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Sunday, August 26, 2007
Conspiracies
As he stepped through the front doors of Arcologics, Geoff Nolan mustered all the aplomb his thirty-two years could command and donned his most urbane Washington smile. The redhead at the reception desk looked up with a professionally noncommital expression.
"May I help you, sir?"
Nolan inclined his head briefly and produced his Secret Service ID. "Is there any possibility Dr. Iverson might be able to see me? I don't have an appointment."
The receptionist's eyes went wide. She pressed a button on the discreet plasma panel before her and muttered a few inaudible words into her headset microphone. A moment later, she nodded, pressed another button, and looked back up at Nolan with a perfectly blank expression.
"Mr. Iverson will see you at once, sir." The swinging doors behind her parted as a gray-haired, nattily dressed matron entered the lobby. "Mrs. Berglund will show you to his office."
Nolan nodded.
Nolan's escort ushered him through the open door of a surprisingly modest office. The furniture was wood rather than sheet steel, but it was limited to a desk and three bookcases. The walls were but sparsely adorned, and the available surfaces were strikingly free of trophies and knickknacks. Seated at the desk was an athletically slender, pleasant-faced middle-aged man, hands folded before him, whose piercing brown eyes glinted with amused curiosity. He rose and extended a hand as Nolan stepped into the room.
"Agent Nolan? I'm Todd Iverson."
Nolan took the proffered hand and shook it. "I'm honored, sir."
Iverson waved him into a guest chair. When the two had sat, Iverson canted back in his seat and swung his feet up onto his desk. Nolan struggled to repress his reaction.
The owner and CEO of Arcologics was wearing platform boots with high, thick heels. They were significantly built up, two inches or more at the toe and at least five at the heel. Iverson smiled as Nolan's eyes fastened upon his footgear.
"Go ahead," he said. "Ask."
Nolan smiled formally. "Not necessary, sir. I have two things I'm supposed to tell you before we start to chat seriously."
Iverson cocked an eyebrow and gestured to Nolan to continue.
"First, I'm not here at President Sumner's request. Not officially. In case anyone should ask."
That brought both of Iverson's eyebrows up. "Surely you're not freelancing?"
Nolan smiled. "Not at all, sir. It's not generally known that not all our orders come directly from the president. In this case, that will prove useful." He hesitated a moment, reluctant to speak the name of his commander. "Officially, Senior Agent Ryan McFarlane dispatched me to speak to you."
Iverson's face was as unreadable as a statue. "And the second thing?"
Nolan paused, searching for exactly the right words.
"The president requires the most complete confidentiality about this entire exchange and everything that might follow from it. Regardless of what might follow from it."
Iverson's expression remained unchanged. "Leaks?"
"Yes, sir. They've been a thorn in the Administration's side since the president took office. Not everyone in the executive branch feels obligated to obey the president's orders. Even when they've been expressed directly to the individual in question."
Nolan sat back in his chair and folded his hands in his lap, eyes fixed upon Iverson's own.
Presently Iverson nodded. "All right, you have my word." He pulled his boots off the desk and leaned forward, renewed intensity in his eyes. "Please proceed."
"The Secret Service has learned some...disturbing things about a certain figure on the Joint Chiefs of Staff. When we briefed President Sumner, he decided at once that he needed outside counsel beyond what we could provide. Technological counsel."
Iverson frowned faintly. "How did my name come up?"
"I'm not supposed to say, sir. The president is very anxious to speak with you, if you could spare the time. I'd escort you to the Oval Office myself, if you were available today. Could you give me some idea of when you might be able to visit with him?"
Iverson sat unspeaking for a long moment. Nolan began to worry. He'd been forbidden to use anything but persuasion. He wondered whether his errand, so closely concealed from the rest of the Detail and the Washington influence circuit, would come to nothing.
With no warning, Arcologics' CEO vaulted out of his chair, grabbed a windbreaker from his coat tree, and strode for the door.
"Got a helicopter?"
Nolan fell into step behind him. "Uh, no, sir."
"That's all right. We'll use mine."
Every Secret Service agent tasked to White House duties is armed at all times and permanently authorized to use deadly force if, in his sole judgment, it is vital to the protection of the president. Iverson had to know it. Yet it didn't prevent him from charging past every White House security checkpoint and into the Oval Office as if he were the president himself. Nolan remained two steps behind him the whole way, frantically gesturing to the agents around him to hold their fire and act as if nothing untoward was going on.
Stephen Sumner rose as they entered the sanctum sanctorum. The president was as composed as always. Rather than come forward to greet his visitor, he waited for Iverson to come to him. The two clasped hands over the antique desk that dated back to Grover Cleveland.
"Thank you for coming, Mr. Iverson."
Iverson grinned impishly. "Anything for a fellow Onteoran, Mr. President. Besides, it was a real gas telling all those ATCs that I was on White House business. I made it even money that I'd be shot out of the sky."
Sumner laughed. "Not a chance. Geoff let me know you were coming as you lifted off."
Iverson flashed a black look at Nolan, who grinned through his blush. "Spoilsport!"
The three took seats in the office's conversation area. When they'd made themselves comfortable, Iverson said, "Of what service can I be to the federal government, sir?"
Sumner didn't answer at once. He straightened the seams in his trousers, folded his hands carefully in his lap, and said, "I assume that rendering a service to my administration won't be a problem for you in any way?"
Iverson's eyes glinted. "Not in the slightest, sir."
Sumner nodded. "I hope you'll continue to think so. I have a problem I can't solve with political savvy or the assets on hand. Have you been following the progress of the pacification effort in Pakistan?"
Iverson pursed his lips. "Not in detail, sir. Are there new problems?"
The president scowled at the floor. "You could say that. Since the destruction of Islamabad, insurgent activity has acquired a new intensity, and a new focus. Before that, the rebels were organized along classic 'swamp fox' guerrilla-tactic lines. They risked as little as possible, while deploying their operatives to inflict the maximum damage on our forces and sow as much discord as possible among the populace. Since Islamabad, they've reorganized along more conventional military lines, daring our boys to confront them in pitched battles -- but with a difference."
Iverson's eyes darkened. "Innocent vanguards?"
Sumner nodded again. "Exactly. But not entirely innocent. A substantial fraction of the women have been wearing suicide belts." He winced. "The evidence suggests that they're not in control of the detonations. My field commanders want the authority to treat them as combatants." His voice dropped. "They have a backer on the JCS who might just give them that authority, no matter what I might say about it."
