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PIN required: Yes

CD: Approved, but minimize

Details: To come

Status: Pending

She continued, "Now, I can't find out anything about this Rashid or where he is. Maybe his kill room's a hut in Yemen, where he's selling nuclear bomb parts. Or given Metzger's zeal, maybe it's a family room in Ridgefield, Connecticut, where Rashid is blogging against Guantanamo and insulting the president. But we do know that NIOS's going to kill him before Friday. And who'll be the collateral damage then? His wife and children? Some passerby? I want Metzger in custody before that."

Rhyme said, "That won't necessarily stop the assassination."

"No, but it'll send a message to NIOS and Washington that somebody's looking very carefully at what they're up to. They might delay the attack and have somebody independent review the STO and see if it's legitimate or not. That's not going to happen with Metzger in power."

Like counsel in a closing argument Laurel then strode forward and dramatically tapped the kill order. "Oh, and these numbers at the top? Eight/twenty-seven, nine/twenty-seven? They're not dates. They're tasks in the queue. That is, victims. Moreno was the eighth person NIOS killed. Rashid'll be the ninth."

"Twenty-seven total," Sellitto said.

"As of a week ago," Laurel said briskly. "Who knows how many it is today?"

CHAPTER 11

A HUMAN FORM, LIKE AN UNFLAPPABLE, patient ghost, appeared in Shreve Metzger's doorway.

"Spencer."

His administrations director--his right-hand man around headquarters--had been enjoying the cool blue skies and quiet lake shore line in Maine when an encrypted text from Metzger had summoned him. Boston had immediately cut short his vacation. If he'd been pissed off, and he probably had been, he'd given no indication of it.

That would be improper.

That would be unseemly.

Spencer Boston's was a faded elegance, a prior generation's. He had a grandfatherly face, creases bracketing his taut lips, and thick, wavy white hair--he was ten years older than Metzger. He radiated an utterly calm and reasonable demeanor. Like the Wizard, Boston wasn't troubled by the Smoke. He now stepped into the office, shut the door instinctively against prying ears and sat opposite his boss. He said nothing but his eyes dipped to the mobile in his boss's hand. Rarely used, never to leave the building, the device happened to be dark red in color, though that had nothing to do with its top-secret nature. That was the shade that the company had had available for immediate delivery. Metzger thought of it as his "magic phone."

The NIOS director realized his muscles were cramping from the pressure on the unit.

Metzger put the phone away and gave a faint nod to the man he'd worked with for several years, ever since Metzger had replaced the prior head of NIOS, who'd disappeared into the vortex of politics. An unsuccessful vanishing.

"Thanks for coming in," the director said quickly and stiffly, as if he felt he should make some reference to the ruined vacation. The Smoke affected him in many different ways. One of which was to muddle his mind so that, even when he wasn't angry, he'd forget how to behave like a normal person. When an affliction rules your life, you're always on guard.

Daddy, are you...are you okay?

I'm smiling, aren't I?

I guess. It just looks, you know, funny.

The admin director shifted. The chair creaked. Spencer Boston was not a small man. He sipped iced tea from a tall plastic cup, lifted his bushy brows.

Metzger said, "We've got a whistleblower."

"What? Impossible."

"Confirmed." Metzger explained what had happened.

"No," the older man whispered. "What are you doing about it?"

He deflected that incendiary question and added, "I need you to find him. I don't care what you have to do."

Careful, he reminded himself. That's the Smoke talking.

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