Chain of Command
©2013 Colby Marshall
All Rights Reserved
ISBN 978-0-9849070-6-9
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
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An Armchair Adventurer book
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Zero Hour
California
His heart rate never rose above sixty as he looked through the scope of his .50 caliber sniper rifle at the unfortunate soul caught in his crosshairs.
He kept his breathing even. He inhaled deeply, slowly, so he could hold his breath as long as it took when the moment came. Then, he controlled his exhale equally. Hold. Breathing when he pulled the trigger could affect the shot’s precision. He had done this a time or two. Actually way more, but this one was different.
This one he knew.
Still, no reason to worry. Stick to the protocol.
He fixed on the target’s head in the center of the scope. The perfect kill shot. Just the way the United States military taught him.
Beside him sat a cell phone, the prepaid kind you could pay cash for in any discount store so it couldn’t be traced. Only one person had the number to this phone.
He sucked air into his nostrils, noting the feel of the air temperature as he watched the glowing face of the phone, the clock flicking in time from 8:59 to 9:00 PM. The phone vibrated against the cement. He turned it on and listened in his earpiece.
“You good to go?”
“Yep, have to go now. Target locked.”
“On my three,” said the voice.
It was important their shots go off at exactly the same time so the message would be unmistakable.
He heard the voice count it off at the other end of the phone. “One…”
His finger tightened on the trigger. His eyes bored into the skull of the man he was about to blow apart. He was lucky he still had a clear shot, but then again, the plan was perfect. Amazing something so incredible and horrible could be counted off in the same manner as ripping a Band-Aid off of a five-year-old kid’s knee.
“Two…”
His finger tensed just the right amount and held there, ready to fire.
“Three.”
As he squeezed the trigger, he heard the shot at the other end of the line. A blast right on top of my own. That’s a new one.
Even as the recoil slammed his frame backward, he was already back on his feet and disassembling the rifle. He thrust the pieces into his case in less than thirty seconds, then ran down the stairwell, calm but rushed.
And he was right to be in a hurry. He’d not only just heard the gunshot that killed the President of the United States.
He had just executed the Vice President.
Day 1: Early Morning
Washington D.C.
The phone rang. The shrill cry of her mockingbird ringtone crowed in the air demanding an answer. Try as she might to ignore it, it wouldn’t stop.
“All right, all right!” Fifty-three-year-old Elaine Covington rolled over in her bed and pulled the receiver to her ear. This had better be good.
“What?” she barked into the phone. The numbers on the clock beside her four-poster bed read 12:44 AM. Who the hell would be calling at this hour, and what was so important they felt it warranted waking her?
“I’m sorry for the lateness of the hour, Madame Speaker,” said the voice on the other line, tension seeping through his tone. His first words were too fast, his last too slow, as if he didn’t know what to call her. “But it’s an emergency. This is Bert Royal.”
She knew him, though her staff spent more time with him than she had. There weren’t many occasions when her position required her to interact with President Seymour’s Chief of Staff. Elaine clutched the phone tighter as Bert spoke.
“The president and the vice president have been shot. Both are dead. Madame Speaker, you’re the first Congressperson, um, former Congressperson to know.”
Through the white hailstorm in her mind, the lists of what to do, what to say, in what order, and to whom battled for dominance. She had to get dressed, had to get out of this room, out of bed, damn it. “Give me ten minutes. No, make it fifteen. Get that new bimbo press secretary we just hired. Meet me at the office.”
“No, Madame Speaker. I’m sorry. I’ve got orders to send a car with a special detail to take you to a secure place.”
She swore. What her exact words were she doubted she’d remember. She agreed to be ready within the hour. Knuckles still white from clenching the phone, she dropped her cell back on the nightstand.
Elaine lay back on her pillow. Surely she was in the middle of a dream. A nightmare. Congress would assemble; she’d have to preside for hours over a debate about whether or not to attack the country responsible.
Suddenly, her eyes flew open. She sat up straight in her bed. She hadn’t been asked to show up at the Capitol. She had been told she’d be taken to an undisclosed location where she would be debriefed.
It was as if she’d been slapped across the face the same way her grandmother smacked her once when she talked back to her at age ten.
President Seymour was dead.
Vice President Tifton was dead.
The Constitution dictated the next person in line.
Elaine Covington blinked twice. She was now the President of the United States.
Elaine’s heart pounded as she was ushered into an unmarked black sedan. It sped through town without yielding to a single traffic light or stop sign and pulled into an underground parking garage. Other than that, Elaine couldn’t tell where they were. She’d tried to follow the maze of turns the car made from the moment the Secret Service closed her inside, but she’d lost track. She only knew they hadn’t driven too far, so they must still be in DC.
Two Secret Service agents hustled her into a dark corridor. The men on either side of her were supposed to make her feel safe, but somehow they only put her on edge. Sweat seeped into the silk blouse she’d thrown on underneath her charcoal gray suit. She fought to breathe evenly. To present a calm facade.
