“Lieutenant General Lester Bean,” Gary Worde said without hesitation when I had finished talking. “That was the name and rank of the officer in the helicopter that brought Colonel Po into Laos and took Veil out.”
“Not Robert Warren?” I asked. “That was the name of the general that signed Veil’s discharge papers.”
Worde shook his head. “No; I never heard of any General Warren. Bean was Veil’s army C.O. The man in the civilian clothes was a guy by the name of Orville Madison. A real fuck.”
I looked at Garth and even in the dim firelight could see him stiffen on his stool. I felt absolutely no satisfaction over the fact that I had picked Orville Madison’s name out of a newspaper five days before. There was nothing for me in Worde’s confirmation but a cold, empty feeling in the pit of my stomach. There was something almost anticlimactic in hearing Gary Worde link Orville Madison to Veil; now that we virtually knew for certain that Madison was the killer hunting Veil and us, I didn’t have the slightest idea what we were going to do with the information. I was afraid—not only for Veil, Garth, and myself, but for the country.
Kevin Shannon, I thought, must have been on drugs when he dreamed up the nomination of Orville Madison as secretary of state. Or, an even more ominous thought, Madison could have something on Kevin Shannon. It was just what the United States needed; I tried to imagine what the reaction of Americans, and other people and governments around the world, would be when the media began trumpeting the news that the charismatic and dashing newly elected president of the United States had nominated an active, busy-beaver murderer to the top post in his cabinet.
If the fact became known and was believed.
Despite everything that had happened, we still had no evidence that Orville Madison had ever even received a parking ticket, much less ordered the murders of men, women, and children from his office in Langley. The only people left alive who had firsthand knowledge of the connection between Veil Kendry and Orville Madison were two certified loonies, one of whom nobody but the other loony had seen in nine years. That left only the two Frederickson brothers to tell what could be described as wild, unsubstantiated tales, and Orville Madison would be doing his best to rectify that situation once he found out about our latest stop.
“Madison was Veil’s C.I.A. controller, wasn’t he?” I said.
“Yes,” Worde replied.
I shook my head in an attempt to clear it. I was getting a contact high from the marijuana smoke, and I assumed Garth was experiencing the same sensation. The firelight and shadow inside the cabin shimmered and danced before my eyes, and I had to hold on to the edge of my stool in order to steady myself. “Why was Veil taken out of Laos?” My voice had a metallic ring to it, and it echoed inside my head.
“To play toy soldier,” Worde answered dryly, sucking on his pipe.
“I don’t understand.”
Worde granted, set aside his pipe. “It was near the end of the war, when everyone but the generals and a few politicians knew it was lost. Back in the United States, it was all coming apart almost as fast as it was in Southeast Asia. Every day you had demonstrations in a dozen different cities; you had the march on Washington, the revelations about the Pentagon Papers—all of it. You’ll recall that a lot of politicians and military people were blaming the fact that we were losing the war on the media. A few of those people decided to do something about it.”
“What did they decide to do about it?” Garth asked quietly. “And who did the deciding?”
Worde shrugged. “Veil didn’t know who made the decisions at the top level, so I don’t know. But their reasoning went that, since newspapers and television were responsible for an anti-American, defeatist attitude and our failure to win the war, a way had to be found to manipulate newspapers and television in order to get the people to support the war effort. Just about every military and political spokesman had been discredited; nobody believed anything they said. Then some genius decided that it could all be turned around if only we found the right spokesman—a bona fide hero, like Sergeant York in the First World War, or Audie Murphy in the Second. The genius decided that what was needed was a John Wayne type who’d actually fought in the war, and who could fight what was perceived as a publicity battle on the home front.”
“They wanted to give that job to Veil Kendry?” I asked in disbelief.
The hidden veteran nodded brusquely. “In fact, at one point the notion had reached a stage where the plan was given a name—Operation Archangel, from Veil’s C.I.A. code name.”