Iverson sat unspeaking. Nolan, who'd listened avidly but with little comprehension, was seized by sudden alarm. His hand went to the crucifix in his pocket and gripped it tightly.
"That would pretty much be the end of our public-relations efforts there, wouldn't it?" Iverson said softly.
Sumner nodded. "It's not like we're revered for nuking their capital city, though the majority of Pakis understand the affair well enough to have accepted us as a force for reconstruction rather than a colonial occupier. But to fire on a wedge of seemingly unarmed women because they might be carrying explosives...Mr. Iverson, I don't think we'd have a chance in hell after that."
Iverson sat forward on his sofa. "Mr. President, may I ask a favor?" Sumner nodded uncertainly, and Iverson smiled. "Would you please call me Todd? No one I know addresses me as 'Mister.'"
Sumner's expression went from monitory to delighted in an instant. "Certainly, Todd. Can you bring yourself to call me Steve?"
Iverson laughed. "If Geoff here will agree not to shoot me, I think I can manage it."
Sumner's grin lit his entire being. "Then let's get down to cases."
"Have we covered all the essentials?" Iverson said. He sipped from his coffee cup and grinned. "I didn't know there was coffee this good. Any chance of getting some for the, ah, home mess?"
Nolan chuckled. Sumner smirked. "It's one of the few perks of this office that's more of a pleasure than a cross to bear. I don't think I could have kept Geoff on the Detail without it." He pressed a button on the intercom panel at his right hand. "I'll have a steward bag a pound of beans for you."
"Well, however this turns out," Iverson said, "you've got my vote come next election. You know," he said, suddenly pensive, "my wife would never believe this. I can't tell her, can I?"
Sumner shook his head. "I'm afraid not."
Iverson shrugged. A Navy steward entered and inquired of the president's wishes. Sumner waved at Iverson. "Please bag a pound...no, make that two pounds of coffee beans for my guest. He'll be taking them with him when he leaves." The steward bowed and departed.
Nolan thought he'd kept his expression pleasantly neutral, but the president must have noticed something. "No envy, now, Geoff. You get to drink it here."
Nolan inclined his head. "Of course, sir."
Iverson drained his cup and set it down. "So," he said, immediately back to business, "we have the problem of rendering nominal innocents, ah, combat ineffective without actually harming them, and we have the coordinated problem of rendering them safe from unknown others at an unknown distance who just might be able to blow them up. More, we have to work out how to do this without divulging the means or involving any of the Joint Chiefs, because at least one of them is on board with a free-to-fire agenda that he'd get court-martialed for...if we knew who he is."
"Well," Sumner drawled, "we know who he isn't. He isn't Navy or Coast Guard. And I don't expect it will be Air Force or Marines, though I could be wrong."
"Steve," Iverson said, "do we dare take any chances at all with this?"
Sumner hesitated perhaps half a second before shaking his head definitively.
"Along with that," Iverson said, "I don't think you want any courts-martial, do you?"
This time there was no hesitation. "They're the best men in uniform, Todd. All five of them. Besides, what general officer hasn't disagreed violently with the commander-in-chief? What general officer hasn't felt that his men's lives were being put unnecessarily at risk because of political pusillanimity? If we can head off the mutiny...or at least, defeat it before it becomes too obvious, I'm inclined to forgive and forget."
"Then we must assume," Iverson said, "that anyone outside this office at this moment could be part of the problem. Which puts my efforts into the blackest of black zones." He ran his hands through his hair and scowled. "I don't have the facilities for this. I'm going to have to build a whole new lab."
New intensity flowed into Sumner's face. He leaned forward on his settee, hands clasped before him as if in entreaty. "Do you have an approach in mind already?"
Iverson nodded vigorously. "Oh, yeah. I've been turning it over ever since you outlined the problem. It's mostly a matter of --"
"Stop!" Sumner's raised hand and parade-ground blare halted Iverson in mid-flight. "Geoff is trustworthy. I'd stake my life on it. And you have to trust me. But do you trust everyone who might someday get access to the tapes that are being made as we speak?"
Iverson blanched. "You mean to keep this secret in perpetuity?"
"I might have to, Todd." Sumner turned away, discomfort in his face. "The money has to come from somewhere. The president is the commander-in-chief, but the armed forces of the United States are commisioned and funded by Congress. I can't -- I mean, I mustn't risk compromising the Constitutional division of powers over this. That's more important than anything else."
Iverson didn't answer. He settled his hands on his knees and stared at the carpet for a long moment.
"If there were no money at issue," he said softly, "would that put the Constitutional questions to bed?"
Nolan repressed a gasp. Sumner's mouth fell open. "It would."
Iverson nodded, eyes still on the floor. "Then there's no money at issue."
"But --"
"Steve."
Sumner fell silent.
"Let me do this for you. I mean, for the country. It won't bankrupt me." Iverson grinned. "Probably not, anyway."
"If it does?" Sumner murmured.
"We'll talk about it then."
Sumner rose and went to the window that overlooked the broad sweep of the White House lawn. He stood there, hands clasped behinds him, staring out at the pristine grass for a full minute.
"All right," he said. "You don't have to be a man at arms or an elected official to serve the country." He turned, eyes brilliant with moisture. "I'm sure I don't need to tell you how much I appreciate it."
Iverson shook his head. "There is something I'd like to know, though."
Sumner waved a hand. "Ask."
"Why me?"
Sumner cocked an eyebrow. "Didn't you think I'd hear about that business last spring with the rape gang and the Onteora police?
"Oh. Well, yeah, I guess you would have. But that wasn't nearly as tough a problem as this is going to be."
"That doesn't matter," Sumner said. He seemed magically to acquire a new and greater stature. "You brought six serious criminals to well-deserved justice, against the will of the police hierarchy and without committing a crime yourself. I know," Sumner said, "you didn't do it alone. But you rose to the occasion with a brilliant innovation, in virtually no time, under constraints any other man would have called too strict to accept. I couldn't help but think you might be able to do it a second time. And," he said, grinning, "you're an Onteora boy. How much more could I want? Now I have some questions."
Iverson's eyebrows rose. "Anything at all, Steve."
"Any problem with having Geoff as my on-site liaison?" Nolan sat forward in surprise. Sumner smiled crookedly. "I'd rather not add anyone else to this little conspiracy, unless it becomes unavoidable."
Iverson grinned. "None at all. Anything else?"
