Clancy, Tom - Ballance of Power

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by Balance of Power [lit]

pulled in familiar surroundings destroys the

  delusion that we're invincible doing what we do

  routinely every day-in this case, walking down a city

  street. Liz had told the small group that in the

  instant of shock, a person's body temperature,

  blood pressure, and muscle tone all

  crash and it takes a moment for the survival instinct

  to kick in.

  Attackers count on that instant of paralysis,

  Liz had said.

  But understanding what had happened didn't help. Not

  at all. It didn't lessen the ache and the guilt that

  Aideen felt. If she'd moved an instant

  sooner or been a little more heads-up-by just a

  heartbeat, that's all it would have taken-Martha might

  have survived.

  How do you live with that guilt?

  Aideen asked herself as tears began to form.

  She didn't know. She'd never been able to deal with

  coming up short. She couldn't handle it when she found

  her widower father crying at the kitchen table after losing

  his job in the Boston shoe factory where

  BALANCE OF POWER 19

  he'd worked since he was a boy. For days thereafter she

  tried to get him to talk, but he turned to scotch

  instead. She went off to college not long afterward,

  feeling as though she'd failed him. She couldn't

  handle the sense of failure when her college

  sweetheart, her greatest love, smiled warmly at

  an old girlfriend in their senior year. He left

  Aideen a week later and she joined the army

  after graduation. She hadn't even attended the

  graduation ceremony; it would have killed her to see

  him.

  Now she'd failed Martha. Her shoulders heaved out

  the tears and the tears became sobs.

  A young, mustachioed sergeant of the palace security

  guard raised her gently by the shoulders. He helped

  her stand.

  "Are you all right?" he asked in English.

  She nodded and tried to stop crying. "I think I'm

  okay."

  "Do you want a doctor?"

  She shook her head.

  "Are you sure,

  sefioritaThat"

  Aideen took a long, deep breath. This was not the

  time and place to lose it. She would have to talk

  to Op-Center's FBI liaison, Darrell

  McCaskey. He had remained at the hotel

  to await a disvisit from a colleague with Interpol.

  And she still wanted to see Deputy Serrador. If

  this shooting had been designed to prevent the meeting,

  she'd be damned if she was going to let that happen.

  "I'll be fine," Aideen said. "Do you-do you have the

  person who did this? Do you have any idea who

  it was?"

  20 OP-CENTER

  "No,

  senorita,"

  he replied. "We'll have to take a look and see

  what the surveillance cameras may have recorded.

  In the meantime, are you well enough to talk to us about this?"

  "Yes, of course," she said uncertainly. There was

  still the mission, the reason she'd come. She didn't

  know how much she should tell the police about that. "

  'But-

  por favor?"'"

  "Si?"

  "We were to be met by someone inside. I would still like

  to see him as soon as possible."

  "I will make the necessary inquiries-was

  "I also need to contact someone at the Princesa

  Plaza," Aideen said.

  "I will see to those things," he said. "But Comisario

  Femandez will be arriving presently. He is the one

  who will be conducting the investigation. The longer we

  wait, the more difficult the pursuit."

  "Of course," she said. "I understand. I'll talk

  to him and meet with our guide after. Is there a

  telephone I can use?"

  "I will arrange for the telephone," the sergeant said.

  "Then I will personally go and see who was to meet you."

  Aideen thanked him and rose under her own power. She

  faltered. The sergeant grabbed one of her arms.

  "Are you sure you wouldn't like to see the doctor first?"

  the man asked. "There is one in residence."

  His

  "Gracias, no,""

  she said with a grateful smile. She wasn't going

  to let the attacker claim a second victim.

  She was going to get through this, even if it were one

  second at a time.

  BALANCE OF POWER 21

  The sergeant smiled back warmly and walked with her

  slowly toward the open gate.

  As Aideen was being led away the palace doctor

  rushed by. A few moments later she heard an

  ambulance. The young woman half turned as the

  ambulance stopped right where the getaway car had been.

  As the medical technicians hurriedly unloaded

  a gurney, Aideen saw the doctor rise from beside

  Martha's body. He'd only been there a moment.

  He said something to a guard then ran over to the

  mailman. He began opening the buttons of the

  man's uniform then yelled for the paramedics

  to come over. As he did, the guard lay his jacket

  over Martha's head.

  Aideen looked ahead. That was it, then. It took just

  a few seconds, and everything Martha Mackall had

  known, planned, felt, and hoped was gone. Nothing

  would ever bring that back.

