Название: The Day John Fitzgerald Kennedy Past
Автор: Welby Thomas Cox, Jr.
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Зарубежная классика
isbn: 9781925880373
isbn:
Deep within the shadow of this dark conspiracy, by government operatives rested the flaming question and the chilling answer ostensibly sought by the Warren Commission, "Why was it done and who was responsible?"
Hamilton had the answer to both questions, even-though every sophisticated spy methodology had been put in place to cover the true identities of the layers of the principles.
Never again in his long life, in this world or the next, would he know the inner power, rising to a clarion call, this secret force of the soul, waiting in the wings to bring down the curtain. Ham Hamilton was to be the Narrator, the Captain of the ship and only upon his command would the ship of state… sail on.
Chapter II
INSIDE LANGLEY
Darian Welch is in a room surrounded by books, the room of documents, the room of theories and dreams. He is in the fourth of five extended contract periods, each lasting for five years. He knows his way around and he often wonders if he is becoming moribund. Age is creeping in, his memory is failing him and there is an issue with his right hand, the hand that is so creative...is it carpal tunnel or something more serious. It is, he believes, an insidious function of his job.
A job that will not permit him to file for disability, even though, he can no longer concentrate on the research and must return often to plowed ground. He wonders over these tended fields that give reason to speculation and compromise on solutions.
Naps become essential... on a sofa, in a chair, even standing at a book shelf. This "safe house" where he has grown old, only the books, only the walls know that his career is over.
But Welch knows where most everything is in the system; any file on any of the shelves is within his reach. The place is a tornado to the uninformed, cassette tapes, yellow pads are to be found on every shelf. The books for research cover all but one wall, all the tables and even the floor is a solid mass of research. There are confidential documents in file cabinets which go back to the beginning of time for the agency. Fire is a major concern. There is no formal system except for the design of the curator; Merwin Hamilton wakes with a jolt, wondering if he is at home...and if not where is he?
He is terrified now by the enormity of the job...this mill of dynamic aggression has him by the throat and he is chocking in despair. He lies in the research...and the casualty of all of the lives that have been impacted by it.
Welch knows the importance of the curator, his man Merwin Hamilton, whom he calls Bob Crachet...fills his orders. Hamilton, though he is just thirty something has been with the company straight out of college, for about eight years and a lot goes down in that time.
Welch has found that this is a unique man who never forgets and lives for the agency. He is not only dependable but is reconciled over his dedication to returning the precise research request... a man like this makes you look good and Welch knew it.
It wasn't just the proper documents... nor even an obtuse remark or opinion by a marked suspect. The Curator brings him the confidential research that no one outside the company at Langley...research that is so sensitive, including the results of internal investigations and files from the Agencies own Office of Security.
Welch lays back in his Italian leather recliner...the senior analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency reflecting on his extended contract which requires him to write the secret history of the assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy on November 22, 1963.
In just six point nine seconds of the heat and light from three shots from an ancient weapon (call a meeting to analyze the blur) or devote Agency lives to understanding the moment, separating the elements of each crowded second and in the sequence the frame by frame photo of the lives of those in Dilley Plaza on that fateful day.
The team will build theories that gleam like stainless steel from the overpass on Elm, intriguing systems of assumptions. They will follow the bullet trajectories backwards to the lives that occupy the shadows, actual people who moan in their dreams. Elm Street, a woman is crying and wondering why she is sitting on the grass with brains and blood-spray on her new blouse. Tenth Street, a witness leaves her shoes on the hood of a bleeding police officer's car. Strangeness, Welch believes, that is solemn cry of the day.
There is much here that is divine, an aberration in the midst of reality...let us get a hold on this moment in history...Welch knows that his Merwin will make him look good.
He enters a date on his computer, one the agency has provided for the sake of convenience and security and the ease of tracking. The names appear at once with all pertinent detail.
The skies are endless, and the sun provides shade along the street of stately homes caressed by giant oaks. Welch knows that his bonus provided by the company’s primary benefactor, known only by his code name "Skipper" will serve him well in early retirement.
Chapter III
FOUR CAR GARAGE
This one has a pool and Mother-In-Law suite, where a man named Michael Flynt sat pondering, Mick as he was called, lost to the morning noises descending upon him, a stir of the all familiar...the quilt work of every happy home. The morning paper, with local news folded by newsboys who wrapped the paper with a rubber band and pitched it on the porch.
Mick stirred the coffee and pursed his lips to blow across the top of his china cup, sending the steam toward his Golden Retriever (Finn) who sat on his haunches eager for some command (go capture a platoon, Finn). Mick stirred again, and the large pet wagged his big tail and gazed lovingly at his master, a kind man who loved dogs and little people, and from all appearances he was gentle and tentative...but looks are deceiving.
Today Mick has secrets on his mind and he was wondering why people were consumed by secrets...and what do they mean?
He did not notice as his wife petted Finn and slipped him a doggie biscuit, Mick had something on his mind...so did his wife. Mick did not notice that she had not dressed for breakfast he had to get to his office; the secret he pondered was still there at lunch.
When Mick came home he sat alone outside in his garden continuing to think of the secret. He believed it was the law of nature for men with secrets to be drawn to each other, not because they have a need to gossip, but because they need company of others with secrets... the fellow afflicted. A respite from the other life...and its contrast in living among the ordinary people who do not keep secrets as a profession or duty or a business fixed to one's existence.
Mick knew about the need to draw together, "the code of the west” to seek mutual solace over the guilt and the depression. That is why he liked it here in the garden, he had time to think...time to become an old man but he did not have time to notice the sounds coming from the master bedroom.
It was not unusual for men in the intelligence service to retire early. A pension plan had been approved by some committee with a statement that this appropriation was necessary because of the dangerous lives led by these dedicated and fearless government employees and the transient nature of the assignments.
But Mick's retirement wasn't exactly voluntary; there was that business in Coral Gables, causing visits to the polygraph machine. And from three СКАЧАТЬ