Friday, August 31, 2012

K Street, Chapter 13

Jeff finds himself in Washington DC on business trying to close a big deal for his company where he meets up with Nancy again, the FBI agent he had fallen in love with in Atlanta nearly two years ago. Jeff is separated from his wife because of Nancy’s letter. Jeff continues to attract women without trying, some of them with deadly intentions. Jeff and Nancy soon find themselves in the center of intrigue with Israelis and Iranians feeling threatened by the impending deal, determined to kill the deal at any cost―even at the cost of Jeff’s life! The surprising twists will make the reader gasp, the love scenes will make the reader sigh.






Chapter 13 of K Street... Jeff gets fitted with a wire!

Sunday 2:03 PM: Purpose
Jeff suddenly has three women swirling around him! He loses patience with the team meeting, and helps them to get a purpose, including who is the inside snitch! Next thing he knows, they are fitting him with a wire!


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Thanks for taking time, and enjoy!
- Chris Lamela

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Author contact: Chris Lamela, chris@chrislamela.com, 707-566-8790 PST

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               K Street, Chapter 13


Sunday 2:03 PM: Purpose

     They finished their breakfasts with light conversation about where each came from, kids, etc. Jeff had the only fully populated life between them, Hank telling about the same complaints Nancy expressed, how the job is so consuming that it doesn’t have much room for relationships.
     “So nobody at the agency has families?”
     “There’s no time to start a family until you move up in the ranks when you’re not actively involved in ops all the time.” He sipped his coffee, setting the cup down, pushing it away. “I don’t know the statistics, but I’ll bet the median age of those who are parents is easily ten years older than the national average. It’s amazing to see all those old guys, men in their very late fifties or early sixties with little kids, or if they’re lucky, teenagers.” He looked off in a thoughtful gaze, back to Jeff, “It’s just part of the job. I guess every job has its demands. That’s just one that comes with the territory.”
     The agent flipped a twenty onto the table, Jeff made to reach into his pocket to pull out money, signaled to keep it. They stood, heading for the door.
     A few minutes later Jeff was back in his room. They agreed that he would come out at one thirty so they could go to the meeting at the ops center.
     Jeff walked into his room smiling that it had already been made up. He sat on the bed noticing the message light blinking on his phone. He picked up the card next to the phone looking for instructions about how to listen to messages. Picking up the receiver he pressed in the codes.
     He sat back listening, “You have one new message.” Jeff sat up attentively, “Hi, Jeff. This is Kathy. Kathy from last night who was going to meet you for breakfast? Jeff, I am sooooo sorry! I’m not used to drinking and well…well…well, I guess I drank too much last night. But it’s your fault!” He could hear her recorded chuckle. “Anyway, I woke up. I forgot to set the alarm and it was almost nine thirty! I ran down, the hostess said you had been there, at least she thinks it was you, with another man. There was some man with you last night, wasn’t there?” There was a pause as though she was trying to piece something together in her head. “Anyway, I am so sorry. You probably think I’m a flake, but I’m not. I just overslept.” He could hear her pause collecting her thoughts. “Anyway, I wanted to call you to tell you that I’m sorry and I hope you’ll give me a second chance. I’ll be in my room for a while, then I’m going to do some touring. If you call me and I’m here maybe we can spend the day together or something. Anyway, you know my room number, so please call me.” There was a short pause then in a girly voice he heard, “Please, please? I promise to make it up to you. Okay, talk to you later. Bye.”
     Jeff hung up the phone, fluffed up a pillow sitting back against the headboard. He tried to remember any time in his life when he had not two, but three women swirling around him. Nope, never happened.
     Not like this for sure!
     He picked up the clicker turning on the TV, flicked the channels, stopping on the image of the big Smithsonian room he had been in with Steve yesterday, turned up the sound. He flicked back to the TV guide seeing that the station he was watching was a special Smithsonian tourist channel the hotel provided, flicked back to the Smithsonian channel. It was amazing that he had seen all these things, just now getting to find out why they were so special.
     After a while he put the TV on mute, reached for the napkin, pondering the pen-scribbled numbers. He reached for the phone, pulling it onto the bed next to him. He dialed 922. The phone rang four times, he heard the introduction and invitation to leave a message.
     “Hi, Kathy, this is Jeff.” He paused realizing he hadn’t thought this through. “Uh, hey listen, not to worry, to be honest I overslept, too, didn’t get down there until twenty after, no maybe a little later. I thought that I had screwed up.” He laughed softly, “So I guess that makes us both screw ups.” He grimaced that he was seriously blowing this message, deciding to cut it off, “Anyway, I have a busy day today, so sorry I missed you, but these people I work with are slave drivers so I wouldn’t have had time to tour today anyway.” Okay, now wrap it up! “So anyway, not sure when we’ll get a chance to see each other again, but I do look forward to it. Give me a call when you have a minute.” He hung up glancing to the ceiling, good going there mister eloquence!
     He realized he could have given her his cell phone number, but figured that he didn’t want to call back with another rambly message.
     Flopping back on the bed he looked up, the kissing faces instantly appeared on the ceiling, the third frowny face looked more pronounced in this light. He tried to imagine if he was one of the kissing faces, who was the other? Nancy? Kathy? And who was the frowny face? It had to be his wife, that he was sure about.
     He rolled over facing the TV, his head laid on his arm on the bed. He pushed the mute button on the TV clicker, continued watching the Smithsonian channel, soon he dozed off.
 
