Read Jack Ryan 9 - Executive Orders Online
Authors: Tom Clancy
His wife. There was ample press coverage on her, too, including in one article the number of her office at her hospital. A skilled surgeon. That was nice—a recent piece said that she'd continue that. Excellent. They knew where to look for her.
The children. The youngest—yes, the youngest used the same day-care center that the oldest had used. There was a photo of that, too. A feature article on Ryan's first White House job had even identified the school the older ones attended. . . .
This was all quite amazing. He'd initiated the research effort in the knowledge that he'd get all or most of this information, but even so, here was in a single day more information than ten people in the field could have gathered—at considerable risk of exposure—in a week. The Americans were so foolish. They practically invited attack. They had no idea of secrecy or security. It was one thing for a leader to appear in public with his family from time to time—everyone did that. It was quite another to let everyone know things that nobody really needed to know.
The document package—it came to over 2,500 pages— would be collated and cross-referenced by his staff. There were no plans to take action on any of it. It was just data. But that could change.
“Y
OU KNOW
, I think I like flying in,” Cathy Ryan observed to Roy Altman.
“Oh?”
“Less wear and tear on the nerves than driving myself. I don't suppose that'll last,” she added, moving into the food line.
“Probably not.” Altman was constantly looking around, but there were two other agents in the room, doing their best to look invisible and failing badly at it. Though Johns Hopkins was an institution with fully 2,400 physicians, it was still a professional village of sorts where nearly everyone knew nearly everyone else, and doctors didn't carry guns. Altman was staying close, the better to learn his principal's routine, and she didn't seem to mind. He'd been in with her for the two morning procedures, and teacher that she was, Cathy had explained every step of the process in minute detail. This afternoon she'd be doing teaching rounds with a half dozen or so students. It was Altman's first educational experience on the job—at least in something that had value in an area other than politics, a field he'd learned to detest. His next observation was that S
URGEON
ate like the proverbial bird. She got to the end of the line and paid for her lunch and Altman's, over his brief protest.
“This is my turf,
Roy
.” She looked around, and spotted the man she wanted to lunch with, heading that way with Altman in tow. “Hey, Dave.”
Dean James and his guest stood up. “Hi, Cathy! Let me introduce a new faculty member, Pierre Alexandre. Alex, this is Cathy Ryan—”
“The same one who—”
“Please, I'm still a doctor, and—”
“You're the one on the Lasker list, right?” Alexandre stopped her cold with that one. Cathy's smile lit up the room.
“Yes.”
“Congratulations, Doctor.” He held out his hand. Cathy had to set her tray down to take it. Altman watched with eyes that tried to be neutral, but conveyed something else. “You must be with the Service.”
“Yes, sir. Roy Altman.”
“Excellent. A lady this lovely and this bright deserves proper protection,” Alexandre pronounced. “I just got out of the Army, Mr. Altman. I've seen you guys at Walter Reed. Back when President Fowler's daughter came back from
Brazil
with a tropical bug, I managed the case.”
“Alex is working with Ralph Forster,” the dean explained as everyone sat down.
“Infectious diseases,” Cathy told her bodyguard.
Alexandre nodded. “Just learning the ropes at the moment. But I have a parking pass, so I guess I really belong.”
“I hope you're as good a teacher as Ralph is.”
“A great doc,” Alexandre agreed. Cathy decided she'd like the newbie. She next wondered about the accent and the southern manners. “Ralph flew down to
Atlanta
this morning.”
“Anything special happening?”
“A possible Ebola case in
Zaire
, African male, age eight. The e-mail came through this morning.”
Cathy's eyes narrowed at that. Though she was in a completely different field of medicine, like all physicians she got Morbidity and Mortality Report, and she kept current on everything she could. Medicine is a field in which education never stops. “Just one?”
“Yep.” Alexandre nodded. “Seems the kid had a monkey bite on his arm. I've been over there. I deployed out of Detrick for the last mini-outbreak in 1990.”
“With Gus Lorenz?” Dean James asked. Alexandre shook his head.
“No, Gus was doing something else then. The team leader was George Westphal.”
“Oh, yeah, he—”
“Died,” Alex confirmed. “We, uh, kept it quiet, but he got it. I attended him. It wasn't real great to watch.”
“What did he do wrong? I didn't know him well,” James said, “but Gus told me he was a rising star. UCLA, as I recall.”
