The Parnell Affair

Home > Other > The Parnell Affair > Page 11
The Parnell Affair Page 11

by James, Seth


  “I didn't contact hi—” Vonka cried then got a hold of himself. “Fuck you. What, are you trying to scare me? Even if it went to court, they couldn't prove I had a 'reason to believe' and so it falls back on my source.”

  “You just told me you knew it would stop Sally Parnell from, what you called, lying,” Tobias said. “What? This conversation is not off the record.”

  Vonka shot to his feet. “This is total bullshit! I'm going straight to Chuck Ailes,” he hissed; the Editor-in-Chief.

  “Then you'll meet him on the beltway,” Tobias said, also standing, “he doesn't get in until 10:00.” He put his hands in his pockets and tried to maintain his cool exterior, as if all was going to plan—but it wasn't. As loud and course as Vonka behaved, he'd not let anything slip other than that the source was male. Given that only three women could be considered within the Administration's inner circle, that didn't narrow things down much. One last gambit: “You're hip deep in it, Lester. The Parnells went to Justice, have consulted attorneys, and Mrs. Parnell asked me to personally look into your involvement. She sends her regards—or something like that. Your only hope now is that someone discovers your source and shifts the focus off you,” Tobias said. He knew Vonka couldn't stand to openly concede to a demand: Tobias hoped Vonka would let slip the source's name to someone who'd bring it to him.

  “Fuck you, you punk,” Vonka said. He snorted. “Justice? You that stupid?” He turned and walked off.

  “There's always civil court,” Tobias called. An empty threat, which earned him barely a hitch in Vonka's stride, but it was all he had left. “Damn,” Tobias breathed.

  Fishing his cell phone out of his jacket he called Sally with the news. Not having baited out the information they wanted, Tobias tried to sound hopeful about Vonka deliberately leaking the source's name via a method he could deny. Sally's reaction indicated nothing of what she thought or felt. She asked Tobias to walk through the conversation but made no comment other than to wonder if Vonka would call his source immediately. There was plan B to consider. Tobias knew Vonka didn't use phones often (some sort of espionage-like pretension), and said if Vonka did contact his source it would probably be in person. A noticeable pause followed this thought. He chuckled and said that, if nothing else, it would keep his attending the White House daily brief unheralded. It was at a quarter to one; Tobias had already ensured his pass was up to date. Sally began to thank Tobias but instead asked if he'd call her right after the brief. He would and suggested she catch the brief on c-span.

  The White House daily brief took place in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room, a cramped, low-ceilinged, stuffy little dungeon slapped together over what had once been the White House's indoor pool. Below a false floor, the electronics for all the cameras, lights, and mics now hummed amid the subway tile as cords snaked ubiquitously. The podium and stage only partially concealed the room's charm, with their curtain and Presidential seal. Disgruntled cameramen would occasionally pan up enough to catch the six-eight ceiling.

  Tobias was by no means a regular. Through good fortune, he arrived at the White House at the same time as a rival paper's note-taker (a former intern at The Observer), saving Tobias from getting lost on his way to the briefing. Inside, squeezing past people and equipment, Tobias went unnoticed at first: the crowd of mostly television people might vaguely recall his name but never his face. Once he reached the folding chairs at the front of the room—not that he found an unoccupied one, and thus stood against the wall—Tobias received enough waves and calls of hello that even the television people pricked up their ears. A Hill reporter—particularly one of Tobias's standing—wouldn't normally attend such a brief. Something was up and the few seasoned reporters present showed every sign of scenting it on the wind.

  At 12:47 pm, Donald L. LeGierz, the White House Press Secretary, took the podium very much in the manner of a grad student about to lead an undergraduate study session in his professor's absence. He took only a few clarifying questions as he read through his list of announcements, few of which excited any interest in the gallery. His chores finished, Don opened the floor to questions. Unlike a Presidential press briefing, in which gotchya questions and policy explanations were the norm, the daily brief was a mostly collegial affair where the Press Secretary, as often as not, recorded the questions posed to him and promised to get back to the inquiring reporter once he discovered the answer.

  The usual White House correspondents received LeGierz' first-name invitations to speak but as each one glanced at Tobias before and after their questions, Don got the hint and called on him.

