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"Proceed with your planning, Gunther."
20.
COMPEt.i.tION.
At the halfway point of the NFL season, the Vikings and Chargers were still the cla.s.s of the league. Shrugging off their overtime loss to Minnesota, San Diego took their revenge the next week at home against doormat Indianapolis, whom they buried 45-3, while the Vikings had to struggle against the Giants in a Monday Night game, emerging on the sweet side of a 21-17 score. Tony Wills pa.s.sed a thousand rus.h.i.+ng yards in the third quarter of the season's eighth game, and was already consensus rookie of the year, plus becoming the official NFL spokesman for the President's Campaign Against Substance Abuse (CASA). The Vikings stumbled against the Forty-Niners, losing 24-16, which evened their record with San Diego's 7-1, but their nearest compet.i.tion in the NFL Central-"Black and Blue"-division was the Bears at 4-3. Parity in the National Football League had come and gone. The only serious challenge in the American Conference came, as always, from the Dolphins and Raiders, both of which were on the Chargers' dance card for the tail end of the season.
None of this was the least comfort to Ryan. Sleep came hard, despite the enveloping fatigue that seemed to define what his life had become. Before when thoughts had plagued his night, he'd come to the windows facing the Chesapeake Bay and stood, watching the s.h.i.+ps and boats pa.s.s a few miles away. Now he sat and stared. His legs were weary and weak, always tired, until standing took a conscious effort. His stomach rebelled at the acid produced by stress and augmented by caffeine and alcohol. He needed sleep, slumber to relax his muscles, dreamless oblivion to loosen his mind from the day-to-day decisions. He needed exercise. He needed many things. He needed to be a man again. Instead he got wakefulness, a mind that would not stop turning over the thoughts of the day and the failures of the night.
Jack knew that Liz Elliot hated him. He even thought he knew why, that first meeting a few years before in Chicago where she'd been in a bad mood and he'd been in one also, and their introduction had been one of harsh words. The difference was that he tended to forget slights-most of them, anyway-and she did not; and she had the ear of the President. Because of her, his role in the Vatican Treaty would never be known. The one thing he had done that was untainted by his work at the Agency-Ryan was proud of what he'd done in CIA, but knew that it was narrowly political or strategic, aimed at the betterment of his own country, while the Vatican Treaty had been for the betterment of the whole world. That one proud insight. Gone, credited to others. Jack didn't want sole credit. It had not been exclusively his work, but he did want fair mention as one of the players. Was that asking too much? Fourteen-hour days, much of it spent in cars, the three times he'd risked his life for his country-for what? So that some political b.i.t.c.h from Bennington could tear up his evaluations.
Liz, you wouldn't even be there except for me and what I did, and neither would your boss, the Ice Man, Jonathan Robert Fowler of Ohio!
But they could not know that. Jack had given his word. Given his word to what? For what?
The worst part of all, it was now affecting him in a way that was both new and totally unexpected. He'd disappointed his wife again this night. It was incomprehensible to him. Like throwing a light switch and getting no light, like turning the key to start the car and- Like not being a man. That was the simple description.
I am a man. I've done all the things a man can do.
Try explaining that to your wife, chump!
I've fought for my family, for my country, killed for my family and my country. I've won respect among the best of men. I've done things that can never be known and kept the secrets that had to be kept. I've served as well as any man can.
So why are you looking out at the water at two in the morning, ace?
I've made a difference! Jack's mind raged.
Who knows? Who cares?
But what of my friends?
A whole lot of good they do you-besides, what friends? When's the last time you saw Skip Tyler or Robby Jackson? Your friends at Langley-why not confide your problems to them?
Dawn came as a surprise, but not so much a surprise as that he'd actually slept, sitting alone in the living room. Jack rose, feeling the aches in his muscles unhelped by whatever number of hours he'd not been awake. It hadn't been sleep, he told himself on the way to the bathroom. It was just that he hadn't been awake. Sleep was rest, and he felt singularly unrested, with a pounding headache from the cheap wine of the previous night. The only good news-if that's what it was-was that Cathy didn't get up. Jack fixed his own coffee and was waiting at the door when Clark drove up.