The president of the United States waved at Todd Iverson's feet with a puzzled frown. "Why the high heels?"
Iverson's grin turned naughty. "Ask me again when this is over. I promise it'll be worth the wait."
Sumner nodded. "All right. And now, Geoff," he said, turning to Nolan, "would you allow me a few minutes alone with our guest, please?"
Senior Agent Ryan McFarlane, commander of the Presidential Detail, was not pleased.
"The president swore you to secrecy from me?"
"He did, sir."
McFarlane's color was becoming ruddier by the second. Veins in his neck were pulsing visibly.
"So if this...guest you brought him turns out to be a threat to his person, we'll have no warning at all."
Nolan inclined his head. "I said as much to the president, sir. He told me not to worry."
"Damn it all, Nolan, it's our job to worry!" McFarlane shoved his chair backward with force enough to send it clanging into the cinder-block wall. "I admire his dedication and his sense of mission, but he ought to know better after three years in office!"
Nolan didn't reply. McFarlane strode furiously back and forth several times, then settled before Nolan once again with his arms akimbo and fury radiating from his eyes.
"Agent, if President Sumner told you not to give me his guest's name, is there anything else you can tell me about him that wouldn't violate your promise? Something that would allow me to deduce his identity, but that couldn't be held against you later?"
Nolan's eyes widened. Without thinking, he rose from his chair and planted his fists on the table between them.
"Agent McFarlane, are you asking me to weasel my way around the president's plain intention to keep his guest's identity a secret from you?"
"Sit down, Nolan," McFarlane grated from between clenched teeth. The words carried a distinct note of undesirable consequences.
Geoff Nolan felt his temper rise. "I will not sit down, McFarlane. You're my commander, not my soul. Your commander has explicitly ordered me not to divulge his guest's name, with a clear implication that he wants the man's identity kept from anyone who might take an interest. That trumps anything you might have to say about it. So get off your high horse and get back to acting like what you and I both are: the president's employees!"
The two big men glared at one another for a long, million-volt moment.
That was probably career suicide, but I had no choice.
McFarlane was first to relent. He sighed explosively, shook his head, and kicked his chair into the wall a second time.
"Get out."
Nolan left.
Nadia Nolan was as complaisant and accommodating a wife as Geoff could ever have wanted. She'd endured the secrecies, separations, and other difficulties that went with her Secret Service husband for five years without complaining even once. Yet even she was disturbed by what he had to tell her.
"You have no idea?"
Geoff shook his head. "Not the slightest."
"And I can't come with you?"
"Oh, you could come. If you're willing to live in a hotel for as long as it takes. But I couldn't guarantee that I'd be available much. And I still wouldn't be able to talk about it."
Nadia nodded. After a moment she disengaged herself from his arms and slid out of bed. He rose onto an elbow. She stood nude before him, a Slavic Madonna of ineffable sadness and immense appeal.
"I'll be back in a minute," she said, and left the bedroom. Geoff lowered himself onto his back again, hands clasped beneath his head, and closed his eyes.
Lord, I need Your guidance. I know she's unhappy. I always thought it was just about her barrenness. I have no idea what to do about it, other than love her as best I can. Lend me Your arm.
Presently she returned, slipped under the covers and back into his arms. He pulled her close, and she nuzzled her face against his chest.
"Geoff, there's something I want."
A momentary current of tension sang through him. "Name it, love. Anything that's within my powers."
"A home of our own."
He grimaced. "Nad, we can't afford --"
"Not here."
"What? I work here!"
"I don't." She pulled a little back and looked into his eyes. "And you're away so much it shouldn't matter a lot if our house isn't here. The president would give you a commuting allowance, wouldn't he?"
Geoff fought to evict the knot that had formed in his chest.
She wouldn't have asked if it weren't important to her.
"I could ask," he said. "It's not guaranteed, but there are precedents. Sweetie, do you really want a house that badly? When you'd be alone there about ninety-five percent of the time? When I won't be around to look after it?"
Her eyes were locked onto his own. She nodded.
He sighed. "All right. We'll have to start thinking about a target area. Our finances won't --"
She shook her head. "Onteora."
"What? In God's name, why? The area is depressed, the weather is rotten, it's hundreds of miles from a major city, there's nothing resembling a culture --"
"Because," she said, voice steady, "it's inexpensive, and there's lots of space, and you'll be there for awhile, Besides," she said with a delicate grin, "the president comes from there. Don't you ever think about after the Secret Service?"
His chest grew tight again.
I should. McFarlane will outlast Sumner. Sumner might not even run for re-election. What could I possibly expect after he goes back to private life?
"You're sure about this, Nad?"
She nodded.
"All right." He breathed deeply. "Maybe our host will help."
"Oh, he will," she said.
His brow furrowed, "What makes you so sure?"
Her grin turned mysterious. "Call it woman's intuition."
Nolan squinted at the long, low structure. "That's the new lab?"
Iverson nodded, obviously pleased. "Turned out it cost a lot less than I feared."
"Uh, well, okay." The building was a single story, over four hundred fifty feet wide and only thirty feet deep. It had a single door and not one window. The roof bore a single microwave antenna, aimed to the southwest. Nolan pointed at it. "Networking?"
"Nope. Television."
"Huh? Why?"
"Covering all the possibilities." Iverson's half-smile suggested that Nolan would get the joke eventually. "You think you'll have any trouble securing the place?"
Nolan snorted. "Against what, a ballistic missile? With one door and no windows, it's a point-defense problem. I could do this in my sleep."
"Good. Tomorrow you'll meet your coworkers." Nolan started to ask who Iverson was talking about, but the inventor raised a hand. "Never fear. You'll approve. I promise."
"But President Sumner said --"
"I know what he said. " Iverson kicked a cinder along the curb, turned and strode back to his car. Nolan hurried to follow. "I also know what I said. I'm not letting him spend a nickel on this project."
"Todd?" Despite Iverson's insistence, Nolan stil found it difficult to address the inventor by his first name. "Secret Service salaries come already funded by Congress. They're part of the Treasury budget. There wouldn't be any questions."
"Doesn't matter." A hard line had formed along Iverson's jaw. "I don't want any other government involvement. Secrecy will be hard enough to maintain. And some of your colleagues would love a shot at your back, you know."
Nolan said nothing.
"Did I say something I shouldn't have?"
"No, not at all." I just didn't expect you to know that. "When do you expect to set to work?"
