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Cheri pushed back from her desk, then walked behind Ellen and embraced her, resting her cheek on Ellen's hair. There was nothing phony in the gesture, nothing patronizing.

"Look," she said, returning to her seat, "I'm not going to say this isn't important to us. But I will say it isn't everything. It's a battle, not the whole war. There were more than five hundred in attendance at the vaccine conference we ran this year. Five hundred from all over the world — professors, pediatricians, scientists, parents, philosophers. There will be more at the next one. The press and Congress are beginning to see that we are not hysterical radicals being led around by our bitterness, hormones, and emotions, devoid of logic, unwilling to listen to reason.

"Ellen, you've done a wonderful job — more so than any of us had the right to expect. You've made Sally and me and all the others out there proud. You've already helped thousands of parents know that their opinions matter. If you vote against Omnivax, you and I both know you're headed for a feeding frenzy in the media, and maybe even the cover of Newsweek and Time. We'd be naive to think otherwise. If you vote for it, life settles back down for you, and you'll still be welcome to resume your spot on the volunteer phone. But I promise you, either way, pro or con, nothing will change in our determination to have a true, long-term scientific evaluation of immunizations. Nothing will change in our crusade for informed parental choice. Nothing will change in our commitment to find the middle ground that is safest for all people."

Ellen could tell by Cheri's expression that she wasn't playing any head games, even though she had the reputation in some quarters of being a master at it.

"My mind is nearly made up as to what I'm going to do," Ellen said, "but until I am absolutely certain, I'd like to keep things to myself."

"That's okay," Cheri replied. "It would sure be nice to know as soon as you do, and I certainly hope you deliver a blow for us."

"I intend to do what's right," Ellen added, hoping Cheri might read that things were likely to go her way.

"That's all any of us have ever asked of you," Cheri said.

As Ellen walked out past Sally's open office door, she peered in at the photos adorning the walls, and paused a moment to look at one in particular.

Ellen's home, an expanded seven-room Cape in Glenside, Maryland, southeast of D.C., was the one she and Howard had bought shortly after their marriage.

"If this is the only place we ever live, I'll be perfectly happy," he had said at the time.

Sure.

On the way home, Ellen stopped at the local superette for some eggs and milk. She loved omelets of all kinds, and with what there was in the crisper she would be able to create a gold-medal winner. Physically and mentally she was spent — as exhausted as she could ever remember being. As she was fishing out her wallet for the cashier, she glanced over at the magazine rack. Both Time and Newsweek were there. Imagine her face on the covers. Today buying eggs and milk at Kim's Korner, tomorrow her face around the world. Was she ready?

What do you think, Howie? Expect to see your new bride on a magazine cover anytime soon? Barmaid Monthly?

Ellen set her groceries on the front seat, chastising herself for her pettiness. Most of the time she managed to keep her anger and hurt in decent check. It didn't feel good at all when she had a slip. The supervaccine was too much, too fast. She thought of the horrible arithmetic Steinman had presented to her: lives lost or ruined if she voted for the drug versus lives lost or ruined if she voted against it. Based on the current level of knowledge of vaccines, it was really no contest. But that was precisely the main point for which Cheri and Sally and the others were crusading — an increase in our level of knowledge.

Ellen pulled into the garage and brought her bundle in through the kitchen door. Despite the unpleasant association with Howard, she really did love the place, from her window herb-garden, to the huge oak in the backyard, to the pesky squirrels, to the small balcony off her bedroom where she often sat and watched the first sunlight of the day filter through the trees. It was really a very lovely -

Ellen set down her package and sniffed the air. Had someone been smoking in the house? One of Howard's pet peeves with her was her overdeveloped sense of smell, and one of her pet peeves was cigarette smoke in any form. Still sniffing curiously, she walked down the short hallway to the living room. Then she cried out and stumbled backward, clutching her chest to keep her heart from exploding.

Sitting calmly in the easy chair next to the fireplace was a large, powerfully built man. He was dressed expensively in a gray suit and black shirt — open collar, no tie — and ornately stitched cowboy boots. His head, square as a block of granite, was topped by thick, jet-black hair, combed straight back and held in place with some product that glistened. His hard, narrow eyes looked as black as his hair, and his wide mouth was accentuated by a short, thick scar that ran from the center of his upper lip to the base of his nose — possibly the result of surgery to repair a harelip.

"Golly, I'm sorry to have startled you, Mrs. Kroft," he said, with a pleasant, gravelly voice and the cheerful, easygoing manner of a used-car salesman. "Please have a seat, have a seat."

Ellen remained fixed where she was. There was no evidence the huge intruder had smoked in her house, yet the reek of cigarettes was definitely coming from him. She debated running, but in truth, she didn't have the sense that she was in any immediate danger. The man had already gotten into her home. If he had wanted to harm her, he wouldn't have been waiting placidly in her living room.

"Who are you? What do you want?" she demanded.

The man smiled patiently.

"Who I am doesn't matter. What I want at the moment is for you to sit down… over here." He motioned to the sofa next to his chair.

Ellen hesitated, then took a breath and did as he demanded. At close range, his eyes were more than dark, they were frighteningly cold. His thick, heavy-knuckled fingers rested in his lap, curled around a large manila envelope. The little finger of his left hand bore a gold ring with a square-cut diamond that must have been three carats or more.

"Now," Ellen said, "what are you doing here?"

"I represent a group that is very interested in getting Omnivax into circulation as soon as possible. That is all you need to know."

"So? What has that got to do with me?"

His expression tightened. Ellen thought she saw a brief tic at the corner of his mouth. Still, he managed a patronizing grin.

"Mrs. Kroft," he said, his tone still chillingly calm, "I have neither the time nor the patience for games. Both you and I know the significance of the unfortunate promise Lynette Marquand made to the world."

"And?"

"And I have it on good authority that you are the only person who might force her to honor that pledge."

"Who do you work for? The President? The drug people? Who?"

The huge man sighed impatiently and ignored the questions.

"Mrs. Kroft, I am going to have to insist on your word not to block the planned release of Omnivax."

"What do you have in that envelope," she asked, "bribe money?"

"Oh, I have no intention of trying to bribe you, Mrs. Kroft."

There was something chilling in the way he said the words. He passed over the envelope. Ellen opened it, removed the photographs it contained, and gasped. Inside were half a dozen sharp, professional quality black-and-white eight-by-ten snapshots of Lucy. Lucy heading into school, hand in hand with Gayle; in the playground; at home in the yard; even asleep in her bedroom.