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Authors: David Hagberg

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There was enough light for him to see the racks and wiring and hydraulic lines, and enough light for someone to see him if they opened the trap door.
He eased back into the darkness as far as he could go, taking care to make no noise.
Had he been stopped in the terminal he might have been able to bluff his way out of the airport. But to be caught here, like this, there would be no explanation other than the truth: He had sabotaged the airplane. But if he was trapped down here and could not get off, he would have to fly at 7:30.
He sat down on his knees and heels, set the tool kit aside, and concentrated on his breathing so that he could fight off the rising panic that threatened to block his sanity and his courage. If this were the time and place for him to die, then so be it. In a way it would be a form of
seppuku,
and therefore honorable. He would not have failed.
The panels went dead, plunging the electronics bay into complete darkness again. Oshima flinched despite himself.
“I'm down,” the technician radioed. “Looks like a broken connection on f-thirty-three-fifteen-baker. That's the circuit breaker for … ah, the forward galley. Looks like an auxiliary. No, it's for one of the coffeemakers.”
The radioed reply was too faint for Oshima to make out.
“The prep crew won't be aboard for another twenty minutes. I should have it done by then.”
It was ironic, Oshima thought, that a man's life could
hinge on something so insignificant as an electric coffeemaker.
“Roger that,” the technician said. “I'll set both panel clocks forward.”
Oshima looked up sharply.
The technician chuckled. “It screws me up every spring, too.”
Daylight saving time, the thought suddenly crystallized in Oshima's head. Since he had arrived in Chicago six weeks ago he'd been too busy to give more than cursory notice to the newspapers or the radio or television. If he had paid more attention he would have realized that on this Sunday clocks across the United States were set one hour ahead. It was not 4:30 A.M. now; it was 5:30 A.M.
That irony was even more bitter to Oshima than the coffeemaker's faulty circuit breaker, and he almost laughed out loud.
As he had promised Yamagata, he thought of the garden, and the windchime, and the rock named “future” and “hope,” while with one ear he listened to the sounds from the cockpit and from the belly of the airplane as the first of the luggage was loaded aboard.
Future and hope were meant to symbolize Japan's
Yamato
spirit. The rock placed in such a setting so obviously at peace and harmony with itself was meant as a focus or catalyst for the thoughts.
Yoshida Shôin once wrote:
Full well I knew this course must end in death:
It was
Yamato
spirit urged me on
To dare whate'er betide.
Someone else came aboard the jetliner, and later others, after which the panel LED indicators came on again, and more baggage was loaded aft and below.
Oshima became calmer as his fear peeled away from him like layers of onion. He carefully examined each line of the verse that Shôin had composed on the evening before his execution for being a traitor against the turn
of the century “New Japan,” and he understood its meaning. He knew the fatalism that Shôin had felt, as well as the sense of inner peace that came before death.
The master had been a
bu-shi
, in the old meaning, a fighting knight. It had been his only crime against modernism.
But now in Japan the belief that the old ways were the best was coming back. Japan had lost her greatness, but she would regain it in this century, or within the first years of the next. The return to power was as inevitable as it was just and righteous.
Oshima was barely conscious of the passage of time, although he was aware of the continuing preparation for the jetliner's first and last flight of the day.
A fundamental difference between Americans and Japanese was that Americans believed anything worth doing was worth doing right. The Japanese, however, believed that anything worth doing was worth
dying
for. It was one of the reasons Japan would be victorious morally, financially, and, given the time, militarily.
Oshima was startled when the engines came to life, one at a time. The noise was loud in the equipment bay.
He could hear announcements being read over the airplane's public address system, though it was hard to pick out the exact words.
The jetliner lurched, then moved slowly backward from the boarding gate.
For a second, Oshima considered bypassing the heat monitor/alarm panel so that he could replace the original module without the flight crew becoming aware of it. But he dismissed the idea.
The airplane turned and then started forward, bumping along the uneven ramp toward the taxiway.
