Ghosts of Columbia (69 page)

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Authors: L.E. Modesitt Jr.

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Alternate History, #United States, #Literature & Fiction

BOOK: Ghosts of Columbia
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“You’re protecting
me?

“I’d like to think so.” I looked at the books on the table.
So did Hansen. Then he got up. “I think you’re being more honest than many,
but I cannot say I’m pleased. I intend to stay nearby. My number will get me in a few minutes or less if you need me.”
“I’m sorry. I’m doing the best I can.” I stood and walked to the door with him. “I really am.”
Once the door was closed, and locked, I wired the embassy but could only get the duty clerk. I impressed on him the need for the First or Second Secretary to contact me as soon as possible. He promised to try to find them.
I had my doubts and suspected I’d have to storm the embassy in the morning. I tried the telephone book, but as I did not know their names, it wasn’t much help.
Again … I should have been more assiduous in gathering that sort of information, but you don’t expect to have to run down people on Sundays. You should figure it could happen, but I was out of practice and, once more, it showed. Espionage was like athletics: you have to stay in shape, and paranoia helps.
I’d have to wire the embassy again later.
I glanced at the closed case. Babbage codes or quotes? I decided on codes, at least until I had a better formulation on the structure I had in mind. My last ghost from scratch hadn’t been all that successful.
In two hours plus, I had something on paper. What it would do was another question, and that assumed that the Revealed Twelve had the necessary hardware. What scared me was that I thought they did.
At seven-forty, I closed the case and left it on the table. The codes by themselves meant nothing, and I couldn’t carry everything everywhere. I washed my hands and face quickly, trying to ignore the remaining scent of Ivoire, and hurried out to the elevator.
I was walking south on 100 West Street at quarter to eight. Ahead, the Salt Palace performing complex loomed like a dark abandoned ruin. Slightly behind and to the east, the Temple shone in a cocoon of shimmering white light. Personally, I’d have preferred the reverse, but that might have been my skepticism about the overall benefit of religions based on true believers.
Several figures—all Danites or Hansen’s men or both—lurked in the shadows while I lounged less than a dozen feet from the public communications booth.
Finally, at three past the hour, the wireset rang, and I picked it up. “Eschbach.”
“There is another wireset two blocks south of where you are.” The voice was disguised and electronically resonant, and that spoke of more sophisticated communications technology than that used by an average terrorist or kidnapper. The technology level reassured me, but only slightly. “It is the only booth with a red facade. Tomorrow at eleven you will receive final instructions. You will park a steamer there, rented from a commercial establishment. We trust you will make your own communications arrangements with your embassy.
“You will be given directions where to drive and for how long. At the end of that time, you will contact the embassy to confirm your wife’s safety. Then you will be picked up.”
“I can accept that.”
“Good. Eleven tomorrow morning.”
Click.
I hung up the handset and walked back to the Lion Inn. Again, Hansen was waiting by my door. We walked inside before I spoke. “Eleven tomorrow.”
He nodded.
“Any luck on tracing the wire?”
“A public set outside a grocery in South Great Salt Lake City. Right beside the south expressway. No one will be there, but I sent a steamer to check.”
“Speaking of steamers, we’ll need to rent a steamer in the morning.”
“I heard.”
“I assume there’s no commercial establishment open now.”
“This is Sunday, Minister Eschbach.”
I wanted to shake my head. What did they do about babies, heart attacks, and other inconveniences that occurred on the holy day?
After he left, I wired the embassy again.
“This is Minister Eschbach. Have you had any luck in finding the Second Secretary?”
“No, sir. We’ve put a message on his service and on the system and posted it in his box. He’s not at home, or he’s not answering.”
“Tell him it’s urgent.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Tell him Deputy Minister Jerome thinks it’s urgent also.”
“Ah … yes, sir. I’ll try again right away.”
“Thank you. Both Minister Jerome and I would appreciate it.”
I really didn’t want to say more—not yet. If need be, I could have Hansen wait outside the embassy with a radio. He’d do it. He’d do anything ethical and legal not to have the blame for the mess dropped in his lap.
R
oom service delivered breakfast to the suite at seven. By seven-thirty I had talked to Hansen. He’d pick me up at the embassy at eight-thirty. Before eight I was dressed, wearing, among other things, the gray vest that looked like leather and was, in fact, little more than textured plastique. I had everything ready to go.
I had packed what I needed into the case—the professional papers, the code lines, the notes and quotes, and
The Book of Mormon.
I took the engineering drawings Dietre had supplied with me. Double or nothing, because if I got killed with the schismatics and they were found there’d be hell to pay. But if I left them behind they wouldn’t be there when I returned, and I deserved some payoff for the mess Harlaan and Jerome and all the others had gotten us into. Besides, it was almost a matter of principle. I needed to do more than expected, and I might need every bit of leverage I had once we got back to Columbia. If we got back.
