THE LIGHTS WERE BLAZING in Molinari's office - the only lights on in the Hall at six A.M.
He was on the phone when I went in. His face brightened into what I took as a worn smile, pleased but exhausted. No one was getting any sleep these days.
"I was just trying to assure the chief of staff," he said, signing off the phone and smiling, "that we weren't the secu-rity equal out here of, say, Chechnya - with larger bridges. Tell me you have something, anything."
I pushed across the yellowed, folded article I had found in Jill's study.
Molinari picked up the article, PROSECUTOR NAMED IN BNA BOMBING CASE. He scanned it.
"What was it you called them, Joe? Radicals from the six-ties who you said are still out there, who never surfaced?"
"White rabbits?" he said.
"What if it wasn't political? What if there was something else motivating them? Or maybe it's partly political, but there's something else?"
"Motivating what, Lindsay?"
I pushed across the last article, the Sunday magazine sup-plement, folded to the part about Billy Danko's code name, circled in bright red: August Spies.
"To get back in the game. To commit these murders. Maybe to get some kind of revenge. I don't know everything yet. There'............