“The photo of the Arab women in black. Is that Saudi Arabia?”
“No. Yemen.”
“Why do you have it in a frame?”
“It’s a reminder of the subjugation of women in the Arab culture.”
McMahon nodded. “That’s what I thought.”
Kennedy began laughing.
“What?” asked McMahon.
“It’s not a reminder of the subjugation of Arab women. It’s actually a team of Delta Force commandos who were on their way to say hello to an individual who, let’s just say, wasn’t playing by the rules.”
“You’re shitting me?” McMahon stood up so he could examine the photo more closely. “Who were they going after?”
“That’s classified.”
“Did they get him?”
Kennedy nodded.
“Good.” McMahon settled back into his spot on the couch. “So what’s the deal with the meeting this morning?”
“Do you know Cap Baker?”
“The Republican strategist.”
“Yes.”
“He’s the mystery person you dragged me out here to see?”
“He assured me it was in your best interest.”
A scowl of irritation fell across McMahon’s leathered face. “Why in the hell would I want to spend two minutes with a political whore, especially a Republican one?”
Kennedy looked at her watch and ignored the question.
“Why the hell didn’t he just come see me at the Hoover Building?”
Before Kennedy could answer, there was a knock on the door. A second later it opened and Cap Baker entered. If it weren’t for his signature shock of gray hair they might not have recognized him. They were used to seeing him on TV wearing suits, expensive shirts, and fancy ties. He was rumored to charge eight hundred dollars an hour for his advice and lobbying skills. This morning he was dressed in boots, khakis, and a plaid flannel shirt. A puffy winter jacket was held under his right arm. A second man, wearing a suit, followed him into the room.
“Sorry we’re late,” announced Baker in his deep baritone voice. “The roads are horrible.”
Kennedy stood to meet the visitors. “That’s all right.” She extended her hand. “Cap.”
Baker took it. “Thank you for seeing me. I know this is a bit unusual.”
McMahon stood but stayed silent. Baker turned to the FBI man. “I promise you, Special Agent McMahon, this will not be a waste of your time.” As if he could sense McMahon’s disdain, Baker didn’t bother to offer his hand. Instead, he gestured to the man who had followed him into the office. “This is my attorney, Charles Wright. He won’t be staying long. Sit.” He motioned with his hands. “Sit.”
McMahon and Kennedy took their seats, and Baker and his attorney grabbed two smaller chairs opposite McMahon. Kennedy gestured to the tea and coffee service on the table, but before she could speak, Baker declined.
“No, thank you. I have a plane waiting to take me to Vail. I need to get the hell out of this town before all the crazies start showing up for the inauguration.”
“Vail,” McMahon said with feigned excitement, “I would have taken you for an Aspen man.”
Baker smiled. “Aspen is a Democratic ski town, Agent McMahon. Vail is where us Republicans go.”
“Life must be rough,” replied McMahon.
Baker stared at the FBI man for a moment. The smile on his face was one of amusement. “I like you. You’re an open book. You don’t know me, but you don’t like me, and that’s fine because in about five minutes I’m going to walk out that door and we’re never going to see each other again.”
“Is that right?” asked an amused McMahon.
“Yep…and you’re never going to forget this meeting.”
“Why’s that?”
“Because what I’m about to give you is going to change your life.”
“Is that right?” McMahon didn’t sound too convinced.
“Yep, but before we get started, there’s one piece of business we need to take care of.”
Baker looked to his attorney and nodded. The attorney opened his large briefcase and extracted a file. He handed the file to Baker, who opened it and grabbed three contracts. He kept one for himself and handed the other two to Kennedy and McMahon.
“What’s this?” asked McMahon.
“Confidentiality agreement,” answered Baker. “I’d tell you to read it, but I don’t have that much time. Just turn it to the last page and sign and date. Charles will notarize each signature and then we can get this over with.”
“This is bullshit.” McMahon tossed the contract on the table. “I’m not signing anything.”
Baker looked to Kennedy, who was speed-reading through the document. “Irene?”
Without looking up, she asked, “Cap, tell me why it would be in my interest to sign this.”
“It’s not in your interest. It’s in mine. But if you want to see what I have inside that briefcase, you’re going to have to sign this contract.”
“Why us?” asked McMahon.
“Good question.” Baker placed his hands on his knees and thought about it for a second. “Three reasons where you’re concerned, Special Agent McMahon. The first, as far as feds are concerned, you’re someone who is known for his discretion. The second, what I’m about to show you will have a direct impact on your current investigation.”
“And your third point?”
“You’re a son of a bitch, you hate politicians, and you can’t be bought.”
“That’s five points,” McMahon said flatly.
“Yeah,” Baker grinned, “but the last three kind of go together, so we’ll just count them as one.”
“He’s hard to argue with,” smiled Kennedy. She then turned to Baker and asked, “Why me?”
“That’s easy. I lived in awe of Thomas Stansfield and so did you. He was a good friend…a mentor. This town has never had anyone who worked so effectively behind the scenes. Before he died he told me to keep an eye on you. He also told me that you were someone I could trust.”