  “Um, Tobias,” Don LeGierz said, “welcome to the pit.”

  A few dutiful chuckles.

  “Thanks, Don,” Tobias said: he'd never met the man in his life but was glad he didn't get “Toby'd” on camera. “I have a question in regard to a piece that appeared in The Washington Observer about a week ago, which detailed the Administration's assertion that Saddam Hussein is actively seeking Weapons of Mass Destruction. In it, Les Vonka wrote: 'Sources within the Administration have revealed . . . Mrs. Sally Parnell is a covert CIA operative specializing in Weapons of Mass Destruction,'” Tobias read from a copy of the paper he'd brought along. Withdrawing a copy of the law, he continued: “According to the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, it's a felony punishable by ten years imprisonment for an authorized person to reveal the identity of a covert agent. Who are the 'Sources within the Administration' who violated the Intelligence Identities Protection Act?”

  A barrage of flashes from cameras hastily withdrawn as the seriousness of Tobias's question became apparent seemed to bring Don back to the present.

  “You know, Tobias,” he said, “that's the first I've heard of it and don't have any information on it. I'm sorry.”

  Before Don could say more, Tobias said, “Someone within the Administration has committed a felony and the matter has not been discussed?”

  “I wouldn't characterize it that way,” Don said, refusing—with his special gift for not taking offense—to match Tobias's confrontational tone. “There may very well be discussions, or have been, that I'm not aware of. I'll certainly ask, though, and I'll—”

  “The Parnells have faced stonewalling from the Justice Department,” Tobias said, “who were reluctant to admit that a crime had even taken place. Now we hear the Administration is not pursuing—”

  Don jumped in before the phrase 'cover up' could come out. “I couldn't say one way or the other,” Don said, holding up his hands. “This isn't the 'Administration doesn't know' this is 'Don LeGierz doesn't know.' If the matter is as serious as you imply, I'm sure it's, uh, it's known. I'll certainly ask, get some answers for you, and get back to you. Hopefully this afternoon or early this evening. Is anyone else interested in this?” he asked the gallery: unison head nodding. “Okay, maybe I'll send a mass email, then. Or hold it until tomorrow's brief?” While writing some notes to himself, he asked Tobias, “Okay, was there anything else specific you wanted to know?”

  “Will there be an investigation?” Tobias asked.

  “I'll find out,” Don said. “Again, this is just a case of me not knowing. But I'll get back to you.”

  “Fair enough,” Tobias said; he believed the Press Secretary didn’t know anything and it was pointless to push further. Whoever outed Sally had their number called live on national television. Story or no story, it might help Sally.

  A few print journalists talked with Tobias after the briefing ended, wondering what his paper thought about him involving their favorite son in a possible crime. A few off-the-record jokes and a young TV reporter's attempt to interview Tobias rounded out the event. As he walked to where he'd left his bike (near the Mall), he called Sally. She'd watched the whole thing live and had enjoyed Don's squirming. They both thought something would come of it, though they didn't know what. Sally thanked Tobias simply and then they stood listening to the other not saying anything until Tobias could hear a door open and close on her en
d. She quickly said she'd call him the next day, said goodbye, and hung up.

  That night, after dinner as Tobias flipped through his collection of vinyl records, Don LeGierz called him.

  “The Administration's official position is that anyone who committed a crime against our national interests,” he said, “will no longer work for this Administration. The President has said he is overseeing the internal investigation into this matter and will see that justice is done. The Administration takes national security very seriously, as our top priority, and condemns any violation from attacks to loose talk.”

  “You said the President is overseeing an internal investigation,” Tobias repeated, holding the phone with his shoulder and writing. “What about Justice?”

  “I'm only representing the White House here,” Don said. “You'll have to ask their spokesman about what they're doing.”

  “Hell, being fired is one thing,” Tobias said, “going on trial and facing ten years in jail is another. Without an investigation, how can you have a trial?”

  “There is an investigation,” Don said evenly: “the President's. We're gathering the facts and if a trial is warranted, a trial will happen. It was great seeing you at the brief this afternoon, Tobias; will you join us again tomorrow?”