As she came to the end of the tunneled hallway, low lights streamed into the corridor from one side. The agents steered her inside the room, where she found herself standing face to face with President Seymour’s Chief of Staff, the president’s National Security Advisor, the Secretary of Defense, and a handful of other people she didn’t recognize right away. A rip tide of whispers surged around the space. Nervousness crept up her neck like a wild electrical current threatening to catch fire.
Another person standing in the room caught her eye, though he was off to the side and not part of the general buzz of conversation. He stood next to the wall in his Navy uniform, alert. The briefcase he held was handcuffed to his wrist. Elaine’s chest clenched, but somehow she swallowed the moan that threatened to escape her lips.
The nuclear “football” was a forty-five pound briefcase that held, in essence, the ability of the President of the Unites States to unleash a nuclear response to any threat to the nation. The briefcase, always handcuffed to a high-ranking military officer, was never more than a few feet from the president at all times.
And now, the power to detonate those weapons was in this room, only a few feet away from Elaine Covington. This was no dream. No action movie scenario. This was real.
The briefcase still held Elaine’s attention when a voice reminded her others were in the room.
“Madame President,” Ronald Garrety, the National Security Advisor, said.
The silver hair receding from Garrety’s round face swam in Elaine’s vision. Some part of her understood his words addressed her, but hearing him refer to her this way made it harder to pay attention to what followed.
“I know this must be a difficult evening for you, but we have much to discuss.” He gestured to a chair across the table. “Please.”
“Of course,” she said, straightening her jacket. “Ladies. Gentlemen.” She sat down, giving a nod to the two other Cabinet members who’d not yet spoken to her.
Elaine licked her lips. What would a president say?
“Do we know anything?” As soon as the words tumbled out of her mouth, her face burned with how stupid she sounded.
Bert Royal slumped in his chair. The short, dapper man looked for once like he had dressed in the dark, thrown on whatever clothes he’d worn the previous day. Bert had not only worked as President Seymour’s Chief of Staff; he was also a good friend. This couldn’t be easy for him, having to continue to do his job and act as if his emotions weren’t all over the place.
The National Security Advisor shot a glance toward Royal, but then quickly returned to facing Elaine. “Not a lot yet,” he said, “but our people are on it, covering it from every angle. Vice President Tifton was killed as he was leaving an auditorium at the University of California, Berkley, where he spoke to some college students. President Seymour was shot getting into his car. He’d just returned to Washington from his trip to visit the region in Alaska hit by the earthquake.” Garrety’s eyes once again flicked toward Bert Royal, then back to Elaine.
“And other than that?”
“That’s all we know. We know it was professional. Deliberate. The timing was too precise to have been a coincidence, so the two shootings must be connected. We’re going to have to wait for further investigations to yield some results. At this point we have no leads. All we know is we’re dealing with two sick bastards who are damned good shots.”
“Terrorists? Foreign country involvement?” she snapped back.
“Given the plotting and precision of the attacks, you’d think so, but we can’t be sure. No one has claimed responsibility. We haven’t picked up on any communications, though we’re watching that situation closely.”
Bert Royal, who until now had been sitting at the end of the table, silent, finally piped up. “Isn’t that unusual? Plenty of whack jobs should’ve lined up by now to tell us it was their brilliant idea to kill the president and vice president simultaneously.”
“What that tells me,” Garrety said, “is this wasn’t an attack on the American way of life. These aren’t your typical terrorists who want martyrdom and infamy. The killers wanted to get the job done without getting caught.”
Garrety leaned forward, folding his hands on the table between them. “Most demented bastards who pull stunts like this want their names in the paper. They’re proud of what they’ve done. Our killers aren’t like that. They executed their mission and disappeared. Which means one of two things: they were guns for hire, or they have another agenda. Maybe both,” he said.
“In other words,” Bert said, “professional assassins.”
“Exactly,” Garrety replied.
Day 1: Morning
The New York Herald
The sun wasn’t even up when McKenzie McClendon arrived at her office at the New York Herald, but the flurry of activity inside was the kind reserved for days like this. Big days.
Her roommate, Pierce, sat on the edge of her desk. Even though he worked on another floor in the same building, she rarely saw him at the office. This situation usually meant one thing: gossip.
Somehow, his usual bowtie didn’t match the day. He shifted his skinny frame, handed her a cup of black coffee. “Morning, Morning Glory. Feeling any better?”
“Before you start, Pierce, don’t,” she answered. She already knew what had happened, dreaded having to talk about it with anyone. Stunned didn’t cover it. The guilt pitted in her stomach over feeling so selfish at a time like this didn’t help.
She stared at the copy of the Herald on her desk. The headline said: “A Nation Shocked: President and Vice President Assassinated on Opposite Coasts.”
One stupid migraine and she’d lost the scoop of a lifetime.
“I’m only here for moral support. I wasn’t going to say a thing. Besides, I’m well aware that all our conversations at this desk are heavily monitored.”
McKenzie glanced toward the ever-annoying crack between her cubicle and the next. Sure enough, the coworker at the next desk averted his eyes. She grabbed a tall, twisty piece of black-lacquered “artwork” and shoved it back in front of the gap in between the thin plastic panels. That thing was well worth the five bucks she’d paid for it at a garage sale a few months ago.