“George was brilliant, best man on structures I ever met, and he was as careful as any of us, but he got it anyway, and we never figured out how that happened. Anyway, that mini-outbreak killed sixteen people. We had two survivors, both females, both in their early twenties, and nothing remarkable about them that we could ever find. Maybe they were just lucky,” Alexandre said, not really believing it. Things like this happened for some reason or other. It was just that he hadn't found it, though it was his job to find it. “In any case, only eighteen total victims, and that was lucky. We were over there for six or seven weeks. I took a shotgun into the woods and blew up about a hundred monkeys, trying to find a carrier. No dice. That strain is called Ebola Zaire Mayinga. I imagine right now they're comparing it to what this little kid contracted. Ebola's a slippery little bastard.”
“Just one?” Cathy asked.
“That's the word. Method of exposure unknown, as usual.”
“Monkey bite?”
“Yeah, but we'll never find the monkey. We never do.”
“It's that deadly?” Altman asked, unable to hold back from joining the conversation.
“Sir, the official guess is eighty percent mortality. Put it this way. If you pull your pistol out and shoot me in the chest, right here, right now, my odds are better than beating this little bug.” Alexandre buttered his roll and remembered visiting Westphal's widow. It was bad for the appetite. “Probably a lot better, what with the surgeons we have working over in Halstead. You have much better odds with leukemia, much better odds with lymphoma. Somewhat worse odds with AIDS, but that agent gives you ten years. Ebola gives you maybe ten days. That's about as deadly as it gets.”
MONKEYS
R
YAN HAD DONE ALL OF
his own writing. He'd published two books on naval history—that now seemed like a previous lifetime summoned to memory on a hypnotist's couch—and uncounted papers for CIA. Each of these he had done himself, once on a typewriter and later on a series of personal computers. He had never enjoyed the writing—it was ever difficult work—but he had enjoyed the solitude of it, alone in his own little intellectual world and safe from any sort of interruption as he formed his thoughts and adjusted their method of presentation until they were as close to perfect as he could achieve. In that way, they were always his thoughts, and there was integrity in the process.
No longer.
The chief speech writer was Callie Weston, short, petite, dirty blond, and a wizard with words who, like many of the enormous White House staff, had come aboard with President Fowler and never managed to leave.
“You didn't like my speech for the church?” She was also irreverent.
“Honestly, I just decided that I had to say something else.” Then Jack realized he was defending himself to someone he scarcely knew.
“I cried.” She paused for effect, staring into his eyes with the unblinking gaze of a poisonous snake for several seconds, manifestly sizing him up. “You're different.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean—you have to understand, Mr. President. President Fowler kept me around because I made him sound compassionate—he's rather a cold fish in most things, poor guy. President Durling kept me around because he didn't have anybody better. I bump heads all the time with staffers across the street. They like to edit my work. I don't like being edited by drones. We fight. Arnie protects me a lot because I went to school with his favorite niece—and I'm the best around at what I do—but I'm probably the biggest pain in the ass on your staff. You need to know that.” It was a good explanation, but not to the point.
“Why am I different?” Jack asked.
“You say what you really think instead of saying what you think people think they want to hear. It's going to be hard writing for you. I can't dip into the usual well. I have to learn to write the way I used to like to write, not the way I'm paid to write, and I have to learn to write like you talk. It's going to be tough,” she told him, already girding herself for the challenge.
“I see.” Since Ms. Weston was not an inner-circle staff member, Andrea Price was leaning against the wall (it would have been in a corner, except the Oval Office didn't have one) and observing everything with a poker face— or trying to. Ryan was learning to read her body language. Clearly Price didn't much care for Weston. He wondered why. “Well, what can you turn out in a couple of hours?”
“Sir, that depends on what you want to say,” the speechwriter pointed out. Ryan told her in a few brief sentences. She didn't take notes. She merely absorbed it, smiled, and spoke again.
“They're going to destroy you. You know that. Maybe Arnie hasn't told you yet, maybe nobody on the staff has, or ever will, but it's going to happen.” That remark jolted Agent Price from her spot on the wall, just enough that her body was standing instead of leaning.
“What makes you think I want to stay here?”
She blinked. “Excuse me. I'm not really used to this.”
“This could be an interesting conversation, but I—”
“I read one of your books day before yesterday. You're not very good with words—not very elegant, that's a technical judgment—but you do say things clearly. So I have to dial back my rhetoric style to make it sound like you. Short sentences. Your grammar is good. Catholic schools, I guess. You don't bullshit people. You say it straight.” She smiled. “How long for the speech?”
“Call it fifteen minutes.”
“I'll be back in three hours,” Weston promised, and stood. Ryan nodded, and she walked out of the room. Then the President looked at Agent Price.
“Spit it out,” he ordered.