"I already have." Iverson yanked open the door of his Chrysler and gestured Nolan into the shotgun seat. "First indications have been promising. With luck we'll wrap up within two weeks."
Nolan's eyes widened. "You're that confident?"
Iverson gunned the engine and pulled smoothly away from the curb. "I begrudge even that much delay, but it can't be helped. Geoff," he said, his voice suddenly muted, "you're going to hear some strange things. You might see a few as well. Promise me you'll...maintain your cool."
Nolan chuckled. "Not to worry, Todd. After you've guarded Stephen Sumner, there isn't much that can rattle your cage."
Iverson glanced sideways at him. "I haven't heard about any attempts on his life. Are you guys that good at keeping secrets?"
"Attempts on his life? No. But do you remember what you saw in the Oval Office? The fencing foil mounted over the mantel, just beneath the Stuart portrait of Washington?"
"Yes, what about it?"
"The president likes to fence. He's very good. But when it comes to 'maintaining your cool,' as you put it, he allows himself a bit more leeway than the Detail does. He once took that foil down and backed the Russian ambassador up against the wall with it." Nolan winced at the memory. "It's not blunted."
Iverson's mouth dropped open, He guided the car into the Arcologics parking lot, brought it to a halt and turned to face Nolan squarely. "Are you telling me that along with having to protect the president from his visitors, you've had to protect visitors from the president?"
Nolan nodded.
"Bloody hell."
"My sentiments exactly, Todd. It makes the job interesting, though."
"I shouldn't wonder."
Nolan returned to his hotel room to find unexpected company.
Nadia had arrived in his absence. She was sitting on his bed with another woman, a petite blonde beauty in a gold silk halter and black satin shorts. The two women were hunched toward one another, talking animatedly, hands constantly in motion in the air between them. Nolan hadn't seen that much vitality in his wife's face since the first year of their marriage, when they were all but new to one another.
The unknown woman noticed Nolan's arrival before his wife did. Her eyes flicked back and forth between Nolan and Nadia several times before Nadia noticed and turned toward him. She grabbed the unknown woman's hand and scooted off the bed at once, pulling her companion with her.
"Why didn't you call and tell me you were coming?" Nolan said. Automatically, he pulled his suit jacket around him and buttoned it, hoping his sidearm wouldn't show.
Nadia's face dimpled with a mischievous grin. "Geoff," she said, chafing the blonde's hand, "this is Jeanne Iverson." The blonde smiled and essayed a micro-curtsey.
Nolan's eyebrows rose. "Todd's wife?"
"Accept no substitutes," Jeanne said. She stepped forward and extended a hand, and Nolan clasped it. "Are you aware that you're married to an absolutely fabulous woman?"
"Well, uh, yes," Nolan said. "I did know that." I might not tell her as often as I should, though. "But tell me, please: how do you know it?"
Nadia snorted and planted her arms akimbo in mock outrage. Jeanne chuckled. "I knew that much five minutes after I met her." She circled Nadia's waist with an arm and pulled her close. "I'd like to take her house shopping, if that would be okay with you. I know you're going to be very busy."
It was going much too fast. Nolan had heard rumors about the formidable Mrs. Todd Iverson, but he hadn't been prepared for this sort of lightning assault.
"Nad," he said in his lowest register, "are you really, truly interested in settling up here?"
She nodded, eyes wide and face intent. "It's exactly what I want. It's open, green, quiet." The accent she usually suppressed so carefully sang beneath each word. "It reminds me of...of home."
Home. Among the birches and pines outside Arkhangelsk, where the sun seldom shines and even the summers are brutally cold. Where her drunken sot of a father alternated between months away at sea and beating her and her mother to a pulp. The home she escaped by selling herself to a faceless American for a promise of immediate marriage and ten thousand dollars' flight money for her mother. Nadia Belinskaya, how little I know you still!
"Mrs. Iverson --"
"Please, call me Jeanne." She smiled. "I'm no more formal than Todd."
"Well, thank you. And thank you for the offer. Are you certain you can spare the time?"
"No problem. It will be my pleasure." Her eyes crinkled at the corners. "In fact, I've been looking forward to it. Todd already owned our home when I married him, so this will be the first time I've ever gone house shopping."
Nolan ran a hand through his hair. "I guess I can't deny you the pleasure, then. But Nadia and I have to talk finances first."
All at once Jeanne Iverson frowned. Her perfect forehead sprouted a web of furrows. "Certainly not! That would take all the fun out of it. Oh, don't worry." She glanced at Nadia and squeezed her gently. "I won't let her make an offer on Forslund Manor. But I'd like to show her around as broadly as possible." The smile returned. "We might do some other shopping along the way."
Nadia said not a word, eyes to the floor. Jeanne Iverson had clearly put her under a spell.
Oh, God. Two gorgeous women going shopping unsupervised. With my checkbook. One of them the wife of a millionaire. Maybe I should shoot them both now. Or myself.
He stepped toward his wife. Jeanne released her as he took her shoulders between his hands.
"Nad," he "don't...I mean, you wouldn't...we're doing okay, but we're not exactly rich, so just don't...please?"
She looked up at him with a shy smile. "Thank you, sweetie. I won't."
"Okay." He released her with a monitory look at Jeanne. The blonde grinned wickedly, slipped into a pair of bejeweled stiletto-heeled sandals that probably cost more than he made in a month, and scampered for the door, dragging Nadia behind her.
The silence from the other end of the line was faintly ominous.
"Are you entirely at ease with this, Geoff?"
"Do we really have a choice, Mr. President?"
Another silence. "I suppose not. But it does make me wonder about his ultimate intentions. You haven't any doubts about his loyalty or his character, have you?"
Despite the subject, Nolan had to laugh. "Mr. President, the man has committed to spending up to ten million dollars of his own money because you asked him for assistance. He volunteered to take the entire burden onto his shoulders." And his wife has mine out looking at houses this very minute. "Didn't you say you'd had a glittering recommendation of him from an absolutely trusted source?"
"Yes, I did. A man named Kevin Conway, who's worked with Iverson and once worked for me at Onteora Aviation. A man I'd trust with my life, just as I trust you. But do I dare undertake a project of this importance to the country on that recommendation and single-point oversight?"
"Mr. President --"
Sumner sighed, "I know, I know. No choice. Just keep your eyes open, Geoff. Keep them as wide and as vigilant as if you were protecting me. Alone. In Islamabad."
"I will, Mr. President. I swear it."
