basement door on the southwest side.
I’d caught a late morning flight to DC. After I’d landed, I had three hours before I had to be at the court building. That was just enough time to do some quick research.
Later, standing on the plaza in front of the court, I made some phone calls. When I’d gotten what I needed, I called Dorothy.
“Any progress?” I asked
“So far it’s a dead end.” I’d asked her to dig up whatever she could on an escort named Heidi L’Amour, who was employed by LilySchuyler .com, which marketed itself as a high-end escort service in DC.
“According to the Lily Schuyler website it says she’s on vacation. So there’s no way to set up a date with her. That leaves us with just a name, and, you know, there’s a teensy-weensy chance that this name might be fake.”
“You think?” I smiled. “What about trying a Google image search for her picture, see if it comes up on any other adult websites?”
“Already tried it. Nothing.”
“Means she probably doesn’t work for other escort services. The odds are she’d use the same photos if she did.”
“You could call the phone number and offer a bonus if she’ll come back from vacation. You know, you like her look and she’s the only one you’ll settle for.”
“Maybe. But I’m guessing she’s gone into hiding. She knows all hell’s about to break loose, as soon as that article’s published.”
“I’ll keep at it,” Dorothy said. “Maybe I’ll have a brainstorm.”
Then I joined a long line of tourists and passed through a metaldetector, up a short flight of stairs to a large open hallway where clots of tourists were milling around. A few others strode by with a sense of purpose. Lawyers, I assumed. They were too well dressed to be reporters.
I took the elevator up one flight, as Gideon had instructed me, and when I got out I looked around for the marshal’s office, where I was supposed to check in. A large beefy uniformed cop with a blond crewcut and ruddy cheeks approached, a metal clipboard in hand.
“Help you, sir?”
“The marshal’s office?”
“Do you have a visitor’s pass?”
“I have an appointment.”
“With?”
“Justice Claflin.”
He nodded, looked at his clipboard. “Name?”
“Nicholas Heller.”
“May I see some form of government-issued ID?”
I showed him my driver’s license.
“Right this way, sir.”
I followed him to a bank of coin-operated lockers outside a cloakroom. “You need to check any laptop computer, cell phone, PDA, iPad, or any other electronic device. If you prefer, you can use one of these lockers.”
I nodded, fished around in my pockets for a quarter, but I didn’t have any. He slid one into the slot, pulled out the key, and handed it to me. I thanked him.
“Good idea to check your stuff in a locker,” the cop said. “Can’t trust anyone around here.”
6
J eremiah Claflin, the chief justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, had a bland, almost generic look about him: short graying brown hair, small nose, fine features. You’d call him nice-looking but not handsome. There was nothing interesting about his face. As soon as he was out of your sight, you’d forget what he looked like. He had deep lines on his forehead and crow’s feet around his eyes. He looked like he spent a lot of time in the sun, probably sailing.
He greeted me politely but gave off a vibe that he had a lot more important things to do. “Jerry Claflin,” he murmured as we shook hands in his paneled waiting area. He was in shirtsleeves and a tie, no jacket.
He gestured me to a couple of wingback chairs on either side of a large fireplace. His office was lined with old law books and had oriental rugs on the floor and a killer view of the Capitol dome.
“So, Mr. Heller,” he said, “you’re—what, a private eye?” He said the words with a moue of disgust, the way you might say “carbuncle” or “abscess.”
“If you want.”
“Then what do you call