  Don's had enough of me, Tobias thought: tough. “One more thing, Don. This whole affair began because of the chilling effect Joe Parnell's Niger report had on the Administration's bid for war with Iraq. I know the President called Joe Parnell into the Oval Office and asked him to change his mind. Don,” Tobias said, “I know every word that was spoken in that meeting, even if I can't print them all. Ask the President, from me: did he order the outing of Sally Parnell as revenge against her husband?” Don took a slow breath as if buying as many seconds as he could to formulate an on-the-record response. “If you can get back to me on that, Don, I'd appreciate it. And I'll sure try to make it to tomorrow's briefing. Goodnight.”

  Tobias hung up, selected a record, walked over to his turntable, and played Your time is gonna come.

  Earlier that evening, President Howland reclined wearily but smilingly behind his desk in the Oval Office. Karl Kristiansen stood opposite, rounding out the day's reports and reminding his boss of the next day's particulars. Pete felt the easy contentment of a man awaiting the bell that would send him home from work to wife and dinner. If only Karl would ring it.

  Instead, the phone rang, the receptionist's extension. At a nod, Karl leaned across the desk and answered it. “Yes? Of course, I thought he might,” he said after a moment. “Send him in.” To Pete: “Don is here.”

  Don LeGierz slipped through the door to the President's right and stood—had he known it—roughly where Joe Parnell had stood a month ago.

  “What's up, Don?” Pete asked. “You look as if you're about to tell me I'm in for a cold dinner,” he said, sharing a wry look with Karl (whom he complained always kept him too late).

  “It should not take long, Mr. President,” Karl said. Then to Don, “I had a feeling you would need to see us. This concerns the daily brief?”

  “Yeah,” Don said. Though the Press Secretary, he had less access to the President than the former holders of his office. Considered a minor functionary in a White House that handled the press through the coordination of the Chief of Staff, Don rarely spoke to the President. “Have you already, uh?” he asked Karl lamely.

  “No, we had other business,” Karl said. “Go on, walk us through it. A development in the Parnell affair,” he said to Pete.

  “Mr. President,” Don began. “At the daily brief today, a reporter from The Washington Observer brought up a piece in their paper which said someone in the Administration had revealed that Sally Parnell—Ambassador Parnell's wife—was a CIA operative. Apparently there's a law, the Intelligence Identities Protection Act,” he read from his notes, “that makes it a crime to reveal an Agent's name. The reporter—”

  “Which one?” Karl asked, smiling.

  “Uh, Tobias Hallström,” Don said. “A Hill reporter, mostly Senate stuff—”

  “I know,” Karl said.

  “Don't know why he was there,” Don said. “Anyway, he was there and asked who the leak was and if there would be an investigation. He also said,” Don added, pretending to look at his notes, “that the Justice Department was stonewalling.”

  The President sat rigidly, jaw muscles working at either end of a tightly compressed mouth.

  “Nothing to worry about, Don,” Karl said, affecting a laugh. “We expected this. My fault, I should have said something to you earlier. I caught a little of the brief when it was recapped on the evening news.” To Pete, seeing how angry the President had become, the look on his face like a burning fuse: “This is not a problem; we knew it would happen.” He took a breath, placed his palms together and tapped his lips with both outstretched forefingers for a moment. “This is what you say, Don,” he said: “You said you would call him with an answer? Good. Tell him the President is personally conducting an investigation into the matter; that national security is our highest priority; and that anyone who jeopardizes it by committing a crime—or, no—that anyone who commits a crime against our national interests will no longer work for this Administration. Is that good, Mr. President?”

  Pete ran his tongue between his teeth and lips before speaking in a quiet voice, eyes unfocused: “Say we condemn any violation, from attacks against our people to loose talk.”

  “Thank you,” Don said, trying to add to his notes, writing on his hand. “Thank you. He, uh, he's probably going to ask about Justice and a trial.”

  “You represent the President, not Justice,” Karl said. “Tell him we are gathering the facts. If a trial is warranted, a trial will happen. With your permission, Mr. President: Don, call him right now from the President's study,” Karl said, motioning to the room's other door. Pete nodded, his chin dropping about half an inch. Karl opened the door to the study and waved Don through, before closing it firmly.

