While Huxstep worked his way through an enormous ring of keys, the Admiral, wearing spit-shined oxfords and a jumpsuit, checked in with Mildred. “Traviata, this is Parsifal. Do you read me?”
Mildred’s voice, sounding as if it originated underwater, filtered back over the walkie-talkie. “Parsifal, this is Traviata. I read you five by five, Admiral.”
The Admiral winced. “We use code names like Parsifal and Traviata,” he lectured the walkie-talkie, “in case anyone is listening in on this channel. That way they won’t be able to identify who is speaking.”
Mildred clicked on after a long pause. “My tradecraft is rusty, but I’m a fast learner,” she said.
“Any activity on the street?” the Admiral asked Mildred.
The walkie-talkie burst into life. “Quiet as a morgue, Parsifal.”
At the door of the Weeder’s apartment, Huxstep growled, “I think I got it.” The key he had slipped into the lock clicked audibly as he turned it. “One more to go and we’re inside,” he told Toothacher.
The Admiral ambled over to the head of the stairs and looked down five flights to the front door. The three floors directly under the loft where Sibley lived were rented by mail-order houses. The young woman who lived on the bottom floor had a backlog of mail piled up in front of her door. He and Huxstep appeared to have the building to themselves. And there was Mildred, huddled in the Chevrolet outside, to warn them in the unlikely event that Sibley, who seemed to have left town two days before, turned up.
Another of Huxstep’s keys fitted perfectly into the top lock and it clicked open. He eased the door back on its hinges with the palm of his large hand and listened. The Admiral, armed with a flashlight, tiptoed up behind him. “Opening locks,” Huxstep muttered, “is like taking candy from a baby.”
The Admiral, his bulging eyes rimmed with raspberry red, whispered, “I have trouble opening them even when I have the key.”
“It’s all in the wrist,” Huxstep observed in a bored voice.
Toothacher glanced quickly at Huxstep to see if he was playing with words. It would have been out of character, or at least out of the character the Admiral was familiar with. Huxstep’s face was not so much innocent as empty. Nothing hidden there, Toothacher decided. He pushed past Huxstep into Sibley’s apartment and switched on his flashlight. The beam stabbed into the corners of a long, narrow loft with uneven knotty pine floorboards and brick walls and a boarded-over skylight. The loft smelled (the Admiral noticed instantly) as if it had been aired and cleaned regularly. No hint, not the faintest, of mildew, of dust. And not an ashtray in sight. If it weren’t for an old grudge, the Admiral could have almost liked the man the archivist had referred to as “the Weeder.” Near the back wall, behind an open kitchen space, Toothacher could make out a neatly made double bed covered with a cashmere shawl. A small black-and-white television set stood on a stool facing the bed. An Eames chair and a footstool and a reading lamp were off to one side. An enormous gilt-edged mirror was leaning against the wall near the Eames chair; the Weeder, the Admiral realized, had positioned the mirror so that he could glance up from his book and see himself reading. Which raised the intriguing possibility that Silas Sibley, like so many others, related to an image of himself he invented for the mirror more than an inner self that existed independently of the mirror.
Toothacher’s flashlight played over some bookcases built against an entire wall facing the open kitchen. “Start there,” he instructed Huxstep. Grunting, Huxstep headed for the back of the loft. The Admiral spotted a long table that obviously served the Weeder as a desk.
Smiling to himself in anticipation, he settled into the wooden desk chair with the high cane back. Every item on the table seemed to be in its place. There was a color photograph, in a silver frame, of a small boy with long blond hair building sand castles on a beach. There was a fish fossil that doubled as a paperweight. There was a cut glass inkwell filled with ink and an old-fashioned pen with a gold nib jutting from a cut glass holder. Next to the inkwell was a lined grade school notebook. Toothacher reached for the notebook and began thumbing through it. There were alternate entries, one written in the flowing hand of someone who prided himself on penmanship, the other printed in rigid block letters crowding onto each line as if space were rationed.
“I assume,” read one notation written in rigid letters, “from the amount of tissues in the wastebasket that you have a head cold. Don’t say I didn’t warn you about bathing in a bathroom with a broken radiator. I’m leaving some homeopathic pills, you dissolve two of them under your tongue four times a day, and some thyme for infusions, drink all you can, eat also, you starve a fever, you feed a cold. And for God’s sake get the radiator fixed. Also have you given some thought to what I said last week about aspirins?”
