Yep, Norton thought. These guys were definitely Spooks.
They
always
dressed the same.
He met the pair at the bottom of the ladder. Neither one struck him as someone who had seen any military service.
"Enjoy the show?" he asked them good-naturedly.
Both men ignored the question.
"You Norton?" one asked instead.
Norton yanked off his helmet and smoothed back his ruffled hair. "I am," he replied.
Both men flashed their ID badges. Norton thought he saw something like CIA-DIS. Or was it NSA-CIS? He didn't know, and in the end, it didn't make much difference. They were just Spooks.
"We have to have a little talk," the first man told Norton.
Norton shrugged. "Here? Now?"
"Here, now," the second guy said.
Norton now gave them a good once-over. What would these two want with him? He had already tip-top security clearance; it was a requirement for his job. Then it hit him: They were here to clear him for his long-pending job at Area 51.
What else could it be?
"OK, then," he said. "Talk . . ."
"Where did you learn to fly like that?" the first Spook asked.
Norton just shrugged again. "It comes naturally," he said, adding with a pause, "After about five thousand hours in the air."
"You can fly anything with your eyes closed," the second guy said. "Day or night. Through unfriendly skies. That's what we heard."
"Yeah? Who told you that?" Norton asked.
The Spooks ignored this question as well and moved in a little closer. The first guy lowered his voice.
"Look, we've got a question to ask you," he began. "Now we don't know whether you like this traveling-carnival thing or not. But depending on your answer, you can be out of this three-ring circus and into something very heavy inside a minute."
"I'm listening," Norton replied. "Ask away."
The first Spook took a deep breath.
"Ever fly a helicopter?" he asked.
St. Louis International Airport
One week later
The airport had been closed for two hours.
All scheduled flights had been notified of the shutdown days in advance. Many had been canceled or diverted to other airports nearby.
Roads leading in and out of the sprawling airport had been blocked off for ninety minutes. Dozens of St. Louis city policemen were manning these detours, miserable in a driving rain. Closer in to the airport itself, the secondary terminals as well as all the parking lots were being guarded by Missouri state troopers. The main terminal itself was crawling with Secret Service. By 1625 hours—4:25 in the afternoon on this dreary day—everything was set.
The President's plane arrived on schedule, exactly five minutes later.
Air Force One landed smoothly, its wheels hitting the rain-swept runway with hardly any skidding. The pilots immediately threw the engines into reverse, and the huge airplane began slowing down. It was met at the far end of the runway by a caravan of security trucks. One had its four-way flashes blinking; it began moving towards the main terminal. The giant Presidential 747 slowly followed.
The heavy rain had forced a small greeting ceremony indoors. Some five hundred people—political types and their families mostly—were now crammed into one corner of the terminal, separated from the unloading ramp by a phalanx of Secret Service agents. Relegated to the far corner of the terminal building was a tight knot of media types. TV and newspaper people, they'd spent the afternoon grumbling about the poor position so hastily assigned to them.
Air Force One finally jolted to a stop in front of the terminal platform. Outside, the rain came harder and the wind more fierce. A small army of aides burst from the airplane's main door and trooped down the ramp-way. Finally the President himself emerged. He walked into the terminal building, waved to the assembled locals, posed for a picture with an elderly supporter, and then was whisked away. Down the causeway and out to the rainy street, where he was put into a pre-positioned limousine, which roared off behind a huge motorcycle escort. A fund-raising speech in downtown St. Louis awaited him.
Two minutes after the Presidential plane touched down, a similar-looking 747 landed. This plane was painted in standard Air Force gray. Its radio call sign was "Phone Booth." It was crammed with sophisticated communications and emergency medical equipment, including a fully equipped mobile surgical room. This plane's passenger hold was also carrying two Presidential security doubles, a gaggle of mid-level Presidential aides, and a handful of reporters.
Five minutes after that, an Air Force C-141 Starlifter landed. Painted white and converted into a passenger carrier, this plane was hauling, among other things, a backup team of Secret Service agents and a dozen low-level White House staff members. It joined "Phone Booth" at the end of the runway, and together they taxied to a spot about one hundred yards away from where Air Force One was parked.