     He awakened to the familiar four quick knocks at the door. Jeff looked over to find that it was almost one thirty. Shaking his head he stood up stretching, walked to the door.
     Opening the door, he saw Steve again. “Where’s Hank?”
     “It’s my shift,” Steve replied looking over Jeff’s shoulder, “grab your coat, we need to go.”
     “What about lunch?”
     “They’ll have food there.”
     “Come on in, I need a minute,” Jeff stood aside, Steve walked into the room. Jeff disappeared into the bathroom, came back out, stepping to pick up his sport coat weighted down by the Colt pistol in the pocket, “Okay, let’s go.”
     Soon they were in the hallway. Just as the door closed Jeff heard his phone ringing in the room. “Excuse me,” he fumbled for his door card stepping into the room picking up the phone, it quit ringing. He picked up the receiver hearing only dial tone. “Oh well, too bad,” he hung it up going back out the door, soon back downstairs in the lobby.
     “I need you to wait right here while I go get my car,” Steve disappeared through the front door. A minute later he drove up in front of the lobby, Jeff could see Steve signaling to him from the car.
     “Crown Vic,” Jeff smiled to Steve as he slid into the car.
     “Yeah, I’m a Ford man.”
     Jeff smiled to himself that there must be some kind of competition between the FBI’s Chevy men and Ford men.
     Twenty minutes later they were pulling up in front of the ops house in Cookes Park again. Two minutes later Jeff was sitting in the conference room with the drape pulled across the door. He looked around the room. There were a few familiar faces including the three congressmen.
     There were two partially-consumed large pizzas in the middle of the table, some people already had pizza-stained empty paper plates in front of them. Jeff reached across to help himself grabbing a can of Coke.
     The conversation started immediately. Jeff tried to pay close attention. It went on for nearly an hour with more recaps of what had happened with the Israelis on Friday night, the meeting yesterday at ODS, the event in the men’s room at the Smithsonian, a general recap of the so-called arms deal. The talking went on and on and on and on and soon Jeff found himself thinking about the three pussies that were swirling around him wondering which of them wanted to open their legs to Jeff first. He was trying to figure out if he would even get any of them, which one it would be and if he did get one or the other―or the other―or if it would mean that he wouldn’t get any period! That would be too bad! He tried to imagine Kathy naked. She had a very trim body, her dark hair would mean dark pubes, her scant eyebrows would mean scant pubes, scant pubes meant he could see…
     “Jeff,” a voice interrupting his daydream, “Jeff!”
     He swung his head toward the voice. There was the face attached to one of the pussies he had just been dreaming about, Nancy spoke to him, “Are you paying attention?”
     Jeff tried to snap into the here-and-now. “Attention to what?”
     “To this, to this discussion,” Nancy said with a frown that reminded him of being in fourth grade, the teacher catching him daydreaming.
     “What discussion? You guys haven’t said a thing worth listening to.”
     An impatient murmur erupted at Jeff’s words.
     Arnie looked like he was cluing into Jeff’s words, “Well maybe there, Sherlock, you can provide us some insight?”
     Jeff looked around the table, counting ten people, all now familiar faces.
     “Look, all I know is that in Atlanta when I came to these kind of meetings people actually took the trouble to show up with ideas.”
     “That’s a bit sharp, isn’t it?” Arnie’s scowl only made Jeff mad.
     “All I know is that nobody seems to have a handle on anything!” To his surprise, everyone leaned forward. Jeff suddenly realized that he had hit on what everyone was already thinking. “We are looking at this all wrong. We don’t even have a purpose. All we all know about the situation are facts.” Eyes intent on him. “I mean, duh!” Jeff didn’t know where that came from expecting anger, but was surprised that duh actually seemed to lighten the mood in the room.
     “We have no purpose to what we are trying to do.” There were nods around the table. “Hand me a piece of paper, a white sheet was slid across to him. Jeff reached into his pocket pulling out his favorite pen, pulling off the cap, almost ceremoniously pushing the cap onto back of the pen. “I can write in four lines what we know.”
     With a certain pomp he wrote the lines:
     “UAV DEAL GOING THROUGH XXX TO YYY WITH THE KNOWLEDGE AND APPROVAL OF ZZZ.”
     Arnie smiled at his discretion.
     Next line: “IRANIANS WANT DEAL STOPPED, WILL KILL TO DO IT.”
     Nods around the table.
     “IRANIANS DON’T KNOW WHO TO KILL.”
     More nods.
     “IRANIANS WILL KILL EVERYONE IF THEY HAVE TO.”
