The Brethren
Important things first. "Congratulations on Virginia;" Teddy said.
Lake shrugged as if he wasn’t sure. "Thank you, in more ways than one."
"It’s a very impressive win, Mr. Lake;" Teddy said. "Governor Tarry worked hard there for a year. Two months ago he had commitments from every precinct captain in the state. He looked unbeatable. Now, Ithink he’s fading fast. It’s often a disadvantage to be the front-runner early in the race."
"Momentum is a strange animal in politics," Lake observed wisely.
"Cash is even stranger. Right now, Governor Tarry can’t find a dime because you’ve got it all. Money follows momentum."
"I’m sure I’ll say this many times, Mr. Maynard, but, well, thanks. You’ve given me an opportunity I’d hardly dreamed of."
"Are you having any fun?"
"Not yet. If we win, the fun will come later."
"The fun starts next Tuesday, Mr. Lake, with big Super Tuesday. New York, California, Massachusetts, Ohio, Georgia, Missouri, Maryland, Maine, Connecticut, all in one day. Almost six hundred delegates!" Teddy’s eyes were dancing as if he could almost count the votes. "And you’re ahead in every state, Mr. Lake. Can you believe it?"
"No, I cannot."
"It’s true.You’re neck and neck in Maine, for some damned reason, and it’s close in California, but you’re going to win big next Tuesday"
"If you believe the polls," Lake said, as if he didn’t trust them himself. Fact was, like every candidate, Lake was addicted to the polls. He was actually gaining in California, a state with 140,000 defense workers.
"Oh, I believe them. And I believe that a landslide is coming on little Super Tuesday. They love you down South, Mr. Lake. They love guns and tough talk and such, and right now they’re falling in love with Aaron Lake. Next Tuesday will be fun, but the following Tuesday will be a romp."
Teddy Maynard was predicting a romp, and Lake couldn’t help but smile. His polls showed the same trends, but it just sounded better coming from Teddy. He lifted a sheet of paper and read the latest polling data nom around the country. Lake was ahead by at least five points in every state.
They reveled in their momentum for a few minutes, then Teddy turned serious. "There’s something you should know," he said, and the smile was gone. He flipped a page and glanced at some notes. "Two nights ago, in the Khyber Pass in the mountains of Afghanistan, a Russian long-range missile with nuclear warheads was moved by truck into Pakistan. It is now en route to Iran, where it will be used for God knows what. The missile has a range of three thousand miles, and the capability of delivering four nuclear bombs. The price was about thirty million dollars US., cash up fiont paid by the Iranians through a bank in Luxembourg. It’s still there, in an account believed to be controlled by Natty Chenkov’s people."
"I thought he was stockpiling, not selling."
"He needs cash, and he’s getting it. In fact, he’s probably the only man we know who’s collecting it faster than you:"
Teddy didn’t do humor well, but Lake laughed out of politeness anyway.
"Is the missile operational?" Lake asked.
"We think so. It originated from a collection of silos near Kiev, and we believe it’s of a recent make and model. With so many lying around, why would the Iranians buy an old one?Yes, it’s safe to assume it’s fully operational."
"Is it the first?"
"There’ve been some spare parts and plutonium, to Iran and Iraq and India and others, but I think this is the first fully assembled, ready-to-shoot missile."
"Are they anxious to use it?"
"We don’t think so. It appears as if the transaction was instigated by Chenkov. He needs the money to buy other kinds of weapons. He’s shopping his wares, things he doesn’t need."
"Do the Israelis know it?"
"No. Not yet. You have to be careful with them. Everything is give and take. Someday, if we need something from them, then we might tell them about this transaction."
For a moment, Lake longed to be President, and immediately. He wanted to know everything Teddy knew, then he realized he probably never would. There was, after all, a sitting President right then, at that moment, albeit a lame duck, and Teddy wasn’t chatting with him about Chenkov and his missiles.
"What do the Russians think about my campaign?" he asked.
"At first, they weren’t concerned. Now they’re watching closely. But you have to remember, there is no such thing as a Russian voice anymore. The free marketers speak favorably of you because they fear the Communists. The hard-liners are scared of you. It’s very complex."
"And Chenkov?"
"I’m ashamed to say we’re not that close to him, yet. But we’re working on it. We should have some ears in the vicinity soon."
Teddy tossed his papers onto his desk, and rolled himself closer to Lake. The many wrinkles in his forehead pinched closer together, downward. His bushy eyebrows fell hard on his sad eyes. "Listen to me, Mr. Lake;’ he said, his voice much more somber. "You have this thing won. There will be a bump or two in the road, things we cannot foresee, and even if we could we’d be powerless to prevent them. We’ll ride them out together. The damage will be slight. You’re something brand new and the people like you.You’re doing a marvelous job and communicating. Keep the message simple-our security is at risk, the world is not as safe as it looks. I’ll take care of the money, and I’ll certainly keep the country firightened.That missile in the Khyber Pass, we could’ve detonated it. Five thousand people would’ve been killed, five thousand Pakistanis. Nuclear bombs exploding in the mountains.You think we’d wake up and worry about the stock market? Not a chance. I’ll take care of the fear, Mr. Lake.You keep your nose dean and run hard."
"I’m running as hard as I can."
"Run harder, and no surprises, okay?"
"Certainly not."
Lake wasn’t sure what he meant by surprises, but he let it pass. Just a bit of grandfatherly wisdom, perhaps.
Teddy lolled away again. He found his buttons and a screen dropped from the ceiling. They spent twenty minutes viewing rough cuts of the next series of Lake ads, then said their good-byes.
Lake sped away from Langley, two vans in front and one behind, all racing to Reagan National Airport, where the jet was waiting. He wanted a quiet night in Georgetown, at home where the world was held at bay, where he could read a book in solitude, with no one watching or listening. He longed for the anonymity of the streets, the nameless faces, the Arab baker on M Street who made a perfect bagel, the used-book dealer on Wisconsin, the coffeehouse where they roasted beans from Africa. Would he ever be able to walk the streets again, like a normal person, doing whatever he pleased? Something told him no, that those days were gone, probably forever.
When Lake was airborne, Deville entered the bunker and announced to Teddy that Lake had come and gone without trying to check the mailbox. It was time for the daily briefing on the Lake mess. Teddy was spending more time than he’d planned worrying about what his candidate might do next.
The five letters Klockner and his group intercepted from Trevor had been thoroughly researched. Two had been written by Yarber as Percy; the other three by Beech as Ricky. The five pen pals were in different states. Four were using fictitious names; one was bold enough not to hide behind an alias. The letters were basically the same: Percy and Ricky were troubled young men in rehab, trying desperately to pull their lives together, both talented and still able to dream big dreams, but in need of moral and physical support from new friends because the old ones were dangerous. They freely divulged their sins and foibles, their weaknesses and heartaches. They rambled about their lives after rehab, their hopes and dreams of all the things they wanted to do. They were proud of their tans and their muscles, and seemed anxious to show their new hardened bodies to their pen pals.