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"Great a.s.s on that Bradley kid," Daga pointed out quietly.
"This women's lib stuff is going too far, Helen," Pete said with a grin. He s.h.i.+fted positions on the couch to get his service revolver out of his kidney.
Gunther Bock and Marvin Russell stood on the sidewalk just outside the White House grounds among a crowd of a hundred or so tourists, most of whom aimed cameras at the executive mansion. They'd arrived in the city the previous evening, and tomorrow they'd tour the Capitol. Both wore ballcaps to protect them from what still felt like a summer sun. Bock had a camera draped around his neck on a Mickey Mouse strap. He snapped a few photos, mainly to blend in with the rest of the tourists. The real observations came from his trained eye. This was a much harder target than people realized. The buildings around the White House were all large enough that sharpshooters were provided with excellent perches concealed by the stonework. He knew that he was probably under surveillance right now, but they couldn't have the time or money to compare his likeness to every photo they had on their books, and he'd taken the trouble to alter his appearance enough to dispense with that worry.
The President's helicopter flew in and landed only a hundred meters from where he stood. A man with a man-portable SAM might stand a good chance of taking it out-except for the practical considerations. To be there at the right time was much harder than it seemed. The ideal way would be to have a small truck, perhaps one with a hole cut in the roof so that the missileer could stand, fire, and attempt his escape. Except for the riflemen who certainly perched on the surrounding buildings, and Bock had no illusions that such snipers would miss their targets. Americans had invented sharpshooting, and their President would have the services of the best. Doubtless some of the people in this crowd of tourists were also Secret Service agents, and it was unlikely that he'd spot them.
The bomb could be driven here and detonated in a truck ... depending on the protective measures that Ghosn had warned him about. Similarly, he might be able to deliver the weapon by truck to the immediate vicinity of the Capitol Building, perhaps at the time of the President's State of the Union Address ... if the weapon were ready on time. That they weren't sure of, and there was also the question of s.h.i.+pping it here-three weeks it would take. Latakia to Rotterdam, then transs.h.i.+pment to an American port. Baltimore was the closest major port. Norfolk/Newport News was next. Both handled lots of containerized s.h.i.+pping. They could fly it in, but airborne cargo was often X-rayed, and they could not risk that.
The idea was to catch the President on a weekend. It almost had to be a weekend for everything else to work. Everything else. Bock knew that he was violating one of his most important operational precepts-simplicity. But for this to have a chance of working, he had to arrange more than one incident, and he had to do it on a weekend. But the American President was in the White House only about half the time on weekends, and his movements between Was.h.i.+ngton, Ohio, and other places were unpredictable. The simplest security measure available to the President of the United States was the one they used: his movement schedule, as well known as it might have been, was irregular and its precise details were often closely held. Bock needed at least a week's lead-time to set up his other arrangements-and that was optimistic-but it would be nearly impossible to get that seven days. It would actually have been simpler to plan a simple a.s.sa.s.sination with conventional weapons. A small aircraft, for example, might be armed with SA-7 missiles ... probably not. The President's helicopter undoubtedly had the best infrared jammers available....
One chance. You get only one chance.
What if we are patient? What if we simply sit on the bomb for a year and bring it into the country for the next next State of the Union speech? State of the Union speech? Getting the bomb close enough to the Capitol Building to destroy it and everyone in it should not be hard. He'd heard-and would see tomorrow-that the Capitol was a building of cla.s.sical construction-lots of stone, but little structural ironwork ... perhaps all they needed was patience. Getting the bomb close enough to the Capitol Building to destroy it and everyone in it should not be hard. He'd heard-and would see tomorrow-that the Capitol was a building of cla.s.sical construction-lots of stone, but little structural ironwork ... perhaps all they needed was patience.
But that wouldn't happen. Qati would not allow it. There was both the question of security and the more important consideration that Qati thought himself a dying man, and dying men were not known for their patience.
And would it work in any case? How well did the Americans guard the areas where the President's presence was predictable well in advance? Were their radiological sensors in the area?
You'd put them there, wouldn't you?
Only one chance. You'll never be able to repeat this.
At least one week's advance notice or you'll never achieve anything beyond ma.s.s murder.
Must be a place without the likely presence of radiological sensors. That eliminated Was.h.i.+ngton.
Bock started walking away from the black iron fence. His face did not betray the anger he felt.
"Back to the hotel?" Russell asked.
"Yes, why not?" Both men were still tired from their traveling anyway.
"Good, wanted to catch the ball game. You know, that's about the only thing Fowler and I see eye to eye on?"
"Hmph? What's that?"
"Football." Russell laughed. "You know? Football. Okay, I'll teach it t'ya."
Fifteen minutes later they were in their room. Russell switched the TV to the local NBC channel.
"That was some drive, Tom. The Vikings had to convert six third-downs, and two of them required measurements."
