Authors: Mario Puzo
Francis Kennedy said quietly, “Let’s adjourn this meeting until the hijackers make their demands.”
In one instant of paranoid divination he had comprehended the whole plan that Yabril had created with such pride and cunning. Now for the first time he truly feared for his daughter’s safety.
Yabril’s demands came through the White House Communications Center late Monday afternoon, relayed through the seemingly helpful Sultan of Sherhaben. The first demand was a ransom of fifty million dollars for the aircraft; the second, the freeing of six hundred Arab prisoners in Israeli jails. The third was for the release of Romeo, the newly captured
assassin of the Pope, and his transport to Sherhaben. Also, that if the demands were not met in twenty-four hours, one hostage would be shot.
Francis Kennedy and his personal staff met in the large northwest dining room on the second floor of the White House to discuss the demands of Yabril. The antique table was set for Helen Du Pray, Otto Gray, Arthur Wix, Eugene Dazzy and Christian Klee. Kennedy’s place was at one end of the table and set so that he had more space than the others.
Francis Kennedy put himself in the minds of the terrorists—he had always had this gift of empathy. Their primary aim was to humiliate the United States, to destroy its mantle of power in the eyes of the world, even in the eyes of friendly nations. And Kennedy thought it a master psychological stroke. Who would ever take America seriously again if its nose was rubbed in the dirt by a few armed men and a small oil Sultanate? Must he allow this to happen to bring his daughter safely home? Yet in his empathy he divined that the scenario was not complete, that there were more surprises to come. But he did not speak. He let the others in the dining room begin their briefings.
Eugene Dazzy, as chief of staff, opened the discussion. His voice was heavy with fatigue; he had not slept for thirty-six hours. “Mr. President,” he said, “it is our judgment that we comply with the terrorist demands to a limited extent. That we release Romeo, not to Yabril but to the Italian government, which is just and legally correct. We don’t agree we have to pay the money, and we cannot make Israel release its prisoners. In this way we won’t look too weak but we won’t provoke them. When Theresa is back, then we can handle the terrorists.”
Klee said, “I promise that problem will be solved within a year.”
Francis Kennedy remained silent for a long time, then said, “I don’t think this will work.”
Arthur Wix said, “But this is our public response. Behind the scenes we can promise them that Romeo will go free completely, that we will pay the ransom and that we will lean on Israel. I do think this will work. At least it will give them pause and we can negotiate further.”
“It won’t do any harm,” Dazzy said. “In these situations ultimatums are just part of the negotiation process. That’s understood. The twenty-four-hour deadline means nothing.”
Kennedy pondered their advice. “I don’t think this will work,” he said again.
Oddblood Gray said, “We do. And, Francis, you have to be very careful. Congressman Jintz and Senator Lambertino have told me that Congress may ask you to remove yourself completely from this crisis because of your personal interest. That is a very dangerous development.”
Kennedy said, “That will never happen.”
“Let me deal with Congress,” Vice President Du Pray said. “Let me be the lightning rod. I’ll be the voice that proposes any surrenders on our part.”
It was Dizzy who summed it up. “Francis, in this situation, you must trust the collective judgment of your staff. You know we will protect you and do what is best for you.”
Kennedy sighed and paused for a long time, then finally said, “Then go ahead.”
Peter Cloot had proved to be a superbly efficient deputy in running the FBI. Cloot was very spare, his body a flat slate of muscles. He had a tiny mustache, which did nothing to
soften his bony face. Despite his virtues Cloot had his faults. He was too unbending in discharging his responsibilities, too fierce in discharging his duties, and believed too much in internal security. Tonight, grim-faced, he greeted Christian with a handful of memos and a three-page letter that he handed Christian separately.
It was a letter composed with type cut from newspapers. Christian read it. It was another of those crazy warnings that a homemade atom bomb would explode in New York City. Christian said, “For this you pull me out of the President’s office?”