"Another great weekend, I see," the man said as Ryan got into the car.
"Et tu, John?" John?"
"Look, Deputy Director, you want to take a swing at me, go right ahead. You looked like s.h.i.+t a couple of months back and you're getting worse instead of better. When's the last time you took a vacation, got away for more than a day or two, you know, maybe pretended you were a real person instead of some f.u.c.kin' government ticket-puncher who's afraid that if he leaves n.o.body'll notice?"
"Clark, you do have a way of brightening my mornings."
"Hey, man, I'm just an SPO, but don't b.i.t.c.h if I take the 'protective' part seriously, 'kay?" John pulled the car over and parked it. "Doc, I've seen this before. People burn out. You're burning out. You're burning the candle both ends and the middle. That's hard to do when you're in your twenties, and you ain't in your twenties anymore, in case n.o.body bothered telling you."
"I'm quite aware of the infirmities that come with age." Ryan tried a wry smile to show that it wasn't that big a deal, that Clark was overdoing it.
It didn't work. Suddenly it occurred to John that his wife hadn't been at the door. Trouble at home? Well, he couldn't ask about that, could he? What he saw in Ryan's face was bad enough. It wasn't just fatigue. He was tiring from within, all the s.h.i.+t he was taking from up the chain of command, the strain of backstopping Director Cabot on d.a.m.ned near everything that went out the front door. Cabot-not a bad guy, he meant well, but the truth of the matter was that he just didn't know what the h.e.l.l he was doing. So Congress depended on Ryan, and the Operations and Intelligence Directorates depended on Ryan for leaders.h.i.+p and coordination. He couldn't escape his responsibilities, and didn't have the good sense to realize that some were really things he could leave to others. The directorate chiefs could have taken up more of the slack, but they were letting Ryan do it all. A strong bark from the Deputy Director's office could have set that right, but would Cabot back him up-or would those White House pukes take it as a sign that Jack was trying a takeover?
f.u.c.kin' politics! Clark thought as he pulled back onto the road. Office politics, political politics. And something was wrong at home, too. Clark didn't know what, but he knew it was something. Clark thought as he pulled back onto the road. Office politics, political politics. And something was wrong at home, too. Clark didn't know what, but he knew it was something.
Doc, you're too d.a.m.ned good a man for this!
"Can I lay a piece of advice on you?"
"Go ahead," Jack replied, looking through dispatches.
"Take two weeks, go to Disney World, Club Med, find a beach and walk it. Get the h.e.l.l out of town for a while."
"The kids are in school."
"So take them out of school, for Christ's sake! Better yet, maybe, leave them and get away, you and your wife. No, you're not that kind. Take them to see Mickey."
"I can't. They're in school-"
"They're in grammar grammar school, not graduate school, doc. Missing two weeks of long division and learning to spell 'squirrel' won't stunt their intellectual growth. You need to get away, recharge the batteries, smell the f.u.c.king roses!" school, not graduate school, doc. Missing two weeks of long division and learning to spell 'squirrel' won't stunt their intellectual growth. You need to get away, recharge the batteries, smell the f.u.c.king roses!"
"Too much work, John."
"You listen to me! You know how many friends I've buried? You know how many people I went out with who never got the chance to have a wife and kids and a nice house on the water? A lot, pal, a whole lot, never came close to having what you have. You got all that, and you're trying very d.a.m.ned hard to end up dead-and that's what's gonna happen, doc. One way or another, give it maybe ten years."
"I have a job to do!"
"It ain't important enough to wreck your f.u.c.king life for, you dumba.s.s! Can't you see that?"
"And then who runs the shop?"
"Sir, you might be hard to replace when you're at your best, but the shape you're in now, that Goodley kid can do your job at least as well as you can." And that, Clark saw, scored for points. "Just how effective do you think you are right now?"
