“We aren’t doing anything. I told you I’d talk to Mrs. Erickson myself so you wouldn’t get in trouble with Tuchman.”
“Then you’ll do it?”
Brad nodded. “You’re right about how important this is. But talking to Erickson is all we’re going to do, right? After that we forget about the Clarence Little case, agreed?”
Brad stuck out his hand, and Ginny shook it. Brad held on and looked her in the eye. Ginny looked back and didn’t blink. Brad still thought she was lying.
Chapter Thirty-one
Unlike an incoming attorney general of the United States who starts his tenure with an existing office, staff, and equipment, an independent counsel starts with nothing but the piece of paper appointing him. On an independent counsel’s first day on the job he does not have computers or telephones or desks on which to put them. He has to locate and lease office space then fill it with furniture, equipment, investigators, books, and lawyers. This explained why Keith Evans was using a room in an inexpensive motel on the outskirts of Washington, D.C., to conduct his interview with Irving Lasker, the head of the Secret Service detail that guarded President Farrington at the farmhouse in Virginia.
Lasker was a wiry, stern-looking, middle-aged man with tight skin, sunken cheeks, and bright blue eyes that Evans half-believed could beam death rays. From his crew cut and the way he held himself, Evans guessed the Secret Service agent was ex-military.
Lasker sat stiff backed on a chair with gold casters that was upholstered in imitation red leather. Evans sat on a similar chair. The two men were separated by a round wooden table over which hung a cheap brass light fixture. Cars sped by on a freeway through the window on Keith’s left. To his right were a queen-size bed and an armoire containing a television that showed in-room movies. The room was dark and depressing and smelled of cleaning fluid.
“Sorry about the accommodations,” Evans said, using the apology as an icebreaker. “Justice Kineer’s out house hunting as we speak and we don’t have a big enough budget to rent at the Willard.”
“Understood,” Lasker answered tersely. Keith hoped the interview wouldn’t be as difficult as Lasker’s demeanor suggested.
“Thanks for bringing the log,” Evans said.
“The log was mentioned in the subpoena.”
“Yes, but you could have given us a hard time.”
“That’s not in my job description, Agent Evans. Ask me your questions and I’ll answer them truthfully, as long as they don’t concern protection procedures or security arrangements.”
Evans scanned the log on which were recorded the times and identities of the people who had entered and left the safe house.
“It says here that you brought the president to the farm at eight P.M.”
“That’s right. He was in the car with me.”
“No one else arrived until Walsh showed up?”
Lasker nodded.
“Then Walsh arrives at nine and leaves at nine-thirty-six.”
“That seems right.”
“Who drove her?”
“Sam Harcourt.”
“Is Agent Harcourt here?”
“He’s waiting in the lobby.”
“After Miss Walsh got out of the car did you hear anything that the president said to her or she said to him?”
“Not when she arrived. I was outside. When she left, I heard her yell at President Farrington.”
“What did she say?”
“Threats. He thought he could use her then toss her away. He’d be sorry. Stuff like that. I don’t remember the exact words.”
“What, if anything, did the president say?”
“He didn’t get emotional. I think he told her to calm down. Again, I can’t remember the exact words.”
“Okay, then Walsh is driven away?”
“By Agent Harcourt. He picked her up from the Dulles Towne Center mall and returned her to her car.”
“Did the president say anything after Miss Walsh left the farm?”
“Not about her, or, at least, not to me.”
“Tell me about the woman in the woods.”
“Okay. Right about the time Miss Walsh left, Bruno Culbertson spotted a woman in the woods taking pictures. He chased her, and she hid and hit him from behind. Richard Sanborne and I chased her and Sanborne wrote down what he believed to be the woman’s license plate number.”
“Did you discover who owned the car?”
“If Agent Sanborne wrote down the number correctly the car that drove away from the farm is registered to a Dana Cutler.”
“Did you or anyone to your knowledge follow up on the possibility that Miss Cutler was the person who took the pictures?”
“Mr. Hawkins told us that he’d be following up.”
“That’s Charles Hawkins, the president’s aide?”
“Yes.”
“Wouldn’t the Secret Service normally follow up on potential threats to the president?”
“Yes, but President Farrington instructed us to leave the investigation to his aide.”
“President Farrington told you this himself?”
Lasker nodded. Evans thought that this was very unusual and that it might be a key piece of evidence in the investigation.
“Has an arrest warrant been issued for Dana Cutler for assaulting a federal officer?”
“The Secret Service hasn’t requested one.”
“Why not?”
“We don’t know for certain that Cutler struck Bruno. He didn’t get a good look at the woman he was chasing, and he didn’t see who hit him. Rich Sanborne isn’t certain about the license number. Then Mr. Hawkins told us to drop the matter.”
“So Cutler’s not a fugitive?”
“Not as far as I know.”
“The log says that Mr. Hawkins arrived at the farm at eleven-fifteen P.M.”
“That sounds right,” Lasker said.
“Did he drive himself or was someone with him?”
“He was alone.”
“Did you hear any part of his conversation with the president?”
“No. President Farrington was in the library. Mr. Hawkins joined him. I was outside the house.”
“The log says that Mr. Hawkins left the farm at eleven-fifty.”
“That sounds right.”
“When did you leave the farm to drive the president back to the White House?”
“Shortly after midnight.”
“When did you arrive at the White House?”
“Somewhere around one in the morning.”
“Was President Farrington in your presence from the time he arrived at the farm until he returned to the White House?”
“If you’re asking whether he could have murdered the Walsh girl between eight and one, the answer is no.”
Secret Service Agent Sam Harcourt was forty-two. There was gray mixed into his jet-black hair, lines on his face, and his eyes were as alert as those of the other Secret Service agents with whom Evans had come in contact. It seemed to him that these men and women were on the alert for any trouble no matter what situation they were in. He wondered if they ever relaxed.
“You were the agent assigned to pick up Charlotte Walsh at the Dulles Towne Center mall and return her there?”
“Yes.”
Evans had the distinct impression that something was bothering Harcourt.
“You seem…I don’t know, upset,” Evans said.
Harcourt stiffened. “Of course I’m upset. She was a nice kid and she was tortured to death.”
“So, you liked her?”
“I really didn’t get a chance to know her. I guess I should have said that she seemed like a nice kid. We were only together during the trips to and from the mall and she didn’t talk much, especially on the trip back.”
“Her mood was different going to the farm and coming back?”
“Definitely. She was excited on the way to the farm. Not that she talked much, but I could see her in the rearview mirror.”
“When she did talk, what did she say?”