Tel didn’t know what he was talking about, but rather than pursuing it, he asked the one question that consumed him. “Why?” He waited for what seemed an eternity.
Kamigami finally came to his feet, looked out to sea, and gestured at the oil platforms. “Maybe something to do with that. I don’t know.” He picked up a shovel and walked quickly toward the amah’s kampong. At a distinctive bend at the halfway point, he stepped off the path. He counted the steps to an open spot and started digging. The shovel clanged off a hard object. Kamigami scooped out more dirt and handed up a metal chest sealed in plastic wrap. He cut away the plastic, knocked off the hasps with the shovel, and threw back the lid. He removed a bundle from the chest and unwrapped it to reveal a submachine gun coated in Cosmo-line. “A Heckler and Koch MP5,” Kamigami said. “It’s time you learned how to clean and assemble one.”
For the next hour Kamigami and Tel methodically stripped and cleaned the MP5 and a well-used Beretta nine-millimeter automatic. When they were finished, Kamigami packed two rucksacks, hiding the two weapons. Then he dressed in dark gray-green pants and a black T-shirt, taking care as he laced his jungle boots. The boots were the only military item he was wearing. He threw Tel a pair of pants and a T-shirt that were much too large for him. “We’ll find something that fits later,” he told him, shouldering one of the rucksacks and adjusting the straps. Satisfied that it fit properly, he went into a deep crouch as his right hand reached back and snapped open a flap at the bottom corner of the rucksack. The MP5 fell out, into his hand. He slapped in a clip as he brought the weapon to the ready. The sound echoed in the smoky air.
Tel stared at the dark specter towering in front of him. He had never seen such a look on the face of a human being.
Kamigami gestured at the second rucksack. “You coming?”
One
The formal dedication ceremony of the Matthew Pontowski Presidential Library was over, but Madeline O’Keith Turner did not leave. Instead the president of the United States strolled down the hillside garden chatting with two former presidents and savoring the unusually clear and mild August day. From time to time they would stop and take in the magnificent vista overlooking San Francisco Bay with its view of the Oakland Bay Bridge and the city on the hill. A breeze washed over them, gently ruffling the president’s hair, creating a charming effect not lost on the TV cameras that were held at a distance on the veranda of the small library building.
The presidential entourage hovered in the background, nervously checking their watches. Only her personal assistant, Nancy Bender, was unconcerned with what the delay would do to the president’s carefully crafted campaign schedule. She alone knew what was on the president’s mind.
The deputy chief of staff rushed up to Nancy. “How much longer will the president be?” the young man asked. “I’ve got a campaign to run…can’t delay much longer.”
Nancy stifled a sigh. Like so many who worked in the White House, he had an overblown opinion of his importance because of the position he occupied. “Yes you can,” she replied. But she immediately relented. He’s got a point, Maddy. Madeline “Maddy” Turner had just emerged from a hard-fought primary campaign and turbulent convention to win her party’s nomination for president. It had been a near thing, which was unusual for an incumbent. Now her old rival and nemesis, Senator John Leland, was determined to deny her the election and get his boy elected, the former congressman and now governor David Grau. Leland and Grau’s opening salvo was an attack on her legitimacy. They claimed she was a political lightweight and incompetent, not capable of leading the United States, and had come to the presidency only through the vice presidency and the death of President Quentin Roberts. It was turning into a savage personal fight, and the fall campaign and run-up to the November election promised to be a brutal, take-no-prisoners battle.
A woman reporter floating behind Nancy said, “She may be the most beautiful widow in the United States.” Nancy agreed, for Maddy was at her best on this particular day. The president’s brown eyes sparkled with life, and her makeup was perfect for the sunlight, accentuating her high cheekbones and smooth complexion. “That white linen suit is very elegant,” the reporter continued. “She has a fabulous figure.”
Indeed she does, Nancy thought. She waited for the inevitable question.
“Off the record,” the reporter ventured, “is there anything to the rumor about Matt Pontowski?”
Nancy knew better than to deny it. “Only what the president has said,” she answered. “They’re good friends and have the same mutual interests as any parents.” She didn’t have to explain what the “mutual interests” were. The reporter knew that the president’s and Pontowski’s fifteen-year-old sons were best friends attending New Mexico Military Institute in Roswell. Nancy saw the cause of the delay move down the veranda and walk across the lawn toward the presidential party. She glanced at her watch and went in search of the deputy chief of staff. She found him still fretting over the delay. “Thirty minutes” was all she said. The young man scurried away to set the wheels of the campaign back in motion. “Oh, Maddy,” Nancy breathed. “He does light your fire, doesn’t he?”
The “he” was Matthew Zachary Pontowski III, the president of the library and grandson of the late President Matthew Zachary Pontowski. Every person, not to mention the TV reporters, at the dedication ceremony of President Pontowski’s library was talking endlessly about the physical resemblance of Matt Pontowski to his famous ancestor. Pontowski was exactly six feet tall, lanky, and with the same piercing blue eyes and hawklike nose. His shock of graying brown hair with its barely controlled cowlick was an exact replica of the late president’s, and he even walked with the same limp. Like his grandfather and father, he had flown fighter aircraft in combat, but no reporter really understood the significance of that. Still, it was the stuff that made news good entertainment, and they played it to the hilt.
Secretly each reporter hoped there was some truth to the rumor of an affair between Madeline Turner and Pontowski. But a strong sense of self-preservation held them in check — for always lurking in the background was Patrick Flannery Shaw. No one knew exactly what Shaw did as the special assistant to the president; however, he had direct access to Turner at any time and any place. That, plus a well-deserved reputation as the president’s pit bull, made it mandatory to stay on his good side. The one White House reporter who had gotten crosswise with Shaw had suddenly found himself reporting local events in Pocatello, Idaho. It was an object lesson that didn’t need repeating.
The TV cameras on the veranda zoomed in on Pontowski. “Matt,” Maddy called, “what a wonderful ceremony.” She extended her hand. “I was quite moved by your words. He was a wonderful man.”