McGovern added, "Maybe we could step to the car."
"What do you want?"
"The car? Please." No one says "please" quite the way an FBI agent does.
Potter walked with them – he was flanked – to their vehicle. He realized only when he was standing beside it that the wind was steady and ridiculously cold for July. He glanced at the grave and saw the green paper of the flowers roll in the steady breeze.
"All right." He stopped abruptly, deciding to walk no further.
"We're sorry to interrupt your vacation, sir. We tried to call the number where you're staying. There was no answer."
"Did you send somebody over there?" Potter was worried that Linden would be upset if agents came calling.
"Yessir, but when we found you we radioed them."
Potter nodded. He looked at his watch. They were going to have shepherd's pie tonight. Green salad. He was supposed to pick up something to drink. Samuel Smith Nut Brown Ale for him, oatmeal stout for them. Then, after dinner, cards with the Holbergs next door. Hearts or spades.
"How bad is it?" Potter asked.
"A situation in Kansas," McGovern said.
"It's bad, sir. He's asked you to put together a threat management team. There's a DomTran jet waiting for you at Glenview. Particulars are in here."
Potter took the sealed envelope from the young man, looking down, seeing to his surprise a dot of blood on his own thumb – from, he supposed, a latent thorn somewhere on the stem of a rose with petals like a woman's floppy-brimmed summer hat.
He opened the envelope and read through the fax. It bore the speedy signature of the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
"How long since he went barricade?"
"First report was around eight forty-five."
"Any communication from him?"
"None yet."
"Contained?"
"Completely. Kansas state troopers and a half-dozen agents from our Wichita office. They're not getting out."
Potter buttoned then unbuttoned his sports coat. He realized that the agents were looking at him with too much reverence and it set his teeth on edge. "I'll want Henry LeBow as my intelligence officer and Tobe Geller for communications. Spelled with an e but you pronounce it Toby."
"Yessir. If they're unavailable -"
"Only them. Find them. Wherever they are. I want them at the barricade in a half-hour. And see if Angie Scapello is available. She'd be at headquarters or Quantico. Behavioral Science. Jet her out too."
"Yessir."
"What's the status of HRT?"
The Bureau's Hostage Rescue Team, consisting of forty-eight agents, was the largest tactical barricade force in the country.
Crowley let McGovern deliver the unfortunate news.
"That's a problem, sir. One team's deployed to Miami. A DEA raid. Twenty-two agents there. And the second's in Seattle. A bank robbery that went barricade last night. Nineteen there. We can scramble a third team but we'll have to pull some agents off the other two. It'll be a while before they're assembled on site."
"Call Quantico, put it together. I'll call Frank from the plane. Where is he?"
"The Seattle incident," the agent told him. "If you want us to meet you at the apartment so you can pack a bag, sir…"
"No, I'll go right to Glenview. Do you have a siren and light?"
"Yessir. But your cousin's apartment's only fifteen minutes from here -"
"Say, if one of you could take the paper off those flowers, there on that grave, I'd appreciate it. Maybe arrange them a little, make sure the wind doesn't blow them away."
"Yessir, I'll do that," Crowley said quickly. So there was a difference between them; McGovern, Potter realized, was not a flower arranger.
"Thank you so much."
Potter started down the path again, following McGovern. The one thing he'd have to stop for was chewing gum. Those military jets climbed so fast his ears filled up like pressure cookers if he didn't chew a whole pack of Wrigley's as soon as the wheels left the asphalt. How he hated to fly.
Oh, I'm tired, he thought. So damn tired.
"I'll be back, Marian," he whispered, not looking toward the grave. "I'll be back."
II THE RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
10:35 A.M.
As always, an element of circus.
Arthur Potter stood beside the FBI resident agency's best car, a Ford Taurus, and surveyed the scene. Police cars drawn into a circle like pioneers' wagons, press minivans, the reporters holding their chunky cameras like rocket launchers. There were fire trucks everywhere (Waco was on everyone's mind).
Three more government-issue sedans arrived in caravan, bringing the total FBI count to eleven. Half the men were in navy-blue tactical outfits, the rest in their pseudo Brooks Brothers.
The military jet bearing Potter, reserved for civilian government transport, had touched down in Wichita twenty minutes before and he'd transferred to a helicopter for the eighty-mile flight northwest to the tiny town of Crow Ridge.
Kansas was just as flat as he'd expected, though the chopper's route took them along a wide river surrounded by trees, and much of the ground here was hilly. This, the pilot told him, was where the mid-high-grass and short-grass prairies met. To the west had been buffalo country. He pointed toward a dot that was Larned, where a hundred years ago a herd of four million had been sighted. The pilot reported this fact with unmistakable pride.
They'd sped over huge farms, one- and two-thousand-acre spreads. July seemed early for harvest but hundreds of red and green-and-yellow combines were shaving the countryside of the wheat crop.
Now, standing in the chill wind beneath a dense overcast sky, Potter was struck by the relentless bleakness of this place, which he would have traded in an instant to be back amid the Windy City tenements he'd left not long before. A hundred yards away was a red brick industrial building, like a castle, probably a hundred years old. In front of it sat a small school bus and a battered gray car.
"What's the building?" Potter asked Henderson, special agent in charge of the FBI's Wichita resident agency.
"An old slaughterhouse," the SAC responded. "They'd drive herds from western Kansas and Texas up here, slaughter 'em, then barge the carcasses down to Wichita."
The wind slapped them hard, a one-two punch. Potter wasn't expecting it and stepped back to keep his balance.
"They've lent us that, the state boys." The large, handsome man was nodding at a van that resembled a UPS delivery truck, painted olive drab. It was on a rise overlooking the plant. "For a command post." They walked toward it.
"Too much of a target," Potter objected. Even an amateur sportsman could easily make the hundred-yard rifle shot.
"No," Henderson explained. "It's armored. Windows're an inch thick."
"That a fact?"
With another fast look at the grim slaughterhouse he pulled open the door of the command post and stepped inside. The darkened van was spacious. Lit with the glow from faint yellow overhead lights, video monitors, and LED indicators. Potter shook the hand of a young state trooper, who'd stood to attention before the agent was all the way inside.
"Your name?"
"Derek Elb, sir. Sergeant." The red-haired trooper, in a perfectly pressed uniform, explained that he was a mobile command post technician. He knew SAC Henderson and had volunteered to remain here and help if he could. Potter looked helplessly over the elaborate panels and screens and banks of switches and thanked him earnestly. In the center of the van was a large desk, surrounded by four chairs. Potter sat in one while Derek, like a salesman, enthusiastically pointed out the surveillance and communications features. "We also have a small arms locker."
"Let's hope we won't be needing it," said Arthur Potter, who in thirty years as a federal agent had never fired his pistol in the line of duty.