“Including something this bold?”
“Well — that’s the unknown quantity,” Liz explained. “I’ll have a look at Link’s file, but I’m not optimistic. A dual murder seems a little extreme for someone who just moved from an organization where that kind of activity was at least acceptable, if not encouraged.”
Hood said he would E-mail the file to Liz. Before leaving, she asked if he was all right.
“Sure, why?” he asked, though he knew the answer.
“The situation with Mike,” she replied.
“That wasn’t easy,” Hood admitted. “But hiring and firing are part of the job description.”
“Does he know you’re investigating his new colleague?”
“No. At least, no one told him. I don’t know what he might surmise or suspect.”
“So everything’s under control here,” she said.
Hood picked up a paperweight Alexander had made in the first grade. It was a blue and white glazed lump of clay that was supposed to be Earth. He held it in his fist. “I’ve got the whole world in my hand, Liz,” he said.
“Like Atlas,” she said.
“He had it on his shoulders,” Hood pointed out.
“Like Atlas,” she repeated.
Hood thought about that, then smiled. She got him. He put the paperweight down. “What do you do when you feel like your life and career are on a parallel course in the wrong direction?”
“That depends,” Liz replied. She shut the door. “If you’re patient, it’s like moving around that globe. Learn what you can on the journey, enjoy the scenery, and eventually, you come back around.”
“What if you feel like you’re running out of fuel?”
“Ride the winds.”
“I have been,” Hood told her.
“And?” The psychologist moved toward the desk. “Talk to me, Paul.”
Hood hesitated. He was not good at this. He did not like to complain or to seek help. But Liz must have sensed that something was wrong. The woman was responsible for keeping psychological files of the staff, and her antennae were always extended. Decisions made in these offices could affect millions of people. If Liz felt that someone were under too much stress, either personal or professional, she could order them to take time off. She had done that with Mike Rodgers after his Striker military unit was decimated in India.
“Truthfully, Liz?” Hood said. “I feel like those winds have been blowing me all over the damn place, mostly away from where I need to be.”
“Do you know where you need to be?”
“Not doing this,” he said. “Not cutting personnel and pulling back from missions. Not kowtowing.”
“That’s negative space,” she said in a careful, nonjudgmental voice. “You can’t define what you should be doing by what you’re not doing.” She leaned on the desk so their eyes were level. “First tell me this, Paul. Are we talking about home or about Op-Center?”
“Both,” he admitted.
“So you feel like your backsliding in two areas.”
“Yeah. At the same speed and gaining momentum.”
“Do you wish you were back with Sharon?”
“No,” he said without hesitation.
“Are you upset that she’s getting her life together?”
Liz was Harleigh’s therapist, so Hood was not surprised that she knew this.
“No,” he answered truthfully.
“You said you were kowtowing. To Sharon?”
Hood nodded. “To her, to the CIOC, to Scotland Yard, and when you leave I’ll probably feel like I was kowtowing to you.”
“Then tell me to go.”
Hood hesitated.
“The only way to stop backsliding is to dig down with your heels.” She stood. “Do it, Paul.”
“Okay. We’re done,” he said.
“Not good enough. That isn’t an end. It’s neutral.”
“I don’t see the difference,” he confessed.
“I’m still here. I’m still talking, aren’t I?”
Hood grinned. “Get out,” he said sharply. “Now,” he added.
Liz smiled. “One more thing?” she asked.
Hood could not tell whether or not this was a trap. “One,” he said firmly.
“Everyone is disoriented and retrenching,” Liz said. “Sharon, the intelligence community, the nation. You’re being pushed, but it isn’t personal — it’s partly fear, partly a sense of renewal.”
The intercom beeped. It was Bugs Benet’s line.
Liz turned to go. “Don’t be afraid to push back,” she said. “Aggression externalized is preferable to aggression internalized.”
“Isn’t that how wars start?” Hood asked as the intercom beeped again.
“No,” Liz said. “Was the American Revolution about tea? Was the Civil War about slavery?”
“In part—”
“Bingo. War is never about one thing,” Liz said. “It’s about one thing that was never addressed and became two things, then three, and finally exploded and consumed everything.”
She was right. “Thanks, Liz,” Hood said as he picked up the phone.
“Anytime,” she said.
Hood nodded gratefully as he took the call. “What is it, Bugs?”
“Chief, the White House just called,” Bugs said. “The president wants to see you in two hours.”
“Did he say why?”
“No,” Bugs said.
Being asked to see the president was not unprecedented. However, if Hood had any doubt about the wisdom of Liz’s advice, it evaporated when he asked who else was going to be there.
“Senator Debenport,” Bugs replied.
TWENTY-ONE
With the flags of Texas and the United States as his backdrop, the dome of the Capitol between them, bright morning light causing his gray eyes to sparkle, Senator Donald Orr announced his candidacy for president. A crowd of some two-dozen supporters cheered. Half as many reporters recorded the moment.
Mike Rodgers stood well off to the side with Kat Lockley. He had called early to tell her he was going to accept the job offer and she told him Orr would appreciate having him at the announcement. Rodgers was glad to be invited. Admiral Link stood anonymously among Orr’s supporters with Kendra Peterson. Explaining the presence of Rodgers or Link was not a concern. Kat had told the gathering ahead of time that there would be no questions. The press secretary had looked directly at Lucy O’Connor when she said that. Rodgers was not in uniform, and it was unlikely that any member of the press corps would recognize him, either as the deputy director of Op-Center or from the news coverage of the UN siege or the assault in India. Those stories had been about Op-Center, not about him. Rodgers had wanted to be here so he could see how his future boss operated in public. He was certainly impressed with the way Orr had handled himself in his two television appearances. Rodgers routinely taped both the Evening News and Nightline appearances on his digital recorder. The senator was a master of working the camera. He addressed issues directly and with clarity. When he was not speaking, he used a lowered eyelid, a raised brow, a slight pursing of the lips, or a slant of the head to express himself. Orr knew the difference between communicating and mugging.
“This will not be an ordinary campaign,” Orr promised after making his introductory statement. “It will be inaugurated — and I use that term with an eye on the future,” he said with a big wink, pausing for applause from his supporters. “It will be inaugurated under the banner of a new party with a new vision for the nation. The United States First Party, working for a new independence.”
There were cheers and strong applause from supporters.
Kat leaned toward Rodgers. “That’s the slogan,” she said.