Acts of Nature

FIFTEEN

Harmon was in his bedroom, going through the closet, his closet, the one he didn’t share with his wife, the one in fact that he forbade her to use. He knew she probably had gone through it in years past, just looking. You don’t keep secrets from your wife for thirty years. She would have looked at his gun collection, the electronics that the company had him keep there for emergency use, maybe even the multiple passports he tucked away in a drawer. But if she had questions about those things, she didn’t bring them up. She knew that he had been in the military and left unsaid any doubts she had now of the legality of his work. It was yet another reason he was always trying to find leverage against the men who employed him. He’d seen colleagues killed and wives left behind without a clue or a safety net. He knew the company would disavow any knowledge of him and see no obligation to take care of his family if something befell him. Harmon was not the kind of man to say, “That just comes with the business.” If that were the case, he wouldn’t still be in this dangerous business, no matter how well it paid. If he went down, his instructions for his wife and all the money he had hidden over the years and the evidence against the oil company would be at her disposal. He took care of his own.
“Arlene,” he called out to his wife, who was in the kitchen and still pissed at the news that the boss had called. “Where’s that other jacket I had?”
He checked off his travel list in his head as he touched each item and stuffed it into his bag: the satellite phone, fully charged. The helicopter pilot would have the same model and they would be able to stay in touch regardless of the lack of power or cell towers in the area. His Nikon digital camera, which he’d been instructed to carry in and take detailed photos of any damage and the general disposition of the property, including any lack of foliage coverage, from the air. A couple of two-liter bottles of water because even if this was an easy hour-long drop-in, document, and get back out, he knew the danger of the humidity and the heat of the Everglades from experience. A radio frequency transmitter, routinely used to electronically unlock abandoned or sealed oil rigs and restart their power systems. His Colt revolver with the snub nose, the last one in his collection and an item he never went to work without.
“I’ve no idea. I thought you wore one on that last trip you guys took,” his wife answered, her voice growing as she approached down the hall.
“I lost that one,” Harmon said, thinking about the bullet hole in the fabric. He continued sorting through clothes hanging on a rod in the back of the closet.
“Well, I thought you said this was going to be a quick mission. You can hardly be going somewhere cold if it’s going to be quick,” his wife said, her head looking around the corner of the bedroom door but not entering when his closet was open. Yeah, he thought, she’s been in here.
“Doesn’t matter if it’s cold, honey,” he said. “You know when I’m on a job I like to have pockets to put things in.” His wife walked away.
They had done this dance a hundred times. Vietnam, Granada, Nicaragua, Kosovo. When he’d retired and gone private he watched her breathe a sigh of relief but still felt her eye on him as he began to spend more time in his library and running the streets in an old pair of combat boots and generally driving himself and her crazy from inaction. When he started going on week-long “security” trips for the company, missing the kids’ games or some special ceremony, he knew she was unhappy with the shift once again in his priorities. He was not a domestic man. She knew that. “For you and the kids” was always his response when she gained the guts to outright ask why he did what he did. It pays very well, Arlene. I’m a pro. I’m not going to do something stupid and leave you guys hanging, you know that.
Harmon did not say those words just to mollify. He was a confident man, knew his abilities, even with age. Once set on course he did not believe he could fail. That was his life’s playing card, the source of respect from others, the mind-set that had kept him alive through a dozen missions. He did what he did because his soul needed it. But he was not so dumb as to not provide, just in case. He’d left instructions for his wife, just in case. He covered his ass.
“Here’s your other jacket,” Arlene said, returning to the door with the short spring coat with the big seamed pockets that gave him easy access and room to maneuver whatever was in them.
“Thanks, honey,” he said.
“Bring that one back with you. OK?”
“Yeah, sure. You can bet on it.”



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