After his encouraging chat with Brett August, the morning sped by for Mike Rodgers. Matt Stoll's assistant Eddie briefed him on what was happening in Germany, and told him he'd put in a call for assistance to Bernard Ballon of the Gendarmarie Nationale. Ballon was on a mission against terrorists, the New Jacobins, and had not returned the call.
Rodgers was more concerned about Herbert going to check on Chaos activities by himself. Rodgers wasn't worried because Herbert was in a wheelchair. The man was not defenseless. He was worried because Herbert could be like a dog with a bone. He didn't like letting go of things, especially unsolved cases. And there was only so much Op-Center could do to help him. Unlike the U.S., where they could listen in on telecommunications through local FBI, CIA, or police offices, it was difficult to mount broad surveillance immediately overseas. Satellites could focus on individual cellular telephones or even small regions, but they also picked up a lot of garbage. That was what he'd been trying to tell Senator Fox earlier. Without people on the scene, surgical operations were difficult.
Herbert was a good person to have on the scene. Part of Rodgers worried about what Herbert would do without a moderating force like Paul Hood— though another part of him was excited by the prospect of Bob Herbert unleashed.
If anyone could make the case for putting money into a crippled HUMINT program, it was Herbert.
Liz Gordon arrived shortly after Eddies call. She updated the General on the mental state of the Striker team. Major Shooter had brought his 89th MAU charm— "more accurately," she said, "his lack thereof" — to Quantico and was drilling the squad by the book.
"But this is a good thing," she said. "Lieutenant Colonel Squires tended to mix things up a lot. Shooter's regimentation will help them to accept that things are different now. They're hurting real bad and many of them are punishing themselves by drilling hard." "Punishing themselves for thinking they failed Charlie?" Rodgers asked.
"That, plus guilt. The Survivor's Syndrome. They're alive, he isn't." "How do you convince them they did their best?" Rodgers asked.
"You can't. They need time and perspective. It's common in situations like these." "Common," Rodgers said sadly, "but brand-new to the people who are having to deal with it." "That too," Liz agreed.
"Practical question," Rodgers said. "Are they fit for service if we need them?" Liz thought for a moment. "I watched them work out a little this morning. No one's mind wandered, and except for a lot of angry energy they seemed fine. But I have to qualify that. What they were doing this morning were rote, repetitive exercises. I can't guarantee how they'll react under fire." "Liz," Rodgers said, slightly annoyed, "those are exactly the guarantees I need." "Sorry," she said. "The irony is, I'm not concerned that the Strikers would be afraid to act. To the contrary. I'm worried that they would overact, a classic Guilt Counterreaction Syndrome. They would put themselves at risk to make certain that someone else isn't hurt, to ensure that what happened in Russia doesn't happen again." "Is there anyone you're particularly worried about?" Rodgers asked.
Liz said, "Sondra DeVonne and Walter Pupshaw are the shakiest, I think." Rodgers tapped a finger on the desk. "We've got mission plans for bare-bones, seven-person teams. Do I have seven people, Liz?" "Probably," Liz said. "You probably have at least that." "That still doesn't help me." "I know," she said, "but right now I just can't give you any assurances. I'm going back this afternoon for individual sessions with several of the Strikers. I'll be able to tell you more then." Darrell McCaskey knocked and was told to come in. He sat down and opened his power book.
"All right," Rodgers told Liz. "If you're unsure about anyone, give them leave. I'll call Shooter and have him second four or five backup members from Andrews. He can bring them up to speed in several key positions and move them in if he has to." Liz said, "I wouldn't have him bring them to the base just yet. You don't want to demoralize the people who are struggling to overcome guilt and grief." Rodgers loved and respected his Strikers, but he wasn't sure that Liz's way was the best way. Back in the sixties, when he was in Vietnam, no one gave half a damn about sadness and syndromes and God knows what else. Your buddy died in an ambush, you made sure you got your platoon the hell out of there, had a meal, a sleep, and a cry, and were back on patrol the next morning. You might still be weeping, and you were sure as shit a bit more careful or a little angrier or burning to inflict some collateral damage, but you were still out there with your M16, ready to work.
