dressing than anything else. He wasn’t going to take it, but the truth was, he was getting bored hanging around his parents’ house in rural Pennsylvania; he could do with the change of scenery. And sooner or later he did really have to decide what the hell it was that he was going to do when he grew up.
Howe laughed again. Then, remembering it was still god-awful early, he clamped his mouth shut, grabbed his suit jacket, and went down to see if he might find a place for breakfast.
Chapter
4
HELLO AMANDA
G OING TO M SCW . C AN YOU GET ME OUT ? B EST CHANCE T HURS . P LEASE ! I HAVE INFORMATION .
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Chapter
5
The knock on the door had a familiar rap to it, the sort of hollow sound Death might make if he had a hangover.
“Fisher. I know you’re in there,” said a voice not unlike Death’s own.
“He’s not here,” said the FBI agent.
“We need to talk.”
“So talk, Kowalski. You’re good at it.”
“Face-to-face.”
“This early in the morning? I don’t know if my stomach can take it.”
Fisher refilled his coffee and lit a fresh cigarette: no sense approaching a Defense Intelligence Agency agent unarmed, even one like Kowalski.
“Why the hell aren’t you working up some plans to take over a minor country, like France or Germany?” he asked as he opened the door.
Kowalski stood in the hallway of Fisher’s small apartment building, flanked by a pair of men Fisher didn’t recognize. Their suits were pressed and their ties didn’t clash: The DIA was recruiting a better class of people these days.
“You’re dressed,” said Kowalski.
“Sorry to spoil your thrills,” said Fisher. He took a sip of coffee. “What happened? You took a wrong turn at Gomorrah and got lost?”
“Can we talk inside?”
Fisher stood back and let the three men enter the small studio apartment. When Kowalski was inside he turned to the other two men. “This is what working for the government will get you.”
“If you’re lucky,” said Fisher.
“That coffee or motor oil you’re drinking?” asked Kowalski.
“Both.” Fisher turned to the two men Kowalski had brought with them. “You guys are DIA?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I could tell from your haircuts.”
“Don’t mind Fisher. He comes off like a real jerk, but once you get to know him you’ll see he’s worse than he looks,” said Kowalski. “Have some coffee, boys. Your widows will be well cared for, I promise.”
“Don’t want the full breakfast?” Fisher asked.
“We had breakfast on the way, sir,” said the taller of the two men.
“Kowalski made you pay, right?”
“Uh, yes, sir.”
“Same old Kowalski. You see his tie? Some of those stains are five years old.”
“It’s a design, Fisher. This is an expensive silk tie that my wife gave me for my birthday. I don’t wear clip-ons like you.”
Fisher considered demonstrating the disadvantages of Kowalski’s sartorial preferences but decided the tactical advantage might come in handy if he had to choke him some