
Wednesday, December 15th, 2010, 2:44 a.m. Baton Rouge, Louisiana
A cold and damp winter wind played around the windows of the building, a breeze not strong enough
to rattle the still pristine thermopane glass, but potent enough to tweak an occasional whistle from an
art-deco protrusion, whistles that now and then came low enough to sound almost like moans.
Alone inside, the night watchman--watchwoman in this case--pored over the laptop on the guard
station's desk, adding a few personal notes to the text of Professor Jenkins's long and incredibly boring
lecture on the strata of rock formations in southern New Zealand. The lecture was from his
auditorium-sized class Introduction to Geology, her final science requirement, and she'd put it off as long
as she could, but graduation was fast approaching and there was no way around it. She would have
taken Astronomy, supposedly a walk, but the classes had been filled before she'd ever logged on to
registration. Too bad. Stars were much more inter esting than rocks.
Kathryn Brant sighed, leaned back in the creaky chair, and rubbed at her eyes. Geology. Bleh.
She leaned toward the desk again and got another nail wrenched-from-wet-wood noise. Lord.
Brand-new, and already the chair squeaked as if it had been left out in the Louisiana rain for a couple
years. But that was what happened when you bought everything from the lowest bidder--a bid that had
probably been the low one because the company had bribed somebody in the Contracts office. Bribery
was a normal way of doing business around here. Kat had taken two semesters of political science at
LSU, where she was, thankfully, a senior. Studying politics was almost a necessity in Louisiana, where
people still spoke fondly of Huey Long, the govemortumed-senator who'd been assassinated in the main
part of the capitol building, just up the hall there, more than seventy-five years past.
Huey had been one in a long list of rogues who had run the state, and with the public's blessing. After
all, the big oil companies had paid for everything for decades, there hadn't been any income tax--no
property tax to speak of--and if you were going to elect somebody, why not elect somebody colorful,
especially if it didn't cost you anything? Her political science professor had once told the class that when
he'd been a teenager, he and his friends would catch a bus to the capitol and sit in the gallery, watching
the House in action. More inter esting than going to a movie, he'd said. People came from all over the
country to study Louisiana politics, and rightly so.
She grinned as the wind howled at the glass doors that opened out onto the capitol grounds. Huey
was out there, in spirit and in bronze, just around the bend, the spotlight from the top of the tall and
pointed building--once the tallest in the entire South, and still pretty much the tallest in the state-again
shining down upon the populist martyour's huge statue.
Every now and then, the state tightened its purse strings and decided to turn the spotlight off to save a
few dollars, but they always turned it back on again. Tourists still came to see old Huey out there,
pigeons and all.
Working your way through school as a guard at the state capitol wasn't the best job in the world, but
it left plenty of time to study, that was the main thing-Her comm buzzed. She grinned again and pulled the
tiny unit from her belt. She knew who it was. Nobody else would be calling at this hour.
"Hey," she said.
"Hey, Kat," her husband said.
"How come you're still awake?" Kat asked.