Murder at the Opera - Margaret Truman [129]
Mac and Annabel watched him go to where Genevieve stood, grab her in his arms, and sweep her onto the dance floor.
“So arrogant,” Annabel said.
“He is that. He also didn’t kill Musinski
Her eyes opened wider. “How do you know that?”
“Straight from the MPD. One of Musinski’s acolytes at the university has confessed, the same one they’ve been focusing on since day one. Whether Ray stole those scores is another question. Should be an interesting conversation tomorrow, and if he’s as good a cook as he claims, we’ll get a decent lunch out of it, too. Dance, Mrs. Smith?”
As they snaked their way to the dance floor, they were stopped by a wall of security forces that parted the dancers like the Red Sea, creating a secure passageway for the president of the United States, Arthur Montgomery, and the nation’s first lady, Pamela Montgomery. Surrounded by Secret Service agents, the evening’s honored guests stepped up onto the bandstand, to a cacophony of applause, cheers, and whistles. They were joined on the stage by a half-dozen members of the Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist Program.
“Good evening,” the president said into a microphone, that simple greeting in a voice familiar to millions of Americans generating another outburst of unbridled approval. Mac and Annabel stood in a tight knot of people and listened. The president spoke of the importance of the Washington National Opera to the cultural life of the nation’s capital, and to the nation itself. “They say that politics is sometimes like opera, full of intrigue and maneuvering, backbiting and betrayal. I wouldn’t know about that.” He paused, eliciting the expected laughter. “I can only say that attending the superb performances at the Kennedy Center, with the vision, creativity, and immense talent of Maestro Domingo always in evidence, causes politics to take a backseat for those few hours, the magnificent voices and spectacular settings lifting the spirits
The applause was loud and long, and not at all surprising.
“And I’m privileged to be standing here next to the next generation of opera stars, who will sing their arias on stages all over the world, ambassadors of peace and understanding between people
More hands came together.
“I know that these superbly talented young men and women will entertain you a little later in the evening,” the president said. “Now I believe the real opera lover in the Montgomery family has something to say
The First Lady replaced her husband at the microphone and started to speak. She’d gotten out only a few words when the sound of a weapon being discharged crackled through the heavy, moisture-laden air. There were shrieks and cries of confusion. Secret Service agents surrounded the first couple, wrapping them in the protection of their own bodies, guns drawn, eyes everywhere. Guests closest to the bandstand saw two agents leap on a man dressed in the white uniform of a kitchen worker and smother him against the floor. A weapon flew from the man’s hand and skidded through dozens of pairs of patent-leather and high-heel shoes, until coming to rest against a woman’s foot, causing her to wrap her arms around the neck of her tuxedoed husband and climb up his torso as though he were a tree.
The first couple was virtually carried from the scene, across the dance floor, past hundreds of partygoers with horrified expressions on their faces, beneath sharpshooters stationed on rooftops, and to the waiting bulletproof limo. Chaos reigned. Some guests, convinced that they would all be slaughtered, made for the exits. Others sought answers. The shooter, his arms wrenched behind his back, was transported away by four Secret Service agents. “You bastard!” a man yelled.
“Who is he?”
“He’s a terrorist,” others answered.
“How did he get a gun in here?”
Bill Frazier, the Opera’s chairman, grabbed the microphone and called for calm.
Mac and Annabel