"The Zapruder film," Kendra admitted.
"And what do we remember Dallas for?"
"I get it," Kendra said, nodding.
"Death resonates, unnatural or otherwise, and pictures reinforce that,"
Kat said. "Pearl Harbor, the World Trade Center, the Challenger and Columbia the emotional power of the end of something overshadows whatever else it stood for. Images strengthen that impact."
"But there's something we want to strengthen," Kendra said. "The difference between what Wilson stood for and what the senator and USF stand for. Wouldn't this be a good opportunity to do that?"
"It would be convenient, but not good," Kat said. "There is a certain level of tawdriness in how Wilson died. We want to stay clear of that, especially if it turns out he was ca noodling with someone from the gala."
"Couldn't we use that to cheapen him and his ideas?" Kendra asked.
"That would cheapen us, I think," Kat replied.
"Yes, I have to agree with Kat on that one," the senator said.
Kendra nodded. "Okay," she said. "I was just asking."
Kat did not always like Kendra's go-for-the-throat thinking, but at least the woman did not take the rejection personally. She was here for Senator Orr and the USF, not for herself.
"There is also the chance that late-night comics turn on Wilson and his lover in a day or two," Kat added. "If that happens, we risk becoming part of the joke right when we are holding our convention."
"Another good point," Orr said.
"So how do we exploit the media exposure we'll have tonight?" Kendra asked. "If the senator condemns Wilson, he'll appear heartless. If he praises the man, we lose credibility. If he goes into his stump speech, then we're obviously exploiting the media exposure. Could we move the announcement of a presidential run?"
"Ouch," Kat said.
"Why?" Kendra asked.
"That would keep Wilson alive," Kat said. "Wilson's death and the senator's candidacy become a run-on sentence, inseparable."
"I see it as planting flowers in fertilizer," Kendra said. "Something wonderful coming from shit."
Kat frowned.
"Who cares if we are linked to Wilson?" Kendra continued. "I see that as a good thing. Wilson's ideas were very bad for America. The USF is good for America."
"But we'll be linked to his death, not his ideas," Kat said. "We'll be seen as vultures, opportunists."
"Just having the senator on one of those shows will be perceived that way, won't it?" Kendra asked.
"Not necessarily. The senator will be seen as a diplomat. He can say things like, "Mr. Wilson and I had a different worldview, but his contribution to technology was invaluable," or, "Mr. Wilson was embarked on a path I opposed. His genius was in other areas." You start with the negative to make an impact, then sugarcoat it so you seem magnanimous."
"I am magnanimous," Orr teased.
The women laughed. It was true. Orr was a politician. Typically, that was not a good fit with idealism or philanthropy. All a philanthropist had to do was convince himself that something was worthwhile and make it happen. An elected official had to convince others, and there was often a considerable gulf between conscience and compromise. A man like Franklin Roosevelt may have felt it was the right thing to free Europe from Hitler. But he needed Pearl Harbor to make that happen. John Kennedy may have thought it was a good idea to send people to the moon, but he needed the threat of a Soviet space platform to get the funding. Fortunately, the senator cared more about getting his message across than about winning the White House.
"I agree with Kat," Orr said. "I don't want to dance too enthusiastically on the man's grave. But I do like Kendra's idea of making some kind of announcement as soon as possible. Kat, what USF personnel are we looking at today?"
"Just two," Kat said. "A military adviser and an economic guru."
"The military adviser is General Rodgers, the deputy director of Op-Center?" Orr asked.
"That's correct, Senator."
"He took our boys into North Korea, India, Russia, the Middle East to stop things from blowing up," Orr said. "That's good. It would make a good counterpoint to what Wilson stood for. Kat, would you give him a call and find out what he thought about the party, see if there's anything we'll need to show him or tell him to make him more comfortable?"
Kat said she would do that at once.
