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files.
VAAPCON was the code name for the joint FBI ATF investigation into
abortion-related violence, the Violence Against Abortion Providers Conspiracy.
The ATF and the FBI have a poor working relationship; for a long time the FBI
had resisted involving itself in investigating attacks on doctors and abortion
clinics, arguing that it didn't fall within their guidelines, which meant that
the investigation of allegations of a conspiracy of violence was left in the
hands of the ATF. That situation changed with the formation of VAAPCON and the
enactment of new legislation empowering the FBI and the Justice Department to
act against abortion-related violence. Yet tensions between the FBI and the
ATF contributed to the comparative failure of VAAPCON; no evidence of a
conspiracy was found, and agents took to dubbing the investigation CRAPCON,
despite signs of growing links between right-wing militias and antiabortion
extremists.
 Did they ever find his killer? I asked.
 Not yet.
 Like they haven't found his wife's killer.
 What do you know about it?
 I know she had spiders in her mouth when she was found.
 And our friend Pudd is a spider lover.
 The same Pudd whose head is circled in this photograph.
 Do you know who he's working for?
 Himself, I'd guess. It wasn't quite a lie. Pudd didn't answer to Carter
Paragon, and the Fellowship as the public knew it seemed too inconsequential
to require his services.
Boone didn't speak for a time. His last words to me before he hung up were,
 We'll be in touch.
I didn't doubt it.
I sat in front of the computer screen, flicking between both images. I picked
out a younger Alison Beck holding her dead husband, her face contorted with
grief and his blood on her shirt, skirt, and hands. Then I looked into the
small, hooded eyes of Mr. Pudd as he slipped away through the crowd. I
wondered if he had fired the shots or merely orchestrated the killing. Either
way, he was involved, and another small piece of the puzzle slipped into
place. Somehow, Mercier had found Epstein and Beck, individuals who, for their
own reasons, were prepared to assist him in his moves against the Fellowship.
But why was Mercier so concerned about the Fellowship? Was it simply another
example of his liberalism, or were there other, deeper motives?
As it turned out, a possible answer to the question pulled up outside my door
in a black Mercedes convertible thirty minutes later. Deborah Mercier, wearing
a long black coat, stepped alone and unaided from the driver's seat. Despite
the encroaching darkness she wore shades. Her hair didn't move in the breeze.
It could have been hair spray, or an act of will. It could also have been that
even the wind wasn't going to screw around with Jack Mercier's wife. I
wondered what excuse she had come up with for leaving her guests back at the
house; maybe she told them they needed milk.
I opened the door as she reached the first step to the porch.  Take a wrong
turn, Mrs. Mercier? I asked.
 One of us has, she replied,  and I think it might be you.
 I never catch a break. I see those two roads diverging in a forest, and damn
if I don't take the one that ends at a cliff edge.
We stood about ten paces apart, eyeing each other up like a pair of mismatched
gunfighters. Deborah Mercier couldn't have looked more like a WASP if her coat
had been striped with yellow and her eyes had been on the sides of her head.
She removed her glasses and those pale blue eyes held all the warmth of the
Arctic Sea, the pupils tiny and receding like the bodies of drowned sailors
sinking into their depths.
 Would you like to come inside? I asked. I turned away and heard her
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footsteps on the wood behind me. They stopped before they reached the door. I
looked back at her and saw her nostrils twitch a little in mild disgust as her
gaze passed over the interior of my home.
 If you're waiting for me to carry you over the threshold, I ought to tell you
that I have a bad back and we might not make it.
Her nostrils twitched a little more and her eyes froze over entirely, trapping
the pupils at the size of pinpoints. Then, carefully, the heels of her black
pumps making a sound like the clicking of bones on the floorboards, she
followed me into the house.
I led her to the kitchen and offered her coffee. She declined, but I went
ahead and started making a pot anyway. I watched as she opened her coat and
sat down, revealing a tight black formal dress that ended above her knees. Her
legs, like the rest of her, looked good for forty-something. In fact, she
would have looked good for forty, and not bad for thirty-five. She removed a
pack of cigarettes from her bag and lit up with a gold Dunhill lighter. She
took a long drag on the cigarette, then blew a thin stream of smoke through
her pursed lips.
 Feel free to smoke, I said.
 If I was concerned, I'd have asked.
 If I was concerned, I'd make you put it out.
Her head turned a little to one side, and she smiled emptily.  So you think
you can make people do what you want?
 I believe we may have that in common, Mrs. Mercier.
 It's probably the only thing we do have in common, Mr. Parker.
 Here's hoping, I replied. I brought the coffee pot to the table and poured
myself a cup.
 On second thought, I will have some of that coffee, she said.
 Smells good, doesn't it?
 Or maybe everything else in here smells so bad. You live alone?
 Just me and my ego.
 I'm sure the two of you are very happy together.
 Ecstatic. I found a second cup and filled it, then took a carton of skimmed
milk from the refrigerator and placed it between us.
 I'm sorry, I don't have any sugar.
She reached into her bag again and produced some Sweet'n Low. She added it to
the coffee and stirred it before tasting it carefully. Since she didn't fall
to the floor clutching her throat and gasping, I figured it was probably okay.
She didn't say anything for a time; she just sipped and smoked.
 Your house needs a woman's touch, she said at last, as she took another drag
on her cigarette. She held in the smoke until I thought it would come out her
ears.
 Why, you do cleaning as well?
She didn't reply. Instead, she finally released the smoke and dropped the
remains of the cigarette into the coffee. Classy. She didn't learn that at the
Madeira School for Girls.
 I hear you were married once.
 That's right, I was.
 And you had a child, a little girl.
 Jennifer, I replied, keeping my tone as neutral as possible.
 And now your wife and child are dead. Somebody killed them, and then you
killed him.
I didn't respond. My silence didn't appear to concern Mrs. Mercier.
 That must have been very hard for you, she continued. There was no trace of
sympathy in her voice but her eyes were briefly thawed by what might have been
amusement.
 Yes, it was.
 But you see, Mr. Parker, I still have a marriage, and I still have a child. I
don't like the fact that my husband has hired you, against my wishes, to
investigate the death of a girl who has nothing to do with our lives. It is
disturbing my relationship with my husband, and it is interfering with the
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preparations for my daughter's wedding. I want it to stop.
I noticed the emphasis on  my daughter but didn't comment. For the final
time, she took something from her handbag. It was a check.
 I know how much my husband paid you, she said, passing the folded check
across the table toward me, her red nails like eagle's talons dipped in a [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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