The Silver Bear (22 page)

Read The Silver Bear Online

Authors: Derek Haas

Tags: #Assassins, #Psychological Fiction, #Political candidates, #General, #Fantasy, #Suspense Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Fiction

The blonde with the clipboard. She chews the inside of her cheek, anxious.
The senior agent doesn’t hesitate. “That’s a negative.”
“Abe insists.”
“Negative.”
“Would you like to speak to him, Steve? Because he certainly isn’t listening to me.”
Steve nods and moves to a corner of the room, pulls out a cell phone and speaks softly. I can tell he’s arguing with my father on the other end of the line, and I wait and it soon becomes clear he is losing the argument. His face falls but then he looks at me and his eyes harden again. I can make out that he says “yes” into the phone before flipping the lid closed.
 
 
TWELVE
secret service officers lead me down a hallway with Larry on my left and Steve on my right and we are moving like a hangman’s caravan toward two doors at the end of the corridor, the big suite on the top floor. We reach the doors and Steve gives me a curt “Wait here” and he enters into the room alone.
I wait for ten minutes, keeping my body neutral the way I’ve practiced for the last ten years until the doors open again and Steve emerges.
“Now, listen, John. There are going to be ground rules and if you deviate from those rules, we will not hesitate to kill you.”
I wait.
“You will enter the room and stand behind the line I’ve drawn for you on the floor. If you step over that line, Congressman Mann will ring a buzzer he’s holding, which will vibrate in my hand and I will enter the door and shoot you dead. Do you believe me?”
“I do.”
“You have ten minutes to walk out of that door. If you are still in the room after ten minutes I will enter and I will shoot you dead. Do you believe this to be true?”
“I do.”
“Okay, John. Then I’m going to let you in the room and start the clock. Please don’t raise your voice. It might make all of us a little antsy and I don’t want us to be antsy, okay?”
“Yes.”
“All right then.”
Steve opens the door and I step inside the suite.
 
 
A
small foyer leads to a spacious living room. A red line of tape marks off the two rooms and I enter and put my toes on the line and there he is, after all this way, there he is sitting on a gray sofa thirty feet away, his eyes fixed on me like they are attached by a rope. He is bigger up close than he looked on all those stages and there isn’t an ounce of apprehension on his face.
“Hello. I’m Abe.”
“My name is Columbus. And I am your son.”
I say this as calmly as if I were announcing the weather.
“How do you figure, Columbus?”
“I was the baby inside LaWanda Dickerson whom you knew as Amanda B. when you had her killed your freshman year in the Congress.”
He does not look down nor away. He is very good at holding his gaze steady, a conditioned skill that has served him well.
“It wasn’t like that, son. I needed her to leave Washington and some men who were looking out for me took their job too seriously, too far.”
He stands up, keeping his hands in his pockets. “But how do you know I’m the father?”
“I know.”
“She was a professional prostitute . . .”
“I know.” I’m answering his first question.
He looks at me the way an architect looks over his final blueprints, searching for flaws, mistakes. But he finds none.
“I do, too. I can tell just by looking at you.” He exhales, heavily. “But why come now? What do you want?”
“I was hired to kill you.”
He swallows once and removes his hand from his pocket. He’s holding a silver box with a button on it. “To kill me?”
“Yes, I’m a professional killer. I’ve killed men and women all over the world. I do this because I was born to do it. Do you understand?”
“Yes.” He looks at his hand and back at me. “Let me ask you something. Do you think it was a coincidence you of all people were hired to kill me?”
“Someone told me fate has a way of making paths cross.”
“Yes. We just move through this world like so many puppets on strings.”
“No. Not me. I’m in control. Our paths crossed because I willed myself to get here.”
He studies me, like he’s mulling this over.
“Do you think you were lucky? To get up into this room?”
“I think luck often favors the artful.”
“So how are you going to do it?”
“I’m going to improvise.”
“Before I press this button?”
“Yes.”
He nods matter-of-factly, then takes his thumb off the button and places the silver box on the glass coffee table.
“How are you going to escape?”
“I don’t know.”
“That’s not much of a plan.”
“No. But I got this far.”
“Yes, you did.”
“You have no idea what it took me to get here.”
“I presume your whole life, all your struggles, led to this moment.”
“Yes.”
“How much time do you have?”
“Six minutes.”
“Then listen to me. Here’s how you’re going to escape. You kill me and then you move through that door, which leads to the master bedroom. The window is open and there are balconies going down. But there is also a balcony going up to the roof. You climb to the roof and you will find a window-washing cart on the opposite side of the building. Use the gearshift to drop at a rapid speed twenty floors to the alley below. You can be several blocks away before Officer Steve comes through that door.”
I’ve kept a poker face during this speech but I don’t understand, can’t comprehend what he’s saying. “Why are you telling me this?”
“Because I hired you.”
The truth rings out in the empty hotel room like a strong wind sweeping in and carrying out the fog.
“But why?”
“Like I said, I’m just a puppet on a string.”
“That’s not good enough.”
“You only have four minutes, son. It’s going to have to be good enough if you want to live.”
“But that’s just it.
You
don’t want to live.”
“You think I have a choice? I’m a bad person, son. I’m bad in a thousand ways. There is only one way out of this . . . I’ve tried everything else. I don’t call the shots. I can’t even scandal my way off the train. I’m not that man on television. I’m a monster.”
“Explain.”
He sits down heavily, like this confession has sapped his final bit of energy. “Three minutes,” he says, weakly.
“Explain.” I repeat through gritted teeth.
“I didn’t kill your mother. I didn’t know they were going to do . . .
that.
Politics . . . politicians . . . we don’t vote, we don’t make decisions, hell, we don’t even put on our own goddam shoes without someone telling us exactly what to do. Don’t you see? Too many people rely on us to feed the machine, too many people own every little part of us to let vice tether us down. Power isn’t in the big rooms in the Capitol, it’s in the shadows and the corners and the dirty space under the rug.”
He’s gaining momentum, picking up his natural cadence, speaking like he did in Portland, speaking like he did when he actually believed what he was saying.
“When I had my
problem
with your mother, some dark men made that problem disappear. You understand about dark men, I take it. I wouldn’t have dreamed that . . .”
“And Nichelle Spellman in Kansas City? And how many others?”
He lowers his eyes. “I can’t stop it. It’s like a black hole’s been pulling me in all these years. There’s no escape. Not for me. There are corrupt people who run this country. Really run it. Their interests are motivated by greed, by money. They’ll do whatever they have to do to prop me up, keep me in power. They’ll carve me in pieces till there’s nothing left but scraps for the vultures.”
His speech is gravelly now, shaken, like the words themselves have been beaten down, pummeled, and his eyes are blank, as though he’s talking to himself. “And what do you think’s going to happen after? When I win? What do you think’s going to happen when I control policy, when I’m in charge of the NSA, when I’m Commander in Chief of the whole goddamn military? You think these dark men are going to vanish? You think they’re going to let me be?
“Or do you think they’re going to be emboldened, inspirited, galvanized to push the blackness further? I can’t . . .” He shakes his head. “I can’t stop them. They won’t let me stop them. My only choice is to . . . escape.”
I keep my voice filled with ice. “You could cast them off. Force your own way.”
“No. You don’t understand.”
“Buck them off your back, throw a chair through a window, escape . . .”
“No.”
“You could try. And if they hit you, rest and try again.”
“Maybe a long time ago. I’m tired now.”
“You could stay in the present, fight off the past, become a new man . . .”
“Impossible.”

