advised against it in the strongest terms. He says Iâm not equipped to conduct my own investigation, and God knows thatâs true. He wonât give me assistance of any kind if I do go. Says the department wonât take any responsibility.â
âSo what are you going to do?â he asked, watching him closely.
Cat leaned back and sighed. âIâm going to go back down there,â he said. âItâs all thatâs left, and I could never live with myself if I didnât do everything I possibly could to find Jinx.â
The man seemed to search Catâs face for doubt. âThatâs your final decision, then? You wonât be dissuaded?â
âNo. Iâm going. Iâve got some money; maybe Iâll go to the newspapers and offer a reward.â
A twitch of alarm seemed to cross the assistantâs face. He stood up. âWill you excuse me for a few minutes? Donât leave; Iâll be right back.â He left the room.
Cat walked to the window and looked out toward the Capitol dome. There really was nothing else left to do. He dreaded the thought, but he would have to go back to Colombia, to Santa Marta, and make a start. Somebody, somewhere in that country knew something. Maybe he could buy the information. The money was all he had left. They could have it all if theyâd give Jinx back to him. He watched people enter and leave the Capitol, his mind growing numb with the fear of what was ahead of him.
Ten minutes passed. The assistant walked back into the room. âSit down, will you?â he said.
Cat dragged himself back to the table.
The younger man placed his hands on the table in front of him and opened his fingers, as if to spread out some invisible map. âLet me be sure you understand this,â he said. âOur conversation ended when I left the room a few minutes ago. I expressed my sympathies, said there was nothing further the senator could do, we shook hands, and you left.â
Cat snapped back to the present, puzzled.
âThis part of our conversation never happened,â the assistant said, seriously, âand no oneânot the senator, or anyone elseâis ever to be told about it, do you understand me?â
âYes,â Cat said, his pulse accelerating. âOf course.â
âYouâre staying at the Watergate?â
âRight, though Iâd planned to check out before lunch and go back to Atlanta.â
âStay another night. Sometime tomorrow, probably in the afternoon, youâll get a phone call from someone who will introduce himself as Jim. Just Jim.â
âJim. Tomorrow afternoon.â
âMaybe sooner. Donât leave your room until you hear from him. Donât expect too much, but he will probably have some advice for you. I canât promise youâll like the advice, but this is the only other thing I can think of to help you.â
Cat stood up and offered his hand. âThank you for believing me. Nobody else has.â
The man took his hand. âMr. Catledge, I only wish I could do more,â he said.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
Cat was asleep when the phone rang. He hadnât slept much the night before, and late in the afternoon he had dozed off in front of the TV. It took him two rings to orient himself. He glanced at the bedside clock as he picked up the phone. Just after six.
âHello?â
âMy name is Jim. I believe we have a mutual friend.â
âYes, we do.â
âCome to 528 now.â
âWhere?â
âRoom 528, here, in the hotel.â The man hung up.
Cat threw some water on his face and slipped on a jacket. He rode the elevator down to the fifth floor, found the room, and knocked. The man who opened the door was in his late fifties, nearly completely gray-haired, and was dressed in a three-piece suit, button-down collar, and a paisley tie. He didnât look very fresh. He was wearing a
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