Dead or Alive - By Tom Clancy Page 0,123

Come on over for lunch. Tell me when.”

“Maybe an hour and a half?”

“Okay, lunch is fine. See you about eleven?”

“Yes, sir.”

“The name’s still Jack, remember?”

Clark chuckled. “I’ll try to remember.”

And the phone went dead. Ryan switched lines and beeped Andrea.

“Yes, Mr. President?”

“Two friends coming over about eleven. John Clark and Domingo Chavez. Remember ’em?”

“Yes, sir. Okay, I’ll put them on the list,” she replied in a studiously neutral voice. These two people, she remembered, were of the dangerous sort, though they seemed loyal enough. As a special agent of the United States Secret Service, she trusted nobody at all. “For lunch?”

“Probably.”

It was a pleasant drive east on U.S. Route 50, then south before reaching Annapolis. Clark found that re-adapting to driving on the right side of the road after several years driving on the left was almost automatic. Evidently the programming of a lifetime easily overcame the adjustments he’d made in the UK, though he occasionally had to think about it. The green signs helped. The corresponding signs in England and Wales had been blue, and had been a convenient reminder that he’d been in a foreign land, albeit one with better beer.

“So what’s the plan?” Chavez asked.

“We tell him we’ve signed on.”

“And about Junior?”

“What you decide is up to you, Ding, but here’s how I see it: What father and son tell one another is their business, not ours. Jack Junior is an adult. What he does with his life is his business, and who he includes in that loop is his business, too.”

“Yeah, I hear you, but man, if he got hurt . . . Christ almighty, I wouldn’t want to be around for that shit storm.”

Neither would I, Clark thought.

“But then again, what could you have said?” Ding continued. “The man asks you to train him, you can’t hardly say no.”

“You got that right.” The truth was, Clark felt bad about not telling Ryan Senior—they went back a long way, after all, and he owed the former President a lot—but he’d built a big part of his life on keeping other people’s secrets. This was personal, of course, but Jack was a big boy with a decent head on his shoulders. That didn’t mean he wasn’t going to try to convince Jack to tell his father about working at The Campus.

After forty minutes they turned right onto Peregrine Cliff Road, doubtless under TV surveillance from this point on, and Secret Service agents would be on their computers to check out his license plate numbers, then to determine that he was driving a rental car, and they couldn’t access Hertz’s computer quickly enough to identify the renter. That would get them slightly worried, though only in an institutional sense, something the USSS did well. Finally came the stone pillar that marked the entrance to Ryan’s quarter-mile driveway.

“Please identify,” said the remote-control voice in the pillar’s speaker.

“Rainbow Six inbound to see SWORDSMAN.”

“Proceed,” the voice replied, followed by an electronic tone and the hydraulic sound of the gate controls being told to open.

“You didn’t tell them about me,” Chavez objected.

“Just keep your hands in the open.” Clark chuckled.

Andrea Price-O’Day stood on the porch as they drove up. The detail chief herself, Clark noted. Maybe they thought he was important. Being a friend of the boss had its uses.

“Hello, Chief,” she said in greeting.

She likes me? Clark thought. Only his friends called him Chief.

“Good morning, ma’am. How’s the boss doing?”

“Working on his book, like always,” Andrea answered. “Welcome home.”

“Thanks.” He took her offered hand. “You know Domingo, I believe.”

“Oh, sure. How’s the family?”

“Great. Glad to be home. Got another one on the way, too.”

“Congratulations!”

“How’s he doing?” Clark asked next. “Climbing the walls?”

“Go see for yourself.” Andrea opened the front door.

They’d both been here before, the large open living room, the Potlatch decking that formed the ceiling, and the large expanse of windows revealing the Chesapeake Bay, plus Cathy’s Steinway grand piano, which she probably played every other day. Andrea led them up the carpeted steps, right to Ryan’s library/office, and left.

They found Ryan tapping on his keyboard with strokes heavy enough to kill one every two years or so. Ryan looked up as they entered.

“Heavy thoughts, Mr. President?” Clark asked with a smile.

“Hey, John! Howdy, Ding. Welcome!” Steps were taken and handshakes exchanged. “Sit down and take a load off,” Jack commanded, and his orders were followed. Old friend or not, he was a former President of the United States, and they’d both worn uniforms in the not-so-distant past.

“Glad to see

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