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HANNIBAL

Seven years after rescuing Jame Gumb's last victim, Clarice Starling witnesses her career crumble around her. A drug raid goes wrong and Starling kills an armed meth dealer in self-defense: the dealer was carrying her own baby while shooting at Starling. Hannibal Lecter, who has been living in Florence, Italy, under an assumed name since escaping custody, sends her a letter of condolence and requests more information about her personal life. Desperate to catch Lecter, the FBI finds a use for Starling once again. She meets with Barney Matthews, former orderly of Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. He tells her what Lecter said about her and that he said he would never go after her if he escaped. Meanwhile, Mason Verger, a wealthy, sadistic pedophile who was left horribly disfigured after a "therapy session" with Lecter, plans to get revenge by feeding Lecter to wild boars, using Starling as bait. He is aided by corrupt Justice Department agent Paul Krendler, Starling's nemesis. A disgraced Florentine detective, Rinaldo Pazzi, also pursues Lecter in the interests of collecting Verger's bounty on him. However, Lecter kills one of Pazzi's men and hangs Pazzi where his ancestor, Francesco de Pazzi, was hanged in 1478. Lecter waves at a camera, the footage of which is later seen by Verger. Lecter kills one of Verger's men and escapes to the United States, where he begins pursuing Starling. The novel briefly touches upon Lecter's childhood, specifically the death of his beloved younger sister, Mischa. The two were orphaned during World War II, and a group of German deserters found them on their family estate and took them prisoner. The Germans, after checking the limbs of both siblings, had taken Mischa away. Lecter later found some of Mischa's milk teeth in a stool pit used by the deserters, indicating to young Hannibal that they had killed and eaten his sister. Barney briefly works for Verger, and gets acquainted with Verger's sister and bodyguard Margot, a lesbian bodybuilder whom Verger molested and raped as a child. Their friendship is briefly strained when he makes a pass at her, but they eventually reconcile, and Margot tells him that she stays in her hated brother's employment because she needs Mason's sperm to have a child with her partner, Judy. Lecter is captured by Verger's men, and Starling pursues them, determined to bring Lecter in herself. One of Verger's men shoots her full of tranquilizer as she releases Lecter. The wild boars break through the barricade separating them from Lecter, but they lose interest in their intended prey when they smell no fear on him, instead going after Verger's men. In the confusion, Lecter carries the unconscious Starling to safety, and escapes with her. At the same time, Margot forcibly obtains Mason's sperm by sodomizing him with a cattle prod, and then kills him by shoving his pet Moray eel down his throat. Lecter, who had briefly treated Margot after her brother abused her, has urged her to blame the murder on him, which she does by leaving one of his hairs at the scene. Using a regimen of psychotropic drugs and behavioral therapy, Lecter attempts to brainwash Starling, hoping to make her believe she is Mischa, returned to life. She ultimately proves too strong, however, and tells him that Mischa will have to live on within him. Lecter captures Krendler and lobotomizes him, and then he and Starling dine on Krendler's prefrontal cortex, sauteed with shallots, before Lecter kills him. The two then become lovers, and disappear together. Three years later, Barney and his girlfriend go to Buenos Aires to see a Vermeer painting. At the opera, Barney spots Lecter and Starling; fearing for his life, he flees with his girlfriend.

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41 Chs

"I acknowledged my instructions."

BUZZARD'S POINT, the FBI's field office for Washington and the District of

Columbia, is named for a gathering of vultures at a Civil War hospital on the

site.

The gathering today is of middle-management officials of the Drug Enforcement

Administration, the Bureau Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and the FBI to

discuss Clarice Starling's fate.

Starling stood alone on the thick carpet of her boss's office. She could hear

her pulse thump beneath the bandage around her head. Over her pulse she hear

the voices of the men, muffled by the frosted-glass door of an adjoining

conference room.

The great seal of the FBI with its motto, "Fidelity, Bravery, Integrity," is

rendered handsomely in gold leaf on the glass. The voices behind the seal rose

and fell with some passion; Starling could hear her name when no other word

was clear.

The office has a fine view across the yacht basin to Fort McNair, where the

accused Lincoln assassination conspirators were hanged.

Starling flashed on photos she had seen of Mary Surratt, walking past her own

casket and mounting the gallows at Fort McNair, standing hooded on the trap,

her skirts tied around her legs to prevent immodesty as she dropped through to

the loud crunch and the dark.

Next door, Starling heard the chairs scrape back as the men got to their feet.

They were filing into this office now. Some of the faces she recognized.

Jesus, there was Noonan, the A/DIC over the whole investigation division.

And there was her nemesis, Paul Krendler from justice, with his long neck and

his round ears set high on his head like the ears of a hyena. Krendler was a

climber, the gray eminence at the shoulder of the Inspector General. Since she

caught the serial killer Buffalo Bill ahead of him in a celebrated case seven

years ago, he had dripped poison into her personnel file at every opportunity,

and whispered close to the ears of the Career Board.

None of these men had ever been on the line with her, served a warrant with

her, been shot at with her or combed the glass splinters out of their hair

with her.