“Excuse me, Gary,” I said, still holding on to the edge of my stool for fear that I would float away if I didn’t, “but I can’t quite see Veil Kendry as a likely candidate for media hero; too independent, too unpredictable, and too downright violent. I can see Veil punching out some reporter’s lights if he didn’t like a question. I’m talking about the way he was back then.”
“You’re right, of course—but only the people who’d actually met or dealt with Veil knew that. As a matter of fact, there had to be dozens of candidates better suited for that kind of assignment than Veil. But then, Veil was the highest decorated soldier of that war; Veil was the Sergeant York and Audie Murphy of Viet Nam. The man had a bagful of bronze and silver stars, and had been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor twice for bravery in the face of the enemy. This was before he was sent into Laos, and it was how he got promoted to the rank of colonel. Because of his C.I.A. connection and the nature of some of his duties, his awards were kept secret. When Operation Archangel went into effect, everything—or almost everything—he had done would be made public. People might argue about the war, but they wouldn’t be able to dispute the fact that Veil was a man of incredible valor, a hero.”
“Damn,” Garth said hoarsely, in a tone of respect. “You wouldn’t be able to even guess at any of that if you looked at his record now.”
“I don’t know what record you’ve seen,” Worde replied, “or what’s been put on it. But what I’ve told you is the truth of the matter. Of course, the reason he’d done all those things and won all those medals was because he was crazy as a loon; Veil would be the first to tell you that. Veil reveled in the sights and sounds and feelings that destroyed me and so many others; he’d be swimming in blood up to his neck, wading through a field of beheaded and castrated corpses, and barely even notice. In this sense, he was a kind of ‘ultimate warrior’; he needed the kind of action for which soldiers are decorated. It was this war record that finally swayed what Veil believed was a small Senate select committee, sitting in secret session, in his favor. Orville Madison, so I’m told, was a master of that kind of political intrigue and maneuvering. It was Madison who’d been pushing hard for Veil’s selection, and when the dust finally cleared from all the Washington infighting, Madison had won. The plan became officially known as Operation Archangel.”
I asked, “Why was it so important to Orville Madison that Veil be selected?”
“There were two reasons. The first, and the most obvious to everyone, was that Veil’s selection for so exalted an honor would reflect very favorably on Madison, since Veil was his man; regular army, yes, but also a C.I.A. operative whose most important work had been done under Madison’s control and orders. All of the other candidates had men championing their selection for the very same motive. Veil’s selection would be a very large feather in Madison’s career cap.”
“The second reason?”
“Orville Madison hated Veil’s guts.”
Garth started to ask a question, but I raised my hand to silence him, leaned forward on my stool. “I think I’ve got it,” I said with an eerie feeling of both sickness and growing excitement. “This was an honor virtually any other soldier would have given anything for, what with its honor, glory, and a full pass home, away from the fighting; but it was something Veil would find intolerable, and quite possibly humiliating.”
“That’s correct,” Worde said. “Combat was something Veil performed as well as—and possib
ly better than—any soldier who’s ever lived, and he desperately needed it, as well, to keep his head straight. He wanted no part of being what he called a ‘cardboard hero.’ He hated the very idea of the assignment. Madison had known precisely what Veil’s reaction would be, and he was probably more than a little concerned that Veil might just say fuck it, tear off Madison’s head, and shove it up his ass. It’s why Madison brought General Bean along with him into Laos—to back him up, and to make certain that Veil understood that the only alternative to accepting the assignment was a court-martial and the loss of his career. Bean was there to make certain Veil understood he had no choice, and to make him think twice before simply punching out Madison.” Worde paused, shrugged. “Veil did what he had to do; he got into the helicopter.”
“Why did Madison hate Veil so much?”
