Read Blood Game: A Jock Boucher Thriller Online

Authors: David Lyons

Tags: #Thrillers, #Political, #Contemporary, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction

Blood Game: A Jock Boucher Thriller (23 page)

BOOK: Blood Game: A Jock Boucher Thriller
9.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“You raised on
that
? Why the hell did you raise on that?”

“You paid for a look,” Boucher said dryly. “Lessons cost extra.”

Cyrus Moore guffawed, his loudest exclamation of the
evening. “
Cincinnati Kid,
right? I loved that movie. Damn, this is a good game.”

Dumont smiled. He looked at Boucher. The initiation was over, his eyes said. Boucher was in. As if to prove him right, General Moore seemed to relax and opened a familiar topic of conversation.

“Sorry I missed the last game,” he said. “Gary told me the conversation was pretty interesting; the legal doctrine of hot pursuit as justification for a U.S. incursion into Mexico.”

“What do you think about the idea?” Dumont asked.

“I leave law to the lawyers,” the general said. “My justification for any military action tends toward national security first and geopolitical doctrine second, not legal precedent. I assume such educated gentlemen as you are familiar with the term ‘sphere of influence.’ ” He looked up from his cards. His question was directed to each man at the table. All eyes were on him. “You want the brief version or the unabridged?”

Boucher spoke. “General, I am very interested in what you have to say.”

Cyrus Moore closed his cards and set them facedown on the table. “I’ll begin by stating my case, as you lawyers say. I believe that after spending billions of dollars and far too many American lives, we have virtually no influence in the Middle East, and anyone who thinks we do is the kind of fool who believes you can pick up a piece of shit from
the clean end.” There were dry chuckles. “For our first two hundred years as a nation, we rose to become a global power without involvement in that part of the world. I think it’s time to return to what has worked best for us.”

He took a sip of his Scotch, then continued. “Our Middle East foreign policy has been confused and paradoxical for the past fifty years, and we have been at war for over two decades in a part of the world that will never be within our sphere of influence. Constant and unrewarding military conflict is ruining our economy and weakening our status as the world’s dominant superpower. We have commitments we must honor, but we need to drastically reduce our follies there and focus our attention here—on the western hemisphere. From the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego, our dominion over this part of the world should be predominant and unchallenged.

“To protect our access to the oil of the Arabian Peninsula, we’ve fought multiple wars in Iraq and in Afghanistan. For America, Saudi oil has been the most expensive source of energy on the planet—while we have abundant, undeveloped resources right here in the U.S. And in Mexico. And in Canada. Here is where we need to devote our efforts. Not the Arabian desert.”

“We are already investing in Canada’s oil sands,” Boucher said.

“I’m not talking about oil from Canada. Canada has unlimited water in their glacier lakes. It is the oil of this century.
Canada has twenty percent of the world’s supply of freshwater, and they can’t deny us access forever. A member of the Alberta provincial government once told me, and I’m quoting him verbatim: ‘If the U.S. and Canada ever go to war, it will be over water.’ The southwestern U.S. is drying up, as is northern Mexico. Drought gets worse every year. Nobody can tell me that the drought in Mexico does not contribute to economic problems there, which in turn contribute to the rise in crime. The water’s in Canada; Mexico has oil and gas. Tell him, Dumont.”

“There are fields in Mexico that may exceed those of the Middle East,” Dumont said. “Some are in areas where the current criminal insurgency has made it impossible to even think about investment and development. My son, as I believe you all know, was a geologist and consultant. He was retained to study an area just south of the border and found what he believed to be one of the largest oil and gas fields in the western hemisphere. He was killed shortly after his discovery. Decapitated. His body heinously abused.”

There was a hush that hung so heavy over their heads that it almost seemed to filter the light cast by the chandelier.

Boucher turned to Cyrus Moore. “General, Canada has made the bulk export of water illegal, and Mexico has excluded foreign investment—specifically, product-sharing agreements—from its energy sector since the industry was nationalized in the thirties. Are you suggesting
armed intervention with our neighbors to the north and south?”

