The sum of all fears - Tom Clancy [223]
"What was that they said?"
"The Secretary of Defense," Russell answered.
"A joke?"
Marvin turned. "Sort of a joke. That's what they call the middle linebacker, Maxim Bradley, from the University of Alabama. But the real one owns the team. Dennis Bunker - there he is." The camera showed Bunker in one of the stadium's sky-boxes.
How remarkable, Bock thought.
"What is this Superbowl they talked about?"
"That's the championship game. They have a playoff series of the most successful teams, and the last one is called the Superbowl."
"Like the World Cup, you mean?"
"Yeah, something like that. 'Cept we do it every year. This year - actually next year, end of January - it's in the new stadium they built at Denver. The Skydome, I think they call it."
"They expect these two teams to go there?"
Russell shrugged. "That's the talk. The regular season is sixteen weeks, man, then three weeks of playoffs, then another week wait for the Superbowl."
"Who goes to this last game?"
"Lots of people. Hey, man, it's the game. Everybody wants to go to it. Getting tickets is a mother. These two teams are the best to go all the way, but it's real unpredictable, y'know?"
"President Fowler is a football enthusiast?"
"That's what they say. He's supposed to go to a lot of Redskin games right here in D.C."
"What about security?" Bock asked.
"It's tough. They put him in one of the special boxes. Figure they have it rigged with bulletproof glass or something."
How very foolish, Bock thought. Of course, a stadium was easier to secure than it might seem to the casual observer. A heavy crew-served weapon could only be fired from an entrance ramp, and watching those was relatively easy. On the other hand
Bock closed his eyes. He was thinking in an unorganized way, vacillating between conventional and unconventional approaches to the problem. He was also allowing himself to focus on the wrong thing. Killing the American President was desirable, but not essential. What was essential was to kill the largest number of people in the most spectacular way imaginable, then to coordinate with other activities in order to foment
Think! Concentrate on the real mission.
"The television coverage for these games is most impressive," Bock observed after a minute.
"Yeah, they make a big deal of that. Satellite vans, all that stuff." Russell was concentrating on the game. The Vikings had scored something called a touchdown, and the score was now ten to nothing, but it seemed now that the other team was moving rapidly in the other direction.
"Has the game ever been seriously disrupted?"
Marvin turned. "Huh? Oh, during the war with Iraq, they had really tight security - and you remember the movie, right?"
"Movie?" Bock asked.
"Black Sunday, I think it was - some Middle East guys tried to blow up the place." Russell laughed. "Already been done, man. In Hollywood, anyway. They used a blimp. Anyway, during the Superbowl when we were fighting Iraq, they wouldn't let the TV blimp come near the place."
"Is there a game at Denver today?"
"No, that's tomorrow night, Broncos and the Sea-hawks. Won't be much of a game. The Broncos are rebuilding this year."
"I see." Bock left the room and arranged for the concierge to get them tickets to Denver in the morning.
Cathy got up to see him off. She even fixed breakfast. Her solicitude over the past few days had not made her husband feel any better. Quite the reverse. But he couldn't say anything about it, could he? Even the way she overdid it, straightening his tie and kissing him on the way out the door. The smile, the loving look, all for a husband who couldn't get it up, Jack thought on his way out to the car. The same sort of smothering attention you might give to some poor bastard in a wheelchair.
"Morning, Doc."
"Hello, John."
"Catch the Vikings-Chargers game yesterday?"