“Because he couldn’t control him, and because he feared him. I was in Special Forces with C.I.A. responsibilities myself, and word about career C.I.A. personnel got around. Madison was a soul crusher, a sadist who liked to burn out his operatives; he’d find a man’s breaking point, then push him past it. He must have been very good at what he did as far as the agency was concerned, but, to a man, his operatives hated and feared him. Except for Veil. To Veil, Madison was just an obnoxious son-of-a-bitch he ignored whenever possible. Veil always knew what had to be done, and he did it—with or without Madison’s blessing. He considered Madison irrelevant to his mission, and this drove Madison up the wall. Because of his combat record, Veil had power too, so the personal battle between Veil and Madison was kind of a standoff. Veil often told Madison to fuck off, and he got away with it. But Madison finally beat him on the Operation Archangel thing because so much preliminary planning had been done and high-level decisions already made, behind Veil’s back. By the time Veil found out about it, Operation Archangel had virtually already been put in place. Veil would have had to buck a good part of the military and political establishment, and he didn’t have the juice to do that.”
Garth said, “Putting Colonel Po in charge of Veil’s village was an added twist of the knife.”
“Right—a delayed twist, because Veil wasn’t aware of Po’s reputation at the time. If he had known … well, I’m not sure what would have happened. Anyway, he was shipped off to Tokyo for six weeks of R and R, and special training for his new assignment.”
“What kind of training?” I asked.
“Public relations bullshit—what he was supposed to say, and when he was supposed to say it; what he was not supposed to say. That sort of thing. Meanwhile, the White House PR staff was gearing up for the media blitz that would kick off with the president, the joint chiefs of staff, and a whole load of important congressmen meeting Veil at Dulles Airport when he flew back to the States. There would be a Washington parade in his honor, and another one the next day in New York, complete with ticker tape. The president would issue a proclamation of sorts honoring Veil as a national hero, and the fact that he was the most highly decorated soldier of the war would be made public. Literally overnight, Veil was scheduled to become the most publicized hero since Charles Lindbergh.
“The presidential proclamation and parades were just for openers. Among other things, Veil was scheduled for a year-long cross-country tour with hundreds of personal appearances. Biographies and other books about Veil would begin to appear in bookstores. Hollywood would make films about him—starring Veil himself, of course, if it was discovered that he had any acting ability at all. His face was going to appear on armed forces recruiting posters, and there’d even be a comic book featuring him. The message would be very simple: Veil, a kind of god of war, had given everything he had to fight against our enemies, and it would be virtually sacrilegious for the American public to betray his efforts and sacrifices; it was time for those misguided Americans who had opposed the war to rally behind this savior of American will and values. Veil’s mission was to rally public support for an all-out, last-ditch effort to win the war by any means necessary, incuding the possible use of tactical nuclear weapons. Veil was to be the personification of everything most Americans want to see in themselves, and the idea was for him to lead us away from the brink of defeat to final victory. That was the scenario.
“I think Veil realized early on, in Tokyo, that he wasn’t going to make it. Deprived of combat, faced with an assignment he couldn’t stand even to think about, an old problem reappeared. Do you know about …?”
“Yes,” I said. “We were told about his brain damage and the vivid dreaming by the same person who told us about you.”
Gary Worde nodded. “He finished his training. It was thought best for Veil to disembark to the United States from Viet Nam, so he was sent back to Saigon. You already know some of what happened there. When he met that pimp and the Hmong children on the street, there were only two hours left before he was supposed to be at the airport and on the plane for the VIP flight that would take him home to the presidential greeting party. It was when he saw the pimp and the children that Veil felt the final twist of the knife and realized the lengths Madison had gone to in order to try to break his spirit.