In the old days Samurai warriors learned to compose poetry in order to cultivate a gentleness of spirit to temper their passion for killing. Oshima had read about one ancient master who had instructed his warrior-pupil to construct a verse about the
Uguisu,
the warbler, or Japanese nightingale.
The young warrior made a first crude effort:
The brave warrior keeps apart
The ear that might listen
To the warbler's song.
The airplane stopped, then the engines roared and they accelerated down the runway, the noise rising sharply, and then even more sharply as they became airborne.
The master continued to work with the young warrior until his soul awakened, and he wrote:
Stands the warrior, mailed and strong
To hear the
Uguisu'
s song,
Warbled sweet the trees among.
The jetliner banked left as it continued to climb, and Oshima's thoughts turned again to the rock, “future” and “hope.”
At twenty-three thousand feet the airplane's port engine disintegrated without warning, shearing off the entire wing to within five feet of its root, blasting a hole seven feet in diameter in the side of the hull halfway back to the tail surfaces, and taking out all electrical power to the cockpit so that neither the twenty-five-year veteran captain, nor the ten-year veteran first officer had a chance to radio Mayday.
Oshima was conscious all the way to impact in a farm field south of Joliet, and on the way down he wondered if a poem would be written about him someday.
K
irk Collough McGarvey knew that someone was coming for him again. Wishful thinking or not, he'd had the feeling all through the fall semester where he taught eighteenth-century literature at Milford College on Delaware's east coast. At the odd moment he would stop in mid-sentence and glance at the door, half expecting to see someone there. Or he would pick up the telephone in his apartment, certain that it had rung, but there'd only be the dial tone.
It had been three and a half years since he'd last had any contact with the CIA, or with anyone from official Washington, and nearly that long since he'd spoken with his ex-wife, Kathleen, although their only daughter, Elizabeth, now twenty-one, came down from New York several times a year to see him.
“What's the matter, Daddy?” she asked at Thanksgiving. But he had no answer for her. Nervousness? Simple boredom? Once a field man always a field man, that was the drill, wasn't it?
Pushing fifty, he wasn't over the hill yet. He was a tall,
muscularly built man, with a thick shock of brown hair starting to turn gray at the temples, and wide, honest eyes, sometimes green, at other times gray. He ran ten miles and swam five every day, rain or shine. He worked out with the college's fencing team to maintain his coordination. And once a month he spent an afternoon at a local gun club's firing range.
He'd not lost his edge, but as the CIA's general counsel, Howard Ryan, told him in Murphy's office three and a half years ago, he was an anachronism.
“You're a man who has outlived his usefulness,” the lawyer said. “The Soviet Union is no more. The bad guys have packed up and quit. Time for the professional administrators and negotiators to take over and straighten out the mess. Thanks for a job well done, but we no longer need shooters.”
Bad times, he thought, getting out of his car. He headed over the sand dunes to Slaughter Beach on the bay. It was a few minutes after three, the day cold and blustery. At the top of the last rise he stopped to watch the whitecaps march down the bay in regular rows. The wind was gusting to thirty-five knots. Spits of snow drove out of a leaden sky, and he could pick out the shape of a southbound container ship well out into the bay heading for warmer climes.
More years ago than he wanted to remember the Company had sent him to Santiago to kill a general who'd been responsible for hundreds of deaths in and around the capital. But his orders had been changed in midstream without his knowing about it. After the kill he'd returned to Washington a pariah.
He'd run then to Switzerland until he'd been called out of retirement for a brief but particularly nasty assignment. No one thanked him. There were no welcome-home parades, no presentations at the White House. He was paid and went to ground next in Paris until his call to arms had come again, as he knew it would. Ryan was just as wrong three and a half years ago as he was now. The world may have become a much safer place with the demise of the Soviet Union as a
superpower, but there was still a need for a man willing to kill. A man, McGarvey sometimes thought of himself, without a past. Or, more accurately, a man driven by a past from which he was trying to escape.
Looking back toward the highway he watched until the blue Ford Taurus pulled onto the beach access road, then he headed the rest of the way down to the water's edge. The beach was deserted, as he knew it would be, and as soon as he was out of sight of the parking area, he transferred his Walther PPK automatic from the holster at the small of his back to his jacket pocket.
