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Completely drained as O’Farrell was, he still had to observe other professional necessities before he went back to Courtfield Road, but it was a halfhearted performance for the watchers he knew would be in place.

He walked to Marble Arch underground station, several times using doorway reflections and crossing streets abruptly to check for pursuit. He passed by one entrance to the subway and turned into Oxford Street before darting sideways to enter the system. O’Farrell remained on the Central line for only two stops, getting off at Oxford Circus to pick up the Victoria line but going north instead of south. Too tired and disinterested to do anything else, he caught a cruising taxi at Euston and rode it all the way to Gloucester Road. So tired was he that he was aware of his feet scuffing, too heavy to lift into a definite step. Didn’t matter how tired he was. Not yet. Not even reconnaissance at this stage. Basic groundwork, that’s all. Which he still had to complete. Plenty of time tomorrow. The day after that, if it were necessary. No hurry, no panic. Always wrong to hurry and panic. Dangerous.

The weak-eyed man was still in his shirt sleeves when O’Farrell pulled himself up the worn steps of the board-inghouse, nodding at him but not smiling.

“Too late for dinner,” he challenged at once.

“I said I didn’t want to eat,” O’Farrell reminded him.

“There’s the bar, though; not really a bar. You tell me what you want, and I get it for you and bring it into the lounge.” He nodded toward a closed door to his right. “It’s very comfortable. There’s television.”

O’Farrell clenched his hands again. “No, thank you,” he said. “Nothing.”

“Seen all you wanted to, the first day?”

“I think so,” O’Farrell said.

“This is a shitty job. You ever think what a shitty job this is?” The driver’s name was Wentworth. He was bulged from junk food and sitting around, the necessities of a watcher’s life.

“All the time,” Connors agreed. The observer was a music enthusiast; the personal stereo and earphones were in his lap now, the Tchaikovsky tape twice exhausted. He disconsolately lifted and then dropped the stereo in his lap and said, “I can’t believe I forgot the other fucking tapes!”

“You think he’s in for the night?”

“How the fuck do I know!” demanded the observer. “It’s only nine.”

“So we gotta wait?”

“ ’Course we gotta wait.”

“What do you think?”

“About what?”

“About how he’s behaved so far, that’s about what!” Wentworth said. “What else do you think I mean, for Christ’s sake!”

Connors considered the question. Then he said, “By the book. Everything he should have done so far.”

“Didn’t lose us on that runaround, did he?” There was a triumphant note in Wentworth’s voice.

“He was only going through the motions,” Connors guessed, groping around and beneath the seat yet again for the mislaid cassette carrier. “I don’t think he was really trying.”

“Would you have admitted it if he had lost us?”

“ ’Course not, asshole!” the observer said.

“We could have been suspended,” the driver said.

Connors stopped searching, grinning sideways. “Almost worth lying over, on a shitty job like this,” he agreed.

FOURTEEN

BARNEY SHEPHERD wore a baseball cap backward, with the rim covering his neck, an apron declaring “Ole King o’ the Coals” over his bermuda shorts and sweatshirt, Docksiders without socks on his large feet, and a grin of complete contentment on his smooth, round face. He stood in the expansive barbecue area to the left of the pool, surrounded by marinated ribs, ground beef patties, and more dissecting tools than an average surgeon in an average operating room, waiting for the cue from the magic man that the act had just ten more minutes to run. That would be the time to start cooking. Janie was in front of the performer, jumping up and down with the demands of a birthday girl, whooping with delight when she got the candy stick for winning whatever the game had been. Shepherd smiled and waved, but she was too absorbed in the party to notice him. Beautiful, he thought; genuinely beautiful. Blond, like Sheree, and blue eyes like her mother’s, too. Beautiful mother, beautiful daughter. He looked beyond the screaming kids, over the landscaped garden and the shrubs and trees to the silver glitter of the Pacific, and then back to encompass the sprawling California ranchhouse that he’d had built to his detailed specifications, including the Jacuzzi and the sauna and the tennis court and the four-car garage. Everything beautiful. Shepherd knew—guessed, at least—that some people thought it ostentatious but he didn’t give a damn. It was a symbol—his symbol—of achievement, and he deserved it. It was good, not having to give a damn, ever again.

The problem was keeping things that way, now mat the slump had hit Silicon Valley. Shepherd’s firm had so far ridden out the recession better than most other hi-tech companies in Santa Clara county. But he’d had to cut some corners and not ask as many questions about some orders as he should have asked. Shepherd wished he could have avoided that, because he didn’t want to risk those all-important Defense Department contracts. The shortcuts were necessary, to maintain cash flow, but it was the long-term defense stuff that mattered for the prestige of the company. And guaranteed the real heavy profits. The sort of profits that enabled him to have a house overlooking Monterey Bay, with a live-in maid and a Rolls as well as a Mercedes in the garage (Sheree had a 928 Porsche and a Golf GTI runaround) and to take time off for the cookout for Janie’s tenth birthday.

Shepherd was still looking expectantly toward the magic man, so he wasn’t immediately aware of Sheree emerging through the patio doors, salad bowl before her. He turned at the movement. So very beautiful. Except for her ass, maybe. Not as tight as it used to be; the definite suggestion of a sag, in fact. He’d have to suggest she get it lifted. Use Dr. Willick again. He’d done her tits and her eyes and her chin and made a good job of all of them.

“Good party, eh?” he said when she reached him.

“I thought I’d leave the Jell-O and the ice cream in the kitchen refrigerator rather than bring it out here yet,” she said, nodding to the cabinet set apart from the barbecue pit. An outside refrigerator had been one of Shepherd’s specifications: it meant the wine was always chilled.

“Good idea.” Definitely a sag; he’d talk to her tonight about getting it fixed.

“There’s some men to see you.”

“What?”

“Two guys.” Sheree jerked her head back toward the house. “From the government.”

“I do business at the office!” Shepherd erupted, annoyed. “Didn’t you tell them that? It’s Janie’s birthday party, for Christ’s sake!”

“I asked them if you expected them … whether they had an appointment … and they said no, but they thought you’d see them—” The woman broke off, looking toward the magician. “You see that! Janie got the dove out of the guy’s hat and it’s sitting on her arm!”

“They say who they were?” Shepherd felt a vague stir of unease.

“Uh-huh. Customs and FBI.”

For a moment Shepherd made no response, his mind refusing to function. He said, “They say what they want?”

“Look at that!” Sheree said, ignoring her husband. “The bird’s actually eating corn out of her hand now! This is going to be Janie’s best party yet!”

Shepherd forced the patience. “Did they say what they wanted?” he repeated.