The sum of all fears - Tom Clancy [314]
"You mean a pallet? They put it in with a fork-lift?"
"Yes," Ghosn said, "that is correct."
"You're lucky. Come on, I'll show you." Russell led the man out into the cold. Two minutes later, he saw that one of the barns had a concrete loading dock and a rusty propane-powered forklift. The only bad news was that the dirt path leading up to it was covered with snow and frozen mud. "How delicate is the bomb?"
"Bombs can be very delicate, Marvin." Ghosn pointed out.
Russell had a good laugh at that one. "Yeah, I guess so."
It was fully ten hours earlier in Syria. Dr Vladimir Moiseyevich Kaminiskiy had just started work, early as was his custom. A professor at Moscow State University, he'd been sent to Syria to teach in his specialty, which was respiratory problems. It was not a specialty to make a man an optimist. Much of what he saw in the Soviet Union and also here in Syria was lung cancer, a disease as preventable as it was lethal.
His first case of the day had been referred by a Syrian practitioner whom he admired - the man was French-trained and very thorough - and also one who only referred interesting cases.
On entering the examining room, Kaminiskiy found a fit-looking man in his early thirties. A closer look showed someone with a gray, drawn face. His first impression was, cancer, but Kaminiskiy was a careful man. It could be something else, something contagious. His examination took longer than he'd expected, necessitating several X-ray films, and some additional tests, but he was called back to the Soviet embassy before the results arrived.
It required all of Clark's patience, but he let it go almost three days, on the assumption that Holtzman didn't get right on the case. John left his house at eight-thirty in the evening and drove to a gas station. There he told the attendant to fill up the car - he hated pumping it himself - and walked over to the pay phone.
"Yeah." Holtzman said, answering his unlisted line.
Clark didn't identify himself. "You have a chance to run the facts down?"
"Yeah, as a matter of fact. Got most of 'em, anyway. Looks like you were right. Really is annoying when people lie to you, isn't it?"
"Who?"
"I call her Liz. The President calls her Elizabeth. Want a freebie?" Holtzman added.
"Sure."
"Call this evidence of good faith on my part. Fowler and she are getting it on. Nobody's reported it because we figure it's not the public's business."
"Good for you," Clark observed. Thanks. I owe you one."
"Five years, man."
"I'll be around." Clark hung up. So, John thought, I thought that's who it was. He dropped another quarter in the phone. He got lucky on the first try. It was a woman's voice.
"Hello?"
"Dr Caroline Ryan?"
"Yes, who's this?"
"The name you wanted, ma'am, is Elizabeth Elliot. The President's National Security Advisor." Clark decided not to add the other part. It was not relevant to the situation, was it?
"You're sure?"
"Yes."
"Thank you." The line clicked off.
Cathy had sent Jack to bed early again. The man was being sensible. Well, that wasn't a surprise, was it? she thought. After all, he married me.
The timing could have been a little better. A few days earlier, she had planned to skip the official dinner, claiming work as an excuse, but now
How do I do this
"Morning, Bernie," Cathy Ryan said as she scrubbed her hands, as usual, all the way to the elbows.
"Hi, Cath. How's it going?"
"A lot better, Bernie."
"Really?" Dr Katz started scrubbing.
"Really."
"Glad to hear it," Katz observed dubiously.
Cathy finished, shutting off the water with taps from her elbows. "Bernie, it turns out I overreacted rather badly."
"What about the guy who came to see me?" Katz asked, his head down.
"It was not true. I can't explain now, maybe some other time. Need a favor."
"Sure, what?"
"The cornea replacement I have scheduled for Wednesday, can you take it?"
"What gives?"
"Jack and I have to go to a formal dinner in the White House tomorrow night. State