     Nods accompanied by worried grimaces all around.
     “Now we need our purpose, that will tell us our actions.”
     Jeff put the pen to his chin in thought. “Assuming there is no way to call off the Iranians…” he looked around the table hoping someone would chime in with an idea about how to do that, but only looks of blank anticipation were to be found, “then our purpose is quite simple.”
     With pen to paper he wrote, “PROTECT ALL PLAYERS.”
     “Assuming that we have to wait until Tuesday to do the deal,” again he looked around hoping somebody would pop up to say no that they could do the deal right now. Shaking his head at the silence, he wrote, “DO DEAL ON TUESDAY.”
     Followed underneath by, “GO HOME.”
     “Like is said, duh.”
     “Jeff, this is all pretty obvious, don’t you think?”
     “Arnie, what else is there?”
     Jeff looked over to see Nancy give Arnie a sharp look. Suddenly Arnie stood up, “Okay, I think we’re done here everyone. The plan is to double up on the guards, Nancy will you write a list of the people we want to keep on this?” Arnie waved to the three congressman, “Gentlemen we are going to double your security detail as well.”
     Everyone stood up. Arnie stood at the curtain, the congressmen filed out first followed by all the others except for Yvonne who was writing in her classified notebook, Arnie pulling at Jeff’s sleeve, “We need you still,” the drape fell back. Arnie sat back down.
     “We need to wait for Nancy.” Arnie stood back up, picked up the pizza boxes walking around the table gathering paper plates, napkins and drink cans. “Let’s get rid of the smell of old food,” Arnie pushed back through the curtain with the trash, returning five minutes later with Nancy, Arnie holding a small zippered nylon case by its cloth handle which he set on the table in front of him.
     The two sat down in silence.
     “So what’s going on?” Jeff looked back and forth at the two seated on each side of him, across the table to Yvonne.
     “You did good here just now.”
     “Thanks,” Jeff smiled. “What did I do?”
     Arnie waved a wait, you’ll see motion, “Now let’s get down to the real work. We need to lay a net to figure out what’s going on here.”
     “What do you mean?”
     Nancy reached to Jeff pulling across the piece of paper he had just written on, flipped it over, reached for Jeff’s pen.
     “You got us focused on purpose. But here’s our real purpose,” she smiled with pen in hand.
     She wrote four lines:
     “IS THIS DEAL LEGIT?”
     “ARE CONGRESSMEN OVERSTEPPING?”
     “ARE CONGRESSMEN BEING PAID OFF?”
     “ARE WEAPONS REALLY GOING WHERE WE THINK?”
     She paused with pen to mouth then wrote two more lines:
     “HOW INVOLVED ARE IRANIANS?”
     “WHO’S DOING ALL THE SHOOTING?”
     She laid down the pen on the paper with a satisfied grin.
     Arnie pulled the paper and pen to him writing one more line:
     “IS THERE AN INSIDE?”
     Jeff looked at the last words knowing instantly the word inside remembering it from Atlanta, the inside man who turned out to be just about everyone with information flowing like water back and forth between all sorts of players. “Okay, yes, but am I involved in this?”
     Arnie laid his hand on Jeff’s left shoulder, “Look, the congressmen think you are a key player, that you have the ability to screw this up.”
     “Why would I want to screw this up, there’s a lot of money in this for my company.”
     “Yes, they know that, but they also know that you know your gear is headed for what some might call bad guys,” Jeff nodded that the gear was head for Saddam in Iraq, “that you might be worried the deal is not legit or that you want to wave the flag or some damn thing.”
     “So what am I supposed to do about this?”
     Nancy sat forward, “We’ve set up a meeting in an hour, not really a meeting, more like drinks with two of the congressmen. And we need…like you said…purpose to all this. One purpose is to protect the deal if the deal is legit. The second purpose would be,” she looked to Arnie, “to make sure that the congressmen aren’t being compensated for their approvals of the deal.” She paused, “I mean directly, as a result of their approvals.” Jeff looked at Arnie nodding slowly, “And the third is to make sure that the gear is going where it’s intended.”
     “Where else could be worse?”
     “Lots of places. Syria comes to mind,” Nancy scowled.
     “And we have got to take the shooters out,” Jeff said softly. “So in the meantime what am I supposed to do for this little meeting in an hour.”
     Arnie stood up, turned toward the drape pulling it open motioning to someone in the ops room turning back to the table. He pulled up the nylon case in front of him, unzipping it, pulling out a small black plastic box about three inches across, a half-inch thick with velcro straps, a wire about one-feet long hanging out.
     “I know that thing,” Jeff frowned, “that’s a wire!