The men did not look at her until they all looked at once, the way a sidling

pack turns its attention suddenly on the cripple in the herd.

"Have a chair, Agent Starling."

Her boss, Special Agent Clint Pearsall, rubbed his thick wrist as though his

watch hurt him.

Without meeting her eyes, he gestured toward an armchair facing the windows.

The chair in an interrogation is not the place of honor.

The seven men remained standing, their silhouettes black against the bright

windows. Starling could not see their faces now, but below the glare, she

could see their legs and feet. Five were wearing the thick-soled tasseled

loafers favored by country slicksters who have made it to Washington. A pair

of Thom McAn wing tips with Corfam soles and some Florsheim wing tips rounded

out the seven. A smell in the air of shoe polish, warmed by hot feet.

"In case you don't know everybody, Agent Starling,, this is Assistant Director

Noonan, I'm sure you know who he is; this is John Eldredge from DEA, Bob

Sneed, BATF, Benny Holcomb is assistant to the mayor and Larkin Wainwright is

an examiner from; our Office of Professional Responsibility," Pearsall said.

"Paul Krendler - you know Paul - came over unofficially from the Inspector

General's Office at Justice. Paul's here as a favor to us, he's here and he's

not here, just to help us head off trouble, if you follow me."

Starling knew what the saying was in the service a federal examiner is someone

who arrives at the battlefield after the battle is over and bayonets the

wounded. The heads of some of the silhouettes bobbed in greeting. The men

craned their necks and considered the young woman they were gathered over. For

a few beats, nobody spoke.

Bob Sneed broke the silence. Starling remembered, him as the BATF spin-doctor

who tried to deodorize the Branch Davidian disaster at Waco. He was a crony of

Krendler's and considered a climber.

"Agent Starling, you've seen the coverage in the papers and on television,

you've been widely identified as the shooter in the death of Evelda Drumgo.

Unfortunately, you've been sort of demonized."

Starling did not reply.

"Agent Starling?"

"I have nothing to do with the news, Mr. Sneed."

"The woman had the baby in her arms, you can see the problem that creates."

"Not in her arms, in a sling across her chest and her arms and hands were

beneath it, under a blanket, where she had her MAC 10."

"Have you seen the autopsy protocol?" Sneed asked.

"No."

"But you've never denied being the shooter."

"Do you think I'd deny it because you haven't recovered the slug?" She turned

to her bureau chief. "Mr. Pearsall, this is a friendly meeting, right?"

"Absolutely."

"Then why is Mr. Sneed wearing a wire? Engineering Division quit making those

tiepin microphones years ago. He's got an F-Bird in his breast pocket just

recording away. Are we wearing wires to one another's offices now?"

Pearsall's face turned red. If Sneed was wired, it was the worst kind of

treachery, but nobody wanted to be heard on tape telling Sneed to turn it off.

"We don't need any attitude from you or accusations," Sneed said, pale with

anger. "We're all here to help you."

"To help me do what? Your agency called this office and got me assigned to

help you on this raid. I gave Evelda Drumgo two chances to surrender. She was

holding a MAC 10 under the baby blanket. She had already shot John Brigham. I

wish she had given up. She didn't. She shot me. I shot her. She's dead. You,

might want to check your tape counter right there, Mr. Sneed."

"You had foreknowledge Evelda Drumgo would be there?" Eldredge wanted to know.

"Foreknowledge? Agent Brigham told me in the van going over that Evelda Drumgo

was cooking in a guarded meth lab. He assigned me to deal with her."

"Remember, Brigham is dead," Krendler said, "and so is Burke, damn fine

agents, both of them. They're not here to confirm or deny anything."

It turned Starling's stomach to hear Krendler say John Brigham's name.

"I'm not likely to forget John Brigham is dead, Mr. Krendler, and he was a

good agent, and a good friend of mine. The fact is he asked me to deal with

Evelda."

"Brigham gave you that assignment even through you and Evelda Drumgo had had a

run-in before," Krendler said.

"Come on, Paul," Clint Pearsall said.

"What run-in?" Starling said. "A peaceful arrest. She had fought other

officers before at arrests. She didn't fight me when I arrested her before,

and we talked a little - she was smart. We were civil to each other. I hoped I

could do it again."

"Did you make the verbal statement that you would `deal with her?" Sneed said.

"I acknowledged my instructions."

Holcomb from the mayor's office and Sneed put their heads together.

Sneed shot his cuffs. "Ms Starling, we have information from Officer Bolton of

the Washington PD that you made inflammatory statements about Ms Drumgo in the

van on the way to the confrontation. Want to comment on that?"

"On Agent Brigham's instructions I explained to the other officers that Evelda

had a history of violence, she was usually armed and she was HIV positive. I

said we would give her a chance to surrender peacefully. I asked for physical

help in subduing her if it came to that. There weren't many volunteers for the

job, I can tell you."

Clint Pearsall made an effort. "After the Crip shooters' car crashed and one

perp fled, you could see the car rocking and you could hear the baby crying

inside the car?"

