Free Novel Read

Final Finesse




  FINAL FINESSE

  Copyright © 2009 Karna Small Bodman

  This edition published by Regnery Fiction in 2018. Originally published by Forge in 2009.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, website, or broadcast.

  Regnery Fiction™ is a trademark of Salem Communications Holding Corporation; Regnery® is a registered trademark of Salem Communications Holding Corporation

  Cataloging-in-Publication Data on file with the Library of Congress

  ISBN 978-1-62157-782-9

  eISBN 978-1-62157-852-9

  Published in the United States by

  Regnery Fiction

  An Imprint of Regnery Publishing

  A Division of Salem Media Group

  300 New Jersey Ave NW

  Washington, DC 20001

  www.Regnery.com

  Books are available in quantity for promotional or premium use. For information on discounts and terms, please visit our website: www.Regnery.com.

  FINAL FINESSE

  BY

  KARNA SMALL BODMAN

  CONTENTS

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  CHARACTERS

  CHAPTER ONE: GEORGETOWN–MONDAY EARLY MORNING

  CHAPTER TWO: OKLAHOMA–MONDAY EARLY MORNING

  CHAPTER THREE: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FOUR: WASHINGTON, D.C.–MONDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FIVE: OKLAHOMA–MONDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER SIX: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER SEVEN: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY MID-DAY

  CHAPTER EIGHT: OKLAHOMA–MONDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER NINE: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER TEN: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER ELEVEN: WASHINGTON, D.C.–MONDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER TWELVE: MEXICAN BORDER–MONDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN: THE WHITE HOUSE–TUESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN: TEXAS BORDER–TUESDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN: CARACAS, VENEZUELA–WEDNESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN: THE WHITE HOUSE–WEDNESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA–THURSDAY EARLY MORNING

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: SILVER SPRING, MARYLAND–THURSDAY EARLY EVENING

  CHAPTER NINETEEN: MISSOURI–THURSDAY EARLY EVENING

  CHAPTER TWENTY: GEORGETOWN–THURSDAY EVENING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: CARACAS–FRIDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: THE WHITE HOUSE–FRIDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE: CAPITOL HILL–FRIDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR: THE WHITE HOUSE—FRIDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE: ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA–FRIDAY EVENING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX: CARACAS–SATURDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN: WASHINGTON, D.C.–SATURDAY EVENING

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT: EL AVILA–SATURDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE: WASHINGTON, D.C.–SUNDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER THIRTY: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE: CARACAS–MONDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO: THE WHITE HOUSE–MONDAY MID-MORNING

  CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE: EL AVILA–MONDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR: CAPITOL HILL–TUESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE: MCLEAN, VIRGINIA–TUESDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX: THE WHITE HOUSE–WEDNESDAY EVENING

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN: THE WHITE HOUSE–WEDNESDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT: WASHINGTON, D.C.–THURSDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE: EL AVILA–FRIDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FORTY: WASHINGTON, D.C.–FRIDAY MID-DAY

  CHAPTER FORTY-ONE: EL AVILA–SUNDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FORTY-TWO: SILVER SPRING MARYLAND–CHRISTMAS EVE

  CHAPTER FORTY-THREE: ALABAMA–CHRISTMAS MORNING

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR: DULLES AIRPORT–CHRISTMAS NIGHT

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE: THE WHITE HOUSE–WEDNESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FORTY-SIX: CARACAS–WEDNESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN: ALABAMA–WEDNESDAY MORNING

  CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT: EL AVILA–THURSDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER FORTY-NINE: THE WHITE HOUSE–FRIDAY MID-DAY

  CHAPTER FIFTY: CARACAS–SATURDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE: LOUISIANA–SATURDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO: CARACAS–SATURDAY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE: CARACAS–SATURDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR: EL AVILA –SUNDAY LATE-AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE: CARACAS–SUNDAY EARLY EVENING

  CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX: EL AVILA–SUNDAY NIGHT

  CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN: CARACAS –SUNDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT: CARACAS–MONDAY LATE-MORNING

  CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE: THE WHITE HOUSE - MONDAY LATE MORNING

  CHAPTER SIXTY: LOUISIANA–MONDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE: EN ROUTE TO THE US–MONDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-TWO: LOUISIANA–MONDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE: LOUISIANA–MONDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FOUR: LOUISIANA–MONDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FIVE: LOUISIANA–MONDAY OVERNIGHT

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SIX: THE WHITE HOUSE–TUESDAY EARLY AFTERNOON

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SEVEN: CARACAS–ELECTION DAY

  CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT: CAPITOL HILL–LATE JANUARY

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Welcome to the new Final Finesse—an updated version of the original story about a White House struggling to combat foreign agents attacking the country’s energy supplies.

  In putting this thriller together, I received help from a number of friends and contacts at the Department of Homeland Security, former White House colleagues, ambassadors and especially agents of the CIA who shared their expertise (but asked to remain nameless).

