eyeballs bulge whenever her name is mentioned.”
“Why are you even in touch with her?”
“I needed to plant a story in her column for cover.”
“And she did that for you?”
“Yes.”
“And what did she get out of it?”
“Mamie . . .”
“She had a reputation at Georgetown.”
“Put her out of your mind,” Tom said firmly. “Got it?”
“Okay, I’ll use my imagination.”
“Don’t even do that.”
Mamie recapped her pen. “Anything else?”
He scribbled a number on a blank card. “This is a burner phone. Leave a message there on how to reach you or see you.”
She handed him a card. “No need. This is my burner.”
Tom tucked it into a pocket.
“You want me to text you information?”
“If it’s urgent. Otherwise, I’d rather talk face-to-face.”
“You think you can read me better that way, Tom?”
“Don’t be a smart-ass, Mamie.”
“But I’m so good at it!”
“Thanks for the sandwich.” He hadn’t touched it. He put it back in the bag and took it with him, then ate it at his desk.
41
As Stone’s G-500 pulled up to Jet Aviation at Teterboro, a three-car line of black SUVs rolled up to the wingtip. He turned to Holly. “Does the caravan mean you’re not coming back to my house?”
“How observant you are,” she said, pinching his cheek. “It’s better if I establish a routine at the Carlyle and my transition office. Don’t worry, I’ll soon long for your touch.”
“That can’t come soon enough for me.”
The stewardess opened the airstairs door and they parted at the bottom as Stone’s luggage was loaded into the Bentley and Fred stood by. Holly was followed to the SUVs by her luggage and a large stack of cardboard cartons, looking like an attorney going to a very complicated trial. Soon, they were both on their way to the city by different routes, Holly via the George Washington Bridge, Stone via the Lincoln Tunnel.
Stone picked up the phone and called Dino.
“Bacchetti.”
“It’s Stone. I’m back from D.C. Dinner tonight at my place? I don’t feel like a restaurant.”
“As a matter of policy, I never turn down a free meal. Promise me a really good bottle of wine, and I’ll stay the night.”
“In that case, I’ll promise you a bottle of mediocre wine. Six-thirty?”
“Done.” Dino hung up.
* * *
—
Dino arrived on time and accepted a glass of his favorite Scotch in Stone’s study. “So, why don’t you feel like going to a restaurant? You eat nine of ten dinners out.”
Stone sighed. “I don’t know. Holly needed to be at the Carlyle, and I guess I wanted a more attractive date than you, if I were going to a restaurant. I have my reputation to think of.”
“Which you so rarely do. Are you falling in love with Holly?”
“I think I fell in love with her at first sight, some years ago, but she has been only periodically available since that time, and I have to have a sex life to survive.”
“I’m well aware. And Holly is an irregular lover?”
“Well put.”
“Did you enjoy your stay at the White House?”
“No.”
“Was the nation inattentive to your needs?”
“I prefer being the master in my own home to being a guest in the homes of others, even if my hosts are at the presidential level. Anyway, Holly was working like a beaver on policy papers and intelligence briefings. Oh, and there was an attempt on her life.”
Dino’s eyebrows went up. “Was that news report really about her?”
“Yes, except she wasn’t wounded. The Secret Service and the FBI had a dummy built and set up in front of a window.”
“How did the dummy do?”
“She took two in the head,” Stone replied. “And that through a window I would have presumed to be bulletproof.”
“Technology fails again.”
“Well, yes. So, where most people would keep their heads down after such an experience, Holly prefers being a moving target, with somewhat more Secret Service protection.”
“As the comedian Brother Dave Gardner used to say, ‘Everybody to his own kick.’”
“I believe he did.”
“So where does that leave you? Unfucked?”
“Until Holly can’t stand it anymore and bails out of the Carlyle.”
“Well, you’ve always considered yourself a serial monogamist, Stone. Someone usually turns up when you’re in need.”
“I’m uncomfortable with that, as long as Holly and I are in the same city.”
“So now you’re geographically monogamous?”
“For lack of a better term.”
Dinner arrived and they sat down and were served by Fred.
“It bothers me,” Stone said.
“That you’re geographically monogamous?”
“Yes. It’s a new experience.”
“Well, you could always surprise Holly at the Carlyle.”
Stone shook his head. “She’d be in the middle of interviewing a candidate for secretary of defense,