Day I

One

Rome, Italy

It was the wrong place for a holiday.

The crowds, the hassle, the noise…

Myles looked around and tried to be impressed: so this was Rome.

He gazed at the magnificent statues: gods, emperors and senators. He saw the Colosseum, where gladiators brawled and died. He studied the city walls, which tried but ultimately failed to keep out the enemy. He even visited the old grain stores, Rome’s strategic stockpile of food, which kept its citizens plump. Stores once filled by harvests from across the sea, until barbarians overran the land now known as Libya…

Helen grabbed his arm. ‘Shall we see the Pantheon?’ she suggested. She was still trying to lift his mood, and he could tell. ‘You ought to teach this stuff to your students, Myles…’

Myles shrugged. She was right: Rome was an empire built on war and conquest. Perfect material for a military historian. He should teach it.

But he knew he couldn’t. And the reason why was something he could never explain to her.

They passed a fast-food outlet, an ice-cream seller and a man hawking plastic sunglasses for five euros a pair. School groups trampled over the ancient squares. Great artefacts were being smothered by chewing gum.

As they crossed a piazza towards the Pantheon, Myles looked up at the sandstone columns guarding the entrance, then hauled open the oversized wooden doors to go inside. Helen followed close behind.

Their eyes adjusted to the gloom. The only illumination came from the single window in the centre of the ceiling. They moved towards the middle of the patterned marble floor, directly below the light. Then their gaze slowly fell down to the alcoves and statues around the side of the circular building. Constructed in 126AD, Rome’s heyday, this was a church built for worship of all the gods — long before Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and ordered the whole Roman Empire to come with him.

Bang.

Myles flinched, hunching his head into his shoulders. He crouched down and scanned around.

No one else had reacted. A few people even looked at him as if he was odd — which he knew he was.

Helen saw it first. She motioned with her eyes: the huge doors to the Pantheon had been slammed shut, and the domed ceiling amplified the sound.

Myles calmed himself.

Helen put her hand on his face, and asked if he was OK.

He was. It was just instinctive. His body had adapted to behave that way in Helmand. It would take time to unlearn.

The army thought it had cracked Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. In a change since Vietnam and the Second World War, troops were now flown from the frontline in groups. They were given time in an isolated place where they could drink away their memories — together, with people who had experienced similar things. By the time they returned home they had already half-forgotten their wars.

Not Myles. His experiences had been unique, and nobody but Helen had any idea what he had been through. When he saw a street, his first thought was to wonder where someone would place a machine gun to control movement. When he saw a patch of grass, he feared an improvised explosive device — a deadly IED — could be buried underneath. When he heard a bang, he flinched.

The symptoms would be obvious in anybody else, and therefore treatable. But for Myles, an unorthodox specialist in war and a misfit by any standard, it was hard to say what behaviour was normal.

Afghanistan hadn’t made him violent. Myles would never be that. Nor had his experiences made him hateful, which was a common expression of combat trauma. But Afghanistan had turned his imagination against him. He used to dream up solutions. Now he dreamed up enemies.

‘Myles, you need to get back to the hotel,’ said Helen.

They turned around. Away from the spectacles of the long-gone empire into the commercialised narrow streets and the crowds.

They passed a homeless man in one of the alleyways. He looked tired and hungry. Myles could tell the young man didn’t have much — unshaven and with ruffled hair, he’d probably been sleeping rough for weeks. So Myles found some change and threw it towards him. The man thanked him with a nod.

Outside a Hard Rock Cafe they saw men and women in business suits. They were standing about and chatting nervously, like they didn’t belong there. Obviously foreign. Myles picked up their accents: American.

Some of them recognised Helen, but none of them reacted. Myles guessed they were used to dealing with famous people.

Then he realised: these people worked in the American Embassy, which was opposite. He could faintly hear a fire alarm, which explained why they were all outside.

Myles smiled at them. Some of them smiled back, others just ignored him. None of them were worried.

Then he looked up to see a very large cardboard box suspended from a rope. A man in dark glasses was manoeuvring it from a second-floor window of a nearby apartment block.

The man lifted his glasses.

Myles caught a sinister look in his eye. He grabbed Helen’s arm and pointed. ‘A bomb,’ he whispered. ‘It’s got to be a bomb…’

Helen tried to work out how Myles could know the dangling box contained explosives. But Myles was already amongst the crowd. ‘Move away — quickly,’ he warned. ‘It’s a bomb.’

The Embassy workers took time to react.

He was flapping them away with his long arms. A few started to move slowly, until two or three started to run. Then everybody began to run with them.

‘Helen — RUN!’ Myles could see this was the perfect terrorist trap: set off the Embassy fire alarm then blow up all the staff as they muster outside.

‘But Myles…’ queried Helen.

‘Quick!’

Senior executives, mid-level diplomats and all their support staff: they all began to flee. Helen reluctantly moved back with them.

They started to gather at the far end of the street. From there they could see what would happen — but not at a safe distance if the Englishman’s warning was right. They all watched: half-curious, half-alarmed.

Myles found himself alone in the street. He looked up at the window.

The man hauling the cardboard box was sweating nervously now. Suddenly he left the box to swing on the rope and darted into the building.

Myles rushed over to where the box was hanging. Damn the consequences.

This was one terrorist he was determined to catch…

Two

New York, USA

Salah had told his wife nothing about what he was planning to do.

She had been suspicious — she had quizzed him about one of the books he had been reading. But he’d managed to conceal most of the material under his baby daughter’s bed. It was the only place to hide things in their tiny New Jersey apartment.

His best information had come from the internet. He had discovered why so many terrorists had achieved so little. Now he understood how to do so much more, since his contact in Libya had explained to him the secret of ‘smart terrorism’.

Small terrorist attacks were doomed to fail. Blowing up a few people or a single building could be explained away as the work of a lone psychopath or a disgruntled former employee. They might dominate the news for twenty-four hours, but not much longer. A celebrity romance or a scandal on Capitol Hill would soon squeeze them off the television.

Larger terrorist attacks also failed. For an Oklahoma bombing, a Mumbai massacre or even a 9/11 to succeed, it could only ever be known about after the event. That meant only survivors would hear about it — the very people whom it had failed to break. It just made them ever-more defiant and patriotic.

