by Stuart Woods
Gene looked carefully around the block. Not much traffic and no one at all on foot. The curtains were drawn on the house directly across the street. He dug out a set of lock picks and went to work on the front door. He was inside in less than a minute.
The first thing he saw inside was an alarm control box. He stared at the thing, waiting for it to start beeping. It did not. The lady had not set her alarm before leaving home. Sweet of her.
He set down the plumbing tools in the entryway, then entered the house. Cute. Two floors, the master bedroom and a guest room upstairs. A cursory glance told him the master had been occupied.
Gene placed three microphones in the bedroom, one by the bedside where the phone was, one by the dressing table, and one high, on top of a picture, that would bridge any gaps between the other two. When he finished there he went downstairs and placed one under the living room phone. As an afterthought, he placed one in the kitchen, as well. You never knew.
He was done and back in his truck in under an hour. He dialed the number and listened on his equipment for it to ring. It worked perfectly. As a final touch, he placed a voice-activated tape recorder in what appeared to be an electrical box, and fixed it to the outside of the house behind some azalea bushes. He would collect the tape every day.
Gene called Nelson Pickett. “Nelson, you’re up and running in Georgetown,” he said.
“Send me your bill,” Pickett said.
“I have to pick up the tape every day,” Gene told him.
“You do that, and be sure you pick it up tomorrow,” Pickett said.
“Something special about tomorrow?”
“You bet your ass,” Pickett replied.
53
Todd Baconlocked his new office door and took a sandwich and a soda to his desk. He had a couple of more files to read from Owen Masters’s safe before he would be done. The first was a kind of telegraphic diary, documenting Owen’s joining the Agency right out of Yale, his training, and every assignment he had been given during the ensuing thirty years. Interesting, but not very. Owen must have been planning to write an autobiography.
The second file was clearly labeled “Teddy Fay.” That name rang a distant bell for Todd, then the whole thing flashed in his frontal lobe. Teddy Fay was the former Agency employee with liberal political leanings who had vanished after retirement, then emerged as the assassin of several right-wing political figures, among them a blowhard talk show host and the speaker of the House, one Eft Efton, both deceased. Before leaving the Agency, Fay had deleted all his personal records from every computer he had access to, so there were no photographs of Teddy extant. Todd suddenly knew he had what was probably the only one.
He read slowly through the file, which contained a number of newspaper clippings, and he formed the opinion that Teddy, who had been reported dead a number of times, was Owen’s man in Panama, the one he had assigned Todd to find. The last item in the file was a large clipping from the International Herald Tribune, originally printed in The New York Times, about a man named Henry King Johnson, a black preacher from Atlanta who had announced his candidacy for the presidency as an independent and who had become a threat to the reelection of President Will Lee.
Todd had heard Owen make a number of favorable remarks about Lee and his wife, Katharine Lee, who was director of Central Intelligence, and Todd was, himself, favorably disposed to both of them, having joined the Young Democrats organization in college. He noted, too, that all the people Teddy Fay had assassinated were outspoken opponents of President Lee and his moderate Democratic policies.
Todd then asked himself two questions: (1) What had Teddy Fay been doing in Panama? Answer: Hiding, obviously, since if it were known that he was still alive, all sorts of agencies would be hunting him. (2) If Teddy had left Panama, then where had he gone? Answer: Unknown. Lance had said Owen’s assassin would be in South America by now, but Teddy seemed to have a record of going where there were people he wanted to kill.
Todd scanned the article on the Reverend Johnson again. “Teddy would not like this guy,” he said aloud to himself.
Something else in the file reminded him of what Owen had said about the man in his briefing: He flew airplanes. Todd was a pilot, too, having grown up with a father who flew and having earned his private license in the family Beech Bonanza when he was in college and his instrument rating not long afterward.
Todd knew the private-pilot mind-set well enough to know that pilots, when they traveled, much preferred flying themselves to flying the airlines or driving. Teddy Fay had faked his death in an airplane, and it stood to reason that, if he were out there and on the run, a light airplane would be his transport of choice.
Todd got onto his computer and logged into the Agency’s mainframe. He did a search for “Reported aircraft incidents” and narrowed it by date. He got a list of fifteen incidents. In one a small Piper had flown too close to a nuclear power plant in New York state; in another, a Beech Baron had made a wrong turn on departing Santa Monica Airport, in Los Angeles, and had had a near miss with an airliner. And in another, a light aircraft had filed a flight plan from the Cayman Islands, across Cuba and to Key West, then had disappeared from approach radar when only a few miles from its destination. A search had been conducted by the Coast Guard, but they found nothing.
Todd did a little more searching and found the daily logs of Key West Approach Control, which was operated by the Navy at its base on Boca Chica. There was a note that a Cessna had reported taking off from Marathon, fifty miles up the Keys from Key West, and was flying under visual flight rules to Sarasota. Todd then found the Sarasota Tower logs and noted that no light Cessna had landed there within the time frame for the flight from Marathon.
Todd went to the FAA registry, online, and entered the tail number of the Cessna: It had been registered to someone on Long Island… until the airplane had been totally destroyed while landing at East Hampton in fog.
