That’s why Summers was at dinner with Hoover, despite his best efforts to be somewhere else. He had made a few mistakes, and they had been discovered. He’d taken the call at home, lying in bed beside his wife for a change. Just two months after he’d been elected Hoover had called him personally—at one in the morning to say that one of his agents had come across the most
And then he had hung up, without waiting for a reply.
Summers could only wonder what awful indiscretion Gentry had committed.
“Would you like some butter with that bread roll, Congressman?” Hoover asked in his squeaky voice. “You haven’t touched your plate or had a sip of wine all night.”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Hoover,” Summers replied. “I’m simply very tired. The war, you know.”
“I know, I know,” said Hoover. “We all work like Trojans, don’t we? Not like some of those union sluggards in California, I’ll bet, what with their mandated hours and legislated undutifulness. I swear, Congressmen, that if this tergiversating Herr Kolhammer had his way, the national defense would be subject to veto by the Wobblies and the Comintern.”
For one horrid moment, Summers wasn’t sure if Hoover was making a joke, and he remained suspended in an agony of indecision. Should he laugh, and risk enraging the vindictive faggot? Or should he nod vigorously and pound the table with an open palm and exclaim something like “Exactly!” thereby looking like a fool who couldn’t appreciate Hoover’s mordant wit? He could feel his fellow congressman stiffen with tension beside him.
Tolson saved them by snickering cruelly, providing him with a cue to chuckle. Hoover joined in the happy moment, his braying laugh sailing over the heads of the other diners.
Surely this was hell.
Summers was actually grateful when the deal came down at the end of the main course, and Hoover leaned forward to turn the screws. “Congressmen, this week your committee will be reviewing significant expenditures allocated for the Special Zone, if I’m right.”
“We will,” said Gentry, trying to appear eager to please. “We’re looking at an appropriation measure to pay for emergency housing, for all the workers flooding in there.”
Hoover stared at him for a long, long time without speaking. His pouchy, bulldog eyes burned fiercely. Air whistled between his crooked teeth. He wouldn’t even let the congressman drop his gaze. Summers was glad he wasn’t on the receiving end. It felt like staring down the barrel of a gun.
“I am sure,” the FBI director said at last, “that you will take as long as is absolutely necessary . . . to give full and proper consideration . . . to the best interests of the country . . . and all of its servants.”
“Of course,” agreed Gentry after a slight delay.
Summers just nodded. His throat was so dry, he could hardly form the words.
“Excellent,” said Hoover. “You can pay your bill on the way out.”
17
IN TRANSIT TO LONDON
The
Before taking off, she’d downloaded the latest compressed burst from California. Admiral Kolhammer had fought hard to keep his command in one piece, but strategic surprise had made that impossible. The destruction of the contemporary Pacific Fleet, the invasion of Australia, and the threat hanging over Britain meant that any Allied resources had to be sent where they would be most effective in forestalling an enemy that was lashing out in all directions.
To some extent, they’d done well. The Japanese thrust into Australia seemed to be doomed, as the ground combat elements of the Multinational Force moved to directly engage Homma’s forces. Reports of atrocities had aroused outrage in the press and Parliament, and led to another round of accusations that Britain had abandoned her former colony in its hour of need. But really, it was nothing out of the ordinary.
The Japanese continued to reinforce their holdings in the southwest Pacific, using the divisions they had stripped from China. The
There was the usual level of witless hysteria on the mainland United States. The encrypted briefing from Kolhammer, for her eyes only, covered the rather tense political situation of the Special Administrative Zone.