American patriotism — the thought of it made Salah retch. They won’t be singing ‘America the Beautiful’ after this one…

Salah had studied previous attacks against New York: the attempt to destroy the World Trade Centre with an underground car bomb in 1993; the feeble bomb attempt in Times Square of May 2010. Even planes flying into the twin towers had done less damage to America’s financial system than a few greedy traders playing with hedge funds and derivatives…

As his contact had explained, the secret to successful terrorist attacks lay not in the devastation they caused, but in the future they forced people to imagine. Smart terrorism meant convincing the public that much worse was to come.

Salah looked across at his wife. She was sleeping soundly. Quietly he slipped out of bed and moved to dress in the very ordinary clothes he had picked out several days before: jeans, a white shirt and a workman’s fluorescent vest.

Careful not to wake his seven-month-old daughter, he pulled his newly acquired American passport and flight ticket from under her cot. He placed them in his daysack, along with a spare set of clothes, a toothbrush, toothpaste, shaving foam and a disposable razor.

He’d thought hard about whether to leave a note, but eventually decided against it. She would never understand what he was trying to do. Even if she did, she would never forgive him.

And there was a greater danger — any note might be discovered before he had done his work. Salah’s wife had been an American twice as long as him. Unlike him, she had taken seriously the mantras they were taught in citizenship classes. Unlike him, she had disowned her roots in Africa.

Salah knew, if she discovered what he was going to do, she would report him.

Instead of a note, he left behind his keys. He wouldn’t need them again.

Taking a last look at his baby daughter, still snoozing serenely, he walked backwards out of the apartment. Silently he closed the door behind him, pulling it into place with a click.

He walked down the stairs and out to his delivery van. Alone in the first light of the morning, he surveyed the vehicle, walking round all four sides to check nobody could have interfered with it. He examined the tires and looked under the hood to see the engine. Everything was still dirty, which was good: it meant the FBI weren’t on to him.

Finally, he climbed into the driver’s seat and, taking another look in the street to confirm he was still alone, he bent down to check the device. Still strapped in place above the foot pedals: the bomb remained untouched.

With a last glance at his family home, he turned the ignition key, let the engine settle for a few seconds, then drove off towards the centre of New York’s financial district. To Wall Street.

On test runs over the previous weeks, Salah had noticed the scars that still marked the walls on 23 Wall Street, the former offices of JP Morgan. In 1920, it had been the site of a bomb concealed in an old cart, led by a tired horse. The carriage had been parked by a man who stepped down and left quickly — some witnesses said he looked Italian. His hundred-pound dynamite bomb had killed thirty-one people instantly, with two more dying from their wounds.

Like the Italian Wall Street bomber of 1920, Salah would never be caught. But his bomb was different. It would not leave scars on walls, but in people’s minds.

He crossed the bridge into New York State, along famous roads clogging up with the morning traffic. He drove into Manhattan with the sun behind him.

As planned, the journey was taking him ninety minutes. Perfect. He spent the time focussed — concentrating on his driving, and being grateful for the money and advice he had received from his contact back in Libya.

Finally, he turned into Wall Street, trying to stay calm as his vehicle slowed to a crawl. He heard the horns blare and watched the taxi-drivers gesticulate against the traffic jams.

Then he smirked. The jam meant he had arrived at exactly the right time: in the middle of the rush hour, when the impact would be greatest.

Soon he was opposite number 23, the site of the bomb blast from almost a century earlier. Here he manoeuvred his van onto the sidewalk, turned off the ignition, and put his daysack on his shoulder. Deliberately, he didn’t look again at the bomb under the dashboard. He just stepped down, onto the tarmac.

He closed the door behind him, locked it, and pulled on the handle to check it was locked.

Then he began walking away into the morning rush of suited bankers, city traders, treasury officials — and all the cleaners, baristas and shop assistants who worked to support them in their jobs but whom Salah knew were paid much, much less.

He was a full two hundred yards away when he first turned around to check his vehicle again. Over the heads of the walking crowds, he could see it remained in place, and was not yet causing any alarm.

No one was on to him. His contact in Libya had been loyal: the secret of the bomb had been kept.

So Salah pulled out his mobile phone, turned it on and waited for it to register a signal.

Then he dialled the number he had memorised. The number which would set off the most powerful bomb Wall Street had ever seen.

Three

Via Veneto, Rome

The bomb dangled outside the second-floor window, which was now empty. Myles had to reach it.

He ran to the door underneath and grabbed the handle. It was locked. He tried ramming it with his shoulder — twice — but it stayed firm.

He looked up. The explosives were still spinning on the rope above him, out of reach. He wondered whether the terrorist could escape through the back.

Then Myles saw someone emerging from the house next door — an old woman. He rushed over. ‘Move away — there’s a bomb,’ he warned. The neighbour looked confused. Myles tried to remember his Italian. ‘Una Bomba!’ He gestured ‘an explosion’.

The woman put her hands to her mouth in shock. Myles grabbed her and pointed her towards the crowd of Embassy staff, huddled at the end of the road. Helen came over to guide the confused woman away.

The house next door gave Myles an opportunity — could he run through the old woman’s house to chase the terrorist?

Myles was about to try when the door beneath the bomb opened. He looked over — the terrorist was about to run out. Sweat covered the man’s forehead. Myles caught his eye again: this time he looked scared.

The man sprinted down the road, towards the American Embassy staff. He overtook his elderly neighbour, almost knocking her over.

Myles did the same, but turned to check the woman was OK as he rushed past.

American Embassy staff were blocking the road in front of the terrorist. Myles called out to them as he ran. ‘Stop him…’

Some of the younger office workers came forward. Having watched the whole chase, they wanted to help.

But then the terrorist slowed down and allowed himself to be caught.

One of the Americans grabbed the man’s arm while two more patted him down for explosives. Others gathered round, cutting off any chance of escape.

The terrorist just looked confused. He tried to talk back to the Americans in Italian, panicking but polite. ‘Dove si trova la bomba?’ he asked.

Once Myles caught up with them he was desperate to make sure the man couldn’t use any electronic devices to set off the bomb.

One of the Embassy men retrieved some keys attached to a small remote control transmitter from the Italian’s pocket. ‘What’s this?’

The Italian gesticulated in an attempt to explain, but was gabbling too fast for anyone to understand. The man reached for the transmitter in desperation.

Myles tried to grab it first. ‘Don’t let him press it!’

But it was too late. The terrorist put his thumb to the red button and pushed.

There was no explosion. Instead, the lights on an Alfa Romeo parked not far away blinked, matched by a faint sound from the horn.

One of the Americans asked him about the hanging box.

‘Si tratta di una lavatrice,’ answered the man.

It was a washing machine. The man had been dangling it into the building by rope because it was too big to be carried up the small Italian staircase.