Todd got out his atlas and checked the route. From Panama, it was due north to the Caymans, then to Key West, and he calculated the mileages. It was possible for a light Cessna, particularly with some ferry fuel aboard.
Todd left his office and walked down the hall to the embassy library, where he found an aeronautical chart for Panama. He found the international airport at Panama City, then, a few miles north, a private grass strip. He dug a large-scale map of the area from the stacks, then went back to his office, locked his safe and the door, put on his jacket, and took a cab home, where he had left his car.
Half an hour later, he found a little dirt road off the Colуn highway, with a sign with the outline of an airplane painted on it. He drove through the jungle for five minutes and emerged into a large, elongated clearing containing a grass airstrip of four to five thousand feet. There was a cluster of hangars at the near end of the strip, and in one of them Todd found an attendant, his feet on his desk, his head thrown back, a flying magazine resting on his chest, snoring loudly. He pinched the man’s toe, and he woke up, startled.
“Buenos dнas,” Todd said, smiling.
“Buenos dнas,” the man replied. He looked as though he may have had a few beers, and a glance into his trash can confirmed that.
“Speak English?” Todd asked.
“Yes, I speak,” the man said sleepily.
“How many airplanes are based here?”
“Maybe twelve, sometimes,” the man replied.
“How many Cessnas?”
“A twin, over there,” the man said, pointing at a tied-down aircraft, “one 172, over there,” pointing at another, “and one 182, in the hangar, there,” he said, pointing again.
“Can I see the one in the hangar, please? I’m interested in buying a 182.”
“Okay,” the man said. He led the way to the hangar, took hold of the door, and pulled up on it. “She’s out,” he said. The hangar contained only a motor scooter.
“When?”
“Dunno. They come, they go, sometimes when I’m not here.”
“Y
ou have fuel here?”
The man pointed at a pump.
Todd nodded and walked into the hangar and over to the scooter. He inspected it closely. It was very clean, as if it had been wiped down. He opened the little storage compartment and found a rag and a bottle of Windex. Then he walked around the hangar slowly, finding only two cans of motor oil and a few basic tools, which also looked very clean. He turned back to the attendant.
“What is the tail number of the airplane that lives here?”
The man shrugged. “N something,” he said. “I don’t remember the rest.”
N meant American registration. “Thank you very much for your help,” Todd said. “If the owner returns, would you ask him to call me about his airplane?” He scribbled his number on a page of his notepad and ripped it out.
“Sure, seсor,” the man said.
Todd drove back to Panama City, thinking all the way. His guess was that Teddy Fay was in Atlanta, looking for the Reverend Henry King Johnson, who was now a threat to the reelection of President Will Lee.
Todd went home and packed a bag, then called the international airport and chartered a CitationJet from a service the Agency did business with. He was now station head, and he had that authority. He called his number two and told him he would be away for a few days on business and available on his BlackBerry, then left a similar message with the ambassador’s secretary. No one would miss him, or even question him.
Todd strapped on a compact SigArms 9mm semiautomatic, got into his car, and left for the airport.
54
Barbara Ortegaleft her new office at the Justice Department a little after six and drove toward home. She stopped at a supermarket on the way and stocked up on groceries for her new house, and as she was waiting her turn at the checkout counter a headline in a tabloid newspaper on the rack next to her caught her eye.
VEEP AND HOTTIE CAMPAIGN MANAGER IN TRAVEL TRYST?
Barbara wanted to read the newspaper then and there, but she tossed it onto her pile of groceries and checked out. Once at home, she made herself wait until the groceries were put away before she opened the paper and read the text of the article.
***
“Vice President Martin Stanton, who has long had a reputation with the ladies, has been raising eyebrows among the press and staff on his campaign plane, and rumors are circulating about his relationship with his traveling campaign manager, Elizabeth Wharton. The lovely Liz, who is at least fifteen years younger than her boss, has been quartered nightly in several cities in a room adjacent to the veep’s suite, with a connecting door, and room-service deliveries to their separate rooms seem to have been coordinated.
“Vice President Stanton, until recently governor of California, has been rumored to have had regular liaisons with at least two California women over the past few years, and is in the middle of what some say is a contentious divorce from his wife of many years. Has Marty been seeking solace in the arms of the nearest beautiful woman?”
***
Barbara put down the paper, dug her secret cell phone out of her purse, sat down on the living room sofa, and called her lover. The phone rang a number of times before it was answered.
“Yes?” Stanton said.
“I think you know who this is,” Barbara said.
“Yes?”
“Have you seen this rotten… paper?”
“What are you talking about?”
Barbara picked up the paper. “The National Inquisitor.”
“I don’t know…”
“According to this vile rag, you are fucking your campaign manager, somebody named Elizabeth. Is that true?”
“I, ah, can’t really talk right now,” Stanton said. “Can I call you back?”
“I just want you to deny it,” Barbara said, seething. “Will you deny it right now?”
“I’m afraid I’ll have to call you back, and what with my schedule, it might be a couple of days before I can do that,” he replied.