"I know you will. Please excuse me, I'm supposed to meet with a gaggle of senators about the state of Pakistani reconstruction, and they're probably deep into alcohol withdrawal by now. Keep me posted."
"I will, sir." The connection ended at once.
Nolan closed his cryptophone and slipped it back into the special shielded carrier that prevented it from being traced or tracked. He blinked hard against the midafternon sun, ran his hands through his hair, and stood up to stretch.
The president has good instincts. And they're in sync with mine. So why did I feel compelled to reassure him? There's never really "no choice." He could can the project if he feels it's too shaky, militarily or politically. The boys on the ground can always deal with those walking bombs by shooting them.
Shooting the lot of them. Including the ones who aren't wearing Semtex belts. Women and kids.
Nolan knew at once that he could never, ever countenance such a solution. It would leave him unable to face the children he hoped to adopt and raise, to say nothing of Nadia. And if he could not, then surely Stephen Sumner, who held the fates of two nations in his hands, could not.
I guess there's no choice after all.
Nolan's coworkers proved to be a couple of the hardest men he'd ever met. One, a tall, well muscled black man, gave his name as Ken Torrance. The other, a white man of medium height and whipcord build whose face spoke of violence done in quantity and without regret, was named Chris Chase. Both carried short-barreled revolvers in hip holsters and wore khaki green coveralls with Integral Security embroidered over the left breast. They shook Geoff's hand, invited him to call them by their first names, asked if there was any coffee, and settled at once into silent, unlimited readiness beneath a veneer of studied boredom.
Nolan would have been satisfied to guard the sole entrance to the building alone. He was confident that it would take a platoon-strength assault to force its way past him and into the recesses of the lab. If that many persons were to learn of the lab's existence, such an attack would be unnecessary; the publicity alone would doom the effort to failure. But Iverson insisted that there be guards to patrol the grounds, even if their patrolling might alert passers-by to activity of importance within the building.
Nothing of interest occurred on the first day, or the second, or the third. Iverson secreted himself deep within the structure just after dawn each day and emerged in the early evening each night. He smiled coming and going, and never failed to ask his protectors if there were anything they might want. He was especially solicitous of Geoff, the sole member of the trio who had any inkling of the significance of the efforts within, but never alluded to that fact or the specifics of his labors. Torrance and Chase asked nothing and volunteered nothing.
On the fourth day, Iverson came forth at about noon and asked Chase to join him within. The patrolman followed him without a word. Shortly thereafter a series of agonized shrieks issued from the other side of the building. Chase emerged about an hour later, wide-eyed and shaken. Iverson beckoned to Torrance to follow him within. The black patrolman looked uncertainly at Chase, then turned and complied. An hour later he came out looking even worse than his partner. Neither of them would speak of what had happened.
And every evening, Nolan returned to his hotel room to find Iverson's dangerously beautiful wife deep in murmured conversation with Nadia, over matters Nadia refused to disclose.
At midafternoon on the fifth day, Iverson emerged from the lab in garb that looked like something from a science fiction movie. It was spacesuit-like, but much closer fitting and with no obvious breathing apparatus. It glittered as if it had been sprayed with metal flakes. He stopped in the vestibule, removed his helmet and gloves, and greeted Nolan with a tired smile.
"We're done. I mean, I'm done."
That fast? "Are you really ready to report to the president, sir? I mean, Todd?"
Iverson nodded. He looked somehow different, not quite right.
"Should I call him?" Nolan reached for his cryptophone.
"No, wait." Iverson held up a hand. "Geoff, I know you're supposed to remain apart from the politics of the presidency, but I need an opinion, and you're the person best qualified to give it. May I ask a delicate question?"
Nolan nodded, his nerves humming.
"What's the president's position on...racism?"
"His personal position? He's never --"
Iverson shook his head. "No, not that. What positions has the Sumner Administration taken on issues that involve charges of racism, racial discrimination, preferential treatment of the races, and so forth?"
Nolan thought hard. "President Sumner hasn't made any statements on such things that I can recall. On every issue I've heard him discuss, he's gone straight to the Constitution and taken off from there."
Iverson nodded. "He's a good man." He waddled to a folding chair, planted himself on it heavily, and set his helmet on the floor beside him. "And he knew enough about me to know that..."
"What, sir, uh, Todd?"
"Never mind." The inventor passed a hand across his eyes. "The solution might cause him some political difficulties here at home. The racialist mouthpiece groups have been restive lately." He grinned. "They get that way when Washington stops pandering to them."
And Sumner has been the reason. He won't sign an appropriations bill that includes anything not expressly authorized by Article One.
Silence stretched between them. Nolan turned to peek out at the street beyond. It was quiet. Torrance and Chase passed the doorway, glanced in and noticed Nolan's attention, and waved at him. They kept on, circling the building in their usual, casual-looking saunter, as if their duty were a mere walk in the sun.
"Maybe we should go see him," Iverson said. "Mind leaving your missus in the care of mine for a night?"
Well, she hasn't spent me broke yet. "All right."
Iverson reached down his chest, popped three grippers and undid two zippers. A moment later he stood before Nolan in his underwear, flat-footed for the first time since they'd met. He was short, no more than five-eight at most.
"Give me five minutes to get dressed and call Jeanne, and we'll be on our way." He slung the protective suit over one shoulder and groped for the helmet. "Think the Washington ATCs will let me through to the White House a second time?"
Stephen Sumner was incredulous. "Already?"
Iverson nodded. "But there's a catch."
That seemed to relax the president somewhat. "I should have known. What percent of the Gross Domestic Product will it cost?"
Nolan stood by the door to the Oval Office's public entranceway, one hand resting lightly on the latch. He'd pulled it out of its recess and twisted it to the position, known only to the president and his Secret Service guardians, in which the door could not be opened with or without a key. No one was to interrupt this conversation for anything short of a nuclear attack.
"Oh, it will be cheap enough, by military standards," Iverson said. "A mission would require a couple of UCAVs and some special electronics. But there could be a cost in political terms. If anyone were to find out how I did it."
Sumner's face was impassive. "Geoff mentioned racial implications."
Iverson nodded. "Not as most people understand race, but yes."
"Do I want to know the details?"
"I don't think so, Steve."
Sumner shook his head. "Sorry, that wasn't addressed to you. I didn't mean to say it out loud."
The president rose and wandered toward Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington. He stared up at the old masterpiece for a long moment.