  The young woman continued to hold back tears as she was

  led into a small office along the palace's

  ornate main corridor. The room was

  wood-paneled and comfortable and she lowered herself into a

  leather couch beside the door. She felt achy where her

  knees and elbows had hit the pavement and she was still in

  an acute state of disbelief. But a countershock

  reflex was going to work, replenishing the physical

  resources that had shut down in the attack. And she

  knew that Darrell and General Rodgers and

  Director Paul Hood and the rest of the

  Op-Center team were behind her. She might be by herself

  at the moment, but she was not alone.

  "You may use that telephone," the sergeant said,

  22 OP-CENTER

  pointing to an antique rotary phone on a glass

  end table. "Dial zero for an outside line."

  "Thank you."

  "I will have a guard posted at the door so you

  will be safe and undisturbed. Then I will go and see

  about your guide."

  Aideen thanked him again. He left and shut the

  door behind him. The room was quiet save for the

  hissing of a radiator in the back and the muted sounds

  of traffic. Of life going on.

  Taking another deep breath, Aideen removed a

  hotel notepad from her backpack and looked down

  at the telephone number printed on the bottom.

  She found it impossible to believe that Martha was

  dead. She could still feel her annoyance, see her

  eyes, smell her perfume. She could still hear

  Martha saying.

  You know what's at stake here.

  Aideen swallowed hard and entered the number. She

  asked to be connected with Darrell McCaskey's

  room. She slipped a simple scrambler over the

  mouthpiece, one that would send an ultrasonic

/>   screech over the line, deafening any taps. A

  filter on McCaskey's end would eliminate the

  sound from his line.

  Aideen did know what was at stake here. The fate

  of Spain, of Europe, and possibly the world. And

  whatever it took, she did not intend to come up short

  again.

  .

  ATX-UL1024 TWO

  ATX-UL0 Monday, 12:12 p.m. Washington,

  D.c.

  When they were at Op-Center headquarters at

  Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland or at

  Striker's Base in the FBI Academy in

  Quantico, Virginia, the two

  forty-five-year-old men were Op-Center's

  Deputy Director, General Michael Bernard

  Rodgers, and Colonel Brett Van Buren

  August, commander of Op-Center's

  rapid-deployment force.

  But here in Ma Ma Buddha, a small, divey

  Szechuan restaurant in Washington's Chinatown,

  the two men were not superior and subordinate. They were

  close friends who had both been born at St.

  Francis Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut;

  who had met in kindergarten and shared a passion for

  building model airplanes; who had played on the

  same Thurston's Apparel Store Little League

  team for five years-and chased home run queen

  Laurette DelGuercio on the field and off; and

  who had blown trumpet in the Housatonic

  Valley Marching Band for four years. They

  served in different branches of the military in

  Vietnam-Rodgers in the U.s. Army

  Special Forces, August in Air Force

  Intelligence-and saw each other infrequently over

  the next twenty years. Rodgers did

  24 OP-CENTER

  two tours of Southeast Asia, after which he was sent

  to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, to help

  Colonel "Chargin" Charlie" Beckwith oversee

  the training of the U.s. Army's 1/ Special

  Forces Operational Detachment-the Delta Force.

  Rodgers remained there until the Persian Gulf

  War, where he commanded a mechanized brigade with such

  Pattonesque fervor that he was well on his way

  to Baghdad while his backup was still in Southern

  Iraq. His zeal earned him a promotion-and a desk

  job at Op-Center.

  August had flown eighty-seven F-4 spy

  missions over North Vietnam during a two-year

  period before being shot down near Hue. He spent a

  year as a prisoner of war before escaping and making his

  way to the south. After recovering in Germany from

  exhaustion and exposure, August returned

  to Vietnam. He organized a spy network

  to search for other U.s. POW'S and then

  remained undercover for a year after the United States

  withdrawal. At the request of the Pentagon,

  August spent the next three years in the

  Philippines helping President Ferdinand

  Marcos battle Moro secessionists. He

  disliked Marcos and his repressionist policies, but

  the U.s. government supported him and so August

  stayed. Looking for a little desk-bound downtime after the

  fall of the Marcos regime, August went to work as

  an Air Force liaison with NASA, helping

  to organize security for spy satellite

  missions, after which he joined the SOC as a

  specialist in counter-terrorist activities. When

  Striker commander X. Colonel W. Charles

  Squires was killed on a mission in Russia,

  Rodgers immediately contacted Colonel August and

  offered him the commission.

  BALANCE OF POWER 25

  August accepted, and the two easily resumed their

  close friendship.