Moore didn’t bat an eye. He glanced from Dumont to Boucher. He cracked a thin-lipped smile, then said softly with full dramatic flair, “I’m suggesting we make them an offer they can’t refuse. If Canada wants to sell us oil from their tar sands, we tell them we’ll buy it only in proportion to the amount of water they sell us. We build two pipelines instead of one. In Mexico, much of the northern tier of the country has been lost to criminal elements. It is a conservative estimate that more than sixty thousand people have been killed over the past six years from cartel violence in Mexico. If that number of civilians were killed in a natural disaster, like a flood or an earthquake, this country would be considered inhuman if we did not try to help. That’s what I’m suggesting: help. We cannot sit by and do nothing.”

“The Mexicans have a saying,” Boucher said: “ ‘Poor Mexico; so far from God, so close to the United States.’ I think they have a far greater fear of the U.S. doing something than they do of the U.S. doing nothing. Recalling what Mr. Benetton shared with us at our last game, it would seem to me that our first priority should be to address the problems on our side of the border, not theirs.”

“Oh?” The general’s eyebrows arched as he fixed his gaze on the lawyer. “And what did you have to share, Mr. Benetton?”

“I believe I used the term no-man’s-land,” Benetton said. “American ranchers and farmers claim that there’s a
ten-mile strip along our side of the border, often crossing their land, where there is no protection, no security. Some say the Border Patrol ignores any call for help within this no-man’s-land. The ranchers have pictures of trespassers carrying automatic rifles. They stumble across drug deliveries on their own ranchland. They claim cartels have set up lookout posts in the mountains on U.S. territory. And they say the U.S. government is failing them.”

“And I agree with them,” General Moore said. Suspended breathing resumed around the table.

“The U.S. Border Patrol as our first line of defense against territorial incursion? Who came up with that idea? Gentlemen, I grew up in El Paso. I grew up with farmers telling neighbors and friends when they were bringing in truckloads of illegal farm laborers from Mexico like they were talking about a trip to the grocery store. There is a long-standing tradition among those guarding our border of looking the other way when it serves local interests. No, we need men and women with the best training, the best equipment, experienced working in difficult terrain.”

“It sounds like you have something in mind, General,” Benetton said.

“I do. I’m thinking of our forces returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. What better mission could there be for these highly skilled veterans?”

“Posse Comitatus Act?” Benetton asked. All at the
table were familiar with the federal law prohibiting use of U.S. troops on state land.

“National Guard is exempt,” Moore said, as if that were answer enough.

“Gentlemen, gentlemen,” Senator Farmer said, “the only way you can keep me from winning my fair share this evening is to talk the night away. May I suggest that we get back to poker? Or you could just hand over your money to me now and continue this discussion into the morning hours. Whichever you prefer.”

“Let’s play poker,” General Moore said. “I’ve said my piece.”

The game continued with intense focus and little conversation. More than enough had been said. It was past ten when they took their first break.

“We’ve got snacks and a bar set up in the observatory,” Dumont said, and led his guests to the glass-enclosed pavilion. He pulled Boucher aside. “Let me show you those paintings you were looking at earlier.”

They walked to the front entry and climbed the circular stairway. “I keep my impressionists up here,” Dumont said. “Other areas of the home are dedicated to different periods.”

“Is that a Cassatt?” Boucher was drawn to a large canvas.

“Ray, can we talk?” Benetton stood at the foot of the stairs.

“Of course, Carl. Come on up. Excuse me for a second, Judge.”

Dumont met Benetton at the top of the stairs, and they walked to the other side of the gallery, perhaps thirty feet away and separated by the hanging chandelier. Boucher studied the masterpiece. He was suddenly aware of another phenomenon. Though Dumont and the lawyer stood whispering in low tones on the far side of the open entry, he could hear them as if they were next to him. He looked up. The domed cupola acted like a parabola. Their voices were bouncing off the marble floor, then up to the dome, and were directed to where he stood. He remembered a schoolboy tour of the U.S. Capitol. The room off the rotunda, which had been the early chamber of the House of Representatives, had the same effect: a whisper on one side of the great hall could be heard on the other side—which the opposing political party had employed to their benefit at the time and which contemporary guides used to entertain their groups of tourists.

Boucher listened carefully. It was as if they were whispering in his ear.

“I don’t like discussing our business in front of a federal judge,” Benetton said.

“What business? Last week you lectured us on border history. This week the general touched on the Monroe Doctrine and his version of Teddy Roosevelt’s Big Stick, if you didn’t recognize them.”

