Authors: Stephen L. Carter
“Stop it,” she chided herself, and focused her attention on the street. Just below Thirty-third Place, a car flashed its lights twice, and the double flash was the signal. Margo climbed into the front seat. Behind the wheel sat Warren, the Secret Service agent who had driven her from Harrington’s townhouse.
“All set?” he asked, but Margo had barely closed her door before the car was barreling up the empty street. At Thirty-fourth they turned left. A few minutes later, they passed the floodlit Gothic splendor of the unfinished National Cathedral, then turned left again onto Massachusetts Avenue, cruising southeast past the embassies.
“Where are we going?” Margo finally asked.
“Not the White House, if that’s what you mean.”
She supposed that she might well have meant exactly that. She didn’t know what she was supposed to say. As far as the agent knew, she was a young woman on her way to an assignation with the President of the United States.
Margo shut her eyes. She tried to rehearse Fomin’s message, but somehow what she kept hearing was his studious inquiry into the cover story for her meetings with President Kennedy.
“Almost there,” said Warren after a moment.
Margo sat up and blinked. They were cruising east along Constitution Avenue. To their right was the Mall. She must have dozed.
“Sorry,” she said, a bit stupidly.
“Don’t worry about it.”
She watched the museums pass. She decided not to let Fomin’s bad jokes upset her. The man was a clever psychologist. He had said so. Fomin had tested her in Bulgaria, he had tested her at Stewart Park, he had probably tested her half a dozen other times without showing his hand. He was testing her now.
A subject who’s angry makes mistakes,
Harrington had counseled her, back when Margo had imagined that going off to Varna would be a lark.
You have to stay calm or you’ll lose your way.
Thanks, Dr. H. Thanks a lot. That’s helpful.
Fear is different. Fear you can’t avoid. In the field, you’ll be afraid all the time. Fear will become so constant a companion that if it ever goes away, you’ll crave the adrenaline. That’s the moment to start worrying, my dear. Not when you’re afraid. When you stop being afraid.
She smiled ruefully. “I haven’t stopped yet, Doctor.”
Warren’s head turned slightly. “I’m sorry, miss. Did you need something?”
“No, no. I’m fine.”
They circled the Capitol, then headed along East Capitol Street. After five or six blocks, the driver began to slow. A limousine sat outside a small townhouse. A dark sedan much like the one she was in stood just behind, with another across the street.
Warren glided to a stop beside the limousine. He helped her from the car.
“Just walk in,” he said, pointing along the bluestone path. “It’s not locked.”
“Thank you,” she said, embarrassment creeping up again.
Longest walk of her life.
An agent stood in the yard, watching her approach, and another opened the door from the inside.
“Go on up,” he said, averting his eyes in disapproval. “Second door on the right.”
“Thank you,” she said, but he had already turned away.
“Miss Jensen. It’s a great pleasure to see you again.” The President was busily shaking her hand. The agent outside the door pulled it shut.
“I didn’t—didn’t think you remembered,” she stammered. “The campaign film was two years ago.”
He flashed the world-famous smile, all of it for her. “Of course I’d remember.”
But the smoothness in Kennedy’s voice told her he had no idea what she was talking about. The bedroom was large and plush, decorated in bright colors. The canopied bed was fit for an emperor. The heavy comforter had been turned down. Margo could hardly look at it. On a polished sideboard stood glasses, an ice bucket, and several bottles. The sofa was brocaded in gold. “Please, Miss Jensen. Sit.”
“Thank you, sir.”
For a moment they sized each other up. The President’s jacket was off and his tie was loose. His collar was unbuttoned, and there was stubble on his chin. He looked like what he was: a hardworking executive at the end of a long day. His next word confirmed the image.
“Drink?”
“No, sir. Um, thank you, no.”
Kennedy had a glass already. He swirled the smooth brown liquid, sipped, pulled a face. He stood looking down at her. “You’re a very brave young woman, Miss Jensen: Bulgaria. Now this. Has anyone
bothered to say thank you? I’ll say it now. On behalf of a grateful nation. Thank you.”
The swift move beyond pleasantries momentarily threw her. “I—I don’t know what to say, Mr. President.”
“Try ‘You’re welcome.’ That usually works.”
She found a weak half-smile somewhere. “You’re welcome.”
