by Todd Moss
ALSO BY TODD MOSS
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Copyright © 2015 by Todd Moss
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Moss, Todd.
Minute zero / Todd Moss.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-698-15212-0
1. Political fiction. I. Title.
PS3613.O785M56 2015 2015007431
813'.6—dc23
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Version_1
CONTENTS
Also by Todd Moss
Title Page
Copyright
Author’s Note
Epigraph
Prologue
PART ONE Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
PART TWO Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
PART THREE Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
EPILOGUE Chapter 70
Chapter 71
Chapter 72
Acknowledgments
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Minute Zero is entirely a work of fiction, yet it was inspired by the author’s real-life experiences inside the U.S. government and the story draws on true historical episodes. In the early 1980s, thousands of civilians in Zimbabwe died during a military operation known as Gukurahundi (or “Early Rain That Washes Away the Chaff” in the local Shona language), an atrocity for which no one has ever been held to account. Zimbabwe’s president Robert Mugabe, in power since 1980, lost the 2008 election but refused to step down and instead deployed the army to attack the opposition and ensure he won a second-round vote. In the 1970s, up to half a million Ethiopians perished from the Red Terror campaign of dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam. Mengistu was overthrown in 1991 and has lived ever since in exile in Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare.
A NOTE ON TIME ZONES
Washington, D.C., is Eastern Standard Time; Great Britain is + 5 hours; Zimbabwe and South Africa are + 6 hours; Ethiopia is + 7 hours; Thailand is + 11 hours.
Our policy is directed not against any country or doctrine, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos.
—GEORGE MARSHALL,
U.S. Secretary of State, 1947
Chaos often breeds life, when order breeds habit.
—HENRY BROOKS ADAMS,
historian, 1907
PROLOGUE
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe
Wednesday, 5:52 p.m. Central Africa Time
Before he saw the smoke, he heard the thunder. His ears hummed with white noise, the infinite, deafening rumble of the Zambezi River. It would also be the very last sound he heard.
The man, in his late twenties, was obviously American. His thick designer glasses, white socks, and neon-yellow running shoes gave him away to the German and Chinese tourists. He was also easily spotted by others watching him across the hotel lobby.
The American felt a twinge of adrenaline as he departed the colonial-era hotel to meet his contact. He had just gotten off the phone with his girlfriend back in Michigan, who had playfully peppered him with too many questions about his latest trip to Africa.
“Isn’t it dangerous?” she had asked with a giggle. The American exposed nothing classified, of course. But he told her just enough to hint that what he was doing was secret. And critical to national security.
Satisfied that he had projected a hint of intrigue without compromising the mission, his face flushed as he imagined his triumphant return to Detroit and another passionate reunion. After his last overseas trip, his girlfriend had greeted him wearing only a raincoat and a mischievous grin. “Hello, Mr. Bond,” she had purred.
A loud “Good evening, saah!” snapped his mind back to Zimbabwe. The doorman was wearing a nineteenth-century British military uniform, an oversized ostrich feather on his hat. Both men averted their eyes, the Zimbabwean out of deferential habit, the American out of awkward embarrassment.
The American hurriedly descended the grand steps, dodged a pack of aggressive taxi drivers, and veered through a garden of jacaranda trees and a finely clipped lawn. As he crossed the line at the end of the hotel’s private property, the ground turned abruptly from lush green to parched brown. Among the unkempt scrub grass, he noticed burn marks where someone must have been setting fires.
The man’s stride quickened and his heartbeat accelerated as his body prepared itself for the encounter. The rumbling of the falls grew louder, and eventually the noise blocked out all other sounds. A light mist cooled his skin, reminding him of his summers spent at the lake. He sudde
nly found himself amid an oasis, a tiny rain forest living off the permanent cloud of the great roaring waterfall.
The American regained his bearings as he arrived at a stone patio marking the scenic overlook. A plaque shared key details of what stood before him. Victoria Falls, one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World, was a sheet of water over a mile wide and 354 feet high formed by the Zambezi River plunging over an escarpment. The vapor rose more than a thousand feet in the air. The locals called it Mosi-oa-Tunya in the Tonga language, or “the Smoke That Thunders,” and in 1855, Dr. David Livingstone had named it in honor of his queen.