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K STREET!



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K Street, Chapter 12

Jeff finds himself in Washington DC on business trying to close a big deal for his company where he meets up with Nancy again, the FBI agent he had fallen in love with in Atlanta nearly two years ago. Jeff is separated from his wife because of Nancy’s letter. Jeff continues to attract women without trying, some of them with deadly intentions. Jeff and Nancy soon find themselves in the center of intrigue with Israelis and Iranians feeling threatened by the impending deal, determined to kill the deal at any cost―even at the cost of Jeff’s life! The surprising twists will make the reader gasp, the love scenes will make the reader sigh.





Chapter 12 of K Street... Jeff meets Kathy again!


Saturday 9:48 PM: More Tangles
Kathy, the pretty woman from the singles mixer appears, and even though they couldn't connect at all before, they hit it off! Later they talk on the phone and plan to meet for breakfast the next morning...but then Jeff sleeps in!


If you enjoy this, please take time to LIKE this on Facebook!




Thanks for taking time, and enjoy!
- Chris Lamela

------------------------------------------------------------------

Author contact: Chris Lamela, chris@chrislamela.com, 707-566-8790 PST

---------------------------------------------------------------------

               K Street, Chapter 12

Saturday 9:48 PM: More Tangles

     Jeff stepped out of the conference room amazed at how many people were still in the operations room. He tried to guess maybe thirty people huddled together or over tables or sitting in front of computer screens in the small room.
     Nancy and Arnie walked up, Jeff felt a pull of tired. Nancy held her hand out, Jeff stunned to see her holding a Colt Cobra handgun laying in her palm.
     “Is that my old friend?” Jeff laughed for the first time since he could remember.
     “I’ll bet you sure wished you had it this afternoon at the Smithsonian.”
     “Yeah, I’m pretty good at shooting through doors,” he took the gun from Nancy.
     Jeff went to slide the gun into his coat’s outside right pocket, but the pocket was shown shut. He felt the two T-shirt cubes in his left inside pocket, pulled them out putting the gun into the pocket, the coat instantly sagged. He pondered if the T-shirt cubes would fit into his pants pocket.
     Nancy smiled watching this.
     “Souvenirs for my son,” he smiled at the two little packages in his hand.
     “You’re a good father there mister Jeff. Here, you’ll need this,” handing Jeff a three-inch long tool that looked like a little knife with two teeth on the end. “Take it, it’s a seam ripper that you can use to open up the outside pocket on your sport coat.” She smiled at the sag in the coat from the weight of the gun, “Your right outside pocket will work better.”
     “Thanks, I’ll do that tonight.”
     Arnie coughed as though to clear his throat, “Look,” cough, “Jeff, these guys are really dangerous, we don’t want you taking any chances. We have arranged for Ted to watch over you again if you don’t mind. You’re code red, so he will have to stay outside your door. He will be relieved sometime in the middle of the night.”
     “Yes, that’s fine. Good, right?”
     “But he has some things to do still tonight, so he will drop you, be back later tonight. Your door will be guarded so you should be fine.”
     “And I’m going to that party I told you about, but I’ll see you tomorrow,” Nancy smiled.
     Ted walked up, they all said goodnight, Jeff headed out the door with Ted.
     They drove together in silence, Jeff’s window was down, enjoying the warm night air. Soon he was closing the door of his room at the Hilton, Ted promised to be back by one.
     Jeff took off his coat, pulled out the seam ripper, carefully unstitching the right outer pocket being careful to pull the little threads out. He put the coat back on, putting the gun into the pocket standing in front of the mirror. The coat sagged just a bit, but not too noticeably, the gun was so small that it didn’t show if you weren’t looking for it.
     Looking at himself in the mirror he suddenly found himself transported back to Atlanta, all the craziness with him wearing the congressman’s cologne-stinky sport coat that exactly matched the one Jeff was wearing this minute. He felt a flash of wishing that he had that gun this afternoon in that bathroom stall, but realized it all worked out anyway plus the thought of killing another man made his insides sink.
     He was too wound to go to bed so he walked to the door opening it. A man was standing outside across the hall from the door. Jeff asked his name, the man replied his name is Steve. “Steve, any way I can go downstairs to get a drink? I am too wound.”
     “Yeah, I heard about your day. I can see why it’d be a little hard to sleep.”
     “Do you mind, I mean you can come down with me for sure.”
