of Parker quickly wonders how in the world she managed to find a husband and to have a child … and also thinks, well, she found a husband, but she sure didn’t find a way to keep him.
“Sit down,” he says, but she’s already descending into a chair when he says, “Why are you here?”
Grissom says, “I have a capable crew out searching the river. And I’ve got other work to do in town.”
“Anything new to report?”
“Not a thing,” she says. “The horse came back riderless. Nobody at the stables saw anything unusual. There’s only one road in and out of the farm. Surveillance tapes were reviewed and she didn’t sneak out.”
“And the note and the panic button?”
“Still in our possession, and I got a call a while ago from our forensics outfit,” she says. “It was legit. Does the President know?”
“He does,” Parker says. “The Homeland Security unit still out there?”
“They are.”
“The cover story about a lost canoeist still holding?”
“It is, so far … but I don’t know for how long.”
Parker brushes away a speck of dust on his otherwise clean desk. “How did you get that unit out there on such short notice?”
“Appealed to their better nature,” Grissom said, voice snappy, and Parker decides not to press the point.
He says, “What did you say earlier, about other work to do? What the hell does that mean?”
Grissom says, “It means the President’s wife is still missing. There are search teams in the area where she was last seen. Having me out there supervising won’t accomplish a damn thing. Talking to people back here can help.”
“What people?”
“The President’s lead protective agent, for one.”
“And who else?”
Grissom says, “I need to talk to the President. Privately.”
Parker shakes his head. “Impossible.”
“Then make it possible, and this morning,” Grissom says. “Right now, there are no leads. None. Zero. And I need to ask some questions, poke around to see what comes up.”
“She might be dead,” Parker says. “That note … I thought it looked like a suicide note.”
“Perhaps, but I’m leaving all options open.”
“You think she might be faking a suicide?”
Grissom says, “Like I said, I’m leaving all options open. And I need to see the President, as soon as possible.”
“Agent Grissom …”
“Make it happen, Mr. Hoyt,” Grissom says. “The best way for a successful resolution, and a quick one, is to run this down like any other criminal investigation. Which means I get to talk to people. And that’s going to include me talking to the husband of a missing woman. When a wife goes missing, the husband needs to be interviewed. Like any other case.”
Parker says, “This isn’t any other case, you know that.”
Grissom stands up. “You can keep on thinking that, Mr. Hoyt, but I can’t afford to do so. Otherwise she’ll never be found.”
After she’s gone, Parker picks up his phone, reluctantly calls one of the two numbers he’s been using since this mess started.
Again, the phone is answered by his contact; again, from the ambient noise, he can tell the person is outside.
There’s no hesitation on the other end of the phone. “Don’t ever call me again, all right? I’ll call if I have any information, and right now, I don’t.”
Parker says, “I just want to verify that there are no new developments.”
No answer, as the person on his private payroll hangs up.
Parker stares at the phone and then glances at a printed piece of paper carefully placed at the side of his desk. He picks up his White House phone and reaches the President’s secretary.
He lets out a big sigh as she answers the phone. He says, “Mrs. Young, I need fifteen minutes of the President’s time this morning … so tell the Better Business Bureau delegation they’re going to have to make do with the secretary of commerce.”
CHAPTER 33
IN A CRAMPED, windowless interview office adjacent to Room W-17, I finally meet with Jackson Thiel, the head of the President’s detail, the agent most often at President Tucker’s side. There’s no decorations, no plants, no framed photographs in the office, just a telephone and a metal desk and two chairs that seem to be leftovers from the Carter administration.
I sit down, and Jackson sits across from me, impeccably dressed as always, face impassive but slightly troubled, and I decide to get right to it.
“When did it start?”
Jackson doesn’t hesitate. “When did what start?”
I make sure he hears my audible sigh. “Okay, if that’s how you want to play it, I’ll let you be. In a day or two,