Wallace Forsyth admired the way the man slightly adjusted his personality to fit each situation while maintaining the polished veneer of the career politician. Forsyth was no political slouch, but playing folksy, down-home politics in East Kentucky was a much simpler game than prepping for the national stage.
Now, as they drove northeast toward Raleigh on I-85, Burchfield studied the morning edition of the Observer.
“Only down six points,” Burchfield said. “Thank the Lord for Tea Party wackos fracturing the base.”
“Now, Daniel, they’re a vital part of your constituency,” Forsyth said. “Besides, you’ve got plenty of time to make a push. The Iowa caucus is still seven months away. Lots can happen between now and then.”
“Yeah. Like some goddamned TV celebrity could enter the race.”
“You got ’em all beat on looks,” Forsyth drawled. “And you got most of ’em beat on money. Just keep beating that donkey with a stick and it will start braying like a jackass.”
Burchfield softened slightly at the compliments. He flapped the newspaper, folded it, and tossed it on the back ledge. The driver, a Secret Service agent named Abernethy, was separated from them by a layer of soundproof glass. The back of the limousine had become an informal Command Central for the campaign, although the official headquarters were in Burchfield’s hometown of Winston-Salem.
They’d be setting up satellite offices around the country, but North Carolina was one of the few Southern Red states that occasionally swung Democratic. It was important for Burchfield to make a stand on his home turf, even if he had to fend off a pack of well-heeled conservative challengers in his own party first.
“Any news on the Morgans?” Burchfield asked.
Forsyth fished his cell from the inside of his jacket. It was some fancy BlackBerry and did all kinds of tricks that scared him half to death. Burchfield had forced him to learn to text and operate the pager system, but that was about all Forsyth could handle. He was afraid he’d hit the wrong button and send out some top-secret memo or one of those slips of the tongue that the media would twist out of shape.
But since it wasn’t government-owned, Burchfield had assured him, nobody could file a public-records request on his messages.
“Why don’t we just check up on them, if I can figure this thing out,” he said.
“Careful you don’t trigger the Star Wars missile defense system,” Burchfield teased.
“Maybe I could send a bomb into San Francisco and make the world a better place.”
“Now, Wallace, they’re American citizens just like the rest of us. If there’s any killing to be done, let’s keep it in the Middle East where it belongs.”
“California’s a lost cause, anyway. Unless you hog-tied Schwarzenegger as your running mate.”
Burchfield smirked. “You know the rules, Wallace. Never pick a sidekick who’s more macho than you are.”
“If I was younger, Daniel, I’d be mighty offended.”
“Don’t worry. The ‘elder statesman’ thing is in. Cheney, Biden, people kind of like a VP who stays in the background.”
Forsyth laboriously punched in the numbers. The limousine ride was smooth, but Wallace hadn’t eaten since the Rotary Club ham biscuits, and his blood sugar was a little low. When he thought he had the numbers right, he waited for the ring and the terse response: “Scagnelli.”
“It’s Wallace. What you got going on?”
“Doing my job.”
“That’s reassuring. And what exactly do you imagine that is today?”
“One thing I need to know. Do you have other agents on this job?”
“Just the CIA agents were brought into play.” Which was true, if Wallace considered the “job” to be keeping the Morgans under surveillance. “How did she react?”
“The doctor’s just going about her business. Well, she was. Then hubby went a little over the top.”
“Damn,” Wallace hissed, drawing a cocked eyebrow from Burchfield, who rarely heard him cuss. “Is he violent?”
“Well, not quite. He’s apparently stolen a car belonging to the Durham Technical Institute where he’s taking his cop classes.”
“That’s all we need, for the local police to get in on this.”
“No problem. Just call up the head of the program, tell him it’s a matter of national security, the whole bit. They won’t be too anxious for the media to get hold of the story. Talk about a black eye for your cop program.”
“Where are you now?”
“The Morgans are together, traveling away from town in the stolen car. No stops since he picked her up in Chapel Hill. I’m tailing them, but it’s not high-speed.”
“Good. Keep it below the radar as long as you can.”
“Let me handle it solo, and I can guarantee it. Bring in any others and it’s not my problem.”
“Do you know where they’re headed?”
“They’re heading north out of Chapel Hill.”
“Stay with them and call me when you find out the destination. Is he armed?”
“Wouldn’t you be?”
“That means Dr. Morgan’s at risk. She must be protected at any cost.”
“Yesterday you wanted her dead at any cost.”
“That was yesterday. Those records the CIA hacked suggest she may be onto something. I want to know what it is.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Any cost.”
“I heard you the first time.” A pause. “Sir.”
Forsyth rang off and prepared his response, wondering how much he wanted to tell his friend and political ally.
“That didn’t sound so good,” Burchfield said.
“Dr. Morgan probably has Seethe. Her husband’s as addled as a frog in a butter churn.”
“Goddamn it.” Burchfield punched the back of the seat with the bottom of his fist, causing Abernethy to slow and check the rearview. Burchfield gave an impatient wave forward and the driver accelerated again. “I didn’t trust them to destroy it, but I didn’t think they’d start playing with it.”
“Maybe this is a good thing, Daniel. If she’s cooked some of it up, then it didn’t die with Sebastian Briggs.”
“But we’ve searched her labs and her house and her office, checked up on all her associates, and tracked down every web search she’s made and every journal article she’s checked out. Lots of pieces, but no goddamned puzzle.”
You don’t know about the piece named Darrell Silver.
“Dr. Morgan learned a lot from Sebastian Briggs,” Forsyth said. “And she learned that you can’t trust nobody, especially when you’re in the business of scrambling people’s brains.”
“I want it,” Burchfield said. “And I want them buried.” He stared out the window. “I should have dealt with all this last year. That industrial accident could have just as easily claimed half a dozen more lives.”
“‘The quality of mercy ain’t strained, it drops like the gentle rain from heaven.’”
“Shakespeare? I didn’t know you could quote from anything but the Bible.”
Forsyth actually was quoting Barney Fife from an episode of The Andy Griffith Show, but he let it go. Someone like Burchfield valued book smarts over real-world wisdom, and it was one of his weaknesses. But Forsyth was cunning enough to exaggerate his slow drawl and backwoods upbringing, because it always led people to underestimate him, especially his opponents.
And Burchfield might be one of them soon enough.
“Scagnelli’s one of the best,” Forsyth said. “And he won’t talk once it’s over.”
“How can you be so sure?”
He couldn’t. But he’d given the consultant enough amphetamines from the labs of Darrell Silver that Scagnelli would gobble just about anything Forsyth handed him.
“I’ve known Scagnelli since his DEA days,” Forsyth said. “He can play both sides of the fence as good as anybody.”
“Okay. Keep him close. Everybody who gets near this stuff seems to want a piece of it.”
“Heaven forbid.”
“And if this new Seethe works as good as the stuff Briggs made…” Burchfield trailed off, apparently casting about for dim memories of the Monkey House calamity. Forsyth’s own memories of that night were of a lurid encounter with Satan, a vision that fully convinced Forsyth that the final days were upon them. Satan not only walked the Earth, but he was drawing ever closer to the nation’s capital.