-3-
Senator Clark picked
up the gavel, almost as an afterthought, and let it fall to the
wooden block. Members of his committee were already out of their
chairs and headed for the door. It was very unusual for senators to
be working at all on a Friday, let alone into the late afternoon.
But Washington was in the midst of a fall budget battle, and
everybody was putting in the extra hours to try to find a way
around the impending impasse. As was often the case, the
Republicans wanted a tax break and the Democrats wanted to increase
spending. The president, for a change, was actually trying to
broker a compromise rather than exploit the situation, but neither
party was willing to budge. The town was more partisan than ever.
The polarization of special interests had left little room in the
middle. You were either part of the solution or part of the
problem. It was no longer okay to hold certain beliefs, no matter
how well thought out. If you disagreed, you were the enemy. It had
become a town of absolutes, and Senator Clark didn't like it. He
had got into politics because it was the next mountain to climb,
not because he enjoyed stubborn, senseless partisan agendas. It was
beneath him, and it wasn't worth his time.
Hank Clark had been
in the United States Senate for twenty-two years. He had thrown his
hat into the ring after the Nixon resignation. Trust in politicians
was at an all-time low; and the people of Arizona wanted an
outsider. Someone who had made a name for himself. Hank Clark was
their man. The new businessman of the West. A true self-made
millionaire.
Henry Thomas Clark
was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1941. His father failed at
almost every business he tried, and with each failure his mother
seemed to crawl a little further into the bottle. Vodka was her
preference at first, poured liberally into screwdrivers and bloody
marys. When times were really rough, she would drink bad whiskey
and even a little Mad Dog 20/20. While Mom drank, Dad tried his
hand at every nickel-and-dime job he could get. He sold ranching
equipment, vacuum cleaners, used cars, aluminum siding, even
windmills at one point. He failed miserably at each and every one
of them, just as he had failed as a husband and a father. When Hank
was eleven, his father quit for good. He went out back, behind
their rented mobile home, and blew his brains out.
In a way; young Hank
was relieved. With his father gone, he went after life with a
determination to succeed. Hank took every spare job he could find
and spent the next seven years trying to sober up his mother and
find a way out of poverty. Fortunately for Hank, he had been
blessed with many of the fine qualities his father lacked. He was
good with people, was a tireless worker, and had an arm that could
throw a wicked curve ball. That was Hank's ticket out. After high
school he accepted a full ride to play baseball for the ASU
Sundevils. Hank was a three-time all-Pac 10 pitcher and would have
had a shot at the big leagues if it wasn't for a car accident his
senior year. After college he took a job working for a resort in
Scottsdale. It was at that resort, in the booming Phoenix suburb,
where Hank Clark started to meet the right people. People who had
vision. People who knew how to speculate on real estate.
At twenty-four Hank
left the resort and went to work as a runner for a developer he had
met. He loved helping to bring the deals together. He loved
watching people with focus do something with their money. And most
importantly, he loved the commissions. By the age of thirty Hank
had made his first million, and by thirty-five he was worth more
than twenty million dollars. Big, tall Hank Clark was the toast of
Phoenix. The developer with the Midas touch. He had climbed one
mountain, and now it was time for another.
That next mountain
was politics, and after almost a quarter of a century Clark had
decided it was insurmountable by any ethical means. The way to win
in politics was to gain an edge over one's opponent and to do it by
any means necessary, without letting him know what you were up to.
Hank Clark wanted to be president, and he had been working toward
that goal since the day he arrived in Washington in 1976.
As the senator rose
from his chair, one of the committee's staffers approached and
whispered, "Chairman Rudin is waiting for you in the bubble."
Clark nodded and
handed the man his briefing book and materials. "Please take that
back to my office for me." He then worked his way toward the door,
wishing his fellow senators and their staffers a good weekend as he
went. Hank Clark was the chairman of the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence. Most of the senators wanted to serve on the Armed
Services, Appropriations, or Judiciary committees that got a lot of
attention from the press. The intelligence committee wasn't one
that they fought to get on, as it did much of its work behind
closed doors.
The Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence and the House Permanent Select Committee
on Intelligence were charged with the oversight of the entire U.S.
intelligence community, most notably the Central Intelligence
Agency, the National Security Agency, and the National
Reconnaissance Office. Clark was the man who kept an eye on the
keepers of the secrets, and he had been methodically and quietly
storing those secrets away.
Senator Clark left
the committee room and started down the hall of the Hart Office
Building. He smiled and nodded to the people he passed. Clark was a
good politician. He made everyone feel special, even his enemies.
He turned the comer, opened a door, and stepped into a small
reception area. A Capitol Hill police officer was sitting on a
stool next to a second door on the other side of the room. The man
looked up and said, "Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman.
Clark offered an
affable smile. "How are you holding up, Roy?"
"The old back is
sore, sir, but I think I can make it another hour."
"Good. Clark patted
him on the shoulder and punched in his code to the cipher lock
beside the door. At the sound of the lock being released, he opened
the door and stepped into room SH 219. Room 219 was one of the most
secure rooms on the Hill. It was entirely encased in steel, making
it impossible for electromagnetic waves to enter or leave. The room
itself was divided into smaller rooms, each elevated off the floor
so technicians could sweep beneath for bugs.
