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"Mr. President," the voice said, "have you made your decision yet?"
John Hansen felt his anger growing. The voice on the other end of the phone exuded the self-a.s.surance of a man who was holding something unspeakably horrible over your head. Either he could bluff with the best of them, or he knew exactly what he was doing. Which was it?
He looked over at Theodore Brock, who had been at his desk, just down from the Oval Office, early, arranging for the wire transfers of the funds to Geneva. The eight hundred million dollars had been placed in a numbered account in a branch of the Union Bank of Switzerland, just in case. The objective, however, was never to take the final step and transfer it into the accounts the terrorist had designated in Banco Ambrosiano. Brock now sat on the couch across, fiddling with his gla.s.ses. A cup of coffee sat next to him, untouched.
"We've accepted your proposal, in principle," Hansen replied, nervously drumming his fingertips on the desk. He scarcely could believe the words were emerging from his mouth. "We have some conditions of our own, concerning the hostages, but I think it's possible to come to terms, given time. Arrangements are being made concerning the money."
"According to the procedures I faxed you?" the voice asked.
"Not entirely," Hansen went on, beginning what was going to be his own gamble. "The funds will have to be handled through our emba.s.sy in Switzerland. It may take a few days."
There was a moment of silence on the other end, then,
"You don't have a few days, Mr. President. Time has run out. You have to make a decision. Either you honor our demands or you must be prepared to accept the consequences. And I a.s.sure you they are terrible. Which will it be?"
"It is going to be neither," Hansen replied coolly, sensing he still had leverage. "It is in both our interests to satisfy our objectives.
Including the safety of the hostages on the island. If we have to work together to accomplish that, then we should. It's the logical, rational way to proceed."
"Mr. President, this world is neither logical nor rational," came back the voice, now noticeably harder. "The timetable does not allow lat.i.tude for delays. You--"
"Let me put it like this," Hansen interjected, trying to catch him off balance. "You have the choice of doing it the way it can be done, or not doing it at all. Which do you want it to be?"
"I've given you an ultimatum," the voice replied tersely, its sense of control returning. "The only question left is whether or not you intend to honor it."
Hansen stole a glance at his wrist.w.a.tch, thinking. He needed to stall for time, but clearly it wasn't going to be so easy. The Special Forces had reached Souda Bay, but they would not be in position to begin an a.s.sault for several more hours.
"I told you I'm working on it," he said finally. "These things take--"
"The funds can be wire-transferred in minutes to the Geneva accounts I listed for you." The voice was growing c.o.c.ky. "There's no need for brown paper bags and unmarked bills."
Hansen suddenly felt his anger boil, his composure going. Sometimes it was better to go with your gut than with your head. Then the scenario could be played out on your own terms. The h.e.l.l with this b.a.s.t.a.r.d. Why not just call his bluff? He wasn't going to use the weapon, or weapons, even if he had them. He would gain nothing by that. The threat of using a bomb was his only bargaining chip.
"You know," he said, "I'm thinking maybe I don't want to play your game at all."
"That is a serious error in judgment, Mr. President. I am not playing games."
"As far as I'm concerned, you are." Hansen looked up to see Alicia ushering Ed Briggs into the office. G.o.d, he thought, do I look as haggard as he does?
"I'm offering you a deal." His attention snapped back to the phone and he continued. "Give me another day to arrange for the money. Another twenty-four hours. That's the best you're going to get."
"We both know that is a lie," came back the voice. "If you expect me to accept that, you are an even bigger fool than I imagined. Since you don't appear to believe my seriousness, the time has come for a demonstration."
"I'm waiting. The chances of you delivering a nuke, which is what I a.s.sume you have, are about the same as Washington being hit by a meteorite. The odds are a lot better that you'll just blow yourself up.
Criminals like you are long on tough talk and short on technology."
"This conversation is getting us nowhere. So just to make sure we understand each other, let me repeat the terms once again. The eight hundred million must be wired to the accounts I listed at the Geneva branch of Banco Ambrosiano within the next five hours. If it is not, the consequences will be more terrible than I hope you are capable of imagining. The loss of life and property will be staggering."
"Keep him talking," Briggs whispered across. "Keep a line open.