Cloot said, “I waited until we went through all the checking procedures. It qualifies as a possible.”
“Oh, Christ,” Christian said. “Not now.” He read the letter again but much more carefully. The different types of print disoriented him. The letter looked like a bizarre avant-garde painting. He sat down at his desk and read it slowly word for word. The letter was addressed to
The New York Times
. First he read the paragraphs that were isolated by heavy green Magic Marker to identify the hard information.
The marked parts of the letter read:
“We have planted a nuclear weapon with the minimum potential of one half kiloton and maximum of 2 kilotons, in the New York City area. This letter is written to your newspaper so that you may print it and warn the inhabitants of the City to vacate and escape harm. The device is set to trigger off seven days from the date above. So you know how necessary it is to publish this letter immediately.” Klee looked at the date. The explosion would be Thursday. He read on: “We have taken this action to prove to the people of the United States that the government must unite with the rest of the world on an equal partnership basis to control nuclear energy, or our planet can be lost.
“There is no way we can be bought off by money or any other condition. By publishing this letter and forcing the evacuation of New York City you will save thousands of lives.
“To prove that this is not a crackpot letter, have the envelope and paper examined by government laboratories. They will find residues of plutonium oxide.
“Print this letter immediately.”
The rest of the letter was a lecture on political morality and an impassioned demand that the United States cease making nuclear weapons.
Christian said to Peter Cloot, “Have you had it examined?”
“Yes,” Peter Cloot said. “It does have residue. The individual letters are cut from newspapers and magazines to form the message but they give a clue. The writer or writers were smart enough to use papers from all over the country. But there is just a slight edge over the normal for Boston newspapers. I sent an extra fifty men to help the bureau chief up there.”
Christian sighed. “We have a long night ahead of us. Let’s keep this very low-key. And seal it off from the media. Command post will be my office and all papers to come to me. The President has enough headaches—let’s just make this thing disappear. It’s a piece of bullshit like all those other crank letters.”
“OK,” Peter Cloot said. “But you know, someday one of them
will
be real.”
It was a long night. The reports kept flowing in. The Nuclear Energy and Research Agency chief was informed so that his agency search teams could be alerted. These teams were specially recruited personnel with sophisticated detecting equipment that could search out hidden nuclear bombs.
Christian had supper brought in for him and Cloot and read the reports.
The New York Times
of course had not published the letter; they had routinely turned it over to the FBI. Christian called the publisher of the
Times
and asked him to black out the item until the investigation was completed. This was also a matter of routine. Newspapers had received thousands of similar letters over the years. But because of this very casualness the letter had gotten to them Monday instead of Saturday.
Sometime before midnight Peter Cloot returned to his own office to manage his staff, which was receiving hundreds of calls from the agents in the field, most of them from Boston. Christian kept reading the reports as they were brought in. More than anything else he didn’t want this to add to the President’s burdens. For a few moments he thought about the possibility that this might be another twist to the hijacker’s plot, but even they would not dare to play for such high stakes. This had to be some aberration that society had thrown up. There had been atom bomb scares before, crazies who had claimed they had planted homemade atom bombs and demanded ransoms of ten to a hundred million dollars. One letter had even asked for a portfolio of Wall Street stocks, shares of IBM, General Motors, Sears, Texaco and some of the gene technology companies. When the letter had been submitted to the Energy Department for a psycho profile the report had come back that the letter posed no bomb threat but that the terrorist was very savvy about the stock market. Which had led to the arrest of a minor Wall Street broker who had embezzled his clients’ funds and was looking for a way out.
This had to be another of those crackpot things, Christian thought, but meanwhile it was causing trouble. Hundreds of millions of dollars would be spent. Luckily on this issue the
media would suppress the letter. There were some things that those coldhearted bastards didn’t dare fuck around with. They knew that there were classified items in the atom bomb control laws that could be invoked, that could even make a hole in the sacred freedom of the Bill of Rights erected around them. He spent the next hours praying that this would all go away. That he would not have to go to the President in the morning and lay this load of crap on him.
