Part 34 (1/2)

Not they're done, or he's done; we're we're done. done.

I glanced at Sergeant Elby--he appeared young, about twenty-five, and his face was heavily bandaged except for his nose, which was bruised, scabbed, and apparently broken. His left hand, also covered with scabs, stuck out from beneath the blanket. I noted a thick gold wedding band. I could not imagine this level of damage inflicted on a human body. In fact, I did not want to.

She stroked the hair of the other patient and commented, ”Lieutenant Donnie Workman. He graduated from West Point only two years ago. Shot by a sniper during the a.s.sault on Karbala. The bullet entered his chest cavity and tumbled and ricocheted around, ripping up a heart valve and perforating a lung and his stomach. He's touch and go.”

I watched her face as she stared down at these battered and broken men. I said, ”You care deeply about them. I see that. Will you travel to Germany with them?”

”No . . . I . . .” She hesitated. ”I'll hand them off . . . to the flight crew. It's a medical flight--good people, very competent, and . . . they don't lose many pa.s.sengers.”

She swallowed heavily and regarded their battered bodies. ”We're not supposed to become attached to our patients. But you know what? You do. A lot of them never speak to you. They can't, right? But you learn so much about them. Always their friends stop by to check on them, and always they tell us this man is very special, and they tell us why, and these are the reasons we must save him . . . or her. Pretty soon, you know all about them.”

She seemed to be experiencing separation anxiety, and she seemed to want to talk about them. So I asked, ”Like what?”

”Well . . . like Andy Elby . . . he has two children. Eloise and Elbert, six and seven. Wife's name is Elma.” She smiled and said, ”They're from Arkansas, where funny names like that are common. You learn that stuff when you deal with a lot of patients. Anyway . . . Andy was a truck driver in civilian life, too. A simple guy. You know how that is, right? Poor guy, working full-time, doing the National Guard thing to pay for summer camp and braces for the kids. He never expected to be called up. Never expected this.”

Again I looked at Andy Elby. If he survived as far as Walter Reed hospital, Elba and the kids would join him there, staying in temporary lodgings, living hand to mouth. Having had several friends who lost limbs, I was aware of the aftermath--a numbing saga of operations as the doctors chase infections and try to cut off dead and infected tissue before it works its way up, like cancer, and destroys the body. Elba would be shocked when she saw him, and she and her kids would go through h.e.l.l as the docs tried to coax and force Andy's body back to a level where it could function on its own. As for what would come afterward, well . . . life would be different. Sad.

Claudia continued, ”Donnie--I know, I know--I'm supposed to call him Lieutenant Workman. Anyway, Donnie was this big lacrosse star at West Point. A few of his cla.s.smates stopped by to see him. They told me Donnie was one of the most popular cadets. And academically, top of the cla.s.s. His cla.s.smates all believed he would be the first general officer. Isn't that something? This is some talented guy.” She paused before confiding in a low whisper, ”I don't think Donnie's going to make it.”

I took her hand and held it. ”You're an angel. You've done everything you can.”

Tears were now flowing freely down her cheeks, and Claudia Foster told me, or perhaps someone much higher than me, ”I'm going to miss them. G.o.d, I hope they make it.”

”Most do.”

”And some don't.”

We sat in silence for the remainder of the drive, me holding Claudia's hand as I thought about these fine, promising young men, and about the bombing victims at the field station, about Nervous Nellie, who constructed bombs that blew people to bits, about Ali bin Pacha, who gathered the money and wrote the checks that underwrote suicide bombings and street ma.s.sacres, about Cliff Daniels, whose selfish ambition contributed to this, and about Tigerman and Hirschfield, who held open the door for the dogs of war.

Claudia said nothing, just attentively watched her patients. Her mood had turned reflective, and I had the impression that her thoughts, like mine, had to do with the consequences of evil and incompetence, of stupidity and fanaticism. She had no idea of the precise causes, but every day she saw the result, and every day she and her patients lived, or died, with it. I had a very good idea, and I wanted revenge.

The driver let me off after we had pa.s.sed through the airport checkpoint, and I stepped out of the ambulance. I took two steps, then turned about and said to Claudia, ”Were these men able to talk, they would tell you this: Thank you.”

She offered me a faint smile and said, ”Don't take this wrong, okay? I hope I never see you again.”

I blew her a kiss and walked away.

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

Bian awaited me in the plane's lounge. She looked up when I entered and asked, ”How did it go?”

