'Oh, Bernie!'
'You earned it, doctor. Who knows, maybe you'll get a free trip to Sweden, too. Ten years of work It's one hell of a clinical breakthrough, Cathy.'
Other faculty members came up then, applauding and shaking her hand and for Caroline Muller Ryan, MD, F.A.C.S., it was a moment to match the arrival of a baby. Well, she thought, almost…
Special Agent Price heard her beeper go off and headed to the nearest phone, taking the message down and returning to her principal.
'Is it really that good?' she finally asked.
'Well, it's about the top American award in medicine,' Katz said while Cathy basked in the glow of respect from her colleagues. 'You get a nice little copy of a Greek statue, the Winged Victory of Samothrace, I think, the Goddess Nike. Some money, too. But mainly what you get is the knowledge that you really made a difference. She's a great doc.'
'Well, the timing is pretty good. I have to get her home and changed,' Price confided.
'What for?'
'Dinner in the White House,' the agent replied with a wink. 'Her husband did a pretty good job, too.' Just how good was a secret from nearly everyone, but not from the Service, from whom nothing was secret.
'Ambassador Whiting, I wish to apologize to you, to your government, and to your people for what has happened. I pledge to you that it will not happen again. I also pledge to you that the people responsible will answer to our law,' Koga said with great if somewhat stiff dignity.
'Prime Minister, your word is sufficient to me and to my government. We will do the utmost to restore our relationship,' the Ambassador promised, deeply moved by the sincerity of his host, and wishing, as many had, that America had not cut his legs out only six weeks earlier. 'I will communicate your wishes to my government immediately. I believe that you will find our response to your position is highly favorable.'
'I need your help,' Yamata said urgently.
'What help is that?' Tracking down Zhang Han San had taken most of the day, and now the man's voice was as cold as his name.
'I can get my jet here, and from here I can fly directly to—'
'That could be viewed as an unfriendly act against two countries. No, I regret that my government cannot allow that.'
'But you—we are allies!'
'Allies in what?' Zhang inquired. 'You are a businessman. I am a government official.'
The conversation might have gone on with little point, but then the door to Yamata's office opened and General Tokikichi Arima came in, accompanied by two other officers. They hadn't troubled themselves to talk with the secretary in the anteroom.
'I need to speak with you, Yamata-san,' the General said formally.
'I'll get back to you,' the industrialist said into the phone. He hung up. He couldn't know that at the other end the official instructed his staff not to put the calls through. It would not have mattered in any case.
'Yes—what is it?' Yamata demanded. The reply was equally cold.
'I am ordered to place you under arrest.'
'By whom?'
'By Prime Minister Koga himself.'
'The charge?'
'Treason.'
Yamata blinked hard. He looked around the room at the other men, now flanking the General. There was no sympathy in their eyes. So there it was. These mindless automatons had orders, but not the wit to understand them. But perhaps they still had honor.
'With your permission, I would like a few moments alone.' The meaning of the request was clear.
'My orders' Arima said, 'are to return you to Tokyo alive.'
'Huh?'
'I am sorry, Yamata-san, but you are not to avail yourself of that form of escape.' With that the General motioned to the junior officer, who took three steps and handcuffed the businessman. The coldness of the steel startled the industrialist.
'Tokikichi, you can't—'
'I must,' It pained the General not to allow his…friend? No, they'd not been friends, not really. Even so it pained him not to allow Yamata to end his life by way of atonement, but the orders from the Prime Minister had been explicit on that score, and with that, he led the man from the building, off to the police station adjacent to his soon-to-be-vacated official quarters, where two men would keep an eye on him to prevent any attempt at suicide.
When the phone rang, it surprised everyone that it was the phone, and not Burroughs' satellite instrument. Isabel Oreza got it, expecting a call from work or something. Then she turned and called, 'Mr. Clark?'
'Thank you.' He look it. 'Yes?'
'John. Mary Pal. Your mission is over. Come on home.'
'Maintain cover?'
'Affirmative, good job, John. Tell Ding the same thing.' The line went dead. The DDO had already violated security in a major way, but the call had taken only few seconds, and using the civilian line made it even more official than the covert sort could.
'What gives?' Portagee asked,
'We've just been ordered home.'
'No shit?' Ding asked Clark handed the phone over.
'Call the airport. Tell them that we're accredited newsies and we might just get a priority.' Clark turned 'Portagee, could you do me a favor and forget you ever saw me?'
The signal was welcome though surprising.
'We need a broom,' the engineering officer said after some deep thought.
'Do we have one aboard?' Lieutenant Shaw asked.
'Every submarine is issued a broom, Mr. Shaw. You've been around long enough to know that,' Commander Claggett observed with a wink.
'What are you guys talking about?' the Army officer asked. Were they jerking him around again?
'We took two shots and both were kills,' the engineer explained. 'That's a clean sweep, and that means when we enter Pearl, we have a broom tied to the number-one periscope. Tradition.'
'You squids do the weirdest things,' the lone man in green fatigues observed.
'Do we claim the helos?' Shaw asked his CO.
'We shot them down,' the ground-pounder objected.
'But they flew off our deck!' the Lieutenant pointed out.
'Jesus!'
The dinner was informal, up on the bedroom level of the White House, with what passed for a light buffet, albeit one cooked by a staff good enough to upgrade the rating of any restaurant in America.
'I understand congratulations are in order,' Roger Durling said.
'Huh?' The National Security Advisor hadn't heard yet.
'Jack, I, uh, got the Lasker,' Cathy said from her seat across the table.
'Well, that's two in your family who're the best around,' Al Trent observed, saluting with his wineglass.
'And this one's for you. Jack,' the President said, lifting his glass. 'After all the grief I've gotten on foreign affairs, you've saved me, and you've saved a lot of other things. Well done, Mister Dr. Ryan.'
Jack nodded at the toast, but this time he knew. He'd been around Washington long enough, finally, to hear the falling sandbag. The trouble was that he didn't know exactly why it was falling toward his head.
'Mr. President, the satisfaction comes from—well, from service, I guess. Thanks for trusting me. and thanks