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"Who knows?" Boston asked.

"Well, he does." A reverent glance at the magic phone.

No need to be more specific than that.

The Wizard.

Boston grimaced, troubled too. Formerly with another government intelligence agency, he'd been a very successful runner of assets throughout Central America--his region of choice--in such fulcrum countries as Panama. And his specialty? The fine art of regime change. That was Boston's milieu, not politics, but he knew that without support from Washington, you and your assets could be hung out to dry at the worst possible moment. Several times he'd been held captive by revolutionaries or insurgents or cartel bosses, he'd been interrogated, he'd probably been tortured, though he never talked about that.

And he'd survived. Different threats in DC; same skills at self-preservation.

Boston's hand brushed his enviable hair, gray though it was, and waited.

Metzger said, "He--" Wizard emphasis again. "--knows about the investigation but he didn't say a word about any leaks. I don't think he knows. We have to find the traitor before word trickles down to the Beltway."

Sipping the pale tea, Boston squinted more furrows into his face. Damn, the man could give Donald Sutherland a run for his money in the distinguished older power-broker role. Metzger, though con

siderably younger, had a much more sparse scalp than Boston and was bony and gaunt. He felt he looked weaselly.

"What do you think, Spencer? How could an STO have gotten leaked?"

A look out the window. Boston had no view of the Hudson from his chair, just more late-morning reflected light. "My gut is it was somebody in Florida. The next choice would be Washington."

"Texas and California?"

Boston said, "I doubt it. They get copies of the STO but unless one of their specialists is activated, they don't even open them...And, as much as I hate to say it, we can't dismiss the office here completely." The twist of his impressive head indicated NIOS headquarters.

Granted. A co-worker in this office might have sold them out, as painful as it was to think about.

Boston continued, "I'll check with IT security about the servers, copiers and scanners. Polygraph the senior people with download permissions. I'd do a major Facebook autobot search. Well, not just Facebook but blogs and as many other social media sites as I can think of. See if anybody with access to the STO's been posting anything critical of the government and our mission here."

Mission. Killing bad guys.

This made sense. Metzger was impressed. "Good. A lot of work." His eyes strayed to the vista. He saw a window washer on a scaffolding three or four hundred feet up. He thought, as he often did, of the jumpers on 9/11.

The Smoke expanded in his lungs.

Breathe...

Send the Smoke away. But he couldn't. Because they, the jumpers on that terrible day, hadn't been able to breathe. Their lungs had been filled with oily smoke rising from the crest of the flames that were going to consume them in seconds, flames roiling into their twelve-by-twelve-foot offices, leaving only one place to go, through windows to the eternal concrete.

His hands began to shake again.

Metzger noted that Boston was regarding him with a close gaze. The NIOS head casually adjusted the photograph of him, Seth and Katie and a snorting horse, taken through a fine set of optics that happened, in that instance, to record a dear memory, but wasn't dissimilar to a scope that could very efficiently direct a bullet through a man's heart.

"They have proof of completion, the police?"

"No, I don't think so. Status is closed, that's all."

Kill orders were just that--instructions to eliminate a task. There was never any documentation that an assassination was actually completed. The standard procedure when asked was to deny, deny, deny.

Boston began to ask, "Are we doing anything...?"

"I've made calls. Don Bruns knows about the case, of course. A few others. We're...handling things."

An ambiguous verb and object. Worthy of the Wizard.

Handling things...

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