  The two men had come to Ma Ma Buddha after spending

  the morning discussing a proposed new International

  Strike Force Division for Op-Center. The idea

  for the group had been conceived by Rodgers and Paul

  Hood. Unlike the elite, covert

  Striker, the ISFD unit would be a small

  black-ops unit comprised of U.s. commanders and

  foreign operatives. Personnel such as Falah

  Shibli of the Sayeret Ha'Druzim, Israel's

  Druze' Reconnaissance unit, who had helped

  Striker rescue the Regional OpCenter and its

  crew in the Bekaa Valley. The ISFD would be

  designed to undertake covert missions in potential

  international trouble spots. General Rodgers had

  been quiet but attentive for most of the meeting, which was

  also attended by Intelligence Chief Bob Herbert,

  his colleagues Naval Intelligence Chief

  Donald Breen and Army Intelligence head

  Phil Prince, and August's friend Air Force

  Intelligence legend Pete Robinson.

  Now Rodgers was simply quiet. He was poking his

  chopsticks at a plate of salt-fried string

  beans. His rugged face was drawn beneath the

  close-cropped saltand-pepper hair and his eyes were

  downtumed. Both men had recently returned from

  Lebanon. Rodgers and a small party of soldiers

  and civilians had been field testing the new

  Regional Op-Center when they were captured and

  tortured by Kurdish extremists. With the help of

  an Israeli operative, August and

  Striker were able to go into the Bekaa Valley and get

  them out. When their ordeal was over and an attempt

  to start a war between Turkey and Syria had been

  averted, Gen-

  26 OP-CENTER

  eral Rodgers had drawn his pistol and executed

  the Kurdish leader out of hand. On the flight back

  to the United States, August had prevented a

  distraught General Rodgers from turning the handgun

  on himself.

  August was using a fork to twirl up his pork lo

  mein. After watching the prison guards eat while

  he starved in Vietnam, if he never saw a

  chopstick again it would be too soon. As he ate, his

  blue eyes were on his companion. August understood

  the effects of combat and captivity, and he knew

  only too well what torture could do to the mind,

  let alone the body. He didn't expect

  Rodgers to recover quickly. Some people never recovered

  at all. When the depth of their dehumanization

  became apparent-both in terms of what had been done

  to them and what they may have been forced to do-many former

  hostages took their own lives. Liz Gordon

  had put it very well in a paper she'd published in

  International Amnesty Journal: A hostage is

  someone who has gone from walking to crawling. To walk

  again, to face even simple risks or routine

  authority figures, is often more difficult than

  lying down and giving up.

  August picked up the metal teapot. " 'Want

  some?"'"

  "Yes, please."

  August kept an eye on his friend as he turned the

  two cups rightside up. He filled them and then

  set the pot down. Then he stirred a half

  packet of sugar into his own cup, raised it, and

  sipped. He continued to stare at Rodgers through the

  steam. The general didn't look up.

  "Mike?"

  "Yeah."

  BALANCE OF POWER 27

  "This is no good." />
  Rodgers raised his eyes. "What? The lo mein?"

  August was caught off guard. He grinned.

  "Well, that's a start. First joke you've made

  since-when? The twelfth grade?"

  "Something like that," Rodgers said sullenly. He

  idly picked up his cup and took a sip of tea.

  He held the cup by his lips and stared down

  into it. "What's there been to laugh about since then?"

  "Plenty, I'd say."

  "Like what?"

  "How about weekend passes with the few friends you've

  managed to hold on to. A couple of jazz

  clubs you told me about in New Orleans, New

  York, Chicago. Some damn fine movies. More

  than a few nice ladies. You've had some real

  nice things in your life."

  Rodgers put the cup down and shifted his body

  painfully. The burns he'd suffered during

  torture at the hands of the Kurds in the Bekaa were

  a long way from healing, though not so long as the

  emotional wounds. But he refused to lie on his sofa

  and rust.

  "Those things are all diversions, Brett. I love

  'em, but they're solace. Recreation."

  "Since when are solace and recreation bad things?"

  "Since they've become a

  reason

  for living instead of the reward for a job well done,"

  Rodgers said.

  "Uh oh," August said.

  "Uh oh is right," Rodgers replied.

  August had sunk a hose into a cesspool

  and Rodgers had obviously decided to let some of the

  raw sewage out.

  "You want to know why I can't relax?" Rodgers

  28 OP-CENTER

  said. "Because we've become a society that lives

  for the weekend, for vacations, for running away from

  responsibility. We're proud of how much

  liquor we can hold, of how many women we can charm

  our way into bed with, of how well our sports teams

  are doing."

  "You used to like a lot of those things," August pointed

  out. "Especially the women."

  "Well, maybe I'm tired of it," Rodgers

  said. "I don't want to live like that any more. I

  want to

  do

  things."

  "You always have done things," August said. "And you still

  found time to enjoy life."

  "I guess I didn't realize what a mess the

  country was becoming," Rodgers said. "You face an

  enemy like world Communism. You put everything into that

  fight. Then suddenly you don't have them anymore and

  you finally take a good look around. You see that

  everything else has gone to hell while you

  fought your battle. Values, initiative,

  compassion, everything. Now I've decided I want

 

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