Collins, Max Allan - Nathan Heller 11

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by Majic Man (v5. 0)


  Noting that the Naval medical corpsman was not at his post, I followed the silk-robed Forrestal—who left his pipe behind—across the hall to a much smaller room, a galley-like pantry with a single table, counter and cupboards, and a refrigerator. A pot of coffee sat, steaming fragrantly, on a hot plate.

  “Care for a cup?” he asked.

  “Thanks. One lump of sugar.”

  As he prepared the coffee for himself and me, Forrestal said, “This is a rather nice privilege…. They call this the diet kitchen, and of all of the patients, I alone have been granted its use—I can wander over and fix myself a snack, pour myself a cup of coffee, as I please…. Such are the small pleasures of the incarcerated.”

  As I sat at the chrome-legged, porcelain-topped table, which was about half again as big as your average kitchen table, I noticed the pantry’s single window did not have the tamper-proof screen of Forrestal’s room; in fact, of the two hooks that fastened it in place, one was broken.

  He was asking, “Can I get you a cup of soup, or a sandwich?”

  “No, no thanks, Jim. Just had lunch.”

  Sitting with his cup of coffee, he placed it before him, then patted his stomach, just above the yellow sash. “You should have seen the steak I put away, at noon. It’s nice to have my appetite back.”

  “You look good. You look fit.”

  “I’ve been exercising.” He sipped his coffee, glanced about the tiny room. “There’s nothing wrong with me that not being cooped up here, on the sixteenth floor, wouldn’t cure. How I’d like to be outdoors, with friends, visiting an estate, walking in the sun … soon, very soon.”

  “How is Jo holding up under all this?”

  The tight line tightened in an unconvincing smile. “Splendidly. She, uh, hasn’t been around much—hospitals depress her. I know she’ll be sorry she missed you, she’s very fond of you.” A quiet sadness slipped into his eyes. “She’s gone off to Europe, on vacation.”

  Her husband a mental patient, confined because of his suicidal tendencies, and Jo was off to Europe. Somehow I wasn’t surprised.

  “My son Michael’s over there, you know, in Paris,” he was saying. “Mike has a post with the Economic Cooperation Administration. Working for the Marshall Plan.”

  “How’s Peter doing?”

  “Very well, thank you—you just missed him. He spent half an hour with me, after lunch; he’s living in Morris House, looking after it for me. He’s at Princeton, doing very well—just started a summer job as a copyboy at the Post.”

  His pride in his sons buoyed him; this was the most talkative I’d ever seen Forrestal, and I was relieved to see him doing so well. I hated to forge ahead into troubling territory, but I felt I had to.

  “Jim, can I ask about something you mentioned to me, when you were—having your difficulties?”

  “Certainly, Nate.” He took another sip of his coffee. “I like to think we’ve gone beyond a client/employer relationship. You were at my side when the chips were down.”

  Well, that made me feel shitty.

  But I asked, “What happened at Roswell?”

  His expression froze. Then, slowly, he shook his head. “Nate, I shouldn’t have mentioned that to you. That’s a delicate, and classified, area.”

  “I figure it must have something to do with the Air Force,” I said.

  He said nothing, expressionless, though his eyes were alive.

  I had a sip of my coffee, which wasn’t bad at all, and pressed on. “You seemed to have, well … lost your grip, after Symington rode home with you that last day at the Pentagon. He said he had something important to talk to you about, and, after all, he’s the Secretary of the Air Force—”

  Forrestal raised a palm, in a stop gesture. “Nate, I’ll say only that the defense of one’s country sometimes necessitates unfortunate choices.” His gaze fell; he was looking at his own reflection in his coffee cup. “I’ll go to my grave feeling I betrayed my country; all the laudatory editorials in the world, all the psychiatry, a battalion of priests, cannot assuage that singular guilt.”

  “I don’t understand, Jim. Does this have anything to do with Majestic Twelve?”

  He looked up sharply, brow furrowed. “How did you know about that?”

  “Someone’s leaked it to a reporter I’ve done some work for.”