"Will you do me a favor and just drive the car." There was another SPINNAKER report waiting for him, according to coded phrases in the morning dispatches, along with one from NIITAKA. This would be a busy day.
Just what he needed, Jack thought to himself, closing his eyes for a moment's rest.
It got worse. Ryan was surprised to find himself at work, more surprised that fatigue had defeated morning coffee and allowed him to sleep for forty minutes or so on the way in. He accepted Clark's told-you-so look and made his way up to the 7th floor. A messenger brought in the two important files, along with a note that Director Cabot was going to be late. The guy was keeping banker's hours. Spies were supposed to work harder, Jack thought. I sure as h.e.l.l do. I sure as h.e.l.l do.
NIITAKA came first. The j.a.panese, the report said, were planning to renege on a rare trade concession made only six months earlier. It would be explained away as "unfortunate and unforeseen" circ.u.mstances, part of which might be true, Ryan thought as he read down the page-the j.a.panese had as many domestic political problems as everyone else-but there was something else: they were going to coordinate something in Mexico ... something to do with the state visit of their Prime Minister to Was.h.i.+ngton the coming February. Instead of buying American farm goods, they were opting to buy them cheaper from Mexico, playing that off against reduced tariff barriers into that country. That was the plan, in any case. They weren't sure they could get the concession from Mexico, and they were planning ...
... a bribe?
"Jesus," Ryan breathed. The Mexican Inst.i.tutional Revolutionary Party-PRI-didn't exactly have an exemplary record for integrity, but this ... ? It would be handled in face-to-face talks in Mexico City. If they got the concession, trading access to Mexican markets to opening j.a.pan to Mexican foodstuffs, then the amount of American foodstuffs they had committed to buy the previous February would be reduced. It made good business sense. j.a.pan would get food a little cheaper than they could in America while at the same time opening up a new market. Their excuse to American farmers would have to do with agricultural chemicals that their food-and-drug agency would decide, much to everyone's surprise, not to like for reasons of public health.
The bribe was fully in proportion to the magnitude of the target. Twenty-five million dollars, to be paid in a roundabout, quasi-legal fas.h.i.+on. When the Mexican President left office the following year, he would head a new corporation that ... no, they would buy out a corporation he already owned for fair market value, and the new owners.h.i.+p would keep him on, while inflating the value of the business and paying his impressive salary in return for his obvious expertise at public relations.
"Nice separation," Ryan said aloud. It was almost comical, and the funny part was that it might even be legal in America if someone hired a sharp-enough lawyer. Maybe not even that much. Plenty of people from State and Commerce had hired themselves out to j.a.panese interests immediately after leaving government service.
Except for one little thing: what Ryan held in his hand was evidence of conspiracy. In one way they were foolish: the j.a.panese thought that some councils were sacrosanct, that some words spoken aloud would never be heard outside the four enclosing walls that heard them. They didn't know that a certain cabinet member had a certain mistress who in turn had a personal beef that matched her ability to loosen a man's tongue; and that America now had access to all that information, courtesy of a KGB officer....
"Think, boy."
If they could get harder evidence, and give that over to Fowler.... But how? You couldn't exactly cite the report of a spy in court ... a Russian national, a KGB officer working in a third country.
But they weren't talking about an open court with rules of evidence, were they? Fowler could discuss this in his own face-to-face meet with their PM.
Ryan's phone rang. "Yes, Nancy?"
"The Director just called in. He's got the flu."
"Lucky him. Thanks. Flu, my a.s.s," Ryan said after hanging up. The man was lazy.
... Fowler could play it one of two ways: (1) face-to-face, tell him that we know what he's up to and we won't stand for it, that we will inform the proper congressional people and ... or, (2) just leak it to the press.
Option 2 would have all sorts of evil consequences, not the least of which would be in Mexico. Fowler didn't like the Mexican President, and liked the PRI even less. Whatever you said about Fowler, he was an honest man who loathed corruption in all its forms.
