Shadow Watch (1999)

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Shadow Watch (1999) Page 18

by Tom - Power Plays 03 Clancy


  Vicente stared down at his nephew a moment, his eyes solemn, the lines around his mouth deepening. Then he knelt over him with the knife and sliced its edge across his throat to deliver the coup de grace.

  Eduardo jerked, made a gurgling noise, and expired.

  Rising, the old man gave the weapon back to Kuhl, turned toward DeVane, and bowed his head a little.

  “I am sorry for your loss, dear friend,” DeVane said gently.

  Vicente nodded again but remained where he stood.

  DeVane rose from his chair as Kuhl approached him, the knife dripping in his hand.

  “Have Vicente driven out of here so the others can scrape that garbage off the floor,” he said. “The Albanians have come through for us, and you and I have matters of vital importance to discuss.”

  ELEVEN

  SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA APRIL 19, 2001

  “ANY WORD ON THIBODEAU?” GORDIAN ASKED.

  “He’s still in ICU, but his condition’s been upgraded from critical to serious,” Nimec said. “The doctors are encouraged. They say he’s alert. Also told me he’s already getting on their nerves.”

  “How so?”

  “Asking a lot of questions.”

  “Good sign.”

  “And demanding they find him a Stetson.”

  “Even better.”

  “Exactly my thought.”

  “Either of you care to explain?” Megan said. “About the Stetson, I mean.”

  Gordian looked at her. “Thibodeau was Air Cav in Vietnam. It was their tradition to wear Stetsons as part of their military wardrobe when they received awards and decorations. Still is, I think.”

  “Ah,” Megan said. “So he’s presumably of a mind that there’s something to celebrate.”

  Gordian nodded.

  They were in a sub-basement meeting room at UpLink’s corporate HQ that looked much like any other in the building—beige carpet, oval conference table, recessed fluorescents—but differed from them in many important respects. The most apparent to the handful of top-tier executives permitted access were the electronic security panels outside the door incorporating voice-activated key-code software and retina-fingerprint scans, and the total absence of windows once they got inside.

  The most substantive differences involved the interstitial matrix of comint technology that had been subtly worked into the room’s design and construction. Layers of two-foot-thick concrete and acoustical paneling soundproofed its walls to human ears. Steel reinforcements, white-noise generators, and other counter-surveillance systems had been imbedded within them to block the tapping of conversations and electronic communications. Adding to security were twice-weekly sweeps for bugs, and spectrum and X-ray scans of all electronic equipment coming into or out of the room. While continual advancements in eavesdropping technology made it unrealistic to guarantee that any space on earth was strongboxed against droops—a word meaning “dirty rotten snoops” coined by UpLink’s risk-assessment man, Vince Scull—its occupants could feel a comfortable degree of assurance in the inviolability of their discussions.

  These occupants presently being limited to Gordian, Nimec, and Megan Breen, who had convened in this high-tech sanctum sanctorum to see what they could make of Brazil.

  “Thibodeau’s doctors mention the sort of questions he’s been asking?” Gordian said now.

  “No, but Cody did. He’s the guy Rollie insisted on talking to,” Nimec said. “It’s pretty much as you’d expect. Who, what, why. And how the invaders knew as much about our perimeter security and grounds plan as they did.”

  “The answer to the last part seems painfully obvious.”

  “A mole,” Megan said.

  “Or moles,” Nimec added.

  “Anybody look good for it?” Gordian asked.

  “Not yet, and I expect it’ll take a while before we find solid pointers,” Nimec said. “There’s no evidence our internal defenses were compromised in the sense of systems shutdowns or restricted databases being hacked. The reconnaissance that was gathered wouldn’t have required a high level of clearance, just a familiarity with the complex and the time and incentive to do a thorough job of mapping it out. My guess is there are over a thousand administrative, R&D, production, building construction, medical, maintenance, and even kitchen staffers who could’ve provided the information.”

