'And if we don't?'

'They can either raise electrical rates to an outrageous level or pull the plug,' Mercier answered.

'Guerrier would be a fool to shut off our power. He knows we'd retaliate with massive economic sanctions.'

Mercier stared bleakly at the President. 'Might take weeks, even months before the Quebeckers felt the pinch. In the meantime our industrial heartland would be paralyzed.'

'You paint a bleak picture.'

'That's only the background scene. You're familiar, of course, with the FQS.'

The President winced. The so-called Free Quebec Society was an underground terrorist movement that had assassinated several Canadian officials. 'What about them?'

'A recent CIA report claims they're Moscow-oriented. if they somehow gained control of the government, we'd have another Cuba on our hands.'

'Another Cuba,' the President repeated in an expressionless tone.

'One with the capacity to force America to its knees.'

The President rose from his chair and walked to the window, staring at the sleet building on the White House grounds. He was silent for nearly half a minute. Finally he said, 'We cannot afford a power play by Quebec. Especially in the months ahead.' He turned and faced Mercier, his eyes grieved. 'This country is broke and up to its ears in hock, Alan, and just between you and me and these walls, it's only a matter of a few years before we have no choice but to cut the stalling and declare national bankruptcy.'

Mercier sagged into his chair. For a heavy man he appeared curiously hunched and shrunken. 'I'd hate to see that occur during your administration, Mr. President.'

The President shrugged resignedly. 'From Franklin Roosevelt on, every chief executive has played a game of tag, pinning a multiplying financial burden on the office of his successor. Well the game is about to be called, and I'm it. If we lost electrical power to our northeastern states for twenty days or longer, the repercussions would be tragic. My deadline for the announcement of a new deflated currency would have to be drastically reduced. I need time, Alan, time to prepare the public and the business community for the ax. Time to make the transition to a new money standard as painless as possible. Time for our shale refineries to halt our dependence on foreign oil.

'How can we restrain Quebec from doing anything foolish?'

'I don't know. Our choices are limited.'

'There are two options when all else fails,' Mercier said, a thin line of tension forming around his mouth. 'Two options as old as time to save an economy from sinking down the drain. One is to pray for a miracle.'

'And the second?'

'Provoke a war.'

At precisely 2:30 in the afternoon, Mercier entered the Forrestal Building on Independence Avenue and took the elevator to the seventh floor. Without fanfare he was ushered into the plush office of Ronald Klein, the secretary of energy.

Klein, a scholarly-looking man with long white hair and a large condor nose, unwound his slim six-feet-five- inches frame from one end of a littered conference table and came over to shake Mercier's hand.

'So what's this matter of dire importance?' asked Klein, skipping the cordial small talk.

'More odd than dire,' replied Mercier. 'I ran across a request from the General Accounting Office for data concerning the expenditure of six hundred and eighty million dollars in federal funding for the development of a doodlebug.'

'A what?'

'Doodlebug,' answered Mercier matter-of-factly. 'That's a pet name given by geological engineers to any offbeat tool that's supposed to detect underground minerals.'

'What's it got to do with me?'

'The money was earmarked for the Energy Department three years ago. There's been no accounting of it since. It might be wise to have your staff make a probe as to its whereabouts. This is Washington. Mistakes of the past have a nasty habit of falling on the heads of current officeholders. If the former energy secretary blew a staggering sum of money on a white elephant, you'd better be prepared with the facts in case some freshman congressman gets it in his head to grab headlines with an investigation.'

'I'm grateful for the warning,' Klein said sincerely. 'I'll get my people busy sweeping the closets.'

Mercier rose and extended his hand. 'Nothing is ever simple.'

'No,' Klein said smiling. 'It's never that.'

After Mercier left, Klein walked over to a fireplace mantel and stared idly at a new log on the soot-coated grate, head bent, hands shoved in the side pockets of his coat.

'How incredible,' he murmured to the empty room, 'that anyone can lose track of six hundred and eighty million dollars.

The generator room of the James Bay hydroelectric project stunned the senses of Charles Sarveux as he surveyed the twelve square acres carved out of solid granite four hundred feet underground. Three rows of huge generators, five stories high and driven by water turbines, hummed with millions of kilowatts of electricity. Sarveux was suitably impressed, and displayed it to the pleasure of the Quebec Hydro Power directors.

This was his first visit to the project since his election as Prime Minister of Canada, and he asked all the expected questions.

'How much electrical energy does each generator produce'

Percival Stuckey, the chief director, stepped forward. 'Five hundred thousand kilowatts, Prime Minister.'

Sarveux nodded and made a slight facial expression of approval. It was the appropriate gesture, a skill that had proved beneficial during his campaign for office.

A handsome man in the eyes of men as well as women, Sarveux could probably have won a contest over John F. Kennedy or Anthony Eden. His light blue eyes possessed a mesmeric quality and his sharp-cut facial features were enhanced by a thick mass of gray hair loosely styled in a fashionable but casual look. His trim, medium-height body was a tailor's dream, and yet he never called upon the services of tailors, preferring to buy his suits off the racks of department stores. It was only one of many twists of character precisely carried off so Canadian voters could identify with him.

A compromise candidate between the Liberals, the Party for Independent Canada and the French-speaking Party quebecois, he had walked a political tightrope his first three years of office, managing to keep his nation from falling apart at its provincial borders. Sarveux looked upon himself as another Lincoln, fighting to preserve unity and keep his house from dividing. It was only his threat of armed force that kept the radical separatists in check. But his plea for a strong central government was falling on a growing sea of deaf ears.

'Perhaps you would like to see the control center,' suggested director Stuckey.

Sarveux turned to his principal secretary. 'How is our time?'

Ian Jeffrey, a serious-faced man in his late twenties, checked his watch. 'We're running tight, Prime Minister. We should be at the airport in thirty minutes.'

'I think we can squeeze our schedule,' Sarveux smiled. 'It would be a pity if we missed anything worthwhile.'

Stuckey nodded and motioned toward an elevator door. Ten floors above the generator chamber Sarveux and his entourage stepped out in front of a door marked SECURITY CARD PERSONNEL ONLY. Stuckey removed a plastic card that hung on a cord around his neck and inserted it in a slot beneath the -door handle. Then he turned and faced the others.

'I'm sorry, gentlemen, but due to the narrow confines of the control center, I can only allow the Prime Minister and myself to enter.'

Sarveux's security people started to protest, but he waved them to silence and followed Stuckey through the door and down a long corridor where the card process was repeated.

The power plant's control center was indeed small, and spartan as well. Four engineers sat in front of a console laced with a forest of lights and switches, peering at a panel of dials and gauges embedded in the facing wall. Except for a row of television monitors hanging from the ceiling, the only other fixtures were the chairs occupied by the engineers.

Sarveux looked around consideringly. 'I find it incredible that such an awesome display of power is controlled by only four men and a modest amount of equipment.'

Вы читаете Clive Cussler
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