Kennedy pulled off her reading glasses and looked at Baker. Thomas Stansfield had occupied this very office until cancer took his life two years earlier. He had also been a mentor to Kennedy. He was the greatest man she had ever known and he had told her the same thing about Baker. Without further thought, Kennedy flipped the contract to the last page and signed above her printed name.
“What are you doing?” asked McMahon.
Kennedy slid the contract in front of Baker so he could sign. “Skip, just sign it so we can get this over with. I don’t think Cap would have gone to this effort if it wasn’t something serious.”
“But I need to run this by Justice. I can’t just go around signing confidentiality agreements while I’m on the government dime.”
Kennedy glanced at him sideways. “Since when do you care about what Justice thinks? Just let go of your control issues and sign it.”
Kennedy handed him her pen. McMahon hesitated for a second and then took it and signed his name.
“If this comes back and bites me in the ass, I’m going to make someone’s life miserable.”
Baker laughed as he took the contract from McMahon. “Don’t worry, in about two minutes this contract is going to be the least of your worries.”
The attorney finished notarizing the contracts and placed them back in the briefcase. Baker stuck out his hand and Wright gave him a legal-size manila envelope.
“Thank you, Charles. Why don’t you wait for me down in the car.”
The attorney left without saying a word, and when the door closed behind him McMahon said, “This better be pretty fucking good.”
“That’s going to depend on how you look at it.” Baker stared at the mysterious envelope in his hands. “Let me ask you something, Agent McMahon. How is your investigation going?”
“That’s confidential.”
“I hear it’s pretty one-dimensional.”
“What’s that supposed to
mean?”
Baker shrugged. “You guys are only looking at this one way.”
“When all the evidence points in one direction, that’s pretty much the way it works.”
“All the evidence? From what I’ve heard there is very little evidence.”
“You know what? I didn’t come here to talk about my investigation with you. This meeting was your idea, and I think it’s time you put your cards on the table.”
“Fine.” Baker nodded. He opened the sealed envelope and extracted a series of 8x10 black-and-white photographs. He turned the first one over and placed it on the coffee table so both McMahon and Kennedy could view it. It was a close-up of a woman. The photograph had the slightly grainy quality of a surveillance photo taken from a distance and then blown up.
“That, if you didn’t know it already, is Jillian Rautbort. President–elect Alexander’s deceased wife.”
Baker grabbed a second photo and set it down next to the first. This one was not blown up. It showed Jillian Rautbort and a man. It was evening and they were standing on a terrace. Jillian was in a halter dress and the man was in a suit. Baker put down the next photo. This one was of just Jillian from the waist up. She had a very mischievous look on her face and she was reaching behind her neck with her hands.
Baker glanced at Kennedy. “This is where it gets interesting, and I apologize in advance, but you need to see this.”
He laid down the next photo. Jillian Rautbort was now standing with her dress around her waist; her tanned and perfectly sized breasts exposed. Baker put the next photo down. Now Jillian and the man were kissing. The photo after that captured Jillian on her knees, her face buried in the mystery man’s groin. Baker began lying the photos down like a blackjack dealer would cards. They showed Rautbort and her lover in an escalation of sexual acts culminating with him on his back on a lounge chair and her completely naked on top of him.
Baker placed the empty envelope on the table next to the photos and said, “That’s pretty much it.”
“Are you sure,” asked Kennedy, “that the woman in these photos is Jillian Rautbort?”
“Yes.”
“When were they taken, and how the hell did you get your hands on them?” McMahon asked.
“I think they were taken over Labor Day at the Rautbort estate in Palm Beach, and no, I didn’t hire someone to do this.”
“Then how in the hell did you get your hands on them?”
“I was contacted by the man who took them,” replied Baker.
McMahon scoffed. “So you didn’t hire him, but in the end you paid him.”
“There is a distinction, Agent McMahon. I’m not going to sit here and tell you I’m an angel. Politics is a rough business. Since you were willing to sign my confidentiality agreement, I’ll give you the straight facts. I paid for these photos. I paid a lot of money for these photos, and it was all legal. My only regret now is that I didn’t destroy them the moment I received them.”
“Why is that?” asked Kennedy.
“Because I allowed my ego to get in the way, and in the end it cost my candidate the White House.”
“How could these photos have cost your candidate the White House?” asked a skeptical McMahon.
“There are very few people in the world who I truly despise. Mark Ross and Stu Garret are two of them.”
Kennedy and McMahon shared a look, and McMahon said, “You’ll get no argument from us.”
“Well, with a month to go in the race, my guys had an eight-point lead, which, if you know how polls are conducted—who answers their phone, who doesn’t, who says they vote, and who actually votes, and all these national polls have a built-in bias for the Democrats—with four weeks to go is huge, especially if you’re on the Republican ticket. I never really wanted to buy these photos, and I certainly never wanted to use them. At least, not in terms of releasing them to the press.”
“Then why did you buy them?” asked McMahon.
“To take them out of play,” Kennedy answered.
