X

The Icarus Agenda by Robert Ludlum

Milos Varak walked down the boarded path towards the enormous beach fronting the Hotel del Coronado three miles over the bridge from San Diego. He had worked diligently for weeks to find a crack through which he could penetrate the ranks of the Vice President of the United States. Most of the time was spent in Washington; the administration’s Secret Service was not easily invaded. Until he found a man, a dedicated man, with a strong physique and a disciplined mind, but with an unacceptable avocation that if exposed would destroy his assets, as well as his career and undoubtedly his life. He was a well-compensated procurer for various high-ranking members of the government. He had been primed for his work by the elders of his family, who had spotted his potential and sent him to the finest parochial schools and through a major university—major but not rich for that image would be incorrect. The elders wanted a fine looking, upstanding, well-groomed young man placed in a position to dispense favours in return for certain accommodations. And what better favours were there than below a weak man’s belt, and how better to reach accommodations than the knowledge thereof. The elders were pleased, had been pleased for a number of years. This man came from the Mafia; he was Mafia; he served the Mafia.

Varak approached the lone figure in a raincoat by the rocks of a jetty several hundred yards from the high, imposing wire fence of the Naval Air Station.

‘Thank you so much for seeing me,’ said Milos pleasantly.

‘I thought you had an accent on the phone,’ said the well-spoken, well-trained, dark-featured man. ‘Are you a redbird courier? Because if you are, you’ve reached the wrong swallow.’

‘A Communist? I’m the farthest thing from it. I’m so American your consiglieri could present me to the Vatican.’

‘That’s insulting, to say nothing of being totally inaccurate… You made several very stupid statements, so stupid that you provoked my curiosity, which is why I’m here.’

‘For whatever reason, I’m grateful that you are.’

‘The bottom line was pretty clear,’ interrupted the Secret Service agent. ‘You threatened me, sir.’

‘I’m sorry you were offended, I never meant to threaten you. I merely said that I was aware of certain additional services you provided—’

‘Stop being so polite—’

‘There’s no reason to be discourteous,’ said Varak courteously. ‘I simply wanted you to understand my position.’

‘You don’t have a position,’ corrected the government man with emphasis. ‘Our records are unblemished, if you get my point.’

The Czech shifted his feet in the sand and waited while the roar of a jet passing over from the Naval Air Station diminished in the sky. ‘You’re saying that there are no records and your point is that you won’t discuss anything concrete because you think I may be wearing a recording device.’ Varak unbuttoned his jacket, separating it. ‘Be my guest, search me. Personally, I wouldn’t care to have my voice on the same tape with yours… Please, go ahead. I will, of course, remove my weapon and hold it in my hand but I won’t stop you.’

The White House guardian was sullen, hesitant. ‘You’re too accommodating,’ he said, standing motionless.

‘On the other hand,’ added Milos quickly. ‘We can dispense with this awkwardness if you’d just read something I’ve prepared for you.’ The Czech released his jacket, reached into his pocket and pulled out several sheets of folded paper. He snapped them open and handed them to the Secret Service agent.

As the man read, his eyes narrowed and his lips parted, frozen into the start of a snarl; in seconds a reasonably strong and attractive face became ugly. ‘You’re a dead man,’ he said quietly.

‘That could be short-sighted, don’t you think? Because if I am, surely so are you. The capos would descend like a pack of wild dogs while the dons, drinking their fine red wine as if it were your blood, waited to hear of your very unpleasant death. Records? What are those? Names, dates, times, locations—and correspondingly, opposite each entry, the results of your sexual merchandise, or rather, blackmailed into being results. Bills amended, contracts awarded, government projects voted up or down according to their allocations. I’d say it’s quite a record. And where does it all lead back to? Let me guess. The most unlikely source one can imagine… An unpublished telephone number listed under a false name and address but located in the apartment of a member of the government’s Secret Service.’