Twenty minutes after this, another airplane entered the St. Louis landing pattern. This aircraft was a noisy, smoky, thirty-five-year-old C-130 Hercules cargo plane. It was painted in faded green camouflage, and the plane's propeller engines were extremely loud in comparison to the relatively quiet jets that had landed before it. In the airborne Presidential entourage, this C-130 was the runt, the caboose. The Number 4. Its cargo hold held nothing more exotic than a pair of backup Presidential limousines, some Presidential suitcases, and the various pets of the Presidential entourage.
No surprise its radio call sign was "Doghouse."
*****
The pilot of this aircraft was Major Bobby Delaney. Mid-thirties, narrow but solidly built, with a shock of rusty hair, he'd been in the Air Force fifteen years, the last eighteen months of which he'd spent flying the Doghouse.
Earlier in his career, he'd drawn some good duty, including a DFC for his performance flying F-15's during the Gulf War. But since that time, he'd watched many of his colleagues leave the military to take jobs with the airlines or driving private business jets. Many were now making over six figures in salary.
Delaney hated his present job, and not just because of the shitty service pay he was drawing. This duty was long days and long nights, with many hours of boredom in between. Not two months into his assignment, he'd made an informal request to be re-designated. But his superiors had informed him that resigning Presidential duty so early would be considered extremely imprudent.
So Delaney was stuck, for at least another eighteen months anyway, hauling around two bulletproof cars and a half-dozen poodles and cats. He was serving his country by flying what was essentially a cross between an airborne tow truck and a kennel.
Next to his divorce eight years before, nothing had been quite so miserable.
*****
The flight to St. Louis had been a routine if bumpy affair.
A storm system over southern Ohio had forced a fifty-mile diversion over Kentucky. By the time Delaney's plane entered St. Louis ATC coverage, the three previous airplanes in the Presidential entourage had already been unloaded.
It was dark and raining even harder when Delaney finally landed the four-prop beast on an auxiliary airstrip at the airport. The unloading of the backup limos—always a laborious process—began soon afterwards. A team of Secret Service agents had to inspect each limo before it was unstrapped from its tethers in the back of the airplane. After this, each limo was rolled down the plane's cargo ramp, then inspected yet again. During all this inspection, Delaney and his four-man crew were required to stay in the C-130's cramped cockpit, thumbs- in-asses, until the all-clear was given. With the rain and the gathering darkness, this time-intensive drill stretched into two hours, nearly as long as the flight from Andrews Air Force Base had taken in the first place.
By the time the crew was finally released, Delaney was hungry, thirsty, and feeling like he'd just dug ditches for fifteen hours. It was all he could do to drag himself up to the airport's messy food shop and order a massive cup of black coffee.
"Hey, Slick," he heard a voice behind him say. "Brazil called. They're running out of beans."
Delaney spun around to see a face he hadn't set eyes on since the last days of the Gulf War.
"Jazz? Jazz Norton?" he whispered. "You've got to be shitting me. . . ."
It was Jazz. He'd been waiting at the other end of the coffee shop for the last six hours.
They shook hands heartily. Delaney had flown with Norton during Desert Storm.
Norton signaled for a cup of coffee. "How you been, Slick?" he asked.
Delaney didn't reply. He just kept staring at Norton. His old friend was wearing a black nylon jacket, white Western-style shirt, brand-new jeans and boots, and a baseball cap. He couldn't recall seeing Norton dressed quite that way before.
"Jessuzz, man," Delaney asked him. "Are you still in the service?"
"Yeah, still am," Norton mumbled.
The coffee arrived and they found an isolated table in the corner of the shop.
Delaney was still a bit in shock.
"What are you doing here, Jazz?" he asked. "Is this just a happy accident?"
Norton chose to ignore the question. "You're still flying around with the President, I see," he said instead.
Delaney took a gulp of his coffee. "Almost a year and a half," he answered. "With another year and a half to go."
"Must be nice duty," Norton said, dumping five teaspoons of sugar into his own coffee.
"Best I've ever, done," Delaney said. "Warm bed every night. Lots of travel. See a lot of interesting shit. Meet a lot of interesting people. I've become fascinated with the Presidents. Reading a lot about them. You know—who they were, what they did . . ."
"You hate it
that
much?" Norton interrupted him.