Four

Via Veneto, Rome

Myles lowered his head, paused, then simply sat down in the street. He tried to apologise to the man, but the blare of approaching police sirens meant nobody heard what he said.

The Embassy staff began drifting back to their offices, and within minutes police were swarming everywhere. They checked and confirmed that the hanging box was indeed a washing machine. It was soon swung inside the house. One of the police even helped fit it into place.

Helen put an arm on Myles’ back. Myles just sat there, thinking through what had happened. ‘I really thought it was a bomb…’

Helen knew it was best not to answer. She just nuzzled her head onto his shoulder in consolation.

A policeman approached and began speaking English with only a mild accent. ‘Are you the one who caused the disturbance?’

‘Sorry. I thought it was a bomb,’ replied Myles.

‘You understand you caused a serious panic. The old lady is being taken to hospital with chest pains — she could have died from a heart attack.’

Helen and Myles could both tell the Italian policeman was playing it up, but Myles answered calmly. ‘Sorry officer. I just tried to do the right thing.’

‘There are professionals to deal with bombs.’

Myles was about to answer back but Helen stopped him. This was a time for discretion. She put her hand on his arm and spoke for him. ‘Thank you officer. We’re sorry. We won’t cause another alarm,’ she promised.

Myles wasn’t sure she was right. If he came across another ‘bomb’ he would try to tackle it again. Maybe the same way. Alone, if he had to. He still distrusted the authorities — all authorities.

He had never trusted them, at least not since his mother had been diagnosed with bowel cancer. Myles had seen medical bureaucracy deny her the early surgical treatment she really needed. He saw her battle against authorities, both public and private, who cared only for their reputations. And he saw her fight the withering poisons of the chemotherapy they gave her. By the time she eventually died, in the week of his fourteenth birthday, Myles had no faith left in ‘the authorities’ at all. Everything since had just confirmed his view.

Even before his mother’s death, Myles had been different. As a child, he was uniquely brilliant at most academic subjects, but unable to read aloud or distinguish his left from his right. He hadn’t been able to tie his shoelaces until he was twelve, and he had no natural ability to empathise. His condition might have been labelled as dyslexia or even Asperger’s syndrome. But there was never a need for diagnosis — Myles was nice to everyone, just a little other-worldly. He had found juvenile pleasure in performing magic tricks for people and helping them solve puzzles. At school he would happily share his always perfect answers with his many friends, none of whom were close. He learned to empathise as an acquired skill and he was soon empathising more naturally than almost everybody else.

But he knew he would never fit in. He’d gone on to study history at Oxford — a university full of oddballs, but even there he felt like an outsider.

In the military they’d put him in intelligence. With his overpowered brain and lack of physical skills it should have been the perfect fit. But Captain Munro could never settle into being a normal officer. Some seniors said he had no discipline. Others said he had too much sense. In the doomed war of Iraq, his military career had ended in disgrace.

Myles had retreated into academia — where else could he go? — accepting a junior lectureship on military history back at Oxford University. There, the students loved him — partly because of his attitude, but mostly because his views were unorthodox. In his ever-popular lectures he would explain why most military historians were wrong. It annoyed the other military historians, and it gave Myles a certain reputation.

A reputation which meant nothing to him at all.

Five

Wall Street, New York

Reputation mattered to Richard Roosevelt because he knew his reputation could never be truly earned. People thought they already knew about him, just from his name.

It wasn’t the two presidents which framed people’s impressions. Dick Roosevelt didn’t remind people of Theodore or Franklin Delano, the boldest Commanders-in-Chief of their generations. Richard Roosevelt had been eclipsed by a far more historic personality, and one who was still alive: his father, Sam.

Even though Senator Sam Roosevelt would probably never run for the White House again — twice was enough — everybody knew of his heroism in the Vietnam War. He had been even more courageous on the floor of the Senate, where he had driven the Roosevelt-Wilson Act into law. It meant US citizens could be tried for crimes committed abroad, ‘Because the laws of the land must reach beyond the sea,’ he famously explained. The senior Senator frequently appeared on early evening news shows, talking to the ‘common American’ in straight language — often very straight language, which left interviewers shocked. Sam Roosevelt was loved by the American people. And some of that affection tumbled down onto his only son, Richard. Now aged thirty-one, Dick tried his best to deserve what people thought of him.

‘This way, Mr Roosevelt, sir,’ ushered a staffer.

‘Call me “Dick”,’ he replied.

As Richard was led into the Treasury building opposite number 23 Wall Street, he leant over to his executive assistant. ‘Remind me of the brief. How many people do we have working here, again?’

‘Seventy-eight on duty at the moment, a total assignment just under two hundred, sir.’

Dick nodded, then straightened his back. He readied himself to meet more of the men and women employed by Roosevelt Guardians, the private security company established by his father, of which he was now the Chief Executive.

It was as he was entering the lobby that he first noticed someone in a Roosevelt Guardian uniform looking concerned. One of his security guards — alarmed?

Dick remembered words from his speech:

Your job is to allay fear, so Roosevelt Guardians, you should appear calm and assured at all times…’

Dick stopped to watch. His small entourage stopped with him, knowing great men often noticed important things others missed.

The security guard had gone outside. He began pulling hard on the locked door of a delivery van. The door wouldn’t open.

One of the men beside Dick nervously tried to explain it away. ‘Er, routine procedure, sir, er, Dick, sir…’

But Richard Roosevelt kept watching. The delivery van was certainly parked in an odd place.

Then, just as the guard was about to give up in bemusement, the spectators saw another man approach. The man was foreign-looking, perhaps North African. He said something apologetic to the security guard as he took a set of keys from his pocket and went to unlock the vehicle.

The Roosevelt Guardian stepped back as the North African man climbed into the van. ‘Thank you for moving along, Sir.’

The North African man nodded as he closed the door, then contorted his body to reach something beneath the dashboard. Sweat reflected from the man’s forehead. Both Dick and the guard could see the driver was agitated.

The security guard opened the door to speak to him. ‘There’s parking further down and to the left, sir,’ he volunteered. But as he said the words, the guard spotted something and began to react.

Suddenly the driver turned and kicked the security guard in the face. As the guard recoiled, the man in the vehicle slammed the door shut and locked it.

The sight of one of his staff being assaulted shocked Richard Roosevelt. He marched out of the lobby, and broke into a run. Roosevelt rushed up to his employee, who was reeling on the pavement with a bloody nose. ‘What did you say to him?’ he asked.

‘There was a bomb, sir,’ came the reply.