No time for ancient history, he thought. The American placed both hands on the railing along the cliff’s edge and peered into the haze. His glasses immediately fogged. Just then, sharply on time, an older dark-skinned man with a gray beard and a black business suit gripped the railing beside him. Without making eye contact, the African spoke.
“My brother, all this smoke. I need to quit smoking.”
“What is your brand of cigarette?” asked the American.
“Marlboro.”
The American nodded. “Where’s my dossier?”
“First, the gift.”
The American glanced over both shoulders, then eyed his contact. After a hesitation, he reached into his jacket and withdrew an envelope. It quickly disappeared into the old man’s pocket. “We walk.”
“That’s not the deal,” said the American, grabbing the other man’s forearm. “Give me the dossier or I am leaving. With my money.”
“No. Too many eyes here,” he said. “Not safe.” He pulled away from the American’s grip and dialed a number on a cheap flip phone. In short bursts he whispered, “The Marlboro man is here. We are on our way.” He snapped the phone closed and grabbed the American’s hand. “This way, my brother.”
Silently the two men walked down another path toward the bridge spanning the 650-foot gorge between Zimbabwe and neighboring Zambia. The bridge had been built to signal friendship between the two allies, but instead it provided a constant reminder of the stark trajectories of the two countries.
Two nations, two anchors of the British Empire in Africa. Zambia had been granted independence in 1964 and Zimbabwe, then called Rhodesia, was supposed to have been next, but white settlers pre-empted London and declared Rhodesia independent. As Zimbabwe descended into a long and nasty civil war, Zambia basked in the confidence of a new nation, even allowing guerrillas to use its territory to fight the Rhodesians and the South African apartheid juggernaut. In 1980 the Rhodesian war ended and Zimbabwe gained its own independence, but by this time Zambia had slumped into a morass of corruption and debt. Zimbabwe was the new hope.
Two decades later, the tide had turned again. Zambia was back on the rise, while Zimbabwe was rotting. As the young American stepped onto the Victoria Falls Bridge, Zimbabwe was poisoning itself with a toxic cocktail of greed, dictatorship, and fear.
At that moment, however, the American wasn’t thinking about that. After a few steps, he stopped. “I . . . I . . . I don’t like this. I’m going back.” He peered over the railing, scanning for crocodiles 420 feet below.
“My brother, it is up to you.” The African hid his impatience. “You have come all this way. The choice is yours.”
Shit, the old man is right. The American had spent most of the past eight months working toward this moment. All the hours spent digging into files, all the late nights tracking bank records, the long, hot days taking testimony in a sweaty thatched hut. He was now so close. Success depended on the final piece: the dossier. Success and a big promotion.
“Let’s do it,” he said, pointing at his contact’s chest. “But if you fuck me, you and your boss are dead.”
The old man laughed—not the reaction the American had expected. “There is no need for that, my brother.”
“Dead meat,” the American muttered under his breath.
The two strode across the bridge, passing a Swedish couple holding hands and a young Zimbabwean family. Most of the other tourists had retreated to their hotels for a sundowner—gin and tonics were still popular among certain crowds in this part of the world—and an early dinner of plate-sized steaks.
Two middle-aged African men, also in suits, approached from the opposite side of the bridge. One was holding a legal-sized manila envelope. The four men met at the very center, the border, the highest point.
The American accepted the envelope in silence, turning his back to the others to open it and claim his prize. The cover page was a fuzzy black-and-white photocopy of an Ethiopian passport. So far, so good. The next page was blank, and the next, and the next. He scrunched his forehead as anger rose within him.
“What the fuck . . .” He twisted his body to turn back, but strong hands grabbed his arms and his ankles and lifted him high up over the railing. “No, no, nooooo . . .”
As he fell, his mind raced with thoughts of his mother, his little brown dachshund, Alfredo, his messy loft apartment, his girlfriend’s laugh, his unfinished, incomplete life.
The white noise of Victoria Falls filled his ears and, 5.2 seconds later, was replaced by total silence and a bright white light as the American’s skull cracked on the rocks of the mighty Zambezi River.
