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Authors: Stephen Hunter

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Then Bob made his recommendations.

1) Secret Service should be informed at earliest possible date of the Soviet attempt and brought in on our side. But they have to be made to understand that the point of the operation is not only to safeguard the President’s life but to apprehend and interrogate the Soviet-Iraqi shooting team and its support units.

2) Radio networks should be authorized and interjurisdictional limits set, so that SS knows exactly its responsibilities and this agency knows what it can do too.

3) Monitoring of St. Louis Cathedral in New Orleans should begin immediately; almost surely the shooting team will begin to modify and adapt it prior to 1 March. At the same time surveillance should be extremely discreet, so as not to scare away “the bird.” As enemy investigation of the site will almost certainly be thorough, it is further recommended that no direct observational devices or planted listening devices be employed. They would be onto those in a second. A very good way might be to observe from above—F4Js at 20,000 feet orbiting in circle—with infrared cameras for heat signatures, in the way the Air Force did in Vietnam when it was interdicting the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

4) An aerial search of greater New Orleans bayou and swamp area should be commenced immediately in order to locate the site of Russian preparation. In order to adjust to climatic conditions in late winter/early spring, the shooting team will almost certainly hold several live fire run-throughs under circumstances as exact as possible so that Solaratov knows exactly what to expect as to load performance and so forth.

5) The President should of course be warned, but
if he is as courageous as he proved to be in the war against Iraq, he will insist upon taking part in the exercise to lure the shooting team onward, rather than using a double or canceling the event. His earliest participation is necessary.

6) On day of event, counter sniper teams should be stationed concentrically from the President’s speaking position as indicated on map. These positions are located roughly 600 yards out and are oriented away from, rather than toward, the President. Each unit should be equipped with one Remington Model-40A1 rifle with Unertl 10× scope and carry duty load of M852 Match Accuracy Lake City Arsenal 7.62mm NATO cartridges, in order to engage the Soviet-Iraqi team in the event of actual shooting. (I would like to lead one of these units, and I prefer to locate myself at the starred site on the map on the day of the event; if necessary, and given the proper command authority, I can take out the Soviet-Iraqi team before any harm is done. I’ll shoot the shooter through center mass and the spotter—if there is one—in the left body quadrant; a quick reactive team can almost certainly get to him before he comes out of shock and begins self-destruction procedures. He should be an interesting intelligence source.)

7) Debriefing of captured Soviet and/or personnel should begin immediately so that we may act on their intelligence immediately; in Vietnam, interrogation information was sometimes squandered when we reacted too slowly.

He stopped typing.

That was it.

What else was there?

Well, of course there was one other thing and it was the thing that no man could plan for. Luck. One only
prayed for it, and maybe it would be there and maybe it wouldn’t.

He looked at his watch. Time to sleep; tomorrow he’d send the report to the people he now believed represented the Central Intelligence Agency.

He stripped and crawled into bed. Mike bounded up too, for the big soft stupid dog liked to touch him ever so slightly through the covers in sleep.

But at four he awakened and went back and read the document over. It seemed good. He couldn’t sleep however. He knew it was absurd but he felt he was being watched or something. He sat back and tried to work out his feelings about his new employers.

He didn’t trust them. But they were all he had.

And then he thought: I need an edge. I need a way to keep these boys from turning on me if things go wrong. He tried to think of what that might be, but he couldn’t come up with a thing.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

It was humiliating. Nick had become a complete and total gofer, a clerk, a fool. He bustled through the corridors with files and coffee and doughnuts like Hazel the maid. Howdy Duty hardly let him talk to the Secret Service people at all, leaving that delicate task to himself; Nick had been appointed head eunuch.

“Hey, Memphis, your slip is showing,” his expartner Mickey Sontag yelled out as Nick raced from the file room to a former storage room now bearing the important title on the door
JOINT SECRET SERVICE/BUREAU MEETING GROUP
, where the federal bodyguards and the sanctimonious Utey had set up shop.

“Yeah, yeah” said Nick helplessly, knowing he
was running late, pissed as hell that Ginny Feany, mistress of the files, had not found the dope on one Clark Clarkson, White Knight of the Lafayette Parish Ku Klux Klan, quite fast enough.

“Boy, they running you ragged, old Saint Nick.”

Nick was thirty-four; this
old
shit had to stop.

But “Yeah, yeah” was all he could think to say.

In the meeting, the senior Secret Service guy, Phil Mueller, was sounding off as usual like General Patton for a squad of his own troops and for Howdy as well.

“And this is the last of them?”

“He says it is,” answered Utey for Nick, before Nick could answer for himself.

“Even the inactives, the discontinueds, the imprisoned and the dead ones?”

“All of them, Phil.”

“So with your files, with our information, and with the stuff from the National Crime Index, we got what, total maybe two hundred fifty names? Triaged into three categories, Alphas, Betas and Charlies, for bad risk, possible risk, and should-be-checked-out. How’s the numbers on it? You getting through the Alphas?”

“Uh, Phil,” said one of the Secret Service joes, “we’re working them pretty hard. I’ve got three teams on them, that’s six guys for fifty-six of them, I’ve got a Beta team, and we’ve got a hundred twenty-four Betas, the rest Charlies.”

“How’s it shaping up timewise?”

“I think we’ll make the Alphas, no sweat, if we bring some of our other people in. I think we’ll make most of the Betas, too, we get a break or two. But it’s those damn Charlies that have us worried. I just don’t think, manpowerwise, we’re going to get very far into them.”

“Um,” said Mueller.

“A thought, Phil,” said Howdy Duty.

“Yes, Howard.”

“Maybe Nick could work the Charlies. Most of it’s phone, no? Checking up?”

“Hmmm,” said Mueller.