Barely believing, Roosevelt looked through the van’s window at the driver. The man’s face confirmed the worst.

Roosevelt tried the door on the vehicle, but it was locked.

Quickly he grabbed a briefcase from someone passing by and swung it into the glass. The window shattered. Roosevelt flung the case to the floor, pulled up the lock and yanked open the door, catching the driver by surprise.

Roosevelt climbed into the vehicle beside the man, then dragged him from the bomb, and pressed him hard against the seat. The driver tried to unpick Roosevelt’s fingers, which were grabbing his shirt. But it was no good. Within moments the man found himself flung out of the door and crashing down onto the street. He collapsed into a gathering crowd of uniformed Roosevelt Guardians.

‘There’s a bomb in here,’ called Roosevelt through the broken window. ‘I’m going to have to drive this someplace safe.’

‘But sir…’ The Guardians watched as their Chief Executive clunked the vehicle into gear and moved off into the traffic. He was soon driving down Wall Street.

Roosevelt’s men called the police immediately. Within a minute Roosevelt was being led by a police car. Within two minutes an impressive escort had formed around the van. Loud sirens and flashing lights started clearing the traffic away, allowing the bomb-laden delivery truck to move ever faster.

Overhead a helicopter, more used to reporting on traffic jams for the New York breakfast TV shows, started to broadcast the events. ‘This must surely be the fastest anybody’s ever driven during Manhattan’s morning rush hour…’

As news leaked that the van was being driven by none other than the son of Senator Sam Roosevelt, the feed was piped live onto national TV.

The first confused reports said that Richard ‘Dick’ Roosevelt was driving a bomb around Manhattan. But the rolling news ticker soon provided the clarification: he was actually driving the bomb away. Dick Roosevelt was single-handedly saving New York.

The police escort knew where to guide him and Roosevelt followed: off Wall Street, down a side road, along another road, into an open area. About as open as it gets in Manhattan.

As he turned onto the broken ground, Roosevelt saw a young bomb disposal expert already starting to put on his protective clothing. Over the noise of police sirens and helicopters, he heard instructions from a loudhailer. ‘It’s safe here, sir — you should leave the vehicle and run away.’

Roosevelt saw the policemen flee their cars, not even bothering to shut their doors as they ran. So undignified. And on live television, too…

Instead, Dick Roosevelt calmly parked the van, turned off the ignition, opened the door, and magnanimously stepped down onto the ground.

He dusted off his hands and turned back to look at the vehicle one last time, before walking on towards the hastily assembled control area. No point running — this was his moment of majesty.

The bomb disposal expert rushed passed him — going towards the van as Roosevelt walked away from it. ‘Can I help some more?’ queried Dick.

‘No thank you, Mr Roosevelt, sir — just professionals from here on.’

It was a snub Roosevelt accepted. He had done enough already. He looked across at the crowd of policemen and agents gathering a safe distance from the van, being joined by the first news crew on the scene. They beckoned and Richard Roosevelt came. As he reached them he was mobbed by pats on the backs, applause and other praise.

But the congratulations were soon cut short. A deep boom and a sudden rush of air knocked them all to the ground.

The delivery van had been obliterated and the bomb disposal expert blown completely away.

It took several seconds for the crowd to recover themselves, and realise the sky around them was full of confetti.

Richard Roosevelt grabbed at the air and caught one of the fluttering bits of paper. He read it.

And, like the police and the assembling news crew around him, he wondered whether the message it contained could possibly be true…

Six

Rome

Helen stayed with Myles, both sitting on the concrete as the crowds drifted away.

She had known him for less than three months — first meeting him on a training course, where he had been able to solve difficult problems but not tie his shoelaces properly.

Straight away she’d known he was different. But it was a good sort of different: even his clumsiness had a charm to it. He had a uniqueness which she found far more attractive than his height, his looks or his peculiar intelligence. To an American working in the media, where the men wore make-up and false smiles, Myles was abnormally genuine. In all her time reporting for CNN, in many places and many tough situations, Helen Bridle had never met anyone quite so special.

‘Next time a terrorist hides a bomb in a washing machine, you’re the man!’ she said with a smile, trying to console him. She was disturbed by the Embassy staff reaching for their pagers. Their mobile phones all started ringing at the same time. Something was happening.

Myles was alert again. ‘What is it?’ he asked.

Then Helen’s phone rang. She raised her eyebrows to Myles, as if to say ‘you’re about to find out’. She pressed the green ‘accept’ button to answer. ‘Helen Bridle here.’

It was one of her producers. There had been a bomb in New York. One dead, but it could have been much worse — they’d tried to blow up Wall Street.

Helen registered the information. Was this news? One dead in a terrorist bomb was a tragedy, and a bomb in New York was certainly a headline.

Her producer’s voice was animated. ‘And get this, Helen. There was a sort of confetti in the bomb. And it said, “America is about to be brought down like the Roman Empire”!’

The producer was eager to give Helen more details: about Senator Sam Roosevelt’s son Richard driving the bomb away, escorted by police live on TV. But Helen was more sombre. ‘Do people think the warning is true?’

‘Nobody knows, Helen, but it’s a great news story…’

She winced to hear one dead and a threat to civilisation described in that way, putting the mobile on speakerphone. She let the producer continue talking while she summarised what had happened for Myles. ‘So, you were right about a man with a bomb. You just got the wrong city.’

Myles was absorbing the report as the TV producer cut to the chase. ‘Helen, you’re in Rome, right? With that historian boyfriend of yours? The Brit, right?’

Both Helen and Myles smiled at the notion of Myles being a ‘boyfriend’.

‘I am, yes.’

‘Well, we need to interview him now — on air, to talk about the Roman Empire and the USA.’

Helen was about to say no, to shield her partner. But Myles refused the protection. He nodded.

‘OK, he’s here with me now. Shall I put him on?

‘Yes, thanks Helen.’

Helen passed the phone to Myles.

Myles tried to stand straight, immediately made nervous by the prospect of a live television interview. He tried to listen down the phone, but it was silent. ‘Er, hello. Myles Munro here,’ he offered. More silence. He was beginning to think they’d changed their minds — no interview after all.

Finally the machine clicked back to life again. Then a very professional-sounding voice spoke from the other end. ‘Myles Munro, thank you for talking live on CNN.’

‘Er, thank you.’ Myles could tell his voice sounded amateurish. He was no natural TV pundit.

‘Mr Munro, you’re a historian from Oxford University, currently in Rome, Italy. Tell me, could the USA really be brought down like the Roman Empire?’