     Steve smiled, “Of course I can’t drink but let’s go, it’s got to be better than staring at your door all night.”
     They walked to the elevator, soon were sitting in the bar. Jeff glanced at his watch seeing it was almost ten. He ordered up what had become his favorite drink lately, a Cuba Libre. Steve said he needed to sit away from Jeff so he could survey the room, Jeff nodded.
     Just as the bartender came forward with his drink Jeff noticed him looking to Jeff’s left with an expression of anticipation.
     “I’ll have whatever he’s having,” a voice came from over Jeff’s left shoulder, the bartender turned away.
     Jeff turned to his left. There was a vaguely familiar face. It took him a second, “Kathy, right?” remembering her from the singles mixer Thursday night.
     With a very pleased expression she exclaimed, “You remember me! And my name too? Oooh, impressive! I must have made quite an impression on you!” The bartender walked up with her drink setting it down. “Can I join you?”
     Jeff smiled, “Sure,” skooching his chair to the right to give her more room. “So what are you doing here on a Saturday night?”
     “Like you, staying here over the weekend. Room gets pretty lonely, it’s nice to be around people.”
     Jeff raised his glass, they tinked them together, “Well, here’s to two lonely people.”
     “Cheers, and yes, to two people who are not so lonely now,” giving Jeff a very inviting smile.
     “So, San Jose, right? I mean Santa Clara!”
     “Yes, and Seattle if I remember.”
     Jeff took a sip of his drink sputtering a bit, the drink touched his windpipe, “Excuse me, yes, Seattle.”
     “And not married.”
     “Well, technically married. Separated with divorce on the way.”
     She took a sip of her drink, “Well, divorce just completed here. Actually, three years ago.”
     “Sorry,” Jeff shook his head softly.
     “Oh, don’t be, things just are the way they are. I’m way past that. Time to get on with my life.”
     “No kids?”
     “Okay, our lives. Yes, I have an eight year-old daughter, Hannah. She is the love of my life. And you?”
     “Two kids. Daughter Nicole who is eleven going on twenty two,” they both laughed, “and my son Scott, seven years old. And yes, they are the loves of my life. They live with their mother mostly. How about you?”
     “Full custody. He about disappeared. Nice and neat, really.”
     “So your daughter is eight, that means you had her when you were what, twenty-two?”
     She laughed, “Oh, what a gentleman! I just turned forty.”
     “Nice, I’m just four years ahead of you,” they clinked glasses again.
     “Nice ages. The spacing, I mean. I meant you know…your age, my age.”
     “Yes, he smiled, nice spacing. We come from the same times. That really helps in a relationship.” I can’t believe I used that word!
     “Relationship, hmmm,” she smiled coyly. “So what kinds things are your kids into?”
     “Music. She plays flute, he is learning violin.”
     “A musical family!”
     “Yeah, I guess we are. I’ve played guitar my whole life…still play…their mother plays the piano…yeah, musical family. The kids are also big into soccer.”
     “Hannah doesn’t do music, she does art and is very big into soccer also.”
     “So you get the weekends running around all over with her?”
     “Oh, yes,” they toasted again. “I also have a niece and nephew to run around, too. Same as yours, older girl, younger boy. Let’s see, she’s eleven, yes. He’s three years younger, so he’d be eight. But close enough to your kids, right?”
     She smiled distantly picturing the kids, “We spend so much time together, my daughter and her cousins. You know, they’d love you!” The way she said these words were like a tinkling bell they’d love you!
     He looked at her sideways trying to see her in this dim light. The multi-colored reflections from the bottles on the walls gave her an angelic halo. Her dark hair curled around her face framing her fair skin, her nose had a nice rounding to the tip, her manner was so slightly elusive, begging him to take the trouble to explore. He couldn’t see her eyes in the light, they were dark the best he could tell, but there was something unusual in them that he just couldn’t see in this light. Her eyebrows framed her eyes nicely, very scant hairs, he smiled to himself, that means very scant pubes! She didn’t have bedroom eyes like Jeff with his droopy eyelids, but nice eyelids framing her dark eyes.
     “So any other interesting family factoids?” he asked sipping his drink.
     “I’m an identical twin, my sister and I are very close.”
     “He laughed, you mean there’s two of you?”
     “Yeah, like I’m not trouble enough!” they laughed.
     “What’s her name?”
     “Theresa.”
     “Theresa? The only twins I knew growing up were always alliterative names like Ricky and Ronny, or rhyming names like Larry and Gary. Kathy and Theresa doesn’t have that poetic flair.”
     “No, my parents worked hard to make sure we grew up with separate identities. They’d seen other twins get kind of mushed together. I mean think about it, same birthdays. Twins don’t even get their own special day. So it was smart, I think.”
