Administration? Can I give you a lift? You look too confused to use the
They didn’t speak while John concentrated on driving through the narrow, busy streets of the Old Town. Even a Volkswagen beetle has difficulty with two-way streets designed to permit the passage of a single horse-drawn coach. John drove expertly, however, as quickly and confidently as the Germans themselves. Within a few minutes they were on the fast Friedrich-Ebert-Anlage, and then heading smoothly out on Rohrstrasse.
“John,” Gideon said. “No offense, but do you really know what you’re talking about? Or are you making all this up?”
John threw back his head and laughed delightedly. “The answers are ‘no’ and ‘no.” I’m not making any of it up, but I don’t know what I’m talking about, either.“ He paused, looking hesitant. ”Look, Doc,“ he said slowly, staring at his hands on the wheel, ”I understand why you’re going through with this Torrejon thing, and I admire you for it, but, well…“
“John, if you were in my place, you’d do the same thing,” Gideon said with sudden heat. “I can’t just walk away from it as if it never happened to me. I need to find out what it’s about.”
“Sure, but what are you going to
“What do you mean, do?”
“What do you mean, what do I mean? I mean
“No. I’m going to check and see if any other USOC’rs show up, or if any have been there recently, and uh… I don’t exactly have a plan, do I?”
“You sure as hell don’t.”
“Okay, so what would
“Me? If I were you, I’d ask me to come down and help you out.”
“Are you serious? Would you really come? Why didn’t you say so before?”
“I was waiting for you to ask me. You’re kind of funny about this; I thought maybe you wanted to do it all by yourself.”
“Heck, no. I’d
“Good. I can’t do this officially, you understand, but I have lots of leave time and nothing else doing right now. If I get a military flight to Torrejon tomorrow afternoon, I’ll get there a few hours after you.”
“Great, and who knows? Maybe I’ll get knifed or shot or run off the road, and then you can stay down there officially and wrap it up.”
“Sure,” John said. “We can always hope.” They both laughed.
“I’ve gotta go, Doc. I’ll see you down there tomorrow.” Awkwardly, he put out his hand. Gideon took it. “It’s been a good day, Doc. I think we’re getting someplace.”
Returning John’s wave as the big policeman drove off, Gideon wasn’t sure he agreed. Certainly, it was marvelous about John’s coming down, and it was nice to have some cogent if convoluted ideas about what the Russians were up to, but he didn’t feel any closer to answering the most compelling questions of all: What did it all have to do with
Just possibly, Eric Bozzini might provide some answers.
“I CANT TALK TO you now, man. It has really hit the fan.” His desk a jumble of papers, Eric spoke through a ball-point pen clamped between his teeth, while one hand picked up the telephone receiver and the other moved to dial. His laid-back image was showing signs of strain. Even his carefully teased hair looked dispirited, the strands having separated at a crucial point to reveal a large expanse of bare, gleaming scalp beneath.
“I don’t have time to come back later,” Gideon said. “I need to talk to you now.” He sat down.
“Come on, man. The teaching schedules are all screwed up. Half the bases are on exercises; there are alerts all over the place—”
“What about my schedule? Is it being changed?”
“Where you supposed to go? Torrejon?”
“Yes.”
“Forger it, man. I don’t know where you’re going, but you ain’t going to Torrejon.” He shuffled among the papers and folders on his desk.
The heading said,