"Do I ever," Delaney replied without missing a beat. "I'd rather go to downtown Baghdad every night than be someone's chauffeur's chauffeur."
Norton stopped in mid-sip.
"Be careful what you wish for, old buddy," he said.
Delaney studied his old friend again. It was as if he hadn't aged a day in the last nine years.
"So, Jazz, what's up?" he pressed Norton. "My gut tells me this isn't just a co-inky-dinky that you're here."
"Well, I can tell you," Norton replied. "But then I'll have to kill you."
Delaney just shook his head. The clothes were giving Norton away.
"Man, I can't believe this," he said finally. "You've gone Spook?
Really
?"
Norton just shrugged and sipped his coffee again.
"But you always hated those guys, Jazz," Delaney said. "I've seen you sleep through intelligence briefings."
"Things change," Norton replied.
Delaney could only shake his head. "Jazz Norton— philosopher
and
Spook. This is too much. . . ."
Norton leaned a bit closer over the table and lowered his voice a bit.
"OK, here's the straight jack," he said. "I got privy to your desire to drop out of this Presidential car caravan stuff. I passed that information on to some new acquaintances of mine."
"Other Spooks?"
"Yep."
"What kind? From where?"
Norton just shook his head. "You've never heard of them."
"Hmmm, CIA, huh?" Delaney said. "OK, go on."
"Well, when I first met them they wanted to know if I was into changing my surroundings," Norton said. "Like immediately, and in a very radical manner."
"Cool . . ."
"Don't be too hasty," Norton cautioned him. "I heard them out, and they gave me an hour to think about it. I did, and then went back and told them no. Then they said too bad, and sprung a letter from your boss himself."
Delaney had to think a moment.
"My boss? You mean the President?" Delaney asked.
"Yep," Norton replied. "It was a Presidential Action Letter and it had my name all over it."
"What did it say?"
"It said my commander in chief was ordering me to join this . . . well, little enterprise that's been cooked up. And that I really had no choice in the matter."
"Christ, Jazz," Delaney said. "This sounds deep."
Norton grinned a moment. "Let's just say that some people in the Agency are never at a loss for dreaming up wacky stuff."
He paused a moment.
"But truth is, something's come up and for whatever reason they picked me to be involved."
Delaney took just his second sip of his coffee since they'd sat down. It was already cold.
"So, Jazz, you've had a big career change," he said. "What's that have to do with me?"
"Well," Norton said. "When I climbed on board I got to pick who I wanted to go down the yellow brick road with. . . ."
"And you picked me?" Delaney asked with a kind of half-gasp. "Why?"
Norton sat back and relaxed a bit.
"During Desert Storm, you were the best in our outfit," he told Delaney matter-of-factly.
"That's bullshit," Delaney shot back. "
You
were the top man. You were the squadron gunslinger, for Christ's sake. We followed
you
in—not the other way around."
"OK," Norton replied. "I was good at getting to the target and getting the weapons onto it. But you were better at getting us the hell home."
Delaney started to protest—but stopped. It was true, he couldn't argue. Whenever the unit went out and things got hairy—be it bad weather, nighttime, Gomer flak, or all three—they all turned to him and he always led the way home. Truth was, he didn't know how he did it most of the time. He'd just pointed his jet south, followed his nose, and brought the pack home, which, despite all their navigation and homing equipment, was still a difficult thing to do at times.
"OK," Delaney said at last. "I'm a hound dog. So what?"
Norton leaned in closer again.
"So my new friends say we might need someone who's good at getting home again."
"You are using that as the royal 'we,' I hope?"
"Not necessarily," Norton replied.
Delaney sat back and thought a moment. "Man, you're giving me the creeps. Are you saying you want me to get mixed up in whatever bad spy novel you've found yourself in?"
"Yep," was Norton's succinct reply.
Delaney finally drained his cup.
"Well, as much as I hate doping around some White House asshole's cat, I'm also smart enough not to volunteer for anything," he said.
Norton just shook his head. "This isn't a volunteering situation."
"What do you mean?" Delaney asked.
"Well, like I said, when I jumped on board, they asked me who I wanted with me and I told them you," Norton replied.
"So?"
"So you know that letter I got from your boss, the President himself?"
Delaney nodded.