The sum of all fears - Tom Clancy [260]
"I had a couple of good teachers. You didn't run and hide when you knew you were a target. You could have done that -"
"No, I could not have done so. If I had -"
"The bad guys would have won," Jack finished the thought. "My problem isn't very different, is it? I learned part of this from you. Surprised?" Jack asked. "Yes," he admitted.
"You don't run away from things. Neither do I."
"Your verbal maneuvering is as skillful as ever."
"See? I haven't lost it yet." Jack was rather pleased with himself.
"I will insist that you bring the family out to Wyoming with us."
"You can always go over my head - talk to Cathy." His Highness laughed. "Perhaps I will. Flying back tomorrow?"
"Yes, sir. I'm going to hit Hamley's for some toys."
"Get yourself some sleep, Jack. We'll have this argument again next year."
It was five hours earlier in Washington. Liz Elliot stared across her desk at Bob Holtzman, who covered the White House. Like the permanent staffers here, Holtzman had seen them come and go, outlasting them all. His greater experience in the building was something of a paradox. Though necessarily cut out of the really good stuff - Holtzman knew that there were some secrets he'd never see until years too late to make a story of them; that was the work of historians - his skill at reading nuances and catching whiffs would have earned him a senior place at any intelligence agency. But his paper paid much better than any government agency, especially since he'd also penned a few best-selling books on life at the highest levels of government.
"This is deep background?"
"That's right." the National Security Advisor said.
Holtzman nodded and made his notes. That set the rules. No direct quotes. Elizabeth Elliot could be referred to as an 'administration official' or in the plural as 'sources within.' He looked up from his notebook - tape recorders were also out for this sort of interview - and waited. Liz Elliot liked her drama. She was a bright woman, somewhat elitist - not an uncommon trait in White House officialdom - and definitely the person closest to the President, if he was reading the signals right. But that was none of the public's business. The probable love affair between the President and his National Security Advisor was no longer a complete secret. The White House staffers were as discreet as ever - more, in fact. He found it odd that they should be so. Fowler was not the most lovable of men. Perhaps they felt sympathy for what had to be a lonely man. The circumstances of his wife's death were well-known, and had probably added a percentage point of sympathy votes in the last election. Maybe the staffers thought he'd change with a steady romance in his life. Maybe they were just being good professionals. (That distinguished them from political appointees, Holtzman thought. Nothing was sacred to them.) Maybe Fowler and Elliot were just being very careful. In any case, the White House press had discussed it off and on at The Confidential Source, the bar at the National Press Club building, just two blocks away, and it had been decided that Fowler's love life was not properly a matter of public interest, so long as it did not injure his job performance. After all, his foreign-policy performance was pretty good. Euphoria from the Vatican Treaty and its stunningly favorable aftermath had never gone away. You couldn't slam a president who was doing so fine a job. "We may have a problem with the Russians," Elliot began.
"Oh?" Holtzman was caught by surprise for once.
"We have reason to believe that Narmonov is having considerable difficulty dealing with his senior military commanders. That could have effects on final compliance with the arms treaty."
"How so?"
"We have reason to believe that the Soviets will resist elimination of some of their SS-18 stocks. They're already behind in destruction of the missiles."
Reason to believe. Twice. Holtzman thought about that for a moment. A very sensitive source, probably a spy rather than an intercept. "They