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Shield backed the tape up all the way to the beginning, before Thomas and his friends placed their orders. She paused it when the waiter came into view. “Who’s the waiter?”

The manager peered at the still image. “I don’t recognize him offhand. I’ll have to ask.” He picked up the phone and called his personnel staffer. “I need the names of all the waiters present on the twelfth of October, working the morning shift.”

Shield kept her eyes on the young man on the monitor while she waited.

The manager jotted down some names and hung up. “All but one of the three people working that morning are full-timers and have been with us anywhere from a year to five years.”

“And the one?”

“A temp from an agency. He came in to replace his girlfriend, who’d called in sick.”

“Do you have his name?”

“Dennis Weitman.”

“How about an address or number?”

He picked up the phone and called personnel again. “Lives in Bath and gave us a cell-phone number.” He wrote it down.

Shield pulled out her cell and dialed Weitman’s number. She got a recording telling her the number was no longer in use. “Is the girlfriend working today?”

He shook his head. “She left to take another job not long after this happened.” After another call to personnel, he wrote down the woman’s name, number, and address. “Her place isn’t far. Just down the road a couple miles.”

She pocketed the information. “What agency sent Weitman?”

“We use Rapid. Here’s that number.”

Shield Bluetoothed the restaurant footage onto her phone before she ejected the DVD. “Thank you for your help. I’ll let you know if I need anything else.”

“What does all this mean?” the manager asked. “This Weitman temp, was he involved in something?”

“I can’t know that.”

“This could be catastrophic for the country club. We make good work of hiring capable personnel.”

“Please, don’t jump to conclusions and don’t spread stories. I have no proof this young man, unbeknownst or otherwise, was involved in anything.”

“Of course. Any stories or rumors would be disastrous for our reputation.”

“Thank you again,” she said. “I’ll show myself out.”

Chapter Twenty-one

Shield got back in her rental and called EOO headquarters on her cell. She forwarded the footage to Reno’s e-mail while she waited for him to come on the line.

“I need current info on a Dennis Weitman,” she told him. “Lived in Bath, Maine, and worked for the Rapid Temporary Agency last October. He’s the waiter in the footage I’ve just sent to your e-mail.”

“Hang on, let me take a look,” Reno replied before taking a noisy slurp of whatever liquid he was consuming. “That’s the president’s husband in the bottom of the screen, right?”

“Yeah. Work your magic and see what you can get off this. Jeffrey Thomas had some obvious discomfort in the video, and this waiter who served him is in the wind.”

“You got it.”

“I’m en route to see his girlfriend,” she told him as she started the car and pulled away from the curb. “I’ll call you back after I’m done there.”

The address the country-club manager gave her was that of a low-rent apartment complex desperately in need of attention. The exterior paint was peeling and cracked, the parking lot was full of potholes, and the lawn was riddled with yellow spots and dog feces.

Inside the entryway was a wall of mailboxes and a massive speakerphone system that allowed residents to buzz visitors in through the locked interior door. Shield hit the button next to a plate that read, J. GINGRAS, 2D. “Julie Gingras?”

“Yeah,” a woman’s voice replied.

“I’m with the Secret Service. I’d like to ask you some questions.”

“What about?”

“Your work at the Bath Country Club.”

“I don’t work there anymore.”

“Please open up.”

“Whatever, I’m busy.”

“We can do this the hard way if you refuse to cooperate.”

A few seconds later, Gingras buzzed her in. Her apartment was on the second floor, and the young woman stood waiting at the top of the stairs. “Show me your ID,” she said as Shield neared.

Shield flashed her White House credentials as she walked around the girl to the open door of 2D. “Let’s do this inside.”

The girl walked in first and Shield shut the door behind them.

Julie Gingras’s long blond hair covered most of her face, the same way dark stains covered most of her worn T-shirt. Without a word, she curled up on the couch and stared at some infomercial on TV. The small apartment, with its kitchenette, looked like a department store had exploded in there. Clothes and shoes covered almost every surface, and dirty plates were piled up on the sink and coffee table.

The furnishings and clothes were all feminine, however, with no indication that Weitman or any other man was also living there.

“So?” Julie said distractedly.

Shield walked over to the television and turned it off.

“Hey.” The girl complained with a frown. “I was gonna buy that Miracle Mop.”

“Nothing short of a fire hose can clean this place up.”

“Whatever.”

“I have some questions regarding your sick leave on the twelfth of October.”

“That was like eons ago. So?”

“I understand your boyfriend took your shift that day.”

“I had the flu. So?”

“I’d like to talk to him.”

“Why, what’d he do?”

“I’m not sure yet,” Shield replied, standing over the girl. “That’s why I want to see him.”

“Good luck with that.” Gingras stared at the blank TV screen.

“Where is he?”

The girl shrugged. “Dunno.”

“What time does he get back?”

“Like, never. We broke up in November when I caught him screwing my best friend, like on our bed.”

“Do you know where I can find him?”

“The scumbag moved back to Boston.”

“Do you have an address?” Talking to the girl was like pulling teeth.

“Ipswich Street, ’cross from Fenway Park.”

“Number?”

“152, I think.”

“Thanks.”

“Whatever. Tell him I said I hope he rots in hell.”

Shield had barely shut the door when the blare from the TV started up again.

“Got anything yet on Weitman?” Shield asked Reno as she headed toward the highway.

“He has a pretty extensive rap sheet for a twenty-six-year-old,” Reno replied. “Stole a car in his teens, lots of petty drug busts, then served a couple of years for breaking and entering. Nothing in the last year or so, however, and can’t find a current on him. No driver’s license, and he hasn’t filed taxes in the last couple of years. If it helps, most of his history—school, arrests and such—was in Boston.”

“I’m headed there now. His girlfriend gave me an address. Send me his mug shot, and call me back if you get anything I can use.”

*

Dorchester, Massachusetts

Dennis Weitman cursed aloud when the phone bleated again, jarring him from his near-coma slumber. He hadn’t gotten home until six that morning and had promptly passed out on the couch after a night of pill popping and sex. He fumbled for the receiver, trying not to tip off the couch. “What?”

“Listen, stupid. Someone was just here asking about you. Not that I owe you any favors, loser, but I thought you might wanna know.”

“Who is this?” Dennis scratched his balls, half-awake.

“It’s Julie, you fool.”

“Hey, Jules. What’s up, babe?”

“Don’t babe me, and are you even listening? Some Secret Service woman named…something Kennedy is looking for you.”