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Mike was lost in thought. The worried look on the Mike’s face surprised even Eastwood, despite his barely disguised contempt for Mike. Can’t show emotion right now, thought Mike, as he struggled to control to control his emotions. His face quickly regained its Asian passiveness.

Cupping the speaker of the phone with the palm of his hand, Mike focused his attention coldly on Eastwood. “We’ll have to cut this discussion short, something has come up. Why don’t you talk it over with the guys in private placement? I’m sure that they can give you some good arguments to use in this situation, seems pretty straightforward.”

The abrupt manner of the dismissal caught Eastwood off guard. Like him or not, Mike was smooth and this abrupt change of character was unsettling. Eastwood rose from his chair, quickly gathered the papers from Mike’s desk, and backed out toward the door. “Thank you, Mr. Liu. Shall I close the door?”

“Please.”

Mike quietly watched as Eastwood exited and the door to his office latched with a soft click.

Mike whispered into the telephone, “Lieutenant, when did it happen?”

“Sir, I’m not permitted to discuss that. Your car is downstairs.”

“Of course. Thank you, Lieutenant.”

Placing the telephone handset on its cradle, Mike allowed himself a moment’s reflection before putting on his suit jacket and took one last look out his window. His now dry lips pursed and relaxed repeatedly as he continued to struggle with the enormity of the call. The Lieutenant had done the right thing, of course. The unsecured line was hardly the place to discuss matters of such urgency. Mike’s years away from active duty with the agency had made him soft. For a moment he was lost in thought as he stared out of his window.

Mike’s office, located on the fiftieth floor of the glass encased tower on the tip of Manhattan, had a sweeping view of upper New York harbor. From his vantage point, Mike could see Governor’s Island, headquarters of the United States Coast Guard’s Atlantic Fleet, the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, and the Verrazano Narrows Bridge. Mike wondered to himself if he would ever see this view again. Mike had worked hard for this office, but the attainments of power were only temporal. What Mike was about to do was different — the difference measured not only in appearances but in the very existence of Earth itself.

Walking over to the coat rack, Mike put on his suit jacket, taking care to secure only the top button.

Mike picked up his telephone, punched the intercom button, and told his secretary that he would be out of town for several days. His secretary never questioned Mike’s need for secrecy, believing that Mike’s projects needed the utmost confidentiality.

After one last look at his opulently furnished office, Mike sighed audibly and walked quickly out. He went down through the dark, wood-paneled halls, and then through the reception area. After taking an elevator to the Sky Lobby on the 38th Floor, he walked across the hall to another bank of elevators. The tall, stainless steel elevators took less than one minute to cover the remaining distance to street level.

Mike stepped off the elevator at ground level, turned left and walked through the revolving doors into the oppressively hot and humid world of New York in June. In doing so, he left the coolness of the wealth and power of Franklin Smedley & Associates for the sweltering milieu of the busiest city in the world.

The streets smelled of a New York summer. The gagging fumes from gasoline and diesel fuels, the putrid smell of rotting garbage thrown on the street, and the sharp charcoal fumes from street vendors pushing various delicacies intermingled with the dank, humid smell of a wet New York summer morning.

Pushing his way through the harried office workers and hordes of tourists gaping at the glistening reflections of the glass tower, Mike finally reached the curb. He marveled at the degree to which people could find wonderment in such man-made structures. The irony of where he was headed as he approached the sedan parked at the curb. He wondered what chaos would result if these gapers knew that the star had fallen. The thought seemed obscene.

Parked at curbside was an unmarked, dark metallic gray Lincoln Town Car with smoked gray windows. Mike opened the door and slid onto the air conditioned comfort of the back seat. As the door closed, the brassy, hustling sounds faded into the background, as did the pungent, intermingled smells of New York. In their place were the quiet serenity of the luxury sedan and the luxurious smell of leather seats, enhanced by a trace of Chanel No. 5.

“Commander, it’s good to see you again.”

The soft voice came from the attractive blonde seated in the rear of the sedan wearing the summer tan uniform of a Master Chief Petty Officer in the United States Navy. A leather briefcase sat on her neatly trimmed, uniformed lap. Margaret Marston still retained her youthful beauty despite the passage of years. Mike hadn’t seen Margaret in at least five years, the last time that McHugh had called on him.

“Hello, Margaret. How have you been?”

She pointed to the leather suitcase sitting on the seat between them. “Commander, the suitcase contains your summer tans and other items. Your Walther PP and holster are in there as well.”

Mike did not own a firearm. However, Margaret was able to get his favorite Walther any time the need arose, despite Mike’s absence from the agency of over fifteen years.

The Walther fit easily in his hand. Even after so many years, it felt as comfortable as a well worn glove or shoe. Someone had kept it in mint condition and Mike wondered if Margaret did that herself.

Mike took the small .38 caliber, seven-shot auto pistol out of the suitcase and smiled.

“You know I hate guns. Besides there’s no need for them on this trip.”

“Standard procedure,” Margaret said, without a smile. “You have to carry it whether you like it or not.”

The holster presented a problem, since he was wearing braces and no belt. Mike opened the suitcase, rummaged through the neatly packed garments and found a standard issue khaki web belt with brass buckle. Threading the end of the belt through the empty belt loops of his expensive, tailored suit pants, Mike positioned the holster in the small of his back. Strangely, Mike felt comfortable with the Walther in this familiar location.

I’d better remember to keep my jacket buttoned, thought Mike, realizing how odd the khaki web belt and brass buckle would look with his gray, pinstriped suit.

Mike wondered what his tailor would think about this discordant note to his carefully picked wardrobe. If he had time, Mike was sure that his tailor could find a tasteful way to carry a personal sidearm. However, since very few Wall Street bankers carried a personal sidearm (things were rough on the Street, but not that rough) there were no guidelines on how the well-dressed and well-armed banker should look.

I’ll just have to wing it, he thought.

The sedan turned right on to West Street and headed north toward the Holland Tunnel, past the now-controlled access to the office tower’s parking garage. As the sedan turned right on to West Street, a similar sedan slipped in front of Mike’s sedan. At the same time, a dark gray GMC Suburban with smoked gray windows slipped behind Mike’s car. Casually looking back at his protectors in the Suburban, Mike wondered why he was required to carry the Walther when the firepower contained in both the lead and the follow vehicles could have easily outfitted several small island armies.