The gated community was named Arapahoe Farms, about twenty minutes outside of the capital. The homes were modern colonials, nice, midsized. It was after ten o’clock. Most of the houses were dark. Minivans and Beemers were parked in front of their garages.
Hauck stopped at 3377 Albion Circle.
This one was not dark. Hauck had the feeling they were expecting him.
He parked the car, walked up the flagstone landing, and rang the bell.
“Just a minute!” He heard footsteps. An attractive middle-aged woman in a robe cracked open the door. Looked as if she was getting ready for bed. “Yes?”
“I’m sorry to bother you,” Hauck said. “I’m looking for Ira Wachman…”
“Ira…?” She turned back into the house. “He’s…”
A short, stout man with receding, wiry gray hair in a cardigan sweater came to the door. “I’ll take it, Alice…”
He looked at Hauck, unsurprised. “I’m Ira Wachman, Lieutenant.”
He peered outside, past Hauck, for the sight of other police cars and flashing lights. There were none, and he gave Hauck a sagacious smile. Wachman’s eyes seemed tired and heavy, but there was something in them, wisdom, experience. He opened the door. “Why don’t you come in, Lieutenant.”
Hauck stepped into the white-tiled foyer.
“Alice, why don’t you go on up to bed. I’ll be up in a while. Lieutenant, I’m sure we’ll be more comfortable in here.”
He led Hauck through the formal living room with skylights and an atrium into a paneled, book-filled den. The shelves were painted red, the furniture English, maybe antique. It had a built-in TV and some hunting paintings and lots of photographs and mementos out on the shelves. “You take scotch, Lieutenant?”
“No.”
“Hope you don’t mind if I do.” Wachman opened a cabinet and poured himself a glass from the bar, while Hauck’s eyes found the silver-framed photos on the polished wood desk. Wachman with many familiar faces. Senator Casey. The governor. The former secretary of defense, who a year ago had been forced to resign.
A portrait of his wife and two grown boys.
“One of my sons graduated from Georgetown, Lieutenant. He’s in the Marines now—on assignment. You know where. The other is a senior at Penn, wants to go to Wall Street…”
Wachman motioned for Hauck to take a seat on the tufted leather couch and pulled up an ottoman across from him. He raised his glass. “Cheers.”
“I came here to arrest you, Mr. Wachman,” Hauck said. “For your involvement in the murders of David Sanger and Keith Kramer.”
“And…”
“And…” Hauck shrugged. “I wish I could.”
“I used to wish for a lot of things, Lieutenant.” Wachman took a sip of scotch. “Politics has cured me of that.”
“I don’t have such reservations. Raines is dead. But somehow I suspect that’s something you already know.”
“I heard.” The government man nodded, making no attempt to conceal it.
“Word travels fast among friends.”
The government man smiled, looked Hauck in the eyes. “Are you miked, Lieutenant?”
Hauck said, “No.”
“I don’t think I’m making a mistake to take you as a man of your word. I won’t make any attempt to deceive you, Lieutenant. Too bad about Raines, but what happened to him was not, shall we say, inconvenient. Of course that all sounds a bit clichéd. The man had gotten himself in a lot of shaky shit. Nor will I make any attempt to hide my connection to your brother.”
“Warren talked. He gave you up. Sanger. Casey. Scayne. The generators to Iraq. Plan B… I think I know what it was about—and what I don’t know, I’ll figure out.”
“That so?” Wachman put down his glass. “I’ve known him for a long time, your brother. Warren’s always proved himself to be a friend. A willing one. Why shouldn’t he be? He’s built a nice life around it. Isn’t that what we all want? A nice life. Free and clear of worry? What is it you want, Lieutenant?”
“Just the truth.”
“That’s all? Even if it brings down the people closest to you? Even if it comes so close, you can feel it on your skin?”
“What else can you possibly give me, Mr. Wachman?”
Wachman leaned back against the desk. “Only one thing. I can give you back your brother.”
That took him by surprise, a blunt force against Hauck’s chest.