‘Those girls are dead… The boys are dead—’

‘Don’t blame them. They had no more of a choice than you do now. Believe me, it’s better to assist me than to oppose me. I have no interest in your extracurricular activities; you provide a service and if you didn’t somebody else would for roughly the same results. All I want from you is information, and in exchange I’ll burn every copy of those pages. Of course, you have only my word for it, but as I’m likely to call upon your expertise again, I’d be stupid to release them, and I assure you I’m not stupid.’

‘Obviously not,’ agreed the Mafia soldier, his voice barely audible. ‘Why throw a gun’ away when you can still use it?’

‘I’m glad you understand my position.’

‘What sort of information are you looking for?’

‘It’s innocuous, nothing that will upset you. Let’s start with the FBI unit that’s been assigned to the Vice President. Aren’t you people doing your job? Do you need a special task force from the Bureau?’

‘It hasn’t anything to do with us. We’re in place for protection. They’re investigative.’

‘You can’t protect unless you investigate.’

‘It’s different levels. We come up with something, we turn it over to the Bureau.’

‘What did you come up with that called for this unit?’

‘We didn’t,’ answered the man. ‘A couple of months ago a series of threats were made against Viper and—’

‘Viper?’

‘The Vice President.’

‘It’s not a very flattering code name.’

‘It’s not in general use, either. Just among the detail.’

‘I see. Go on—these threats. Who made them?’

That’s what the unit’s all about. They’re trying to find out because they’re still being made.’

‘How?’

‘Phone calls, telegrams, paste-up letters—they come from different places, which keep the Feds in the air a lot tracing them down.’

‘Without success?’

‘Not yet.’

‘Then they’re a roving task force, here one day, somewhere else the next. Are their movements co-ordinated from Washington?’

‘When Viper’s there, sure. When he’s out here, it’s here, and when he’s on the road it’s wherever he’s at. The unit’s controlled by his personal stuff; otherwise too much time is wasted checking back and forth with DC.’

‘You were out here five weeks ago, weren’t you?’

‘Around then, yes. We just got back ten days ago; he spends a lot of time out here. As he likes to say, the President covers the East and he covers the West, and he’s got the better deal because he gets away from Funny Town.’

‘That’s a foolish statement for a Vice President to make.’

‘That’s Viper, but that’s not to say he’s a fool. He’s not.’

‘Why do you call him Viper?’

‘As long as you want it straight I guess we don’t like him, or the crowd he pals around with—especially out here. Those bastards treat us like Puerto Rican houseboys. The other afternoon one of them said to me, “Boy, get me another G and T.” I told him I’d better check with my superiors in the Secret Service to see if I was assigned to him.’

‘Weren’t you afraid the Vice—Viper—might take offence?’

‘Christ, he doesn’t mess with us. Like the Fed unit, we only answer to his staff chief.’

‘Who’s he?’

‘Not he, she. We’ve got another code for her; it’s not as good as Viper but it fits. We call her Dragon Bitch—Dame Bountiful in the logs, which she likes.’

‘Tell me about her,’ said Varak, the antennae of an adult lifetime picking up a signal.

‘Her name’s Ardis Vanvlanderen, and she came on board about a year ago replacing a hell of a good man who was doing a hell of a good job. So good he got a terrific offer from one of Viper’s friends. She’s in her forties and one of those tough executive ladies who looks like she wants to cut your balls off when you go into her office just because you’re a male.’

‘An unattractive woman, then?’

‘I wouldn’t say that. She’s got a decent enough face and a foxy body, but it’d be hard to work up a letch for her unless you like the type. My guess is she screws by numbers.’

‘Is she married?’

‘There’s a gonzo who comes around saying he’s her husband but nobody pays much attention to him.’

‘What does he do? What’s his business?’

‘He’s Palm Springs social set. Stocks and bonds when they don’t interfere with his golf, that’s the way I read him.’

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166

Categories: Robert Ludlum
Oleg: