登陆注册
10805300000002

第2章 Prologue

Suspected Spies in Chains

Portland, Oregon, January 29, 2009

I'm sitting in Satan's Pew, the name I've conferred upon the torturously narrow courtroom benches in the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse. As I squirm in my seat, reporter's notebook dandling on my lap, I notice a curiously high number of deputy U.S. marshals in the gallery, mostly buff guys with steely gazes and Glocks under their sports coats. Behind me, wearing blazers and striped clip-on ties, stands a knot of court security officers. Next to them, FBI agents squeeze together on a bench against the back wall. I haven't witnessed court security this tight since the feds rolled up Theodore Kaczynski, the Unabomber, and hauled him before a judge in Helena, Montana. A courthouse contact has already tipped me that today I'll witness something groundbreaking here in the cheap seats of American justice.

Keys jangle behind a paneled wall to my right, where I can hear the clank of a metal door. Deputy marshals are queuing today's prisoners, who will appear one by one to face their charges before a magistrate judge. The weekday parade of pathos, known to courthouse denizens as Mag Court, normally features a tedious cast of freshly arrested miscreants, some scratching from withdrawal. Now and again the show comes alive with stone killers, cops gone bad, diamond thieves, outlaw bikers, cockfighting impresarios, ecoterrorists, grave robbers, or the corner-cutting captains of industry.

On this foggy Thursday afternoon, I've come to write about two suspects-an international spy, and the son who joined him in the family business of espionage.

My editors at The Oregonian, the daily newspaper several blocks away, are holding space on the front page for my father-son spy story. But the duo-whose names I'd never heard until this morning-will be arraigned separately, consigning me to a hellish deadline. I look at my watch and silently curse the docket gods. A hapless bunch of schnooks are scheduled ahead of my spy suspects, and the judge will take her good old time reading them their rights.

First up today is an accused scam artist from California who sold central home vacuum cleaning units across North America; apparently he was brilliant at sales and collecting money, but not at delivering the goods. Now comes another genius, a career bank robber arrested yesterday just twenty-one minutes after knocking off a Bank of America for a lousy $700; he's already calculating how much time he'll serve in prison. Up next is a guy who drank himself stupid out on the Umatilla Indian Reservation and threw some playful karate kicks at a buddy, who hurled him to the ground, whereupon Junior Jackie Chan blew a gasket, picked up two knives, and stabbed his pal nearly to death. Then come two men accused of illegally harboring a luckless El Salvadoran woman; she turned up, like so many, on the wrong side of the U.S. border.

Today's guest of honor is Harold James "Jim" Nicholson, who in 1997 became the highest-ranking Central Intelligence Agency officer ever convicted of espionage. Nicholson, serving time at the federal prison fifty miles from where I sit, sold the identities of hundreds of CIA trainees to Russian spies. Now he's accused of betraying his country again-this time from behind bars. The Rolex-wearing spy nicknamed Batman, having recruited countless foreign assets to betray their own countries for the CIA, is suspected of sending the Russians his youngest son, twenty-four-year-old Nathaniel James Nicholson, as his emissary. Nathan, a partially disabled Army veteran, took basic lessons in spycraft from the old man, then smuggled his dad's secret messages out of the prison visiting room to Russian spies on three continents. For the trophy-conscious FBI, securing another conviction against Jim Nicholson would be a major prize.

A heavy door swings open, and here he is.

Jim wears a khaki prison uniform and a faded T-shirt the color of broiled salmon. His pale blue eyes sweep the room with an expression that shifts abruptly, as if he'd expected something grander than this feckless rabble of court staffers, lawyers, and a few scribbling journalists. Jim moves for the defense table with the short-step shuffle of a man who knows the sting of a jaunty stride in ankle chains. He eases into a high-back chair. Jim sports a soul patch and mustache, gray hair sweeping over the tops of his ears. I take a mental note. This guy would look right at home playing tenor sax in a jazz quartet.

