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that dreamlike conversation while the fan blew on my sweaty face and the pebbled glass upper panel<br />

of Chief Curry’s door glowed with the supernatural light of the TV lights outside, two words beat in<br />

my brain.<br />

I’m safe. I’m safe. I’m safe.<br />

The President of the United States had called from Austin to thank me for saving his life, and I was<br />

safe. I could do what I needed to do.<br />

8<br />

Five minutes after concluding my surreal conversation with John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Hosty and Fritz<br />

were hustling me down the back stairs and into the garage where Oswald would have been shot by<br />

Jack Ruby. Then it had been crowded in anticipation of the assassin’s transfer to the county jail. Now<br />

it was so empty our footsteps echoed. My minders drove me to the Adolphus Hotel, and I felt no<br />

surprise when I found myself in the same room I’d occupied when I first came to Dallas. Everything<br />

that goes around comes around, they say, and although I’ve never been able to figure out who the<br />

mysteriously wise sages known as “they” might be, they’re certainly right when it comes to timetravel.<br />

Fritz told me the cops posted in the corridor and below, in the lobby, were strictly for my own<br />

protection, and to keep the press away. (Uh-huh.) Then he shook my hand. Agent Hosty also shook my<br />

hand, and when he did, I felt a folded square of paper pass from his palm to mine. “Get some rest,” he<br />

said. “You’ve earned it.”<br />

When they were gone, I unfolded the tiny square. It was a page from his notebook. He had written<br />

three sentences, probably while I was on the phone with Jack Kennedy.<br />

Your phone is tapped. I will see you at 9 P.M. Burn this & flush the ashes.<br />

I burned the note as Sadie had burned mine, then picked up the phone and unscrewed the<br />

mouthpiece. Inside, clinging to the wires, was a small blue cylinder no bigger than a double-A<br />

battery. I was amused to see that the writing on it was Japanese—it made me think of my old pal<br />

Silent Mike.<br />

I jiggered it loose, put it in my pocket, screwed the mouthpiece back on, and dialed 0. There was a<br />

very long pause at the operator’s end after I said my name. I was about to hang up and try again when<br />

she started crying and babbling her thanks for saving the president. If she could do anything, she said,<br />

if anyone in the hotel could do anything, all I had to do was call, her name was Marie, she would do<br />

anything to thank me.<br />

“You could start by putting through a call to Jodie,” I said, and gave her Deke’s number.<br />

“Of course, Mr. Amberson. God bless you, sir. I’m connecting your call.”<br />

The phone burred twice, then Deke answered. His voice was heavy and laryngeal, as if his bad cold<br />

had gotten worse. “If this is another goddam reporter—”<br />

“It’s not, Deke. It’s me. George.” I paused. “Jake.”<br />

“Oh, Jake,” he said mournfully, and then he started to cry. I waited, holding the phone so tightly it<br />

hurt my hand. My temples throbbed. The day was dying, but the light coming in through the<br />

windows was still too bright. In the distance, I heard a rumble of thunder. Finally he said, “Are you<br />

all right?”<br />

“Yes. But Sadie—”<br />

“I know. It’s on the news. I heard while I was on my way to Fort Worth.”<br />

So the woman with the baby carriage and the tow truck driver from the Esso station had done as I’d<br />

hoped they would. Thank God for that. Not that it seemed very important as I sat listening to this

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