  “Nor can we rule out Sword personnel,” Megan said.

  Nimec looked at her. “That’s right,” he said. “We can’t.”

  Gordian glanced from one to the other. “Impressions?”

  “The invasion force was well organized and armed to the teeth,” Nimec said. “It had land and air elements that performed with exceptional tactical coordination and were equipped with a French integrated weapon/helmet-mounted targeting package that gave them the equivalent of our country’s Land Warrior system—ordnance that’s technically still in field trials. The airborne teams that we think took out the robots made their insertion using high-altitude-high-opening para techniques. Again, we’re looking at skills, experience, and equipment generally associated with elite commando units. They made the terrorists who hit us in Russia a couple years back look like toy soldiers.”

  “I assume none of the men we captured gave up information about who sent them?”

  “There hardly would have been a chance if they’d wanted to,” Megan said. “Brazilian federal police scooped them out of our hands within an hour after we notified them of the strike.”

  “Which is pretty much what I expected. Have we made official inquiries of the gendarmes since then?”

  “Several, but they haven’t exactly been eager to respond. Nobody we’ve contacted even seems sure where the prisoners are being detained.”

  “And I’d be willing to bet they’re never seen or heard from again.” Nimec rubbed his thumb over his fingers. “Whoever could launch an operation of the kind we saw the other night has got to have plenty of grease. The hinky bastards that pass for lawmen down there would be just the ones to soak it up. Mark my words, Gord, we’ll get zero disclosure from them.”

  “We have our own intelligence resources. The ground units would have needed to stage from positions somewhere relatively close to the plant.”

  “The key word being ‘relatively,’ ” Nimec said. “There are hundreds of miles of wilderness in the Mato Grasso. Territory where you could hide a fair-sized encampment if you have the know-how. As those people clearly would.”

  Gordian rubbed the back of his neck.

  “They’ve got concealment and cover, we’ve got the Hawkeye,” he said. “Let’s put our new bird through its paces and see who wins the Kewpie.”

  “What I was just about to suggest,” Nimec said. “I’ll order the satellite jogged into position soon as I get to Brazil.”

  Gordian shook his head. “You can do that from a ground station right here in the states, Pete.”

  “Sure, but my point is that with Rollie’s situation uncertain, we need somebody in charge down there—”

  “I agree,” Gordian said. “However, right now I’d prefer to have you in Florida as our liaison and advisor to the Orion investigation.”

  Nimec looked at him. “I thought you’d wrangled it so that Annie Caulfield was chosen to head the probe.”

  “I did. And I have complete confidence in her leadership.”

  “Yet you still want me to keep an eye on things?”

  “To keep me abreast of developments,” Gordian said. “Furthermore, there are some people at NASA who may be in a snit about Annie’s accession, so to speak, and I’d like to have someone in place to backstop her should she run into difficulties.”

  “Right off the top of my head, I’m able to name at least a dozen people in our organization who can do the job as well as I can,” Nimec said.

  “Only if we disregard your experience in identifying the characteristics of sabotage,” Gordian said. “I hope it doesn’t become essential, but we have to be ready just in case. Which is my third rea
son for wanting you at the Cape.”

  Nimec sat there for a moment of dead silence. Gordian’s fixed expression told him it wouldn’t do any good to contest his decision, that things would have to go his way whether Nimec liked it or not. Besides, he could present no logical argument; everything Gordian had said made perfect sense.

  In spite of the logic and sense, though, all Nimec could think was that he was finally getting his due for Malaysia. That Gordian was expressing his concern about a replay of the cowboys-and-Indians scenario that had grown out of Nimec’s tolerance of Max Blackburn’s unauthorized investigation into Monolith Technologies a year ago. He could still remember Gordian’s words when he’d found out about it. At that point it had been evident that Blackburn was in trouble. No one had yet guessed how serious it would turn out to be, but Max had disappeared, and Nimec had finally had to ask his employer’s permission to go looking for him.