“Veil went crazy. You know how he rescued the rest of the children and took them to the relief agency. Then, instead of going to the airport, Veil went to the safe house where Madison lived and had offices, and he beat the shit out of him. It was while Veil was busting up Madison that he found out about the joint commando force that was on its way to wipe out the Hmong village. Veil forced Madison to order him up an armed helicopter. You know what happened when he flew into Laos, and you know that he survived the crash of his helicopter. He managed to hike out of the jungle, back into Viet Nam. He turned himself in to the first American unit he ran into, and they turned him over to General Bean. Veil assumed he’d be executed, and he accepted that. He was put in the stockade, and plans were made for a summary court-martial. It never came off.
“Somebody in the army pointed out that they had a problem with Veil, and neither of the options they were considering—Veil’s execution or imprisonment—was going to solve it. Veil had left some of the most important and powerful people in the country—including no less than the president of the United States—standing around on the tarmac at Dulles Airport with their thumbs up their asses while he flew off to commit a treasonous act by firing rockets and bullets at his own countrymen and our allies. It would have been an absolute public relations and enemy propaganda disaster if that fact was made public. The media would be talking about nothing else for months, and a super-soldier’s desertion in the face of C.I.A. treachery would become the issue, not the necessity of winning the war. The story of Operation Archangel would have had exactly the opposite impact on the nation of what was intended.
“The fact that Veil had turned himself in was already an official matter of U.S. Army record; he was in General Bean’s personal custody, and—after the episode with Po and the Hmong—Bean was no friend of Orville Madison’s. So it was too late for the C.I.A. simply to take Veil out behind some tree and shoot him. If the army tried and shot him, the event would attract all sorts of reporters with dangerous questions. Imprisoning Veil might attract less attention, but then Veil would be free to communicate. Obviously, nobody wanted Veil sitting around writing his memoirs.”
“Gary,” I said, “Operation Archangel, according to you, was not only in place, it was already moving. It takes hundreds of people to plan and orchestrate that kind of media campaign, so those hundreds of people—including a lot of reporters—must already have known what was supposed to happen.”
“They knew what was supposed to happen, but not whom it was supposed to happen to; they didn’t know who was supposed to be at the center of it. It was thought that keeping Archangel’s identity a secret until the last moment would heighten dramatic impact, so Veil’s name had never been announced; only a handful of people knew that Veil was Archangel. So it was possible to cancel Operation Archangel, for whatever reason they might think up, and then classify
the information and restrict it to the few people who already knew the whole thing, and who wouldn’t talk in any case. It just wasn’t possible to contain the damage that would result if Veil’s name and activities ever became connected to it. His cooperation was needed.”
“So they let him go,” Garth said. “He must have had one hell of a lawyer.”
“He didn’t need a lawyer,” Worde replied as he refilled his pipe with more homegrown marijuana and lit it. “He had Orville Madison.”
“Come again?” I said, concerned that the marijuana smoke might be making me hear—or Gary Worde say—absurd things.
The hidden veteran puffed on his pipe, blew a thick, night-blue smoke ring. “Although Veil didn’t know it at the time, it was Orville Madison who argued for Veil’s release in exchange for his promise to remain silent about everything that had happened.”
“That doesn’t make any sense,” Garth said.
Gary Worde threw back his head and laughed loudly. “It does when you know Madison.”
“Why the hell would Madison do anything to help Kendry?” Garth persisted.
The laughter abruptly stopped, and Worde leaned forward on his stool. “Madison had been beaten up, both physically and professionally; finally, Veil had defeated him. More than anything else, Madison wanted to exact revenge—and he thought he’d figured out a way to do it. He understood Veil as well as anyone, and it was this understanding that he hoped to use. At this time Veil probably preferred death to imprisonment, because he knew that he would lose his mind behind bars. But Madison couldn’t exact the kind of personal revenge he wanted if Veil were dead or in prison. Madison wanted Veil out, where he could get at him. And he managed it. Veil’s records were to be completely altered, with all mention of his combat record and medals erased; in effect, Veil was to be erased, made a nonperson. In exchange for his freedom, Veil was to promise never to discuss anything concerning his war record or Operation Archangel.”
Two Songs This Archangel Sings Page 19