"Tomorrow. I plan to jog all the way home. And there's something else."
"What?"
"I believe John used that phone call to arrange more than the switch of vans. He used it to set up Peck Rawlings, too. Apparently, John thought Peck was working for you. You can find what's left of him in a ditch near a swamp, somewhere west of Miami, with two bullets
in him."
"That's interesting," Harry said. "When you get back, I want you to come out here and walk us through Winachobee, show us what you know about it."
"Sure, glad to."
"Let me speak to Holly."
Ham handed her the phone.
"Hi."
"When you talked to Chip Beckham, did you tell him anything at all about our operation?"
"Nothing. I asked him straight out if the president was in town, and he said no. I guess he wasn't at the time."
"Yeah. Listen, a lot of shit is going to fall from the sky the next few days, and I need you to not talk to anybody about it until you and I have a chance to sit down and talk."
"Harry, it's like this," Holly said. "You may have screwed up big-time by not calling in the Secret Service on this, but I'm not looking to tell anybody that. I'll refer all questions to you."
"That's all I ask."
"But Harry, if some of your shit starts to fall on me, and I get braced for a lot of questions by some authority or other, I'm not going to stonewall them, and I'm not going to take the fifth. You'd better understand that."
"I understand, Holly, and I appreciate your help."
"Let's get this straight, Harry. I'm not helping, I'm just not hurting you if I can help it. Frankly, I don't know why the Secret Service isn't already here, talking to Ham. What I'm going to tell them when they come, and they will, is that I asked Chip if the president was in town, and he said no. I hope that will cover both your ass and Chip's, but if it doesn't, there's nothing I can do to save it. Are we perfectly clear on that?"
"Perfectly. I couldn't ask for more."
"One final thing, Harry: You and I are pretty good friends, so I'm sorry to have to say this, but I'd better get it up front. If I begin to get the feeling from the questions I'm asked by whoever that blame is starting to fall on either Ham or me, then I'm going to protect us."
"I understand, Holly, and you didn't have to say that."
"Good. We'll be home tomorrow. Call me if there's something I ought to know." She closed the telephone.
"If you hadn't told him that, I was going to," Ham said.
"You get some rest, old man."
"One more thing," Ham said.
"What?"
"John owned up to the robbery and Jackson's death. Peck planned it, and one of his people panicked and shot Jackson."
"Oh," Holly said. She suddenly had a hollow feeling in her chest. "I hope Jackson knows we got these people."
"If it helps, they offed the guy who shot him. Oh, and the two people in the submerged van? The guy, Frank, was put in the bank by John, and they put the couple in the river when they tried to run with some money."
"Well," Holly said, "that ties up a few loose ends."
"So what do we do now? Wait for the Secret Service to show and ask us questions for twelve hours?"