Executive Orders by Tom Clancy

“But–”

“But, my ass, Mr. President. There’s people out there who don’t like you? Okay, fine. You just figure out how to find them, and then you can ask those Marines out there to go take care of business. You know what they’ll say. You may be hated by some, but you’re respected and loved by a lot more, and I’m telling you now, there’s not one person in our country’s uniform who isn’t willing to dust anybody who fucks with you and your family. It’s not just what you are, it’s who you are, okay?”

Who am I? SWORDSMAN asked himself. At that moment, one of his weaknesses asserted itself.

“Come on.” Ryan walked over to the west. He’d just seen a sudden flare of light, and thirty seconds later, at the corner of another cabin, he found a Navy cook smoking a cigarette. President or not, he wasn’t going to be overly proud tonight. “Hello.”

“Jesus!” the sailor blurted, snapping to attention and dropping his smoke into the grass. “I mean, hello, Mr. President.”

“Wrong the first time, right the second time. Got a

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smoke?” POTUS asked, entirely without shame, Robby Jackson noted.

“You bet, sir.” The cook fished one out and lit it.

“Sailor, if the First Lady sees you do that again, she’ll have the Marines shoot you,” Jackson warned.

“Admiral Jackson!” Those words made the kid brace again. “I think the Marines work for me. How’s dinner coming?”

“Sir, the pizza is being cut right now. Baked it myself, sir. They oughta like it,” he promised.

“Settle down. Thanks for the cigarette.”

“Anytime, sir.” Ryan shook his hand and wandered off with his friend.

“I needed that,” Jack admitted, somewhat shamefully, taking a long drag.

“If I had a place like this, I’d use it a lot. Almost like being at sea,” Jackson went on. “Sometimes you go outside, stand on one of the galleries off the flight deck, and just sort of enjoy the sea and the stars. The simple pleasures.”

“It’s hard to turn it off, isn’t it? Even when you went communing with the sea and the stars, you didn’t turn it off, not really.”

“No,” the admiral admitted. “It makes thinking a little easier, makes the atmosphere a little less intense, but you’re right. It doesn’t really go away.” And it didn’t now, either.

“Tony said India’s navy’s gone missing on us.”

“Both carriers at sea, with escorts and oilers. We’re looking for them.”

“What if there’s a connection?” Ryan asked.

“With what?”

“The Chinese make trouble in one place, the Indian navy goes to sea again, and this happens to me–am I being paranoid?” SWORDSMAN asked.

“Probably. Could be the Indians put out when they finished their repairs, and maybe to show us that we didn’t teach them all that big a lesson. The China thing, well, it’s happened before, and it’s not going anywhere, especially after Mike Dubro gets there. I know Mike. He’ll have

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fighters up and poking around. The attempt on Katie? Too early to say, and it’s not my field. You have Murray and the rest for that. In any case, they failed, didn’t they? Your family’s in there, watching TV, and it’ll be a long time before somebody tries anything else.”

IT WAS BECOMING an all-nighter all over the world. In Tel Aviv, where it was now after four in the morning, Avi ben Jakob had called in his top terrorism experts. Together they went over the photos transmitted from Washington and were comparing them with their own surveillance photographs that had been taken over the years in Lebanon and elsewhere. The problem was that many of their photos showed young men with beards– the simplest method of disguise known to man–and the photos were not of high quality. By the same token, the American-transmitted images were not exactly graduation pictures, either.

“Anything useful?” the director of Mossad asked.

Eyes turned to one of the Mossad’s experts, a fortyish woman named Sarah Peled. Behind her back, they called her the witch. She had some special gift for ID’ing people from photographs, and was right just over half the time in cases where other trained intelligence officers threw up their hands in frustration.

“This one.” She slid two photos across the table. “This is a definite match.”

Ben Jakob looked at the two side by side–and saw nothing to confirm her opinion. He’d asked her many times what keyed her in on such things. Sarah always said it was the eyes, and so Avi took another look, comparing the eyes of one with the eyes of the other photo. All he saw were eyes. He turned the Israeli photo over. The printed data on the back said that he was a suspected Hezbollah member, name unknown, age about twenty in their photo, which was dated six years earlier.

“Any others, Sarah?” he asked.

“No, none at all.”

“How confident are you on this one?” one of the

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counterintelligence people asked, looking at the photos himself now and, like Avi, seeing nothing.

“One hundred percent, Benny. I said ‘definite,’ didn’t I?” Sarah was often testy, especially with unbelieving men at four in the morning.

“How far do we go on this?” another staff member asked.

“Ryan is a friend of our country, and President of the United States. We go as far as we can. I want inquiries to go out. All contacts, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Iran, everywhere.”

“SWINE.” BONDARENKO RAN a hand through his hair. His tie was long since gone. His watch told him it was Saturday, but he didn’t know what that day was anymore.

“Yes,” Golovko agreed.

“A black operation–a ‘wet’ one, you used to call it?” the general asked.

“Wet and incompetent,” the RVS chairman said crossly. “But Ivan Emmetovich was lucky, Comrade General. This time.”

“Perhaps,” Gennady losefovich allowed.

“You disagree?”

“The terrorists underestimated their opponents. You will recall that I recently spent time with the American army. Their training is like nothing else in the world, and the training of their presidential guard must be equally as expert. Why is it that people so often underestimate the Americans?” he wondered.

That was a good question, Sergey Nikolay’ch recognized, nodding for the chief of operations to go on.

“America often suffers from a lack of political direction. That is not the same as incompetence. You know what they are like? A vicious dog held on a short leash– and because he cannot break the leash, people delude themselves that they need not fear him, but within the arc of that leash he is invincible, and a leash, Comrade Chairman, is a temporary thing. You know this Ryan fellow.”

“I know him well,” Golovko agreed.

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“And? The stories in their press, are they true?”

“All of them.”

“I tell you what I think, Sergey Nikolay’ch. If you regard him as a formidable adversary, and he has that vicious dog on the leash, I would not go far out of my way to offend him. An attack on a child? His child?” The general shook his head.

That was it, Golovko realized. They were both tired, but here was a moment of clarity. He’d spent too much time reading over the political reports from Washington, from his own embassy, and directly from the American media. They all said that Ivan Emmetovich . . . was that the key? From the beginning he’d called Ryan that, thinking to honor the man with the Russian version of his name and the Russian patronymic. And an honor it was in Golovko’s context. . .

“You are thinking what I am thinking, da?” the general asked, seeing the man’s face and gesturing for him to speak.

“Someone has made a calculation …”

“And it is not an accurate one. I think we need to find out who has done so. I think a systematic attack on American interests, an attempt to weaken America, Comrade Chairman, is really an attack against our interests. Why is China doing what she is doing, eh? Why did they force America to change her naval dispositions? And now this? American forces are being stretched, and at the same time a strike at the very heart of the American leader. This is no coincidence. Now we can stand aside and do nothing more than observe, or–”

“There is nothing we can do, and with the revelations in the American press–”

“Comrade Chairman,” Bondarenko interrupted. “For seventy years, our country has confused political theory with objective fact, and that was almost our undoing as a nation. There are objective conditions here,” he went on, using a phrase beloved of the Soviet military–a reaction, perhaps, to their three generations of political oversight. “I see the patterns of a clever operation, a coordinated operation, but one which has a fatal flaw, and that flaw is-a

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misestimation of the American President. Do you disagree?”

Golovko gave that a few seconds of thought, noting also that Bondarenko might just be seeing something real–but did the Americans? It was so much harder to see something from the inside than the outside. A coordinated operation? Back to Ryan, he told himself.

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