“
No. What’s wrong with the bunker?”
“Nothing, nothing at all,” replied Jack. He’d have to give Frank a pat on the back.
“The attorney general and I just wanted to run through a few legal issues we’re having with the rationing and things.”
Jack checked his watch; 9:55 a.m. He looked at Kenneth. “10 a.m.?”
“Ten thirty would be better, Mr. President,” said Kenneth, a cold sweat beginning to build as they neared the 10 a.m. deadline for the Future Leaders’ videoconference.
Jack had calmed down from his annoyance at the intelligence imbeciles. “Fine, we’ll call you at 10:30.”
“Okay, folks, let’s get through today and if there any problems or bullshit, call me.”
The video feeds were cut to a chorus of ‘Thank you, Mr. President’.
As everyone began to filter out of the Situation Room, Jack caught the arm of the DNI. “Find the link with the pilot. That’s how we’re going to stop this from getting further out of hand.”
The man smiled and nodded his head in agreement. Jack’s during the meeting had been aimed firmly at the CIA director. Jack passed the note back which the DNI had given him during the meeting. It detailed the ethnicity of the B2 pilot and the links of his parents to the CIA. They were trying to cover up a monumental fuck up. Jack had played along and the CIA director had just been hung out to dry in front of the whole meeting. Jack would have replaced him in a second. His major problem was that whoever was in that seat would have tried to cover it up.
The attorney general waited for the president to finish with the DNI and then spoke. “If you don’t mind, Mr. President, I’ll call in from my office, rather than wait here.’
“No problem,” he smiled, rising from his seat to leave himself.
“Mr. President?” asked Kenneth as the AG left the room, leaving himself and the president alone.
“Yes, Kenneth?”
“Apologies, sir, but we have one more meeting in here,” he said meekly, handing Jack a few sheets of paper.
Jack looked down at the heading on the paper and had the screen not jumped to life with two hundred and fifty eager and excited students pledging allegiance, he would have swung at Kenneth.
“Wait a minute,” said Butler, grabbing Swanson’s elbow.
“What?” she said pulling at his grip, eager to get off the street.
“Listen,” paused Butler. After a few seconds of silence, he said, “The Humvees…they’ve gone the other way.”
Swanson listened. Butler was right. Their engines had revved loudly and their tires screeched as they left the parking lot, but they had turned South, not North towards them, or where she and Butler had been directed by the drug boss.
“Code of the street, don’t snitch!” she surmised.
“Must be. So what do you think he told them?”
“He knew we were going to stay in Baltimore, so the opposite of that I’d guess.”
“Shit, that means they’ll cover every conceivable entry point between Baltimore and Washington. So much for our plan.” He looked around, trying to find some inspiration.
“Any ideas?” he asked when nothing came to him.
Swanson thought long and hard. She had an idea but knew it wasn’t even worth mentioning.
“Go on,” prompted Butler, seeing her deliberate.
“I know the FBI’s Special Agent In Charge here very well.”
“Very well?” Butler interrupted, raising his eyebrows.
“God, no, not
that
well!” she replied, disgusted at the thought. “Not that that’s any of your business.”
“It’s too risky,” replied Butler. “You have no idea who we’re up against.”
“You keep telling me that and I keep getting glimpses, so why don’t you just fucking tell me!”
Butler shrugged. It was a good point and he
had
kept her somewhat in the dark. “Fair enough, but not here,” he replied, leading her back towards the Red Rug Inn.
“You’ve got to be fucking joking. I’m already covered in bug bites, never mind the massacre in the parking lot.”
“Exactly. It’s the last place they’ll think we would stay.”
Swanson could think of numerous reasons not to stay beyond the bed bugs. The police would be crawling all over the place following the incident in the parking lot. However, all that became irrelevant when the first military personnel carrier rolled down the street, quickly followed by many more. Inside anywhere seemed to be a good idea.
Butler hurried her along as they reentered the fire exit from the wrong side with ease. Another issue to add to the many. He rushed into the room and watched the TV station inform their viewers that a state of emergency was in place. Rationing was underway to stop the panic buying and the National Guard had been called in to support local police forces.
“Holy shit! We really need to get you to the president!” said Swanson, as similar footage was relayed from every major city in American.
“We do. But you’re right, I need to tell you what I know. Just in case we both don’t make it,” Butler said.
Swanson nodded timidly, nervously anticipating what Butler was about to tell her.
“What do you know about the Trust?”
“What, like what it does?”
“Its history?”
“It was set up over a hundred years ago by the great industrialists to protect America’s future. It cleared the crippling national debt and began to rebuild our infrastructure.”
Butler nodded as she spoke, agreeing with everything she had said.
“All bullshit. What if I were to tell you that four years ago, the Trust didn’t even exist? What if I were to tell you that the money doesn’t really exist?”
“What money?” she asked.
“The Trust’s twenty four point five trillion dollars.”
“That’s it? That’s what you’ve got?” she asked. “I’ve put my career and life on the line because they don’t have money?”
Butler shook his head. “No, that’s just the beginning,” he began. For the next three hours, he talked more than he had in the last two years, laying out clearly what he had uncovered, constantly checking she was following. Swanson was a sponge and soaked up every detail, gasping at times, muttering swear words at others. By the time he finished, she sat motionless and speechless. Her mind was racing with the information and its implications.