Dialogue the f.u.c.ker till--"
Hansen cleared his throat and nodded. "Look, if you'll just hold off a few more hours, maybe something can be done about the problems with the money. You have to try and understand it's not that easy . . ." His voice trailed into silence and he looked up. "The b.a.s.t.a.r.d cut the line, Ed. He's gone." He cradled the hand piece. "s.h.i.t."
Will the son of a b.i.t.c.h be ruthless enough to use one of those nukes?
he was wondering. You can't really know, he answered himself. With a lunatic, you d.a.m.ned well never know.
12:40 A.M.
Bill Bates was still in his office, trying to do some heavy thinking and put his problems into sequential order. The first problem was that the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds were killing his people, mostly just to make an example and instill terror. The next one he wasn't so sure about, but from what he had seen in his occasional glimpses of Control, Cally was missing.
Apparently she had gone off with the f.u.c.ker who called himself Number One and hadn't come back. Was she down at Launch? Doing what?
Well, Calypso Andros was a tough cookie. They might pressure her and threaten her, but she would stand up to them. These terrorists were just cowards with automatics; he could smell that much a mile away.
The next problem was SatCom itself. He hated to find himself thinking about it at a time like this, but the company was built on a pyramid of short-term debt--construction loans that could be rolled over and converted to long-term obligations only if the test launch proceeded as scheduled. It already had been postponed once, and the banks were getting nervous. If these thugs derailed the Cyclops for any length of time, the banks were going to move in and try to foreclose on all the computers and equipment. The litigation would stretch into the next century.
SatCom. On the brink. High-risk all the way, but what a dream. Almost there, and now this.
He found himself thinking about his wife, Dorothy. She had been supportive--she always was--from the very first. Maybe after eighteen years of struggle she had had misgivings about gambling everything on this one big turn of the roulette wheel, but she had kept her thoughts to herself. Which was only one more reason why he loved her so. She had been all their married life, always there with a real smile and a hug when the going got the roughest. It made all the difference.
But now, now that the whole enterprise was in danger of going down the tubes, he felt he had let her down. For the first time ever. Even his briar pipe tasted burned out, like ashes. He had taken every cent he could beg or borrow and had gambled it all on s.p.a.ce. Only to have a group of monsters barge in and wreck everything. Now what? He honestly didn't know.
He had flown an A-6 Intruder in Vietnam, but hand-to-hand with terrorists was something else entirely. The b.a.s.t.a.r.ds had shut down all the communications gear when they moved in. The phones were out, the radio, and even his personal computer terminals had been shunted out of the system. He could count and he knew what automatic weapons could do.
No, this one was out of his control.
He glanced around his office, paneled in light woods and hung with photographs of Dorothy and the two boys--his favorite was during a regatta in Chesapeake Bay. There also were photos of the Cyclops system and the VX-1 vehicle, the latter caught in the austere light of sunrise, the blue Aegean in the background.
He shook his head sadly, rose, and made his way out into the cavernous room that was Command. The fluorescent lights glared down on a depressing sight--the staff disheveled and living in stark fear--one armed hood at the computer, another lounging by the doorway. . . .
12:45 A.M.
Georges LeFarge looked up to see Bates coming out of his office and into the wide, vinyl-floored expanse that was Command. He a.s.sumed the CEO had been sitting moodily in his office, dwelling on the imminent foreclosure of SatCom's creditors. He must have been puffing up a storm on his pipe because a cloud of smoke poured out after him. And he looked weary--his eyes told it.
n.o.body down at Launch Control knew they had been taken over by terrorists. Peretz had carefully made sure that all communications from Command were monitored and controlled. Number One had gone down there, but he apparently had managed to fool everybody into thinking he and all his hoods were SatCom consultants. One thing you had to say for them, they were masters of deceit. Number One could pa.s.s for a high- powered European executive, and he was playing the authority thing to the hilt.
"Are you b.a.s.t.a.r.ds having fun?" Bates walked over and addressed Dore Peretz.
The Israeli looked up and grinned. "More than that, we're making history. Fasten your seat belt, 'cause your first test launch is going to be a real show-stopper. A one-of-a-kind."
"This facility doesn't need any more 'show-stoppers,' as you put it, pal." Bates looked him over with contempt. "We were doing just fine before you barged in."