“She's the biggest pain in the ass over there. Last year she attacked some junior staffer over something. A guard had to pull her off him.”
“Over what?”
“The staffer said some nasty things about one of her speeches, and speculated that her family background was irregular. He left the next day. No loss,” Price concluded. “But she's an arrogant prima donna. She shouldn't have said what she did.”
“What if she's right?”
“Sir, that's not my business, but any—”
“Is she right?”
“You are different, Mr. President.” Price didn't say whether she thought that was a good or bad thing, and Ryan didn't ask.
The President had other things to do in any case. He lifted his desk phone, and a secretary answered.
“Could you get me George Winston at the Columbus Group?”
“Yes, Mr. President, I'll get him for you.” She didn't have that number immediately to mind, and so she lifted another phone for the Signals Office. Down there a Navy petty officer had the number on a Post-It note, and read it off. A moment later he handed the Post-It to the Marine in the next chair over. The Marine fished in her purse, found four quarters, and handed them over to the smirking squid.
“Mr. President, I have Mr. Winston,” the intercom phone said.
“George?”
“Yes, sir.”
“How fast can you get down here?”
“Jack—Mr. President, I'm trying to put my business back together and—”
“How fast?” Ryan asked more pointedly.
Winston had to think for a second. His Gulfstream crew wasn't standing by for anything today. Getting to
Newark
Airport
. . . “I can catch the next train.”
“Let me know which-one you're on. I'll have someone waiting for you.”
“Okay, but you need to know that I can't—”
“Yes, you can. See you in a few hours.” Ryan hung up, then looked up to Price. “Andrea, have an agent and a car meet him at the station.”
“Yes, Mr. President.”
Ryan decided that it was nice to give orders and have them carried out. A man could get used to this.
“I
DON'T LIKE
guns!” She said it loudly enough that a few heads turned, though the kids immediately turned back to their blocks and crayons. There was an unusual number of adults around, three of whom had spiraling cords leading to earpieces. Those heads all turned to see a “concerned” (that was the word everyone used in such a case) mother. As head of this detail, Don Russell walked over.
“Hello.” He held up his Secret Service ID. “Can I help you?”
“Do you have to be here!”
“Yes, ma'am, we do. Could I have your name, please?”
“Why?” Sheila Walker demanded.
“Well, ma'am, it's nice to know who you're talking to, isn't it?” Russell asked reasonably. It was also nice to get background checks on such people.
“This is Mrs. Walker,” said Mrs. Marlene Daggett, owner-operator of Giant Steps Day Care Center.
“Oh, that's your little boy over there, Justin, right?” Russell smiled. The four-year-old was building a tower with hardwood blocks, which he would then tip over, to the general amusement of the room.
“I just don't like guns, and I don't like them around children.”
“Mrs. Walker, first of all, we're cops. We know how to carry our firearms safely. Second, our regulations require us to be armed at all times. Third, I wish you would look at it this way: your son is as safe here with us as he's ever going to be. You'll never have to worry about having somebody come over and steal a kid off the playground outside, for example.”
“Why does she have to be here?”
Russell smiled reasonably. “Mrs. Walker, Katie over there didn't become President. Her father did. Isn't she entitled to a normal kid's life, just like your Justin?”
“But it's dangerous and—”
“Not while we're around, it isn't,” he assured her. She just turned away.
“Justin!” Her son turned to see his mother holding his jacket. He paused for a second, and with one finger pushed the blocks a fraction of an inch, waiting for the four-foot pile to teeter over like a falling tree.
“Budding engineer,” Russell heard through his earpiece. “I'll check her tag number.” He nodded to the female agent in the doorway. In twenty minutes they'd have a new dossier to look over. Probably it would just say that Mrs. Walker was a New Age pain in the ass, but if she had a history of mental problems (possible), or a criminal record (unlikely), it would be something to remember. He scanned the room automatically, then shook his head. S
ANDBOX
was a normal kid surrounded by normal kids. At the moment she was crayoning a blank sheet of paper, her face screwed into a look of intense concentration. She'd been through a normal day, a normal lunch, a normal nap, and soon would have an abnormal trip back to a decidedly abnormal home. She hadn't noticed the discussion he'd just had with Justin's mother. Well, kids were smart enough to be kids, which was more than one could say for a lot of their parents.
Mrs. Walker guided her son to the family car, a Volvo wagon to no one's surprise, where she dutifully strapped him into the safety seat in the back. The agent memorized the tag number for processing, knowing that it would turn nothing of real importance, and knowing that they'd run it anyway, because there was always the off chance that . . .
