Tavenall's voice was crisp with sarcasm but remarkably free of bitterness.
"Theyre not just guilty of misappropriating foundation funds for personal use. Circle of Friends receives millions in government grants, so they're in violation of numerous other federal statutes."
"You have the corroborating evidence?"
He nodded. "It's all in the Neiman Marcus bag." He hesitated, but then decided that this woman's exceptional strength matched the congressman's weakness. She didn't have to be coddled. "Karla Rhymes isn't his only mistress. There's one in New York, one in Washington. Circle of Friends indirectly purchased their residences, too."
"That's in the bag? Then you've completely destroyed him, Mr. Farrel."
"My pleasure."
"He underestimated you. And I regret to admit, when I came to you, my expectations weren't terribly high, either."
In their initial meeting, she acknowledged that she would have preferred a large detective agency or a private security firm with nationwide reach. She suspected, however, that all those operations did business, from time to time, with individual politicians and with the major political parties. She was concerned that the one she chose would have an existing relationship with her husband or with a friend of his in Congress, and that they might see more long-term profit in betraying her than in serving her honestly and well.
"No offense taken," Noah said. "No sane person ought to have confidence in a guy whose business address is also his apartment- and the whole shebang in three rooms above a palm-reader's office."
She had settled in a chair at a nearby writing desk. Opening her small purse, extracting a checkbook, she asked, "So why're you there? And why isn't your operation bigger?"
"Have you ever seen a really good dog act, Ms. Tavenall?"
Tweaked by puzzlement, her classic features had a pixie charm. "Excuse me?"
"When I was a little kid, I saw a fantastic performing-dog act. This golden retriever did all these astonishingly clever tricks. When I saw what potential dogs possess, how smart they can be, I wondered why they're mostly happy to hang out doing dumb dog stuff. It's the silly kind of thing a little kid can get to wondering about. Twenty years later, I saw another dog act, and I realized that in the meantime life had taught me the answer to the mystery. Dogs have talent
but no ambition."
Her puzzlement passed to pained compassion, and Noah knew that she had read the text and subtext of his remark: not more than was true about him, but more than he intended to reveal. "You're no dog, Mr. Farrel."
"Maybe I'm not," he said, although the word maybe issued from him without conscious intention, "but my level of ambition is about I hat of an old basset hound on a hot summer afternoon."
"Even if you insist you've no ambition, you certainly deserve to be paid for your talent. May I see that final bill you mentioned?"
He retrieved the invoice from the Neiman Marcus tote, and with it the airsickness bag still packed full of hundred-dollar bills.
"What's this?" she asked.
"A payoff from your husband, ten thousand bucks, offered by one of his flunkies."
"Payoff for what?"
"Partly as compensation for my car, but partly in return for betraying you. Along with the videotapes, I've included a notarized affidavit describing the man who gave me the money and recounting our conversation in detail."
"I've got more than enough to destroy Jonathan without this. Keep his bribe as a bonus. There's a nice irony in that."
"I wouldn't feel clean with his money in my pocket. I'll be satisfied with payment of that invoice."
Her pen paused on the downswing of the l in Farrel, and when she raised her head to look at Noah, her smile was as subtly expressive as an underlining flourish by a master of restrained