.
Â
I almost croaked, “Roger?”
“
Ya
better not be tryin'
ta
get
outta
payin
' me,” he warned.
Â
“Your friend Cliff was here, yeah.”
“Cliff,” I repeated, in disbelief.
“That's right.
Â
Cliff.
Â
Said you weren't
comin
' for a while, an' you wanted him to pick up your stuff.”
“And you let him, didn't you, Roger?”
“Hey, he said he had yer permission.
Â
How'd he know I had the stuff if you didn't
tell'em
?”
“Right,” I said.
Â
“Except I told you not to answer the door unless it was me.”
“He called me âfore he came over.”
“Or answer the phone.”