Kitty and the Midnight Hour (Kitty Norville 1)
Page 95
“You’ve been subpoenaed by the Senate.”
Ben was not one to mince words.
“Excuse me?”
“A special oversight committee of the United States Senate requests the honor of your presence at upcoming hearings regarding the Center for the Study of Paranatural Biology. I guess they think you’re some kind of expert on the subject.”
“What?”
“You heard me.”
Yeah, I’d heard him, and as a result my brain froze. Senate? Subpoena? Hearings? As in Joe McCarthy and the Hollywood blacklist? As in Iran-Contra?
“Kitty?”
“Is this bad? I mean, how bad is it?”
“Calm down. It isn’t bad. Senate committees have hearings all the time. It’s how they get information. Since they don’t know anything about paranatural biology, they’ve called hearings.”
It made sense. He even made it sound routine. I still couldn’t keep the tone of panic out of my voice. “What am I going to do?”
“You’re going to go to Washington, D.C., and answer the nice senators’ questions.”
That was on the other side of the country. How much time did I have? Could I drive it? Fly? Did I have anything I could wear to Congress? Would they tell me the questions they wanted to ask ahead of time, as if I could study for it like an exam?
They didn’t expect me to do this by myself, did they?
“Ben? You have to come with me.”
Now he sounded panicked. “Oh no. They’re just going to ask you questions. You don’t need a lawyer there.”
“Come on. Please? Think of it as a vacation. It’ll all go on the expense account.”
“I don’t have time—”
“Honestly, what do you think the odds are that I can keep out of trouble once I open my mouth? Isn’t there this whole ‘contempt of Congress’ thing, that happens when I say something that pisses them off? Would you rather be there from the start or have to fly in, in the middle of things, to get me out of jail for mouthing off at somebody important?”
His sigh was that of a martyr. “When you’re right, you’re right.”
Victory! “Thanks, Ben. I really appreciate it. When do we need to be there?”
“We’ve got a couple of weeks yet.”
And here I was, going the wrong way.
“Can I drive there from Barstow in time?”
“What the hell are you doing in Barstow?”
“Driving?”
Ben made an annoyed huff and hung up on me.
So, I was going to Washington, D.C.