"Screaming," Starling said. "I raised my hand for everybody to stop shooting

and I came out of cover."

"That's against procedure right there," Eldredge said.

Starling ignored him. "I approached the car in the ready position, weapon out,

muzzle depressed. Marquez Burke was lying on the ground between us. Somebody

ran out and got a compress on him. Evelda got out with the baby. I asked her

to show me her hands, I said something like `Evelda, don't do this."

"She shot, you shot. Did she go right down?"

Starling nodded. "Her legs collapsed and she sat down in the road, leaning

over the baby. She was dead."

"You grabbed up the baby and ran to the water. Exhibited concern," Pearsall

said.

"I don't know what I exhibited. He had blood all over, him. I didn't know if

the baby was HIV positive or not;' I knew she was."

"And you thought your bullet might have hit the baby," Krendler said.

"No. I knew where the bullet went. Can I speak freely, Mr. Pearsall?" When he

did not meet her eyes, she went on. "This raid was an ugly mess. It put me in

a position where I had a choice of dying or shooting a woman holding a child.

I chose, and what I had to do burns me. I shot a female carrying an infant.

The lower animals don't 'even do that. Mr. Sneed, you might`, want to check

your tape counter again, right there' where I admit it. I resent the hell out

of being put in that position. I resent the way I feel now." She flashed on

Brigham lying facedown in the road and she went too far. "Watching you all run

from it makes me sick at my stomach."

"Starling-"

Pearsall, anguished, looked her in the face for the first time.

"I know you haven't had a chance to write your 302 yet," Larkin Wainwright

said. "When we review-" -"

"Yes, sir, I have," Starling said. "A copy's on the way to the Office of

Professional Responsibility. I have a copy with me if you don't want to wait.

I have everything I did and saw in there. See, Mr. Sneed, you had it all the

time."

Starling's vision was a little too clear, a danger sign she recognized, and

she consciously lowered her voice "This raid went wrong for a couple of

reasons. BATF's snitch lied about the baby's location because the snitch was

desperate for the raid to go down before his federal grand jury date in

Illinois. And Evelda Drumgo knew we were coming. She came out with the money

in one bag and the meth in another. Her beeper still showed the number for

WFUL-TV. She got the beep five minutes before we got there. WFUL's helicopter

got there with us. Subpoena WFUL's phone tapes and see who leaked. It's

somebody whose interests are local gentlemen. If BATF had leaked, like they

did in Waco, or DEA had leaked, they'd have done it to national media, not the

local TV."

Benny Holcomb spoke for the city. "There's no evidence anybody in city

government or the Washington police department leaked anything."

"Subpoena and see," Starling said.

"Do you have Drumgo's beeper?" Pearsall asked.

"It's under seal in the property room at Quantico."

Assistant Director Noonan's own beeper went off. He frowned at the number and

excused himself from the room. In a moment, he summoned Pearsall to join him

outside.

Wainwright, Eldredge and Holcomb looked out the window at Fort McNair, hands

in their pockets. They might have been waiting in an intensive care unit. Paul

Krendler caught Sneed's eye and urged him toward Starling.

Sneed put his hand on the back of Starling's chair and leaned over her. "If

your testimony at a hearing is that, while you were on TDY assignment from the

FBI, your weapon killed Evelda Drumgo, BATF is prepared to sign off on a

statement that Brigham asked you to pay . . . special attention to Evelda in

order to take her into custody peacefully. Your weapon killed her, that's

where your service has to carry the can. There will be no interagency pissing

contest over rules of engagement and we won't have to bring in any

inflammatory old, hostile statements you made in the van about what sort of

person she was."

Starling saw Evelda Drumgo for an instant, coming out of the doorway, coming

out of the car, saw the carriage of her head and, despite the foolishness and

waste of Evelda's life, saw her decision to take her chip and front her

tormenters and not run from it.

Starling leaned close to the microphone on Sneed's tie and said clearly, "I'm

perfectly happy to acknowledge the sort of person she was, Mr. Sneed: She was

better than you."

Pearsall came back into the office without Noonan and closed the door.

"Assistant Director Noonan has gone back to his office.

"Gentlemen, I'm going to call a halt to this meeting, and I'll get back to you

individually by telephone," Pearsall said.

Krendler's head came up. He was suddenly alert the scent of politics.

"We've got to decide some things," Sneed began.

"No, we don't."

"But-"

"Bob, believe me, we don't have to decide anything, I'll get back to you. And,

Bob?"

"Yeah?"

Pearsall grabbed the wire behind Sneed's tie and pulled down hard, popping

buttons off Sneed's shirt and snatching tape loose from his skin. "You come to

me with a wire again and I'll put my foot in your ass."

None of them looked at Starling as they left, except Krendler.

Moving toward the door, sliding his feet so he would not have to look where he

was going, he used the extreme articulation of his long neck to turn his face

to her, as a hyena would shuffle at the fringe of a herd, peering in at a

candidate. Mixed hungers crossed his face; it was Krendler's nature to both

appreciate Starling's leg and look for the hamstring.