The Big Bad Wolf

CHAPTER 94

DONT MAKE ANY MISTAKES. It was a hell of an exit line, I had to give him that. Kind of

funny, in a sadistic, hard-ass way. I was starting to like Ron Burns again. Couldn’t help

myself. But did I trust him?

Somehow, I got the feeling that Burns wasn’t that worried about the mistakes, though. He

wanted to catch the kidnappers, especially Pasha Sorokin even if we didn’t know yet who

he really was or where he lived. According to Burns’s orders, all I had to do was figure out a

way to break Lawrence Lipton down, do it in a hurry, and not embarrass the Bureau in any

way.

I met with Roger Nielsen on possible strategies we had already resumed surveillance on

Lipton. It was decided that it was time to put real pressure on him, to let him know we were in

Dallas and that we knew about him. After Burns’s phone call, I wasn’t surprised that I had

been chosen to confront Lipton.

We decided that I would go and see Lipton at his office in the Lakeside Square Building at

the intersection of the LBJ Freeway and the North Central Expressway. The building was

twenty stories high, with lots of reflective glass. It was practically blinding as I looked

skyward in the Texas sunshine. I walked inside at a little past ten in the morning. Lipton’s

office suite was on the nineteenth floor. When I got off the elevator, a recorded voice said,

“Howdy.”



I stepped into a large reception area with half an acre of wine-colored carpeting, beige walls,

and dark brown leather sofas and chairs everywhere. There were framed, signed photos of

Roger Staubach, Nolan Ryan, and Tom Landry on the walls.

I was told to wait in reception by a very proper-looking young woman in a dark blue pantsuit.

She sat self-importantly behind a sleek walnut desk under recessed lighting. She looked all of

twenty-two or twenty-three years old, fresh out of charm school. She acted and spoke as

properly as she looked.

“I’ll wait, but let Mr. Lipton know it’s the FBI. It’s important that I see him,” I told her.

The receptionist smiled sweetly, as if she’d heard all this before, then she went back to

answering the phone calls coming in on her headset. I sat down and waited patiently; I waited

for fifteen minutes. Then I got back up again. I strolled over to the reception desk.

“You told Mr. Lipton that I’m here?” I asked politely. “That I’m with the FBI?”



“I did, sir,” she said in a syrupy voice that was starting to rub me the wrong way.

“I need to see him right now,” I told the girl, and waited until she made another call to

Lipton’s assistant.

They talked briefly, then she looked back at me. “Do you have identification, sir?” she asked.

She was frowning now.

“I do. They’re called creds.”



“May I see it, please? Your creds.” I showed off my new FBI badge, and she looked it over

like a fast-food counter-person inspecting a fifty-dollar bill.

“Could you please wait over at the seating area?” she asked again, only now she seemed a

little nervous, and I wondered what Lawrence Lipton’s assistant had told her, what her

marching orders were.

“You don’t seem to understand, or I’m not making myself clear,” I finally said. “I’m not here

to fool around with you, and I’m not here to wait.”



The receptionist nodded. “Mr. Lipton is in a meeting. That’s all I know, sir.”



I nodded back. “Tell his assistant to pull him out of his meeting right now. Have her tell Mr.

Lipton that I’m not here to arrest him yet.”



I wandered back to the seating area, but I didn’t bother to sit. I stood there and looked out on

magnificent Technicolor green lawns that stretched to the concrete edge of the LBJ Freeway.

I was burning inside.

I’d just acted like a D.C. street cop. I wondered if Burns would have approved, but it didn’t

matter. He’d given me some rope, but I also had made a decision that I wasn’t going to

change because I was an FBI agent now. I was in Dallas to bring down a kidnapper; I was

here to find out if Mrs. Elizabeth Connolly and others were alive and maybe being held

somewhere as slaves. I was back on the Job. I heard a door open behind me and I turned. A

heavyset man with graying hair was standing there and he looked angry.

“I’m Lawrence Lipton,” he said. “What the hell is this about?”