It was possible that someone had come from Langley to offer him another job. But it was just as likely that someone out of his past had finally come gunning for him. Lately he'd been having his old recurring nightmare in which Arkady Kurshin was climbing up out of a flooded tunnel. The Russian was impossible to kill, and he was coming for revenge.
The wind-driven spray raised a mist from the beach that smelled faintly fishy—seaweed, salt, and probably some pollution. But not an unpleasant odor. After his parents' ranch in western Kansas McGarvey preferred almost any smell other than the prairie.
He stopped a hundred yards down the beach and half turned so he could look out to sea while at the same time watch the dunes toward the parking area out of the corner of his eye. The wind was picking up, and he made mental note to take it into account if he had to make a crosswind shot. The slow-moving 7.65 mm bullet's path would be severely affected over anything but point-blank range.
A man wearing a dark, thick-collared jacket and a baseball cap topped the rise, stopped a moment, and then headed directly toward McGarvey. He was of medium height, perhaps six feet, and moved with the sure-footed grace of an athlete. But he wore gloves, so he was no immediate threat, whoever he was. You couldn't fire a gun while wearing gloves.
As he got closer, McGarvey made the judgment that the man was not from the Company. There was something
about his bearing, about the way he came straight on without looking left or right, that made him seem like a soldier. The man was not a cop or field officer. But he'd asked about McGarvey on campus this afternoon. Administration had sent him over to Humanities, and Evelyn had called to warn that a visitor was on his way.
“Did he say what he wanted?” McGarvey asked.
“He said that a mutual friend sent him down to see you.”
“Name?”
“David Kennedy.”
McGarvey thought he might know it, but he couldn't dredge up the connection. Maybe somebody from the Company, after all, maybe not. “I'll probably just miss him,” he told the dean's secretary. “My constitutional.”
“He'll show up back here.”
“Slaughter Bay.”
“Don't catch a chill,” Evelyn said. She and the dean and the chairman of the school's board were the only three on campus who knew anything about McGarvey's background. But good teachers were hard to find, and Milford wasn't Ivy League, so as long as his past didn't interfere he was accepted with open arms.
“Mr. McGarvey?” Kennedy had to shout over the wind.
McGarvey turned. “That's right.”
“My name is David Kennedy,” the man said. His eyes were blue, and the expression on his face was guileless, almost little boyish.
McGarvey made the connection. NASA. “You're an astronaut. A shuttle pilot.”
“Until five years ago. Now I'm president of Guerin Airplane Company's Commercial Airplane Division. Portland, Oregon.”
They shook hands. Guerin was the second-largest designer and manufacturer of commercial aircraft in the world behind Seattle's Boeing, with every bit as much prestige as the older company. Nearly every airline in the world flew Guerin equipment. And the United
Nations Peacekeeping Armed Forces Unit was considering Guerin's F-124 Hellfire all-weather supersonic fighter/interceptor for its primary air weapon. Not even Europe's Airbus Industrie, which was heavily subsidized with government money, could outcompete the company.
“What brings you to see me, Mr. Kennedy?”
“I'd like to offer you a job.”
“Teaching your engineers about Voltaire?”
“The chairman of our board and CEO Al Vasilanti is a personal friend of Roland Murphy. Your name was mentioned.”
Murphy was Director of Central Intelligence. He was a tough but fair-minded man who did not care for McGarvey. But unlike the Agency's general counsel, he understood the need for McGarvey's skills. The fact that he'd given McGarvey's name to the CEO of a civilian company was extraordinary.
“You were told about my background?”
“Mr. Murphy said that you were a … troubleshooter. And considering the trouble that we're having, the situation that we're facing, you might be the only man who can help us.”
McGarvey looked away. The downbound container ship was nothing more than an indistinct blur on the horizon. Wherever it was headed, it had direction, a purpose. For that he envied the ship and those who sailed her.
“What else did the general tell you?”
“That your methods were not orthodox, that wherever you turned up someone would probably get hurt. And that you would be watched, and if you broke any law you would be arrested and we—the company—would find ourselves in big trouble.”