In the Sultanate of Sherhaben, Yabril stood in the doorway of the hijacked aircraft preparing for the next act he would have to perform. Then his absolute concentration relaxed and he let himself check the surrounding desert. The Sultan had arranged for missiles to be in place, and radar had been set up. An armored division of troops had established a perimeter so that the TV vans could come no nearer to the plane than a hundred yards, and beyond them there was a huge crowd. And Yabril thought that tomorrow he would have to give the order that the TV vans and the crowds would be allowed to come closer, much closer. There would be no danger of assault; the aircraft was lavishly booby-trapped, and Yabril knew he could blow everything into fragments of metal and flesh so completely that the bones would have to be sifted out of the desert sands.
Finally he turned from the aircraft doorway and sat down
next to Theresa Kennedy. They were alone in the first-class cabin. Terrorist guards kept the passenger hostages in the tourist section, and there were also guards in the cockpit with the crew.
Yabril did his best to put Theresa at ease. He told her that the passengers, her fellow hostages, were being well looked after. Naturally, they were not all that comfortable; neither was she or, for that matter, he himself. He said with a wry face, “You know it is in my own best interests that no harm comes to you.”
Theresa believed him. Despite everything, she found that dark, intense face sympathetic, and though she knew he was dangerous she could not really dislike him. In her innocence she believed her high station made her invulnerable.
Yabril said almost pleadingly, “You can help us, you can help your fellow hostages. Our cause is just, you once said so yourself a few years ago. But the American Jewish establishment was too strong. They shut you up.”
Theresa shook her head. “I’m sure you have your justifications, everybody always has. But the innocent people on this plane have never done you or your cause any harm. They should not suffer for the sins of your enemies.”
It gave Yabril a peculiar pleasure that she was courageous and intelligent. Her face, so pleasant and pretty in the American fashion, also pleased him, as if she were some kind of American doll.
Again he was struck by the fact that she was not afraid of him, was not fearful of what would happen to her. The blindness of the highborn to fate, the hubris of the rich and powerful. And of course it was in her family history.
“Miss Kennedy,” he said in a courteous voice that cajoled her to listen, “it is well known to us that you are not the usual spoiled American woman, that your sympathies go out to
the poor and oppressed of the world. You have doubts even about Israel’s right to expel people from their own land to found a warring state of their own. Perhaps you would make a videotape saying this and be heard all over the world.”
Theresa Kennedy studied Yabril’s face. His tan eyes were liquid and warm, the smile made his dark thin face almost boyish. She had been brought up to trust the world, to trust other human beings and to trust her intelligence and her own beliefs. She could see that this man sincerely believed in what he was doing. In a curious way he inspired respect.
She was polite in her refusal. “What you say may be true. But I would never do anything to hurt my father.” She paused for a moment, then said, “And I don’t think your methods are intelligent. I don’t think murder and terror change anything.”
With this remark Yabril felt a powerful surge of contempt. But he replied gently, “Israel was established by terror and American money. Did they teach you that in your American college? We learned from Israel but without your hypocrisy. Our Arab oil sheiks were never as generous with money to us as your Jewish philanthropists were to Israel.”
Theresa said, “I believe in the state of Israel, I also believe the Palestinian people should have a homeland. I don’t have any influence with my father, we argue all the time. But nothing justifies what you’re doing now.”
Yabril became impatient. “You must realize that you are my treasure,” he said. “I have made my demands. A hostage will be shot every hour after my deadline. And you will be the first.”
To Yabril’s surprise, there was still no fear on her face. Was she stupid? Could such an obviously sheltered woman be so courageous? He was interested in finding out. So far she
had been well treated. She had been isolated in the first-class cabin and treated with the utmost respect by her guards. She looked very angry, but calmed herself by sipping the tea he had served her.