The media portion of the meeting was over, and Kat left the senator with Kendra. She returned to her office, pausing only to make sure the other staffers did not discuss William Wilson with the media. Orr's personal staff of three men and four women were pretty sharp. Kat did not think they would have done that. But the D.C. press corps was smart, too. They had back-door ways of asking questions. "I'm not at liberty to say" could be written as "so-and-so refused to comment," which suggested that there was something to hide. For Orr's staff, the correct response to all questions about Wilson was, "Would you like to talk to Ms. Lockley?"
Throughout the morning, several people had wanted to talk to Ms.
Lockley. She would call back later and tell them that the senator had nothing to add to the statement he had made that morning. Right now she needed to talk to Mike Rodgers. She called his cell phone and introduced herself. The general seemed happy to hear from her.
"Are the senator and I still on for this afternoon?" he asked.
"Absolutely, General Rodgers. The senator is looking forward to it. In fact, he wanted me to call and find out if you need anything.
Additional information, a brand of cigar, a favorite beverage."
"Actually, there are just two things I want," Rodgers told her.
"What are they?" Kat asked.
"I want to meet a man with vision and the courage to see that vision through," Rodgers said.
"You will definitely find that."
"I believe I will," Rodgers said. "I have read about the senator, and I admire the values for which he stands. The other thing I want to find is a man who is willing to listen to the people around him."
"General, I just came from a meeting with the senator. I assure you, he listens and he hears."
"Then I look forward to meeting with him, and hopefully to working with him," Rodgers replied.
"May I ask a somewhat personal question, General?"
"Sure."
"Are you eager to make a move at this time?"
"If it's the right one," Rodgers told her.
"I'm glad to hear that, sir," Kat told him. "We all look forward to seeing you again."
The woman hung up and relayed the information to Senator Orr. He was glad to hear how the general felt.
"He sounds like our kind of fighter," Orr said.
Kat was glad to hear the senator excited. In a day that offered their first major challenge on the national stage, it was reassuring to find a potential ally.
Now it was time to call back the rest of the reporters who wanted to talk to the senator. First, however, she made another call. One that was more important to her.
She phoned the Green Pantry and ordered a turkey club sandwich.
ELEVEN
Washington, D.C. Monday, i2:53 p.m.
On the way back to Op-Center, McCaskey stopped at a gas station market for lunch. He got a hot dog and a Mountain Dew. As he stood outside eating, he glanced at a rack of newspapers. The headlines of the Washington Post, USA Today, and a handful of foreign papers were all about the untimely death of William Wilson.
When he was with the FBI, McCaskey attended a class in ATT antiterrorist tactics. The teacher, psychologist Vic Witherman, was an expert in what he called countdown profiling. Witherman maintained that it was possible to spot a terrorist who was within minutes of launching an attack. There was a dark brightness in their eyes, undistracted purpose in their step, a confident boast in the way they held their head and shoulders. It was the posture of a demigod.
"It comes from three things," Witherman had said. "One, of course, is adrenaline. Two is the fact that they are out of hiding for the first time in months, maybe even years. But three is the most significant of all. They possess what no one else has: knowledge of the future."
McCaskey was struck by that observation. But today was the first time he had ever experienced something similar. If he was right, he knew what tomorrow's headlines would read.
McCaskey's cell phone beeped as he was getting back into the car. It was Dr. Hennepin.
"It took exactly fifteen minutes for the laboratory to find something that did not belong in a man's mouth," she said. "Traces of potassium chloride."
"Which is used for what?" McCaskey asked.
"Executing criminals by lethal injection," the medical examiner told him. "It stops the heart."
"Is there any way our subject could have acquired that substance naturally?" McCaskey asked. He was careful not to use William Wilson's name, since this was not a secure line.
"Only if he had been eating dog food and certain brands of weight loss bars and dietary supplements," she said. "I did not find anything in the contents of his stomach that indicated he had eaten any of the above. Moreover, in the case of the bars and supplements, potassium chloride would have been detected in conjunction with potassium citrate or potassium phosphate."