Myles tried to do the question justice, which meant there was no simple answer. ‘Well, yes, I suppose it could, if we actually knew how the Roman Empire was brought down.’

Silence, while the anonymous interviewer in a faraway studio tried to come up with the next question. ‘And what do you think brought down the Roman Empire? What should people prepare for?’

‘I’m afraid there are over two hundred theories on why Rome fell. Some historians reckon it was lead poisoning.’

‘Lead poisoning?’

‘Yeah, the Romans used lead in a sauce for their food. Other people reckon it was the plague. Several epidemics struck the empire, including things like smallpox. But bubonic plague was the most deadly.’

‘And what’s your favourite theory, Mr Munro?’

Favourite? A favourite reason for the collapse of a whole civilisation? Myles tried to remain polite. ‘Well, there are three leading theories,’ he explained. ‘First, Rome suffered a series of attacks — from Persia and from lots of tribes in the East.’

‘Persia — that’s modern Iran, right?’

‘Yes, and they fought over where Syria and Iraq are today. The theory goes that there were simply too many attacks for the Roman army to cope with. The Empire was overwhelmed.’

‘So, multiple attacks from the Middle East, huh? What’s the second theory, Mr Munro?’

‘Well that has to do with migration. For centuries, when it was on the rise, Rome welcomed new tribes into the Empire — including people they’d conquered. But when thousands of refugees, who’d been forced from their lands by war in the East, tried to settle in Europe, Rome treated them very differently. It was cruel to them. The refugees became enemies, and it was a migrant tribe, the Vandals, who eventually broke into Rome and destroyed the city.’

‘And that’s where we get the word “vandalise” from?’

‘That’s right. Rome’s last big military operation was against the Vandals, and their new base in Libya. It was a disaster, and it left the Empire bankrupt.’

‘A refugee crisis. Very interesting. OK, so the third theory…’ There was a pause on the other end of the line. Then, ‘Sorry, Mr Munro, we’re going to have to wait on that third theory on why the Roman Empire fell. We’re about to go live to a press conference with Dick Roosevelt, son of Senator Sam Roosevelt, who drove the bomb away in those live television pictures we saw earlier and thwarted a major terrorist attack that would have ripped through the heart of New York and claimed thousands of lives…’

Seven

Via Veneto, Rome

The phone line went dead. Myles gave the handset back to Helen.

Helen was still curious. ‘Why do you think a bomber in New York cited the Roman Empire?’

Myles turned his head to one side — he was trying to make an educated guess. ‘Could be because the US was founded with the Roman Empire in mind. Your Senate, Capitol Hill, the eagle as a national symbol, even the rule of law — they all came from ancient Rome.’

‘But America doesn’t have an empire?’

‘Not a normal empire, no. But, like Rome, you dominate the known world. Some people resent you for it.’

Helen nodded, accepting Myles had a point.

The phone rang again. Helen looked at the screen and frowned: an unknown number from Washington DC. ‘Hello, Helen Bridle speaking.’

‘Sam Roosevelt, Senator. I understand you’re with that British historian, Myles something.’

Helen was shocked. As a television journalist she often met powerful people. But a call from Senator Sam Roosevelt was quite a surprise, even to her. ‘Er, yes, Senator.’

‘Well, I want to speak to him,’ growled the voice. ‘Put him on.’

The Senator’s voice gave commands naturally. Something about his tone made them hard to disobey. Helen handed the phone over to Myles again, who raised his eyebrows in surprise.

‘Myles Munro speaking.’

‘Mr Munro, its Senator Sam Roosevelt here. You may have heard of me.’

‘Yes, I’ve heard of you. I think most people have heard of you, Senator.’

‘You know about this “Roman Empire” thing?’

Myles paused, and scratched his head. ‘The threat, Senator?’

‘Yes, and it is a threat. It’s a threat to the whole United States…’

The Senator raised his voice to emphasise points and spat out the important words. Myles could tell he wouldn’t like to spend much time with the man.

‘Mr Munro, we’ve got intelligence which says this threat is blackmail.’

‘Blackmail, Senator?’

‘Yes. Someone is trying to hold the whole USA to ransom.’

Myles paused before he asked the obvious question. ‘Do you know who it is?’

‘Yes we do,’ came the reply, confident and instant.

‘Well, can you tell me?’

‘No I can’t, Munro.’

Myles was more bemused than angry. ‘So, how do you want me to help you?’

‘Mr Munro, I need you to come with me to sort this out.’

To Myles, the request seemed absurd. He thought, then answered carefully. ‘Why me, Senator?’

‘Because I’ve just heard you on TV, Myles, and you know the Roman Empire.’

Myles let out a frustrated wheeze of breath. Whatever the Senator was planning, it had the makings of a fiasco. ‘Senator, I don’t know the Roman Empire. I don’t know who’s blackmailing you, and I’m not American. You’ll be able to find someone much better.’

There was the sound of shock at the other end of the line: the Senator was not used to people saying ‘no’ to him. Myles could hear the Senator exhaling very deliberately. ‘Munro, there is also another reason.’

‘Well, what is it?’

‘It’s a reason I can’t explain over an open phone line. Few people get a chance to serve their country like this.’

Myles refused the bait. ‘Senator, I’ve just served my country, in Afghanistan. I’ve got nothing against Americans — I’m even dating one…’ He saw Helen smile. ‘And there will be lots of Americans far better than me for what you have in mind.’

Myles was about to offer help finding someone else. But the Senator had already ended the phone call.

Eight

Washington DC, USA

The Senator was furious. He pushed the phone across his desk, away from him. ‘You said this guy understood the military,’ he boomed. ‘He should know why some things can’t be said over the phone.’

Susan hadn’t yet learned that the Senator was not to be corrected. ‘I said he gave lectures about the military, Senator.’

‘I read the brief. It said he’d worked closely with Military Intelligence,’ huffed the Senator. ‘Is this what the British call “intelligence”?’ Senator Roosevelt tossed the thin briefing folder in the air.

Papers fluttered down all over the office. Susan tried to read them as she gathered them up. She soon realised the Senator was right and she was wrong.

The Senator put his head in his hands, scratching his scalp through his white hair. ‘Don’t we have any Americans with a long-lost connection to this Juma guy or his Ivy-League wife?’

The words ‘Ivy-League’ were said with a sneer. Susan, a Harvard-alum herself, tried not to take the bait. ‘No, Senator,’ she answered, squarely.

