“Got to be Ax,” said Danny.
“Yeah,” said Dog, folding his arms. Sure enough, Chief Master Sergeant Gibbs rolled down the window as the SUV slammed to a stop a few feet away.
“Colonel, Jed Barclay on the scrambled phone for ya,” said the chief, hanging out the window. “Real important.”
Jennifer leaned back against the chair, waiting while the captain questioning her sorted through his notes.
Her head felt as if it had begun to tilt sideways. She hadn’t eaten dinner, and lunch had been half of a chicken sandwich. Except for two trips to the restroom — escorted, though at least the security people had the decency to stay outside — she’d been in the room for nearly six hours. At least she wasn’t hooked up to the lie detector anymore.
She felt as if she’d fallen down the rabbit hole in
Jennifer rubbed her arms, trying to get some circulation going. She needed to stretch — she needed to run, just get the hell out of this rabbit hole, where everything she said was turned upside down.
“You could make things easier,” said the captain.
“Excuse me?”
“Cooperate.”
“I
“Why would you help the Chinese?”
“I wouldn’t.”
“Don’t get mad. I’m trying to help you.”
“You’re not.” Jennifer sat up straight in her seat. “You think I’m a traitor, don’t you?”
The captain didn’t answer at first. “I think you might need help,” he said finally.
“Oh, so you’re going to be my friend, right?”
He made a show of sighing, as if she were the one being unreasonable.
“I’m not a traitor,” she said.
The word sounded so odd, so foreign, that Jennifer had to say it again.
“I am not a traitor.”
Until that point, tired and hungry, she’d been sustained mostly by anger. But now that foundation too slipped away. Jennifer Gleason had proven herself several times under fire, but this was something more fierce, more deadly. She’d never felt brave before — she’d just done what she had to do. It was easy almost, because she knew she could do it. She knew who she was — Jennifer Gleason, Dreamland scientist. And everyone at the base, everyone knew who she was. They trusted her, they liked her, and, in one case at least, loved her.
But the look in this man’s eyes told her that trust was gone. She felt her whole idenity slipping through a crack in her ribs.
Jennifer Gleason: traitor.
She wasn’t. She knew she wasn’t. But she worried that no matter what she did, she’d never convince anyone else of that again.
Not her friends. Not even Dog.
“So, when you were in college,” said the captain, putting his papers down. “Tell me about your friends.”
“My friends?”
“You had friends?”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
The captain pursed his lips.
“I don’t remember who my friends were,” she said honestly. “At this point, I don’t know if I have any friends at all.”
“There’s a joint exercise between ASEAN assets planned in the South China Sea, covering about a thousand square miles. More a goodwill exercise than actual combat training,” Jed explained. “B-52s were requested. You’ll go instead.”
“All right,” said Dog, listening as Jed filled him in on the arrangements for Brunei. A State Department rep was already en route to help smooth over any protocol matters. It had been suggested than an officer on his staff be appointed to liaison with the government.
“Brunei is not ideal,” Dog told him. “It’s a long way to operate it.”
“Yeah,” said Jed, who obviously agreed. “The President wanted you to locate there. It kind of interfaced with some State Department initiatives.”
“What would those be? Making nice to Brunei?”
Jed gave him an embarrassed laugh.
“All right. If we have to go there, we will,” said Dog.
“Listen, by the way, the Navy’s still kind of pissed at you. There’s a joke going around that an admiral has offered a reward for anyone who accidentally shoots down a Dreamland aircraft. At least I think it’s a joke.”
“Look, Jed, I have a lot going on over here.”
“I’m sorry. The, uh, the President authorized this ASAP, so he wants you there, uh, right away. The exercises actually start tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow?”
“Well, the time difference, it’s like fifteen hours and that makes tomorrow today here—”
“We’ll get there,” said Dog, hanging up.
The phone no sooner hit the cradle than Rubeo walked in.
“The entire situation is piffle,” said the scientist between his teeth.
“Which piffle?”
“The Colonel Cortend show. Piffle. It’s a witch hunt. They hate scientists,” continued Rubeo. “I’ve seen this before. They railroaded Oppenheimer on trumped-up charges that he was a communist.” Rubeo snorted. “The man wins the war for them and they cashier him.”
Dog didn’t know the particulars about the Oppenheimer case, and he certainly wasn’t going to ask about them now.
“No one’s getting railroaded,” he said.
Rubeo shook his head, flustered by his anger. The scientist’s emotion had a strangely calming effect on Dog, as if Rubeo had somehow taken charge of being mad.
“You know they’re questioning Jennifer Gleason,” said Rubeo. “Questioning her. Her.”
“I’d heard some scuttlebutt,” said Dog.
“You’re supposed to register when you attend a scientific conference where outside government agents may be. They’ve lost the paperwork, and they’re hanging her for it.”
“They lost the paperwork, or it wasn’t done?”
“What does it matter?”
“It’ll make a difference,” said Dog.
“Then it was lost. Probably on purpose.”
Dog leaned back in his seat. Rubeo showed exactly how right Danny had been — going off half-cocked made the scientist look like a crazoid, and did nothing for Jennifer.
“They questioned her for hours, and took away her clearance,” said Rubeo.
Dog sighed. “I’m sure Captain Freah is just following procedure.”
“Oh please.”
“Did Jennifer answer their questions?”
“Of course.”
“Tell me about the conferences.”
Rubeo waved his hand in the air as if brushing away a fly. Then he sighed and began explaining in some