“I thought I told you not to break down my defenses when you sit on this desk.”
“I was only trying to spy on the other angles for you. You know this’ll be plastered across the papers for months. Getting a leg up early can’t hurt.”
She sighed, staring back down at the picture of a younger, smiling President Seymour in the sidebar of the front page. A world-changing event, and she’d slept through the whole thing. “Where were you?”
“Upstairs debugging syntax in the code of an incompetent moron,” Pierce answered.
“In English?”
“The new guy is trying to write the Great American Novel of computer code without knowing how to spell.”
“Right. Co-workers are fun.”
She skimmed Jessie Cartwright’s front page article about the assassinations, unable to help wincing at the horse-like blonde’s penchant for ending paragraphs on heartstring-pulling quotes. If you liked that kind of thing, fine, but McKenzie’d always thought Jessie’s little quirk toed the line of objectivity. Then again, she was probably the only one who noticed.
“I have no doubt you could’ve written it ten times better,” Pierce said.
“At least you know that.”
Pierce hopped off the edge of her desk, then grabbed his satchel from the floor. “Perk up, Pumpkin. It’s not the end of the world.”
“I hope not. I’d hate to think the last random pet name I’d ever hear you call me would be something as generic as ‘Pumpkin’.”
He pecked her on the cheek. “I have to get back upstairs before they realize I’m missing. See ya, Artsy Fartsy!”
She watched Pierce walk away. When he was out of sight, she turned to the memos on her desk. Her smile flat-lined. Super. Today, she’d be writing about Park East Elementary School selecting a new principal.
Now, that’s news that’ll change the world.
Why don’t they just cut me with a butter knife? It would be more efficient.
Son of a bitch. She and Jessie had been at the Herald for the same amount of time. Did she suck so much at writing that her editor thought the only things she could handle were glitter and glue projects?
The emotion in the office was so thick it was almost palpable. “He had children,” the woman in the cubicle next to her sniffled as she spoke. “I know they were in college, but it doesn’t matter how old you are or if he’s the president. Losing a parent is unbearable.”
McKenzie shot a quick text to Pierce:
What does it say about me that it’s the morning after an unprecedented national crisis, and all I can think about is myself?
The talk around her ranged from intense and emotional to the obvious political discussions. Some speculated the assassinations were an act committed by an activist angry about President Seymour’s recent pick for the Supreme Court. Others waved around conspiracy theories suggesting the Democratic Party wanted to rub out two Republican leaders.
“It seems a little too convenient that none of the Secret Service protection was able to save either of them,” one woman ventured. “Maybe they were in on it, too!”
McKenzie’s phone vibrated in her lap. She flipped it open and read Pierce’s reply:
It says it’s a normal Tuesday morning.
Most of the suspicions were so over the top they couldn’t be taken seriously. One man announced this was a sign of the start of Armageddon. How did she end up sharing an office with these idiots?
She typed back:
Ass.
McKenzie was almost as sick of the supposition as she was of seeing co-workers stop at Jessie’s desk to congratulate her.
Most of the comments ran along the lines of, “It’s history.” McKenzie quickly tired of Jessie’s fake smile and simpering response of, “I hate that my big story had to come from something so tragic.”
“And I hate it when my breakfast threatens to make a second appearance,” McKenzie mumbled under her breath.
At six-thirty in the morning, Morton Gaines waddled into the office. A squat, bald man, McKenzie’s boss would’ve resembled Mr. Clean if it weren’t for the fact that he was missing the earring and weighed about two hundred pounds more than the white-clad advertising icon.
He wore his pants pulled up far past his waist with his tie, as usual, tucked into them.
“Listen up, people,” he said in his trademark growl. “The White House has set a press conference for nine AM. Jessie—” he nodded toward the blonde “—the chopper’s standing by.”
McKenzie’s glare shifted to Jessie, and she squeezed the pencil she held, willing it to snap. Of course, it didn’t. That splintering crunch would have been much too satisfying for it to actually happen.
“As for the rest of you, we need some other angles on this press conference. A few well-placed people are saying they have details on the assassins. Find whatever you can on whoever it is. I want their mother, their grandmother, their high school English teacher, their kindergarten girlfriend…anything and everything. I have Jessie covering the main story. Everyone else, we need the deep background and the local angles, and we needed them yesterday. Get to work!”
McKenzie groaned as she opened her internet browser. A new take on the assassinations was about as likely as she and Jessie taking a trip to Disney World together. God, if only the assassin would dial her personal line and offer her an exclusive interview.
She Google searched Elaine Covington, the Democratic Speaker of the House who, as of this morning, was the President of the United States. Information on the former governor of Colorado was scarce. Amazing how someone could be third in line for the presidency, and McKenzie, along with most of America, had no idea what she stood for.
