“Oh, he knows, but he accepted my explanation,” Craig said, stealing a piece of Alastair’s toast and dumping a small pitcher of cream into his freshly poured coffee.
“Aha!” Alastair said, raising his remaining slice of toast for emphasis. “Now we get to the truth! You flummoxed him once more!”
“I’m sorry, what? Oh! You’re into Britspeak again, aren’t you?”
“Flummoxed. Bamboozled. Pulled the wool. Messed with his mind.”
“Oh, yeah. Mind messing. That one I got.”
“Craig, what in heaven’s name did you tell him?”
“I simply told him…” Craig began, as he searched the menu and drew out the suspense.
“Yes? What?”
“I told him that we’d cancelled our instrument clearance in order to stay in international airspace to prevent diplomatic problems, and for some reason London Center couldn’t hear our subsequent radio calls.”
“That’s all?”
“Well… I might have told him… or might have somehow suggested… that we were operating on direct orders from the Royal Air Force and the White House.”
“Direct…?”
“Direct orders. I told him it was classified. He said he didn’t want to know.”
“Yes, I imagine. Nor would I.”
“He’s beginning to act like Schultz, in Hogan’s Heroes. Did you ever see that show? Remember old Schultz? Whenever Hogan or his guys would pull something, Schultz would scream: I know nothing!”
“I think I envy Schultz. So… we’re still employed for a few more hours?”
“For a few more hours. Wanna go to Maine?”
“Do I have a choice?”
“No.”
“So… what’s the determining factor for a ‘go, no-go’ decision?”
“Primarily, whether or not President Harris is able to get out of here on a commercial flight. If he can’t, then the decision depends on the weather, the upper-level winds, careful flight planning, and the possibility that someone will find a way to refuse us departure clearance.”
“That’s a serious threat?”
“Yeah, it is. I haven’t heard from them, whether the flight’s on or not, but we have to use the North Atlantic Track System to make it direct, and they could refuse us the clearance just like that, and for no apparent reason.”
Alastair was nodding as Craig continued.
“It’d be as easy as intimidating the average FAA inspector with a call from a U.S. senator. One call from Mr. Campbell to the right people, and we’d never get off the ground.”
Secretary of State Joseph Byer hung up the telephone and sat back with his arms behind his head as an aide sat in a nearby chair with a questioning look. Byer ignored him for well over a minute, carefully marking the time necessary to reinforce the reality that he was the head wolf, as he was fond of describing himself.
“Wondering what the President wanted this time, Andrew?” he asked at last, his eyes carefully focused on the opposite wall.
“Yes, sir.”
“He wanted to know why, if we’d determined that Harris and Reinhart are in Dublin, weren’t we in Dublin, too, holding their hands.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Know why?”
“No, sir. I mean, I think I do, but I didn’t hear what you told him.”
“I told him that Harris’s lawyer insists on running the show, and Harris insists on letting him, so we’ll just wait until Harris gets himself arrested and then we’ll fly over and offer to help pick up the pieces. And if they don’t want our help, so be it. We’ll just monitor the situation. Let Harris twist in the wind awhile.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Meantime, get the others in here. We’ve got some official channels to engage in Ireland.”
“You’re not fond of Harris, are you, sir?”
“Has nothing to do with politics, Andrew. I heard about the allegations Mr. Campbell made in that hearing, that Harris knowingly approved torture and murder. I’m deeply worried there could really be such a tape.”
“And if there is?”
Byer lowered his arms and turned to look at his aide. “If there is, John Harris is in far more trouble than even he knows, and he’s going to drag us into a terrible debacle. The harm he could do to American foreign policy cannot be overstated.”
Mr. Justice Gerald O’Connell had slapped his tiny electronic alarm clock across the room for the offense of waking a High Court judge before he was ready to regain consciousness.
That was thirty minutes before he admitted to himself that the hour of ten o’clock was not a respectable time to be in bed alone, even on a holiday.
The judge rolled to a sitting position and sampled his mood, finding it unusually sour. Sleeping alone was an agony and an ecstasy. With his wife on holiday in the States, he could hog the bed and the covers, but the unavailability of feminine comfort was an irritant. Mrs. Justice O’Connell – Elizabeth by given name – was still lovely and sexy and desirable and, dammit, he wanted her right now. And where was she? Instead of tending to her womanly duties, she was gallivanting halfway around the globe with her loony sister.
I’ll hold her in contempt, I will! he thought, thankful she couldn’t read such thoughts from afar. She didn’t need red hair to be fearsome when angered, and his demands sometimes infuriated her.
“So you want me now, do you, Your Lordship?” she’d screamed at him one morning several months before, pulling her gown off and standing in all her glory before the large bedroom window for the neighbors to see. “Take me, damn you! Right here, right now! Or would you rather do it in your courtroom on the bench?”
He rubbed his eyes and remembered the equally irritating fact that he was the standby judge for this holiday, available to any rotten barrister or incompetent progenitor of Irish law who couldn’t handle the tide of crime and punishment without a bewigged jurist to bless the process.
“Dammit!” he muttered aloud, just to hear the protest echo off the walls.
He almost dared the phone to ring as he boiled a couple of eggs and burned some toast for breakfast in the downstairs kitchen, and ring it did.
“Yes?”
“Mr. Justice O’Connell?”
“Who else do you think would be answering his phone on a holiday?”
“I’m sorry, Judge. I thought you were the standby…”
“Yes, I am, dammit. Who’s this?”
“Patrick Nolan, sir, of the firm of McCullogh, Malone, and Bourke. I’m afraid we have an urgent matter involving a former U.S. President, and we’ve exhausted all possibilities of securing a district judge.”
He snorted. “That figures. They’re all slacking. A U.S. President? Is this a joke?”
“No, My Lord, it isn’t.” Nolan explained the basics of the case as O’Connell sat down at his kitchen table.
“So the application is for issuance of an arrest warrant based on the Interpol warrant, is that correct?”
“Yes, My Lord.”
“So where are the Garda? Such a warrant has to be presented by them, not by a private firm.”
“It will be, My Lord. I’m merely assisting them.”
“Will the application be opposed by Mr. Harris’s counsel?”
“We’re certain it will be, and we’re ready to notify them when you’re ready to receive us, Judge.”
“Why on earth would you think I have jurisdiction of a case like this? It’s just a warrant!”
Carefully and quickly, Patrick Nolan laid out his argument. “Bottom line, My Lord, in the absence of a District Court and the presence of an emergency, you may assert jurisdiction, if you so desire.”
“Well, I may hear it, but get it out of your head that you’re coming to my house today.”