take your friends to BWI. By the time Gimpy has the rubber bands on the Citation wound up, we’ll meet you with Mr. Parker’s passport and a quick change of linen.”
“How are you going to get into my apartment? Past the press?”
“Getting into your apartment would be easier, Mr. Parker, if you gave me the keys,” she said. “As far as the press is concerned, it’s been my experience that they pay very little attention to little old ladies who use a walker, especially little old ladies being helped into a building by a kindly member of the clergy—and accompanied by a snarling hundred-twenty-pound dog.”
“Where are you going to get the kindly clergyman?” Roscoe asked.
Tom Sanders stood.
He motioned with his right hand to form a cross, then said, “Bless you, my children. Go and sin no more. And just as soon as I get my clerical collar on and load one of the dogs into a Yukon, we can get this show on the road.”
[THREE]
The Tahitian Suite
Grand Cozumel Beach and Golf Resort
Cozumel, Mexico
1710 12 April 2007
Vic D���Alessandro, whose barrel chest and upper arms strained his short-sleeved floral-print Hawaiian shirt, walked onto the balcony of the penthouse suite and announced, “Jesus, it must be nice to be rich!”
“It’s way ahead of whatever’s in second place, Vic,” Fernando Lopez said agreeably. “Write that down.”
Lopez, a very large man with a dark complexion, was sprawled on a chaise longue with a bottle of Dos Equis on his chest. He raised his right arm over his head without turning, and offered his hand. D’Alessandro walked to him and shook it.
Castillo got off his chaise longue and walked to D’Alessandro. They wordlessly embraced. Max sat on his haunches and thrust his paw repeatedly at D’Alessandro until D’Alessandro shook it. Lester Bradley stood behind Castillo.
“Hey, Dead Eye,” D’Alessandro said.
“It’s good to see you, sir,” Bradley said.
Aleksandr Pevsner, Tom Barlow, and Stefan Koussevitzky, sitting on chaise longues in the shade of a striped awning, stood. D’Alessandro nodded to them, then went over and offered his hand.
“Good to see you, Mr. Pevsner,” D’Alessandro said.
“And you, Mr. D’Alessandro,” Pevsner replied. “This is our friend Stefan Koussevitzky.”
“You can be nice to Stefan, Vic,” Castillo called. “You guys went to different snake-eating schools.”
“I know you by reputation, Mr. D’Alessandro,” Koussevitzky said. “I’m pleased to meet you.”
“You’re the guy who Sweaty shot on that island, right? And call me Vic.”
Koussevitzky smiled and nodded.
“I was one of them. She also shot General Sirinov in the foot. Fortunately, mine was a minor flesh wound in the leg with a thirty-two.”
“Fortunately for Stefan, Svetlana always liked him,” Tom Barlow said. “She was never at all fond of the general.”
“So where is Charley’s redhead?” D’Alessandro asked.
“She’s having a bikini wax. She should be up in a minute in her bikini,” Castillo said. “Lester, why don’t you get Vic a Dos Equis? After which he can tell us all about Acapulco.”
“Lester,” D’Alessandro said, “why don’t you get your old Uncle Vic a double of that Jack Daniel’s?”
“Yes, sir.”
D’Alessandro slid onto a chaise longue in the shade of the striped awning, and sat on it.
“Is everybody familiar with the official version, the message Ambassador McCann sent to Secretary of State Cohen?” he began.
“Which she passed to Roscoe Danton, giving him his scoop,” Castillo said. “Yeah, Vic, we’re all familiar with that.”
“Our guys in Acapulco—there’s three—and the DEA guys there think that what happened is Ferris’s Suburban was stopped by a roadblock manned by either Federales or people wearing Federales uniforms. They got talked out of the Suburban and the bad guys whacked everybody but Ferris. Then they loaded Ferris back into the Suburban and took off for God
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