McKenzie found a few photos of Elaine Covington on the campaign trail, her tight, brunette up-do a bit too chocolate brown for her age, her expensive, tailored suits smart. The search yielded a couple of interviews on Covington’s attempts to halt meth production in Colorado and transcripts from various press junkets. Elaine Covington’s father had died of a heart attack five years ago, her mother of cancer when she was seven. She had one brother, but other than that, no family. She was a widow. Her husband had been killed in a car accident the same year she ran for the House of Representatives.
Sympathy vote.
After two hours researching, McKenzie knew not much other than that Elaine Covington was pro-choice and a snappy dresser. There was no First Family to cover, so that ruled out a piece on how Elaine’s nonexistent children would be affected. Unfortunately, the new president had never done anything too wild, like run nude through a department store during a fur protest. Now that could’ve topped Jessie.
The owner of the desk next door peeked around the cubicle. “Want to go with me to Conference One and watch the press conference?”
McKenzie dropped the pencil nub she’d been drumming on her desk and ran both of her hands through her hair.
What a choice. I could compile questions for the current assignment, which is sure to be the journalistic masterpiece of the year.
On the other hand, I could mope over a press conference I’d die to be at with a guy who owes his eyesight to the fact that the closest pencil sharpener in the office is a good hundred yards away.
“Sure,” McKenzie answered. “It’s not like I have anything better to do.”
Day 1: Morning
The White House
Elaine hadn’t even had time to stop for her usual mid-morning diet Coke since she’d been awakened at o-dark-thirty that morning. Everything since that phone call blurred together like a dream sequence in a television sitcom.
Her swearing in as President of the United States took place in a quiet ceremony at the White House while the sun came up. She would take a public Oath of Office later, but it was important she be installed right away. If any of the country’s enemies saw the United States leaderless and on shaky ground, they might decide this would be the opportune moment to launch an attack.
After the formal procedure, she’d met with more advisors than she could count. They discussed everything from her options about how to proceed with her Cabinet to what color she should wear for a press conference later in the day.
Although a hell of a lot of people were telling her what to do, no one seemed to know exactly how to move forward. The chain of command had never been put into action past the vice presidency.
Elaine chose to keep President Seymour’s Cabinet in place for the time being. The administration was haywire enough without replacing officials in the midst of the most devastating tragedy since September 11. In fact, this day reminded her very much of that particular sunny Tuesday morning. Everywhere she walked, people whispered, tears falling. The White House staff was in shock.
Elaine drank in her surroundings. The cream and gold stripes on the walls of the Oval Office complemented the gold draperies. The staff photographers, recording the entry of the first female president into the Oval Office, had been shooed away. She stood in the middle of the eagle-and-shield emblem on the carpet.
My office. I’m the President of the United States.
She considered taking a seat on the sofa but opted for the power position in the black leather chair behind the desk. The Director of National Intelligence was on his way up with Bert Royal to brief her on a new development in the case.
“Mr. Royal, Mr. Garrety, and General Helms to see you, Madame President,” Katherine said over the intercom.
Elaine asked the secretary to show them in. She stood from behind the huge desk, the same one used by almost every president since Rutherford B. Hayes. The Resolute desk was made from remnants of a British arctic rescue ship. Too bad no one can rescue me right now.
“Madame President, may I introduce the Director of National Intelligence, General Grafton Helms,” Bert said as he entered the room, gesturing toward a man whose graying hair was cut so close to his head it was almost invisible. His broad nose coupled with his stature reminded Elaine of a rhinoceros ready to charge when provoked.
“Madame President.” General Helms gave a curt nod.
“My pleasure,” Elaine replied. She was the ranking officer in the room, yet somehow under the gaze of this man who had actually served in the armed forces, she had to fight looking at her feet. Her insides trembled like she was a teenager chosen to play principal for a day in high school who now had to address the real headmaster.
Still, she hooded her eyes to mask her lack of confidence. She could put on a show if she had to. “What do we know, General?”
“FBI Director Leighton Collins has informed me that this morning, a team entered a room at the Five Points Hotel in Los Angeles rented to one Lieutenant Cody Randolph, a former-SEAL who was discharged from the Navy back in ‘02. Housekeeping screamed bloody murder when they went in to clean and found him dead. Hotel called the locals. Local cops called in the Feds after going in and finding Randolph shot once in the head. They also found his .50 caliber rifle and about a hundred recon photos of the vice president in a briefcase in the hotel closet,” the general said.
Elaine glanced at her watch. “We’re sure this guy shot the vice president?” Elaine asked. She sounded dense, but such a fog clouded her head that she had to double check.
General Helms continued. “There’s a lot to look into, including ballistics on the rifle, but I’d say a dead SEAL carrying around photos of the vice president is a decent bet. He’s the guy. Same old story. Disgruntled ex-military man. A doc decided Randolph was mentally unfit to continue as a SEAL, so the Navy gave him a medical discharge. Guy has issues. Nightmares every night about watching teammates blown to kingdom come. His team was on an operation in Afghanistan in ‘02 when they ran into a bunch of local militant whackjobs. Slaughter doesn’t begin to describe it. Mayday came in, rescue attempt failed. Just this guy and his partner made it out, but not because of anything we did. Maybe Randolph held a grudge. No idea what stalled the evac team, but if Randolph and his partner had waited on ‘em, we’d have had two more families to notify and wouldn’t be having this conversation at all. Instead, they escaped, found some other soldiers, hunkered down, and hitched a ride home.”