“All those adventures and you’re just nineteen. You’ll have a lot to write about one day.”
“I would never—I mean, I signed a nondisclosure agreement.”
“Oh,
that.
” The President took another swallow. “They tell me you’re quite the student. Straight A’s your freshman year. Well, other than that B in French.” He waved his glass. “Is this what you want to do when you graduate? Politics? Government? National security?”
“I—I haven’t decided, Mr. President.”
“Get married? Have a family?”
“Eventually. Of course.”
“Of course,” he echoed, and Margo realized that her answer had amused him. “It turns out I knew your great-uncle a bit. Your father’s uncle, I suppose he would have been. Your grandfather’s brother. Pierce Jensen. I didn’t know you were related.”
“Oh. Yes.” She didn’t know where to put her eyes. Her mother had rarely spoken of Uncle Pierce, and Nana never did. He had been an accountant, a graduate of Northwestern, but had wound up in prison for helping the wrong sort of people evade taxes. She was afraid to ask how Kennedy could know such a man. “I never met him,” she said, sounding to her own ear arch and unpersuasive.
“I didn’t know him well,” said the President, catching her mood. “It’s just that Pierce and my father did some business together a long time ago.”
“Oh. I see.”
“Thick as thieves,” he said, and winked. When Margo didn’t reply, he realized that his effort at small talk had misfired. “Tell me, Miss Jensen. What’s your impression of Aleksandr Fomin?”
Again the change of subject caught her short. “I’m not sure yet.”
“Bundy tells me he’s a smooth so-and-so. Dangerous. Never tells you what he’s really thinking. Great poker face.” Kennedy settled beside her, so close she could feel his warmth. And his anxiety. “But
the times are dangerous, aren’t they? At times like these, maybe we need dangerous men.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Do you feel you can trust him?”
“I don’t know. I think he trusts me.”
“That’s a good answer. Very good.” He yawned. “You look very nice. That’s a lovely dress.”
Her face burned, and she dropped her eyes. “Oh, um, thank you. Thank you, sir.”
The President’s arm was stretched along the back of the sofa. Her shoulders were bare, and if his fingers touched her she would jump out of her skin. But he only sipped at his drink.
“You need to try to relax, Miss Jensen. If we’re going to be meeting like this, you need to relax.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Remember, honey. Our cover is that we’re having a fling. It won’t work if everybody thinks you’re afraid of me.”
Margo was feeling trapped and panicky. “Yes, sir.”
“Like when you came in just now. They have to see that you’re happy to see me. A little nervousness, sure. But don’t overdo it. You have to glow with anticipation. Excitement. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir. I do, sir.”
“You’re an innocent girl.” His eyes were huge and strangely warm as they bored in on her. “Very pretty, but innocent. Young. So—remember. Being with me like this is the biggest thrill of your young life.” He touched her cheek. She flinched. “You love every minute,” he said.
The Soviet Embassy was located in an ornate mansion at 1125 Sixteenth Street, just blocks from the White House. Half a century earlier, before the Russian Revolution, the house had been considered the fanciest in the city. Nowadays, it was a cramped rabbit warren of subdivided rooms, especially on the fourth floor, given over entirely to the activities of the Committee on State Security. It was there on the fourth floor that same night that Viktor Vaganian knocked on the door
of Aleksandr Fomin’s long, narrow office, then stepped inside without waiting to be admitted.
Fomin glanced up from the file to which he was appending a note. Those thick eyebrows knitted briefly, and then he returned to his reading.
“What can I do for you, Comrade Captain?”
“I am here in my counterintelligence capacity—”
“I asked what I can do for you.”
“You met an American woman tonight at a restaurant on Connecticut Avenue.”
The pen continued moving across the page. “And?”
“You met this same woman earlier, in Ithaca. She is the woman you also interrogated in Varna.”
“And?”
“I should like to know, please, the subjects of your conversations.”
“No.”
Vaganian had to tread carefully. Fomin, like Smyslov, had powerful protectors. “As you know, Comrade, I am tasked with discovering how the Americans got word of Anadyr. I have full powers in this matter.”
“I already told you, no.” Fomin’s flat tone offered no clue to his response to the implied accusation. “Listen to me, Viktor Borisovich. It is not the task of Counterintelligence to tell me how to do my job. I will gather intelligence in any way that I see fit. I don’t care what jurisdiction you think you have. Interfere with my operations, and you will wind up in Siberia.”
