“Mark Aker and Trilogy water,” Walt said.
“We should have known about Trilogy. That was a horrible oversight on our part. We didn’t even know that bottling facility existed. Very stupid of us.”
“The ranchers had contacted the vets before you got to them.”
“Aker saw how sick the livestock was. He was in the midst of trying to help when we had to ask the ranchers to turn him away. They made excuses that they’d switched to a local vet. And that might have stuck if the local vet had been made to play along. But Aker must have run into him, or followed up with him, and the lie was exposed. And Aker came looking.”
“But then Randy Aker was your doing,” Walt said.
“My people say no. Perhaps to protect me, but they say it wasn’t us. Our best guess is that it has something to do with the Samakinn. They left a note, long since in the hands of the FBI, a rambling manifesto about the wrongs of the country. They want their message heard. You know the drill.”
“And by covering up any news of the leak… the sabotage,” he corrected, “you’ve pissed them off.”
“A dozen miscreants don’t dictate how this country is run. They called some newspapers to make their claim. We fielded some calls as a result. We denied any mishap, as did the administration. No harm, no foul. Another group of wackos making unsubstantiated claims. No damaging articles ever ran. The Samakinn blogged about the spill on the Internet, but without any kind of proof…”
“Which is where I come in,” Walt said. “Why should I believe any of this? An NDA isn’t proof of anything.”
“No, it’s not.” He paused. “I thought you might go there.” He walked over to the office door and opened it, murmuring to someone on the other side. A young woman entered, and glanced at Walt as she crossed behind the senator’s desk. She spoke on the phone for several minutes while working the senator’s computer. Walt and Hillabrand waited in silence.
When the aide spoke, Walt thought it was to him. But it was, in fact, to the computer.
“Are we ready?” she said.
“We’re good on this end,” a voice returned.
Hillabrand moved to the door and waited for the aide, who motioned for Walt to take the chair.
She said, “You don’t have to do anything. Just sit.”
Walt moved around the desk to see the face of a twentysomething man on the screen.
“Sheriff Fleming?”
“Yes,” Walt said, sliding into the comfortable chair.
“Stand by for Vice President Shaler.”
The man vacated the screen. Walt saw only a set of drapes and some framed photographs. The ski mountain in the nearest photo was all too familiar to him.
Walt glanced over at Hillabrand, who stood half out the door. “Hopefully, you’ll believe her. I’ll be waiting just outside.” He pulled the door shut.
“Walt?”
She had sneaked onto the screen while Walt had been distracted with Hillabrand.
“How great to see you!” she exclaimed.
“Madame Vice President…”
“Enough of that, Walt. It’s ‘Liz,’ and you know better.”
“You look well.”
“I am, thank you. And you? You look tired.”
“I know your time must be limited. I was just speaking to Roger Hillabrand. He said you might clarify some of this.”
“Everything I presume Roger has told you is accurate, Walt. We were attacked, and we’ve had to play hardball to protect current negotiations. Its important for you to know that both houses have been briefed through committee. There is no cover-up taking place. It may take twenty-five years and the Freedom of Information Act for any but a handful of people to know about this incident, but that’s how the game has to be played sometimes.”
“They tried to frame Danny Cutter on a drug charge,” Walt said. “Is that protocol?”
“I can’t speak to specifics. I have heard that, in certain instances, pressure points were determined and taken advantage of in order to ensure full cooperation. They have to make absolutely sure that everyone will sign the NDA and cooperate fully. They can’t risk anything short of that. If a witness hesitates, there has to be backup. Some of this behavior is despicable, and I apologize for that. I’ve expressed my displeasure at some of the tactics used.”
“My wife? My children?” Walt suddenly saw Gail’s intrusion differently.
“What about them?”
“Never mind.”
“Tell me. Please.”
“It’s unrelated.”
“It may not be, Walt,” she said. “Please, tell me.”
He briefly explained Gail’s claiming the girls for herself-this after leaving the marriage because she felt overwhelmed by motherhood. It hadn’t added up until just this moment.
“I’m wondering if she didn’t get an anonymous phone call implying some kind of failure on my part. I’m wondering if there wasn’t some behind-the-scenes look at my divorce papers.”
“Walt, I would never condone such a thing. I want you to know that. The president and I are briefed regularly about the situation out there but certainly haven’t heard all the details. Nothing about what you claim happened to Danny Cutter, and most definitely nothing to do with you. I can, and will, make some calls.”
“A thing like this,” Walt said, “the sabotage, it can’t be contained. Not once it’s in the water. You know that, right?”
“Do you mean the news of the event or the contamination itself?”
“Both.”
“As to the contamination, it was minimal. There’s a tremendous volume of water we’re dealing with. Levels are well off of where they were two and three weeks ago. Another two weeks, we’re told, and we’re in the clear.” She pursed her lips as her attention was drawn offscreen. “As to the spread of information, we believe it can be contained, has to be contained. We need your cooperation, your assistance, in seeing that happens.”
“I signed the NDA, Liz. I’m not going to risk a stay in Leavenworth. I won’t say anything.”
“It’s more than that. It’s Mark Aker. We need to extract him before he’s forced to publish something that could be damaging.”
“Publish?”
“Maybe Roger didn’t tell you everything. What the Samakinn seek most is notoriety. Credibility. They believe credibility comes through verification, confirmation the sabotage was effective.”
“Scientific proof,” Walt said. “Like a veterinarian’s report on the sheep.”
“The sabotage is under investigation. The Samakinn must have had inside help. Roger’s people have been working twenty-four/seven with the Bureau, attempting to turn up the mole. Our information is that the Bureau has surveillance in place. They are ready to strike. We both know what happens to Mark Aker if he’s anywhere near them when that strike occurs.”
“I need whatever intel’s available,” Walt said, sitting forward in the chair.
“I’m not privy to the details. It’s too far out of my area of operations.”
“But you said yourself, Mark has to be extracted.”
“There’s a genuine fear of Ruby Ridge here, Walt. It’s one of the things holding the Bureau back. If they make this into a standoff, the Samakinn win the press coverage they so desperately seek. It’s a no-win for us. And that’s got all of us looking at alternatives. But if Mark Aker’s out of the equation, there’s a lot more leeway. There’s still time for you to help us fix this.”