  Yes, he could remember Gord’s exact words.

  “It’s beyond me how you could have been part of something this reckless, Pete. Completely beyond me ... the two of you launched a caper that could have sunk us in quicksand. And very likely has ... ”

  Nimec breathed. Maybe it hadn’t sunk them, but Max was dead, and he owned a share of the blame. Maybe, too, he deserved to be making reparations.

  “Who you plan on sending to Mato Grasso?” he asked.

  Another dead moment.

  Megan shifted in her chair.

  “Gord’s asked me to go,” she said.

  Nimec looked at her.

  “I apologize.” She averted her eyes for the briefest instant. “I probably should have told you sooner.”

  He was quiet.

  “Pete, one more thing,” Gordian said, breaking into the silence at what he thought was an opportune moment. “Have you heard from Tom Ricci? We can’t afford to get hung up as far as the Sword position.”

  “He left a message on my voice mail this morning. I plan to return the call as soon as I get back to my office.”

  “No indication yet about how he’s leaning?”

  Nimec shook his head.

  “He’d want to talk to me directly.”

  Gordian nodded. “I can see that.”

  Megan smoothed her skirt over her legs.

  “Must be a guy thing,” she half-muttered.

  Gordian looked at her, raising his eyebrows.

  “You haven’t spoken to my wife lately, have you?”

  “No,” she said. “Why do you ask?”

  Gordian looked at her another moment.

  “Never mind,” he said, and scratched behind his ear. “It’s nothing important.”

  TWELVE

  CAPE CANAVERAL, FLORIDA APRIL 21, 2001

  ANNIE CAULFIELD HAD BEEN THRUST INTO THE ROLE of NASA spokeswoman often enough to have grown philosophical about it. See it as a burden and it would become one, and when it became one it would start to show on camera, and when it started showing on camera you’d be perceived as touchy and evasive, i.e., having something to hide, and the press corps would pound you without mercy. See it as a sort of friendly jousting match with reporters and interviewers, get too cute, and you would come off as one of the gang, an egotistical, overly glib insider who was enjoying the limelight, cozying up to your questioners for personal advancement—perhaps in anticipation of joining their ranks as a pundit, or expert consultant as it was formally called—and had very likely gotten into cahoots with them to put one over on the average citizen. See it as a means of serving the public’s legitimate right to know while doing your best to shape a positive perception of the agency, be honest about the facts you disclosed and equally aboveboard explaining instances when you couldn’t make certain information available, and you’d be solidly on Annie’s preferred course. Yes, it was always part performance and part ritual ... but a performance could be either sincere or insincere, a ritual of light or shadow, and she tried her earnest best to stay on the side of the angels.

  It was a tough balancing act that often put her resilience and composure to the extreme test.

  The day after she accepted the assignment of Orion task force leader, her face was all over the televised landscape. In addition to being the subject of pieces on virtually every national and local newscast, she made appearances on two of the three morning coffee klatch shows via satellite, conducted the first of what would be a series of regular afternoon media briefings at the Cape, and was the leadoff guest on cable TV’s highest-rated prime-time interview program, again via remote feed.

  Her first booking was a five-minute spot with the same Gary Somebody-or-other who’d snared her for the cameras just before the shuttle launch was to have taken place. A genial man in his thirties, his plain-vanilla good looks and honey-voiced manner contributed to his talent for reducing conversations about wars, disasters, and the latest showbiz buzz alike into a homogeneous puree that washed down smoothly with breakfast and made him a consistent Nielsen winner. While Gary was certainly opportunistic, Annie had to admit that she sort of liked him, finding him to be further removed from a Gila monster than many of his peers, and a whole lot sharper than his soft and fuzzy veneer let on.

  “We appreciate your taking the time to join us, Ms. Caulfield,” he began in a tone of gentle empathy. “On behalf of this broadcast’s staff and viewers, I’d like to extend my condolences to NASA and the family of James Rowland. Our thoughts go out to all of you.”

