was the obvious one, though it took the Archer nearly half a minute to recognize it.
"Don't kill me "
Once the Archer understood it, he continued his search. He removed the Captain's wallet and flipped through its contents. It was the photographs that stopped him. The man had a wife. She was short, with dark hair and a round face. She was not beautiful, except for the smile. It was the smile a woman saved for the man she loved, and it lit up her face in a way that the Archer himself had once known. But what got his attention were the next two. The man had a son. The first photo had been taken at age two perhaps, a young boy with tousled hair and an impish smile. You could not hate a child, even the Russian child of a KGB officer. The next picture of him was so different that it was difficult to connect the two. His hair was gone, his skin tightly drawn across the face and transparent like the pages of an old Koran. The child was dying. Three now, maybe four? he wondered. A dying child whose face wore a smile of courage and pain and love. Why must Allah visit his anger on the little ones? He turned the photo to the officer's face.
"Your son?" he asked in Russian.
"Dead. Cancer," the man explained, then saw that this bandit didn't understand. "Sickness. Long sickness." For the briefest moment his face cleared of pain and showed only grief. That saved his life. He was amazed to see the bandit sheathe his knife, but too deeply in pain to react in a visible way.
No. I will not visit another death upon this woman. The decision also amazed the Archer. It was as though the voice of Allah Himself reminded him that mercy is second only to faith in the human virtues. That was not enough by itself- his fellow guerrillas would not be persuaded by a verse of scripture-but next the Archer found a key ring in the man's pants pocket. He used one key to unlock the handcuffs and the other to open the briefcase. It was full of document folders, each of which was bordered in multicolored tape and stamped with some version of SECRET. That was one Russian word he knew.
"My friend," the Archer said in Pashtu, "you are going to visit a friend of mine. If you live long enough," he added.
"How serious is this?" the President asked.
"Potentially very serious," Judge Moore answered. "I want to bring some people over to brief you."
"Don't you have Ryan doing the evaluation?"
"He'll be one of them. Another's this Major Gregory you've heard about."
The President flipped open his desk calendar. "I can give you forty-five minutes. Be here at eleven."
"We'll be there, sir." Moore hung up the phone. He buzzed his secretary next. "Send Dr. Ryan in here."
Jack came through the door a minute later. He didn't even have time to sit down.
"We're going in to see The Man at eleven. How ready is your material?"
"I'm the wrong guy to talk about the physics, but I guess Gregory can handle that end. He's talking to the Admiral and Mr. Ritter right now. General Parks coming, too?" Jack asked.
"Yeah."
"Okay. How much imagery do you want me to get together?"
Judge Moore thought that one over for a moment. "We don't want to razzle-dazzle him. A couple of background shots and a good diagram. You really think it's important, too?"
"It's not any immediate threat to us by any stretch of the imagination, but it's a development we could have done without. The effect on the arms-control talks is hard to gauge. I don't think there's a direct connec-"
"There isn't, we're certain of that." The DCI paused for a grimace. "Well, we think we're certain."
"Judge, there is data on this issue floating around here that I haven't seen yet."
Moore smiled benignly. "And how do you know that, son?"
"I spent most of last Friday going over old files on the Soviet missile-defense program. Back in '81 they ran a major test out of the Sary Shagan site. We knew an awful lot about it-for example, we knew that the mission parameters had been changed from within the Defense Ministry. Those orders were sealed in Moscow and hand-delivered to the skipper of the missile sub that fired the birds-Marko Ramius. He told me the other side of the story. With that and a few other pieces I've come across, it makes me