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Authors: Peter Schechter

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“What they intended to do with that control is anybody’s guess. But what we do know is that when Senator Luis Matta found out about Russia’s control of the sham company that was about to win control of his country’s gas, he was assassinated. Shot.

“If this isn’t interesting enough,” said Hardaway, the Pacific
Ocean’s wind whipping through her auburn hair, “there is more. The plot gets thicker.

“As we reported a few nights ago, Martha Packard, the U.S. national intelligence chief, tendered her resignation, ostensibly for personal reasons. But CNN has now learned that, at the very moment Luis Matta was discovering Volga Gaz’s deceit here in Lima, General Martha Packard was in Moscow negotiating a secret deal with Volga Gaz to expand Russia’s supply of gas to the United States. Nobody knows exactly what was happening in those negotiations, but there are two questions that need answering.

“Why was the CIA negotiating in Moscow for gas with an entity that clearly had the intention of doing harm to the United States? And why did the CIA not know about what was going on here in Lima?”

Tony looked over at Tolberg. His eyes were glued to the television, but his face had contoured into a sly smile. His fist was clenched into a punch. It occurred to Tony that he was imagining his own uppercut landing on Packard’s jaw.

“We will explore those two questions in the next half hour,” Hardaway said, turning to face the camera. Suddenly, her pacing stopped. For the smallest of pauses, she seemed to hesitate. Television magnified even the slightest of mannerisms. And, for that split second, Anna Hardaway looked as if she didn’t want to continue.

“But first we should be clear.” Hardaway’s delivery suddenly lost its luster. She slowed to a monotone. It was so unusual for her that it left the impression that something important was coming.

“It is CNN’s policy to protect sources. There is, however, an exception to that rule. If another news organization is reporting the same story with a name attached to it, it is our obligation to give you, our viewers, the widest-angle view possible.

“We must report, therefore, that the
New York Times
Web site is tonight running a story sourced to unattributed CIA officials for publication in tomorrow’s newspaper that central intelligence di
rector Martha Packard was not alone in Moscow. According to the
New York Times,
with her in Russia was Anthony Ruiz, a White House official presently under questioning by his superiors for illicitly passing official information to Russian government officials.”

The four persons in Isaiah J. Tolberg’s office sat in stunned silence, eyes glued to the television. It didn’t matter anymore what Anna Hardaway was saying. None of them was listening.

Tony Ruiz looked from the president to Tolberg and back again to the president. Gene Laurence’s hand was in his hair, holding on to the firmament of his scalp. Tolberg never raised his eyes from the floor.

Tony had warned them, begged them. It had been obvious that a story this big couldn’t be locked away in a box. Not when Martha Packard was the enemy. But they had refused to listen. What was it about this city that made powerful people believe they were impregnable?

The only one not surprised was Tony Ruiz. He had come prepared. Tony got up and went to his briefcase, parked on the floor next to Tolberg’s office doorway. He took out the red folder and tossed it on the coffee table. Without another word, he turned and walked out, leaving Blaise Ryan in the office with the two men.

Tony ambled down the hallway toward his office. In a strange way, he was relieved; a huge weight had been lifted off his shoulders. But he felt sorry for Tolberg and the president.

They would be the ones to deal with this mess, Tony thought as he followed the cubicle-lined passage to his office. They would be the ones to fight the energy battle with Congress. And with this scandal hanging over the White House, Gene Laurence’s effort to liberate America from its dependency on the fossil fuels of hostile outsiders would become hell on earth. Hand-to-hand combat.

No, thought Tony. The energy wars were far from over. A new Cold War had just begun. And as Tony made his way toward the White House’s east elevator, he wondered how long he could really stay out. In the past months, he had learned that the coin of leader
ship had two sides—the beautiful and the unsightly. But Tony Ruiz had now been bitten by the bug of politics. He was hooked. As he smiled at the uniformed Secret Service guard overseeing the traffic at the black-painted, wrought-iron gate, he knew that somehow his role in all this was far from finished.

I write these words with difficulty as they are the first to be drafted such a short time after my mother’s death. My mom was a graceful, wonderful woman; intelligently loving life and her family in ways that I can only hope to emulate.

It gives me great comfort and makes me enormously happy to know that she still had the time to read the final manuscript before leaving us. Seated in the dark green easy chair—in my old bedroom, now converted into her study—she rolled through the book in three or four days.

Obviously, she told me that she loved it. Not that she is a fair critic. But now those words of approval sure make a world of difference to me.

Second novels are notoriously harder than first ones. This book is no exception. The now-adolescent author has gone through the full process at least once. Experience naturally raises the bar and creates higher demands than those imposed on the happy-go-lucky first-time writer. Yet even with these heightened challenges, my own
novel-writing experience continues to be one that is enormously fun and fulfilling.

And so, there are some people to thank for making this experience positive and uplifting.

As with most things in my life, the first and foremost smile of gratitude and kiss of thanks goes to my wife, Rosa. It is she that has to tolerate my moods and read the countless drafts over and over again. She is the toughest of critics. Yet she always finds a way to say what needs to be said with clarity and mirth. I am the luckiest of men.

René Alegría is my talented, multifaceted editor at HarperCollins. Part coach, part businessman, part intellectual, and part dramatic showman, René has astutely used his various hats to deliver direction and advice to me throughout the process. At every moment, his wise counsel and teasing cajoling has been spot-on. Thank you, René, for another opportunity to have the benefit of your talents and for your support and confidence.

Andrea Montejo was my first book’s editor and the close relationship we built has not waned. Though no longer my “boss” at HarperCollins, she was generous enough to continue reading and providing me with her talented advice. As usual, her wise insights were delivered patiently and generously.

There are a number of dear friends who also deserve my gratitude. To begin, a particular word of appreciation to that special friend, you know who you are, for bringing alive the oft-conflicting poles of Russia’s economic, social, and political reality. Your insights were not only impeccable but they were delivered with uncanny creativity.

To Miguel and Ornella, who read a couple drafts of the manuscript and gave me their straight and useful opinions, once again you have my deep thanks.

I try to write about international events affecting our world. In the future, our children’s understanding of what we broadly call
“energy” will differ greatly from our own. How we, as citizens, relate to what we use to drive our cars, fuel our factories, heat our homes, and brighten our computer screens will change radically over the next twenty-five years. America’s leaders face choices today that will decide whether tomorrow this transition will be traumatic and impoverishing or deliberate and enriching.

About the Author

P
ETER
S
CHECHTER
is the author of
Point of Entry
, and an international political and communications consultant. A founder of one of Washington’s premier strategic communications consulting firms, he has spent twenty years advising presidents, writing advertising for political parties, ghost-writing columns for CEOs, and counseling international organizations out of crises. He also owns a winery, farms goats, and is a partner in a number of successful restaurants. Schechter has lived in Europe and Latin America and is fully fluent in six languages. He lives in Washington, D.C.

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Jacket design by T.H. Nicholas

Jacket photographs of Washington D.C. by IT Stock International/Jupiter, flag by Jupiter Images

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

PIPELINE
. Copyright © 2009 by Peter Schechter. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub © Edition SEPTEMBER 2009 ISBN: 9780061973031

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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