"He called out the Army to crush the Whiskey Rebellion. Killed a lot of Americans for defying Congress's power to lay an excise on their corn whiskey. Mostly back-country Pennsylvanians and territorials. A lot of them were veterans of the Army of the Potomac. The cries went up at once about a new Tyrant George, even more willing to oppress his countrymen than the one he'd freed them from. But he stood by his decision. Right or wrong, he stood by his Constitutional duty."
Iverson said nothing.
"I have the same duty, Todd. I have to defend the country. As the commander-in-chief of its armed forces, if I were to retreat from a tactic that would win this campaign and save uncounted American lives, I'd be derelict in my duty. Treasonably so."
"You don't think we could keep it between us, then?" Iverson said.
"It wouldn't matter if we could," Sumner said. He turned a mask of resignation toward the inventor. "I would know. That would be enough."
Sumner strode to his desk, lifted the handset of his phone and punched a speed-dial button.
"Yes, Mr. President?"
"Get General Maclaurin in here at once."
Iverson rose. Nolan returned the door latch to the open position.
Twelve days later they went to the theater of operations for the first deployment, a town north of Karachi that had lain in insurgent hands for months and had successfully resisted every attempt on its defenses. Sumner tried his best to dissuade Iverson, but the inventor wouldn't have it any other way. Sumner ordered Nolan to accompany him at all times, armed to the teeth and ready to kill without scruple.
The brigade commander ordered to accommodate them was anything but welcoming. Iverson showed less interest in his opinions than was politic. He startled Nolan by addressing the squad and platoon leaders of the point-assault forces with extraordinary deference and charm. Ten minutes after meeting him, every one of them would have eaten out of his hand.
It took less than five minutes to instruct the assembled infantrymen in how to operate the black boxes he'd distributed among them. It took longer to deflect their questions about what the boxes would do and why they should carry the additional burden .
"What you need to remember," Iverson said, his voice soft yet audible all the way to the rear of the huge assembly tent, "is that your lives matter most of all. You're going to see some terrible things. You're going to want to run to the aid of screaming women and children. You have to resist the impulse. They'll be screaming because they helped to assemble bombs meant to take your lives. You have to run past them and not look back, even if they seem to be dying right before your eyes. And make no mistake, gentlemen," he said in a voice barely above a whisper, "some of them will do exactly that. But you won't."
A corporal in the rear of the tent raised his hand.
"Yes?"
"Sir," the corporal said, "we ain't exactly shrinking violets out here. We've all been in the shit, and some of us have scars to prove it. We volunteered for point in this assault, and we'll do like you said." He hefted the black box slung over his shoulder. "But we're trusting our asses to this gizmo of yours. Can't you give us a little more poop about how it works?"
The tent was still.
"Soldier," Iverson said, "I've got a couple of scars of my own. No, I've never been in the Army. I got them a bit less formally. But I know where you're coming from. In your position, I'd be dubious too. But I want you to do something for me, right now. Look around this tent. Look at your fellow soldiers. Tell me if there's anything about them that looks just a wee bit different from the other outfits you've marched with."
The corporal scanned the tent, his expression slowly becoming a study in confusion. "Yeah, we're all --"
"Stop!" Iverson's blare of command was a good imitation of Sumner's. "I know what you noticed. Your buddies know it too. But the enemy doesn't know it, and we have to keep him from learning about it if you want this 'gizmo' to save your asses. Scars and all."
Understanding swelled in the corporal's face. He nodded and sat.
"Any other questions?" the brigade commander boomed. No one spoke. "Then let's muster up and put this thing to the test."
The battle array was subtle and well concealed. The point force moved toward the town stealthily, along a two hundred yard perimeter. But the insurgents were watchful. The frontmost American troops were more than five hundred yards from the first fortifications when the vanguard of women and children emerged from the surrounding buildings, dressed a ragged line, and walked fearfully toward the visible elements of the assault force.
Overhead, one orbiting UCAV emitted a high-pitched whine. Another gave forth a basso rumble like the snore of a congested god.
When the Americans had closed to within a hundred fifty yards of the women and children, they activated their black boxes. In that instant the world was forever changed.
Half a dozen women scattered among the vanguard shrieked in agony and fell prostrate in the dust. They tore at their flesh as if it were ablaze, but no such effect was visible. The children and other women halted, paralyzed by confusion and ultimate fear.
The American troops sprinted into their midst and bundled them away from the planned line of assault. When the path was clear, two ultra-heavy anti-fortifications tanks raced forward and crashed into the town's defenses, setting off a thunder of explosions and gouts of fire that could be heard for twenty miles around. Immediately behind then came a column of Bradleys, turret guns firing steadily at the enfilading insurgents and spreading to blanket the area within.
Twenty minutes later the town was in American hands. Several of the women in the buffer, including two who'd been incapacitated by Iverson's invention, were found strapped into suicide-bomb vests. None exploded.
The mop-up forces that probed for hidden pockets of resistance turned up a fascinating tableau: a group of jihadists all of whom had died in one room, with no apparent explanation. The brigade commander called Iverson and Nolan in to examine the scene.
Iverson squatted over one of the corpses and turned it over. The jihadist's face was contorted in agony, but he bore no visible wounds. He examined a second and a third, rose and clapped the dust from his hands.
"It worked, Geoff." Iverson was reaching forward for a handshake when Nolan caught a flicker of movement to his right. He dove forward, knocking the inventor to the dirt floor, rolled and whipped out his sidearm. Two pulls of the trigger, and a final insurgent fell on his carbine, as dead as his comrades.
Four troopers and the brigade commander dropped to prone firing positions as the reports faded. Iverson rose and inspected the body as if nothing untoward had occurred. The terrorist was far fairer of complexion than his fellows. Nolan was trembling violently.
"Thank you. First time?"
Nolan nodded.
"I know the feeling."
"You've killed?"
"I have." The inventor spread his arms and beckoned Nolan into them. He clasped his Secret Service protector like a beloved friend and held him until his shaking had ceased.
"The critical element of the solution," Iverson said between sips of White House coffee, "was genetics. Populations that don't outbreed develop gene clusters that identify them as reliably as a fingerprint identifies an individual man. The Middle Eastern peoples are among the most easily separated from others on that basis. Give me a tissue sample from the Middle East and I'll tell you the exact nationality of the donor ten times out of ten. Combine that with the electron-spin resonances of the perchlorate and pernitrate radicals present in all high explosives, and I could develop a set of microwave interference patterns that would kill or cripple any person of Pakistani ancestry whose skin bears a trace of explosive residue."
