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2g34
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“Each of the little g's, eleven through forty-four are ten terms in four-dimensional space.” Otto put down the marker and turned around again. “You want to keep it simple, there it is.” He glanced at his work. “Tedious, maybe. But, oh boy it's pretty.”
Nobody said a thing. The approach wasn't particularly novel, and they probably would have gotten around to it sooner or later. But this was sooner. Rencke had pushed the fast-forward button for them.
“Oh boy,” Otto said darkly. He lowered his head and stalked back to his own office. He'd made a fool of himself again. The back of his neck was hot, and he could feel people looking at him. He could almost hear their whispers. Their laughter.
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Somebody was waiting for him in his office. Coming around the corner, he spotted the pair of dark brown walking shoes and tan gabardines in front of one of his monitors.
“What do you think you're doing?” Otto demanded, his anger suddenly flaring. They wouldn't leave him alone.
Dick Yemm had been staring at the lavender tombstone display. He turned around, a Dutch uncle smile on his face. “Waiting for you. Where have you been?” He was here with bad news or more advice. Otto wanted neither.
“Next door. They were having a problem.”
Yemm nodded patiently, as if he knew that there was more, and he was willing to wait for it. He was like a cobra, swaying hypnotically, on the verge of striking at any second.
Otto never knew what to do with his hands when Yemm was around: stick them in his pockets, fold them over his chest, clasp them behind his back. Of all the people in the Company, Yemm was the most invulnerable now. He was tough, he was aloof and he had the ear of the boss. He was almost always right there at Mac's shoulder, watching everybody and everything, almost daring something to happen.
“It was an encryption problem. None of your business,” Otto said defensively.
Yemm shrugged. “You're probably right,” he said, in the same patient manner. “But that's not what I meant.”
“Then what? Oh boy, what the fuck do ya want with me?”
“Let's go for a walk. We can go downstairs to the gym. Nobody will disturb us.”
Otto looked at the monitor behind Yemm. The screen showed the lavender tombstone pattern. Yemm hadn't touched anything.
“It's about what's going on around here,” Yemm said. “I need a favor.”
“Okay,” Otto reluctantly agreed.
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They took the elevator to the gym, where they sat on the raised platform leading to the showers and the pool. No one was here this afternoon; the Agency was on emergency footing, and everybody was too busy to come down.
“We've put together a special flying unit to find out who's after the boss,” Yemm said. Otto looked straight ahead. “We're beating the bushes for anything, and I mean anything, that'll help.”
“I'm working the problem too,” Otto said.
“We know that you are. We couldn't do without you,” Yemm said placatingly. “It's just that we don't completely understand what you're doing.”
“I'm gathering dataâ”
“On Nikolayev. The one the Russians are looking for. He was an old Baranov man. We've got that much. But then we don't know where you're taking it.” Yemm spread his hands. He was at his wit's end. “Do you think that he's the one gunning for the boss?”
“I don't know,” Otto mumbled. They were skirting what to him was the main issue; the
only
issue. He was scared to death that Yemm would stumble on to it.
“But he does have something to do with it?”
Otto nodded.
“Okay, that makes sense,” Yemm said. “At least we know why you went to France. Did you find him?”
Something flip-flopped inside Otto's gut. There was no way that he could let Yemm and his people get to Nikolayev first. There were too many questions that only the Russian had the answers for. Too much was at stake. “No. He might not even be in France.”
“He's there all right. Or at least the Russians are telling anybody who'll listen that they think he's there.”
“They're not so reliable anymore.”
“Maybe.”
“He could be anywhere by now.”
Yemm seem to consider this for a bit. But then he looked up. “Why'd you go to France, then? I mean if you didn't think that he was there?”
“I wanted to make sure.”
“Are you sure now, Otto?” Yemm asked. “I mean if you went there, and, as you say, you didn't find him, how can you be so sure that he's not there after all?” Yemm's eyes locked on Otto's.
Otto felt cornered. He was on the edge of panic. “It's just a feeling, ya know.”
“No traces of the man? Not so much as a whiff?”
“Nada.”
A startled expression came across Yemm's features. “You're not giving up, are you? Just because you didn't find him the first time out, doesn't mean that you have to quit.”
“I'm not so sureâ”
Yemm shook his head. “We know that whoever is trying to kill Mac is working on the inside. Or with some serious help from someone on the inside. Someone who knows his movements. Knows about his family. So if there is a connection to Nikolayev, then it might be more than a simple case of revenge.”
“How do you figure that?” Otto asked.
“They wouldn't have gone after the family, or you. They want Mac to step down, but it's not revenge. And I don't even think it's so simple as somebody not wanting Mac as DCI. I think there's more to it than that. Some plot, maybe political. I don't know. But if it was revenge, they'd just put a bullet in the back of his head. Or, since it's somebody inside the Company, maybe they have access to his complete file. If that got over to the Senate, they'd axe his nomination at the speed of light.”
“The Senate is giving him a hard time, and he was almost killed in the islands.”
“Hammond and Madden are just going through the motions because they don't have enough material to stop a presidential nomination, and they know it. And Hans Lollick was crude. Mrs. M. spotted it from the git-go because of the second bag.”
“So I'll keep looking,” Otto conceded. He wanted to be anyplace else except here.
“Nikolayev is the key for now,” Yemm said. “We need to talk to him. You need to help us find him.”
Otto nodded. “I'll do my best.”
“I know you will,” Yemm said. “We're all doing our best.”
“Mac is my friend too,” Otto flared. “I don't want any question about that, ya know.”
“No question,” Yemm said.
Otto stood up. “I never had a real family,” he said.
“Is that why you called Mrs. M. to tell her about Elizabeth's accident?”
Yemm's accusatory tone put a knife into Rencke's heart. “I didn't want her to hear it from anyone else,” he shot back defensively. “I knew that Liz was going to be okay.”
“Did you know that she had lost the baby?”
Otto hung his head, suddenly ashamed, and even more frightened than when Yemm had shown up in his office. “Yes.”
“Why'd you have to tell Mrs. M. about that?”
“She deserved the truth.”
“Yes, I guess she did. We all do.”
Yemm watched him leave. It was easy to tell when Otto was hiding something, but impossible to find out what it was. Or even in what direction he was heading. For all they knew Nikolayev and the trip to France could be totally unrelated to each other, and either or both could be smoke screens. False trails.
Back in his office Yemm phoned David Whittaker, who was the boss of Operations. Rencke had not requested authorization for the Aurora flight to France, nor had he checked in with the chief of Paris station when he'd arrived. In fact he'd slipped into France and got back out before anyone there had any idea something was happening.
“What was he doing over there?” Whittaker asked. “Did you get him to tell you?”
“He said he was looking for Anatoli Nikolayev, the one that the SVR has been looking for since August.”
“Did he find him?”
“I'm not sure,” Yemm said. “But I think that we should keep looking for him. Nikolayev just might have some answers.”
“To what?” Whittaker asked, and Yemm had no reply.