“It’s too risky. I’ve received word. They want their next shipment of weapons. When can you get your vessel under way?”

“I can load tomorrow night. She’ll sail at high tide. And don’t worry about Judge Boucher. To repeat the general, I’m making him an offer he can’t refuse.”

Benetton nodded. “Hey, Jock,” he yelled, though Boucher had heard every whispered word, “let’s play some poker.”

When the game resumed, Boucher sensed that Benetton had conveyed his concerns about him to the other players. In the forced silence, Boucher studied his hole cards. A pair of queens. Another pair of queens in the community. He took a deep breath, closed his cards, and laid them carefully on the table, then spoke.

“The president’s director of intelligence has publicly stated that he does not feel Mexico presents a national security concern to the United States; that the drug lords have no political agenda and are interested only in shipping and selling the drugs, which, to our national shame, we buy and consume in large quantities.” He paused. There were frowns around the table. Only Dumont kept his poker face. “I do not agree with the director’s assessment. As Mr. Benetton previously pointed out, their own government has acknowledged that they have lost control of a large area of their own country; territory contiguous to our border. Mexican civilians have been shot, many by random gunfire; hospitals and drug rehabilitation centers have been raided
and patients murdered. Raging gun battles have taken place outside of public schools. Law enforcement officers and elected local leaders have been assassinated, some forced to seek asylum and anonymity in the U.S. If they have lost control of their country to apolitical criminals motivated by greed, it offers fertile ground for terrorist elements intent on harming our country and its citizens. I think the situation on both sides of our southern frontier presents a clear and present danger to the security of the United States. I salute you gentlemen for giving this matter your consideration. I am in total agreement with you. My bet is two hundred dollars.”

He won the hand and hoped that, with his declaration, he’d put to rest any doubts they had over him. That’s what bluffing was all about.

CHAPTER 22

“Y
OU PLAY CHESS?”

Fitch recognized the voice on the phone he had grabbed without opening his eyes, but the question didn’t compute at this hour. Sunday mornings were for sleeping, not for competitive intellectual challenge. The sliver of sunlight slicing through the closed drapes made his digital alarm clock hard to read. He reached for his watch on the nightstand and frowned. “No,” he said. “Or should I say hell no.”

“That’s a pity,” Boucher said. “New Orleans and the French Quarter have a long tradition with the game that’s been washed away with time and floodwaters. It’s really a—”

“Jock, it’s Sunday morning, and I had a late evening. I took the lady home, but if she were here with me right now and you called with such a ridiculous question at this
time of a new day, my tone of voice would be something different from the slightly aggravated one you hear now.”

“How soon can you meet me? We have to talk.”

“At my Sunday pace, probably in about an hour. Where?”

Boucher gave the address of a restaurant on Decatur with an outdoor seating area. It was fine weather for alfresco.

It had been almost four in the morning, with light rain still falling, when he left the Dumont residence. He’d driven home, and though his head was swimming when he went to bed, he had fallen asleep immediately, waking up a few hours later to finish the sentence that was in his mind when he had dozed off. He fixed coffee and sat in his courtyard. There was a clarity to his thoughts that was surprising, considering his lack of sleep. Physically, he felt better, feeling hardly any pain when he massaged his ribs. In the cool early-morning stillness, he had thought of chess, and the men he’d been with the previous night. They didn’t make up a complement, but each man’s moves could be compared with several of the game’s principal pieces. One thing for sure—the pieces were on the move, with the game’s primary initial objective easy to ascertain. They were moving to control the center of the board. But there the analogy faded. What was the board? Where was its center?

•  •  •

Fitch arrived at the restaurant wearing a white cotton shirt unbuttoned, a houndstooth sport coat, black slacks, and a straw fedora with black band. His shoes were polished. His aftershave was probably something of a drugstore variety. Boucher stared at the outfit. Fitch waved away his unspoken comment.

BOOK: Blood Game: A Jock Boucher Thriller
9.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Silent Deceit by Kallie Lane
The Possession by Spikes J. D.
I Hate You—Don't Leave Me by Jerold J. Kreisman
Tease by Immodesty Blaize
Final Assault by Stephen Ames Berry
Flight of the Hawk by Gary Paulsen
Unti Peter Robinson #22 by Peter Robinson