No sense dwelling on that. So I checked my watch. Eight o’clock. Of course, the Second Secretary hadn’t called back. So I put in another call to the embassy.
“Ah … he’s not available at the moment.”
“This is Minister Eschbach, and I strongly suggest you find him—this moment. Or the First Secretary. The name is Eschbach, and neither President Armstrong nor Speaker Hartpence or a fellow by the name of Asquith will be very pleased if you don’t. Nor will Ambassador Klein or Minister Jerome.”
It took a few moments more—more than a few—on the wireset, with a few more helpful suggestions, before I put it down flatly.
“I’ll be there in ten minutes to see either the First or Second Secretary.”
“We can’t do that.”
“If you don’t, you’re all likely to be on a turbo to the Federal District by tonight. By the way, tell them it’s Hamilton’s Whiskey Revolt.”
“Would you hold for a moment, sir?”
“I’d be happy to.” I wasn’t in the slightest happy to hold.
“This is Second Secretary Trumbull-Hull.”
“Johan Eschbach. You have a condition red-two facing you. Hamilton Whiskey Revolt. Status amber, going red at eleven. I’ll be there to see you in ten minutes.”
“Eschbach?
The
Eschbach?”
“Yes. I’m back where I didn’t want to be.”
“I’ll be here.” He sounded less than pleased. I couldn’t blame him.
Someone had clearly briefed him, however, by the time I arrived by a steamer cab—a Reo, not a Browning. The embassy was on the hill, between Deseret University and the Temple, in a huge old complex that had probably housed some former patriarch’s establishment. The oak door was golden, with spotless brass furnishings, and it opened before I reached it.
Two Republic marines in blues stood back. “Minister Eschbach, sir?”
“That’s me.” I had out both the diplomatic passport and the government ID.
The shorter marine nodded. “This way, sir.”
The Second Secretary’s office was on the first floor on the back side, overlooking a garden. The conversion into an office had left an ancient fireplace, faced with blue and cream ceramic tile, with a hearth of the same tile, and a dark walnut mantel that held the picture of a handsome brunette and two children.
Trumbull-Hull was in his midthirties, taller than I was, and balding. His forehead was damp, and he stood behind an antique walnut desk as if it were a rampart under siege.
“Please have a seat.” He motioned to the chair in front of the desk.
“I take it that my concerns were reinforced?” I asked pleasantly.
He nodded stiffly. “I was told to offer any assistance within the power of the embassy.”
“Good. It isn’t that bad from your point of view.” How much should I tell him? Too much and he’d muck it up. Too little and he’d manage to obstruct everything.
“It’s rather simple. A contact went bad. The wrong people got involved, and they hold my wife. They want me. I need your help in a small way in ensuring her safety and the successful conclusion of the operation.”
“Your wife? The singer?” His mouth almost opened.
I nodded.
“The news media—”
“They don’t know yet, and I hope they never know. So do you. If this goes right, she’ll be here on your doorstep sometime after eleven—probably around noon, but the time could vary.”
“Here?”
“Here.”
“We’ll do what is possible.” His words were careful, calculated. “What, exactly, do you need from us?”
“Very little. We reached an accommodation—of sorts: Llysette is delivered here. I talk to her before going with them, but I have to be close to their reach. So what I need from you is a radio or the equivalent and someone listening constantly from eleven onward—a shortwave or similar unit that will reach from anywhere in several hundred miles to the embassy.”
“You’re going to do that?”
“You can’t defuse a bomb long-distance.” I laughed hoarsely. “Anyway, my wife is supposed to arrive here sometime after they contact me at eleven. I’ll need confirmation of that, and I’ll need to speak to her personally. If, and I hope this is not the case, she cannot speak, or she doesn’t arrive, I want you on the other end.” I smiled. It wasn’t a totally pleasant smile.
“Ah … I think we can do that. Is there anything else?”
“Once I’ve resolved the situation, we both get immediate turbo passage to the Federal District and guards to the aerodrome to ensure we get home.”
“And?” Trumbull-Hull asked warily.
“You may be contacted by a Bishop Hansen.”
“The Saint security chief? You are moving in … interesting circles, Minister Eschbach.”
“You can tell him one of two things—either that you have Llysette or you don’t.”
“Are you sure you want to go through with this?” he asked, almost perfunctorily.
“You don’t want an incident, and I don’t want one. I’d prefer things be kept very quiet. I was trained for this, and I doubt you have anyone acceptable.” I cleared my throat. “I’m sure you people can find a cover story if something happens to me. You can’t if it happens to her. Not exactly easily.” That probably wasn’t true. With enough effort, anything can be covered up, especially in a nation that would want it covered, but I didn’t want Second Secretary Trumbull-Hull thinking along those lines.
In the end, he saw it my way, not that I really had to press much, probably because he didn’t have many choices. Second Secretaries were often more self-serving and rational than the political appointees. More cowardly, often, too. The brave ones usually didn’t last, as was the case in so many other fields as well.
Still, I didn’t get back outside the embassy until eight-forty, lugging a small radio with a long collapsible antenna and my datacase. Brother Hansen was waiting in a dark green Browning with a young clean-shaven driver.
The day was gray and cold, and even my overcoat didn’t seem that warm.
Hansen held the door open from inside, and I climbed out of the wind.
“I see you persuaded Trumbull-Hull to part with a radio.”
“It wasn’t too hard.”
“You talk a good game, Eschbach, but do you really know what they want?”
“I don’t have an absolute confirmation, but almost anything would be better than what I’ve prepared for.” I laughed hoarsely. “Then, I’ll probably find out that what they want is even worse than that. It usually works that way.”
I was guessing, of course, but the kidnappers had agreed to my terms, and that meant I was the
only
one who could do what they wanted—and that was either to destroy or create a ghost. Since there were no rumors about ghosts in existence, that meant creating one, and I had a good idea what that meant.
The security limousine hissed to a stop outside a sandstone-type building. In the car park were a double handful of fresh-washed steamers. The sign read: “Deseret Rentals.”
Hansen almost choked at the invoice for renting the steamer. “Three hundred … and not even a Browning.”
“Groundnuts,” I said quietly, deciding he needed a reminder of what was at stake. “You want deGaulle’s Foreign Legions marshaling in Santa Fe for a quick march toward the San Juan gasification plants?”
Hansen looked puzzled and I really didn’t feel like explaining, but at this point some explanation—or speculation—wouldn’t hurt too much.
“Escobar-Moire and deGaulle need diesel for those fleets, and they really don’t want to pay your prices. Columbia does, and Ferdinand wants a civil war here and unrest all over North America. If Llysette disappears, you’ll get trouble with Columbia and problems from your schismatics. A rental steamer is cheap insurance.”
Of course, that was only part of the story, but a part that was true and certainly
wouldn’t hurt for Brother Hansen to hear. I would have paid for it, if necessary, but with all the risks Llysette and I were taking, I preferred that the Saints, and Counselor Cannon, paid as many of the bills as possible. I’d end up paying more than my share no matter how well matters turned out, and I didn’t even want to consider the costs if they didn’t.
With all the paperwork—every country had it—it was almost nine-forty-five before I fired up the rental steamer, a small brown Reno, barely big enough for four people.
“Let’s go back to the Inn,” Hansen suggested. “We haven’t finished.”
He was right about that, and I worried about what he had in mind.
Because I needed to eat, we sat in the corner booth in The Refuge, which confirmed, indirectly, that Hansen had had a lot to do with our seating and that the table was probably snooped to the gills and Hansen wanted my words on record. I’d have to be careful how I said what I said.
Hansen’s eyes met mine over the chocolate. “Would you mind telling me what is really going on?”
“An attempt to use religion as a weapon to alienate Columbia and Deseret forever by playing on the simplistic side of people’s faith in a time when life is too complex for many of them to handle.”
“My, you sound superior.”
“I don’t mean it that way, but that’s what I see.” With a sigh, I refilled my mug.
“You’re saying that the schismatics have no real faith and that they’re using their disputes as a cover to gain temporal power?”
“Not exactly.” How could I put it? “I have no reason to disbelieve the sincerity of what the schismatics believe. I do believe that they are being supported by outsiders who see the schismatics’ beliefs as more in the interests of the outsiders.”
“Very politely put. One can tell you were a politician.”
“A very bad politician, Brother Hansen.”
“So, Deseret’s … furor over faith … is being used for political goals.”
“That’s my guess. It’s only a guess.”
“And what’s in this for you, since you’re not exactly a Saint?”
He was right about that in both senses. “The first is obvious. I want my wife safe.”
“You love her. That is obvious, and praiseworthy. I do not believe that is the only reason.”
“No. I’d like to put a stop to those who would use people’s beliefs in ways that aren’t in their own interests.”
“High-sounding rhetoric, Minister Eschbach.”
“Probably, but I’ve noted that disruption fueled by religious disputes gets extraordinarily ugly, especially when the … temporal … stakes are high. I happen to think that Columbia and Deseret need to work out an arrangement that’s less adversarial. That won’t be possible if the schismatics succeed.”
Hansen stroked his beard. “That makes sense, but I’m still not totally convinced.”
I wasn’t either. So I sipped more chocolate and had another bite of the dry ham sandwich.
“There has to be more,” he prodded.
“There is. I really want to be left alone. I really want Llysette to be able to sing without fear or concern.”
He nodded, and he apparently understood enough that he asked a different question. “Are you certain you don’t want a close tail?”
“Look,” I said. “They won’t do anything until they’re convinced no one is following me. That’s why they want a rental steamer. I don’t want a tracker or a tail.”
“Then you’ll have to tell us where you’re headed.”
I laughed. “It’s all a blind. I’ll be back in Great Salt Lake City by tonight. Where in Great Salt Lake City I haven’t the faintest idea. This whole business is designed to make a transfer where you can’t get too close. But the best place to hide remains a city.”
“You don’t want us too close, do you?”
“Yes and no. I’d prefer to be rescued, but the problem is that the problem won’t stay solved if it’s not played out.” I’d only thought the problem had been played out the first time around. Self-deception can be so comforting, until you’re called on it. How could I have thought Branston-Hay’s theoretical formulations on creating ghosts would have stayed buried? I’d applied them. Probably Minister Jerome had people working on applying them.

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