"Fine," Rodgers said sharply. "The backup personnel can drill at Quantico." "One thing more," Liz said. "It might not be a good idea for me to give anyone leave. A report ascribing AWL to even low-level bereavement like this can be pretty stigmatizing. It would be better," she went on, "if I got Dr. Masur to find something physically wrong with them. Something they can't check themselves, like anemia. Or maybe a bug some of them picked up in Russia." "Jesus," Rodgers said, "what am I running here, a kindergarten?" "In a way, that's exactly what you're doing," Liz said testily. "I don't want to get too heavy, but we relate a great deal in our adult lives to losses or hurts we suffered in our childhood. And that's what comes out in times of stress or suffering, the lonely kid in us. Would you send a five-yearold into Russia, Mike? Or Korea?" Rodgers wiped his eyes with the heels of his hands.
First it was coddling, now he was lying and playing games with his own people. But she was the psychologist, not him.
And Rodgers wanted to do what was best for his team, not what was best for Mike Rodgers. Frankly, though, if it were up to him he'd spank a five-year-old who didn't do what he was told, and they'd be better for it. But then, that kind of fathering went out with the sixties too.
"Whatever you say, Liz," Rodgers said. He looked at McCaskey. "Tell me something healing, Darrell." McCaskey said, "Well, the FBI's pretty happy." "The Baltic Avenue?" Rodgers asked.
McCaskey nodded. "It went off perfectly. They got the Pure Nation group and their computer. It's got names, addresses, couple of bank accounts, right-wing subscription lists, weapons caches, and more." "Like what?" Rodgers asked.
"The big catch was their plans to attack a Chaka Zulu Society meeting in Harlem next week. Ten men were going to take hostages and demand a separate state for black Americans." Liz snorted.
"What's wrong?" Rodgers asked.
"I don't believe it. Groups like Pure Nation aren't political activists. They're rabid racists. They don't demand states for minorities. They erase them." McCaskey said, "The FBI is aware of that, and they think that Pure Nation is trying to moderate their image to gain acceptance among whites." "By taking hostages?" "There was a draft of a press release in the computer," McCaskey said. He accessed a file in the power book and read from the screen. "Part of it said, " 'Seventy-eight percent of white America does not want blacks living among them. Rather than disrupt the white world with dead on both sides, we appeal to that great majority to petition Washington, to echo our demand for a new Africa. A place where white citizens will not be subjected to rap noise, unintelligible language, clown clothes, and sacrilegious portraits of black Jesuses.' " McCaskey looked at Liz, "That still seems pretty rabid to me." Liz crossed her legs and shook her foot. "I don't know," she said. "There's something not right about it." "What do you mean?" Rodgers asked.
Liz said, "Hate, by its very nature, is extreme. It's intolerance pushed as far as it can go. It doesn't seek an accommodation with the object of its loathing. Hate seeks its destruction. That press release is just too— fair." "You call exiling a race of people fair?" McCaskey asked.
"No, I don't," she said. "But by the standards of Pure Nation, that's downright decent. That's why I'm not buying it." "But Liz," said McCaskey, "groups can and do change.
Leadership changes, goals change." She shook her head. "Only the public face changes, and that's a cosmetic alteration. It's so right-thinking people give them a little rope so they can hang the objects of their hate." "Liz, I agree. But some Pure Nationals do want black people dead. Others simply don't want them around." "This particular group is thought to have raped and lynched a black girl in 1994. I would say that they more than don't want blacks around." McCaskey said. "But even in hate groups, policies have to evolve. Or maybe there's been a schism. Groups like these always suffer rifts and breakaway factions. We're not exactly dealing with the most stable people on the planet." "You're wrong about that," Liz said. "Some of these people are so stable it's scary." Rodgers said, "Explain." "They can stalk a person or a group for months or more with a single-mindedness of purpose that'd shock you. When I was in school, we had a case of a neo-Nazi custodian in a Connecticut public school. He lined all the corridors, both sides, with plastique. Put it in behind the molding while pretending to scrape gum off the floor. He was found out two days before blowing up the school, and later confessed that he had snuck the plastique in a foot a day." "How many feet were there?" Rodgers asked.
