Debt of Honor - Tom Clancy [358]
"Thank you." When they made their way out. Ryan walked toward the Oval Office.
"We got it," he told the President.
"I'm sorry I couldn't back you up on that."
"It's an election year," Jack acknowledged. The Iowa caucuses were two weeks away, then New Hampshire, and though Durling had no opposition in his party, he would on the whole have preferred to be elsewhere. He could also not afford offending the media. But that's why he had a National Security Advisor. Appointed officials were always expendable.
"When this is all over…"
"Back to golfing? I need the practice."
That was another thing he liked about him, Durling told himself. Ryan didn't mind telling a joke once in a while, though the circles under his eyes duplicated his own. It was one more reason to thank Bob Fowler for his contrarian advice, and perhaps a reason to lament Ryan's choice of political affiliation.
"He wants to help," Kimura said.
"The best way for him to do that," Clark replied, "is to act normally. He's an honorable man. Your country needs a voice of moderation." It wasn't exactly the instructions he'd expected, and he found himself hoping that Washington knew what the hell it was doing. The orders were coming through Ryan's office, which was some consolation but not all that much. At least his agent-in-place was relieved.
"Thank you. I do not wish to put his life at risk."
"He's too valuable for that. Perhaps America and Japan can reach a diplomatic solution." Clark didn't believe it, but saying such things always made diplomats happy. "In that case, Goto's government will fall, and perhaps Koga-san will regain his former place."
"But from what I hear, Goto will not back down."
"It is also what I hear, but things can change. In any case, that is our request for Koga. Further contact between us is dangerous," "Klerk" went on. "Thank you for your assistance. If we need you again, we will contact you through normal channels."
In gratitude, Kimura paid the bill before leaving.
"That's all, eh?" Ding asked.
"Somebody thinks it's enough, and we have other things to do."
Back in the saddle again, Chavez thought to himself. But at least they had orders, incomprehensible though they might be. It was ten in the morning, local time, and they split up after hitting the street, and spent the next several hours buying cellular phones, three each of a new digital model, before meeting again. The units were compact and fit into a shirt pocket. Even the packing boxes were small, and neither officer had the least problem concealing them.
Chet Nomuri had already done the same, giving his address as an apartment in Hanamatsu, a preselected cover complete with credit cards and driver's license. Whatever was going on, he had less than thirty days in-country to accomplish it. His next job was to return to the bathhouse one last time before disappearing from the lace of the earth.
"One question," Ryan said quietly. The look in his eyes made Trent and Fellows uneasy.
"Are you going to make us wait for it?" Sam asked.
"You know the limitations we face in the Pacific."
Trent stirred in his seat. "If you mean that we don't have the horses to—"
"It depends on which horses we use," Jack said. Both insiders considered that for a moment.
"Gloves off?" Al Trent asked.
Ryan nodded. "All the way off. Will you hassle us about it?"
"Depends on what you mean by that. Tell us," Fellows ordered. Ryan did.
"You're really willing to stick it out that far?" Trent asked.
"We don't have a choice. I suppose it would be nice to fight it out with cavalry charges on the field of honor and all that stuff, but we don't have the horses, remember? The President needs to know if Congress will back him up.