Sumner's face twitched. "That's the racial angle?"
Iverson nodded. "Unfortunately, the resonances I used would also have done harm to anyone darker-skinned than you, I, or Geoff. Not lethal harm, but harm to be avoided all the same. So I had to seine out all the black soldiers from the point force, and I couldn't let anyone know why I did it."
"Will your approach be applicable in other places, among other peoples?" Sumner said.
"Not exactly as we used it in Pakistan," Iverson said. "The transmitter frequencies on the UCAVs would have to change, the portable units would need re-engineering, and the, uh, troop selection might differ. But in outline, yes, it could be used anywhere there was a similar threat."
"And you would be available to help with the adjustments?"
Iverson didn't answer at once. He leaned forward over his coffee cup and stared into it as if he were displeased with the contents.
"It would depend."
Sumner's eyes narrowed. "On what?"
Iverson met the president's gaze without flinching. "On the campaign, the issues at stake, the nature of the enemy, the state of the nation, and my estimate of the character of the person in the White House."
Nolan had anticipated the exchange, but the sight of anyone actually denying Stephen Sumner set his nerves to jangling even so. He'd seen the president bring arrogant, demanding, and conceited men to heel before. If he deemed the national interest to be at stake, Sumner would not hesitate to use whatever measures were necessary to get his way.
But Sumner didn't respond as Nolan expected. He laid his palms against his knees and nodded very slowly.
"I expected something like that. It doesn't really matter whether I approve, does it? You own all the technologies involved. I'd have to get a condemnation judgment to wrest them away from you, and that would involve letting this whole affair become public. Not to mention that I have no idea what they are. And no one else does either, right?"
Iverson nodded. "Exactly."
"Did you have any of this in mind when we first spoke?"
"Some of it." Iverson rose, stuck his hands into his pockets, and wandered to stand before the Washington portrait. "Not all of it. The laws of nature aren't always politically correct. I didn't want your administration marred by something that no one can help. Especially since it's the first administration since Cleveland's that's refused to pander to anyone."
The inventor pointed up at the Stuart masterpiece. "He saw his duty clearly when the Whiskey Rebellion hit. He called up the Army and sent it to enforce the law. And the Constitution says that's what he should have done. 'He shall take care that the laws be faithfully enforced.' But it wasn't the right thing to do. The whiskey excise fell upon the poorest citizens of the new republic, the ones least able to resist it. The Army was far more than they could cope with. But they stuck to their guns, a lot of them at the price of their lives."
Iverson's eyes glowed with a special fervor. It was a light Nolan had come to associate with dangerous men. Fanatics. Yet he knew the inventor too well to think him one of either.
"I'm a private citizen. I'm on the rebels' side. When the people rise up as the Whiskey Rebels did, the government should draw the moral. Men willing to risk their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor are of more value to a nation than any law, regulation, or tax. Whatever aroused their fury is wrong. It may be Constitutionally acceptable, but it's still wrong. And it should be undone before blood is spilled on its account. Do you remember your second question from when we first met? The one I told you to hold until all this was behind us?" He turned profile toward the president.
Sumner nodded. "Why you wear high-heeled boots."
Iverson grinned. "Yup. Without them I'm five feet seven and a half inches tall. I weigh a hundred fifty-five pounds. As a teenager and young adult, that made me a target for bullies and dictators. I had to learn to fight. I had to learn to strike the first blow and make it so devastating that there needn't be a second, then or ever. But that has its costs.
"Over time, I noticed that the main trigger for that sort of dominance contest is a a deficit in height. So I gave myself more height the only way possible. I dress to hide it, most of the time. But there are times when I want it to show, so whoever I'm with will know I'm not predictable, not someone he can manipulate. One way or the other, it's cut way back on the number of power games I've had to play. But when the chips are down, there's no substitute for actual power. I've learned that the hard way.
"So I believe in keeping as much power in the hands of private persons as possible. I want the government -- all governments, not just the one in Washington -- to fear the public's displeasure. I want the public to know that it possesses the means of resistance, and the government to know that if we should decide to rise up, it will not be able to put us down again."
Iverson returned to his sofa and sat hunched over, peering at the president in expectation of a response. It was slow in coming.
"I think..." Sumner paused and stared at his folded hands. "I think I agree with you. I'm not entirely pleased, mind you. No politician would be. We all think we're ultimately trustworthy. And I'm politician enough to want every tool of office I can get my hands on." He grinned. "I suppose I'll have to earn your trust, won't I?"
Iverson's answering smile was sunny and warm. "Mr. President," he said, causing Sumner to raise an inquiring eyebrow, "you already have. Take my word for it. But I'm not going to trust your successor...or his. Arcologics will control this technology, and will see to it that it's used only in wholesome causes. As for your administration's needs...well, ask and ye shall receive."
Nolan nursed his misgivings on the flight back to Onteora. Few men had impressed him as strongly as Todd Iverson. His polymathic intellectual powers were matched by a swift and accurate apprehension of moral issues. His social graces and ability to persuade were enough to raise him to the Oval Office, should he ever desire it. He commanded instant, irresistible loyalty in everyone around him. His wife was too beautiful and too charming to be allowed to run loose.
He was easily the most dangerous man in America. Perhaps in the world. He had to be watched.
"Will you and Nadia have dinner with Jeanne and me tonight, Geoff?"
"Hm? Oh, thank you, Todd, but I've been away from my post far too long already. I have to collect Nadia and get back to work before my supervisor decides to strike my name from the payroll."
"Nonsense." Iverson grinned, never taking his eyes off the flight path. The trees of Onteora County had come into view. "President Sumner directed me to have you over tonight. Doesn't the president always get what he wants?"
Nolan grinned ruefully. "I used to think so. All right, then yes, thank you. We'd be honored."
It was sumptuous. The Iversons' dining room was luxuriously paneled and furnished in dark woods and silver appurtenances. Jeanne Iverson proved to be a superb cook; her veal piccata was exquisitely flavorful and tender. She dimpled when Nolan praised it and insisted that the credit belonged with her butcher. When she stepped out for coffee and dessert, Iverson leaned over and whispered, "Wait until you try her cherry cheesecake."
The cheesecake surpassed all expectations. The coffee was from the White House mess. The combination would have drained the aggression from Genghis Khan. At the end, the Nolans could hardly move.
"So," Jeanne said as they sat back, "has Nadia told you anything about our shopping trips?"
