5
HOLLY JOHNSON’S FIVE o’clock case conference was
allocated to the Chicago FBI office’s third-floor meeting room.
This was a large room, better than forty feet by twenty, and it was
more or less filled by a long polished table flanked by thirty
chairs, fifteen on each side. The chairs were substantial and
leather, and the table was made of fine hardwood, but any tendency
for the place to look like a corporate boardroom was defused by the
scruffy government wall covering and the cheap carpet. There were
ninety square yards of carpet on the floor, and the whole ninety
together had probably cost less than just one of the chairs.
Five o’clock in the summer, the afternoon sun
streamed in through the wall of windows and gave the people
arriving in the room a choice. If they sat facing the windows, they
got the sun in their eyes and squinted through the meeting and
ended up with a blinding headache. And the sun overpowered the air
conditioning, so if they sat backs to the window, they got heated
up to a point where it got uncomfortable and they started worrying
about whether their deodorant was still OK at five o’clock in the
afternoon. A tough choice, but the top option was to avoid the
headache and take the risk of heating up. So the early attendees
took the seats on the window side.
First into the room was the FBI lawyer with special
responsibility for financial crime. He stood for a moment and made
a judgment about the likely duration of the meeting. Maybe
forty-five minutes, he thought, knowing Holly, so he turned and
tried to assess which seat might get the benefit of the shade from
the slim pillar splitting the wall of windows into two. The bar of
shadow was lying to the left of the third chair in the row, and he
knew it would inch toward the head of the table as time passed. So
he spilled his pile of folders onto the table in front of the
second chair and shrugged his jacket off and claimed the place by
dropping it onto the chair. Then he turned again and strolled to
the credenza at the end of the room for a cup of coffee from the
filter machine.
Next in were two agents working on cases that might
be tied into the mess that Holly Johnson was dealing with. They
nodded to the lawyer and saw the place he’d claimed. They knew
there was no point in choosing between the other fourteen chairs by
the window. They were all going to get equally hot. So they just
dumped their portfolios at the nearest two places and lined up for
coffee.
“She not here yet?” one of them said to the
lawyer.
“Haven’t seen her all day,” the lawyer said.
“Your loss, right?” the other guy said.
Holly Johnson was a new agent, but talented, and
that was making her popular. In the past, the Bureau would have
taken no pleasure at all in busting the sort of businessmen that
Holly was employed to chase down, but times had changed, and the
Chicago office had gotten quite a taste for it. The businessmen now
looked like scumbags, not solid citizens, and the agents were sick
and tired of looking at them as they rode the commuter trains home.
The agents would be getting off the train miles before the bankers
and the stockbrokers were anywhere near their expensive suburbs.
They would be thinking about second mortgages and even second jobs,
and they’d be thinking about the years of private detective work
they were going to have to put in to boost up the mean government
pension. And the executives would be sitting there with smug
smiles. So when one or two of them started to take a fall, the
Bureau was happy enough about it. When the ones and twos turned
into tens and twenties, and then hundreds, it became a blood
sport.
The only drawback was that it was hard work.
Probably more difficult to nail than anything else. That was where
Holly Johnson’s arrival had made things easier. She had the talent.
She could look at a balance sheet and just know if anything was
wrong with it. It was like she could smell it. She’d sit at her
desk and look at the papers, and cock her head slightly to one
side, and think. Sometimes, she’d think for hours, but when she
stopped thinking, she’d know what the hell was going on. Then she’d
explain it all in the case conference. She’d make it all sound easy
and logical, like there was no way anybody could be in any kind of
doubt about it. She was a woman who made progress. She was a woman
who made her fellow agents feel better on those commuter trains at
night. That’s what was making her popular.
Fourth person into the third-floor meeting room was
the agent assigned to help Holly out with the fetching and carrying
until she recovered from her soccer injury. His name was Milosevic.
A slight frame, a slight West Coast accent. Less than forty,
casually dressed in expensive designer khaki, gold at his neck and
on his wrist. He was also a new arrival, recently transferred in to
the Chicago office, because that was where the Bureau found it
needed its financial people. He joined the line for coffee and
looked around the room.
“She’s late?” he said.
The lawyer shrugged at him and Milosevic shrugged
back. He liked Holly Johnson. He had worked with her five weeks,
since the accident on the soccer field, and he had enjoyed every
minute of it.
“She’s not usually late for anything,” he
said.
Fifth person in was Brogan, Holly’s section head.
Irish, from Boston via California. The young side of middle age.
Dark hair, red Irish face. A tough guy, handsomely dressed in an
expensive silk jacket, ambitious. He’d come to Chicago the same
time as Milosevic, and he was pissed it wasn’t New York. He was
looking for the advancement he was sure he deserved. There was a
theory that Holly’s arrival in his section was enhancing his
chances of getting it.
“She not here yet?” he said.
The other four shrugged at him.
“I’ll kick her ass,” Brogan said.