“So did the partner shoot the president?” Elaine asked. Could it be that simple?
“Well, it would be the easy jump to make,” the general said. “But it doesn’t look like it. The partner was at a bar in New York City all evening last night, as confirmed by more than fifty witnesses. We’re still questioning some of them, but it seems airtight.”
“I guess that settles that,” Elaine said. Her heart thudded into the recesses of her chest. “I suppose whoever killed the president here in Washington hopped a flight to California and took care of Randolph?”
The general shrugged his shoulders. “Or he hired someone to do it. Either way, whoever shot the president didn’t trust Randolph enough to leave him alive, which most likely means Randolph knew the killer.”
Elaine turned to Ronald Garrety. “So, do we hold onto what we know until we have a second suspect, or do we release the information?”
“Madame President, we have to make the knowledge public if for no other reason than to show people we’re making headway with this investigation. Even though Randolph’s dead, public opinion would be more favorable if we looked closer to apprehending the president’s killer. Twenty-four hours can’t go by without us having any leads. There’ll be panic.”
“We’ll take a lot of flack for one of our own military turning against us,” Bert piped up from the corner chair. His voice cracked, supporting the red-eyed evidence of recent tears.
“Not as much flack as we’d take if it looks like we don’t have a clue who did it,” Garrety replied.
She couldn’t let Bert’s grief influence her right now. She faced Garrety again. Elaine nodded. “I agree. Tack it onto the press conference,” she said. She locked eyes with Bert. “I want to make it very clear that the persons responsible will be brought to justice.”
“Yes, Madame President,” Bert said, making a note on his clipboard.
“And the press conference is scheduled for?” Elaine asked.
“1000 hours,” Bert answered.
“Let’s try to have more information by then, shall we, gentlemen?”
Day 1: Morning
LAX, Los Angeles, CA
The man grabbed his beer off the bar and took a swig. Nice thing about airports: everyone minded their own business. No one gave him a second look. They were all too busy watching the TV in the corner, which was running continuous coverage of the assassinations.
What would his mother say if she could see him now? “What kind of person drinks before they’ve even had breakfast?” she’d ask.
He’d answer, “The kind that shoots the President of the United States and doesn’t leave a trace.” But then again, he’d never have to answer that question from her, because he’d put bullets into both his parents’ heads years ago. They had it coming for being such pains in the ass growing up.
Too bad his accomplice couldn’t be here to have a beer with him. It wasn’t possible though, so his solo celebration would have to suffice. At least the TV wasn’t tuned to one of those mindless game shows or so-called talk shows where the white trash of the world came on national television to air the paternities of their children. God, this country was ridiculous. People would say anything on television for a few minutes of fame.
The newscasters’ voices and the chitchat of other passengers waiting for flights droned in the background while he zoned out for a little while. He’d been restless cooped up in the apartment for so long. The four walls had been making him crazy. But growing careless was a rookie mistake. Notoriety was the last thing he was looking for. As soon as he got home, he’d hang out and wait for the public outcry to fizzle like with any news scandal.
Suddenly, his eye caught the corner TV as a new face flashed to the screen. He took another chug of his beer.
Well, hot damn. A presidential press conference.
The woman standing behind the Presidential Seal looked unruffled to the amateur eye. Uptight black suit made for bitches with a permanent stick up the ass. Prim hairdo his grandmother would’ve worn. Even so, she wasn’t as calm as she came across. The look somewhere behind her eyes permeated from the hollows of the pupils.
Fear.
“It is with deep sadness that I speak to you today, not just as a leader, but as a fellow citizen shocked and dismayed by the tragedy that has befallen our nation. Last evening, President Matthew Seymour and Vice President Bernard Tifton were killed on opposite coasts of our country. Our nation now faces the loss of not one, but two great leaders. As Speaker of the House of Representatives, it falls to me not only to take over the duties of the presidency, but also to ensure the persons responsible for these despicable acts are brought to justice.”
She detailed the finding of a suspect’s body in California, though she didn’t admit the dead guy was a former SEAL.
You wouldn’t have discovered him if I hadn’t found him for you.
She had to be sweating underneath that dark suit. If only he could put a finger to her throat, he knew her blood would be racing like a skittish rabbit’s.
It was the same speed Randolph’s pulse reached a few hours ago when he’d shown up at the former SEAL’s hotel. “It’s just business,” he’d said to Randolph right before he pulled the trigger. “Nothing personal.”
“This I can assure you,” the president continued, “the FBI is working in coordination with the CIA to locate and arrest the culprit. We’re pursuing several leads and are confident the perpetrator will be apprehended very soon.”
At this, he laughed out loud, raising his beer. No one in the bar noticed. They wouldn’t, of course. They were of the same mold as the rest of the country.
