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“That should make it a perfect match.”

Spivey leaned back in his swivel chair and examined Dill carefully. “Haven’t done all your mourning yet, have you?”

“No. Not yet.”

“Takes time, Pick. Lord, it takes time.” He sipped some of his beer. “How long’s it been now?”

“Seven years, almost eight.”

“Genoa, right?”

“Right.”

“I was with Brattle and you were with, what was her name? Lorna, Lana? Lena?”

“Laura.”

“That’s right. Laura. You all split up?”

“You heard, huh?”

“Nope. You just look sort of split up. Divorced. What happened?”

Dill shrugged. “Terminal boredom, I guess. She went out one night to see a play — Chekhov, I think — and never came back.”

Spivey grinned. “No shit? Chekhov?”

“The Cherry Orchard.”

Spivey shook his head in either amusement or commiseration. “She was one handsome woman. Know who reminds me of her?”

“Your Miss Daphne. I noticed it, too.” Dill drank from the can of beer. “Let me tell you why I’m here, Jake.”

Spivey nodded, interested.

“The Senator wants a deposition from you.”

“No problem there, but you’re gonna be plowing up the same old cotton. I’ve already talked to Justice more times than I can count. The IRS has got me on permanent audit. Even Treasury sent some tall drink of water down here, and he and I went round and round for three days. The only ones who haven’t dropped in on me is the fucking CIA, and I expect they’ll come sneaking over the wall one of these nights just to find out what I’ve been telling everybody else.”

“They’ve located Brattle, Jake.”

The blue eyes opened a little wider and the wide mouth split into a charming but skeptical grin. “Found Clyde? Clyde Brattle? Where was he this time, Cape Town? Rangoon? One of the Tripolis? Downtown Tulsa maybe? Shit, Pick, they been spotting old Clyde here, there, and over yonder for months now. You know what I think?”

“What?”

“I think old Clyde’s dead.”

“You hope so anyway.”

“Well, I can’t say I’d be in the front rank of mourners.”

“But you would be off the hook.”

“I ain’t exactly wiggling on one now. Where’d they claim to have spotted him?”

“London.”

“When?”

“Two months ago.”

“Whyn’t they pick him up? Hell, he’s extraditable.”

“They lost him.”

“Who the fuck are they?”

“The Brits.”

“Well, no wonder. Look, let’s get this thing over with. You say you want a deposition for the Senator? Let’s do her.”

Dill looked around the room. “Where’s the tape recorder?”

Spivey shook his head sadly. “Pick.”

“What?”

“It’s been running from the second you walked in.”

Dill grinned. “I should’ve known. I’ll just start then.”

“You start and then Daffy’ll give the tape to one of the girls to get typed up and Xeroxed and sworn to and all.”

“Okay,” Dill said, “here we go.” He paused, counted silently to fifteen, and then began. “This is the sworn deposition of John Jacob Spivey given freely on this day of August whatever it is, ladies, at his home at the right address on Beauchamp Lane and so forth.”

Dill put his beer on the desk and opened the file on Jake Spivey. He looked at the file and then up at Spivey.

“Your name is John Jacob Spivey.”

“Yes.”

“Your age?”

“Thirty-eight.”

“You are an American citizen, living permanently at the above address.”

“Yes.”

“Your occupation?”

“Retired.”

“Your previous occupation?”

“I was engaged in the purchase and sale of defensive weaponry.”

“For how long?”

“Seven years, almost eight.”

“And before that?”

“I was a contract employee of a government agency.”

“Which agency?”

“The Central Intelligence Agency.”

“Where were you employed?”

“You mean where did they hire me or where did I work?”

“Both.”

“I was hired in Mexico City and I worked in Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.”

“For how long?”

“From 1969 to 1975.”

“What was the nature of your duties?”

“The oath I took when employed by the CIA precludes me from revealing the nature of my duties unless I request and am given written permission by the Central Intelligence Agency.”

“Have you sought such permission?”

“Yes.”

“Was it given?”

“It was refused.”

“When was the last time it was refused?”

“On June fourteenth of this year.”

“Why did you ask for the permission?”

“I did so at the request of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.”

“And the permission was denied?”

“Yes.”

“Are you willing to violate your oath at this time?”

“No, sir, I’m not.”

“Why not?”

“On the grounds that it could be self-incriminating, and I cite the Fifth Amendment.”

“When did you first meet Clyde Tomerlin Brattle?”

“In 1970, around March or April. I’m not exactly sure of the date.”

“Where was this?”

“Bangkok.”

“How did you meet him?”

“He was my supervisor.”

“Your case officer?”

“My supervisor. He instructed me in the duties I performed in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia whose exact nature I am prevented by my oath from disclosing.”

Dill grimaced and drew a finger across his throat. Spivey, smiling broadly, reached beneath the desk and cut off the tape recorder.

“Jesus Christ, Jake.”

“What’d you expect?”

“It’s canned.”

“You goddamn right it’s canned — by Dump, Diddle and Squat, which is what I call those jackass lawyers of mine up in Washington who’re sucking me dry. When’s the last time you got a bill from a lawyer?”

“It’s been a while.”

“Well, here’s some advice. Sit down before you open it — or better yet, lie down, because sure as green apples give gripe you’re gonna faint dead away.”

“But all that crap about an oath.”

“I took an oath just like I said. Does Langley deny it? Hell, no, they don’t. They just deny I ever worked for ’em.”

“They don’t deny that either,” Dill said. “They just refuse to confirm it.”

“Pick, I don’t really give a fuck about any oath I took for those fuckers. I was twenty-three years old then and when I quit ’em I was thirty and an old man. I mean old up here.” Spivey tapped his forehead. “Up here, I was a hundred-and-two. They paid me one thousand bucks a week, which back then was serious money, and I did stuff I wouldn’t do now and stuff I don’t even let myself think about much anymore. But what I did I didn’t do for God, flag, or country. I did it for one thousand bucks a week cash money and believe it or not, I paid a price. What price, you’re thinking, right? Well, old buddy, I never got to be twenty-four or twenty-five or twenty-six or any of those good years, because one day I was twenty-three and six months later I was a hundred-and-two going on a hundred-and-three.”

“Poor old Jake.”

Spivey shrugged, suddenly indifferent, even bored.

“So what would happen if you violated your so-called oath?” Dill said. “I mean, what do you think would happen?”

“Not much,” Spivey said. “There might be some juicy headlines for a day or two, but there’d never be any trial or anything because Langley’d slam the lid down tight. Just like they did before — all in the interest of national security. Hell, Pick, Vietnam’s old hat now. You got a generation coming of age that thinks of Vietnam, if they think of it at all, like you and me used to think of World War Two. Ancient history. When you and me were twenty-one, the war’d been over for twenty-two years. Twenty-three maybe.” He paused. “You want another beer?”