Senator Clark
continued down the hall, passing several of the glass-enclosed
briefing rooms, where the senators and a few select staffers
received briefings from the various intelligence agencies. Near the
end of the hall he approached another door with a touch pad. Clark
punched in his personal five-digit code, and the door hissed as its
airtight seal relaxed. He entered the elevated room and closed the
door, the gasket expanding once again to its airtight position.
Black blinds covered the room's four glass walls, and a sleek black
oval conference table occupied the center of the fifteen-by-twenty-
five-foot space. There was a place at the table for each of the
committee's fifteen members. The glass-covered table had individual
reading lamps for each senator and a computer monitor mounted at an
angle under the glass. The room was dark except for one lone light
at the far end.
From where he was
standing, Senator Clark could see the thin, bony fingers of his
counterpart in the House. Congressman Albert Rudin's hands were
placed on the table under the soft light of one of the fifteen
modern black lamps. Clark could barely make out Rudin's profile in
the shadows, but it didn't matter. He had it memorized, and that
profile could belong to one of only two people: either Congressman
Albert Rudin, the chairman of the House Select Committee on
Intelligence, or Ichabod Crane.
Clark continued to
the far end of the room. "Good afternoon, Al.
Rudin didn't respond,
and Clark didn't expect him to.Al Rudin Was probably the most
socially retarded politician in Washington. Clark grabbed a glass
from the credenza behind the congressman and filled it with a
couple of shots of Johnnie Walker scotch. The senator waved the
drink in front of Rudin and asked if he'd like some. Rudin gruffly
shook his head.
Albert Rudin was in
his seventeenth term as a United States congressman. He was a
Democrat to the bone and hated absolutely every single Republican
in town with the possible exception of Senator Hank Clark. Rudin
was a tireless party hack. He did whatever it took to perpetuate
the party. If the party was embarrassed by a scandal where they
were clearly in the wrong, it was AI Rudin they paraded out in
front of the cameras. It was pretty much the same rhetoric every
time. The Republicans want to starve your children, they want to
give a tax break to their wealthy mends, they want to kick your
parents out of their nursing home - it made no difference that the
reporters were asking questions about possible felonies committed
by a fellow Democrat; to Rudin, it was good versus evil. He
represented good, and the Republicans represented evil, and the
truth mattered not. This was a marathon, not a simple jog around
the block. It was about beating the Republicans.
Hank Clark sank into
the leather chair two over from Rudin and turned on the small
reading lamp. After taking a long sip from his drink, he put his
feet up on the chair between them and let out a long sigh. Clark
weighed two-hundred-sixty pounds, and at six foot five he needed to
take a load off his tired bones.
Rudin leaned over and
said, "I'm worried about Langley."
Clark looked at him
passively and thought, No shit. When aren't you worried about
Langley? Rudin was obsessed with the CIA. If he had it his way, the
Agency would be mothballed like an old battleship and placed in the
Smithsonian. Despite! d1inking it, and wanting to say it just once,
Clark was far too smart to let a sarcastic impulse get the best of
him. It had taken him years to gain Rudin's confidence, and he
wasn't going to piss it all away for one small moment of personal
satisfaction.
Instead, Clark nodded
thoughtfully and said, "Tell me what's on your mind."
Rudin shifted
uncomfortably in his chair. "I don't want another insider to take
over when Stansfield dies. Your committee should never have
confirmed him in the first place." Rudin's face twisted in disgust
as he talked about Thomas Stansfield. "We need to bring someone in
who can clean that place up."
Clark nodded and
said, "I agree, even though he didn't. He thought of reminding
Rudin that Stansfield had been confirmed by a Democratic-controlled
committee but thought it was best to keep him as calm as
possible.
"The president is in
love with that damn Irene Kennedy, and I know that bastard
Stansfield is going to recommend her as his successor." Rudin shook
his head. His deeply lined leathery skin turned red with anger.
"And once she's nominated, it's over. The press and everybody in my
party" - Rudin pointed a bony finger at Clark - "and yours is going
to want to jump all over the idea of having a woman as the director
of Central Intelligence." Rudin didn't want his position to be
construed as politically incorrect, so he added, "Not that I would
mind a woman, but not Stansfield's protégé. We have to do something
to stop that from happening, and we have to take care of it before
the president gets the ball rolling. Once that happens, we're
screwed."
Clark studied Rudin
for a moment and nodded slowly as if the crass old man had just
imparted a rare pearl of wisdom. It was so easy to play him. "I've
been keeping an eye on Kennedy, and I think she just might
self-destruct before the process gets that far."
Rudin eyed the big
man sitting next to him. "What information do you have that I
don't?"
Clark let a big old
grin crease his face and raised his drink. "If you're good to me,
Albert, I just might let you see someday."
Rudin was mad at
himself for asking the question. He knew firsthand that Hank Clark
liked to keep tabs on people, friend and foe alike.
The old congressman
from Connecticut scratched his nose and asked, "What type of
information are we talking about? Is it personal or
professional?"
Clark smiled. "I
think it would be considered professional."
Rudin scowled. He
hated begging for details. Besides, he had learned a long time ago
that Clark would tell him only when he was ready and not a moment
before. Sniveling for info would do no good.
"I assume you will
let me know when the time is right."
Clark nodded as he
took a drink. "I'll keep you in the loop, Albert."