“Here’s to the bullshit leads,” he muttered under his breath. “You’ve got no more leads than a pig in a snowstorm. Unbelievable.”
After Elaine Covington’s brief address, the Presidential Seal was removed from the podium, and the press secretary took her place. Andrea Orellana’s practiced voice spoke into the mic. “I’ll take a few questions only. Ms. Cartwright, up front please.”
McKenzie’s jaw plummeted as she watched her rival stand amidst the gaggle of reporters.
Unbelievable.
“Thank you, Secretary Orellana. Jessie Cartwright, New York Herald.”
First Gaines chose Jessie to go to the press conference, and now the frickin’ press secretary picked her for the first damn question. This could not be happening.
Jessie wore an easy smile, but McKenzie knew that look too well to think it innocent.
“Is it true,” Jessie said, “the alleged assassin found dead was a former United States Navy SEAL?”
McKenzie wished she could be sucked right into the gaping hole that was her mouth. How the hell did Jessie come up with that?
“No comment.” Orellana scanned the crowd of news hounds, seemingly oblivious to the near constant flare of flashbulbs and whir of camera shutters. “You. In the striped tie.”
Another reporter stood, and the press secretary answered a few more questions about the funerals, how the state of affairs would affect upcoming Senate votes, and a smattering of other logistical inquiries, none of which were nearly as interesting as the one Jessie had ventured. Was it just McKenzie, or had the press secretary looked increasingly uncomfortable since the initial question?
“That’s all for now,” the press secretary said shortly after answering a question about possible foreign involvement.
McKenzie glanced at the clock. The whole thing had lasted only a few minutes. Way less than normal.
She stared at the screen as Andrea Orellana exited the White House Press Room. The picture flickered back to the news anchor behind the breaking news desk, but his voice was nothing but disjointed buzzing in her ears. The press secretary hadn’t confirmed Jessie’s accusation, but she didn’t have to. The way Orellana’s face had gone rigid, she may as well have had the confession stamped across the front of her blue blazer. Jessie was right. The vice president’s killer had been in the United States military.
Something tickled at McKenzie’s brain. She took off back toward her cubicle.
Of all times to leave my phone at my desk.
As soon as she had her precious phone back in hand, she punched the buttons in quick succession and scrolled through her contact list.
“Yes!” she breathed, hitting the call button. After a couple of rings, a voice picked up on the other end. “May I speak to Detective Becker, please? I’m his niece. Yes, I’ll hold.”
A moment later, a man picked up. “Uncle Sal, it’s me, McKenzie,” she said as if they talked all the time. In reality, she hadn’t seen her mom’s brother face to face in almost two years. Still, he was family, and regardless of distance, she had the “favorite niece” card on her side.
“Well, hello there, Bumble Bee. Long time no see.”
Despite her concentration, a smile spread over her face. Ever since she was little, he’d kidded her about being too busy to keep him up to date on her life.
“I know, I know. Before you ask, no, I haven’t lost my phone. No, I’m not allergic to e-mails. And no, I’m not dating anyone.”
“That’s good to know. I’d hate to think some tawdry affair was what was keeping you from calling and not Jag reruns.”
“Ouch,” she replied. If only he was wrong. “How’s Levi?”
“Not dating anyone, either,” Uncle Sal replied.
McKenzie bit her lip. She had to remember to call more. “Yeah, he’s a tad young for that.”
“I don’t know. The way he tells it, the first grade is swimming with foxes,” he replied, chuckling. “To what do I owe the pleasure, McKenzie?”
This would be tricky. “Uncle Sal, you know I’m working for the Herald now, right?”
“Oh, dear,” he sighed.
“It’s only a tiny favor,” she pleaded. “I need to know his name.” She waited a moment while he was silent. “The SEAL’s,” she added.
“I knew what you meant,” he said, but no more.
“Uncle Sal, my job is on the line here. This story could make my career.”
“McKenzie, this isn’t just any murder case. It’s the President and Vice President of the United States, for God’s sake.”
“Don’t you think I know that?”
The air he blew out came over her end of the phone as static. Other than the crackles, Uncle Sal was so quiet that for a frightening moment, McKenzie was afraid he’d hung up on her.
“You have to swear no one will know where you got this information,” he whispered.
“I’m a professional journalist, Uncle Sal. We never reveal our sources.” Her pen hovered over her notepad.
“Don’t make me regret this, McKenzie.”
He’d said the same words just before he let her jump on the bed when she was five years old. She’d stayed with him for the weekend while her parents were out of town. Uncle Sal had said, “Go ahead and jump, but don’t make me regret it.” She’d tried to do a split in the air. The box springs had never recovered.
“I won’t,” she promised.
She heard him take in a sharp breath. “Cody Randolph,” he said. The click of the phone let her know this time, she’d better not break her word.
“Thanks, Uncle Sal,” she said into the off-the-hook signal bleating in her ear.
She opened a new document on her computer. If nothing else, the piece had the potential to have people talking. In journalism, buzz was ninety percent of the goal. The letters of her title appeared on the screen: Are We Creating Killers?
Day 2: Morning
New York City
Move.