Nolan frowned. "Not a word. I'd been expecting to hear about all these houses you two have been visiting. You've had nearly three weeks with her and I've heard nothing at all."
Nadia was staring into her coffee cup, a mysterious smile forming on her lips.
"Well," Jeanne said, "that's because we haven't been shopping for houses."
Uh-oh. "Nad," he said, trying to make it as pleasant as possible, "do you have a surprise for me?"
Nolan had never seen his wife look quite that naughty. "Later, sweetie." Her Russian accent was on full display. "Don't worry. I think you'll like it."
"Speaking of later," Iverson interjected, "you'll be staying with us tonight. I've already arranged for your baggage to be fetched here from the hotel, and tomorrow I'll fly you back to Washington myself."
"But Todd --"
Iverson raised a hand. "No buts! It will be my pleasure. And, I hope, yours as well. Ladies," he said as he rose, "would you allow Geoff and me a few minutes of private conversation?"
Nadia Nolan and Jeanne Iverson giggled in unison. "Of course, gentlemen." Jeanne rose, took Nadia by the hand, and led her into the kitchen. More giggles sounded irregularly from their wake.
"Geoff," Iverson said when they were alone, "you've served ably and well. The president considers you the best man on the Detail. He's thought so since that business with the PFLP two years ago. What do you have to say to that?"
"Well, I'm flattered, of course. But --"
"Good," Iverson said, "because he has an assignment for you. It's not mandatory; he'll allow you to decline it without prejudice. But he'd really like you to take it, if you can see your way clear to it. Trouble is, it means leaving the Detail. You'd still be Secret Service, but no longer a guardian of the president's person. Shall I lay it out for you?"
Nolan's nerves had begun to hum again. "Certainly, Todd. Go right ahead." Especially if I can refuse it.
Iverson smiled. "Presidential liaison for advanced technologies. Assigned semi-permanently to Onteora County, New York. You'd be working with me, keeping track of what Arcologics develops and projecting out its social, political, and military implications. There'd be a substantial increase in salary, and several trips each year back to Washington to brief the president on your findings." Iverson paused. "If it matters to you, you'd still be eligible for the eventual command of the Detail. You wouldn't suffer any career impact at all, if you elect to stay in federal service after Stephen Sumner leaves the White House."
"You make it sound," Nolan said slowly, "as if there might be some more attractive alternative available."
"That depends," Iverson said. "Stephen Sumner is from Onteora. And of course, so am I. He plans to return here once his time in office is done, and he'll need protection then just as much as he does now. Who better to command his personal security than the man who's guarded his life for three years and acted as his right hand with the most important technologist of the day?"
Nolan grinned. "Not too high an opinion of yourself, Dr. Iverson?"
"Mister Iverson, please! I have only a bachelor's degree. Would you care to argue about any of the rest of it?"
Nolan sat silent. Iverson peered at him for a long, uncomfortable moment before pushing a photograph across the table. Nolan glanced at it. It depicted a large, gorgeous stone house on a heavily treed lot. The property was girdled by tall oaks and low stone walls. "What's this?"
"Your new home."
"What? But --"
"Please, Geoff! 'Do not bind the mouths of the kine that tread the grain,' and all that. It's part enticement and part compensation for services rendered. But it's yours either way. Your name is already on the deed. Yours and Nadia's."
Nolan gaped. Iverson smiled and rose.
"I know it's a lot to take in at one pass. Go upstairs and talk it out with your wife. Second door on the right."
Nolan rose shakily, shook Iverson's hand, and mounted the stairs. He went to the second bedroom to the right of the stairhead, laid his hand tentatively on the knob, and twisted. As the door swung back, his breath deserted his body.
Nadia stood within.
She was garbed in a diaphanous creation that seemed to be tailored smoke. It clung to her and flowed around her as if it knew how she was about to move and had resolved to follow her wherever she went. Her full-bosomed, broad-hipped figure swayed from side to side as she closed on him and twined her arms around his neck.
"They live very well, don't they?" she breathed into his ear.
"Uh, yeah," he husked. His body's mounting excitement was rapidly depriving him of the requirements for speech and thought. "Is this what you and Jeanne were shopping for?"
He felt her mouth curve against his cheek. "Partly. There's someone I'd like you to meet." She drew away from him and beckoned him toward a door set at the back of the room.
Is she kinky? I'd never have imagined --
As Nadia opened the door, a soft coo emanated from within. She led him forward and around the plushly dressed bed with a crooked finger.
The room beyond contained a bassinet and a baby.
Nolan stood paralyzed as his wife took the baby from the bassinet and cradled it in her arms.
"Her name is Svetlana," she said. "She was born four days ago, to a girl in Moscow who would have aborted her if Jeanne hadn't stepped in. Now she's ours to love and raise." She peered at her husband through eyes of judgment. "Would you like to hold her?"
Awkwardly, Nolan extended his arms, and Nadia gave the baby to him.
She's so tiny. As if she were barely in this world.
Did God intend me for this? Did He intend you for this, little one?
"Who named her Svetlana?" he croaked.
Nadia frowned. "I did."
"Oh. I thought...never mind." A wave of multifarious emotions, impossible to disentangle, swept over him as he rocked his new daughter in his arms. "Nad...did he show you the house? I mean the one he picked out for us?"
Nadia's frown darkened further. "I picked it out! He just paid for it!"
"He just...oh, damn. Damn damn damn. How can I -- Nad, we can't let him do this! It's too much! It's --"
"It's what he wanted," she said quietly. "He wants you here. Jeanne wants me here. They both want Svetlana here. And the president wants you here for when he comes home. You've guarded him for three years now. He trusts you more than anyone else he knows. Don't you know how badly he wants to come home?"
"I --" Nolan was shorn of all speech.
I have a wife I love beyond all measure. I've been given a home of my own, a career, and a daughter to love. What else is there to ask from life? Season tickets to the Nationals?
Nadia put her arms around him and hugged him and Svetlana gently.
"You know," he said, "you women are better at this conspiracy stuff than we men are."
"And this surprises you?" she said.
"No, I suppose not. Anyway," he said, "what should we do with our stuff in Washington?"
She shrugged.
"Nadia Belinskaya," he murmured, "you are far too formidable for a simple Secret Serviceman to handle. I should have left you in Arkhangelsk. I'm going to have you watched every moment, from here to the grave."
She smirked. "Make sure he's young and handsome, then."
"Ouch!"


