been killed. You also helped to ship illegal contraband. I believe some if not all of that skirts treason. It may be treason. Of course, Justice will have to make the ultimate decision about whether it’s actionable. Preliminary reports tell me you’re heading for criminal trial.”
Ouray pursed his lips. “I’d say it’s treason.”
Erikson looked from one to the other. “What do you want, Sam?”
“Don’t call me Sam. Not anymore. I told you what I wanted. You can claim ill health. Family responsibilities. You want to devote your time to exploring a campaign for president. That’d be partially true, anyway.”
“Is that all, Mr. President?” Erikson asked bitterly.
“Not quite. You can make a good show of exploring the possibility, but in the end, you won’t run for president, for senator, for dog catcher.
No public office ever again. Not ever, even if you’re not charged.”
“And if I choose to run anyway?”
“I’ll see to it you get no help from the party. Believe me, no one’s going to want to be even seen in the same room with you.”
Erikson’s expression hardened into stone. He stood. “You’ll have my resignation tomorrow.” He turned to leave, then turned back. “You know, I’m not quite as bad as you think. I never really agreed with your policy of weakening the military. I did only what I thought best for the country.” “Bullshit,” Ouray said. “You did what was best for Brandon Erikson.”
The president nodded. “And along the way, you lost your benefactor, too.
If the Altman Group survives, no one there will ever put you in their Rolodex again. You don’t fit the profile. In your case, mixing business and politics almost caused a war. That can really hurt a bottom line.”
The morning was warm and hazy with sunshine as the air force jet swept in over the Pacific. From a window, Jon studied the Channel Islands, ringed with tendrils of fog, and the rugged coast with its white sands and dramatic cliffs. The highly secure base extended over nearly one hundred thousand acres of manzanita and rocket launchpads, pampas grass and missile silos, on a wide shelf that jutted into the glistening ocean.
“We used to drive up here occasionally with Mom and Dad, to study the wildflowers,” Randi told him.
She had a window seat, while he sat across from her, on the aisle, where he could rotate and see out several windows. “Lovely, isn’t it?”
she continued. “There’s something about the sun and the ocean that I find endlessly appealing. If … when … I ever settle down, I’ll come back here. What will you do, Jon?”
About fifty miles southeast of Vandenberg was Santa Barbara, where Randi and her sister, Sophia Russell, had grown up. Santa Barbara was also where Jon had gone to lick his wounds and decide what to do with his life after the Hades virus had killed Sophia.
“Settle down?” he repeated. “You’re making me shudder. Why would anyone want to settle down?” “Why, indeed?” asked David Thayer. “Take it from me, people put too much stock in it. Footloose and fancy free, that’s my idea of life now.” He grinned, his crevices rearranging themselves in a face that shone with curiosity and eagerness. His thick white hair was combed neatly back, and he had new tortoiseshell frames for his glasses.
“Goodness, I’ve been settled down more than fifty years. I’ve decided to spend the rest of my life on the go.
The three smiled at one another as the jet touched down and sped along the runway. They were dressed in casual trousers and shirts supplied by the U.S. embassy in Beijing. David Thayer had been surprised by plastic zippers, which he had never seen. Velcro fascinated him. He had ripped open and closed the Velcro straps that fastened his new athletic shoes several times. He had never ridden in a jet. The air force pilot gave him a thorough tour of the cockpit, trying to explain how much of the craft was computerized these days until he finally realized Thayer had no real understanding of computers. Thayer assured him he would buy a book and figure it out himself. After Jon had reunited with Thayer at the embassy, Jon demanded he have a thorough physical exam. But Thayer did not want to take the time, explaining politely he would rather watch television, which was also new to him. Still, he was persuaded, and the doctor found healed bones indicating past traumas, what appeared to be an iron deficiency, an eye that should have cataract surgery soon, and obvious dental needs. Then Jon, Randi, and David Thayer had piled onto the jet, heading home to America. The events of the past week remained very fresh — raw — in Jon’s mind. That would not change for a long time.
When he returned to Fort Detrick, he would write a full report for Fred.
That often helped.
Jon had noticed that Randi had been studying the president’s father from the time she first met him. At last, as the jet rolled to a stop, she asked, “Aren’t you bitter, Dr. Thayer? They stole your life. Doesn’t that make you even a little bitter?”
He gazed back from the window, where he was leaning forward so he could see Air Force One clearly. “Of course I’m bitter, but I’ve got other things on my mind, too. There he is!” He pressed his face against the glass. “I see him! My son. My son. There’s my daughter-in-law! There are my grandchildren! I can’t believe it. They all came. They all came to see me!” His body trembled with excitement.
The jet stopped, and David Thayer unsnapped his belt and headed for the door. Jon and Randi did not move. As he waited for the stairway to be rolled up and the copilot to unlock the door, he turned and came back.
There were pink spots on his sunken cheeks. His eyes sparkled. He shook their hands, thanking them again.
“I hope you can understand, Ms. Russell.” He patted the top of her hand as he continued to hold it. He glanced back occasionally, eager for the door to open. “I never would’ve survived if I’d allowed myself to be full of hate every second. There were a few good things among the bad.
For instance, I learned the price for hubris was humility, and I learned I didn’t have all the answers. Still, if I could go back and change what I did that got me into that mess, I would. But since I can’t, I’m going to make the most of what time I’ve got left. The Chinese have a proverb that goes something like this: ‘ a caterpillar calls the end of life, wise men call a butterfly.’ ”
“That’s beautiful,” Randi said.
He nodded. “I know.” He squeezed her hand, punched Jon’s shoulder, and hurried back to the door. He glared at the copilot. “Are you ever going to open this damn thing?”
“Right now, sir.” He spun the lock, and the pneumatic door lifted and swung out.
The stairwell was there. The old man moved onto it without another look back. Jon and Randi watched him descend and brush away an aide who obviously had planned to escort him over to Air Force One. The president, his wife, son, and daughter were waiting in its shade. Thayer moved straight toward them about ten steps and suddenly stopped.
“Look at his face,” Randi said.
“He’s afraid,” Jon agreed.
“It’s hit him all at once. He doesn’t know whether they’ll like him.”
“Or whether he’ll like them. Whether he can live such a different life.”
The president and his family gazed at one another, some sort of message passing among them. Without a word, they hurried across the tarmac to Thayer. He slowly opened his arms. The president reached him first, stepped into his embrace, and wrapped his own arms around him in return.
They held each other a long time. The president kissed his father’s cheek. Soon everyone was there, too, talking, laughing, introducing themselves, hugging.
As their jet backed up, Jon and Randi turned away from the windows.
“Back to Washington,” she said with a sigh.
“Yes. It’ll be good to go home for a while.”