“Good. My son is opening his first play at Yale this weekend, and I want to be there.”
“I want to be there, too,” Dino said, “since my boy is the producer. I’m counting on him to make a big success so he can take care of me in my old age.”
“I want Kerry to issue a press release,” Holly said, “saying that the investigation is now closed. We need that.” “That’s problematical,” Shelley said. “Kerry is a cautious man. He’s not going to want to nail himself to that kind of statement. I think it’s better if the White House issues the announcement.”
“I don’t think the president is the person to issue a statement about a criminal investigation,” Holly said, “and I don’t think the first lady will think so, either.”
“The attorney general, then,” Shelley said.
“He’s not involved in this,” Holly pointed out. “This should be done at Kerry’s level. I’m not suggesting that the director of the FBI put his imprimatur on it.”
“You can try, but I’m beginning to get the feeling that I’m going to be the one to carry the water on this.”
“Maybe an assistant director is good enough,” Holly said, “but Kerry is worth a shot.”
THE FOLLOWING MORNING, Stone and Dino drove over to the Hoover Building, parked in the basement garage, and took the elevator up to the executive floor, where Kerry Smith received them. Holly and Shelley were already there.
After offering them coffee, Kerry tossed a copy of the Washington Times onto the coffee table, open to an inside page. “You all look as if you’re enjoying yourselves,” he said.
Stone picked up the paper and saw the photograph taken of them the previous evening. They were all named, except Holly, who had a menu in the way, and she was called “an unidentified woman.”
Stone passed the paper around.
“Why couldn’t I be the ‘unidentified woman’?” Shelley asked.
“We were just having dinner, Kerry,” Stone said. “We can’t worry about some gossip guy with a camera.”
“Of course not,” Kerry replied. “Okay, tell me where you are and where you’re going with your investigation.”
“Where we are is at the end,” Stone said. “Where we’re going is back to New York.”
“Have you told the president this?”
“We thought we’d let the first lady do that.”
“She told him last night,” Holly said. “He apparently took it well.”
“And who’s going to explain all this to the media?” Kerry asked.
“That would be you,” Holly said.
“Gee, thanks.”
“It shouldn’t come from the director, nor from someone any lower than you.”
“Just what would you like me to say?”
“Send a fax to the AP and Reuters, and to the big papers, if you want to, saying that an investigation has determined that the probable murderer was Charlotte Kirby, who then took her own life.”
“The ‘probable’ murderer?”
“All right, the likely murderer. Or just the murderer. You shouldn’t sound uncertain.” She explained about the absence of fingerprints on the gun’s magazine and the ammunition.
“I guess that’s a decent theory,” Kerry said. “Where is the Arlington PD in all this?”
“I took it away from them as soon as I heard about it, I heardt i” Kerry Shelley said, “on the grounds that Kirby was a federal employee. Dave King and his people own the case.”
“Have Dave King write a memo to you, recommending that the case be concluded, and copy me.”