     She took a sip of her drink, “So tell me about your wife.”
     “Third marriage for me, young marriage for her. Kids. Not much else to tell. Not exactly sure why the separation.” He thought for a second quietly, not much reason to tell the truth here is there? Turning to her, “She lived so much under my wing, I think she just needs to fly on her own.”
     He could see her pondering this. He instantly launched into another subject to fend off more questions, working hard to turn the conversation toward their work instead. They sat for a good half hour exchanging stories. He could feel a genuine concern coming from her, he was really warming to what a charming woman she is. Her voice was soft, sultry, her laugh unabashed, her open expression was very attractive, lively but not a bubbly personality. She kept saying what a funny man he was, he shared little anecdotes about his working life, they both talked a little about their childhoods. Yes, this was a very nice woman. Very nice.
     The space between them went quiet, he felt little magnetic lines between them, “So, are you getting a chance to do any touring while you’re here?”
     “A little, and you?” she sipped her drink.
     Today’s events suddenly streamed through Jeff’s brain. “No, not really. My clients are real workaholics, I just came from a meeting with them.”
     “On a Saturday night?” Jeff nodded finishing his drink, looking at Kathy’s drink he signaled the bartender for two more.
     “Yeah, and another meeting tomorrow. Then Monday, then Tuesday hopefully we will get the deal done. I might get time to do some touring on Wednesday or Thursday, but I’ve got to be up in Boston on Friday.”
     “Well, Jeff, all work and no play as they say.”
     Jeff could feel the positive vibes coming from her, knowing he was sending them back to her. Wanting to send them back to her. He wondered again why they didn’t connect when they first met. Too much distraction in all that high energy of the singles mixer, plus maybe she wasn’t any luckier than him that night. But then he was, wasn’t he? Kind of lucky anyway. He thought about Nancy. Yeah, but then not. He shook it off.
     “So, I’m on the ninth floor,” she pulled a pen out of her purse scribbling the number 922 on a napkin. She took a long drink, finishing the glass. “I assume you are a gentleman here?”
     “Oh, don’t worry, I’ve got it,” signaling to the bartender.
     Kathy stood up reaching over to give Jeff a quick peck on the lips. “In case you don’t see the hint there,” pointing to the napkin with the room number on it in front of Jeff.
     “Don’t worry, I can take a hint.”
     “Okay, we’ll see you then,” she smiled standing up, gave a little pinky wave, turning to walk toward the elevators.
     Jeff turned back to his drink signaling the bartender for another one.
     A few minutes later he was in the elevator with Steve. “Any chance I can go pay a visit to the ninth floor?”
     “That nice lady at the bar?”
     “Yeah, that nice lady at the bar.”
     “It’s probably not a good idea.”
     “What if she comes to pay me a visit?”
     “It would be pretty bad form, I’d have to do the ID check and call-in. Not very inviting for a first date, don’t you think?”
     “Yeah, I guess not.” Jeff thought for a second realizing he was exhausted anyway. “Nah, never mind.”
     In a minute he was back in his room. He reached into his inside coat pocket pulling the little T-shirt bundles out, tossing them into his suitcase, undressing thinking how nice it would be to lay with a good-looking woman right at that moment. He felt the tiniest twinge of guilt thinking about another woman looking down at the tiny rolls of T-shirts for his son. He smiled, shrugged.
     Pulling on his night shirt he went into the bathroom to pee and brush his teeth.
     He sat back on the bed, reaching across to the napkin with the room number. He held it in his hands, holding it to his face to see if he could pick up any of her fragrance.  Maybe, he thought picking up the phone.
     “Hello,” came an answer.
     “Hi, Kathy? It’s Jeff. Jeff from the bar?”
     “Oh, silly, like I don’t remember you from ten minutes ago?”
     “Yeah,” he laughed, “look I know you invited me, but things are a little complicated.”
     “You’re not separated! You’re married!”
     He laughed, “No, no, it’s exactly like I told you. It’s just that I’ve had a hell of a day. I’m not sure I’d be very good company tonight.”
     He could hear her sigh, “Hey, I understand…”
     “No, it’s not what you’re thinking! I think you are a really attractive woman. I mean really attractive. And I’d really like to get to know you. Really. Plus, well, I’d kind of like to take it slow.” Jeff sat on the bed in the dim light of the reading lamp wondering where the hell these words were coming from. Jesus, he thought to himself, just what I need – ANOTHER WOMAN IN MY LIFE!