“Holy fuck,” she said finally. “We are so fucked.”
“Not yet,” argued Butler, unconvincingly.
Swanson shook her head in disagreement. They
were
fucked and it appeared had been for some time.
“Your FBI friend, does he have kids?” asked Butler.
Swanson realized why he was asking. It was unlikely he would survive if they involved him and Butler didn’t want the death of a father on his hands. Swanson considered her answer carefully, given the situation.
“No, he’s single.”
Jack’s inspirational and motivational speech brought the house down, followed by a five minute standing ovation. He felt a tinge of satisfaction that he had made the speech. He knew it would change the life of at least a few of the students watching. It wasn’t that he thought he was anything special. He certainly never thought of himself in that way. He had just taken the opportunities and used his skills and abilities to their best. A similar talk by a senior general at the same age had made him choose an Army career.
Once the applause died down, Roger Young stood up and thanked the president once again for his time, particularly given the current situation.
“I hope you don’t mind, Mr. President,” added Roger, “but if you had a few minutes, we have some members who would love to ask you a few questions. Well, actually, I’m sure all two hundred and fifty would!”
Jack checked the clock. He had three minutes before he was due for his 10:30 call. He looked at the expectation on the faces of the group on the large screen. “Okay, but I’m afraid I’ve only got about five minutes or so.”
“Excellent! Thank you, Mr. President.” Roger turned to the audience and picked out Lauren, as promised the previous evening.
Jack watched the screen fill with the face of a very beautiful young woman. “Good morning, Mr. President. My name is Lauren Swann and I wanted--”
“I had a master sergeant called Swann, not a very common name,” interrupted the president absentmindedly.
“My Uncle Bill,” she replied. “He never tires of telling us how he’d known the president when he was just a lieutenant, fresh from West Point.”
“Best damned sniper in the Army, Miss Swann. How is the old shooter?”
“He’s great,” Lauren beamed, amazed that the president remembered her uncle from all those years ago.
“You tell him Jack King was asking about him,” he smiled. “The stories I could tell you about your uncle,” he began, before realizing two hundred and fifty students were hanging on his every word and had absolutely no interest in Miss Swann’s Uncle Bill. “Anyway, you send him my best wishes, Miss Swann. Now what’s your question?”
Thirty minutes later and long after he should have ended the call, he apologized that he really had to go and do some work, particularly if they wanted him to avert a war. Few laughed, which was a rather sobering note on which to end the conference. Reality was calling.
As the video feed ended, the Trust’s logo appeared on the screen and under its name, ‘
America’s Savior, America’s Future’
was left on the TV screen.
Beware the Trust
.
Jack instantly thought of Tom Butler’s comment. He wondered what had become of Butler and the FBI woman. Was Butler a threat or was he a voice of sanity in a world that had suddenly and for no apparent reason gone mad? He didn’t know but it was clawing at him. He couldn’t seem to lose it. Sitting there just beneath the surface, every time he had anything to do with the Trust, he seemed to think of Butler and his comment. Why would Butler warn Jack if he was trying to kill him? Why would the FBI woman go AWOL with him? There were too many questions and not enough answers.
“Shall I dial you into the AG?” asked Kenneth. Although outwardly he remained calm, internally he was doing cartwheels at how well the videoconference had gone.
“No, call them and tell them I’ll be another ten minutes. We’ll do it from the Oval Office,” said Jack, rising and exiting the room. He scrolled through his contacts on his cell and dialed the FBI director, bypassing the pleasantries. “What’s happening with Butler and the FBI agent?”
It took a second or two for the FBI director to even realize who was on the phone. “Regretfully, Mr. President, I have no idea.”
“Are you deliberately trying to antagonize me?” asked Jack. Every time he dealt with the man, he wound him up.
“Absolutely not, Mr. President. The reason why I have no idea is because we have been told to back off and leave the case to the Secret Service.”
“But it’s
your
agent who’s gone AWOL, right?”
“Yes, but we’ve been told not to interfere. I’ve tried to find out myself but my guys are getting nowhere.”
“Have you spoken with the attorney general?” asked Jack. She was the head of the Department of Justice and the person to whom the FBI director reported.
“I’ve updated her on the fact that Agent Swanson has gone AWOL but not on the lack of updates from the Secret Service. She’s been a bit--”
“Yes, yes of course,” interrupted Jack. “I have a call with her and the Homeland secretary shortly. I’ll get to the bottom of it and I’ll ask them to update you as well.”
He hung up before entering the Oval Office, where Kenneth waited with the two most powerful law enforcement women in the US on hold on the conference phone. Jack didn’t miss a beat, sat on the sofa opposite Kenneth, and took the phone off mute, apologizing for the delay.
After running through forty minutes of legalese that had quite literally bored him to tears over the finer detail of what his television address had required them to do, they finally came to a close. In short, they could have just told him his actions had caused them a massive legal headache and saved him one. However, the message was clear, it would be great if he could give them a heads up in the future.
With all other business out of the way, Jack finally managed to turn their attention to what was troubling him.
“What’s the latest with Tom Butler and Special Agent Swanson?” he asked the Homeland boss.
Kenneth spat out a mouthful of tea all over the coffee table that separated the two men. He quickly covered his outburst with a choking fit, as though he had taken the liquid down the wrong way.