“They’d have to fix that,” she said.
“Make it less bright?”
“No, raise it. It’s down to make it easier for cleaning.”
“A lot of places have chandeliers in the bathroom?”
“It’s a half-bath,” she said, as if that were an explanation.
Howe gave a mumbled “Mmmph.”
“Five-five a month,” she said, leading him back to the living room.
“As in five thousand five hundred?” he asked.
She nodded. “They might come down a little.”
Howe and the real estate agent had spent the past three hours working their way up the price chain. While he had some rough ideas now of what things cost, in truth he was no closer to knowing what sort of place he wanted to live in.
Except that this wasn’t it.
“I don’t know about this place,” he said.
“Well, is the price range okay?”
It seemed outrageously high, but everything did. Using the base salary figures that Blitz and the others were throwing around, though, he could easily afford it. But did he want a place with a crystal chandelier in the bathroom?
“It’s not so much the price as—”
“It’s too ostentatious,” she said, finishing his sentence.
“Yeah. I’m not that formal. I’ve spent most of my time in the military, and, uh, not that I don’t appreciate nice houses or anything…” he said, flustered again. “What kind of place would you live in? This?”
“Here?” She laughed. “I couldn’t afford this.”
“Let’s say you could. Where would you live?”
“Tell you what, I’m hungry,” she said. “Let’s get something to eat and we’ll think about it some more.”
“Great,” said Howe.
They were just getting out of her car when Howe’s cell phone rang. He fumbled getting it out of his pocket, then thought maybe he shouldn’t answer; this wouldn’t be a good place to get into a discussion with a senator or one of the other influential people he’d called to sound out about the post. But habit and duty conspired to make him snap it open.
“Colonel, stand by for Dr. Blitz,” said Blitz’s assistant.
“I have to take this,” Howe told Alice.
“I’ll wait.”
“It’s kind of—”
“Your girlfriend?”
“No, I’m not — It’s business.”
She had a smirk on her face; Howe thought she hadn’t believed what he’d said about it not being a girlfriend. “I’ll be inside,” she told him. Howe watched her walk away as Blitz came on the line.
“Sorry it took so long to get back to you, Colonel. What’s up?”
“I’ve been talking to people about those UAVs I saw in Korea,” said Howe. “I think they’re significant.”
“UAVs? What, at the base?”
“In the hangar there. I mentioned them. And they should be in the reports. I was talking to Mark Dalton over at NADT, and to Howard McIntyre.”
“How is Mac?”
“I think he’s fine.”
“He’s a good man. We have to get him back to work.”
“I’d like to talk to the CIA about what I saw,” said Howe. “According to Dalton, the aircraft would be pretty potent. And we don’t seem to know about it.”
“Tell you what, Colonel. There’s an evaluation group at the Pentagon working with some of my staff and coordinating with the intelligence community. Why don’t you talk directly to them. My assistant will make the arrangements. Have you spoken to Senator Elwell yet?”
“About this?”
“No, about NADT. You haven’t changed your mind, have you?”
“No, sir.”
“Good. Listen, I’m going to see Elwell tonight. I’ll make sure he calls you tomorrow. Thanks.”
Blitz snapped off the line.
Chapter 13
“You’re just a guest, Fisher,” said Kowalski. “If we want your advice, we’ll ask for it.”
“I’m just saying that the thing to do would be to wait and watch for a while, see who shows up,” said Fisher. “We don’t have any other leads.”
“We will once we’re inside,” said Kowalski.
“Maybe. Or maybe the place is rigged to blow up when someone walks in the front door.”
“See, that’s where we do things differently than the FBI,” said Kowalski. “We’re blowing a hole through the sidewall.”
“That’s different,” said Fisher.
“We don’t screw around.”
“Kowalski’s right, Andy,” said Macklin. “We can’t afford to sit on this. We have to find out what’s inside.”
“I’m not saying sit on it.” Fisher wouldn’t have liked to admit it, but he was a bit miffed at being called a guest. He prided himself on the fact that he hadn’t been invited to anything since his best friend’s bar mitzvah twenty years ago. “If you want to go in, go through that second-story window up there. Then you can check the place out, make sure there’s no explosives, and get in through the doors.”
“Take too much time,” said Kowalski.
“You already know from the radar it’s empty,” said Fisher. The DIA people had brought in a radar unit that scanned the interior of the building. In addition, they used an infrared viewer and found nothing except for two cats. “And sneaking in would give you the option of setting up a sting.”
“We can still set up a sting,” said Kowalski. “And besides, the DIA doesn’t sneak in anywhere. Neither does Homeland Defense. Right, Macklin?”
Macklin looked at Fisher, then back at Kowalski. “I guess you’re right.”
Sneaking in would have been difficult in any event, as the task force safety officer insisted that the first team in wear full protective gear, in case they actually found something. Fisher thought he detected a certain healthy skepticism in the officer’s remarks, something he hadn’t seen much of from the rest of the task force.
The special tactics people borrowed from New York City took out the door on the loading dock by shooting out the hinges with solid lead shot. Fisher had actually never seen this done and was kind of curious about it, but the protocol called for him to stay far away until the warehouse was actually secured unless he was willing to wear a hazmat suit himself. Since that would have made it difficult to smoke, he passed on the opportunity, contenting himself with watching the team from the video feed in the van. The door seemed to pop off the building, and the men disappeared inside. Ten minutes later it was all clear. Fisher got out of the van and walked the half-block to the place, arriving as the garage-style overhead door at the front of the building was rolled upward.
“There,” said one of the men, pointing to a row of large canisters against the side wall. “That looks like it.”
The tanks were the sort used to hold seltzer water in large soda fountain setups. Fisher walked over and started to inspect one; Macklin, who was wearing a respirator, grabbed him.
“Preliminary hit says they’re filled with liquid sarin,” said Macklin. “A lot worse than that coffee you’re always drinking.”
“Not necessarily,” said Fisher, but he backed away anyway.
Chapter 14
“This is my dream place.”
Alice opened the door and stepped through the landing. Howe followed. The living room to the left was open to the second story, with large windows covering two walls. The woodwork was stained a dark walnut that matched the inlaid pattern in the oak. He followed inside the kitchen — another granite counter — which looked into a breakfast nook and a family room. A large fireplace sat at the far end.
The wine they’d had over dinner, not to mention the conversation, had left him in a mellow mood. Howe followed her through the house: It was a house, not a condominium, and it was for sale, not rent. Her voice echoed through the empty room like faint music, luring him onward.