He picked up the pen and returned to his work.
“Is there a problem, Miss Jensen?” Kennedy murmured, still far too close. “Is there something you want to say?”
“No. No, Mr. President.”
“Then try to act like you’re enjoying yourself. At least pretend.”
She bit her lip, trying not to cry. In some ways, this was worse than Varna. “I understand,” she managed. “I’ll try, sir.”
Her compliance seemed to bother him. He drained his glass, sprang to his feet, only to stop, make a sound, rub his lower back. “Never
mind,” he said, now annoyed, although at whom was unclear. “I assume he gave you a message for me.”
“Yes, Mr. President.” She took a moment to compose herself, wanting to make no error. “He said that the General Secretary cannot afford to lose face just now. He said that the missiles are defensive only, but nevertheless the General Secretary might be willing to consider reducing the number if you are able to give him something in return. A show of good faith, so he’ll know you’re serious about negotiating.”
Kennedy turned toward her, hand still massaging the same spot. “Did he say what?”
“No, sir. He, um, he said you’d know what the General Secretary had in mind.”
“Oh, yes. I do.” All business again. “I know exactly what he has in mind. Is that all he said?”
She felt a rising alarm. “Yes, sir. That’s all.”
“That bastard,” said the President with sudden vehemence. “Wait. Don’t tell Fomin what I just said.” He was shaking with anger. Margo couldn’t think why. “Just tell him that I am willing to help Khrushchev to save face, but he’ll have to be more specific about what he’s asking. Tell him I don’t want a war, but I also can’t give much. America can’t send the message to the world that it’s open season, that all you have to do is threaten us and we’ll give you what you want.”
“Yes, sir.”
Lightning flashed outside. Kennedy was still angry. He put his glass down too hard. Scotch sloshed onto the sideboard. “Tell me, Miss Jensen. Did Fomin happen to mention what Ambassador Dobrynin, in the official negotiations, is asking for? They want us to take our Jupiter missiles out of Turkey and Italy. That’s the official position of the Soviet government. That’s the show of good faith Khrushchev wants. What good is a back channel if they take the same position as in the formal negotiations?”
“It might not be the same position,” she said.
Kennedy spun around. “What did you say?”
“I said, he might not be taking the same position. You said that in the official negotiations they’re insisting that we remove the Jupiters. But all Fomin said was that Khrushchev needs something in return. He didn’t say what.”
The President’s eyes narrowed. “Go on.”
“Maybe there’s another way Khrushchev can save face. Maybe he’s hoping, if you won’t move the Jupiters, you’ll offer something else.”
“Something like what?”
She shook her head. More yellowy flashes from the window. She remembered how Nana liked to close the curtains during a thunderstorm so the lightning couldn’t find you. “I don’t know, Mr. President. Something.”
A faint smile. “Now I see how you got those A’s. And why Niemeyer is so high on you. That’s what Bundy says, anyway. He and Niemeyer have known each other a long time. I don’t think they like each other very much, but there’s a lot of respect there.” The smile vanished. “Okay. When do you see Fomin next?”
“He’s supposed to contact me.”
“Well, let’s hope it’s tomorrow. Tell him we’re working on it. Tell him we’re perfectly willing to help Khrushchev save face, but those missiles in Cuba have to go, and he can’t expect us to dismantle the Jupiters in return. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Tell him we need Khrushchev to be very specific in explaining what he wants. I’m not saying he can have it—I’m not saying he can have anything at all—but I’m perfectly happy to listen to his proposals. After all, the back channel was his idea.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And remind him”—a moment’s hesitation, and on the President’s face a shadow of something—mistrust, maybe, or even uncertainty—“remind him that they started this. They snuck the missiles in and lied to us about them. Say it just like that. Snuck. Lied. Understand?”
“Yes, Mr. President.”
He was back at the sideboard. This time he poured but didn’t drink. “Anyway, that’s not what Khrushchev really wants to know.” His craggy profile had gone reflective again. “He’s trying to measure my will, Miss Jensen. What he wants to know—what that probe is about—maybe what this whole back channel is about—is whether I’m willing to go to war.”