The Senator picked up a photo which had fallen onto the floor. He held it close to his face as he studied it, looking at the man eye-to-eye. ‘So this is Juma,’ he mused. Roosevelt had seen many photos like this when he was chair of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee. It had obviously been taken with a long-distance lens, which meant either spooks or Special Forces. Juma was someone they couldn’t get close to. Sam Roosevelt ignored the man’s muscular physique. He registered the way Juma held his gun, but it was the expression on his face which struck him most: Juma had a recklessness about him, as though he didn’t care about anything. ‘This is the pirate who thinks he can send a bomber to the Big Apple…’

‘Through his wife, Senator — Homeland said the messages sent to the bomber were all from Juma’s wife, not Juma himself.’

‘OK. So Juma — or his wife — sends a bomber to New York. They write ransom demands on little bits of paper and think people will listen because they put the confetti in a bomb. Then the bomb goes off in a different place to where it’s supposed to and the bomber gets caught.’

‘Yes, Senator.’

‘And they still send a text message to his phone? After he’s been caught?’

‘That’s right. Even though their bomb was foiled, they still made the demand.’

The Senator paused and thought. Text messages and a bomb plot which went wrong. It seemed very amateurish. ‘Read me out the text message again.’

Susan checked her paper and read from it. ‘It said: “If you don’t want America to suffer the same fate as Rome, then send a delegation to meet me, and I will set out my terms. I will only talk with Senator Roosevelt. He should bring a representative from his old firm, the Roosevelt Guardians, and the Oxford University historian, Myles Munro. No one else.”’

The Senator absorbed the information again. ‘Who does this pot-chewing pirate from Libya think he is?’

‘Er, it’s called “Qat”, Senator. And he is from Somalia. He’s only been in Libya for a few years.’

The Senator looked confused, a facial expression that demanded an explanation from Susan.

‘Qat, Sir. It’s the drug they chew. Not pot, Senator, Qat.’ Susan smiled quietly to herself.

The Senator let her small victory pass. ‘OK. But why did Juma move from Somalia to Libya?’

Susan had read up on this. ‘In 2009, the Libyan dictator Colonel Gaddafi tried to develop a navy, so he invited in a whole bunch of Somali pirates,’ she explained. ‘Juma was one of them. Later, Gaddafi paid them to fight for him as mercenaries. But when Gaddafi was killed in 2011, the mercenaries were abandoned. Some left Libya, but many stayed and turned to crime.’

‘Was this guy Juma involved in murdering our Ambassador Stevens and his staff in the Benghazi consulate attack on September 11th, 2012?’

‘I don’t know, sir,’ Susan replied. ‘He may have been complicit.’

Senator Roosevelt frowned at her — not knowing was bad, and speculating was worse. ‘Just stick with the facts, missy. Do we know whether Juma still leads a bunch of Somali pirates?’

‘More than that, Senator. Juma leads one of the militias which rival the defence forces in the New Libya,’ she explained. ‘Juma’s got many of the Africans who came to Libya to work for the oil firms.’

‘Migrant workers, you mean?’

‘If they can find work. Many try to escape to Europe — every few days a boatload of them sinks in the Mediterranean. And if they make it to Italy they just get sent back. Juma doesn’t need to offer them much to bring them into his gang.’

‘So Juma’s leading a band of slaves, huh?’ Senator Roosevelt nodded to himself. ‘A real modern-day Spartacus…’

‘He’d like to think so, sir. The new authorities in Libya — the guys elected after Gaddafi — have tried to round them up but failed. And no one knows where Juma lives.’

Senator Roosevelt didn’t notice Susan agreeing with his assessment. He began thinking aloud. Susan took it as a good sign — it meant he trusted her. ‘OK, so our first choice is: do we let Juma dictate who’s on our team?’

‘Sir, if we do, we need to handle the media on it,’ insisted Susan. ‘It would mean both negotiating with terrorists and giving in to their first demand before we’d even started.’

‘Agreed.’ Then the Senator waved his hand. ‘But I’ve talked with all sorts of crazies over the years. If we try to send a different team, then he’ll refuse to meet us and do something stupid. For the media, just say it was an old man doing peace talks. Something like that.’

‘OK, Senator.’

‘Next, Juma’s gonna let us bring a Roosevelt Guardian along. But which one should I take?’

Susan nodded. Her expressions made clear that she was very keen to accompany him.

‘I suppose you want to come along.’

‘Yes, Senator. Although I’m from Homeland, I’m on your staff. I could count as a Roosevelt Guardian.’

The Senator pulled a thinking face. Then he smiled like a father about to disappoint. ‘No. I’m sorry. Two reasons. You’re too official — if this goes wrong, it’s got to look like the independent peace mission of a has-been hero.’

‘I could resign from Homeland Security, and just work for you, sir.’

‘If you resign from Homeland then you’re no good to me.’

Susan pretended to ignore the insult. ‘And the second reason, Senator?’

‘You’re a woman.’

Susan tried to hide her astonishment. Could anybody really be that sexist anymore? Then she remembered who she was talking to. Sam Roosevelt had no trouble at all being sexist.

The Senator tried to console her. ‘It’s not me. I know you could do it,’ he said, eyebrows raised. ‘It’s them. The terrorists. They won’t take you seriously.’

Susan didn’t look convinced. The Senator rammed the point home. ‘We’ve got to remember our mission: we’re not going to enlighten them about gender equality. We’re going to stop them killing Americans.’

Susan had to accept the logic. ‘So who will you take?’

The Senator looked at the photographs on his wall: faded pictures of himself as a young football star, a Marine, a Junior Senator in Iowa where he came close to winning his party’s presidential nomination… Then he settled on a family picture. ‘Dick. I’ll take Dick. He’s become a five-minute hero in New York. If he’s going to inherit my Senate seat he needs foreign affairs experience.’

Then the Senator smiled like a gambler about to play the same bet twice. ‘And don’t think I’ve given up on this British guy…’

Nine

JFK Airport, New York

Together, Myles and Helen collected their bags and walked off the plane. Through the arrivals corridor of Terminal One, they followed the other passengers until they reached passport control. There the corridor split: one way for US citizens, another for aliens. Myles waved off Helen as they joined different queues.

‘Meet you at the other side,’ she called, blowing him a kiss as she left.

He smiled back to her, then approached his own line. Soon he was giving his landing card to the female immigration official and allowing his iris to be scanned.

‘Do you intend to stay long in the United States, Mr Munro?’ asked the American official.

‘Er, no, not really.’