     “Yes, I’d like to take it slow, too.” She was quiet for a second, “Jeff, can I ask you something?”
     “Sure,” he replied worrying that she was going to ask to come down to his room.
     “When we met…” she paused, he could hear her collecting her words, “…when we first met why do you think we didn’t connect?”
     “You know,” he thought for a second certain there must be an answer, “I wondered that the very second you walked away.”
     “I walked away because I thought you weren’t interested in me. Actually, I was a little intimidated by you.”
    “Intimidated?” Jeff wondered how he could be intimidating.
     “Yes, you are so handsome, so charming.” She sighed, “Plus maybe the environment there, all that nervous energy. You know, it’s funny how sometimes we connect with people, sometimes we don’t. You know what I mean?”
     “I guess.”
     “Yeah, then like with us at the bar just now,” Jeff felt a ping from the word us. “Tonight it felt so natural, like I had known you, like you had known me for a long time.” She paused. “By the way, I’m making myself a Cuba Libre from the mini-bar.”
     “Wait, let me put the phone down, that sounds like a good idea!” Jeff stepped over to the mini-bar fridge, tore the little red tag off, opened the door pulling out two little bottles of rum and a coke. He reached up pulling down a glass pouring it all together, reaching for the phone, “I made mine a double!”
     “So did I!” they both laughed together.
     He could hear her slurping from her drink, he took a small sip from his.
     “Jeff, so what do you think?”
     Jeff knew where this was leading so he drank a huge glug, nearly clearing out half the glass, “Think what?”
     “If you have time tomorrow, maybe we could have breakfast or lunch?”
     He was relieved that she didn’t want to come down now, “Yeah, I’d like that.”
     “But I’m not desperate, just so you know,” she said sternly.
     “Oh, of course not, but just so you know,” he took a large sip from his glass, “I am!” They both laughed loudly, he could tell that she liked his little joke more than him because it took a good thirty seconds before her laughter subsided.
     “Look, can I tell you a secret?”
     “Sure,” he took another sip of his drink.
     “I was really attracted to you when we met at the mixer.”
     “I didn’t really get that vibe, was I missing something?”
     “You…well…I was…like I said, I was intimidated by you. I mean you have so much confidence, not proud or arrogant, but I could tell that you are a man used to getting your way.”
     “I wish I could say I am used to getting my way. I do try, but you know…”
     “What I mean is that if we had been alone together in that room without all those other women around, I mean I looked at some of them. There were some really beautiful women in there. It kind of made me feel, well…”
     “I have no idea what you’re talking about. You are a beautiful woman. I mean I doubt I’m the first man to tell you that. But none of that matters now. We’ve met. And we like each other.”
     Why do I keep doing this!
     “If it had been up to me I would have torn your clothes off, got you down on the floor just to show everyone how it’s done!”
     Wow, Jeff thought, how many times have I had a chance to show everyone how it’s done!
     “As for now, if I weren’t half drunk right now I would come to your room to show you how it’s done!” They laughed together again.
     “Look, I think this is going to lead to phone sex in another minute, it’s hard to juggle my drink and my dinky at the same time,” they both laughed again.
     “I doubt it’s dinky!”
     “Well, you’ll just have to find out, huh?”
     “Is that a date?”
     Jeff laughed, “How about we start with breakfast, see where it goes. Tomorrow morning in the main restaurant. How’s nine?”
     “Nine it is, and if you don’t mind I have a date.”
     “Date?” Jeff was confused.
     “With my right hand imagining your dinky!” They both laughed out loud again.
     “Okay, maybe I will have to put my drink down after all!” He could hear her howling with laughter.
     “So my love, let’s see if there could be an us starting with breakfast, what do you say?” Jeff feeling that ping again at the word us.
     “Okay, I guess we’ve got to hang up if we’re going to get to our dates. Goodnight.”
     Jeff hung up flopping back onto the bed sighing. He looked to the ceiling to see if he could see the kissing faces, but in this light they were nowhere to be seen.
     “Oh Jesus,” he said out loud, “how tangled can this web get?”
     Jeff reached over, turned out the light, in a few seconds he was fading.
     He fell into a restless sleep with images swirling in his mind, the sound of gunfire echoing in his ears. The image of the business-end of the barrel of that tiny submachine gun being pointed at him, the sounds of voices, the little boy’s voice at the door of the men’s room in the Smithsonian, the scene of dead bodies in that restroom, seeing the two men drop to the floor from Ted’s shots, images twirling round and round and round.
 
