7
It was several months before Jack realized that Tony Antiniori had a limp. Only a keen eye could spot it, and when Jack finally did he wondered if it were a temporary thing.
They were strolling through North Beach at the time, doing the rounds of the local bars, when Jack noticed the hitch in Tony’s step and said, “You hurt yourself?”
Tony immediately corrected his walk, and the limp all but disappeared. But when Jack gave him a quizzical look, Tony said defensively, “You spend enough time doing twenty-foot jumps out of a Huey Slick with sixty pounds of gear on your back, you’d be walking funny, too.”
Jack didn’t know the extent of Tony’s injuries from his days in Vietnam and the Gulf, but based on the stories he’d told, the old guy had to be in constant pain. That he hid it all so well and still managed to maintain a relatively balanced disposition was a testament to pure will.
But that was Tony Antiniori.
Jack was sitting at his favorite booth at Pagliaci’s on the Wharf, looking out at the bay and sipping a cup of perfect, nonbitter espresso, when Tony walked in, Eddie tucked under his arm. His limp was more pronounced than usual-a sign that he was hot and bothered about something.
He weaved through the maze of white-clothed tables, struggled into the leather booth across from Jack, and sat Eddie between them. The Pescatori brothers didn’t normally allow dogs in their establishment, but for Tony they made an exception. The way Tony coddled Eddie, Jack sometimes wondered if what he was witnessing was a very slow, very deliberate dognapping.
Tony said, “The streets were packed with Euro-Peons. Did you order yet?”
Jack shook his head, then reached over and scratched Eddie under the chin. “Waiting for you two.”
“I’m so steamed up right now, I’m not sure I can eat.”
“Because of the press conference?”
Tony nodded. “Darleen spent the night, and we were in bed this morning when we watched it. Killed the mood the minute that FBI douchebag opened his mouth.”
Tony may have had his injuries, but that had never slowed him down when it came to the ladies. Darleen was a neighbor and his latest hookup. And if Tony Antiniori had passed up a morning liaison because of a routine press conference, that was saying something indeed.
“You know me,” Tony went on. “I may have my share of secrets, but I’m pretty much what you see. I didn’t spend years in the jungle so some federal strunzo, a piece of shit, could lie to my face. I wanted to reach through my TV set and throttle that son of a btich.”
“Imagine how I felt.”
“You ask me, the way he slapped you down only confirms he’s a spokesmouth for some scumbag plot. Good thing I wasn’t in that room.”
Jack smiled. “Easy, boy.”
“I mean it. I saw that video you made. Your friend Drabinsky reminded me of some of the men in my unit, and it just about kills me to see these people use his sacrifice to sell their fairy tale.”
“I thought exactly the same thing.”
“I’m not surprised.”
Jack took a sip of his espresso. “So what did you find out about the government’s star witness? Tell me about this friend of yours in Higgston.”
“Met him years ago, while I was stationed up at Fort Lewis. He’s Higgston born and raised and he’s known this Clegg character since he was six years old. Says he’s a drunk, a liar, and an idiot all rolled into one.”
“But why would Clegg lie?”
“Why else?” Tony rubbed his thumb back and forth across his fingertips.
“You think somebody paid him off?”
“Makes sense to me. According to my friend, the Constitutional Defense Brigade is just a bunch of middle-aged tax dodgers sitting around bitching about the new world order. The only thing they’ve ever organized is a Saturday-night beer party.”
“What about the C4 and the weapons?”
“My buddy says the guns are all legal and you and I both know the C4 could have been planted. And get this: William Clegg didn’t try to join the CDB until two days after the bombing.”
Jack immediately understood. “Someone manufactured a witness.”
“That would be my guess. Nobody in the CDB can stand the guy. What does that tell you?”
“The CDBers get angry just hearing his name,” Jack said. “On camera, it plays like they’re angry about something else.”
“Like having their ring busted up,” Tony said.
“So why would anyone fall for this nonsense?”
Tony shrugged. “Same reason they always do. Everybody wants to believe. You’ve had some experience with that.”
Jack nodded glumly, then took another sip of espresso. “I made a few phone calls, myself. Tried to get hold of Officer Beckman. Turns out he’s on medical leave in Florida.”
“That’s convenient.”
“No kidding. I saw his injury. Maxine took a bigger hit than he did and she’s already back to running ten miles a day.”
“So who else did you call?”
“Some of my old contacts at the FBI, but nobody seems to want to talk to me.”
Tony gave him an amused look.
“No, not just because it’s me.” Jack grinned.
“The wall’s gone up,” Tony said, once again serious. “All because some punk said he thought the car belonged to an Arab.”
“That’s about the size of it.”
Tony thought for a moment. “He had to tell them more than that.”
“What do you mean?”
Tony leaned closer. The restaurant wasn’t very crowded and he didn’t want his voice to carry. “The carjack victim could have been Egyptian, Druze, Bahraini, and no one would give a damn. Or flip that around. What kind of Arab would the government care about?”
“Off the top, Saudi, Iranian-”
“Stop right there,” Tony said. “That’s the entire list. One a supposed ally, one an enemy. No one else could put a scare into Washington. Suppose the guy is GIP.” Tony was referring to the General Intelligence Presidency, the Saudi spy network. “He goes rogue, plans an attack. The Saudis won’t want that to become public knowledge. Spoils their image as being oh-so-damned-concerned about our security.”
“Well, they are,” Jack said. “Who’s gonna bail them out when Iran goes nuclear.”
“Exactly. My point is, that’s one reason to hush things up. It would make the Saudis look bad. But that’s not what happened.”
“How do you know?”
“I made some calls. There has been no uptick in GIP activity here. Zero.”
“So the Saudis are not looking for this mysterious Arab,” Jack said.
“Right. And they would be-looking hard. Now, suppose the guy is Iranian. That would mean those bad boys aren’t just shuttling weapons into Iraq anymore. They’re active here and trying to blow a hole in one of our cities.”
Jack sat back. “Interesting theory. But the Arab could also be an independent operator, a radicalized student, any number of things.”
“Agreed, but that’s not the point. Americans go right to the worst possible scenario, and a bunch of mini-Ahmadinejads running loose on our shores is one of those.”
“I buy that. But what could this Leon kid have said that tipped them off?”
“Have you ever read any of the government white papers on Iran?”
“Not since I was stationed in the Gulf and they were part of the eyes-only press packets.”
“Profiling has gotten a lot better since then. You know-the kind of stuff we’re not supposed to be doing but are.”
Jack laughed.
“I won’t get into the psychology of it, but here’s the shout-out for the young Iranian male,” Tony said. “Neatly pressed button-down white shirt, long sleeved. Sunglasses, day and night. Beige or light-colored slacks. Loafers, no socks. Expensive gold wristwatch. Think you’d notice those things casing out a carjack?”
Jack nodded.
“That, my friend, is why the FBI thinks this guy is Iranian. Maybe they know more than that, maybe Leon’s report and the explosion dovetailed with something they already knew, someone they were already watching.”
“But it’s enough to trigger a good old-fashioned multiagency cover-up,” Jack said. “A bunch of local wackos seem a lot less threatening than an Islamic terrorist cell. And with only one man dead, people are bound to forget about this the minute some celebrity goes into rehab. It becomes a nonevent. And nonevents don’t threaten political careers unless someone wants them to.”