“He’d be more than willing, right, Nick?”

Nick just sat there, stewing.

Great. What these guys were doing—what they
always
did prior to a visit by the Man—was developing, in coordination with local law enforcement and cooperating federal agencies, a regional list of known wackos, screwballs, right- and left-wing dingbats, survivalists, and others fitting the potential risk profile. These people were then investigated by teams to determine location and current situation; if some signal of instability was detected by the officers, then surveillance was sometimes mandated; more frequently, the guys were simply rousted savagely, detained, had the shit scared out of them, then sent on their way. It was painstaking, boring work, absolutely the dullest. But it was Secret Service policy to know where all the nuts were stored before the Man got into gun range.

“But the bomb—” Nick began.

“Can wait,” snapped Mueller. “You get digging into the Charlies, okay, Memphis?”

“He’ll do it,” assured Utey. “Nick, you won’t mind putting in the extra time, will you?”

So what do you say? Well, the good Bureau man doesn’t say anything; he doesn’t let anything show; he just nods and knuckles under and gets behind the team.

And that’s what Nick committed himself to doing, biting down his anger that he’d missed a shot at the Secret Service bomb detail. Now those guys were pros. He’d wanted to see them work, they were so legendary. They did site preparation, and when they were done working an area over, you knew it was sanitized, that the dogs had sniffed no explosives or wires, that the spectrometers had uncovered no unusual radio waves
for command detonations, that no sniper’s nests or shooting platforms had been uncovered.

And it was outdoor work! It was doing something! It was getting back into the field, away from all this political nonsense and being just a clerk-jerk. And, the truth was, what Nick hated most of all of it was sitting in the office. He knew he wasn’t thorough enough, that he tended to make small mistakes. He cursed, silently, as his fate overtook him. But he kept his face flat and mild.

When it was over, Herm Sloane, who wasn’t too bad a guy, slid by and said, “Too bad, Nick. Know you wanted to slip out tomorrow. We’re just bogged down.”

“No problem,” said Nick, trying for cheer, which was his usual way of dealing with adversity.

“I don’t know who’s worse,” Sloane added conspiratorially, “my guy assholing it all over the place or your guy sucking it up all over the place.”

“It’s pretty fucking pathetic,” Nick said. “You got those Charlies for me?”

“ ’Fraid so, old pal.”

Sloane handed over the stack of files that he had triaged into the Charlie category. Nick looked at them sadly. It was hours and hours of work. He knew his investigation on the death of Eduardo Lanzman was falling apart. It wasn’t happening, because he couldn’t get to it.

The names were prosaic, pitiful, and as he glanced through the files, he saw the usual litany of failure and hatred, the usual roundup, the usual suspects. Little men with large grudges and imprecise grips on reality, who were only to be reckoned with because they had or could get guns.

And then Nick saw the name of his hero:

Bob Lee Swagger.

Bob the Nailer, he thought. Jesus Christ!

In three fourteen-hour days, Nick managed to eliminate fifty-six of his seventy Charlies. It was exhausting work, sitting there, phoning this office or that, tracking down that parole officer or this one, going through phone books and the state prison records division, talking to cops and lawyers and the various parish morgues. Of the fifty-six, more than half, twenty-nine, had simply died since, for whatever reason, they had been placed on the Secret Service Active Suspect List. Nick suspected therefore that the list was very old; so many old men. Another sixteen were serving jail time. Five were currently in mental institutions—these were the real crazos, whose difficulty in dealing with authority over the long term had finally gotten them classified pathological and who were now rusticating in some picturesque bayou bin. Six more had vanished, left the city or the state, simply disappeared off the face of the earth. They were now, happily, somebody else’s worry. That left fourteen to be accounted for, tracked, located, what have you; it was not easy work but he went at it with a great deal of effort.

And it left Bob the Nailer.

Nick had first heard of the great Marine sniper sometime in the early eighties, in an article in one of those
Soldier of Fortune
-type magazines that he used to read at the time. He remembered the cover photo of the lean young man in the camouflage paint and the intense eyes, and the beautiful Remington rifle he was carrying and the cover line:
THE MOST DANGEROUS MAN ALIVE
. The stories were incredible; whatever the guy shot died. Bob the Nailer had eighty-seven confirmed kills in Vietnam; he did some jobs for the Agency, it was said; and, his masterpiece, he’d hit a North Vietnamese battalion moving on an isolated Green Beret camp and held it
down for two days, killing thirty-odd men in the process, saving the Special Forces’ bacon.

That was when Nick himself was trying to be the great shooter, back in his ass-kicking SWAT days, before Myra and Tulsa. Thinking back now, it all seemed so clear and innocent; you were a trained man, you went against bad guys, and because you were so good, they got nailed.

That was when he’d sold his soul to the rifle, when he was, however briefly, an acolyte in the cult of the sniper. He shivered a bit at the vanity of it, remembering what his pride had turned into in Tulsa.

Still, all these years later he had a place in him full of respect for Bob. Bob had never wavered, had let nothing stand between himself and what he wanted to be, and Bob had tested himself in the crucible of the actual, while Nick had only tried once and failed spectacularly. His bullet had gone exactly where he had not wanted it to.

So it was with a sense of facing his old self and his old beliefs and the mistakes of his own youth that he set about to track down Bob the Nailer. And like many memories, this one proved easy enough to unearth. Bob was not hard to find, that is, the traces of Bob. He’d checked into the Robert Oliver Hotel in the French Quarter on February 3 and checked out on February 4. Two days. Nobody much remembered him; the only vague reports Nick could scare up told of a tall western-styled man, very leathery, who said nothing, kept to himself, was gone all day, and left without fuss. Had a funny camera with him, some expensive Jap thing probably.

BOOK: Point of Impact
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