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"I did."
I sat back in my chair. "You guys gathered intelligence on dissident groups," I said.
"Some," Epstein said.
"Some? For chrissakes, the Bureau probably had a file on the Beach Boys."
Epstein smiled again. I think.
"Things have changed in the Bureau since those days."
"Sure," I said. "So do you have a file on the Dread Scott Brigade?"
"None that I know of."
"Could there be one you might not know of?"
"Of course."
"If there was one, how would I access it?"
"You'd get me to request it through channels," Epstein said.
"Will you?"
"I did."
"And?"
Epstein drummed on his thumbnail with his pen. His face was completely without expression. "There appears to be no such file," he said.
"So how come Bennati thought one was on its way?"
"That is bothersome," Epstein said. "Isn't it."
7.
I drove up to Toronto on a Monday morning, with the sun s.h.i.+ning the way it was supposed to in May, and got an all-chocolate, fifteen-month-old female German shorthaired pointer, whose kennel name was Robin Hood's Purple Sandpiper. She was crated when I got her, which was a sound idea given that it was a ten-hour drive home. You wouldn't want her jumping around in a strange car and causing an accident. As I pulled onto 404 north of Toronto, she whimpered. At the first rest area we came to on 401, I discarded the crate next to the Dumpster behind the food court, and Robin Hood's Purple Sandpiper spent the rest of the trip jumping around in the car. Susan had said that ten hours was too long for her to have to ride on her first day, so Robin Hood's Purple Sandpiper and I spent Monday night at a motel in Schenectady. Unless you are a lifelong GE fan, there's not a lot to be said for Schenectady.
Robin Hood's Purple Sandpiper slept very little and was full awake at 5:10 Tuesday morning. We pulled out of Schenectady before dawn and got to Cambridge around noon. When we pulled into the driveway off Linnaean Street, Susan was sitting on the front steps of the big, five-colored painted-lady Victorian house where she lived and worked. As I got out of the car I said "Oh boy" to myself, which was what I always said, or some variation of that, whenever I saw her. Thick black hair, very big blue eyes, wide mouth, slim, in shape, great thighs, plus an indefinable hint of sensuality. She radiated a kind of excitement, the possibility of infinite promise. It wasn't just me. Most people seemed to feel that spending time with Susan would be an adventure.
"OmiG.o.d," Susan said when Robin Hood's Purple Sandpiper and I got out of the car.
Susan's yard was fenced. I opened the front gate and closed it behind us and unhooked the dog from her leash. She was uneasy.
Susan said, "Pearl."
The dog p.r.i.c.ked her long ears a little. Then she ran around Susan's smallish front yard in a random way as if she were trying to find a point of stable reference. Finally she decided that I was her oldest friend outside Canada and came over to me and leaned in against my leg for emotional support.
Susan watched her with the full-focus concentration that made her such a good therapist. If she concentrated on something long enough, it would begin to smolder.
"Pearl?" Susan said.
The dog looked at her carefully and wagged her tail tentatively. Susan nodded slowly.
"She's back," Susan said.
"Yes," I said. "She just doesn't know it yet."
Susan crouched at the foot of her stairs and opened her arms.
"Pearl," she said again.
The dog walked to Susan and sniffed her. Susan put her cheek against the dog's muzzle and patted the dog's head.
"She'll know it soon," Susan said.
8.
I was in the lobby of the New Federal Courthouse on Fan Pier. "International Consulting Bureau," I said. I gave my card to the guard and he looked at it, then checked his computer screen.
"Whom do you wish to speak with there?"
"Whom?"
The guard looked up at me and grinned. "It's the training program they give us," he said.
"I wish to speak with Mr. Ives," I said. He nodded, punched up a number, and spoke into the phone.
"Mr. Spenser to see Mr. Ives."
He nodded and hung up.
"Over there," he said, "through the metal detector, take the elevator to the fifteenth floor."
"There a room number?" I said.
"Someone will meet you at the elevator, sir."
"Of course," I said.
At the security barrier there were four guards from the Federal Protection Service.
"I have a gun on my right hip," I said to them. "I'm going to unclip it and hand it to you, holster and all."
The guards spread out slightly and two of them rested hands on their holstered guns. The head guard was a black man who looked like retired military.
"And do you have a permit, sir?"
"I do."
"First the gun, then the permit," he said.
I handed him the holstered gun, then I took my permit from my s.h.i.+rt pocket where I had put it in antic.i.p.ation of this moment. The head guard read it carefully.
"We'll hang on to the gun and the permit," he said. "You can pick them up on the way out."
"You're asking me to risk the federal courthouse unarmed?" I said.
The guard's face stayed serious.
"Yes, sir," he said. "We are."
He swept his arm toward the metal detector, and I went through without incident.
"Elevators are there, sir."
"Stay alert," I said. "If I run into trouble, I'll scream."
"We'll be here, sir."
At the fifteenth floor there was a woman with long, silver hair and a severe young face. She was dressed in a black pantsuit and a mannish white s.h.i.+rt with a narrow black tie. Her black shoes had very high heels. We stepped into a long hallway. There were office doors along both sides of it. The hallway floor was carpeted in dark red. There was no identification on any of the office doors, all of which were closed.
"Spenser," I said, "Follow me, please," she said.
There were discreet security cameras at either end of the hall. I smiled at the one I was facing. It's good to be cheery. The severe woman knocked on the last door on the right.
From inside, a voice said, "Come."
The woman opened the door and stepped aside, and I went in. Ives was sitting at an empty desk in a blank room with a view of the harbor. He looked at me without expression until the door closed and we were alone.
Then he smiled, sort of, and said, "Well, well, young Lochinvar."
"How about maturing Lochinvar," I said.
"You're as old as you feel," Ives said, and gestured at the straight chair in front of his desk. "Sit."
Ives was sort of tall and leathery with sandy hair. He wore a tan poplin suit with a pink oxford b.u.t.ton-down s.h.i.+rt and a pink bow tie with black polka dots. The room was entirely without ornamentation except for Ives's Yale diploma framed on the wall behind his desk.
"You ever hear of an antiestablishment organization in 1974 that called itself the Dread Scott Brigade?"
Ives smiled his dim smile. "It is my business to hear of things," he said. "Why do you ask?"
"They killed a woman in a bank holdup in Boston in September of 1974."
"And were never caught," Ives said.
I nodded.
"Which is why you're here," he said.
"Yes."
"You're going to catch them."
"I am."
"Except you don't know who they are."
"Not yet," I said.
"Or if they even exist," Ives said.
"Somebody killed her," I said.
"Why do you think it was this group?"
"Cops got a letter from them afterwards, claiming responsibility."
"Anyone can write a letter," Ives said.
"It's a place to start," I said.
"I suppose it is."
Ives folded his hands over his flat stomach and leaned back in his chair and rested one foot on the edge of his desk. He made a slight gesture with his lips, which I had decided to treat as a smile.
"So, you ever hear of them."
"They are a domestic group," Ives said. "We concern ourselves with international issues. Have you consulted our counterintelligence cousins at the Bureau?"
"There seems to be a missing file."
Ives smiled again. "Ahhh!" he said.
"Ahhh?"