  Readers of this novel will discover humorous references to special interest groups, earmarks and Congressional resolutions–all inspired by actual requests made over the last several years.

  Also I want to thank the Regnery Publishing staff for reissuing this series. We all hope you enjoy reading these stories of international challenges and political intrigue: Checkmate, Gambit, Final Finesse, Castle Bravo, as well as my new novel, Trust but Verify.

  Finesse–v. “To handle with a deceptive or evasive strategy.”

  CHARACTERS

  THE PRINCIPALS

  Tripp Adams, Vice President, GeoGlobal Oil & Gas

  Samantha Reid, Deputy Assistant to the President for Homeland Security

  WHITE HOUSE STAFF

  Gregory Barnes, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security

  Ken Cosgrove, National Security Advisor

  Angela Marconi, Special Assistant to the President for Public Liaison

  Evan Ovich, Special Assistant to the President for International Communications

  Joan Tillman, Administrative Assistant to Samantha Reid

  OTHERS

  Joe Campiello, Grayfield company operative

  Cassidy Jenkins, Senator from Oregon Senator

  David Major, FBI agent

  Godfrey Nims, Lobbyist for GeoGlobal Oil & Gas

  Will Raymond, CIA agent

  Dick Stock
well, Greyfield computer expert

  Harry Walker, Senator from Oklahoma

  FOREIGN NATIONALS

  Victor Aguilar, President, GeoGlobal, South America

  El Presidente

  “Eyeshade,” Gang leader

  Simon Gonzales, Field Worker

  Juan Lopez, Field Worker

  Carlos Mendoza, Field Worker

  Diosdado Rossi, Assistant to El Presidente (The “Fixer”)

  Rafael Santiago, Gang member

  CHAPTER ONE

  GEORGETOWN–MONDAY EARLY MORNING

  “All non-essential White House employees remain home due to ice storm. Update in four hours.”

  Samantha Reid stared at the email and pushed a strand of her long brown hair back off her forehead. She knew that most everyone would try to show up for work today because nobody wanted to be thought of as “non-essential.” At least she had a four-wheel drive jeep she’d been driving for years. Not the chicest car that regularly parked on West Exec., the driveway separating the West Wing from the Old Executive Office Building, or OEOB as they all called the big empire place that housed most of the staff. It was a car she’d bought near her parents’ home in Texas where everybody drives jeeps.

  She glanced out the picture window of her tiny Georgetown apartment overlooking the Whitehurst Freeway. Just beyond was a narrow park lining the Potomac River, its trees weighted down with icicles. To the right, the Key Bridge was silhouetted in the dim pre-dawn light where a lone taxi, trying to navigate the icy roadway, suddenly spun out and slammed into a guard rail.

  Good Lord. It may look like a scene out of Swan Lake, but it really is treacherous out there. She had known a front was moving in, but an ice storm in early December didn’t happen all that often, and nobody had predicted it would be this bad.

  She looked down at her computer again. She always checked her personal and secure email accounts as well as texts when she first woke up, as she often got urgent messages from her boss, the head of the White House Office of Homeland Security. They had been working practically round the clock on a whole list of issues and new safety measures, coordinating with the agencies, following up on tips and executing presidential orders.

  She had stayed late last night summarizing the fallout from a threat to a big shopping center made the day after Thanksgiving. Thankfully, that one turned out to be a hoax.

  Today she knew they would be focusing on other problems including a new missile defense system they were trying to get deployed on a number of commercial airplanes. She checked her schedule and remembered that a group of airline executives was due for an 11:00 a.m. meeting in the Roosevelt Room. The mastermind of a new 360-degree laser defense, Dr. Cameron Talbot, was supposed to join the airline officers. But now, with the storm raging, she doubted if any of them would make it in.

  She also had a meeting to follow up on an attack on the Metro. Transit cops had nailed a guy trying to leave a backpack filled with explosives on board a D.C. train headed for the Pentagon. When the Metro was built, some genius had designed a stop directly underneath the building. What were they thinking?

  She shoved her computer aside and padded into the tiny galley kitchen. It looked like it could have fit into a train with its shallow cabinets on two walls, sparse counter space and a stove that was a relic from the eighties. Her whole condo was less than four hundred square feet, but she had gladly exchanged size for the convenience of a Georgetown address that put her within minutes of the White House, though this morning, inching along the icy Washington streets, she’d be lucky if she’d make it in an hour’s time.

  She flicked on the small TV set that took up way too much space on the kitchen counter and heard a commercial advertising a new drug. There were pictures of a kindly looking grandmother pushing a laughing child on a swing while the announcer said in the tone of an after-thought, “Side effects could include dizziness, nausea, muscle weakness, weight gain and in rare cases, temporary loss of vision, coma or stroke.”

  Samantha shook her head at the absurdity of it all, but then heard the news anchor come back on with the weather report. His map showed a wide swath of storms, snow and ice reaching from Oklahoma all the way up to Delaware, with D.C. on the leading edge.

