In the fury and chaos of the morning, Lake’s words found their mark. Here was a man who meant what he said, who knew precisely what he would do. We wouldn’t slaughter innocent peasants if a man with guts were making the decisions. Lake was the man.
In the bunker, Teddy weathered another storm. Bad intelligence was blamed for every disaster. When the raids were successful, the pilots and the brave boys on the ground and their commanders and the politicians who sent them into battle got the credit. But when the raids went wrong, as they usually did, the CIA got the blame.
He had advised against the attack. The Israelis had a tenuous and very secret agreement with Yidal—don’t kill us, and we won’t kill you. As long as the targets were Americans and an occasional European, then the Israelis would not get involved. Teddy knew this, but it was information he had not shared. Twenty-four hours before the attack, he had advised the President, in writing, that he doubted the terrorists would be in the
compound when the bombs arrived. And, because of the target’s proximity to Talah, there was an excellent chance of collateral damage.
Hatlee Beech opened the brown envelope without noticing that the right lower corner was somewhat wadded and slightly damaged. He was opening so many personal envelopes these days, he looked only at the return address to see who and where they came from. Nor did he notice the Tampa postmark.
He hadn’t heard from Al Konyers in several weeks. He read the letter through without stopping, and found little if no interest in the fact that Al was using a new laptop. It was perfectly believable that Ricky’s pen pal had taken a sheet of stationery from the Royal Sonesta in New Orleans, and was pecking out the letter at thirty-five thousand feet.
Wonder if he was flying first class? he asked himself. Probably so. They wouldn’t have computer hookups back in coach, would they? Al had been in New Orleans on business, stayed at a very nice hotel, then flew first class to his next destination. The Brethren were interested in the financial conditions of all their pen pals. Nothing else mattered.
After he read the letter, he handed it to Finn Yarber, who was in the process of writing another one as poor Percy. They were working in the small conference room in the corner of the law library, their table littered with files and mail and a pretty assortment of soft pastel correspondence cards. Spicer was outside, at his table, guarding the door and studying point spreads.
“Who’s Konyers?” Finn asked.
Beech was flipping through some files. They kept a neat folder on every pen pal, complete with the letters they received and copies of all letters they’d sent.
“Don’t know much,” Beech said. “Lives in the D.C. area, fake name, I’m sure. Uses one of those mailbox services. That’s his third letter, I think.”
From the Konyers file Beech pulled out the first two letters. The one from December 11 read:
Dear Ricky:
Hello. My name is Al Konyers. I’m in my fifties. I like jazz, old movies, Humphrey Bogart, and I like to read biographies. I don’t smoke and don’t like people who do. Fun is Chinese take-out, a little wine, a black-and-white western with a good friend. Drop me a line.
Al Konyers
It was typewritten on plain white paper, the way most of them were at first. Fear was stamped between every line—fear of getting caught, fear of starting a long-distance relationship with a complete stranger. Every letter of every word was typewritten. He didn’t even sign his name.
Ricky’s first response was the standard letter Beech had written a hundred times now: Ricky’s twenty-eight, in rehab, bad family, rich uncle, etc. And dozens of the same enthusiastic questions: What kind of work do you do? How about your family? Do you like to travel? If Ricky could bare his soul, then he needed something in return. Two pages of the same crap
Beech had been writing for five months. He wanted so desperately to simply Xerox the damned thing. But he couldn’t. He was forced to personalize each one, on nice pretty paper. And he sent Al the same handsome photo he’d sent to the others. The picture was the bait that hooked almost all of them.
Three weeks passed. On January 9, Trevor had delivered a second letter from Al Konyers. It was as clean and sterile as the first, probably typed with rubber gloves.
Dear Ricky:
I enjoyed your letter. I have to admit I felt sorry for you at first, but you seem to have adjusted well to rehab and know where you’re going. I’ve never had problems with drugs and alcohol, so it’s difficult for me to understand. It sounds as though you’re getting the best treatment money can buy. You shouldn’t be so harsh on your uncle. Think of where you might be if not for him.