The border officer smiled at his English accent while she swiped his passport. ‘You travelled to Afghanistan recently?’

Myles nodded.

‘Military?’

‘No, but with the military. I study war.’

The official accepted his answer, then waited for her computer to give the all-clear. But something flagged up. She frowned. ‘Mr Munro — there’s a special message for you. You need to report to that room over there.’ She pointed to one of the interview rooms at the back.

‘That one?’

‘Yeah.’

Myles thought of asking what it was, but realised he might as well find out for himself.

An American woman with an ID badge around her neck introduced herself with a handshake. ‘Susan from Homeland Security,’ she said, welcoming him into the room. ‘Good to meet you, Mr Munro.’

Myles took in the room around him: no windows, just white walls.

Susan invited him to take a seat. ‘Would you like a drink?’ She was wrestling a plastic cup from a dispenser, which she filled from a water cooler in the corner of the room, then brought it to him.

‘Thank you. Will I be here long?’

Susan didn’t answer. Instead she reacted as if to say ‘you’ll find out soon enough’.

Then the door opened again.

In walked an ageing but very fit-looking man. Smaller than Myles had expected, but with a face he recognised immediately. Sam Roosevelt.

Myles remembered Sam Roosevelt’s bids to be President — and his famous campaign slogan: ‘We’re all going bust if we ain’t got trust.’

Roosevelt had stood out in the crowd of political wannabes. In one of the Presidential TV debates, he’d famously distinguished himself by daring to agree with Bill Clinton’s line on Bosnia. Other candidates had tried to call him a coward for it, but the charge could never stick: Senator Roosevelt’s personal story was far too glorious for that. As a marine, he’d won the Congressional Medal of Honor in Vietnam for rescuing a small army of American POWs from the Vietcong. He had led a team of only five men to take on more than twenty. Roosevelt, then only a junior officer, had planned the audacious assault on the position himself. His actions that day in 1971 were still studied at West Point as an example of tactical brilliance. Myles had even referred to them in his Oxford University lectures.

Myles stood up to offer a handshake. The Senator motioned to a chair, directing Myles to sit back down again. Myles obeyed.

As he sat down, a younger man entered the room behind the Senator. The two men plus Susan were squaring up to him like an interview panel. Sam Roosevelt waited until everyone was seated before he started at Myles. ‘So you’re the guy who said “no” to me on the phone, huh?’ he said.

Myles refused to be intimidated. ‘Correct, Senator. But I can help you find…’

‘No.’ The Senator had cut him off, then paused, sizing Myles up before he offered more. ‘Mr Munro, America needs you.’

Sam Roosevelt explained what he couldn’t say over the phone: the threat that ‘America will be brought down like the Roman Empire’ had come from Libya. From a Somali pirate based there called ‘Juma’. And Myles knew his wife. ‘You studied history with her — when you were an undergraduate at Oxford University.’

‘So you want me to help because I once knew his wife — when I was a student?’

The Senator shook his head. Myles wasn’t getting it. ‘No, Munro. The pirate sent a bomber to New York. The bomber was caught, and my son, here, drove the bomb away from Wall Street.’

Roosevelt waved his hand in the direction of the young man sitting beside him. Dick Roosevelt was about to introduce himself formally but his father ignored him and continued. ‘Then they sent their demands,’ said Sam. ‘After their bomber had been caught. And they demanded that the negotiation team include…’ The Senator poked Myles with his finger as he completed his sentence ‘…you’.

Myles looked to Dick and Susan for a reaction. There was none. They were watching for his.

Myles offered a response. ‘So you’re going to talk with this man?’

‘Yes, absolutely.’ The Senator answered without hesitation. He had no doubts at all. Myles could tell Dick Roosevelt was less sure: negotiating with terrorists made the young man uneasy.

The Senator continued. ‘We’ve already got a plan for this…’ The Senator outlined his ideas and Myles listened. The plan seemed simple: fly to Cairo in neighbouring Egypt, drive in US Embassy vehicles up to the Libyan border, then cross into Libya under the protection of his own Roosevelt Guardians. They would come out the way they went in. There were even back-up options, in case something went wrong.

Sam Roosevelt clearly missed the front line. Trips with the Armed Services Committee and campaign season might come close. But it was nothing like tactical planning for real. Like all politicians who had made their reputations in the military, Senator Sam Roosevelt relished the details of war-fighting. Neither Myles nor the Senator’s son were surprised as Sam went through the specifics.

Myles allowed the Senator to finish, then cocked his head to one side. ‘OK, but what if this “Juma” guy…’ Myles made eye contact with Susan and Dick to check he had Juma’s name right. ‘What if “Juma” doesn’t want to talk?’

Sam Roosevelt became enthusiastic at the question. ‘We know he wants to meet a delegation because he’s asked for one. But we don’t want namby-pamby diplomats putting this in wordy speak. So the answer will come from me.’

The Senator put out a hand as a surgeon might ask for a scalpel. Susan placed a fountain pen on his palm. Maintaining eye contact with Myles, the Senator grabbed a sheet of clear white paper from his assistant and began to scrawl.

Juma.


You have threatened the most powerful nation on earth.

One of your men has exploded a bomb here.

We will meet you to talk. We may also blast you to hell.


Sam Roosevelt

The Senator screwed the lid back on his pen and passed the paper back to Susan. ‘Make sure he gets that.’

‘Yes, Senator.’

Sam Roosevelt concentrated back on Myles. ‘Good thought, Mr Munro. We’ll work well together. So you’re in, then?’

The Senator was in full persuasion mode. His charisma was compelling. Myles could see how donors, voters and just about everyone this man met said ‘yes’. How could Myles say ‘no’? He looked at Dick and Susan — they were fully behind the Senator, encouraging Myles to come into line too. Everybody was just waiting for him to agree…

Myles faced Sam Roosevelt squarely as he answered.

‘No, Senator.’

Ten

JFK Airport, New York

Sam Roosevelt frowned, staring at Myles, but still hoping to persuade the Englishman. ‘Why won’t you come with me?’ The Senator paused, trying to size him up. ‘Money? How much do you want?’

Myles shook his head. He didn’t care about money.

‘You’re scared?’

Again, Myles shook his head.

The Senator’s frown deepened. ‘Then please explain.’

‘Well, Senator — you’ve told me how you’re going to get there and get out again, but nothing about the crucial part: the talks themselves.’

The Senator nodded respectfully. ‘OK. First, we find out whether this guy’s serious. If he is, we stop him doing whatever he has in mind.’

Myles thought before coming back. ‘And how could we stop him, Senator?’