The notation was signed, “Yours sincerely, Mrs. Doolittle.”
“Many thanks,” said the next notation written in flowing script, “for the homeopathic pills and the thyme. I admit to feeling better already. As for the aspirin a day, I feel I am too young to worry about heart attacks. But I appreciate your mentioning it. I left a pile of shirts on the bed—if you have time, you can iron them. If not, not.”
The entry was signed, “S. Sibley.”
Another entry, in rigid printed letters, read: “The vacuum cleaner needs bags. The iron needs distilled water. The kitchen needs paper towels and liquid soap, no matter what the ads say one brand is as good as another so buy whichever’s cheapest. I need a vacation but what with one thing or another I can’t afford to take it and wouldn’t know where to go if I did, but thanks for suggesting it, you are definitely my kind of white liberal, I don’t mean that as an insult, just the opposite. Yours sincerely, Mrs. Doolittle.”
The Admiral flipped to the last entry in the book, written in Sibley’s flowing script. “Tomorrow I’m off and running for three weeks,” it said. “With any luck I may be able to fill in some missing links. If you can air the loft and vacuum before I return, I’d appreciate it. S. Sibley.” There was a postscript: “Could you check the box downstairs and bring up any mail—I don’t want to advertise that nobody’s home.”
Huxstep called from the back of the loft, “There must be two, three hundred books here. There’s a hundred more stacked on the floor of the closet. What you want me to do with them all?”
“Hold each one by the spine and shake it—see if anything falls out.”
Huxstep, muttering under his breath about how there had to be better ways of making a living, went back to the bookshelves. The Admiral turned to the wooden filing cabinet next to the table. He pulled open a drawer, saw typing paper, opened another, found envelopes, opened a third, discovered a thick folder tied with a ribbon. He set it on the desk, undid the ribbon, opened the folder. Inside was what appeared to be the carbon copy of a typed manuscript. The first pages contained a quotation:
INSTRUCTIONS for the inlifting of MEN
… let our manners diftinguifh us
from our enemies, as much as the caufe
are engaged in.
IN PROVINCIAL CONGRESS
at New York June 20th 1775
Intrigued, the Admiral turned to the second page and read, “For starters, I’ll do my man Nate: In my mind’s eye I see him still dancing leaf in the rebellion’s gusts.”
The perspiration on Toothacher’s palms, the tingling in his scalp told him he had come across something significant. The Admiral leaned eagerly over the manuscript and plunged on. He heard the beat of the kettledrum on the bowling green. He passed “Whose truth? Which truth?” He witnessed the execution of Sergeant Hickey. He came to the part where Nate takes two steps forward. His friends try to talk him out of volunteering. Nate persists. The Commander-in-Chief. not a very sympathetic figure, personally briefs him. “I need to know what the lobsters are up to.” Exit the Commander-in-Chief. When last seen, the Weeder’s man Nate is selecting patriotic phrases from Addison’s Cato to use as codes.
The Admiral looked up. E. Everard Linkletter, his archivist friend, had filled him in on Silas Sibley. This Nate he was writing about was a distant relative of his and a lifelong obsession. It struck Toothacher that Sibley was doing to Nate what he, the Admiral, was doing to Sibley, walking back the cat on an operation that had gone wrong. Sibley was taking Nate’s mission apart piece by piece to discover why his illustrious ancestor ended up the way he did. “I’m off and running for three weeks,” Sibley had written in the notebook to his cleaning lady. “With any luck I may be able to fill in some missing links.”
Off and running where? The Ides of March was two weeks away. If he and Huxstep and Mildred could catch up with Sibley and neutralize him before then, Wanamaker could go ahead with Stufftingle. But the Ides of March was the absolute limit. Kabir was being closed down permanently on the fifteenth. The faculty and the atomic facility were being transferred to a remote base in the countryside. It would take Wanamaker years to smuggle enough uranium into the new site and mount the operation again. Faced with this delay, the locals in Tehran, not to mention Wanamaker’s contact in the superstructure, would lose their nerve, would scurry back to their holes. A great occasion to make the world more congenial to American interests would have been lost forever.