Liz said, "Eight hundred and seventy-two." Rodgers had not taken sides during the debate, but he had always believed in overestimating an enemy's strength.
And whether she was right or not he liked the hard line Liz, Gordon was taking against these monsters.
"Assuming you're right, Liz," Rodgers said. "What's behind it? Why would Pure Nation write a press release like that?" "To jerk us around," she said. "At least, that's what my gut tells me." "Follow the thread," Rodgers urged.
"Okay. They set up a shop on Christopher Street, which is populated heavily by gay establishments. They targeted a black group for hostage-taking. The FBI busts them up, there's a public trial, and gays and blacks are openly outraged." "And attention gets focused on hate groups," McCaskey said. "Why on earth would they want that?" Liz said, "Attention gets focused on that hate group." McCaskey shook his head. "You know the media. You uncover one snake, they'll want to do a white paper on the nest. You find one nest, and they'll go after other nests." "Okay," Liz said, "you're right about that. So the media shows us other nests. Pure Nation, Whites Only Association, the American Aryan Fraternity. We see a parade of psychos.
What happens then?" "Then," said McCaskey, "the average American gets outraged and the government cracks down on hate groups.
End of story." Liz shook her head. "No, not the end. See, the crackdown doesn't end the groups. They survive, go back underground. What's more, there's backlash. Historically, oppression breeds resistance forces. The aftermath of this aborted Pure Nation attack— if there were, in fact, really going to be one, which we can't be sure of— will be a rise in black militancy, gay militancy, Jewish militancy. Remember the Jewish Defense League's 'Never Again' slogan from the 1960s? Every group will adopt some form of that. And when this widespread polarization threatens the infrastructure, threatens the community, the average white American will get scared. And ironically, the government won't be able to help because they can't crack down on minorities. They come down on blacks, then blacks cry foul. Come down on gays, Jews, the same thing. Come down on all of them, and you've got a goddamn war on your hands." Rodgers said, "So the average American, normally a good and fair person, gets drawn toward the radicals. Pure Nation and WHOA and the rest of them start to look like society's salvation." "Exactly," said Liz. "What was it that Michigan militia leader said a few years ago? Something like, 'The natural dynamic of revenge and retribution will take its course.' When word gets out about Pure Nation, and what they were planning, that's what's going to happen here." "So Pure Nation takes the fall," said Rodgers. "They get hunted, arrested, disbanded, and outlawed. They're the martyrs to the white cause." "And loving it," Liz said.
McCaskey made a face. "This is like a surreal 'House that Jack Built.' " He said in a singsong voice, "These are the white supremacists who sent out a group of their own to be caught and sacrificed, to breed minority backlash, which scares the whites, who create a groundswell of support for others in the white supremacist movement." He shook his head vigorously. "I think you're both attributing way too much forethought to these degenerates. They had a plan and it got busted up. End of story." Rodgers's phone beeped. "I'm not sure I buy all of what Liz is suggesting either," he said to McCaskey, "but it's worth considering." "Think of the damage Pure Nation could do as decoys," Liz said.
Rodgers felt a chill. They could, in fact, lead the proud, victorious FBI every which way but right. With the media following their every step, the FBI could never even admit that they'd been duped.
He picked up the phone. "Yes?" Bob Herbert was on the other end.
"Bob," said Rodgers. "Alberto briefed me a few minutes ago. Where are you?" From the other end of the phone, Herbert said calmly, "I'm on a road in the middle of the boonies in Germany, and I need something." "What?" Herbert replied, "Either a lot of help fast, or a real short prayer."