said, as he stepped inside. His eyes took in the room, and LuEllen and Lane on the couch, and the .357 on the end table next to LuEllen’s hand. “I see a gun. What’s the situation here?”
“Somebody killed my brother, and somebody burglarized my house this afternoon . . .” Lane started.
“Did you call the police?”
“Yes. They think it was burglars attracted by my brother’s funeral.”
“You don’t think so?”
“I know it wasn’t. We even know who it was; but not exactly why.”
Green held up a finger: “Before you tell me anything else, maybe we should take the first security precaution.”
“What?” Lane asked. We all looked at him expectantly.
“Pull the drapes,” he said.
A fter we’d pulled the drapes, Lane gave him the story—not all of it, but most of it: her brother being killed in Dallas in suspicious circumstances, the funeral, the burglary at her home. She told him about the fire, but didn’t mention that we were there. She told him about our record search through Hertz, and the two names we had so far: William Hart, mentioned by Jack, and Lester Benson, from the Hertz records. “We’re afraid they might come back—that they might think that Jack passed information to me, or computer files.”
“Did he?”
Lane looked at me, and I nodded. “Yes. He sent me some Jaz disks. A Jaz disk is a high-capacity storage . . .”
“I know what a Jaz disk is,” he said. “What’s on it?”
“Everything from memos to computer games to a lot of gobbledygook that we haven’t had time to figure out. That we might not be able to figure out,” I said. “Whatever it is, we think Jack might have been killed to keep it private. The shoot-out might have been a setup.”
“The guard took a slug as part of a setup?” he asked skeptically.
“The guard didn’t see anything,” I said. “As far as he knows, he might have been shot by the Easter Bunny. He opens the door and, boom, he’s down. The other guy supposedly fires four times and Jack’s killed. The guard didn’t see a thing.”
“Why didn’t you just give them back? The disks?”
“That might not help; because we know about them, and we can’t erase that. Then there’s this group calledFirewall . . .” I explained Firewall, as much as I knew about it.
“You’re starting to scare me,” Green said. “If this is some kind of government thing, the FBI or the CIA or one of those other alphabet agencies . . . I mean, I don’t want to be protecting a bunch of terrorists or spies or something.”
“Do we look like terrorists? I’m a college professor,” Lane said.
“A lot of terrorists start out as college professors,” he said.
“Well, I’m not one of them,” she snapped. “I’m just scared.”
“We’re not asking you to crawl down a sewer pipe with a bomb in your mouth,” I said. “Just keep her healthy.”
“That’s it? All I do is keep them off her?”
“That’s it. And if it gets heavy, call the cops. We already did that once, and these guys ran for it. Which tells you where they are.”
“For how long?” he asked.
“For a while. Two or three weeks, anyway. She’s gonna have to make a trip to Dallas. In a couple of weeks, these guys should have figured out that if she had anything, they’d know about it, one way or another.”
He looked at me for a few seconds, a steady gaze, and finally nodded: “You’re lying a little. But if that’s the basic idea of what’s going on, I’ll take the job.”
Green got a hard-shell suitcase out of his car and I cleared out of the guest room. “I’ll get a room in LuEllen’s motel tonight,” I said. “It’ll have a cleanphone line. I’ll get with Bobby about AmMath and we’ll start looking for Firewall.”
“Okay,” Lane said. She reached out and touched the .357 on the table. Green asked, “You know how to use that?”
“I just shot a big stack of phone books down in the basement,” she said. “LuEllen told me if
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