"The sample you found was pure."
"Yes," she said.
"So he was murdered."
"Unless it was self-inflicted."
"Which does not seem likely," McCaskey said. "Who has to be informed about this?"
"I have to send a report to the Metro Police superintendent of detectives and a copy to the MP forensics office," she replied.
"When?"
"As soon as I can write it up," the doctor told him. "They should have it within an hour."
"Can you write slowly?" McCaskey asked. "I have to get back to my office and give Scotland Yard a heads-up. There may be individuals they want watched before the information becomes somewhat public."
"All right," she said. "I'll have them run tests for other coronary inhibitors. That should take an extra hour."
"Thanks, Dr. Hennepin," McCaskey said. "Will you be able to forward a copy to me?"
"Sure."
McCaskey thanked her again.
Op-Center's top policeman was already on the road before the conversation ended. He did not want to call Op-Center or Scotland Yard from the secure cell phone in the car. He was not thinking about the empowerment he gained by possessing foreknowledge. Right now, the former FBI agent was thinking about everything that would have to be done to find the individual who had gone to William Wilson's room and apparently assassinated him.
Upon arriving at Op-Center, McCaskey went directly to his office, shut the door, and called George Daily. The detective superintendent was less surprised than McCaskey had expected.
"It's more credible, frankly, than hearing that he died of heart failure," the British investigator remarked.
"I'm going to meet with Director Hood as soon as he's free," McCaskey said. "Do you want to approach the Metropolitan Police, or would you prefer that we work on your behalf?"
"We'd best do both," Daily told him. "When the press gets hold of this, we will be pressured to take a direct hand. In the meantime, it would help enormously if you would earmark areas that we will need to examine. Local police can be very territorial about their sources and the interrogation process."
"I'll make sure you are represented, Detective Superintendent,"
McCaskey promised.
"How long do we have until this news becomes public fodder?" the Englishman asked.
"The medical examiner is going to forward her updated report in about ninety minutes," McCaskey said. "Fifteen minutes after that, most of Washington will have heard the news."
Daily sighed audibly. "You know, it used to be pan em et circensis, bread and circuses, that kept the populace happy.
Now it is cell phones and the Internet. They allow us to savor the blood and pain of others in real time."
"Not everyone does that," McCaskey said.
"Indeed we do," Daily declared. "Some of us don't enjoy it, I'll grant you, but most do. Recidivism, it seems, is not just for criminals.
Society itself has retreated to barbarism."
The harshness of the condemnation surprised McCaskey. He did not want to believe that the majority of people were rubber neckers at best and moral savages at worst, that they were no different than killers or molesters who could not be rehabilitated. He had always felt that society was basically sound, that it needed only occasional tweaks from people like himself and Daily to stay on course.
This was not, however, the time to debate philosophy. McCaskey rang Bugs Benet to find out if the boss was free. He was. McCaskey said he would be right over.
As the former FBI agent hurried along the corridor, he realized there was an aspect to foreknowledge that Vic Witherman had missed. Terrorism was easy. All it took was a moment of angry resolve to tear things down. Keeping things together required courage and commitment.
Humanism. That was difficult.
TWELVE
Washington, D.C. Monday, 1:44 p.m.
Paul Hood called around to find out if the department heads in non classified areas needed an intern. They did not. Lowell Coffey said he would be happy to work with a legal trainee. Frankie Hunt did not fit that profile. Kevin Custer in Electronic Communications said he would take on someone with interest in the field. Otherwise, it was a waste of everyone's time. Other division leaders said more or less the same thing. Hood could have pushed them, but he did not. As he made the calls, he had already decided he did not want the kid working at Op-Center. Someone who helped a friend was "a nice man." Someone who helped his former wife was "a man with guilt." Someone who helped the lover of their former wife was not a man at all.