"And one was a bad spot," President Fowler said.
"Ref didn't think so." Talbot chuckled.
"They're holding Tony Wills to barely three yards a carry, and one of those was his twenty-yard break on the reverse that caught the Chargers napping."
"A lot of work for three points, Tim, but they did get the three."
"And now the Chargers get their chance at offense. The Vikings defense is a little iffy, with two of their starters out with minor injuries. I bet they're sorry to miss this one."
The Chargers' quarterback took his first snap, faded back five steps, and hurled the ball toward his flanker, slanting across the middle, but a hand tipped the ball and it ended up in the surprised face of the Vikings' free safety, who pulled it in and fell at the forty.
Bock found the game exciting in a distant sort of way, but almost totally incomprehensible. Russell tried to explain, but it didn't really help very much. Gunther consoled himself with a beer, stretching out on the bed while his mind rolled over what he'd seen. Bock knew what he wanted his plan to accomplish, but the exact details-especially here in America-were looking harder than expected. If only- "What was that they said?"
"The Secretary of Defense," Russell answered.
"A joke?"
Marvin turned. "Sort of a joke. That's what they call the middle linebacker, Maxim Bradley, from the University of Alabama. But the real one owns the team. Dennis Bunker-there he is." The camera showed Bunker in one of the stadium's sky-boxes.
How remarkable, Bock thought. Bock thought.
"What is this Super Bowl they talked about?"
"That's the champions.h.i.+p game. They have a playoff series of the most successful teams, and the last one is called the Super Bowl."
"Like the World Cup, you mean?"
"Yeah, something like that. 'Cept we do it every year. This year-actually next year, end of January-it's in the new stadium they built at Denver. The Skydome, I think they call it."
"They expect these two teams to go there?"
Russell shrugged. "That's the talk. The regular season is sixteen weeks, man, then three weeks of playoffs, then another week wait for the Super Bowl."
"Who goes to this last game?"
"Lots of people. Hey, man, it's the the game. Everybody wants to go to it. Getting tickets is a mother. These two teams are the best bet to go all the way, but it's real unpredictable, y'know?" game. Everybody wants to go to it. Getting tickets is a mother. These two teams are the best bet to go all the way, but it's real unpredictable, y'know?"
"President Fowler is a football enthusiast?"
"That's what they say. He's supposed to go to a lot of Redskin games right here in D.C."
"What about security?" Bock asked.
"It's tough. They put him in one of the special boxes. Figure they have it rigged with bulletproof gla.s.s or something."
How very foolish, Bock thought. Of course, a stadium was easier to secure than it might seem to the casual observer. A heavy crew-served weapon could be fired only from an entrance ramp, and watching those was relatively easy. On the other hand ... Bock thought. Of course, a stadium was easier to secure than it might seem to the casual observer. A heavy crew-served weapon could be fired only from an entrance ramp, and watching those was relatively easy. On the other hand ...
Bock closed his eyes. He was thinking in an unorganized way, vacillating between conventional and unconventional approaches to the problem. He was also allowing himself to focus on the wrong thing. Killing the American President was desirable but not essential. What was was essential was to kill the largest possible number of people in the most spectacular way imaginable, then to coordinate with other activities in order to foment ... essential was to kill the largest possible number of people in the most spectacular way imaginable, then to coordinate with other activities in order to foment ...
Think! Concentrate on the real mission. Concentrate on the real mission.
"The television coverage for these games is most impressive," Bock observed after a minute.
"Yeah, they make a big deal of that. Satellite vans, all that stuff." Russell was concentrating on the game. The Vikings had scored something called a touchdown, and the score was now ten to nothing, but it seemed now that the other team was moving rapidly in the other direction.
"Has the game ever been seriously disrupted?"
Marvin turned. "Huh? Oh, during the war with Iraq, they had really tight security-and you remember the movie, right?"
"Movie?" Bock asked.
"Black Sunday, I think it was-some Middle East guys tried to blow up the place." Russell laughed. "Already been done, man. In Hollywood, anyway. They used a blimp. Anyway, during the Super Bowl when we were fighting Iraq, they wouldn't let the TV blimp come near the place." I think it was-some Middle East guys tried to blow up the place." Russell laughed. "Already been done, man. In Hollywood, anyway. They used a blimp. Anyway, during the Super Bowl when we were fighting Iraq, they wouldn't let the TV blimp come near the place."
"Is there a game at Denver today?"
"No, that's tomorrow night, Broncos and the Seahawks. Won't be much of a game. The Broncos are rebuilding this year."
"I see." Bock left the room and arranged for the concierge to get them tickets to Denver in the morning.
Cathy got up to see him off. She even fixed breakfast. Her solicitude over the past few days had not made her husband feel any better. Quite the reverse. But he couldn't say anything about it, could he? Even the way she overdid it, straightening his tie and kissing him on the way out the door. The smile, the loving look, all for a husband who couldn't get it up, Jack thought on his way out to the car. The same sort of smothering attention you might give to some poor b.a.s.t.a.r.d in a wheelchair.
