junior major, like Billy Tucker, who’d taught that class. Just then, Kingshot walked back into the room.
“Al, we have a problem,” Ryan told him.
“I know, Jack. I just told Sir Basil. He’s thinking about it.”
“You’re a field spook. What do you think?”
“Jack, this is well over my level of expertise and command.”
“You turn your brain off, Al?” Ryan asked sharply.
“Jack, we cannot compromise our source, can we?” Kingshot shot back. “That is the paramount consideration here and now.”
“Al, we know that somebody is going to try to whack the head of my church. We know his name, and Nick has a photo album on the fucker, remember?” Ryan took a deep breath before going on. “I am not going to sit here and do nothing about it,” Ryan concluded, entirely forgetting the presence of the Rabbit for the moment.
“You do nothing? I risk my life for this and you do nothing?” Zaitzev demanded, catching on to the rapid-fire English exchanged in front of him. His face showed both outrage and puzzlement.
Al Kingshot handled the answer. “That is not for us to say. We cannot compromise our source—you, Oleg. We must protect you as well.”
“Fuck!” Ryan stood and walked out of the room. But what the hell could he actually do? Jack asked himself. Then he went looking for the secure phone and dialed a number from memory.
“Murray,” a voice said after the STUs married up.
“Dan, it’s Jack.”
“Where you been? I called two nights ago and Cathy said you were in Germany on NATO business. I wanted to—” Ryan just cut him off.
“Stick it, Dan. I was somewhere else doing something else. Listen up. I need some information and I need it in a hurry,” Jack announced, lapsing briefly back into the voice of an officer of Marines.
“Shoot,” Murray replied.
“I need to know the Pope’s schedule for the next week or so.” It was Friday. Ryan hoped the Bishop of Rome didn’t have anything hopping for the weekend.
“What?” The FBI official’s voice communicated predictable puzzlement.
“You heard me.”
“What the hell for?”
“Can’t tell you—oh, shit,” Ryan swore, and then went on. “Dan, we have reason to believe there’s a contract out on the Pope.”
“Who?” Murray asked.
“It ain’t the Knights of Columbus,” was all Ryan felt comfortable saying.
“Shit, Jack. Are you serious?”
“What the hell do you think?” Ryan demanded.
“Okay, okay. Let me make some phone calls. What exactly am I free to say?”
That question stopped Ryan cold in his tracks.
“What’s Langley say about this?”
“Dan, frankly, I don’t care a rat’s ass right now, okay? Please, get me that information. I’ll call back in an hour. Okay?”
“Roger that, Jack. One hour.” Murray hung up. Ryan knew he could trust Murray. He was himself a Jesuit product, like so many FBI agents, in his case a Boston College alum, just like Ryan, and so whatever additional loyalties he had would work in Ryan’s favor. Breathing a little easier, Ryan returned to the ducal library.
“Whom did you call, Jack?” Kingshot asked.
“Dan Murray at the embassy, the FBI rep. You ought to know him.”
“The Legal Attache—yes, I do. Okay, what did you ask?”
“The Pope’s schedule for the coming week.”
“But we don’t know anything yet,” Kingshot objected.
“Does that make you feel any better, Al?” Jack inquired delicately.
“You did not compro—”
“Compromise our source? You think I’m that stupid?”
The Brit spook nodded to the logic of the moment. “Very well. No harm done, I expect.”
The next hour of the first interview returned to routine things. Zaitzev fleshed out for the Brits what he knew about MINISTER. It was sufficiently juicy to give them a good start on IDing the guy. It was immediately clear that Kingshot wanted his hide on the barn door. There was no telling how much good information KGB was getting from him—it was definitely a him, Zaitzev made clear, and “him” was probably a senior civil servant in Whitehall, and soon his residence would be provided by Her Majesty’s Government for the indefinite future—”at the Queen’s pleasure” was the official phrase. But Jack had more pressing concerns. At 2:20 in the afternoon, he went back to the STU in the next room.
“Dan, it’s Jack.”
The Legal Attache spoke without preamble. “He has a busy week ahead, the embassy in Rome tells me, but the Pope is always in the open on Wednesday afternoons. He parades around in his white jeep in St. Peter’s Square, right in front of the cathedral, for the people to see him and take his blessing. It’s an open car, and, if you want to pop a cap, that sounds to me like a good time to try—unless they have a shooter infiltrated all the way inside. Maybe a cleaning man, plumber, electrician, hard to say, but you have to assume that the inside staff is pretty loyal, and that people keep an eye on them.”
“Thanks, pal. I owe you one.”
“
“Probably not, but it’s not for me to say, Dan. Gotta run. Later, man.” Ryan hung up and reentered the library.
The sun was over the yardarm, and a wine bottle had just appeared, a French white from the Loire Valley, probably a nice old one. There was dust on the bottle. It had been there for a while, and the cellar downstairs would not be stocked with Thunderbird and Wild Irish Rose.
“Zaitzev here has all manner of good information on this MINISTER chap.”
Might he be a plant, a false defector sent West to give the Agency and others false information? It was possible, but the proof of that pudding would lie in the quality of the agents he identified to the Western counter- intelligence services. If MINISTER was really giving out good information, the quality of it would tell the Security Service if he were that valuable an agent. The Russians were never the least bit loyal to their agents—they’d
By 4:00 local time, Jack could be sure that somebody would be at work at Langley. He asked one more