“I’m hurt,” Box replied.
“Don’t be. Your memory will carry you through. It’s important, too, not to exceed the fifteen-minute limit. You run the risk of boring your audience, and it’s better to leave them wanting more than offering them too much.”
“I take your point.”
“I want you to have your clothes pressed more often, too,” Ari said.
“Oh?” Box looked hurt again. “I’ve been told you’re sometimes excessively blunt.”
“I try to say what needs to be said as quickly as possible. You have a tendency to look rumpled at the best of times, and keeping your clothes pressed lessens that. Assign a campaign volunteer to that task. Also, I’d like you to wear more solid-color ties or ones with very small figures, like pin dots.”
“Am I choosing my ties badly?”
“Yes.”
Box winced. “All right, I’ll do as you say. By the way, your speeches have been excellent.”
“Yes, they have been,” Ari agreed, “and they will continue being so. The press is picking up the lines I have intended them to.”
“Am I ever going to see you live?” Box asked.
“I’ll catch an occasional appearance on the trail, and I’ll introduce myself.”
“I’m told you don’t like shaking hands.”
“The custom of shaking hands arose from a desire to show others that one is unarmed. I am always unarmed.”
“I’m glad to hear that.”
“Goodbye, Senator.” Ari hung up.
Senator Box turned to his bodyguard. “That kid is weird,” he said.
Annie appeared, reflected in his computer screen. “I know you don’t like being touched,” she said.
“It’s good that you know.”
“I’m going to put my hands on your shoulders, and I want you to relax.” She reached out to him and detected an immediate stiffness.
“I had a massage once,” Ari said. “I disliked it intensely.”
“If you want a full and happy life,” she said, “you’re going to have to do some relearning.” She squeezed his shoulders slightly.
He took a quick breath.
“Now I want you to make a concerted effort to relax your shoulders, even though I’m touching them.”
“I don’t know if I can do that,” he said.
It took her ten minutes to feel a little relaxation in his body, and another ten minutes before he seemed to like it. “There,” she said. “Was that awful?”
“It became less awful as you went along,” he said.
“We’re going to do that for a few minutes every day. You’ll have more energy, and you’ll sleep better.”
“If you say so.”
“That’s what I like to hear,” she said, kissing him lightly on the beginnings of his bald spot.
Ari jumped. “Too much, too soon,” he said.
32
After a fervent goodbye, Jamie was picked up in Stone’s garage by a black SUV with a driver and two women in the rear seat. The women got out and greeted her.
“Hi,” said the slightly taller of the two. “I’m Lane, and this is Ida.”
“Hi, Lane and Ida,” Jamie said. “It’s good to have you aboard for this tour.”
“A few words of explanation,” Lane said. “We’re both armed.” She patted her large handbag. “And in some circumstances we’re trained to shoot first and think later. If you see either of us pull a gun, drop to the floor on your belly immediately. Is that clear?”
“Clear,” Jamie said.
“It doesn’t matter where we are when it happens, do it at once.”
“Very clear,” Jamie said.
“When we go into a ladies’ room, all three of us go. One stands outside your stall, or in the next one, if she needs to go; the other washes her hands or freshens her makeup. You must never, ever go into a ladies’ room alone in a public place. In the back room of a bookstore or an auditorium, we’ll wait outside until you’re done.”
“Got it.”
“All your hotel accommodations have two large beds in the bedroom. One of us will sleep on one of them, the other on the living room couch, in sight of the door.”
“Tell me something,” Jamie said. “Do you have some special information that warrants this?”
“It’s routine,” Lane said. “All you have to do is learn to trust us.”
“I’m feeling very trusting,” Jamie replied.
They opened a door, and Lane got into the rear seat with Jamie, while Ida rode shotgun, and they headed for LaGuardia.
“We have all your airline tickets and copies of your ID,” Lane said, “so we’ll do all the checking in and, later, luggage retrieval. We’ve arranged it with the airlines that your bags will always be the last on board and the first off. Saves time.”
They arrived at LaGuardia, where a waiting skycap with a cart took charge of the luggage and placed a red tag on each bag, and then they disappeared with him. The women started their journey to the gate. They were admitted to a side lane that took them past the security checkpoint, and when they arrived at the gate they were told that there would be a short delay.
“I’ve got to go to the ladies’,” Jamie said.
“Right this way,” Lane replied and led the way. They went into the room, and Ida put Jamie into the last stall, then stood outside while Lane washed her hands.
The door to the restroom opened. Lane looked in the mirror and saw two men in dark suits enter. One of them stood by the door and wedged his foot against it. Lane turned, smiling, and stuck her hand into a pocket in her large purse. “That’s far enough, gentlemen,” she said.
One of the men unbuttoned his jacket and let it fall open. Lane got her weapon out first. “That’s far enough,” she repeated. “Take your weapons out with two fingers and let them drop to the floor.”
“You can’t get us both,” one of the men said.
“If you want to bet on that, then go for it,” she said quietly. “We’re close enough for head shots. You’ll be dead before you hit the floor. Do it now!”
The two men glanced at each other, and the doorkeeper nodded. They removed two Glocks and set them on the floor.
“Kick them to me,” Lane said, “and do it right, to avoid accidents.”
They kicked their weapons across the tile floor.
Ida joined Lane, picked up the guns, and tossed them into the stainless-steel trash bin built into the wall beside the sink.
“Jamie?” Ida said. “Join us, please.”
“Now,” Lane said to the two men. “Open the door and run. Sprint.”
The two men disappeared out the door, and she followed them to be sure they were running down the corridor.
Ida guarded the outside of the door while Lane made a call. “Baggage? Four red tags to the sidewalk right now,” she said, then dialed a second number. “Plan B,” she said. “Half an hour.”
“How would they know I’d be at LaGuardia?” Jamie asked. “My schedule hasn’t been published.”
“There’s always somebody who can be bought,” Lane said. “Or maybe they’re just checking airports.”
They hustled Jamie down a back hallway to where an electric cart waited, then rode back to the set-down entrance, where their bags were tossed into the waiting SUV.
“Where are we going?” Jamie asked, once the car was moving.
“Teterboro,” Lane replied. “You’ve been upgraded.”
“But there’s no scheduled service from Teterboro, is there?”
“No, but there’s unscheduled service,” Ida replied.
A half hour later, at Teterboro, they drove into a rear door of a hangar marked STRATEGIC SERVICES and stopped next to a small jet. Moments later they were buckled in and being towed onto the ramp, and shortly afterward engines were started.