He slid the already-packed duffle bag out from under the twin bed, ripped his cell phone from the wall charger, and was out the door. He exited the stairwell at the second floor, turned right, then followed the hallway until it dead-ended at apartment 9B.
Ten seconds to jimmy the lock, ten more through the living room into the bedroom. Luckily for the girl who lived here, he’d watched her purely for the tactical advantages of her apartment.
Even though they’d left hours ago, he knew the Feds were probably camped outside, waiting for him to run. Out the front door.
Five seconds to unlock and lift the window. Thirty-two seconds later, his feet slammed the pavement in the alley behind the apartment building. It was four blocks to the nearest subway tunnel, but he walked twelve blocks to an entrance he didn’t frequent on a regular basis.
As the train rumbled through the New York City underground, he unfolded the newspaper from his bag and pretended to read it. He’d found in the past few months that his intense gaze seemed to unsettle people for some reason. He wasn’t even looking at them usually, but that degree of focus apparently does something to your eyes.
Now, he stared at the newsprint as he reviewed the op in his mind. They’d be watching. He had to have a way out, but he also needed an extra pair of hands. No way he’d involve his family in this bullshit. He didn’t have friends. Not anymore.
Thankfully, this morning while he sat in his apartment to lull the wonderful FBI agents outside into thinking he was staying put, the newspaper had been dropped on the doorstep.
“They buried it! Page nine, right next to an article about a possible UFO sighting in Central Park!” McKenzie fumed. “Does this coffee shop have anything stronger than espresso?”
“Aw, buck up, Little Speciest,” Pierce said, offering her half the chocolate biscotti on which he’d been munching.
“Did you meet me down here to check on me or to be condescending?” She snatched the biscuit out of his hand. “I have nothing against aliens, but that article was supposed to yank me from the depths of journalism hell. It’s now in the corner of a page only read by retired old men who have time to comb the thing cover to cover. You want me to ‘buck up’?”
Pierce shrugged. “Either that or put a gun in your mouth. Bucking up will keep your shirt cleaner. Would it make you feel better if I hacked into the Herald’s servers and corrupted Jessie’s hard drive?”
“Tempting, but they’d probably know it was me no matter how good you are. I’d lose my job. Be prosecuted. You know, all sorts of fun stuff.”
He reached across the table and squeezed her shoulder. “I better get back to the office. If anyone notices I’m not there, you won’t be the only one in need of a stiff drink tonight.”
McKenzie muttered, “Bye.”
After Pierce rounded the corner and was out of sight, she slammed her fist on the newspaper. She yelped as her caramel latte splashed into her lap. “Damn it!”
She shoved back from the table and stormed toward the restroom in the back of the coffee shop. Her skirt dripped a trail on the floor behind her.
She snatched a handful of paper towels from the dispenser and tried to blot her skirt dry. The hand dryer on the far wall yielded even less success. She held her skirt away from her skin and under the dryer as best she could, but the stupid machine kept cutting off every few seconds. She jammed the start button, but just before the dryer whirred to life again, she heard an unmistakable chink.
She glanced underneath the stall doors, checking for feet. “Hello?”
No response. She must have imagined it. She restarted the dryer a fourth time, but something peculiar about the restroom entrance caught her eye. The hook was secured in the clasp on the wall, effectively locking the main door.
What the hell?
McKenzie eased back from the dryer. A hand clapped over her mouth. A strong arm locked her into place in front of someone who had at least fifty pounds on her. She tried to scream, but the sound was nothing but a muffled whimper into her attacker’s palm.
Hot breath brushed against her ear as a deep voice spoke. “Quiet. I’m not here to hurt you.”
She struggled against his grip, but the more she fought, the tighter he squeezed. She tried to suck oxygen through the tiny gaps between the guy’s fingers, but all she inhaled was skin and her own salty sweat.
“I told you, all I want to do is talk. But I’m not letting go until you promise to stand still and shut up. Now, if you’ll do that, nod.”
McKenzie bobbed her head up and down, angry tears stinging her eyes. His hand loosened from her face, but he kept a firm grip around her middle. She took a few deep breaths as she fought the urge to scream for help.
Instead, she choked out, “Who are you?”
“Cody Randolph’s partner.”
It took McKenzie’s brain a few seconds to make the connection. Her eyes widened. Cody Randolph. The dead SEAL who shot the vice president. Beads of sweat formed on her upper lip.
“What do you want?” she whispered.
Do I really want the answer to that?
“To talk to you about your article. That’s all.”
His boulder of a bicep clenched around her shoulder said otherwise. “You can’t just follow women into public bathrooms without anyone noticing,” she hissed. Hopefully, that was the truth.
“Ms. McClendon, I was a Navy SEAL for seven years. I’ve made it in and out of war zones without anyone knowing I was there. No offense, but the ladies’ room isn’t exactly a fortress.”
McKenzie’s chest heaved underneath his arm. “I might be able to talk better if my lungs weren’t being crushed.”
