Child, Lee – Without Fail

‘Probably,’ Reacher said. Fhaw it a bit, rub it down their

nose, print it on the paper. Just like Stuyvesant’s secretary with

her rubber stamp. It’s probably drying out a bit with age, which

is why the squalene percentage keeps getting higher.’

‘What are the implications?’ Stuyvesant said. ‘Assuming

you’re right?’

301

Reacher made a face. ‘We can change one major assumption.

Now I would guess they’ve both got prints on file, and they’ve

both been wearing the latex gloves.’

I’wo renegades,’ Bannon said.

‘Not necessarily ours,’ Stuyvesant said.

‘So explain the other factors,’ Bannon said.

Stuyvesant was silent. Bannon shrugged.

‘Come on,’ he said. ‘We’ve got an hour. And I don’t want to be

looking in the wrong place. So convince me. Show me these are

private citizens gunning for Armstrong personally.’

Stuyvesant glanced at Swain, but Swain said nothing.

‘ime is ticking by,’ Bannon said.

q’his isn’t an ideal context,’ Swain said.

Bannon smiled. ‘What, you only preach to the choir?’

Nobody spoke.

‘You’ve got no case,’ Bannon said. ‘I mean, who cares about a

vice president? They’re nobodies. What was it, a bucket of warm

spit?’

‘It was a pitcher,’ Swain said. ‘John Nance Garner said the

vice presidency isn’t worth a pitcher of warm spit. He also

called it a spare tyre on the automobile of government. He

was FDR’s first running mate. John Adams called it the most

insignificant office man had ever invented, and he was the first

vice president of all.’

‘So who cares enough to shoot a spare tyre or an insignificant

pitcher of spit?’

‘Let me start from the beginning,’ Swain said. ‘what does a

vice president do?’

‘He sits around,’ Bannon says. ‘Hopes the big guy dies.’

Swain nodded. ‘Somebody else said the Vice President’s job

is merely about waiting. In case the President dies, sure, but

more often for the nomination in his own right eight years down

the track. But in the short term, what is the Vice President for?’ ‘Beats the hell out ofme,’ Bannon said.

‘He’s there to be a candidate,’ Swain said. fhat’s the bottom

line. His design life lasts from when he’s tapped in the summer

until election day. He’s useful for four or five months, tops. He

starts out as a pick-me-up for the campaign. Everybody’s bored

to death with the presidential nominees by midsummer, so the

302

VP picks put a jolt into the campaigns. Suddenly we’ve all got something else to talk about. Somebody else to analyse. We

look at their qualities and their records. We figure out how well

they balance the tickets. That’s their initial function. Balance

and contrast. Whatever the presidential nominee isn’t, the VP

nominee is, and vice versa. Young, old, racy, dull, northern,

southern, dumb, smart, hard, soft, rich, poor.’

‘We get the picture,’ Bannon said.

‘So he’s there for what he is,’ Swain said. ‘Initially he’s just a

photograph and a biography. He’s a concept. Then his duties

start. He’s got to have campaigning skills, obviously. Because

he’s there to be the attack dog. He’s got to be able to say

the stuff the presidential candidate isn’t allowed to say himself.

If the campaign scripts an attack or a put-down, it’s the VP

candidate they get to deliver it. Meanwhile the presidential

candidate stands around somewhere else looking all statesmanlike.

Then the election happens and the presidential candidate

goes to the White House and the VP gets put away in a closet.

His usefulness is over, first Tuesday in November.’

‘Was Armstrong good at that kind of stuff?’

‘He was excellent. The truth is he was a very negative

campaigner, but the polls didn’t really show it because he kept

that nice smile on his face the whole time. Truth is he was

deadly.’

‘And you think he trod on enough toes to get himself

assassinated for it?’

Swain nodded, q’hat’s what I’m working on now. I’m analysing

every speech and comment, matching up his attacks against

the profile of the people he was attacking.’

if’he timing is persuasive,’ Stuyvesant said. ‘Nobody can

argue with that. He was in the House for six years and the

Senate for another six and barely got a nasty letter. This whole

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