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The Sum of All Fears jr-7

Page 25

by Tom Clancy


  Fowler stood. “Tomorrow afternoon, Andrey.”

  Bob Fowler escorted the Russian to the door and saw him off, then returned to his suite of rooms. Once there he pulled the handwritten checklist out of his pocket to make sure he'd asked all the questions.

  “Well?”

  “Well, the missile problem, he says, is exactly what our inspectors said it is. That ought to satisfy the guys at DIA.” A grimace; it wouldn't. “I think he's worried about his military.”

  Dr. Elliot sat down. “Anything else?”

  The President poured her a glass of wine, then sat beside his National Security Advisor. The normal pleasantries. He's a very busy, very worried man. Well, we knew that, didn't we?"

  Liz swirled the wine around the glass and sniffed at it. She didn't like Italian wines, but this one wasn't bad. “I've been thinking, Robert…”

  “Yes, Elizabeth?”

  “What happened to Charlie… we need to do something. It isn't fair that he should have disappeared like that. He's the guy who put this treaty on track, isn't he?”

  “Well, yes,” Fowler agreed, sipping at his own replenished glass. “You're right, Elizabeth. It really was his effort.”

  “I think we should let that out — quietly, of course. At the very least—”

  “Yes, he should be remembered for something other than a pregnant grad student. That's very gracious of you, Elizabeth.” Fowler tapped his glass against hers. “You handle the media people. You're releasing the treaty details tomorrow before lunch?”

  “That's right, about nine, I think.”

  “Then after you're finished, take a few of the journalists aside and give it to them on background. Maybe Charlie will rest a little easier.”

  “No problem, Mr. President,” Liz agreed. Exorcizing that particular demon came easily enough, didn't it? Was there anything she could not talk him into?

  “Big day tomorrow.”

  “The biggest, Bob, the biggest.” Elliot leaned back and loosened the scarf from her throat. “I never thought I'd ever have a moment like this.”

  “I did,” Fowler observed with a twinkle in his eye. There came a momentary pang of conscience. He'd expected to have it with someone else, but that was fate, wasn't it? Fate. The world was so strange. But he had no control over that, did he? And fate had decreed that he would be here at the moment in question, with Elizabeth. It wasn't his doing, was it? Therefore, he decided, there was no guilt, was there? How could there be guilt? He was making the world into a better, safer, more peaceful place. How could guilt attach to that?

  Elliot closed her eyes as the President's hand caressed her offered neck. Never in her wildest dreams had she expected a moment like this.

  The entire floor of the hotel was reserved for the President's party, and the two floors under it. Italian and American guards stood at all the entrances, and at various places in the buildings along the street. But the corridor outside the President's suite of rooms was the exclusive domain of the Presidential Protective Detail. Connor and D'Agustino made their own final check before retiring for the evening. A full squad of ten agents were in view, and another ten were behind various closed doors. Three of the visible agents had FAG-bags, black satchels across their chests. Officially called fast-action-gun bags, each contained an Uzi sub-machinegun, which could be extracted and fired in about a second and a half. Anyone who got this far would find a warm reception.

  “I see H AWK and H ARPY are discussing affairs of state,” Daga observed quietly.

  “Helen, I didn't think you were so much of a prude,” Pete Connor replied with a sly grin.

  “None of my business, but in the old days people outside the door had to be eunuchs or something.”

  “Keep talking like that and Santa will drop coal in your stocking.”

  “I'd settle for that new automatic the FBI adopted,” Daga said with a chuckle. “They're like teenagers. It's unseemly.”

  “Daga…”

  “I know, he's The Boss, and he's a big boy, and we have to look the other way. Relax, Pete, you think I'm going to blab to a reporter?” She opened the door to the fire stairs and saw three agents, two of whom had their FAG-bags at the ready.

  “And I was about to offer you a drink, too…” Connor said deadpan. It was a joke. He and Daga were nondrinkers while on duty, and they were nearly always on duty. It wasn't that he had never thought about getting into her pants. He was divorced, as was she, but it would never have worked, and that was that. She knew it, too, and grinned at him.