Option 1 ... Ryan had to report this to Al Trent, didn't he? He had to let Trent know about the new operation, but Trent had his personal ax to grind on trade issues, and Fowler would worry that he might be leaky on this issue. On the other hand, could he legally not not tell Trent? Ryan lifted his phone again. tell Trent? Ryan lifted his phone again.
"Nancy, could you tell the general counsel that I need to see him? Thanks."
Next came SPINNAKER. What, What, Ryan thought, Ryan thought, does Mr. Kadishev have to say today ... ? does Mr. Kadishev have to say today ... ?
"Dear G.o.d in heaven." Ryan forced himself to relax. He read through the complete report, then stopped and read through it again. He picked up his phone and punched the b.u.t.ton to speed-dial Mary Pat Foley.
But the phone just rang for thirty seconds until someone picked it up.
"Yes?"
"Who is this?"
"Who is this?"
"This is Deputy Director Ryan. Where's Mary Pat?"
"In labor, sir. Sorry, I didn't know who you were," the man's voice went on. "Ed's with her, of course."
"Okay, thanks." Ryan hung up. "s.h.i.+t!" On the other hand, he couldn't be angry about that, could he? He got up and walked out to his secretary's office.
"Nancy, Mary Pat's in labor," Jack told Mrs. c.u.mmings.
"Oh, wonderful-well, not wonderful, it's not all that much fun," Nancy observed. "Flowers?"
"Yeah, something nice-you know that stuff better than I do. Put it on my American Express."
"Wait until we're sure everything's okay?"
"Yeah, right." Ryan returned to his office. "Now what?" he asked himself.
You know what you have to do. The only question is whether or not you really want to do it.
Jack lifted his phone again and punched yet another speed-dial b.u.t.ton.
"Elizabeth Elliot," she said, picking up her direct line, the one known only to a handful of government insiders.
"Jack Ryan."
The cold voice grew yet colder. "What is it?"
"I need to see the President."
"What about?" she asked.
"Not over the phone."
"It's a secure phone, Ryan!"
"Not secure enough. When can I come over? It's important."
"How important?"
"Important enough to b.u.mp his appointment schedule, Liz!" Ryan snapped back. "You think I'm playing games here?"
"Calm down and wait." Ryan heard pages turning. "Be here in forty minutes. You can have fifteen minutes. I'll fix the schedule."
"Thank you, Dr. Elliot." Ryan managed not to slam the phone down. G.o.dd.a.m.n that woman! G.o.dd.a.m.n that woman! Ryan got up again. Clark was back in Nancy's office. "Warm the car up." Ryan got up again. Clark was back in Nancy's office. "Warm the car up."
"Where to?" Clark asked, rising.
"Downtown." Jack turned. "Nancy, call the Director. Tell him I have to get something to the Boss, and, with all due respect, he should get his tail in here." That would be inconvenient. Cabot's place was an hour away, in fox country.
"Yes, sir." One of the few things he could depend on was Nancy c.u.mmings' professionalism.
"I need three copies of this. Make one more for the Director and return the original to secure storage."
"Take two minutes," Nancy said.
"Fine." Jack walked off to the washroom. Looking in the mirror, he saw that Clark was as right as ever. He really did look like h.e.l.l. But that couldn't be helped. "Ready?"
"If you are, doc." Clark was already holding the doc.u.ments in a zipped leather case.
The perversity of life did not abate this Monday morning. Somewhere around the I-66 cutoff, some fool had managed to cause an accident, and that backed traffic up. What should have been a ten- or fifteen-minute drive took thirty-five. Even senior government officials have to deal with D.C. traffic. The Agency car pulled into West Executive Drive barely on time. Jack managed not to run into the west entrance to the White House only because someone might notice. Reporters used this entrance, too. A minute later he was in Liz Elliot's corner office.
"What gives?" the National Security Advisor asked.
"I'd prefer to go over this just once. We have a report from a penetration agent that you're not going to like very much."