  Walking back to the President, Karl raised both hands placatingly. “It's no big deal, it's okay,” he said. Pete's attention snapped back to Karl so quickly the other man stopped in his tracks. “We expected this,” Karl said. “It will go nowhere. Leaks happen in every Administration; we cannot be held to a higher standard. And regardless, we are conduction the investigation so the source will never be revealed.” Seeing that the President was not worried but angry, Karl changed tactics. “We have more important things to consider: the Senate is now on message, ready to believe Saddam is building a nuke. More importantly, Gitmo's facilities are now ready to accept the priority enemy combatants,” he said. “The latest intel suggests we should have a subject suitable for phase two—if you will forgive the expression,” he tried to joke—“within a week or so. It should set the timing for going to the UN sometime in October.”

  Pete relaxed, or grew more tense than angry. He nodded and said, “You're right, Karl. I've got more important matters than some officious reporter interfering in my business.”

  “Well said, sir,” Karl agreed.

  Don knocked at the study door and then entered slowly. He'd lost all the color in his usually pink face. Karl tried to dispel an impatient look he knew was furrowing his brow.

  “What is it?” Pete snapped.

  “Sir, he, he had a question,” Don said and then swallowed.

  “Well spit it out,” Pete barked.

  “Yes, sir,” Don said. He looked down at his notes, even though he hadn't recorded Tobias's question. “He said this whole thing started because of Joe Parnell; that you called him into the Oval Office and asked him to change his mind about Iraq's WMD; he said he knows every word that was said in that meeting, even if he couldn't print them; he told me to ask you if—” his voice collapsed in dryness. He swallowed and said, “He told me to ask you if you ordered the outing of Sally Parnell as revenge against Joe.”

  President Howland slowly placed his palms on the arms of his chair, as if to rise; th
e set of his features stiffened as his chest visibly inflated with a great inhalation of air.

  “I guess we know someone who wants to cover the White House instead of the Senate,” Karl said, putting his hands in his pockets. He tried a chuckle. The President came to his feet, looking through the others, beginning to breathe quickly and audibly through his nose. “Don't take it so seriously, Don,” Karl said and clapped Don on the shoulder. “You know reporters will make up anything to get a rise out of us.” The President locked eyes with Karl and his self control teetered on the edge. “Serious people do not make foolish accusations like that,” Karl said and immediately regretted it. The President pounded a fist on his desk that made his phone rattle in its cradle. “Thanks for letting us know, Don,” Karl said, ushering Don toward the door. “If Hallström shows up tomorrow keep to the line and laugh at him. He's fishing and doesn't know what he's talking about.”

  Karl barely had the door shut when Pete growled up to a shout: “That motherfucker!”

  “Pete!” Karl hissed.

  Coming around the far side of his desk, Pete shouted at every step: “Who in the hell does this little rat nobody think he is. Questioning me! Meddling in my affairs? It's none of his goddamn business!”

  “Mr. President,” Karl half whispered, half spat. He knew the appointments secretary would hear every word if the shouting continued. He pointed emphatically at the door behind him.

  Pete threw himself at the other door, to his study, and charged through it and out toward the family rooms, Karl jogging to keep pace behind. Once within the hallway that led to his quarters, Pete whirled on Karl, an outstretched finger brandished like a knife at his Chief of Staff's face.

  “How fucking dare he!” he bellowed. “Questioning me? Questioning my decisions as if a little cocksucking bastard scrounging in the dirt for his crust of bread could understand, begin to imagine—imagine! even comprehend—the instruments of power!” The President turned and slapped the hallway wall and then took a few steps. Karl opened his mouth to say something to calm him but Pete whirled on him again and pointingly said: “When they've played their part, we've always given them enough information to, to sell their service. And now that son of a bitch,” he shouted, “from the same goddamn paper, has the gall to accuse me! Who the hell does he think he is? It's none of his business! Is he vested? Does he or anyone like him have any investment in matters on this scale? Why the owner of his rag of a paper is only worthy of begging me to be put to use! And yet his employee, this dung-eating cur dares to raise his snout from the sty of his simple beast's morality and—with shit-tainted breath—accuse me!”

 

‹ Prev