Debt of Honor - Tom Clancy [157]
"This is the kitchen?" Cathy asked.
"Galley," Jack corrected. It was impressive, as were the meals prepared here, actually cooked from fresh ingredients and not reheated as was the way on airliners.
"It's bigger than ours!" she observed, to the amused pleasure of the chief cook, an Air Force master sergeant.
"Not quite, but the chef's better, aren't you, Sarge?"
"I'll turn my back now. You can slug him, ma'am. I won't tell."
Cathy merely laughed at the jibe. "Why isn't he upstairs in the lounge?"
"That's almost all communications gear. The President likes to wander up there to talk to the crew, but the guys who live there are mainly cryppies."
"Cryppies?"
"Communications guys," Jack explained, leading his wife back to their seats. The seats were beige leather, extra wide and extra soft, with recently added swing-up TV screens, personal phones, and other features which Cathy started to catalog, down to the presidential seal on the belt-buckles. "Now I know what first-class really means."
"It's still an eleven-hour flight, babe," Jack observed, settling in while others boarded. With luck he'd be able to sleep most of the way.
The President's televised departure statement followed its own pattern. The microphone was always set up so that Air Force One loomed in the background, to remind everyone of who he was and to prove it by showing his personal plane. Roy Newton watched more for timing than anything else. Statements like this never amounted to much, and only C-SPAN carried them at all, though the network newsies were always there with cameras in case the airplane blew up on takeoff. Concluding his remarks, Durling took his wife, Anne, by the arm and walked to the stairs, where a sergeant saluted.
At the door of the aircraft, the President and the First Lady turned to give a final wave as though already on the campaign trail—in a very real way this trip was part of that almost-continuous process—then went inside. C-SPAN switched back to the floor of the House, where various junior members were giving brief speeches under special orders. The President would be in the air for eleven hours, Newton knew, more time than he needed. It was time to go to work.
The ancient adage was true enough, he thought, arranging his notes. If more than one person knew it, it wasn't a secret at all. Even less so if you both knew part of it and also knew who knew the rest, because then you could sit down over dinner and let on that you knew, and the other person would think that you knew it all, and would then tell you the parts you hadn't learned quite yet. The right smiles, nods, grunts, and a few carefully selected words would keep your source going until it was all there in plain sight.
Newton supposed it was not terribly different for spies. Perhaps he would have been a good one, but it didn't pay any better than his stint in Congress—not even as well, in fact—and he'd long since decided to apply his talent to something that could make him a decent living. The rest of the game was a lot easier. You had to select the right person to give the information to, and that choice was made merely by reading the local papers carefully. Every reporter had a hot-button item, something for which he or she had a genuinely passionate interest, and for that reason reporters were no different from anyone else. If you knew what buttons to push, you could manipulate anyone. What a pity it hadn't quite worked with the people in his district, Newton thought, lifting the phone and punching the buttons.
"Libby Holtzman."
"Hi, Libby, this is Roy. How are things?"
"A little slow," she allowed, wondering if her husband, Bob, would get anything good on the Moscow trip with the presidential party.
"How about dinner?" He knew that her husband was away.
"What about?" she asked. She knew it wasn't a tryst or something similarly foolish. Newton was a player, and usually had something interesting to tell.
"It'll be worth your time," he promised. "Jockey Club, seven-thirty?"
"I'll be there."
Newton smiled. It was all fair play, wasn't it? He'd