McGarvey faced him. “Yet you came to offer me a job.”
“Al Vasilanti is an unorthodox man. He built Guerin from the ground up, mostly on guts.”
“Spare me the pep talk, Mr. Kennedy. If you know
who and what I am and you want me to do something for you, then your company must be facing something your engineers or lawyers can't handle.”
Kennedy nodded.
“Unless something has changed in the past few years, I think that cargo planes and airliners are our single largest dollar-value export.”
“By a wide margin.”
“But Washington refuses to help. No more Chrysler-style bailouts.”
“Something like that,” Kennedy said. “And it concerns the Japanese. No one wants to upset the apple cart so soon before the President's economic summit next month in Tokyo.”
“Did the general mention my last assignment?”
“Not in any specific terms,” Kennedy said. “But he said it involved the Japanese.”
A multibillionaire Japanese industrialist who'd lost his family in the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had hired a group of former East German Secret Service thugs to steal the fissionable material and parts for two nuclear devices that were to be detonated in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Except for McGarvey's interference, the plan would have succeeded. There was no love for him in Japan.
“What do you want me to do for you?”
Kennedy glanced back the way he'd come. “Could we go some place warmer? Maybe a coffee shop or something?”
“No,” McGarvey said. Here on this beach their conversation was as secure as it could be.
“Then I'll get to the point. We believe that a group of Japanese corporations have formed a
zaibatsu,
which is a type of conglomerate, to try an unfriendly takeover of Guerin. We don't think this group has a government sanction, but we're not sure about that part. What we are reasonably certain of, however, is that if they're successful they mean to dismantle our company and ship it to Tokyo.”
“Why?” McGarvey said. “If they wanted an airplane
manufacturing company they could build one. What has Guerin got that they want?”
Kennedy hesitated a moment. “Our company hinges on keeping what I'm about to tell you secret.”
“From whom, Mr. Kennedy?”
“Anyone … the public.”
McGarvey said nothing, and after a second the point dawned on the former astronaut.
“The Japanese wouldn't be coming after us if they didn't already know or guess,” he said.
“That's a reasonable assumption. But you have a business problem on your hands, Mr. Kennedy. What do you need me for?”
“In 1990 one of our airplanes went down out of Chicago. It was an American Airlines flight. Three hundred forty-eight people were killed. No survivors.”
“Sabotage?”
“We think it's a possibility. The National Transportation Safety Board disagrees. They said it was engine failure.”
“That was seven years ago. What's the connection between then and the
zaibatsu
you think has been formed now? Have you come up with any evidence?”
“The flight manifest showed three hundred forty-seven passengers and crew. An extra body, parts actually—a heart, part of a skull, some tissue—were found in the vicinity of the cockpit. One of the pathologists the NTSB hired said the tissues probably came from an Oriental male. There was some question about DNA matching, and the Board shot it down. Said the body parts were from someone on the ground. A migrant farm worker probably. But the doctor disagreed, so his conjecture ended up as an addendum that was ignored.”
“Have you talked to the doctor?”
“He was murdered three months later, and his office burned. The thieves were supposedly looking for drugs, but all of his paper records, as well as his computer memory, were destroyed.”
“Still no connection between then and now. Maybe the doctor was wrong.”
“In the past six months we've had a seven hundred percent increase in the number of job applicants of Japanese descent. In more than one-third of the cases our routine background investigations found that the applicants were lying about some very significant facts. Like where they were born, what schools they attended, their work background.”
“What's your rate of faulty applications among the white population?”
“A little less.”
“Among the Blacks or Hispanics?”
“A little more,” Kennedy conceded the point. “But during that same time period our work-related accident rate has skyrocketed, parts and subassembly theft has become big business, and one week ago one of our structural engineers, a man who has been with the company for thirty years, was killed when a forty-pound tool box fell off a scaffold and hit him on the head. We had three guys who said they thought one of our Japanese-American employees was nearby when it happened, but now they're not so sure they saw anything.”
BOOK: High Flight
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