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expecting someone with a little more sophistication. Her husband had been a world-class traveler, a guy who’d whisked through London and Berlin and Amsterdam. A man like that should have a wife who was sleek and elegant. Instead, in had walked this skinny, awkward creature who was almost, but not quite, pretty. Her face had been too full of angles: high, sharp cheeks, a narrow nose, a square forehead softened only by a gentle widow’s peak. Her long hair had been a rich, coppery color; even tied back in a ponytail, it had been beautiful. Her horn-rimmed glasses had somehow amused him. They had framed two wide, amber-colored eyes—her best feature. With no makeup and with that pale, delicate complexion, she’d seemed much younger than the thirty or so years she must be.

      No, she was not quite pretty. But throughout the interview Nick had found himself staring at her face and wondering about her marriage. And about her.

      Tim rose. “Hey, all this grief is making me hungry. Let’s hit the cafeteria.”

      “Not the cafeteria. Let’s go out. I’ve been sitting in this building all morning, and I’m going stir-crazy.” Nick pulled on his jacket, and together they walked out past Angie’s desk and headed for the stairs.

      Outside a brisk spring wind blew in their faces as they strode down the sidewalk. The buds were just starting to swell on the cherry trees. In another week the whole city would be awash in pink and white flowers. It was Nick’s first D.C. springtime in eight years—he’d forgotten how pretty it could be, walking through the trees. He thrust his hands in his pockets and hunched over a little as the wind bit through his wool jacket.

      Vaguely he wondered whether Sarah Fontaine had reached her apartment yet, whether she was lying across her bed now, sobbing her eyes out. He knew he’d been rough on her. It had bothered him, hounding her like that, but someone had to break through all of her denial. She had to understand the facts. It was the only way she’d ever really recover from her grief.

      “Where we going, Nick?” asked Tim.

      “How about Mary Jo’s?”

      “That salad place? What, are you on a diet or something?”

      “No, but it’s quiet there. I’m not into loud conversation right now.”

      After two more blocks, they turned into the restaurant and sat down at a table. Fifteen minutes later the waitress brought their salads, which were cloaked in homemade mayonnaise and tarragon. Tim looked at the lettuce and arugula on his fork and sighed.

      “This is rabbit food. Give me a greasy burger any day.” He stuffed a forkful of the salad into his mouth and looked across the table at Nick. “So what’s bugging you? The new post got you down already?”

      “It’s a damned slap in the face, that’s what it is,” said Nick. He drained his cup of coffee and motioned to the waitress for another. “To go straight from being number two man in London to shuffling papers in D.C.”

      “So why didn’t you resign?”

      “I just might. Since that fiasco in London, my career’s been shot. And now I’ve got to put up with this bastard, Ambrose.”

      “Is he still out of town?”

      “One more week. Till then I can do the job my way. Without all that bureaucratic nonsense. Hell, if he rewrites any more of my reports to make ’em ‘conform to administration policy,’ I’m going to puke.” Nick put his fork down and scowled at the salad. The mention of his boss had just ruined his appetite. From the very first day, Nick and Ambrose had rubbed each other the wrong way. Charles Ambrose reveled in the bureaucratic merry-go-round, whereas Nick always insisted on getting straight to the point, however unpleasant. The clash had been inevitable.

      “Your trouble, Nick, is that even though you’re an egghead, you don’t talk gobbledegook like all the others. You’ve got ’em all confused. They don’t like guys they can understand. Plus you’re a bleeding-heart liberal.”

      “So? You are, too.”

      “But I’m also a certified nerd. They make allowances for nerds. If they don’t, I shut down their computers.”

      Nick laughed, suddenly glad for the company of his old buddy, Tim. Four years of being college roommates had left strong bonds. Even after eight years abroad, Nick had come home to find Tim Greenstein just as bushy and likable as ever.

      He picked up his fork and finished off the salad.

      “So what’re you going to do with this Fontaine case?” Tim asked over dessert.

      “I’m going to do my job and look into it.”

      “You gonna tell Ambrose? He’ll want to hear about it. So will the guys at the Company, if they don’t already know.”

      “Let ’em find out on their own. It’s my case.”

      “It sounds like espionage to me, Nick. That’s not exactly a consular affair.”

      But Nick didn’t like the idea of turning Sarah Fontaine over to some CIA case officer. She seemed too fragile, too vulnerable. “It’s my case,” he repeated.

      Tim grinned. “Ah, the widow Fontaine. Could it be she’s your type? Though I can’t quite see the attraction. What I really can’t see is how she hooked that husband. Blond Adonis, wasn’t he? Not the kind of guy to go for a woman in horn-rimmed glasses. My deduction is that he married her for reasons other than the usual.”

      “The usual? You mean love?”

      “Naw. Sex.”

      “Just what the hell are you getting at?”

      “Hmm. Touchy. You liked her, didn’t you?”

      “No comment.”

      “Seems to me the old love life’s been pretty barren since your divorce.”

      Nick set his coffee cup down with a clatter. “What’s with all these questions?”

      “Just trying to see where your head’s at, Nick. Haven’t you heard? It’s the latest thing. Men opening up to each other.”

      Nick sighed. “Don’t tell me. You’ve been to another one of those sensitivity training sessions.”

      “Yeah. Great place to meet women. You should try it.”

      “No, thanks. The last thing I need is to join some big cry-in with a bunch of neurotic females.”

      Tim gave his friend a sympathetic look. “Let me tell you, Nick. You need to do something. You can’t just sit around and be celibate the rest of your life.”

      “Why not?”

      Tim laughed. “Because, dammit, we both know you’re not the priestly type!”

      Tim was right. In the four years since his split-up with Lauren, Nick had avoided any close relationships with women, sexual or otherwise, and it was starting to show. He was irritable. He’d thrown himself into salvaging what was left of his career, but work, he’d discovered, was a poor substitute for what he really wanted—a warm, soft body to hold; laughter in the night; thoughts shared in bed. To avoid being hurt again, he’d learned to live without these things. It was the only way to stay sane. But those old male instincts didn’t die easily. No, Nick was not the priestly type.

      “Heard from Lauren lately?” asked Tim.

      Nick looked up with a scowl. “Yeah. Last month. Told me she misses me. What she really misses, I think, is the embassy life.”

      “So she called you. Sounds promising. Sounds like a reconciliation in the works.”

      “Yeah? It sounded more to me like her latest romance wasn’t going so well.”

      “Either way, it’s obvious she regrets the divorce. Did you follow up on it?”

      Nick pushed away what remained of his chocolate mousse cake. “No.”

      “Why


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