“That’s right. Elections are about controlling as many factors as possible, and I’ll be damned if I was going to allow these things to float around and do God only knows what. The conventional wisdom would be that they would hurt the Alexander camp, but one never knows for sure. The smart thing is to leave nothing to chance. We were flush with cash, so I paid the guy.”
“That was the only reason why you bought them?” Kennedy asked in a slightly skeptical tone.
Baker grinned. “There was one other small reason.” He shifted in his chair and crossed his right leg over his left. “I wanted to make Garret and Ross sweat.”
“You sent them these?” McMahon asked with his mouth agape.
“Only a few. I had them personally delivered to Garret’s hotel room during a campaign stop in Dallas.”
“Did he know you sent them?”
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
“He may have guessed, but I made sure the delivery couldn’t be traced back to me. I did, however, send a message along.”
“What kind of message?”
“I only sent three photos. I wrote one word with a black Sharpie on each photo.”
“What word?”
“Three words. You’ll never win.”
“You and Garret have a history?” asked Kennedy.
“You could say that. We’ve been on the opposite sides of some pretty big battles.”
“And let me guess,” said McMahon, “one of your favorite sayings with him was, You’ll never win.”
“Actually, he was the one who was fond of the saying.”
“So you thought you’d rub his nose in it.”
Baker nodded. “And if I’d just left it alone, I’d be the one getting ready for an inauguration, and they,” Baker pointed at the photos on the table, “would still be alive.”
“What do you mean, they?” asked McMahon.
“Jillian and the man she had the rendezvous with.”
McMahon picked up one of the photos and pointed to the person underneath Jillian Rautbort. “This man is dead?”
“That man is Special Agent Matt Cash of the United States Secret Service.”
2
M cMahon couldn’t sit any longer. He’d been down this road before, just never on such a high-profile case. Instinctively, it was a nightmare. Law enforcement was in great part about maintaining order in society. There were rules, and they needed to be enforced. The people who enforced them tended to be very organized individuals who approached their jobs in a methodical manner. Never more so than when they were investigating a crime. And with a sensational crime such as this one, you investigated the case with one eye on the crime, and one eye on the eventual prosecution of the perpetrators. Usually prosecutors were brought in later, but on this one they’d been looking over his shoulder every step of the way.
This steaming pile of crap that this Republican shark had just dropped in his lap was now forcing him to rethink all of the suppositions and evidence that he and hundreds of agents had spent months running down and collecting. He wanted to dismiss it as inconsequential bullshit. Tell him to take his envelope and his confidentiality agreement and take a flying leap off a cliff. But, as much as he hated to admit it, his gut told him that there was something here.
McMahon wished Kennedy would break the ice and speak, but she wasn’t going to. That wasn’t her style. She was too smart. For all he knew, this was a setup. She could have known about this for weeks. McMahon didn’t like any of this. He stopped his pacing and looked down at Kennedy.
“How long have you known about this?”
She looked at her watch. “For about six minutes.”
McMahon studied her placid face and fought to conceal his own rage. He loved Kennedy and he trusted her, but at the end of the day she was still a spy. A professional perpetrator of deceit and lies. As much as he wanted to believe her, he could never really be sure. He turned his attention back to Baker.
“Why s
hould I believe any of this, and why in the hell did you wait two months to tell anybody about this?”
“I’m no saint, Agent McMahon. I’m not afraid to bend the rules here and there. Especially when it comes to stuff like these moronic campaign finance laws, but this…” Baker gestured to the photos. “If someone on the other side decided to make this go away and do it in such a way as to make it advantageous to their cause…then they stepped way over the line.”
“That’s a big if, and you still didn’t answer my question. Why did you wait until now? Why didn’t you come forward the day after the explosion?”
“Are you kidding me? The opposing candidate’s wife gets incinerated by a car bomb, and you think I should have gone public with a bunch of pornographic photos of her screwing her bodyguard, who, by the way, also got killed in the explosion? I would have been branded the biggest bastard in the history of politics.”
“I didn’t say go public. Why didn’t you bring it to me?”
Baker stood and waved his hand in frustration at McMahon. “You’re where I was in the weeks after the attack, except I still had a campaign to manage. A campaign that we almost won, which is amazing, when you think about it.” He grabbed his jacket off the back of the chair. “I didn’t want to believe any of this. Things were happening so fast those final two weeks. There were the funerals, and then Alexander decided to go on with the debates, after we’d been informed that he was pulling out. We were in a street fight with our hands cuffed behind our backs. We couldn’t fight back. We had to just sit there and take it.”
“So again,” McMahon said forcefully, “why now? Why sit on this for two months?”
“Because I didn’t want to believe it. This is going to sound really corny to you, but I believe in this country. I believe in the two-party system. I believe in the peaceful transfer of power, and from everything I’ve seen, Josh Alexander is a decent man. I’m not about destroying institutions and ruining the people’s faith in their government, but…” Baker fell silent.
“But what?” prodded McMahon.
“Mark Ross and Stu Garret are motherfuckers! And I mean motherfuckers!”
The severity of the comment caught even McMahon off guard.