He looked at Kurt. “Tony has a point. How are we going to prevent Taskforce disclosure, given what’s occurred? I don’t want to burn Pike any more than you do, but we need something.”
Kurt said, “You sent Marine One with CAT guys, didn’t you?”
President Warren’s eyebrow’s furrowed, seeing where he was going. “Yeah, there was no way the doctor would go without protection, and the counterassault team was all that was available.”
“Well, there you go. Those guys are trained for this very thing. I mean, they’re trained for a counterassault against a direct threat to your life, but it’s not a stretch to say they went out to capture some terrorists that may have been hell-bent on killing you. And they’re Secret Service. You control them. You can write the story. Like Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe, only for a good reason.”
Kurt watched the president consider, and knew he was close. “Nobody knows anyone was injured out there. We can write the press release any way we want. Give the credit to the CAT guys and the Secret Service. They took down the terrorists.”
Kurt saw Brookings look from the president to him, and knew he realized he was losing the argument. They both understood that the Secret Service story would look like the president himself had directly averted disaster with his own team, and would be something very appealing.
Brookings said, “Sir, there’s no way you can contain this. It isn’t 1962. We live in a world of transparency, with Internet bloggers and instant news. There’ll be a History Channel special on these attacks in four months, and it’ll be down to the minute. They’ll know everything there is to know, and broadcast it every hour for a month.”
Kurt snarled, “Bullshit. I’ve seen the History Channel crap. Watch the one on the capture of Saddam Hussein and you’re left believing it was a fourth infantry division operation all the way. We
Brookings spat back, “This isn’t a war zone,
The tirade sank into Kurt’s head and he lost control. He leapt out of his chair, crossing the table and snatching Brookings up by his hair, using his momentum to slam Brookings into the wall. He locked up Brookings’ elbow and leaned into his ear.
“You fucking miserable piece of shit. Pike saved your life last year. Your
President Warren said, “Kurt! Stop. Right now.”
Kurt looked at the president, then at Brookings’ trembling face. He raised his voice so that everyone could hear. “Okay, sir. You want to burn Pike, so be it. But I want Mr. Secretary here to know that if Pike goes down, I’m going to put him in the hospital. You can arrest me later.”
He cranked Brookings’ arm, eliciting a squeal. “You get that, Mr. Sanctimonious? Pike goes to jail, for whatever reason, and I’m hunting you down. Make sure your fucking health insurance is up to date.”
He released Brookings, panting a little from the adrenaline rush. The secretary sank onto the floor, rubbing his arm, looking for sympathy. President Warren ignored him. “I get the point. Calm down.”
Kurt returned to his chair.
President Warren said, “Look, we can make the substation hit work. I agree with that, but what about the kid? There’s no way we can cloak that.”
Kurt said, “I know. Jennifer said she’d convinced him not to say anything, but he’s been through a traumatic event. He’s going to talk. The question is whether anyone will believe him. And if they do, if it will reach the media.”
President Warrant waited, then said, “So? That’s it?”
“It’s a risk, but some things are worth the risk. Pike is one of them.”
81
I woke up a little disoriented, confused for a second about where I was. The drive from the nuclear plant was a splintered dream, Jennifer spending her time weaving across lanes as she talked on the phone and tended to me. I was now in a bed, swathed in bandages, and it clicked that Jennifer had managed to get me inside the Taskforce, to the little medical department we kept for injuries that couldn’t go to a hospital.
I heard the door open, hoping it was Jennifer, but seeing Kurt instead. Then I remembered that Jennifer wasn’t allowed in here.
“How’re you feeling?”
“I’ll live.”
Kurt smiled. “You’re a hard man to kill, I’ll give you that. Broken clavicle seems to be the worst of it.”
I didn’t return the smile. “So what’s my status?”
“Don’t know yet. The politicians are monitoring the press. I got the president to hold off on anything hasty. If something pops, they’ll decide whether to throw you under the bus.”
I nodded. “That’s fine. I’m ready for whatever. I only ask two things.”
“What’s that?”
“Number one, you let Jennifer go. There’s no reason for two folks to go to jail. I’m enough. Can you make that happen?”
Kurt paused a second, considering, then said, “Yeah, I can get that done. What’s number two?”
“The president comes in here before I go to jail and gives me a fucking thank-you.”
“Uhh… I don’t know about that one. You might have to settle for me.”
I laughed, then grimaced at the pain in my shoulder. “I know. A man can hope, though.”
Kurt said, “It’s not as bad as you think. We’ve got a pretty good plan in place.” He told me the cover story involving the Secret Service CAT team and the “misfire” at the nuclear plant, which was good, then the fact that nobody could predict the actions of the boy, which was bad.
“It’s holding up so far, though, so maybe it’ll be okay.”
Before I could answer, Holly entered the room with a bunch of balloons and flowers, like I was twelve and just had my tonsils out. She was followed by a nurse, who went straight to the machines monitoring my status.
“What the hell is this shit?” I said. “Are you kidding me?”
Holly said, “Cut the crap. It’s a girl thing. We’re just happy you’re alive.”
She put the balloons next to the bed, a DVD on my lap, turned to Kurt, and said, “Sir, I’ve got something a little urgent to show you. Sorry to interrupt.”
Kurt said, “No problem. We were just bullshitting anyway. Pike, I think you’ll be good. You mentioned a thank-you, and you’re on to something. The president’s a good man. He’ll remember what you did. I’ll make sure of it.”
I rolled my eyes, letting him know what I thought of that little bit of hope. He smiled and left the room, followed by Holly. She paused at the door for a second, waiting until Kurt was in the hallway, then turned to me and stage-whispered, “You owe me more than dinner now.”
I looked at the balloons next to the bed, thinking she’d lost her mind if she believed I was going to owe her something for bringing me that crap. I picked up the DVD and turned it over.
The nurse spoke, and I realized what the payback was for.
“Still trying to piss off the boss, huh?”
Jennifer was smiling, and looked very, very good. I smiled back. “How’d you get in here?”