It all came back just then, the reason why they had to be careful. Here they were, at Giant Steps, the same day-care center the Ryans had used since S
HADOW
was a munchkin, just off
Ritchie Highway
above
Annapolis
. The bad guys had used the 7-Eleven just across the road to stake out the location, then followed S
URGEON
in her old Porsche, using a custom van, and on the Route 50 bridge they'd pulled off a sweet little ambush, and later killed a state trooper in their escape. Dr. Ryan had been pregnant with S
HORTSTOP
then. S
ANDBOX
had been far off into a future yet undreamed of at the time. All of this had a strange effect on Special Agent Marcella Hilton. Unmarried, again—she was twice divorced, with no kids of her own—being around kids had made her heart flutter a little, tough professional that she was. She figured it was part of her hormones, or the way the female brain was wired, or maybe she just liked kids and wished she had one of her own. Whatever it was, the thought that people would deliberately hurt little kids made her blood chill for a brief moment, like a blast of cold wind that came and went.
This place was too vulnerable. And there really were people out there who didn't care a rat's ass about hurting kids. And that 7-Eleven was still there. There were six agents on the S
ANDBOX
detail now. That would be down to three or four in a couple of weeks. The Service wasn't the all-powerful agency people thought it was. Oh, sure, it had a lot of muscle, and investigative clout which few suspected. Alone of the federal police forces, the United States Secret Service could knock on somebody's door and walk in and conduct a “friendly” interview with someone who might represent a threat—an assumption based on evidence which might or might not be usable in a court of law. The purpose of such an interview would be to let the person know that he or she had an eye fixed firmly on him or her, and though that wasn't strictly true—the Service had only about 1,200 agents nationwide—the mere thought of it was enough to scare the hell out of people who'd said the wrong thing into the wrong ear.
But those people weren't the threat. As long as the agents did their job correctly, the casual threat wasn't a deadly one. Those people almost always tipped their hand, and people like her knew what to look for. It was the ones their intelligence division didn't hear about who constituted the real threat. Those could be deterred somewhat through a massive show of force, but the massive show was too expensive, too oppressive, too obvious not to attract notice and adverse comment. Even then—she remembered another event, months after the near death of S
URGEON
, S
HADOW
, and the yet unborn S
HORTSTOP
. A whole squad, she thought. It was a case study at the Secret Service Academy at Beltsville. The Ryan house had been used to film a re-creation of the event. Chuck Avery—a good, experienced supervisory agent—and his whole squad taken out. As a rookie she'd watched the taped analysis of what had gone wrong, and even then she'd chilled at how easy it had been for that team to make a small mistake, that to be compounded by bad luck and bad timing.. . .
“Yeah, I know.” She turned to see Don Russell, sipping from a plastic coffee cup while he got some fresh air. Another agent was on post inside.
“Did you know Avery?”
“He was two years ahead of me at the academy. He was smart, and careful, and a damned good shot. He dropped one of the bad guys then, in the dark from thirty yards, two rounds in the chest.” A shake of the head. “You don't make little mistakes in this business, Marci.”
That is when the second chill came, the one that made you want to reach for your weapon, just to be sure that it was there, to tell yourself that you were ready to get the job done. That's when you remembered, in this case, how cute a little kid could be, and how even if you took the hits you'd make damned sure your last conscious act on the planet would be to put every round through the bastard's X-ring. Then you blinked, and the image went away.
“She's a beautiful little girl, Don.”
“I've rarely seen an ugly one,” Russell agreed. This was the time when one was supposed to say, Don't worry, we'll take good care of her. But they didn't say that. They didn't even think it. Instead they looked around at the highway and the trees and the 7-Eleven across
Ritchie Highway
, wondering what they'd missed, and wondering how much money they could spend on surveillance cameras.
G
EORGE WINSTON WAS
used to being met. It was the ultimate perk, really. You got off the airplane—almost always an airplane in his case—and there was somebody to meet you and take you to the car whose driver knew the quickest way to where you were going. No hassles with Hertz and figuring the useless little maps out, and getting lost. It cost a lot of money, but it was worth it, because time was the ultimate commodity, and you were born with only so much to spend, and there was no passbook to tell you the exact amount. The Metroliner pulled into Union Station's track 6. He'd gotten some reading done, and had himself a nice nap between
Trenton
and
Baltimore
. A pity the railroad couldn't make money carrying passengers, but you didn't have to buy air to fly in. while it was necessary to build a right-of-way for ground transport. Too bad. He collected his coat and briefcase and headed for the door, tipping the first-class attendant on the way out.