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“Well, my guess is that the woman is the ambassador who took all the heat for telling Hussein it was okay to ransack Kuwait.”

“Right. Who’s the guy?”

“The tape quality is too poor to determine anything either way, even if you knew the guy,” she said.

“Do you remember what she said, that tape they kept playing out of Baghdad?” Matt asked.

“Something like, ‘We won’t take issue with Arab disputes.’ That’s not exactly it, but it wasn’t too far from what we just heard,” she said.

“She said, exactly, ‘We have no opinion on your Arab-Arab conflicts, such as your dispute with Kuwait. The secretary of state has directed me to emphasize the instruction, first given to Iraq in the 1960s, that the Kuwait issue is not associated with America.’”

Peyton looked at Matt and nodded, impressed.

Matt picked up the tape recorder, looked at her, and said, “Memorized it. If you really take a look at it, we gave them the green light, almost baited them into attacking Kuwait.”

“Well, we’ve got the conversation that started it on tape. Clearly it’s not the secretary of state because he references ‘the secretary.’ But it’s most likely someone high up because she’s not questioning him too much. She’s an ambassador, and she’s dealing with him instead of going to the main man,” Peyton pointed out.

“Right. So what does this tell us? Why would they be discussing this particular tape? Zachary specifically said, ‘Get the colonel’ as he was being pulled away. And I overheard the talk of the backpack and the tape. Could the colonel and the tape be connected?”

“Did the tape sound at all like Rampert?”

“Rampert was a lieutenant colonel during the Gulf War, but the ambassador wouldn’t have been talking to him.” Matt didn’t sound convinced of his own comment.

“Well, maybe,” she said, “but these special ops guys do some wild stuff. How do we know it wasn’t the political adviser for Schwarzkopf on the phone or someone like that?”

“Good point,” he said.

“And Zachary did say, ‘Find the colonel.”

“Right. But the tape really only tells us what we already knew,” Matt said, thinking out loud.

“Unless what we know isn’t the truth. You never heard the secretary of state take any grief for any of this. May Sandford, the ambassador to Iraq, was hung out to dry, perhaps even set up. Maybe he never gave those instructions.”

Peyton had this way, he was learning, of cutting to the chase, getting right to the point. He liked that about her. Not only was she exceptionally attractive, she was bright, had a quick mind, and might even have a sense of humor hidden in there somewhere.

“But why would someone tell the ambassador to tell Hussein it was okay to take Kuwait?” he asked.

“Why did Admiral Kimmel not act when he heard the Japanese were going to attack Pearl Harbor?”

“I get your point, but Kimmel was incompetent. This seems more deliberate. Like someone wanted Hussein to attack,” Matt said.

“Why would someone want Hussein to take Kuwait?”

“Someone looking for a war.”

Matt’s words hung in the air for a moment, circling like a hawk. Their analysis seemed right to him. Could Zachary have tumbled upon a conspiracy?

“So let’s assume that someone told the ambassador to say these things to Hussein for the purpose of starting the war,” Matt said.

“That sounds about right,” she said.

“The next level of detail is, why would someone want to start a war?”

“Well, we’ve been focusing on Rampert. There are theories about the military trying to start wars to prove their viability, test new weapons, show their stuff — you know, that kind of thing,” Peyton said.

“My experience has been that the military, the actual men and women in uniform and on the ground, are the least likely to be looking for a war. They’ve seen it up close and personal. That wouldn’t make sense.”

“Maybe Rampert, if it is Rampert, was told by someone to say these things.”

Matt stood and paced toward the kitchen stove and then turned around. “But again, why would someone want to start the Persian Gulf War? Who benefits from that?”

“Oil companies, for one,” Peyton said.

“The president and secretary of state at the time both had big oil connections. That’s a possibility, but would seem too obvious. The president then was a better man than that. I don’t think he’d send young Americans to their deaths so that his buds in the oil business could make a buck or two. Doesn’t flush.”

“Maybe it wasn’t that high up. Maybe someone knew that the president would react if Iraq attacked Kuwait. So they kept the intel about Iraqi maneuvering below the noise level of the National Security Agency.”

“That’s certainly a possibility,” Matt said. “But again, why? Who?” Matt stared at the spine of mountains then moved his line of sight toward the South River that framed the north side of the property. Its banks were full from the spring thaw, which always brought new growth. In the last year he had believed he lost a brother and a mother, both supposedly buried in the soil upon which he stood. He had also lost Meredith’s love as she found herself more suited for the ultra-powerful circles in which she now operated. Just like Kari Jackson, Matt thought to himself, thinking of his college girlfriend who had moved to the Manhattan financial district. But really, who could ever love a man whose goal in life was to kill every son of a bitch that wanted to do harm to his country. There was that edge… and also the mere logistical fact that he was usually away conducting missions.

“Who?” Matt said again. His mind drifted to Rampert, an unlikely possibility, in his view. And then he latched onto something, like a gear catching.

Lantini. Frank Lantini had been involved in detainee interrogations in the first Gulf War when he was an Air Force officer prior to working his way into the CIA.

“Ronnie Wood,” Matt said more to himself than to Peyton. “It has got to be Ronnie Wood. Lantini.”

Peyton ignored the comment, stood and walked over to him. “Can I do something?”

“It’s Frank Lantini, aka Ronnie Wood, the former CIA director. I can see it now. He met Ballantine and began conspiring with him. For what, I don’t know. He started that war in the Philippines, and he’s got something to do with this one. The bastard is one of these academics with a vision. Smart by half.”

“Let’s forget about these Rolling Stones,” Peyton said. She lightly clasped his jacket lapel with thin, well-manicured fingers. “Can we? That’s wrapped up.”

She wrapped her arms around his neck and hugged him. Matt hesitated a moment, then slid his arms around her waist. She felt good, and he liked the way she smelled, clean and light. He noticed just a whiff of perfume as he nuzzled his head into her hair.

“What brought this on?” Matt took a step back.

“I think we bonded in Vermont.” She smiled. “C’mon.”

Matt followed her into the house and up the stairs. After a quick trip to the restroom, he peeked in Zachary’s old room. The bookcases were lined with football and baseball trophies, not unlike Matt’s room. Zachary had hung some of his military memorabilia on the wall when he had left the service and moved back home during the peacekeeping years of the nineties. After 9/11, of course, Zach had eagerly accepted returning to active duty at a lower rank than the rest of his West Point classmates. And now, Matt had been led to believe that he had paid the ultimate sacrifice.

Fond memories started to snake their way back into Matt’s mind. Strangely, when he had no opportunity to save his brother he felt fully responsible, yet when he had his brother in his arms and was knocked back by a firefight, he felt as though he had done well. Not good enough, but he was confident that he would retake Zachary. Something inside him told him that Ballantine wanted the duel with him, not Zachary. Matt figured that Ballantine might now see Zachary as the bait and would therefore try to keep him alive, so long as he didn’t become a liability.