“I can make this all go away. His role. His part in it. Everyone’s part. I can shroud this thing in such a hole, ten reporters from the New York Times, all vying for fucking Pulitzers, couldn’t figure it out. Richard Scayne will be gone soon. Senator Casey will be making an announcement that this will be his last term. A year from now, those generators will be forgotten. Politics is politics, Lieutenant. It will just go on.”
“To me it’s just a little too late for all that now.”
Ira Wachman nodded resignedly, then shrugged. “I can also make your life a living hell, Lieutenant.” He said it so evenly and matter-of-factly it almost didn’t come across as a threat. “You say you know? You don’t know. It was ‘open for business’ over there. Everyone wanted a piece of the action. Everyone got it. Bechtel. Halliburton. Blackwater. KPMG. You think any of them did anything any differently? Some well-placed money changing hands. That was the ticket in, Lieutenant. The price.” Wachman chortled. “This sonovabitch in the Pentagon goes and blows his brains out…Why do we suddenly give a shit about a handful of generators?”
“It has nothing to do with generators,” Hauck said.
“It has everything to do with generators, Lieutenant! Everything. That fucking country was nothing more than blood and sand. We stuck the needle into its heart and then we had to find the way to resuscitate it. The government couldn’t handle it. It was too big for the fucking government! It had to be built back up by private hands. That’s what we do, Lieutenant. We, Americans. That’s the way history is built.”
Hauck didn’t answer, just let him go on.
“So what did they need there?” The veins on Wachman’s neck began to swell. “What did they goddamn need, before all the schools, the police academies, the air-conditioned shopping malls? Before the Starwoods and the McDonald’s? They needed to get the machinery back up again. The cement mixers turning. The lights back on. They needed hope! That’s what the people were begging for. Power. Generators. Hope. And what was so wrong about giving people a little hope, Lieutenant? Ultimately, when history is written, who gives a piece of lint however we got them there?”
“Hope? Is that what you think you bought with their lives? Sanger. Kramer. Freddy Munoz…Hope?”
“It doesn’t matter what we bought with their lives, Lieutenant. My job is to make sure a good man doesn’t go down in the dust for it. A man who devoted his career to this state. Who built roads, schools, businesses. Hired police, put people to work. Raised their lives. That’s what I care about, Lieutenant. You come after me on this—that’s all you’re going to get. We arranged a contract. They needed people who could get the job done, not rules. Not bidding processes, transparency…Halliburton got sixty billion, for God’s sakes! Richard Scayne got two. You come after us, Lieutenant, that’s all you’re going to get. A tale of how wars are run in the world today. You’re looking for scandals? It’s one of many. A pebble on a white sand beach.”
“So is it all worth it, Wachman? Sanger. Kramer. Pacello. Munoz. You think they had any idea what they were dying for?”
“Sometimes it is, Lieutenant.” Wachman clinked his ice against the glass. “Sometimes it just depends on what it is you’re trying to protect.”
Hauck stood up. “You seem to like clichés. Here’s another. Don’t leave town.”
“Not high on my list.” The government man smiled. “The senator’s got a transportation bill before the legislature this week…”
“And here’s one more. Anything happens to my brother—he trips while jogging, cuts himself shaving…Or happens to have an accident in his cell. You know it’ll be personal then, Wachman. You’ll wish I took you in…”
The government man smiled, sat against the credenza. “No worries, Lieutenant. Among your brother’s virtues—and there are a few—being an effective witness against a U.S. senator is not chief. I think I’ll take my chances there.”
“Finish your drink,” Hauck said. He headed toward the door. “I’ll show myself out.”
“Remember what I said, Lieutenant. About getting your brother back.”
Hauck stopped at the door and turned. “You’re wrong, you know. All this talk about how wars are run and people standing up. That’s just a lie. We both know what it was, don’t we? It was just greed. Greed and self-preservation. Not some noble idea, Mr. Wachman. Pretty much the basest motive known to man.”
“It’s been fun hashing things out with you, Lieutenant,” Wachman said, taking a last gulp from his glass. “I look forward to seeing you again. Maybe in court.”