  He was shaking his head. “Majic-12 is a top-secret group, Nate, I won’t discuss it. Knowledge of that kind is what makes a … mental case like me … a security risk. Are you asking on behalf of this reporter?”

  “No.” And I wasn’t. I was asking for myself. I did not consider myself on the clock with Pearson, now; but I wanted to know if what I’d learned at Roswell was real—if my stay at the Walker base “guesthouse” had been due to my getting close to the secret of the century: the visitation of earth by aliens.

  So I kept at it, sitting forward, asking the big one: “Do you believe in flying saucers, Jim?”

  He studied me with unblinking eyes. “You know that much, do you? Does your reporter friend know, as well?”

  “There’s been no confirmation.”

  Now his gaze shifted to that screened window. Rather distantly, he said, “I thought perhaps the Horten brothers had talked.”

  “Who?”

  “They were the pilots and engineers responsible.” He shook his head. “We were lucky Hitler was a madman—a difference of a few months, and, hell, forget the V-2s … we might have been facing a fleet of saucer-shaped bombers. Imagine a bomber that could take off without a runway! Particularly in a country like Germany, with their runways reduced to rubble by Allied bombing.”

  Trying to follow this, I asked, “Are you saying flying saucers are from … Germany?”

  A dry smile tickled the thin lips. “Where did you think they were from—outer space?”

  I decided it wasn’t prudent to answer that question out loud, anyway not in a mental hospital.

  But I did ask, “Then these stories of flying saucers—are they government disinformation?”

  “The Communist threat is very real, Nate,” was his elliptical response. “It requires deals with various devils…. And I still believe there are dozens, perhaps hundreds, of Communist agents and fellow travelers in our government—as I was telling my young friend Joe McCarthy.”

  “Who?”

  His eyes narrowed as he offered me half a smile. “Young senator from Wisconsin. Keep your eye on him. My ability to fight this battle will be limited, now; the presidency is out of my reach, with a nervous breakdown in my history. But other warriors will come forward. I only hope they don’t have to make the abhorrent decisions I, from time to time, have had to make.”

  “What kind of decisions, Jim?”

  “You’ve implied it yourself. With the Reds a plague on the world landscape, dealing with Nazis is a lesser evil.” He laughed humorlessly. “Then there’s Roswell. To think the Japanese would have engineering minds better than ours—now that’s insane.”

  “Wait a minute—are you saying that there are Japs working at White Sands, along with the German scientists?”

  Forrestal frowned. “I’ve said too much. You must promise me you won’t share any of this with your reporter friend.”

  I had a last sip of coffee. “He, uh … he’s not exactly my friend.”

  “Well, who is he? Arthur Krock? Marquis Childs? Lyle Wilson, maybe?”

  I leaned forward. “Listen … Jim … there’s something difficult I have to get into with you. But first, I want to assure you that nothing we’ve talked about this afternoon will leave this room.”

  “I appreciate that. It’s been nice to have someone to talk to, someone I can trust, who doesn’t have the taint of government.”

  “… I’m afraid I have a worse taint.”

  His eyes tightened. “How is that possible?”

  “Oh, it’s possible. You just have to understand that I have never betrayed your confidence, and I never will. I’ve never worked a job for this man that ha
d to do with you. No cross-purposes were involved whatsoever.”

  And by now the eyes had widened. “You can’t be serious … Pearson?” He popped to his feet, thrust a finger across the table, in my face. “You’re the goddamn traitor!”

  “No! No … sit down before someone in the hall hears us. I deserve a fair hearing. Just let me explain.”

  Forrestal was trembling, his hands turned to fists.

  “Please,” I said. “Hear me out.”

  He looked at me for the longest time; then, finally, he sat.

  I told him that I’d done a number of jobs for Pearson in the thirties, and that I had stopped working for him, at that time. I had done a few minor jobs since, mostly having to do with the columnist’s rackets expose in Chicago.

  “But when we spoke at Chevy Chase,” I told Forrestal, “and you wanted me to see if you were being watched, I knew if I told you about my past relationship with Pearson, you wouldn’t hire me for the job.”

  “And you wanted the money?” he asked, bitterly.