You ask many questions about me. I’m not ready to discuss a lot of personal matters, but I understand your curiosity. I was married for thirty years, but not anymore. I live in D.C., and work for the government. My job is challenging and fulfilling.
I live alone. I have few close friends and prefer it that way. When I travel, it’s usually to Asia. I adore Tokyo.
I’ll keep you in my thoughts in the days to come.
Al Konyers
Just above the typewritten name, he’d scribbled the name “Al,” with a black-felt pen, fine point.
The letter was most unimpressive for three reasons. First, Konyers did not have a wife, or at least he said he didn’t. A wife was crucial for extortion. Threaten to tell the wife, to send her copies of all the letters from the gay pen pal, and the money rolled in.
Second, Al worked for the government, so he probably didn’t have a lot of money.
Third, Al was much too scared to waste time with. Getting information was like pulling teeth. The Quince Garbes and Curtis Cateses were much more fun because they’d spent their lives in the closet and were now anxious to escape. Their letters were long and windy and filled with all the damning little facts an extortionist might need. Not Al. Al was boring. Al wasn’t sure what he wanted.
So Ricky raised the stakes with his second letter, another piece of boilerplate Beech had perfected with practice. Ricky had just learned that he would be released in a few months! And he was from Baltimore. What a coincidence! And he might need some help getting a job. His rich uncle was refusing to help anymore, he was afraid of life on the outside without the help of friends, and he really couldn’t trust his old friends because they were still on drugs, etc., etc.
The letter went unanswered, and Beech assumed that Al Konyers was frightened by it. Ricky was on his way to Baltimore, just an hour from Washington, and that was too close for Al.
While waiting for an answer from Al, the Quince Garbe money landed, followed by the wire from
Curtis in Dallas, and the Brethren found renewed energy in their scam. Ricky wrote Al the letter that was intercepted and analyzed at Langley.
Now, suddenly, Al’s third letter had a very different tone. Finn Yarber read it twice, then reread the second letter from Al. “Sounds like a different person, doesn’t it?” he said.
“Yes, it does,” Beech said, looking at both letters. “I think the old boy is finally excited about meeting Ricky.”
“I thought he worked for the government.”
“Says he does.”
“Then what’s this about having business interests in Baltimore?”
“We worked for the government, didn’t we?”
“Sure.”
“What was your highest salary on the bench?”
“When I was chief justice I made a hundred and fifty thousand.”
“I made a hundred and forty. Some of those professional bureaucrats make more than that. Plus, he’s not married.”
“That’s a problem.”
“Yeah, but let’s keep pushing. He’s got a big job, which means he’s got a big boss, lots of colleagues, typical Washington hotshot. We’ll find a pressure point somewhere.”
“What the hell,” Finn said.
What the hell, indeed. What was there to lose? So what if they pushed a little too hard, and Mr. Al got scared or got mad and decided to throw the letters away? You can’t lose what you don’t have.
Serious money was being made here. It was not a time to be timid. Their aggressive tactics were producing spectacular results. The mail was growing each week, as was their offshore account. Their scam was foolproof because their pen pals lived double lives. Their victims had no one to complain to.
Negotiations were quick because the market was ripe. It was still winter in Jacksonville, and because the nights were chilly and the ocean was too cool to swim in, the busy season was a month away. There were hundreds of small rentals available along Neptune Beach and Atlantic Beach, including one almost directly across the street from Trevor. A man from Boston offered $600 cash for two months, and the real estate agent snatched it. The place was furnished with odds and ends no flea market would handle. The old shag carpet was well worn and emitted a permanent musty smell. It was perfect.
The renter’s first chore was to cover the windows. Three of them faced the street and looked across to Trevor’s, and during the first few hours of surveillance it became obvious how few clients came and went. There was so little business over there! When work surfaced it was usually done by the secretary, Jan, who also read a lot of magazines.
Others quietly moved into the rental, men and women with old suitcases and large duffel bags filled with electronic wizardry. The fragile furnishings were shoved to the rear of the cottage, and the front rooms were quickly filled with screens and monitors and listening devices of a dozen varieties.
