know Gibson is following me, but I’m not exactly sure why. I’ll call Lang and ask him.”
“Tell me more about the guy you met. The ANM guy. If we have enough detail, we might be able to put a finger on him.”
Lucas gave her what he knew: the man had been an inch over six feet, a few pounds either side of one-eighty, blue eyes, brown hair with a touch of white, athletic, a runner, maybe ex-military or a cop, possible connections in the intelligence community, well-spoken, likely a college grad.
“That gives us a chance,” Chase said. “Why don’t you come around later in the day . . . two o’clock . . . I’ll have my assistant put together a video show.”
“All right, I’ll see you then. Did the media coverage kick out anything?”
“Not so far. The media doesn’t seem to have reporters anymore, they just have commentators. What we’re seeing is mostly hot air. Our guys who work the alt-right say there’s some talk about the 1919 site, and apparently it was mirrored on a couple of alt-right websites before it got taken down, so the web page is still out there.”
* * *
—
WHEN LUCAS AND CHASE were finished talking, he called Charles Lang, and asked, “Why is Gibson following me? I assume you assigned him to do it.”
Lang tried bluster: “Stephen isn’t following you. That’s ridiculous. What makes you think . . .”
“I’ve got a photograph of him, Charles. Standing right next to the RAV4. I suspect that’s a rental car, right? In case I spotted it?”
Silence. Then, “We wanted to see who you spoke to. We are a research team and you wouldn’t commit to keeping us informed.”
“Well, tell him to fuck off. If I see him around anymore, I’ll find a way to put him in jail. Interfering with a government investigation or something. Maybe you could go with him. It’d be a new cultural experience for you.”
“I’ll pull him back. I apologize, but I find this whole episode rather fascinating and I couldn’t help myself.”
“Well, help yourself. Make him go away.”
* * *
—
BACK AT THE WATERGATE at eleven o’clock, Lucas decided he didn’t want to read any more of the FBI files, which left him nothing to do, except go shopping. He got the Cadillac and drove over to N Street, to Figueroa & Prince, a custom tailor shop where he’d spent a few thousand dollars on previous trips.
His sales clerk was named Ted, who brightened when he saw Lucas coming through the door. “Lucas! I was thinking of you only yesterday. You won’t believe what we got in from Italy. It’s the finest piece of wool I’ve seen this year and just right for Saint Paul in the winter.”
Lucas spent two hours in the shop—it was a fine piece of wool, an absolutely perfect shade of blue to chime with his eyes—and after picking out three neckties and three shirts that would go with it, he was in the back of the store, being measured by Jim the Tailor, who said, “For you, we’ll have it in three weeks. Your measurements have changed, though. You’ve lost weight. Will you get it back or are you slimming down?”
“I’ll get it back: best go with the old measurements.”
“So it wasn’t a diet?”
“No, I got shot last spring.”
“See, don’t do that . . .”
* * *
—
ANOTHER TAILOR CAME THROUGH, nodded at Lucas, and asked, “You on a case?”
“Yeah, I’m trying to chase down some right-wingers. No big deal.”
“That 1919 thing? The SS?”
Lucas nodded. “That’s the one. You saw it on TV?”
“Yeah, the girl is on CNN. She’s a cutie.”
Lucas: “What girl?”
“You know, the high school kid who uncovered the whole thing. She’s on right now.”
“Oh, boy.” Lucas stepped off the box he was standing on, and asked, “Where’s your TV?”
“Back in the fabric room.”
Lucas followed the tailors back, where a small television sat on a shelf among bolts of fabric.