  “Sure I did. But I knew that if I even mentioned knowing Pearson, you’d read more conspiracy into it, and get even more bent out of shape.”

  His expression softened. “That’s probably true.”

  “I also knew that I could ascertain the extent of Pearson’s surveillance because I’d go right to his office and ask him about it. And, if you’ll recall, I uncovered his spy in your house, that maid, who your wife fired accordingly.”

  Shaking his head, he studied me with dumb-founded disappointment; then he asked, “Why are you admitting this, at this late date?”

  “Because I didn’t want you to hear it from someone else. One of your shrinks, Bernstein, said it might undo what they’ve been trying to accomplish here, if your paranoia got fed by finding out I’d … betrayed you.”

  His voice seemed steady again as he asked, “And you’re saying you haven’t betrayed me?”

  “I haven’t, and I won’t. Listen, maybe I better, uh … leave right now. Let you mull this over. You can decide whether you want to talk to me about this again, ever.”

  “Nonsense.” Forrestal sighed, shook his head, even—amazingly enough—smiled. “It took courage for you to admit this … although frankly how you can work for that monster is beyond me.”

  “I don’t judge my clients that way. I’m afraid I mostly judge them by whether or not they can afford me.”

  He managed to chuckle at that. “I’m afraid that son of a bitch found my Achilles’ heel. I’ve never been able to overcome an acute sensitivity to criticism of a personal sort. Rational attacks—even irrational ones—on my policy decisions, my public positions, have never bothered me. But challenge my integrity, or call me a coward, and I’m afraid it shakes me to the core.”

  “Like that lousy lie about the jewel robbery.”

  “Exactly. I simply cannot understand this man’s fanatical viciousness. What possesses Pearson to pursue me into my sickroom, when I’m no longer even holding public office?”

  “You said it yourself, at the golf course—he’s a crusader. To Pearson, it’s no different than the difficult decisions you’ve had to make.”

  “The age-old question,” Forrestal said. “Do the ends justify the means?”

  “I’ve always figured it depends on the ends,” I said, “and it depends on the means.”

  “You’re a case-by-case sort of individual.”

  “Yeah, and it’s been one damn case after another. Look, Jim … you’ve been very understanding about this. And I’ve taken up too much of your time.”

  Forrestal stood. “It was a pleasure seeing you again, Nate, despite this rather bizarre revelation of yours … and, while I won’t pretend I’m overjoyed by what you revealed about that bastard Pearson … I am impressed by your courage in owning up to it.”

  “Still friends, then?”

  “Yes—but no longer a client.”

  “Fair enough,” I laughed. “Oh! I have a gift for you.”

  “Well, that’s very thoughtful.”

  We walked across the hall to his room and I handed him the brown paper bag.

  “I really went all out for the gift-wrapping,” I said.

  Forrestal smiled, removing the handsome red-leather, gold-decorated volume from the bag, then said, “Why, this is too extravagant!”

  “I thought maybe you’d find a book of poetry comforting,” I said.

  He held it in both hands, then flipped through some pages, contemplating the volume with a thin smile. “Very thoughtful of you, Nate. Very thoughtful indeed.”

  We shook hands and, in an uncharacteristic gesture, he touched my shoulder.

  “Thank you for this visit,” Forrestal said, surprising warmth in his voice.

  “Good seeing you, Jim. See you back on the golf course.”

  “I’ll take you up on that, Nate.”

  I left Bethesda in a cloud of confusion. If what Forrestal had told me was true, then the flying saucer at Roswell was an experimental aircraft out of White Sands. To some extent that would even account for the government’s clampdown, if not quite justify death threats and trips to the Walker “guesthouse.”

  But how did that explain the detailed, convincing eyewitness accounts I’d encountered in Roswell? And my own, deep sense of conviction that what had happened there did involve a craft from another world, with a crew from the same place? A conviction fueled by recurring dreams of that friendly spaceman …

  … who I was for a change not dreaming about, that night in my bed in my room at the Ambassador Hotel, when the phone rang me awake. I’d been sleeping deep and soundly, after seeking escape from my whirling thoughts with a night out that had included the company of the Yugoslavian lass, Anya, the bebop of Louis Jordan and the comic antics of Tim Moore at the Howard Theater, and a late dinner at the Water Gate Inn.

