This, Kerry acknowledged, was the beginning that he had hoped for. But its end was as unpredictable as its impact on Lara and her sister. Silent, he rested his hand on Lara's shoulder.
* * *
Shortly after seven p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, the SSA countered with a press conference of its own. Standing behind a podium, Dane's saturnine mien was solemn and stern. He spoke with a slow and measured indignation which was more impressive than Frank Fasano could have hoped—a reminder of the magnetism Dane exerted on his supporters.
Drinking bourbon with Macdonald Gage, Fasano turned up the volume on his remote.
Sitting beside Fasano, Gage laughed softly. It struck Fasano that anything Dane would say or do to torment Kerry Kilcannon was satisfying to Mac Gage. But Fasano himself was not so sanguine.
"A little florid," Fasano observed. "This isn't the Fourth of July."
Pausing, Dane jabbed his finger at the camera. M
"He's on the edge," Fasano remarked. "Let's hope he doesn't say that Kilcannon has blood on his hands."
"Doesn't he?" Gage said with quiet bitterness. "He certainly has mine."
He was stuck, Fasano realized, and so was Kerry Kilcannon. What Kilcannon had set in motion—a race between a lawsuit and the Senate; a clash between Kilcannon and the SSA—might spin out of control, with consequences worse than anyone could imagine. Only Macdonald Gage, turning to Fasano, could feel happy.
"Ready, Frank?" he asked.
SEVENTEEN
The following morning, as the result of random selection by computer, Sarah and Lenihan found themselves in the chambers of United States District Judge Gardner W. Bond.