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“Mr. Garrity,” Judge O’Connell said in a more subdued fashion. “What could you possibly say to refute what we just saw?”

Michael glanced down at the lengthy note Jay was pushing across to him and read it quickly before continuing.

“My Lord, I’ll readily admit that what we have just seen purports to be a scene in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington and a scandalous exchange between President Harris and Mr. Reynolds. I’ll also admit that the possessory chain of this tape from Mr. Reynolds’s hands to the present moment has been clearly and satisfactorily established. But in this day and age, not all that we see and hear can be believed. Electronic means exist to alter images and sound, and I submit to you that a very real possibility exists that the sound track on this tape is not the original sound track, but a substitute, carefully and cynically dubbed onto this tape cassette for the purpose of railroading an ex-president. After all, My Lord, we have the government of Peru directly involved in seeking to secure John Harris for purposes of criminal prosecution. With the power and resources of a sovereign nation involved, anything that is electronically possible could have been used to alter this tape.”

“Do you have evidence of alteration, Mr. Garrity?” O’Connell asked.

“No, My Lord. But the defendant should not bear the burden of proving that this tape is false. It is Mr. Campbell who should bear the burden of proving that it is authentic, yet he offers the tape with no firsthand witnesses and no means by which we can be sure whose voices we have heard.”

Stuart Campbell rose to his feet. “My Lord, as to the matter of who has the burden of proof, I beg the court recognize that this is but a hearing on the sufficiency of the warrant. The opportunity for President Harris to contest in detail or even wholly impeach the validity of this videotape will be afforded in the criminal trial in Lima. This is not the forum for testing the tape, but merely for showing that there is a prima facie reason to believe that Mr. Harris may have committed the crime as charged.”

“My Lord,” Michael countered, “are you prepared to rule, as Mr. Campbell desires, that the authenticity of this tape may not be questioned in this forum?”

“No, Mr. Garrity, I am not,” Mr. Justice O’Connell replied. “I’m reserving that judgment for the moment.”

“Then, My Lord,” Michael continued, taking a breath, “I offer into evidence what may well be the real videotape taken clandestinely, and illegally, by Mr. Barry Reynolds on the date in question.”

The judge looked confused for a moment as Stuart Campbell turned with a blank expression.

“I’m sorry, Mr. Garrity, I don’t understand,” O’Connell said.

Jay pushed the videotape cassette across the table to Michael, who held it up.

“We have here a videotape of the same encounter, and I request My Lord’s leave to play it.”

“The same tape?” O’Connell replied with ill-disguised irritation. “Why?”

“My Lord, the reason for this will become very clear if you’ll grant leave to present it.”

“Have you any documentation supporting the authenticity of this tape?”

“Indeed, I do, My Lord,” Michael said, following the script they’d agreed to. “This tape was delivered to Mr. Reinhart last evening, and we have the affidavit of the hotel desk clerk bridging the possessory chain between Mr. Campbell’s people and Mr. Reinhart. Mr. Campbell represented that this tape was identical to one he just displayed in this court.”

“It is the same tape, then?” O’Connell said.

“Well, yes and no, My Lord.”

“Enough games, Mr. Garrity! Is the bloody thing the same or not?”

“My Lord, the videocassette is precisely the same one provided by Mr. Campbell and his team, and the images are the same, but there is another sound track of which Mr. Campbell is undoubtedly unaware, and by using a different format, we can play that sound track.”

“A different sound track? I see,” O’Connell said, his irritation suddenly subsiding into puzzlement. “I am aware, Mr. Garrity, that in some cases there are multiple sound tracks on videotapes.”

“My Lord!” Stuart Campbell said in a pained voice. “This is nonsense. I have played for you the original tape, and there is but one sound track on it.”

“Are you certain of that, Mr. Campbell?” O’Connell asked. “Are you an expert in the electronics of such instruments?”

“Well, no, My Lord, but…”

“Then I’m sufficiently curious to want to see and hear this. Proceed, Mr. Garrity.”

Michael handed the tape to Jay, who came forward and inserted it into the larger videocassette player hooked to the television. He pressed the “play” button and returned to the table as the screen came alive again with the same images.

EuroAir 1020, in Flight

“It’s getting better, Craig,” Alastair said after a flurry of new calculations at thirty-one thousand feet.

“Thank God!”

“We’re not out of the woods yet, but I’m estimating arrival at Galway with one thousand five hundred pounds of fuel remaining, and that’s in… an hour and ten minutes.”

“The winds are holding, then?”

Alastair nodded. “So far, so good. The problem is the weather at Galway. There’s an ILS, but right now the field is beset by fog and it’s right at minimums.”

“Galway’s on the coast, right?”

He nodded. “On Galway Bay. They get sea fog.”

“If we have to bust minimums to get in, we’ll bust minimums.”

“The decision height is two hundred feet above the surface.”

“Roger that. If necessary, we’ll take it all the way to the surface, provided we’re precisely on centerline,” Craig said. “We’ll use category three-A procedures as if the field was good to fifty feet. We’ll use both autopilots, brief a monitored approach, you’ll fly the approach, and I’ll take over to do the landing.”

“Instead of my doing a missed approach at fifty feet if we can’t see the runway?”

“At fifteen hundred pounds remaining, we won’t have the fuel for a safe go around. We’ll get one shot at it.”

The Four Courts, Dublin, Ireland

Jay Reinhart pushed the “play” button, sending the voice of President John Harris over the TV’s speakers against a scratchy background of ambient noise, the words seeming to be the same at first, but then becoming markedly different, even though the pictures on the screen were identical.

“Okay, Barry, where are we? Are we set?”

“Well, sir,” a voice closer to the microphone and correspondingly louder began, “we’re ready to go, but it’s going to be costly.”

“How much… want?”

“They’re asking for a million dollars in U.S. funds.”

“… already agreed to that.”

“Yes, Mr. President. I remember the instructions.”

“Now, Barry… critical question to ask you. Are these people controllable?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Are you absolutely sure that they understand… orders here, that there be no excessive force… absolutely no violence beyond the minimum necessary to destroy the factory?”

“They do, sir.”

“I’m… concerned… harm no innocent civilians. I don’t care how many witnesses there are, I don’t want the workers harmed unless… shooting, that sort of thing.”

“Understood, sir.”

Stuart Campbell was shaking his head in amazement with his hands held out in frustration as he queried his team and came up with no explanations.

On the tape, the President sighed and crossed his arms with his head still not in view.