They were "Islamists," and during America's long war on terror a lot had been learned about the financial, technical, and ideological links between the purists of Islam. The mob closing in on them now had bitterly fought in the streets and in the Palestinian Legislative Council for the imposition of the shari'ah, an Islamic legal system not unlike the one the Taliban had imposed on the poor souls of Afghanistan. Like the Taliban, they wanted a world where women couldn't be educated, couldn't work, couldn't show their face. A world where women couldn't wear nail polish, couldn't smile or laugh in public, couldn't listen to Mozart. Indeed, they could be flogged or stoned or killed for trying. They wanted a world where children couldn't play with toys or dolls or watch Sesame Street or have birthday parties. They wanted a world where men ruled and ruled ruthlessly, just like the Taliban.
These were kindred spirits with the Iranian-funded Hezbollah of Lebanon. They'd been supporters of Hamas and Islamic Jihad. But wherever they lived or whatever they called themselves, the mission of the "Islamists" was the same — to conquer in the name of Mohammed. They'd danced in the streets when the Ayatollah Khomeini led the Islamic revolution in Iran and took Americans hostage for 444 days. They'd danced in the streets when Osama bin Laden and the Saudi-funded Al-Qaeda attacked the World Trade Center and Pentagon on September 11, 2001. And in the subsequent U.S. war in Afghanistan, they'd joyfully sided with their "Muslim brothers" in the Taliban.
One Reuters headline McCoy had come across before leaving Washington now came flashing back: "Hamas Backs Taliban, Urges Muslim Unity." The article was dated September 14, 2001, just three days after the terrorist attacks that left three thousand Americans dead. Cited prominently in the story, Abdel-Aziz al-Rantissi of Hamas couldn't have been more clear. "I join the cause for Muslims to be united in order to deter the United States from launching war against Muslims in Afghanistan," al-Rantissi said proudly. "It is impossible for Muslims to stand handcuffed and blindfolded while other Muslims, their brothers, are being attacked. The Muslim world should stand up against the American threats which are fed by the Jews."
There it was, in black and white. The "dots" were "connected." Radical Muslims in Gaza and the West Bank were soul mates with their brethren in Afghanistan, not to mention those in Tehran and Riyadh. They saw the world the same way. They fought for the same objectives. They'd supported each other in the same struggles. This was an alien world into which she and Bennett had just been submerged. It was an alien world out of which they now had to fight.
McCoy fought back a flood of emotions. Her own father had died fighting radical Islam. Was she destined to do the same? Sean McCoy had worked for the CIA. Now she did, too. He'd been a senior advisor to the president of the United States. Now she was, too. Despite his strong marriage, he'd struggled with putting his career ahead of love. Wasn't she doing that, too? "There are only two places for a woman," a Taliban leader once said. "In her husband's house, and in the graveyard."
Erin McCoy had no husband, and she didn't want to die.
Not here. Not yet.
FIVE
MacPherson's head was pounding.
He hung up the phone and shut his eyes. In a few minutes, Jackie Sanchez of the United States Secret Service would be knocking on his door. She'd move him into the next room where he'd be patched through to the National Security Council via a secure satellite video teleconferencing system. But there were too many questions to answer. Could they mount a rescue operation? Should they ask the Israelis to? Could all this really be the work of one man? Why, then, the gun battle? And were these attacks isolated to the Palestinian territories? Or were they likely to see new terrorist attacks unleashed throughout Israel, and/or against American interests all over the globe?
The motorcade was ready.
Now all they needed was the vice president. Special Agent in Charge Steve Sinclair — head of the VP's protective detail — was edgy. His orders had been clear. Get Checkmate to the Situation Room quickly and without incident. Most of the principals were already on their way to the White House. The NSC meeting was scheduled to begin in less than ten minutes. Given that the VP was supposed to chair the meeting in the president's absence, it wouldn't do to be late. Not tonight.
MacPherson simply couldn't believe it.
He and Secretary of State Tucker Paine had hardly been kindred spirits. But they'd known one another for more than a decade, and they'd become useful to each other.
MacPherson couldn't really remember exactly how they'd met, but he was pretty sure it had been in Denver. A middle-class kid, MacPherson had grown up in Lakewood, Colorado, graduated from Harvard, then joined the navy, went to Top Gun school and headed to Vietnam. When he'd come back to the States, MacPherson moved to Manhattan, made a fortune with Fidelity, then moved back to Denver where he was making quite a name for himself— and an even more impressive fortune — as founder and CEO of Global Stra tegix, Inc., and the Joshua Fund, two of the premier institutions in the financial services industry.
Somewhere along the line, he'd met Paine, an old-money gazillionaire whose family seemed to own half of Colorado and wanted to run for the state's open U.S. Senate seat. Paine wasn't the sharpest knife in the drawer. He was a bit too moderate for MacPherson's liking — good on taxes and growth, bad on education and the life issue, horrible on defense and national security issues. But if Hollywood was going to make a movie about a crusty old patrician senator with a penchant for French wine and a good pipe after dinner, Tucker Paine was direct from central casting.
GOP control of the Senate hung in the balance at the time and it wasn't a tough call. MacPherson was nothing if not a loyal Republican, and even then he'd had his own political ambitions. He was planning a run for gov ernor and his chief political advisor — Bob Corsetti, now the White House chief of staff — made the case succinctly: to blow through the primaries and win the nomination in a landslide, MacPherson needed to find a way to unite the state's conservative and moderate factions. It wouldn't be easy.
As a pro-flat tax, prolife, former navy fighter pilot, MacPherson could count on strong support from the conservative political base in and around Colorado Springs in the south, Fort Collins in the north, and the more rural congressional districts in the mountains and on the plains near Kansas. But Denver itself, MacPherson's hometown, would be tougher. Republicans there tended to be wealthier and more moderate, and though his Wall Street suc cesses had helped him build inroads among the country club crowd, Corsetti concluded that if MacPherson strongly backed Tucker Paine, it certainly couldn't hurt. And it hadn't.
MacPherson took Corsetti's advice. He helped Paine raise more than $2.5 million in less than six months, as Paine was too cheap to spend his own money. Unfortunately, Paine went on to lose the Senate race — though he soon was named U.S. ambassador to the U.N. — but MacPherson picked up a boatload of goodwill and a pocket full of chits. A few years later, he went on to win the GOP nomination for governor without opposition, winning Paine's much-desired endorsement along the way. And in the process he'd laid the groundwork for two successful terms in the governor's mansion, and a storybook run for the White House in 2008 after two Bush terms.