  “I could use one — the stuff they have here is what I was raised on. What a crummy job this is!” A final look down the corridor. “Everybody's in place, Pete. I think we can call it a night.”

  “You really like the ten-millimeter?”

  “Fired one last week up at Greenbelt. Got a possible with my first string. It doesn't get much better than that, lover.”

  Connor stopped dead in his tracks and laughed. “Christ, Daga!”

  “People might notice?” D'Agustino batted her eyes at him. “See what I mean, Pete?”

  “God, who ever heard of a Guinea puritan?”

  Helen D'Agustino elbowed the senior agent in the ribs and made her way to the elevator. Pete was right. She was turning into a damned prude, and she'd never ever been like that. A passionate woman whose single attempt at marriage had collapsed because one household wasn't large enough for two assertive egos — at least not two Italian ones — she knew she was allowing her prejudices to color her judgment. That was not a healthy thing, even over something both trivial and divorced from her job. What H AWK did on his own time was his business, but the look in his eyes… He was infatuated with the bitch. Daga wondered if any president had allowed that to happen. Probably, she admitted. They were only men, after all, and all men sometimes thought from the testicles instead of the brain. That the President should become a lackey of such a shallow woman as this — that was what offended her. But that, she admitted to herself, was both odd and inconsistent. After all, women didn't come much more liberated than she was. So why, she asked herself, was it bothering her? It had been too long a day for that. She needed sleep, and knew that she'd only get five or six hours before she was on duty again. Damn these overseas trips…

  “So what is it?” Qati asked, just after dawn. He'd been away the previous day, meeting some other guerilla leaders, and also for a trip to the doctor, Ghosn knew, though he could not ask about that.

  “Not sure,” the engineer replied. “I'd guess a jamming pod, something like that.”

  “That's useful,” the commander said at once. Despite the rapprochement, or whatever the key phrase was, between East and West, business was still business. The Russians still had a military, and that military still had weapons. Countermeasures against those weapons were items of interest. Israeli equipment was particularly prized, since the Americans copied it. Even old equipment showed how the Israeli engineers thought through problems, and could provide useful clues to newer systems.

  “Yes, we should be able to sell it to our Russian friends.”

  “How did the American work out?” Qati asked next.

  “Quite well. I do like him, Ismael. I understand him better now.” The engineer explained why. Qati nodded.

  “What should we do with him, then?”

  Ghosn shrugged. “Weapons training, perhaps? Let's see if he fits in with the men.”

  “Very well. I'll send him out this morning to see how well he knows combat skills. And you, how soon will you pick the thing apart?”

  “I planned to do it today.”

  “Excellent. Do not let me stop you.”

  “How are you feeling, Commander?”

  Qati frowned. He felt terrible, but he was telling himself that part of that was the possibility of some sort of treaty with the Israelis. Could it be real? Could it be possible? History said no, but there had been so many changes… Some sort of agreement between the Zionists and the Saudis… well, after the Iraq
business, what could he expect? The Americans had played their role, and now they were presenting some kind of bill. Disappointing, but hardly unexpected, and whatever the Americans were up to would divert attention away from the latest Israeli atrocity. That people calling themselves Arabs had been so womanly as to meekly accept fire and death… Qati shook his head. You didn't fight that way. So, the Americans would do something or other to neutralize the political impact of the Israeli massacre, and the Saudis were playing along like the lapdogs they were. Whatever was in the offing, it could hardly affect the Palestinian struggle. He should soon be feeling better, Qati told himself.

  “It is of no account. Let me know when you've determined exactly what it is.”

  Ghosn took his dismissal and left. He was worried about his commander. The man was ill — he knew that much from his brother-in-law, but exactly how sick he didn't know. In any case, he had work to do.

  The workshop was a disreputable-looking structure of plain wood walls and a roof of corrugated steel. Had it looked more sturdy, some Israeli F-16 pilot might have destroyed it years before.

  The bomb — he still thought of it by that name — lay on the dirt floor. An A-frame like that used for auto or truck service stood over it, with a chain for moving the bomb if necessary, but yesterday two men had set it up in accordance with his instructions. Ghosn turned on the lights — he liked a brightly-lit work-area — and contemplated the… bomb.