His grip slackened the slightest bit, but his hand moved to her left wrist. He whirled her to face him as if they were doing some kind of violent tango. His tousled light brown hair matched the stubble on his chin. “Lieutenant Hutchins,” he said. His ice blue eyes bored into hers.
“I’d introduce myself, but clearly you already know who I am,” she said, out of breath.
His face twisted into a half-smile. “You’re right. I suppose we’re past the niceties.”
Just like that, he released her arm. She stumbled backward into the wall.
Her cell phone was in her purse. Any chance she could reach it? Probably not. His hands would pound her skull to dust by the time she unzipped her bag. She used her thumb to wipe the lipstick smeared across her face. “Lovely to meet you, Mr. Hutchins.”
“Lieutenant Hutchins. And yes, the circumstances suck, but you of all people should understand why I didn’t want to saunter into the Herald building.”
“A phone call would’ve been nice,” McKenzie snapped before she could stop herself.
“Surely you don’t think lethal androids like me do normal things like use phones?”
So, her news article had drawn him to her. McKenzie had not only accused the United States military of turning its soldiers into remorseless robots, but she’d also implied that despite witness testimonies, the person standing before her may have shot the president.
Serious damage control required. “You misunderstood, Lieutenant Hutchins. I only suggested that perhaps investigators abandoned a profitable route of inquiry too soon. I didn’t mean to offend you.”
Really, really didn’t mean to, considering your thumb is larger than my windpipe.
“I believe you said, ‘Do the drunken testimonies of bar patrons satisfy the FBI? Are we one hundred percent sure the former partner of the assassin had nothing to do with the murders?’” His eyes dared McKenzie to contradict him.
Damn. He had the thing memorized. Talk about pissed. “Look, it’s my job. Again, no offense, but it’s nothing half the country isn’t thinking. Plus, it makes a good story. It wasn’t personal.”
“Well it’s personal to me.” Anger flashed in his eyes.
The door was yards away. Someone would hear her if she called for help. However, if he shot the president, he’d probably be willing to bump off a reporter no problem. That, and he could easily grab her if she tried to run. She wiped her palms on her skirt.
Think, brain! Think!
“It’s a good ten paces to the door, but I’ll give you a head start.”
McKenzie’s attention jerked back to Hutchins. “What?”
“If you’re thinking of running,” he replied. His eyebrows arched. “You can sprint. You might have a chance. The lock might slow you up, though.”
McKenzie knew her eyes went as big as saucers. In the next second, the SEAL smirked.
“Hilarious,” she replied. “So, I take it you didn’t sneak in here to shoot the breeze.”
“My partner was a lot of things, but he wasn’t a mindless killer,” Hutchins said, the growl in his voice as comforting as that of an uncaged Siberian tiger.
McKenzie held back the retort on her lips and instead forced out, “What do you mean?”
“I can’t let people think he was something he wasn’t. I know what the evidence says, but I knew Cody. I know he didn’t do this. I’m going to prove it. So, take it back. Come with me and search out the real story. You said I killed the president in one of the biggest papers in the world, for God’s sake. It’s the least you can do for me.”
McKenzie shook her head. “I had every right to say what I did.”
Hutchins grabbed her wrist again. “Oh, really? Been sued for libel much?”
“Been arrested for assault much?”
The SEAL’s lip curled. “Touché. Still, do you want to try me? Think your position at the paper is secure enough that they’d support you if someone filed suit?”
McKenzie stepped backward to put distance between the two of them, but he closed in, running her into the bathroom wall. “I’ll retract my statement about you and imply further investigation is warranted. That’s the best I can do.”
“Not good enough.”
“What do you care what people say about him as long as they know you had nothing to do with it?”
“First off all, Mac—”
“McKenzie,” she corrected.
“Mac,” he said again. “You said it yourself. Who cares that fifty people saw me in a bar? Cody and I were partners, so until I clear him, I’m suspect number one.”
McKenzie gritted her teeth and looked at his fingers clasped around her wrist. “Gee. I can’t imagine why anyone would think you were capable of something like that.”
He followed her gaze toward her arm. His fingers unfurled, but he leaned his face into hers, keeping her trapped against the wall. “He was my partner. For years, I trusted him with my back. I don’t want him to be that guy everyone only knows because they think he committed the worst crime this millennium.”
He backed away a step. McKenzie exhaled the breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. She examined the spots where the tile pieces ran together on the floor. Cody Randolph’s name was the worst kept secret on earth right now. In Jessie’s newest front page article, she’d read all about the pictures of the vice president taped around Cody Randolph’s hotel room, the same hotel room where the police found his sniper rifle. She looked back up at Hutchins. This man wasn’t ready to believe the truth, but she couldn’t blame him. His teammate was a traitor.
“The problem is he did commit the worst crime of the millennium.”
“Well, I guess I’m through here, then,” Hutchins said. He turned his back on her.
McKenzie closed her eyes.
Slow down, heart. We’re in the clear.
In the next instant, however, her eyes flew open. “Wait!”
It was too late, though. Her chance at the interview of a lifetime—and the front page—had walked out the bathroom door.
Day 2: Late Morning
Washington, D.C.