The old man peered over the bridge railing and watched the body hit.
“Dead meat, my brother.”
—
Four hundred miles to the east, in a highbrow suburb of Zimbabwe’s capital city, Solomon Zagwe sat alone in the garden courtyard of his villa. A light breeze was keeping him cool, and the light of the setting sun turned the jacaranda trees a bright purple. But Ethiopia’s former president and supreme general didn’t notice any of his surroundings.
“Now. I need the money now,” he said, squeezing the phone tightly and clenching his jaw. Zagwe was concentrating on controlling his temper. He knew that he had to convey the necessity of an accelerated timetable without revealing any vulnerability. If the man on the other end of the line knew his true predicament, it would cost him more money. “Let us agree today, Max,” he said. The line went dead.
“Ah, dedabe,” he swore to himself in Amharic, slamming down the cell phone. A few seconds later his phone buzzed and he quickly answered. “My apologies. No names. I won’t use names on the phone again.”
A servant boy in an all-white uniform entered the garden carrying a polished silver tray holding a pot of coffee, a plate of small triangular sandwiches, and a single orchid in a glass vase. Zagwe scowled and shooed him away with a dismissive wave of the hand.
“I understand time is short,” Zagwe whispered once the boy was gone. “If it was up to me, I would say very well. But my partners, they are difficult. They need the shipment now. This is not like it used to be with our Saudi friends. These people are impatient. It has to be now, even if it is a smaller package than usual. . . . Good. . . . Good.”
Zagwe’s shoulders relaxed. “No, there are no troubles,” he said. “Victoria Falls went well.” He laughed. “The mosquito buzzing in our ears has been taken care of. No more buzz. It has been crushed.”
PART ONE
THURSDAY
1.
Georgetown, Washington, D.C.
Thursday, 5:54 a.m. Eastern Standard Time
Judd Ryker, half-asleep with his eyes still closed, could hear the gentle tap, tap, tap of the laptop. One eye opened.
“Uh, Jess?” he groaned.
Sitting up in bed next to him, Jessica smiled. “Hi, sweets. Good, you’re awake.”
“Not yet. What are you doing?”
“I’m up early for my video call with Papa. I told you already.”
“No, you didn’t.”
“Well, that’s what I’m doing. I didn’t think I’d wake you. But now that you’re up, be a sweetie and get me some coffee.”
Jessica gave him that puppy-dog look she kn
ew always worked. With one eye still closed and his face creased from sleep, Judd swung his legs heavily off the bed and stumbled out of the bedroom, scratching his stomach. He checked his BlackBerry—no urgent messages—and slipped the phone into the pocket of his robe as he walked toward the kitchen.
The smell of the brewing coffee helped him clear the cobwebs in his head. Had Jessica mentioned she was having an early morning call with Papa Toure? Things at work had been so crazy lately, he couldn’t keep anything straight.
Judd Ryker’s experimental office at the State Department, the Crisis Reaction Unit, was struggling. His baby was in trouble. Three months earlier, a crisis in the West African nation of Mali had gone well, more or less. Judd had saved an important American ally from a coup d’état and rescued the daughter of a powerful senator who had been kidnapped by a previously unknown terrorist cell. But rather than celebrate his triumph, the corridors of the State Department had seen Judd as an irritant—or a direct threat.
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs William Alfred Rogerson was the U.S. government’s top diplomat for relations with the forty-nine countries south of the Sahara Desert—and now he was viewed by his peers as uncharacteristically weak. Rogerson had taken a beating over the Mali affair from the other senior officials. He had allowed an interloper, a rookie outsider—a college professor no less—to tread on his turf.
“Never would’ve allowed that sort of thing in NEA,” the Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs had declared openly at a senior staff meeting.
Rogerson was determined not to let it happen again. The other offices around State were similarly immunizing themselves from Judd Ryker and his ivory tower ideas. Not only had Judd been excluded from meetings since—hurricane response in Haiti, riots in Ankara, and a bombing in Rome—but he’d been increasingly shunned. The State Department treated him like a virus no one else wanted to catch.
This was why his first meeting today was so crucial. And why he needed to be thinking clearly this morning.
—