“Don’t bother, you son of a bitch,” she said. “Don’t bother ever to call me again. I’ve torn my life apart for you, Marty Stanton. I’ve moved across the country, bought a house, found a new job-all just to be near you-and this is how you treat me?”
“I’ll have to say good-bye for now,” Stanton said, then hung up.
Barbara threw the cell phone at the opposite wall as hard as she could, shattering it.
***
The following afternoon, Gene stopped at the Georgetown house, collected the tape from the recorder, inserted a new one, then drove to the offices of the National Inquisitor. He put the tape in the envelope, wrote Nelson Pickett’s name on it and left it at the reception desk.
The envelope was sent to the Inquisitor’s mail room, and shortly before the office closed, it was left on Pickett’s desk. He returned from the men’s room to find the envelope there. The cassette had no name on it, just the date and time of collection.
Pickett took a small tape player from his desk drawer, inserted the cassette, and pressed the play button. Then he listened, with increasing interest, as he heard the conversation between Barbara Ortega and the vice president of the United States. Before he had finished he was on his way to the office of William Gaynes.
He burst into Gaynes’s office to find him on the phone. Gaynes pointed at his sofa and put a finger to his lips. Pickett waited impatiently while Gaynes continued his conversation. Finally, he hung up the phone. “What?” he said to Pickett.
“Running that story in yesterday’s edition did the trick,” he said. “Listen.” He played the tape.
Gaynes waited until it was finished before he said a word. “Brilliant!” he said, finally. “She actually used his name!”
“And he didn’t deny it,” Pickett said. “Do you realize what effect this could have on the national election?”
“I don’t give a flying fuck what effect it has on the election,” Gaynes said, “I’m Australian. All I care about is circulation.”
“Well, before you make a decision to run this story, let me explain something to you about this woman. She is the head of the Criminal Division of the United States Justice Department. Do you understand what that means?”
“All right, tell me,” Gaynes said.
“It means that all the United States attorneys report to her on criminal matters.”
“So?”
“Making this recording is a criminal matter-it’s against the law. Do you see where I’m heading here?”
“I think I get the picture,” Gaynes said. “If we run it, we get busted by the feds.”
“That’s exactly right.”
“So we can’t run it.”
“Not as such. We can’t even allude to this conversation, because if we do, Ortega will immediately know that we could only have gotten it by taping her phone conversations. Not only would we be charged with illegal wiretapping, but she would have her house swept for bugs in a flash, and no more telephone tapes.”
“So how are we going to handle this?” Gaynes asked.
“The story that ran yesterday, which was just supposition, set her off and made her get indiscreet on the phone. We need more stuff about Stanton and Wharton, stuff we can back up. If we can get that, then Ortega might get even madder, and who knows where that could lead. We’ve got a couple of weeks before the election, so let me put more people on Stanton and Wharton, and more people on Stanton and Ortega when they were in Sacramento, and we’ll see what we come up with. If we can get something more concrete we can name Ortega and blow the lid off the whole thing.”
“Well, get your ass on it!” Gaynes said. “Spend whatever you have to!”
55
Todd Baconlanded his airplane at Peachtree Dekalb airport, an Atlanta general aviation field, then rented a car and drove to the Ritz-Carlton Buckhead, only ten minutes away. He ordered some dinner from room service, set up his laptop, and got online.
He had no evidence of where Teddy Fay was or what his plans were, but the Reverend
Henry King Johnson was easier to find, since he published his travel schedule, like any candidate, on his website. Johnson was traveling, mostly in the Southeast, and Todd tried to put himself in Teddy’s shoes. If I were Teddy, he asked himself, where would I kill Johnson? He’d worry about how later.
Todd looked for locations that were outside large population areas like Atlanta and Charlotte; Teddy would find smaller venues easier to deal with and, most important, easier to run from. His airplane was likely to be his escape vehicle, so Todd went through Johnson’s schedule, looking for smaller cities with airports nearby. There was only one stop on the reverend’s campaign trail that fit the bill.
Amelia Island was an expensive resort community near Fernandina Beach, just east of Jacksonville, Florida. Todd, being a southerner and the son of a flying southerner, had visited there with his father as a teenager. They had landed at Fernandina Airport and spent a weekend playing golf.
Then he noticed something even more attractive on the schedule. The reverend was to perform a marriage ceremony on Cumberland Island, the next up from Fernandina Beach. Todd had visited there once, too, with his parents. They had stayed at Greyfield Inn and had taken a nature tour with a guide in an old truck. The place was mostly national seashore now, so the number of visitors was restricted to the inn and a campground that had a capacity of a couple of dozen. The marriage was to take place in the old slave village, now mostly deserted but maintained. Todd remembered that John F. Kennedy, Jr., and his wife had been married there, in the tiny village church, which Todd had visited with his parents.
He found a map of the island on the Internet and, right in the middle of it, the grass landing strip where his father had landed the family Bonanza. He remembered that they had had to buzz the strip before landing, to clear away the wild horses and feral pigs that foraged there. The inn was south of the airstrip, and the slave village was north of it. Teddy could get in there in his airplane, do what he planned to do, and get out in a hurry, and, flying low, he would be virtually untrackable.