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			 Part 18: Bloody 
			Dichondra 
			Dean was watching it all from the car. The two external cameramen 
			had caught Oral Jerry Swagger and Zak entering the restaurant. OJS 
			had been carrying the briefcase with the money. The internal 
			cameraman would film and record part of their dinner conversation. 
			Then . . .
 
			 Here they came. Zak was carrying the briefcase now. They were 
			shaking hands. Three cameras going. The man inside had followed them 
			out and was making no effort to be non-obtrusive. He caught OJS with 
			his mouth dropping open as he looking directly into the camera lens.
 
 Zak came over and got into the car, two cameramen following him, 
			filming. One of them got into the back seat. Zak opened the 
			briefcase and the cameraman leaned forward, filming the money.
 
				
				"Where to?" Dean asked.
 "Chinatown," Zak said. "I deliver the money and we—they—generate the 
			wire transfer records.
 
 "I sure hope you know what you are doing," Dean muttered, as he 
			started the car.
 
 "Relax," Zak said. "You’ll get paid shortly. Cash."
 
			He tapped the 
			briefcase. Hoova had told him he could keep ten percent. That would 
			be enough to pay Dean, and a few bucks left over for himself. Zak 
			was in a good mood. All the stuff for Hoova had been voluntary—a 
			freeby. Now something was coming back.   
			True, Larry Meier hadn’t mentioned the part about the ten percent. 
			But that was Hoova’s problem. Ten percent. A tithe. Zak snickered to 
			himself. A tithe of a tithe. Ten percent from money OJS had 
			collected as tithes and offerings from his followers.
 Hoova had told him to leave the tapes under some Mason jars in a 
			paper bag marked "Sally Rand" in the same place as previously.
 
				
				"Chinatown!" Zak yelled. "Chinatown here we come!" 
				 
			Dean only glanced 
			at him and drove in silence.
 
 
			Craig hit the button in the Hilton elevator. The woman who had 
			called in to headquarters wasn’t there anymore. Vacation or 
			something. But the suspect, Hermes T. Megistus, was still in his 
			room. He hadn’t stirred for twenty-four hours, apparently.
 Craig just wanted to pass by. Check the location of the room number. 
			Any excuse to deal with the endless boredom of waiting for the 
			suspect to make a move. What was he doing in there anyway? Watching 
			TV? Shacked up with some whore?
 
 Craig stepped out into the 10th floor and checked the location of 
			the room number. Down this way. Here it is . . .
 
 The door was slightly ajar. Shit! Craig thought. It was three a.m. 
			in the morning. It couldn’t be the maid. So—was the suspect there or 
			not? Obviously he had come in or out—but no one had bothered to 
			close the door. Maybe the suspect had just gone down the hall for 
			some ice. Craig looked behind him. No one. But in that case there 
			ought to be a light in the room. The room was dark.
 
 Craig hesitated. Then he knocked on the doorjamb.
 
				
				"Mr. Megistus? Hotel security. We noticed your door was open." 
			He waited. Nothing. He listened. No sound.
 Craig pushed open the door and slipped inside, fumbling for the 
			light switch. He hadn’t quite found it yet when he felt the sharp 
			point. A sting in his solar plexus.
 
 He was still fumbling with the blade in his belly when he blacked 
			out.
 
 
 
			Edward Lodge was watching a basketball game to pass the time when 
			the STU-III rang on his desk. It was a new product that gave an 
			encrypted communication session.
 
			Lodge didn’t really trust it. But at least he knew who was calling 
			when it rang.
 
				
				"Yes," he answered, never taking his eyes off the TV screen.
 "Um, hmm," he said several times as he listened. Then:
 
 "Sanitize the trail. We don’t want it leading back here."
 
 He hung up the phone and yelled at the TV: "Shoot! Shoot!"
 
 
			Oral Jerry Swagger had gotten up early that morning. He was dressed 
			in his morning outfit—suspenders, red shirt, bow tie—when he went 
			out for the paper on the front lawn. Usually the housekeeper 
			delivered it at 7 a.m. along with breakfast. But it was 6:30 and OJ 
			was impatient for the news.
 
			The paper was half-way down the stone path to the front gate. OJ 
			opened up the Los Angeles Times, and stood there, reading and 
			shaking his jowls at the sin and corruption of the world.
 
 Only gradually did he become aware of some blemish on his spacious 
			front lawn. The lawn had long ago been replanted with dichondra, 
			which gave a uniform green, in place of the patchy and fickle grass.
 
 It was a human figure. OJ walked cautiously across the dichondra for 
			a closer look. The man was laying face down.
 
 He tapped on the man’s shoulder.
 
 "Get up!" he commanded sternly.
 
 The man—still drunk—didn’t move.
 
 OJ grabbed his shoulder, and with some effort flipped him over. It 
			was Craig. His employee—the one looking into the military Satanists. 
			The one taking care of that Jack Parsons matter.
 
 Craig’s throat was slit open with a large gash. His intestines were 
			partly hanging out through his shirt.
 
 OJ felt a little sick. He went back into the house and called his 
			attorney, Randy Stader.
 
 Stader will know how to handle this, OJ reflected. He felt quite 
			numb and calm.
 
 Will the Parsons’ horror never cease? he wondered.
 
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