Holly had been a stock analyst on Wall Street
before applying to join the FBI. Nobody was clear why she’d made
the change. She had some kind of exalted connections, and some kind
of an illustrious father, and the easy guess was she wanted to
impress him somehow. Nobody knew for sure whether the old guy was
impressed or not, but the feeling was he damn well ought to be.
Holly had been one of ten thousand applicants in her year, and
she’d passed in right at the top of the four hundred who made it.
She’d creamed the recruitment criteria. The Bureau had been looking
for college graduates in law or accountancy, or else graduates in
flimsier disciplines who’d then worked somewhere for three years at
least. Holly had qualified in every way. She had an accountancy
degree from Yale, and a master’s from Harvard, and three years on
Wall Street on top of all that. She’d blitzed the intelligence
tests and the aptitude assessments. She’d charmed the three serving
agents who’d grilled her at her main interview.
She’d sailed through the background checks, which
was understandable on account of her connections, and she’d been
sent to the FBI Academy at Quantico. Then she’d really started to
get serious. She was fit and strong, she learned to shoot, she
murdered the leadership reaction course, she scored outstanding in
the simulated shoot-outs in Hogan’s Alley. But her major success
was her attitude. She did two things at once. First, she bought
into the whole Bureau ethic in the biggest way possible. It was
totally clear to everybody that here was a woman who was going to
live and die for the FBI. But second, she did it in a way which
avoided the slightest trace of bullshit. She tinged her attitude
with a gentle mocking humor which saved people from hating her. It
made them love her instead. There was no doubt the Bureau had
signed a major new asset. They sent her to Chicago and sat back to
reap the benefits.
LAST INTO THE third-floor conference room was a
bunch of men who came in together. Thirteen agents and the
Agent-in-Charge, McGrath. The thirteen agents were clustered around
their boss, who was conducting a sort of rolling policy review as
he walked. The thirteen agents were hanging on to every word.
McGrath had every advantage in the book. He was a man who’d been to
the top, and then come back down again into the field. He’d spent
three years in the Hoover Building as an Assistant Director of the
FBI, and then he’d applied for a demotion and a pay cut to take him
back to a Field Office. The decision had cost him ten thousand
dollars a year in income, but it had bought him back his sanity,
and it had bought him undying respect and blind affection from the
agents he worked with.
An Agent-in-Charge in a Field Office like Chicago
is like the captain on a great warship. Theoretically, there are
people above him, but they’re all a couple of thousand miles away
in Washington. They’re theoretical. The Agent-in-Charge is real. He
runs his command like the hand of God. That’s how the Chicago
office looked at McGrath. He did nothing to undermine the feeling.
He was remote, but he was approachable. He was private, but he made
his people feel he’d do anything at all for them. He was a short,
stocky man, burning with energy, the sort of tireless guy who
radiates total confidence. The sort of guy who makes a crew better
just by leading it. His first name was Paul, but he was always
called Mack, like the truck.
He let his thirteen agents sit down, ten of them
backs to the window and three of them with the sun in their eyes.
Then he hauled a chair around and stuck it at the head of the table
ready for Holly. He walked down to the other end and hauled another
chair around for himself. Sat sideways on to the sun. Started
getting worried.
“Where is she?” he said. “Brogan?”
The section head shrugged, palms up.
“She should be here, far as I know,” he said.
“She leave a message with anybody?” McGrath asked.
“Milosevic?”
Milosevic and the other fifteen agents and the
Bureau lawyer all shrugged and shook their heads. McGrath started
worrying more. People have a pattern, a rhythm, like a behavioral
fingerprint. Holly was only a minute or two late, but that was so
far from normal that it was setting the bells ringing. In eight
months, he had never known her to be late. It had never happened.
Other people could be five minutes late into the meeting room and
it would seem normal. Because of their pattern. But not Holly. At
three minutes past five in the afternoon, McGrath stared at her
empty chair and knew there was a problem. He stood up again in the
quiet room and walked to the credenza on the opposite wall. There
was a phone next to the coffee machine. He picked it up and dialed
his office.
“Holly Johnson call in?” he asked his
secretary.
“No, Mack,” she said.
So he dabbed the cradle and dialed the reception
counter, two floors below.
“Any messages from Holly Johnson?” he asked the
agent at the door.
“No, chief,” the agent said. “Haven’t seen
her.”
He hit the button again and called the main
switchboard.
“Holly Johnson call in?” he asked.
“No, sir,” the switchboard operator said.
He held the phone and gestured for pen and paper.
Then he spoke to the switchboard again.
“Give me her pager number,” he said. “And her cell
phone, will you?”
The earpiece crackled and he scrawled down the
numbers. Cut the switchboard off and dialed Holly’s pager. Just got
a long low tone telling him the pager was switched off. Then he
tried the cell phone number. He got an electronic bleep and a
recorded message of a woman telling him the phone he was dialing
was unreachable. He hung up and looked around the room. It was ten
after five, Monday afternoon.