Brian Freemantle - The Watchmen

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James Schnecker and his team also flew in by midmorning, but with a reason. Both Cowley and Pamela went with them to the warehouse in which the OverOcean containers were to be bonded, again specially chosen because it could be entered through a series of corridors from dock authority administration buildings unseen by any OverOcean watcher on the dockside.

Schnecker immediately said, “Couldn’t ask for anything better, after how we worked in Moscow.”

“You won’t have any trouble identifying what’s outstanding?” queried Pamela.

“Just a question of finding it,” assured Neil Hamish.

“We’ll even have time to go over everything we’ve already done,” suggested Schnecker. “We’re looking good.”

Cowley thought so, too, when he made his first contact of the day with Washington to be told there’d been no interference with the reprogramed Challenger or the navigational satellite. There’d been no telephone calls, incoming or outgoing, the previous night or that morning from Bella Atkins’s apartment. There’d been obvious cleaning sounds-almost a full fifteen minutes of vacuuming-the previous night. She’d hummed a lot, although not a recognizable tune. And laughed aloud at Friends.

“What’s Ashton say about watching her in the Pentagon?” asked Cowley.

“There’s an instant trace on her computer ID: comes up directly on Ashton’s monitor,” said Terry Osnan. “They’ve actually got one of those phony antistatic bands on her terminal lead as a backup.”

“Office phone?”

“Five calls so far this morning. All work related.”

“What do we know about her?”

“Still waiting to hear.”

“I’d like a preliminary biog early afternoon.”

Leonard Ross called thirty minutes later. When he heard Samuels and the police chief were already there, he spoke individually to both. When Cowley went back on the line, the director said, “Any jurisdictional problems?”

“None,” said Cowley.

“It’s our case.”

“Everyone’s accepting that.”

“Unfortunate about Guzov.”

“I’m expecting him to turn up here.”

“I’m expecting you to wrap this whole thing up. It’s time.”

There was California wine and hard booze for the buffet lunch set out in an adjoining room. Cowley drank mineral water, as Pamela did. Pamela ate a piece of fruit. Cowley didn’t bother with anything. The police commissioner wanted to know how quickly they expected to make arrests and the timing of their being publicly disclosed. To the man’s second and obvious disappointment of the day, Cowley made a lot of the difficulties of coordinating split-second seizures in America and Russia and of the disastrous consequences of premature publicity. It was even possible, after the international significance of the investigation, that the president himself might decide to make the announcement.

Cowley was about to call Washington when Terry Osnan came on to the line. “We’ve learned an awful lot about Bella.”

Hers was a family steeped in a military tradition stretching back to World War II, although Atkins was her married name. The family was Barrymore. The tradition had been established by her grandfather, who had been a major and served in Patton’s Third Army general staff all the way through to Berlin. The son-Bella’s father-had been a career soldier who’d served in Korea, remained there as part of the military administration in the south after the cease-fire, and been on his second tour in Vietnam when he’d been killed at Da Nang in the first Tet offensive.

Bella was the youngest of four children, the others all boys and all career soldiers like their father. George, the next in line to Bella and the Ranger in the York Avenue photographs, had died in Operation Desert Storm. So had Bella’s husband, a lieutenant in a tank unit. Her other two Special Forces brothers, Peter and Jake, had also fought in the Gulf. The operations they’d been involved in were classified, but an application was being made to get the security embargo lifted. Peter Barrymore was the one with the eagle tattoo.

Both had been invited to leave the service, to avoid the war hero publicity of a court-martial, after their membership in the John Birch Society had emerged when they’d been discovered trying to recruit within their own and other units for what had been described as an unacceptable right-wing offshoot. There was also an untraced, substantial loss of military equipment. Both had left the army with the rank of major. Peter Barrymore’s last known address was North Rush Street, Chicago, which Osnan had already told the Chicago office, direct. He’d also personally given Al Beckinsdale the army discharge address of Jake Barrymore on Reynolds Avenue, in the Point Breeze district of Pittsburgh.

Osnan said, “The army finally shifted their butts.”

Cowley saw Pamela talking animatedly on another telephone. The attention of everyone in the room was on both of them. To Osnan he said, “Bella’s voiceprint-and maybe the connection with the Roanne Harding murder-is reasonable suspicion for warrants.”

“Already being applied for.”

“Chicago and Pittsburgh know?”

“Told both myself,” said Osnan.

“Get hold of Anne Stovey in Albany. I reckon this is new information sufficient to get at Robert Standing again.”

“Will do.”

“Better warn Trenton. And tell Manhattan to get more people closer to Orlenko in Brooklyn. No one’s to move until I say so, but when I do say so there’s only got to be one sound from the trap snapping shut.”

“Moscow?”

“I’ll talk direct.”

Pamela was already walking toward him when Cowley put down the phone. She said, “Steve Murray called to say he was going to North Rush Street himself. Filled me in quickly. So I spoke to Pittsburgh. Beckinsdale’s going himself there, too.”

“Just a stakeout!” Cowley qualified hurriedly.

“That’s all,” assured the woman. “A look-see, then back to us. You organized Standing?”

“Yes.”

She grinned at him. “We work as well out of bed as we do in it.”

“Keep your mind on the job,” he said, but still smiled. For the first time he thought they really had a reason to smile.

Danilov expected a telephone call to be sufficient, but Georgi Chelyag insisted on seeing him.

“It’s not just the arrests that have got to be simultaneous,” said the chief of staff. “The president doesn’t want to follow any American announcement. He wants to make it and he wants it to be at precisely the same time-unarguable proof that it really has been a totally joint and coordinated investigation.” The man paused. “It’s as important to you as it is to us that it’s seen to be so.”

“I haven’t discussed that sort of detail with Cowley,” admitted Danilov. “I’m not even sure he knows the official thinking about public communiques; he’s not in Washington.”

“The alternative is for us to time our statement with the arrests here,” declared Chelyag.

“That’s not an alternative,” rejected Danilov. “The arrests are to be coordinated but un announced, to ensure we get everyone. It won’t be simultaneous; logically it can’t be. If we go public too soon, we could ruin everything in America.” He hesitated, seeing how to strengthen the objection. “It wouldn’t achieve what you want if America publicly complained we wrecked the cooperation and the investigation, would it?”

“That argument applies equally here.”

“Isn’t it one you should be making politically? That’s what we’re talking: politics, not criminal investigation.”

The presidential advisor managed a bleak smile. “It is being made. But I want you to press it, as hard as you can, at your working level. It would be understandable for America to want to take all the credit.”

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