  After clicking on the nightstand lamp and blinding me, Anya, blonde hair pleasantly tousled, handed me the receiver. I glanced grumpily at my watch, and said thickly into the mouthpiece, “It’s two-thirty a.m. This better be good.”

  “Actually, it’s bad, Mr. Heller,” a businesslike second tenor intoned. “This is Baughman, and I’m over at Bethesda. How quickly can you get here?”

  Anya batting her blue eyes at me, I sat up and said to the chief of the Secret Service, “Give me a reason and I’m on my way.”

  “James V. Forrestal committed suicide here, forty minutes ago. You were his last outside visitor. Is that sufficient reason?”

  I felt it was.

  19

  No red lights flashed, no scurry of activity indicated that an event with international repercussions had taken place within the looming white tower; no ambulance out front to cart a dead body away—after all, this facility had its own morgue. One-stop shopping here at the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Maryland, which—not being in the District of Columbia proper—fell within the jurisdiction of the Montgomery County Sheriffs Department, a few bemused uniformed officers of which could be seen loitering in the parking lot and in the lobby.

  But on the sixteenth floor of the hospital tower, the only uniforms on view were those of the naval medical ensigns and a few naval nurses. The investigation into the death of James V. Forrestal was strictly a plainclothes affair, an apparent mingling of Secret Service, FBI and possibly even CIA.

  The plainclothes agent in the lobby (he didn’t identify his branch) who had allowed me onto the elevator must have walkie-talkied ahead, because Chief Baughman himself was waiting for me as the elevators opened onto the sixteenth floor.

  Though he had surely once again been called in from home, Baughman was a considerable distance from the Hawaiian shirt of our first meeting. The lanky, fortyish, poker-faced Secret Service chief with the piercing gaze wore a double-breasted blue tropical worsted with a red-and-blue striped tie against a white shirt—appropriately patriotic. He showed no signs of middle-of-the-night awakening, in contrast to my casual clothes of earlier today (act
ually yesterday—this was Sunday morning, now) which I’d tossed back on, the brown-and-white sportjacket over a blue T-shirt. The Southwest Flight fedora was pushed back on my head.

  Baughman offered me a hand to shake, which I took and shook, even as we started walking slowly down the relatively short hallway toward room 1618. Even without a mysterious death, the world of a hospital at night is an eerie one, the corridors dimly lighted, the cleaning staff leaving their mark by way of slick floors and antiseptic smells, as the rubber-soled shoes of nurses and orderlies take careful footsteps, so as not to disturb patients sedated and asleep in their rooms, their deep breathing providing a wall of ambient sound.

  “Thank you for coming, Mr. Heller,” Baughman said, in that hushed manner reserved for churches and after-hours hospitals. “I want you to understand that we’re not going to ask you for an official statement. That may come later.”

  “Am I a suspect?”

  “Of what?”

  “You tell me. Forrestal’s murder, maybe.”

  Down a hallway at the left was the nurses’ station, where a number of plainclothes officers gathered in a small lounge area.

  Baughman was matter-of-fact. “I told you on the phone, Mr. Heller. The former Secretary of Defense jumped from the pantry window. This is a suicide.”

  “Did anybody see him jump?”

  We were nearing the short hallway between 1618 and the diet kitchen; next to the diet kitchen was the single room that adjoined Forrestal’s double one via a bathroom—the single room where supposedly either a medical corpsman or a doctor had been on watch, twenty-four hours. Baughman stopped, so we could speak without being heard by the handful of plainclothesmen bustling about from room to room.

  “No one saw him jump,” Baughman said, almost whispering. “But we’ve completed questioning of Lieutenant Dorothy Turner, a duty nurse on the seventh floor, who heard a loud crash around one-fifty a.m. She called the alarm and within minutes the body was found, on the roof of a third-floor passageway connecting this tower to one of the wings.”

 

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