  Why do I keep calling it that? he asked himself. Ghosn shook his head. The obvious place to begin was the access door. It would not be easy. Impact with the ground had telescoped the bombcase, doubtless damaging the internal hinges… but he had all the time he wanted.

  Ghosn selected a screwdriver from his tool box and went to work.

  President Fowler slept late. He was still fatigued from the flight, and… he almost laughed at himself in the mirror. Good Lord, three times in less than twenty-four hours… wasn't it? He tried to do the arithmetic in his head, but the effort defeated him before his morning coffee. In any case, three times in relatively short succession. He hadn't done that in quite a long time! But he'd also gotten his rest. His body was composed and relaxed after the morning shower, and the razor plowed through the cream on his face, revealing a man with younger, leaner features that matched the twinkle in his eyes. Three minutes later, he selected a striped tie to go with the white shirt and gray suit. Not somber, but serious was the prescription for the day. He'd let the churchmen dazzle the cameras with their red silk. His speech would be all the more impressive if delivered by a well turned-out businessman/politician, which was his political image, despite the fact that he'd never in his life run a private business of any sort. A serious man, Bob Fowler — with a common touch to be sure, but a serious man whom one could trust to do The Right Thing.

  Well, I will sure as hell prove that today, the President of the United States told himself in yet another mirror as he checked his tie. His head turned at the knock on the door. “Come in.”

  “Good morning, Mr. President,” said Special Agent Connor.

  “How are you today, Pete?” Fowler asked, turning back to the mirror… the knot wasn't quite right, and he started afresh.

  “Fine, thank you, sir. It's a mighty nice day outside.”

  “You people never get enough rest. Never get to see the sights, either. That's my fault, isn't it?” There, Fowler thought, that's perfect.

  “It's okay, Mr. President. We're all volunteers. What do you want for breakfast, sir?”

  “Good morning, Mr. President!” Dr. Elliot came in behind Connor. “This is the day!”

  Bob Fowler turned with a smile. “It sure as hell is! Join me for breakfast, Elizabeth?”

  “Love to. I have the morning brief — it's a nice short one for a change.”

  “Pete, breakfast for two… a big one. I'm hungry.”

  “Just coffee for me,” Liz said to the servant. Connor caught the tone of her voice, but did not react beyond nodding before he left. “Bob, you look wonderful.”

  “So do you, Elizabeth.” And so she did, in her most expensive suit, which was also serious-looking, but just feminine enough. She took her seat and did the briefing.

  “CIA says the Japanese are up to something,” she said as she concluded.

  “What?”

  They caught a whiff, Ryan says, of something in the next round of trade negotiations. The Prime Minister is quoted as saying something unkind."

  “What exactly?”

  “'This is the last time we'll be cut out of our proper role on the world stage, and I'll make them pay for this,'” Dr. Elliot quoted. “Ryan thinks it's important.”

  “What do you think?”

  “I think Ryan's being paranoid again. He's been cut out of this end of the treaty works, and he's trying to remind us how important he is. Marcus agrees with my assessment, but forwarded the report out of a fit of objectivity,” Liz concluded with heavy irony.

  “Cabot is something of a disappointment, isn't he?” Fowler observed as he looked over the briefing notes.

  “He doesn't seem very effective at telling his people who the boss is. He's being captured by the bureaucracy over there, especially Ryan.”

  “You really don't like him, do you?” the President noted.

  “He's arrogant. He's—”

  “ Elizabeth, he has a very impressive record. I don't much care for him either as a person, but as an intelligence officer he has done a lot of things very, very well.”

  “He's a throwback. He's James Bond — or thinks he is. Fine,” Elliot admitted, “he's done some important things, but that sort of thing is history. We need someone now with a broader view.”