  She measured the coffee, stuck an English muffin into the toaster and checked her watch. She’d have to skip her morning workout in the basement fitness center. With the added commute time, maybe they’d delay their usual early morning staff meeting, but she couldn’t take that chance.

  As she reached for a coffee mug, she made a mental note to remind her boss about his appearance on CNN at noon to discuss the Metro train arrest and the shopping center situation. She knew she’d have to write his talking points, but wondered what other potential disaster would have to be added at the last minute.

  CHAPTER TWO

  OKLAHOMA–MONDAY EARLY MORNING

  “Honey, wake up! Something’s wrong.”

  Her husband rolled over and made a muffled groan.

  “Really. Wake up. It’s freezing in here. Furnace must have gone out or something.”

  “Uh huh,” he mumbled and burrowed down inside the covers.

  “Please, honey. I mean it.” She reached over and tried to turn on the bedside lamp. “Oh great. Just great. The power’s out.”

  The windows in the old farm house rattled as a strong gust of wind pushed sheets of ice and snow against the north wall. “It’s gotta be forty degrees in here. We have to get the furnace going or something.” She yanked open the drawer in the table and fumbled until she felt the flashlight. She flicked it on and shoved the man until he finally opened his eyes.

  “What the … what do ya mean it’s forty degrees?”

  She pulled the heavy quilt to one side, and he snatched it back. “See what I mean?” she asked. “The furnace. Do something.”

  He slowly turned the covers back and ambled to the bathroom where his terry cloth robe was hanging on the door. “Okay. Okay. I’ll check it out.”

  “Do you want me to go with you?”

  “Nah. Stay warm. Gimme the flashlight. With this wind, it’s probably just the pilot light. I figure we should get a new heater one of these days.”

  “You know we can’t swing that now, not with the bills and all.”

  “I know,” he sighed. “Just wish I didn’t have to keep fixing the damn thing all the time.”

  The stairs creaked as he made his way down to the basement and headed to the back. He peered at the furnace and checked the pilot light. Sure enough. Out again. He held the flashlight with his teeth and tried to light the gas, but it wouldn’t come on. He turned the valve on and off and tried again. Nothing. He grabbed the flashlight and muttered, “Damnation. Gas ain’t getting’ through. Must be a clog or somethin’ in the line. Better check the fireplace.”

  He climbed the stairs, went into the living room and knelt down in front of the weathered brick hearth. He tried the switch that turned on the gas logs. Nothing. He shivered and pulled the belt on his robe tighter. “Never shoulda put in the damn gas logs,” he whispered to himself, “regular ones burned fine. But no, she says they’re too messy to clean up, so we get the gas logs. Fine mess we’re in now.”

  “What’s happening down there?” she called over the banister. There’s still no heat coming on.

  “I know, damn it. There’s no gas gettin’ into the house. No furnace, no fireplace. Nothin’ works. Call your sister and see if we can come stay in town till we can get someone to fix the line.”

  “I can’t call her now. It’s five-thirty in the morning.”

  He got to his feet and started up the stairs to the bedroom. “So we wait an hour. Get back in bed. There’s nothing we can do now but wait.”

  Several miles to the south, an underground bunker, covered by a golf course, had been built in the sixties with an elevator taking workers down to a ten thousand square foot facility. It currently is equipped with living quarters, a kitchen, bathrooms, and storage areas, all to
support a massive control room where employees of GeoGlobal Oil & Gas monitor their maze of pipe lines.

  The supervisor pointed to a large board covering an entire wall featuring a map with red, yellow and green flashing lights that indicate the status of the lines stretching over a multi-state area. Five computer screens have the capability of zooming in on a section of pipeline, checking diagnostics and analyzing their operation.

  “Pressure drop on number twelve,” he shouted. “What the hell!”

  His assistant rushed over and stared at the map. “What the devil is that?”

  “Gotta shut her down,” he called as he hit a series of computer keys.

  “Must be a break of some kind. Helluva storm out there, you know.”

  “Storms don’t knock out our lines. Where the hell were you during Katrina, huh?”

  “Yeah, I know, but … I just wondered …”

  “Stop wondering and start acting,” he ordered.

  Suddenly several phone lines began ringing at once. The supervisor grabbed the one closest to his console. “Control room here.”

  “Hey Joe, that you? This is Sheriff Chapoton. Big fire west of town. My deputy just called it in, and now our phones won’t stop. He says it looks like some gas line exploded. That’s gotta be one of yours.”

  “Exploded? How the hell could that happen?”

  “You’re the gas guy. You tell me. I’ve got the fire chief on his way out there with his boys.”

  “We saw a pressure drop, so we closed down that line. Fire should burn off pretty quick.”

  “Fine. But what’s going on out there?”

  “Right now I can’t say. But we’ll get our crews over there pronto to check it out. We’re on it.”

  The head nurse on the third floor of the small country hospital raced down the hall. “Blankets. We need more blankets,” she called out, almost colliding with a doctor coming out of the neo-natal unit.

  “It’s way too cold in there” he exclaimed as he ran out the door.