Debt of Honor - Tom Clancy [138]
"Hello?"
"Ed? Jack Ryan. You guys busy?"
"We are allowed Sunday off, Jack. The Caps play the Bruins this afternoon."
"Ten minutes."
"Fair enough." Ed Foley set the phone back in its place on the wall.
"Ryan's coming over," he told his wife. Damn it.
Sunday was the one day they allowed themselves to sleep. Mary Pat was still in her housecoat, looking unusually frowzy. Without a word she left the morning paper and walked off toward the bathroom to fix her hair. There was a knock at the door fifteen minutes later.
"Overtime?" Ed asked at the door. Robberton came in with his guest.
"I had to do one of the morning shows." Jack checked his watch. I'll be on in another twenty minutes or so."
"What gives?" Mary Pat entered the room, looking about normal for an American female on a Sunday morning.
"Business, honey," Ed answered. He led everyone to the basement recreation room.
"SANDALWOOD," Jack said when they got there. He could speak freely here. The house was swept for bugs every week. "Do Clark and Chavez have orders to get the girl out yet?"
"Nobody gave us the execute order," Ed Foley reminded him. "It's just about setup, but—"
"The order is given. Get the girl out now."
"Anything we need to know?" Mary Pat asked.
"I haven't been comfortable with this from the beginning. I think maybe we deliver a little message to her sugar daddy—and we do it early enough to get his attention."
"Yeah," Mr. Foley said. "I read the paper this morning, too. He isn't saying friendly stuff, but we are laying it on them pretty hard, y'know?"
"Sit down, Jack," Mary Pat said. "Can I get you coffee or anything?'
"No, thanks, MP." He looked up after taking a place on a worn couch.
"A light just went off. Our friend Goto seems to be an odd duck."
"He does have his quirks," Ed agreed. "Not terribly bright, a lot of bombast once you get through the local brand of rhetoric, but not all that many ideas. I'm surprised he's getting the chance."
"Why?" Jack asked. The State Department material on Goto had been typically respectful of the foreign statesman.
"Like I said, he's no threat to win the Nobel in physics, okay? He's an apparatchik. Worked his way up the way politicos do. I'm sure he's kissed his share of asses along the way—"
"And to make up for that, he has some bad habits with women," MP added. "There's a lot of that over there. Our boy Nomuri sent in a lengthy dispatch on what he's seen." It was the youth and inexperience, the DDO knew. So many field officers on their first major assignment reported everything, as though writing a book or something. It was mainly the product of boredom.
"Over here he couldn't get elected dogcatcher," Ed noted with a chuckle.
Think so? Ryan thought, remembering Edward Kealty. On the other hand, it might just turn out to be something America could use in the right forum and under the right circumstances. Maybe the first time they met, if things went badly, President Durling could make a quiet reference to his former girlfriend, and the implications of his bad habits on Japanese-American relations…
"How's THISTLE doing?"
Mary Pat smiled as she rearranged the Sega games on the basement TV. This was where the kids told Mario and all the others what to do. "Two of the old members are gone, one retired and one on overseas assignment, in Malaysia, as I recall. The rest of them are contacted. If we ever want to—"
"Okay, let's think about what we want them to do for us."
"Why?" MP asked. "I don't mind, but why?"
"We're pushing them too hard. I've told the President that, but he's got political reasons for pushing, and he isn't going to stop. What we're doing is going to hurt their economy pretty bad, and now it turns out that their new PM has a real antipathy to us. If they decide to push back, I want to know before it happens."
"What can they do?" Ed Foley sat on his son's favorite Nintendo chair.