‘Not by trying to invade Libya,’ assured the Senator. Everybody knew the Senator had been a sole voice on the Senate floor warning against America’s doomed intervention in Somalia in the early 1990s. Sending US troops into Libya, now supposedly ‘free’ after the Arab Spring, threatened to repeat the humiliation of Black Hawk Down.

The Senator indicated to Susan, who pulled some files out from under the table which were marked ‘confidential’. The Senator offered them to Myles. ‘If you want to read more, we’ve got plenty of material for you.’

Intrigued, Myles glanced at a CIA briefing on Juma. Myles picked it up and began to read:

Juma is the leader of a group of Somali pirates, now based in Libya. From his headquarters in Sirte, on the coast — a lawless city which refuses to accept Libya’s new government — he has rapidly come to dominate Libya’s underworld…

The brief explained how Juma had first caught the attention of the CIA. As an impoverished teenager in Somalia, he’d been lured to Istanbul by a criminal gang who promised to buy one of his kidneys. After the surgery, Juma had been flown back to Mogadishu with the promise there’d be someone waiting there to pay him. There wasn’t. One kidney down, and no money to show for it, the young Juma refused to be taken for a fool. He had smuggled himself on a cargo vessel back to Turkey without a visa. There, he’d tracked down the gang, killed a few of the middlemen, then threatened the gang leader. The gang leader — frightened for his own life — agreed to go back to Somalia with him, where all his money was signed over to Juma. The gang leader then disappeared, presumed dead. The cash enabled Juma to hire some local muscle in Somalia and establish a gang of his own. In 2009, Colonel Gaddafi invited Juma and his pirates to Libya. When Gaddafi’s regime began to crumble in February 2011, Juma’s men became mercenaries for the dictator. Several died fighting for him, and some were arrested when the dictator was killed in October of that year. But most escaped. They revelled in the lawlessness of ‘Free Libya’ — the Arab Spring meant they didn’t need to take orders anymore. Untouched by the new rulers of the country, Juma had become the brutal leader of a large criminal network…

The CIA’s psychological assessment was blunt: ‘Presumed Psychopathic’.

The Senator, Dick and Susan had waited silently while Myles read the paper. Dick Roosevelt broke first. ‘So you know this guy’s wife from school?’

‘I don’t know,’ shrugged Myles. ‘Who’s his wife?’

Without words, Richard Roosevelt passed another piece of paper towards Myles, then watched the Englishman’s face.

Myles tried not to react, although when he re-read the name he found himself swallowing in shock. He hesitated before answering. ‘You’re telling me this “Juma” guy is married to Placidia?’

Dick nodded.

‘Then yes,’ Myles admitted. ‘I do know her.’

Dick leant forward. ‘How well did you know her, exactly?’ The question was snide — half accusing Myles of something, half voyeurism.

Myles ignored it. ‘She was a Rhodes scholar. We studied the history of the Roman Empire together — Placidia was my tutorial partner for a term. She was much cleverer than me.’

Dick Roosevelt had heard of the Oxford university tutorial system, where just one or two students were taught in person by a world expert in a subject. ‘And you became friends?’

‘Yes, we did. We were very good friends.’

‘Just friends. Really?’ Dick Roosevelt was trying to probe.

‘Yes. But after her year in Oxford she went back to Harvard, and I lost contact with her. I’ve not heard from her for a long time now.’

Dick checked with his father that he still had permission to ask questions. He did. ‘So, Myles, why do you think a highly educated half-American woman has hitched up with a psychopathic pirate in the third world?’

Myles raised his eyebrows. ‘I don’t know. Only explanation I can think of is…’ He hesitated.

Dick urged him on. ‘Is…?’

‘Well, love.’

Myles’ answer disarmed Dick, who began looking through the CIA briefing pack to see if there was a sheet on the woman. He double-checked the whole file: there was nothing. As Dick leafed through his sheets, Myles glimpsed the top of a page the younger Roosevelt was trying to keep covered.

Myles Munro: Oxford University Lecturer of Military History


Exceptionally Intelligent (top 0.1 %) but problems with some basic tasks…


Distrustful of bureaucrats…

Myles was curious. He pointed the sheet out to Dick. ‘Mind if I read that?’

Dick looked to his father for advice.

Sam Roosevelt shook his head, taking charge. ‘Myles, look,’ he levelled. ‘Your name was in a text message sent to the mobile of someone who planted a bomb in the middle of Manhattan. Don’t be surprised there’s a confidential CIA briefing on you.’

‘Well, can I read it?’

‘I’m afraid you don’t have the security clearance.’

‘And yet you still want me to go with you, to meet this madman in Libya?’ Myles was moving his body to indicate he was about to leave the room.

The Senator put his hand on his shoulder. ‘Mr Munro. America needs your help, and — hell — I need your help. Come on. Please.’

Myles didn’t respond.

The Senator knew he still hadn’t Myles won over. He paused, then hunched his shoulders a little, ready to change tack. ‘You know, Myles, your ex-girlfriend has got herself mixed up with a terrorist. I can only imagine she asked for you because she needed your help.’ He stared into Myles’ eyes. ‘Placidia needs your help, Myles.’

Myles absorbed Sam Roosevelt’s plea. He looked at Susan and Dick, whose expressions were underwriting Sam’s words — that Placidia really did need him.

He turned back to the Senator. ‘OK,’ he said. ‘I’ll help.’

The door burst open. It was Helen, with an apologetic immigration official trailing behind her. The four people in the room were as surprised to see her as she was to see them. ‘Myles, so this is where they took you…’

She acknowledged the Senator, who responded on Myles’ behalf. ‘Ma’am, your boyfriend is about to become a hero,’ said Roosevelt senior.

Helen wasn’t buying it. ‘Senator, my “boyfriend” needs a rest.’

The Senator was about to get angry, but Myles intervened. ‘I’m still young enough to be a “boy”-friend?’ Everybody relaxed. Myles put his hands on Helen’s elbows and spoke slowly. ‘I’ve got to do this. I’ll be back soon.’

‘You’ve got to?’

‘Helen… I must.’

‘Must?’ She winced as she said the word. It was probably the most meaningless explanation Myles had ever given her.

‘Yes, Helen, I must.’

Helen surveyed the room. She wanted to fight it, but she could tell she was outnumbered and that the decision had already been made.

She turned to the Senator. ‘Senator, keep him safe. Please.’

Sam Roosevelt nodded but said nothing.

The Senator made no promise to keep Myles safe at all.

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