The Admiral’s flashlight played over the desk. Under the fossil paperweight was a pile of unopened envelopes that the cleaning lady, Yours sincerely, Mrs. Doolittle, must have brought up. Toothacher leafed through them. Most of them were bills, bank statements, advertisements. Two were personal letters. Toothacher held the envelopes up to the flashlight one at a time, but he couldn’t make out the writing because the letters inside were folded. He reached into a pocket of his jumpsuit and produced a length of bamboo that had been carefully split not quite to the end. It was a trick of the trade the Admiral had picked up from an agent in Hong Kong. Working the bamboo into the first envelope through a small opening at the corner of the flap, Toothacher pinched the folded letter in the split bamboo. He carefully turned the length of bamboo so that the letter wound itself around it, then pulled both the bamboo and the letter out through the small opening. He unwound the letter, flattened it on the desk and read it. It was from the director of Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library in New Haven. “This will confirm our phone conversation of yesterday,” it said. “Browse till the cows come home, Silas. If you stop by my home Sunday morning, I’ll give you the back door keys. You’ll have the place to yourself.”
Toothacher checked a Master Plan of Leads to Run Down appended to the Nate manuscript. Sure enough there was an entry marked “Beinecke Stacks—A. Hamilton’s missing letter to Nate’s brother Enoch could be buried in the uncatalogued Hamilton papers.”
Using the length of bamboo, the Admiral returned the letter to its envelope and extracted the second letter. Unrolled from the split bamboo and flattened on the desk, it was cryptic to the point of rudeness. “On the phone you were very persuasive,” it said. “But I’m having second thoughts. My privacy is more important than your wild-goose chase, at least to me. Forget my yes. Please don’t come. Please.” There was no signature on the letter, no return address on the envelope. The stamp had been canceled at Concord, Massachusetts. On Sibley’s Master Plan of Leads to Run Down, the “pot of gold at the end of the rainbow” entry read: Molly’s diary—Concord descendants?
The Admiral switched off his flashlight and stared into the darkness for a moment, imagining the loft, the bed with the cashmere quilt, the boarded-over skylight; imagining Huxstep pulling books off the shelves and shaking them by their spines; imagining the Weeder curled up with a good book in his Eames chair watching himself reading in the mirror. Except for two tours of duty on board destroyers, both cut short because of chronic seasickness, Toothacher had spent all of his career in intelligence work. And although he had never admitted it, had never put words to the thought, he had been plagued by a hesitation. It was an article of faith with him that there was one truth and it was knowable—but once you had discovered it, what then? Did knowing an enemy’s capabilities really tell you anything about his intentions? Did he have a capability because he intended to use it or because he wanted you to think he might use it? Therein lay the essential flaw of intelligence work; a flaw that left many of its practitioners half-paralyzed with uncertainty. But now the Admiral found himself engaged in another sort of intelligence-related activity—one unequaled for its purity, its primitiveness. Here there was no uncertainty, no hesitation, no self-doubt.
It was called the manhunt. And the Admiral found it very much to his taste. Tracking the Weeder beat the Guantanamo happy hours by a country mile. It even beat burning the candle at both ends.
Toothacher noticed a flashlight weaving toward him in the darkness. Huxstep tossed a handful of papers onto the desk. “One library card,” he said, tucking stray hairs back up into his nostrils, “assorted postcards probably used as bookmarks, two laundry tickets, five theater stubs, three overdue slips from lending libraries, one dated August 12, 1972. If he ever returns the book it’ll set him back”—Huxstep let his eyes drift up in their sockets as he made a quick calculation—”5,656 days at twenty-five cents per makes $1,414.”
Convinced that the manhunt was off to an auspicious start, the Admiral began putting things back the way he had found them. “Get on the horn to Mildred,” he snapped to Huxstep. “Tell her we’re on our way out.”
Huxstep, who had a child’s love of gadgets, fingered the walkie-talkie. “Traviata, this is Parsifal’s jackass-of-all-trades,” he said. “Are you still alive? We’re coming out.”
There was a burst of static. Carried along on it, like a buoy riding a ground swell, were the exultant words, “Praise the Lord!”