     With a start he woke sweat pouring down his face, he jerked up to sitting. Swinging his legs over the bed he looked at the blackness through the window. He felt his pillow, it was soaked with sweat.
     He turned on the lamp sitting on the edge of the bed trying to get the images spinning in his head to stop, go away. He stood up, walked to the TV reaching for the clicker. Turning on the TV he sat back in bed, flicked through a few channels, turned the TV back off again, setting the clicker on the night stand.
     “Damn, what am I doing here?” He got up again, walked to the window looking down at the street below with only a couple cars driving by in the dark. The clock said twelve minutes after three.
     He lay back down again, rolling over to turn the light back off.
 
     He woke slowly, could see light on the other side of his eyelids realizing without opening his eyes that he forgot to close the drapes last night. Determined not to open his eyes, he rolled over from his right side onto his back.
     Damn, I’m awake!
     Listening to the soft sound of traffic below his mind wandered going over the events of the last couple days. His meeting Kathy at that Singles Mixer, having Nancy come up behind him. He felt a twinge of regret about how he had treated her, but he still felt confused about it all. Now with his wife wanting to talk things over. What was all that at the Smithsonian, and why did he have so many doubts about the investigation? The team just didn’t seem to be into it at all. He remembered all those meetings in Atlanta during that crazy weekend. Maybe they didn’t get it all very right, but everyone seemed to be in it so much more, like their brains were really in it. No, more like their hearts were really in it. Was he missing something?
     Okay, I guess it’s time to wake up.
     He rolled over looking at the clock saying ten minutes after nine. Nice, he thought, I got to sleep in.
     “Oh damn, nine o’clock! I was supposed to meet Kathy!” he cried out loud, flew out of bed, into the bathroom, peeing while brushing his teeth, wetting his hair, a comb raced through a quick and dirty job of making him look half-way decent, stepping quickly into the room, pulling on whatever came to hand. He glanced at the clock making his way to the door, nine-twenty. “Damn damn damn!”
     He burst out the door, the man standing in front of him wasn’t Steve, “Where’s Steve?” Jeff barked turning left heading to the elevator.
     “I relieved him at nine, are you Jeff?”
     “Yeah, but I’m late. You’re gonna follow me right?”
     “That’s my detail, yes.”
     “Then follow me fast!”
     In four minutes he was standing at the front of the restaurant, a greeter coming up to him but before she could speak his panicked voice sputtered, “I’m supposed to meet someone, I need to go in to look for her,” pushing his way past the woman. He walked around the restaurant not seeing Kathy, his new bodyguard trailing behind him. “Damn damn damn!” Jeff muttering to himself.
     He went back to the entry podium, to the young woman he had been so brusque with before, “I’m sorry for my hurry, it’s just that I was supposed to meet someone pretty special here and I overslept.” He described Kathy to her, the woman shook her head saying that she hadn’t seen anyone like that.
     He thanked her turning to his bodyguard, “I’m sorry, I was in such a rush just now. I really blew it.” He glanced into the restaurant again, “I guess she stood me up. Maybe I was just too late, who knows.” Jeff held out his hand, “I’m sorry, I’m Jeff, I didn’t get your name.”
     “Henry, but my friends call me Hank.”
     “Hi, Hank.” Jeff looked around him. He paused, took a deep breath. “So Hank, do you know this area?” Hank nodded. “I need to get out of this hotel, do you know some place close by for breakfast?”
     Hank said yes that there was a nice little coffee shop up the next block, they could just walk there if Jeff was up to it. It was agreed that they would take the little walk together.
     Ten minutes later found Jeff sitting in a small booth with coffee in front of him ordering his favorite biscuits and gravy, “Let’s make it a heart-attack special, add some ham with that, okay?” The waitress smiled, pouring them both orange juices from a small pitcher she brought to their table.
     They both sat in silence, Jeff watched people strolling by outside in the bright morning sunshine.
     “Well,” he said taking a sip of his coffee looking to Hank, “at least it looks like it’s going to be a nice day.”
     “Yeah, great day to get out a little. I don’t know how that’s going to work with you, though, I’m under pretty strict orders to really keep close to you. No touring.”
     “I suppose you heard about yesterday.”
     “Yeah, that was a bit of a black eye for Ted.”
     “They’d have come after me anyway, maybe they would have gotten both of us. Who knows.”
     “All I know is that you will never be out of my sight unless you are behind your room door.” Hank sipped his coffee. “Sorry, but nothing’s going to happen to you on my watch.”
     “Don’t worry, I have only one request for today.”
     “What’s that?”
     “Not to get shot.”

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