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Point Blank f-10

Page 31

by Catherine Coulter


  I’ve got to go now. Elias just came in, said the Rebels are getting closer. I’m needed. Kiss our daughter. Your loving husband, Charles

  Ruth said in a whisper, “He was a Union soldier, an officer.”

  “And he never got home to his wife and daughter,” Dix said. “He died.”

  “All of them died, but they didn’t give up the gold,” Ruth said. “I wonder how the map ended up in an old book in that attic in Manassas? Why did Charles leave his satchel here? It obviously meant a lot to him.”

  “Maybe,” Dix said, “he was killed right here, outside, near Lone Tree Hill.”

  He pulled her against him. “Well done, Ruth. You did it. Mr. Weaver’s going to be a very happy man. You’re pretty smart, you know that?”

  She kissed him in reply.

  NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE BRIEFING THE WHITE HOUSE TUESDAY MORNING

  THE DIRECTOR OF National Intelligence jiggled the ice in his glass, a sure sign he was pleased about something. “With respect to item six, Mr. President, the FBI domestic wireless telecommunications operation has been decommissioned with no disruption of emergency nine-one-one service. The single FBI agent injured by gunfire will fully recover.”

  The president sat back in his leather chair and steepled his fingers. “And operational security remains intact? We can expect no blowback on any possible civil liberties questions?”

  “That is correct, Mr. President. And we believe the swift conclusion has indeed given the message we discussed.”

  “John, I’d like you to write a letter under your own signature commending Special Agent Dillon Savich for his briefing and the successful execution of his plan.”

  “Of course, Mr. President,” the director said. “Now to item seven, the request for new countermeasures on the Afghan border.”

  EPILOGUE

  THAT SUMMER

  RUTH WARNECKI KNOCKED on the front door of a small tract house in a subdivision of Midlothian, Virginia. Linda Massey answered the door with two boys, both under the age of four, clinging to her jeans, and a baby nestled in the crook of her arm. She gave Ruth a harried smile. “I hope you’re not selling encyclopedias,” she said. “This crew is still a little young and no one else has the time.”

  “No, I’m not selling anything,” Ruth said. “I do have a story to tell you about your family that goes back to the Civil War. I think it might interest you.”

  Linda Massey, the closest surviving descendant of Lieutenant Charles Breacken of the Union Army, was five hundred thousand dollars richer.

  Ruth left an hour later, feeling so fine she clicked up her heels. She waved to Dix, who was leaning against his Range Rover, waiting for her. She gave him a huge grin and a thumbs-up.

  FB2 document info

  Document ID: 671dd731-8214-43f3-a8e3-d9f42135ae99

  Document version: 1

  Document creation date: 20.5.2012

  Created using: calibre 0.8.51, FictionBook Editor Release 2.6.6 software

  Document authors :

  Catherine Coulter

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