“Damn, you’re good,” the operator said.
“Yes, I am,” Truitt said quietly, then disconnected.
Ho returned with two wrapped stacks of dollars. Each strip read $10,000. Removing fifteen of the hundred-dollar bills from one of the stacks, he handed Truitt the rest. Sliding the stacks of money into his leather clutch, he smiled at Ho.
“Do you have a sheet of paper?”
“What for?” Ho asked.
“I need to write you a receipt,” Truitt said.
HANLEY reached for the telephone and dialed Cabrillo. “Dick Truitt just got us three more men inside the compound, acting as security guards.”
“Excellent,” Cabrillo said, “and there was no problem with the appraisal?”
“He handled it like the pro he is,” Hanley said.
“Have we got security guard uniforms in the Magic Shop?”
“Absolutely,” Hanley said. “I’ll just call Nixon and have him blast off a jazzy patch on the embroidery machine.”
“Get on it,” Cabrillo said quickly, “so we can extract Truitt.”
“Truitt’s been invited to the party,” Hanley said, “unless you want me to order him out.”
“Have him wait until the fake security team arrives,” Cabrillo said. “That way he can verify their identity to Ho. Then have him stick around—I have another job for him.”
“Done,” Hanley said.
Cabrillo disconnected and Hanley dialed the Magic Shop.
“Kevin,” he said, “I need three security guard uniforms with the appropriate badges.”
“Name?”
Hanley thought for a moment before answering.
“Make them Redman Security Services.”
“As in Redford and Newman?”
“You got it,” Hanley said, “The Sting.”
“It will take me twenty minutes or so to make the badges,” Nixon said, “but send the three operatives down right away. I can fit the uniforms while the patches are forming.”
“They will be there shortly,” Hanley said in closing.
Hanley glanced at a clipboard in the control room. Most of the Corporation stockholders were already assigned to functions of operations, extraction or backup. His remaining choices were an assistant chef, Rick Barrett; a propulsion engineer named Sam Pryor; and a middle-aged man who worked in the armory, Gunther Reinholt. None had ever worked on the operations end. But beggars can’t be choosers.
“Get me Reinholt, Pryor and Barrett,” Hanley said to one of the communications operators, “and have them meet me in the Magic Shop.”
The operator began paging the men.
“DON’T worry,” Murphy said to Halpert, “it just smells like marijuana.”
Murphy was waving what looked like an incense stick near the members of the band when Cabrillo walked into the conference room.
“Smells like a Grateful Dead concert in here,” he said.