"Morning, doc."
"h.e.l.lo, John."
"Catch the Vikings-Chargers game yesterday?"
"No, I, uh, took my son to see the Orioles. They lost six to one." Success was following Jack everywhere, but at least he'd kept his word to his son. That was something, wasn't it?
"Twenty-four to twenty-one in overtime. G.o.d, that Wills kid is incredible. They held him to ninety-six yards, but when he had to deliver, he popped it for twenty yards and set up the field goal," Clark reported.
"You have money on the game?"
"Five bucks at the office, but it was a three-point spread. The education fund won that one."
It gave Ryan something to chuckle about. Gambling was as illegal at CIA as it was in every other government office, but a serious attempt to enforce a ban on football betting might have started a revolution-the same was true at the FBI, Jack was sure, which enforced interstate gambling statutes-and the semiofficial system was that half-point betting spreads were not allowed. All "pushes" (odds-caused ties) forfeited into the Agency's in-house charity, the Education Aid Fund. It was something that even the Agency's own Inspector General winked at-in fact, he liked to lay money on games as much as the next guy.
"Looks like you at least got some sleep, Jack," Clark noted as they made their way toward Route 50.
"Eight hours," Jack said. He'd wanted another chance the previous night, but Cathy had said no. You're too tired, Jack. That's all it is. You're working too hard, and I want you to take it easy, okay? You're too tired, Jack. That's all it is. You're working too hard, and I want you to take it easy, okay?
Like I'm a G.o.dd.a.m.ned stud horse that's been overworked.
"Good for you," Clark said. "Or maybe your wife insisted, eh?"
Ryan stared ahead at the road. "Where's the box?"
"Here."
Ryan unlocked it and started looking at the weekend's dispatches.
They caught an early direct flight from Was.h.i.+ngton National to Denver's Stapleton International. It was a clear day most of the way across the country. Bock got a window seat and looked at the country, his first time in America. As were most Europeans, he was surprised, almost awed by the sheer size and diversity. The wooded hills of Appalachia; the flat farmlands of Kansas, speckled with the immense circular signature of the traveling irrigation systems; the stunning way the plains ended and the Rockies began within easy sight of Denver. No doubt Marvin would say something when they arrived about how this had all been property of his people. What rubbish. They'd been nomadic barbarians, following the herds of bison, or whatever had once been there before civilization arrived. America might be his enemy, but it was a civilized country, and all the more dangerous for it. By the time the aircraft landed, he was squirming with his need for a smoke. Ten minutes after landing they'd rented a car and were examining a map. Bock's head was dizzy from the lack of oxygen here. Nearly fifteen hundred meters of alt.i.tude, he realized. It was a wonder that people could play American football here.
They'd landed behind the morning rush hour, and driving to the stadium was simple. Southwest of the city, the new Skydome was a distinctive structure located on an immense plot of ground to allow ample room for parking. He parked the car close to a ticket window and decided that the simple approach would be best.
"Can I get two tickets for tonight's match?" he asked the attendant.
"Sure, we have a few hundred left. Where do you want them?"
"I don't know the stadium at all, I'm afraid."
"You must be new here," the lady observed with a friendly smile. "All we got's in the upper deck, Section Sixty-six and Sixty-eight."
"Two, please. Is cash all right?"
"Sure is. Where are you from?"
"Denmark," Bock replied.
"Really? Well, welcome to Denver! Hope you enjoy the game."
"Can I look around to see where my seat is?"
"Technically, no, but n.o.body really minds."
"Thank you." Bock smiled back at the simpering fool.
"They had seats for tonight?" Marvin Russell asked. "I'll be d.a.m.ned."
"Come, we will see where they are."
Bock walked through the nearest open gate, just a few meters from the big ABC vans that carried the satellite equipment for the evening broadcast. He took the time to notice that the stadium was hard-wired for the equipment. So the TV vans would always be in the same place, just by Gate 5. Inside, he saw a team of technicians setting up their equipment, then he headed up the nearest ramp, deliberately heading in the wrong direction.
The stadium had to seat sixty thousand people, perhaps a little more. It had three primary levels, called lower, mezzanine, and upper, plus two complete ranks of enclosed boxes, some of which looked quite luxurious. Structurally it was quite impressive. Ma.s.sive reinforced-concrete construction, all the upper decks were cantilevered. There were no pillars to block a spectator's view. A fine stadium. A superb target. Beyond the parking lot to the north were endless hectares of low-rise apartment buildings. To the east was a government office center. The stadium was not in the city center, but that couldn't be helped. Bock found and took his seat, orienting himself with the compa.s.s and the TV equipment. The latter was quite easy. An ABC banner was being hung below one of the press boxes.