  “Congress won't go for it,” the President said, as breakfast was wheeled in. The food had been scanned for radioactives, checked for electronic devices, and sniffed for explosives — which, the President thought, put one hell of a strain on the dogs, who probably liked sausage as well as he did. “We'll serve ourselves, thanks,” the President dismissed the Navy steward before going on. They love him there, Congress loves the guy." He didn't have to add the fact that Ryan, as Deputy Director of Central Intelligence, was not merely a Presidential appointee. He'd also been through a confirmation hearing in the US Senate. Such people were not easily dismissed. There had to be a reason.

  “I never have figured that out. Especially Trent. Of all the people to sign off on Ryan, why him?”

  “Ask him,” Fowler suggested, as he buttered his pancakes.

  “I have. He danced around the issue like the prima ballerina at the New York Ballet.” The President laughed uproariously at that.

  “Christ, woman, don't ever let anybody hear you say that!”

  “Robert, we both support the estimable Mr. Trent's choice of sexual preference, but he is a prissy son of a bitch and we both know it.”

  “True,” Fowler had to agree. “So, what are you telling me, Elizabeth?”

  “It's time for Cabot to put Ryan in his place.”

  “How much of this is envy for Ryan's part in the treaty, Elizabeth?”

  Elliot's eyes flared, but the President was looking at his plate. She took a deep breath before speaking, and tried to decide if it were a goad or not. Probably not, but the President wasn't the sort to be impressed by emotions in matters like this. “Bob, we've been through that. Ryan connected a few ideas that other people had already come up with. He's an intelligence officer, for God's sake! All they do is report what other people do.”

  “He's done more than that.” Fowler saw where this was going, but it was fun to play games with her.

  “Fine, he's killed people! Is that what's special about him? James goddamned Bond! You even let them execute the ones who—”

  “ Elizabeth, those terrorists also killed seven Secret Service agents. My life depends on those people, and it would have been damned ungracious and just plain idiotic of me to commute the sentences of people who had killed their colleagues.” The President almos
t frowned at that — So much for strongly-held principle, eh, Bob! a voice asked him — but managed to control himself.

  “And now you can't do it at all, or people will say that you failed to do it once out of personal self-interest. You allowed yourself to be trapped and out-maneuvered,” she pointed out. She had been goaded after all, Liz decided, and answered in kind, but Fowler wasn't buying.

  “ Elizabeth, I may be the only former prosecutor in America who doesn't believe in capital punishment, but… we do live in a democracy, and the people support the idea.” He looked up from his meal. “Those people were terrorists. I can't say I'm happy that I allowed them to be executed, but if anyone deserved it, they did. The time wasn't right to make a statement on that issue. Maybe in my second term. We have to wait for the right case. Politics is the art of the possible. That means one thing at a time, Elizabeth. You know that as well as I do.”

  “If you don't do something, you'll wake up and find that Ryan is running CIA for you. He's able, I admit, but he's something from the past. He's the wrong person for the times we live in.”

  God, you're an envious woman, Fowler thought. But we all have our weaknesses. It was time to stop playing with her, though. It wouldn't do to offend her too deeply.

  “What do you have in mind?”

  “We can ease him out.”

  “I'll think about it— Elizabeth, let's not spoil the day with a discussion like this one, okay? How do you plan to break the news of the treaty terms?”

  Elliot leaned back and sipped at her coffee. She reproached herself for moving too soon and too passionately on this. She disliked Ryan greatly, but Bob was right. It wasn't the time, wasn't the place. She had all the time in the world to make her play, and she knew that she had to do it with skill.

  “A copy of the treaty, I think.”

  “Can they read that fast?” Fowler laughed. The media was full of such illiterates.

  “You should see the speculation. The lead Times piece was faxed in this morning. They're frantic. They'll eat it up. Besides, I ginned up some Cliff Notes for them.”

  “However you want to do it,” the President said, as he finished off his sausage. He checked his watch. Timing was everything. There was a six-hour time difference between Rome and Washington. That meant the treaty could not be signed until two in the afternoon at the earliest, so as to catch the morning news shows. But the American people had to be prepped for the news, and that meant that the TV crews had to have the details of the treaty by three, Eastern Daylight Time, in order to absorb everything fully. Liz would break the news at nine, twenty minutes from now, he noted. “And you'll be playing up Charlie's part in it?”

 

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