”Don't ask. Why aren't you asleep?”

”Look who's asking. You look like h.e.l.l.” She studied my face and said, ”Is something wrong?”

”No, I'm . . . Where's our prisoner?”

”In the guest suite, locked to the bed. I barely nicked his calf. A flesh wound. I soaked it with disinfectant and put on a fresh dressing.” She noted, ”He doesn't react well to pain.”

”Did you interrogate him?”

”I promised, didn't I?” She added, ”I'm being good.”

”And did you call Phyllis with an update?”

”I did. She sounded pleased. Incidentally, she's flying here.”

”On her broomstick?”

Bian smiled and replied, ”I'm serious. She's in flight, and the Agency switch connected us.” She checked her watch. ”Took off five hours ago. She's scheduled to arrive in seven hours.”

”Did she mention why?”

”Well . . . no. But I asked. She said something that sounded evasive. She's very cagey, isn't she?” She made a sour face and added, ”That was the good news, if you're wondering.”

I felt a headache coming on. ”I don't want to hear it.”

She said it anyway. ”Waterbury is accompanying her.”

I collapsed into a comfortable lounge chair and thought about this a moment. Among the more agreeable aspects of working for Phyllis Carney--possibly the only only agreeable thing--is that she tends to be old school. This is to say, she gives you jobs, she generally does not interfere, and if you succeed she treats it as par for the course, no big deal; if not, she fires you, and then goes the extra mile of ruining your career. agreeable thing--is that she tends to be old school. This is to say, she gives you jobs, she generally does not interfere, and if you succeed she treats it as par for the course, no big deal; if not, she fires you, and then goes the extra mile of ruining your career.

She's not vindictive; that would require a level of emotion she does not possess. What she is, is a throwback to an older era, a living time capsule of habits, instincts, and methods that reside now only in history books. And for my generation--the boomers--bred as we were to be unconditionally nurtured and blithely agnostic about personal responsibility, we are a little disoriented by a lady boss with such Calvinist impulses. Also, it strikes me that Phyllis is aware she has become a generational misfit; I actually think she gets a s.a.d.i.s.tic pleasure from this. Her nickname around the office is Dragon Lady, which I personally find insulting, disgusting, s.e.xist, and dead-on.

Her flying here, however, was a curious deviation from her normal modus operandi, and that Herr Waterbury was accompanying her suggested other problems, and other issues. But what? Well, for one thing, a higher authority, like the White House, finally got its act together and realized the kids at the Agency were playing with matches around political dynamite. Maybe they didn't know everything, yet here we had a case where knowing very little could change the nameplate in the Oval Office.

So Phyllis, or the Director, or both, had been dragged down Pennsylvania Avenue, put on the red carpet, and read the riot act.

Which might explain, as well, her traveling companion. Either Mark Waterbury ratted her out or he was the watchdog dispatched to monitor or control her every move and report back. Those aren't mutually exclusive suspicions.

Or I could have this all wrong. The capture of Ali bin Pacha was a big victory in a war that badly needed a few notches on the success pole. So maybe they were flying here to make sure their mugs were in the victory photo. I could actually see Waterbury doing this, and it wouldn't hurt Phyllis to score a few brownie points either.

So, was it that simple and innocuous? Maybe. But maybe not.

This case just kept getting deeper and more complicated, starting with a corpse in an apartment, and now we had a bomber in the bedroom, a terrorist paymaster in an operating room, and if one or both of them spilled the beans, who knows what else might land on our plate. You like to think of investigations as ordered, a sensible progression of steps guided by a start and headed toward a tangible finish, where the lodestar for the investigator is the illusion that things happen for a reason.

But in truth, sometimes it's day by day, a journey without a map or an exit ramp in sight. In a way, I thought, this case had become a microcosm of this war, having looked so simple at the start and now our troops were sinking deeper and deeper into the muck of every tribal and religious and political mess in the region.

I looked at Bian, who was thumbing through a TIME TIME magazine. I asked her, ”Did you mention magazine. I asked her, ”Did you mention anything anything to Waterbury?” to Waterbury?”

”Sean, please.” She looked up. ”I'm not stupid.”

”I know that.” I bent forward, untied my combat boots, and kicked them off my feet. ”Maybe he just misses you.”

She commented, ”I'll bet he misses you more,” and went back to reading. ”He doesn't want you out of his sight.” Bian looked up from her magazine again. ”Whew . . . what's that poisonous smell?”

”You're no petunia yourself.”