Trevor himself would make an interesting case study for third-year law students. He arrived around 9 a.m., and spent the first hour reading newspapers. His morning client seemed to always arrive at ten-thirty and after an exhaustive half-hour conference he was ready for lunch, always at Pete’s Bar and Grill. He carried a phone with him, to prove his importance to the bartenders there, and he usually made two or three unnecessary calls to other lawyers. He called his bookie a lot.
Then he walked back to his office, past the rental where the CIA monitored every step, back to his desk where it was time for a nap. He came to life around three, and hit it hard for two hours. By then he needed another longneck from Pete’s.
The second time they followed him to Trumble, he left the prison after an hour and returned to his office about 6 p.m. While he was having dinner in an oyster bar on Atlantic Boulevard, alone, an agent entered his office and found his old briefcase. In it were five letters from Percy and Ricky.
The commander of the silent army in and around Neptune Beach was a man named Klockner, the best Teddy had in the field of domestic street spying. Klockner had been instructed to intercept all mail flowing through the law office.
When Trevor went straight home after leaving the oyster bar, the five letters were taken across the street to the rental, where they were opened, copied, then resealed and replaced in Trevor’s briefcase. None of the five was for Al Konyers.
At Langley, Deville read the five letters as they came
off the fax. They were examined by two handwriting experts who agreed that Percy and Ricky were not the same people. Using samples taken from their court files, it was determined, without much effort, that Percy was really former Justice Finn Yarber, and that Ricky was former U.S. District Judge Hatlee Beech.
Ricky’s address was the Aladdin North box at the Neptune Beach post office. Percy, to their surprise, used a postal box in Atlantic Beach, one rented to an outfit called Laurel Ridge.
SEVENTEEN
F
or his next visit to Langley, the first in three weeks, the candidate arrived in a caravan of shiny black vans, all going too fast but who would complain. They were cleared and waved onward, deeper into the complex, until they roared to a collective stop near a very convenient door where all sorts of grim-faced, thick-necked young men were waiting. Lake rode the wave into the building, losing escorts as he went until finally he arrived not at the usual bunker but in Mr. Maynard’s formal office, with a view of a small forest. Everyone else was left at the door. Alone, the two great men shook hands warmly and actually appeared happy to see one another.
Important things first. “Congratulations on Virginia,” Teddy said.
Lake shrugged as if he wasn’t sure. “Thank you, in more ways than one.”
“It’s a very impressive win, Mr. Lake,” Teddy said. “Governor Tarry worked hard there for a year. Two months ago he had commitments from every precinct captain in the state. He looked unbeatable. Now, I
think he’s fading fast. It’s often a disadvantage to be the front-runner early in the race.”
“Momentum is a strange animal in politics,” Lake observed wisely.
“Cash is even stranger. Right now, Governor Tarry can’t find a dime because you’ve got it all. Money follows momentum.”
“I’m sure I’ll say this many times, Mr. Maynard, but, well, thanks. You’ve given me an opportunity I’d hardly dreamed of.”
“Are you having any fun?”
“Not yet. If we win, the fun will come later.”
“The fun starts next Tuesday, Mr. Lake, with big Super Tuesday. New York, California, Massachusetts, Ohio, Georgia, Missouri, Maryland, Maine, Connecticut, all in one day. Almost six hundred delegates!” Teddy’s eyes were dancing as if he could almost count the votes. “And you’re ahead in every state, Mr. Lake. Can you believe it?”
“No, I cannot.”
“It’s true. You’re neck and neck in Maine, for some damned reason, and it’s close in California, but you’re going to win big next Tuesday.”
“If you believe the polls,” Lake said, as if he didn’t trust them himself. Fact was, like every candidate, Lake was addicted to the polls. He was actually gaining in California, a state with 140,000 defense workers.
“Oh, I believe them. And I believe that a landslide is coming on little Super Tuesday. They love you down South, Mr. Lake. They love guns and tough talk and such, and right now they’re falling in love with Aaron
Lake. Next Tuesday will be fun, but the following Tuesday will be a romp.”