Hollander.”
Anne threw her head back, the way she did when signaling overdrive in disaster-handling mode. “Tell me that’s not true.”
“Unfortunately, it is.”
Anne began to pace in front of the oil painting near Levering’s office door, the one of Gordon McRae as Curly in Oklahoma! It had been the gift of a wealthy donor.
“So you are telling me you were with Justice Hollander last night, and that she is about to die this morning? Have you seen the Post Web site yet?”
“No.”
“Well, it’s all over the place. And the big question is what was she doing alone, in an evening gown, in the middle of a Washington, D.C., park? And you’re saying there are only two people with the answer?”
“Three.”
Anne thought a moment. “You had the limo?”
“Sylvan won’t talk.”
“What about her friends? Did she tell anybody she was going out with you?”
“I don’t know.”
“Well, we better find out. Anybody see you pick her up?”
Levering shrugged.
Anne stopped for a moment and fished a cigarette from her pocket. She put it in her mouth and “smoked” it, though it remained unlit. Levering had seen her do this many times before. It was the ritual of a supreme spin doctor.
“All right,” Anne said. “Detail me.”
“I was going to take her to dinner,” Levering said, longing for a drink but deciding he better not until this meeting was over. “Then I thought we’d ride around a little. Have a couple of drinks.”
“Does she drink?”
“Not much.”
“Did she have anything to drink?”
“Some champagne. Why?”
“That may come in handy. Keep going.”
Levering rubbed his temples. With his eyes closed he continued. “So I’d already had a snort before picking her up. Believe it or not, I was a little nervous.”
“Why shouldn’t I believe it?” Anne said. There was a challenging tone in her voice that Levering ignored.
“So I drank a little more with her, we talked. She was uptight. And, I don’t know, I got forward with her, I guess.”
Anne dragged deeply on the unlit cigarette, then put her hand on her hip. “Keep going.”
“Do I have to?”
“You want me to help you?”
“Fine. I kissed her on the neck.”
Anne Deveraux threw her head back again, looked at the ceiling, and did a complete turn in the middle of the office. When she finished, she said, “You’re telling me you tried to score with a justice of the United States Supreme Court? On the first date? Before you even got out of the car?”
Smiling sheepishly, Levering said, “That’s about it.”
“What were you thinking?” Anne said.
“You know me.”
“I can understand it with the others. Interns, yes. Socialite widows, fine. But Millicent Mannings Hollander?”
“I don’t know why I wanted her.” He paused, pondering his reasons. He had not grown up with very much attention from girls. He had always felt shy and self-conscious — all the way through college. Even when he got married he considered it a lucky blunder. But when he won his first public office in the state legislature, he found that power held a certain attracting force. Women began to gravitate toward him. He was always careful about it. He’d never had a scandal during his married years. Even after the divorce he kept things as discrete as possible. He’d had his pick of women. So why Millie?
“Let me answer for you,” Anne said. “She’s Jaws.”
Levering tilted his head at her.
“You know,” Anne said. “Jaws. The shark. The big one. She was the big one. You wanted to land her.”
Levering, with reluctance, nodded. “Maybe.”
“Millicent Mannings Hollander is the most famous virgin in the country. Everybody knows she never got married and doesn’t date. But you thought you’d be Mr. Excitement for the great score, didn’t you?”
“Fine. Guilty.”
“Good. Confession’s good for the soul.”
“I don’t believe in souls.”
“Then it’s good for your digestion, okay? Now let me do