  “Thank you, Gary. The support we’ve gotten from the public obviously means a great deal to us, and has been a particular comfort to Jim’s wife and daughter.”

  “Can you tell us what sort of impact the tragedy has had on you personally? I know that you and Colonel Rowland were close friends as well as colleagues.”

  Don’t choke up, she thought. Answer him, give him his follow-up, and maybe then he’ll drop it.

  “Well ... like anybody who suffers the loss of someone dear, I find it hard to put all my feelings into words. Jim’s death has been devastating for everyone who knew him. He had a huge, warm personality, and it’s hard to believe he’s gone. He’ll be terribly missed and remembered always.”

  “You flew several missions into space with Colonel Rowland, didn’t you?”

  One word. Don’t choke.

  “Yes.”

  “As crewmates on several missions, did the two of you ever discuss the possibility of being harmed in what is, after all, a highly dangerous occupation?”

  Please, let’s move on.

  “I don’t recall that we ever did. I think every astronaut feels a sense of privilege about being chosen to go into space. We’re always aware things can go wrong and try to prepare for these eventualities in training, and I’m convinced it’s because of this training that the rest of Orion’s crew escaped the shuttle unharmed. But we really can’t afford to dwell on the risks of our job any more than a firefighter or police officer can worry about them when he starts out each day.”

  “Of course, I understand, and believe it’s one of the main reasons that astronauts have come to epitomize an almost mythic spirit of heroism to those of us who’ve only been able to see the stars from the ground, and dreamed of seeing the ground from the stars.”

  Whatever that means, as long as you please, please move on, she thought with an interim smile, having no idea how to respond.

  “On the subject of your present duties as Orion task force leader, how do you intend to proceed with your efforts to determine the cause of last Tuesday’s terrible calamity at the launchpad?”

  Thank you. I think.

  “Speaking in general terms, and that’s the best I can do at this juncture, we’ll assemble a team that will look at what happened and search for clues to help us isolate the factors leading up to it. Any forensic probe is largely a process of elimination, and it’s going to require a painstaking examination of Orion’s remains.”

  “May we assume your investigative team is to be composed of NASA personnel?”

  “As we expres
sed in our initial statement to the press, we’re quite firmly committed to using experts from inside and outside the space agency—”

  “When you say outside experts, I find myself wondering where they’d be drawn from, this being an occurrence that’s had few historic parallels. Other than Challenger, and Apollo 10 before that, nothing else gratefully comes to mind ... and I do want to emphasize the word gratefully. ”

  “I understand the basis of your question, Gary. But we’ve learned a great deal from the accidents you mention, and many of the people who helped determine what occurred in those instances are available for consultation—or even active participation—in our investigation. Also, while it’s true that the shuttle is a unique and advanced spacecraft, many of its systems and subsystems share a common baseline with the technologies used in other modern flying machines. Consequently, there’s a wide pool of authorities from government and civil aviation who can be of tremendous assistance to us.”

  “Does that mean the FAA and National Transportation and Safety Board will be involved?”

  Name the two agencies that nobody but nobody trusts, why don’t you? Might as well ask about the possible inclusion of former KGB operatives, or maybe Nixon’s White House plumbers while you’re at it.

  “We’ll be working alongside those groups to get to the bottom of what happened, and may very well include representatives from both as part of our team’s composition. However, we’ve already had many specialists from the aerospace industry and other parts of the private sector volunteer their expertise, and we will certainly be taking full advantage of it. What matters to me is that the job gets done, and I’m inclined to engage anyone who can have constructive input, regardless of his or her professional affiliation.”

  Gary Somebody-or-other paused a beat. Though Annie was looking directly into the bland eye of a television camera and had no video monitor with which to see him long distance, she suspected he was getting instructions from the control room.

 

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