You
can control your future.
You
can bend it to your will.”
“I can’t.”
“You’re a coward.”
“Yes.”
I look at the man before me, and he looks smaller than he did when I first entered the room. I have just one more question. “Did you know? Did you know I’d be the one coming for you?”
He searches my face through half-closed lids. “Would it help you if I said I did?”
I cross the room and am on him before he can take another breath. My fingers are on his throat and I squeeze with my left hand, my right hand useless, and our faces are inches apart but he has shut his eyes, letting this happen, and he doesn’t resist, doesn’t flinch as I close my fingers around his windpipe and then tear the skin and rip the throat out by sheer force, a grip more powerful than I can imagine, and Cox and Pooley and Dan Levine and Janet Stephens and Hap recede into the shadows, fade away, and blood is spraying that gray couch like a geyser emptying its crystal clear water and Abe Mann’s eyes shoot open and roll back and he gags on his own blood, slumping off the couch and rolling on to the floor.
I am up and through the bedroom door and the window is open and I know he wasn’t lying, maybe for the first time in a long time, he wasn’t lying, and the words he said to me about my escape were honest and right and true.
I climb the balcony and scale the final eight feet to the roof and sprint across the gravel and tar to the other side like a man being granted his freedom and it’s right there as he said it would be, an empty window-washer’s cart like a boat across Styx, and I hit the button and it lowers quickly. My shoulder aches but I ignore it and the wind picks up and blows hard into my face and I can taste a bit of salt in the air from the endless ocean to the west.
EPILOGUE
I
step out of the white Mercedes van and the driver opens my door and hands me my suitcase. The hotel is as I remember it, built into the side of the hill like a natural addition to the landscape. My room is large and comfortable and I walk to the patio overlooking the town and the sea far below and I cast my eyes up the hill and across until they settle on the Cortino house.
I wonder who lives in it now. It has been six years since the bodies of Cortino, his invalid wife, and his bodyguard were found murdered in their bedroom on an early June morning. The crime slapped the sleepy town awake, sent it reeling, but the passage of time and the endless lapping of the ocean on its doorstep gently nudged the town back to sleep. I imagine the doors of the houses high up on the hill are locked at night now.
The city of Los Angeles had a similar reaction the second time a nominee was assassinated while in its care. But there was no Sirhan Sirhan to exact revenge upon, just a John Smith with a nondescript face and a pleasant voice and an ability to vanish into thin air. Two years later, the case remains unsolved, despite every effort to gain some answers.
I am here in Positano getting my mind right. It is late summer and I informed Mr. Ryan I would need a few months between assignments this time. A few months without making connections, without severing connections, just a few months to breathe and live and remember.
I have worked exclusively in Europe since the Abe Mann killing, and Mr. Ryan moved to Paris to facilitate his role in my work. He has found the move from the desert to be agreeable, the law enforcement here more relaxed, the economy strong, the supply of contracts endless. I believe he is happy having a Silver Bear under his aegis, though we don’t talk about personal things. Ours is a business relationship, and things are simple.
He traveled recently to Denver, Colorado, upon my request. It is the first time he has made a file on a person who wasn’t a target. I have the file in my hand now, but I haven’t opened it. I was waiting until I arrived in this place, this town built into the side of a hill yearning to tumble into the sea. I sit heavily on a patio chair, breathe in the cool night air, and place my thumb under the seal.
The name at the top of the page is Jacqueline Grant, formerly Jake Owens of Boston, Massachusetts. The surveillance photo shows a profile of a woman stepping out of a car, hurrying across a parking lot to a grocery store. Her hair is longer than it was when I knew her and her face is a bit fuller. She looks content, or maybe I’m projecting this on to her image.
She has been married for three years. Her husband owns a restaurant. A clean, well-lighted place that serves hamburgers to locals. He is her age and treats her well. I wonder how they met. I wonder if she was unlucky with men after I kicked her in the stomach or if she swore them off until Alex Grant came into her life. I wonder if he was safe and she felt secure with him.
I wonder if she loves him.

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