I've gazed at hundreds and hundreds of suspected felons in courtrooms across the country, but Jim Nicholson carries himself differently. He's not eye-fucking the prosecutors or sneaking glances into the gallery for a friendly face. There's no swagger, no tapping foot, no nervous smile that might offer some kind of tell. The man doesn't even appear to be breathing. He wears an expression of captive resignation, like a golfer on a tee box watching the foursome in front of him swat cattails in search of a lost ball.

Then I see something. The chin. It tilts upward ever so slightly and guides his gaze, regally, a few inches above the eyes of everyone else on the floor of the courtroom. It's a look that tells me everything I need to understand: This guy just knows he's the smartest man in the building.

At this moment, I have no clue that I will spend the next five years contemplating the life and crimes of Jim Nicholson, piecing together his tangled human narrative, the wreckage he left of his family and the CIA, and his unique role in the ongoing hostilities between Washington and Moscow. And I cannot possibly know that I will learn this story with the help of Nathan, his family and friends, prison inmates, former spies and counterintelligence agents, national security lawyers, public policy makers, hundreds of pages of investigative files, wiretaps, court records, prison and military papers, Jim's correspondence, excerpts from his personal journal, and a colorful band of investigators with the FBI and CIA who twice brought him to justice.

Already my questions are many: How on earth could a man devote decades of distinguished service to his country only to betray her? Why would he reach out to Russia again? Why would Moscow still care about its former mole nearly two decades after the Cold War? What could Russian spies hope to gain by making contact with Jim a dozen years after his treachery was unmasked? And why would he send his youngest son into the breach, risking his freedom? What kind of a dad does that?

When I hustle out of the courtroom to make my early evening deadline, I run into David Ian Miller, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Portland Field Office. Dave, who has always been a straight shooter, tells me that Jim Nicholson was a skilled and worthy adversary.

"At the end of the day," he says, "this will prove to be a story of family, trust, and betrayal."

And, as it happens, so much more.

同类推荐
  • The Everafter War (Sisters Grimm #7)

    The Everafter War (Sisters Grimm #7)

    Picking up after the dramatic cliffhanger that ended Book Six, Sabrina and Daphne's prayers are finally answered when their parents awake from their sleeping spell. But their happy reunion is short-lived, as they are caught in the middle of a war between the Scarlet Hand and Prince Charming's Everafter army. As the family works to help the prince's ragtag group of rebels and protect their friends, Sabrina comes face-to-face with the family's deadliest enemy—the mysterious Master—who reveals a secret so shocking it will rock the entire family to its core.
  • The Moon and Sixpence 月亮与六便士(III)(英文版)

    The Moon and Sixpence 月亮与六便士(III)(英文版)

    Based on the life of Paul Gauguin, The Moon and Sixpence is W. Somerset Maugham's ode to the powerful forces behind creative pgsk.com Strickland is a staid banker, a man of wealth and privilege. He is also a man possessed of an unquenchable desire to create art. As Strickland pursues his artistic vision, he leaves London for Paris and Tahiti, and in his quest makes sacrifices that leaves the lives of those closest to him in tatters. Through Maugham's sympathetic eye Strickland's tortured and cruel soul becomes a symbol of the blessing and the curse of transcendent artistic genius, and the cost in humans lives it sometimes demands.
  • Anxious Hearts
  • Door into the Dark

    Door into the Dark

    Originally published in 1969, Seamus Heaney's Door into the Dark continues a furrow so startlingly opened in his first collection, Death of a Naturalist (1966). With the sensuosness and physicality of language that would become the hallmark of his early writing, these poems graphically depict the author's rural upbringing, from the local forge to the banks of Lough Neagh, concluding in the preserving waters of the bogland and a look ahead to his next book, Wintering Out (1972).
  • The Fortune of the Rougons(II) 卢贡家的发迹(英文版)
热门推荐
  • 太上灵宝玉匮明真斋忏方仪

    太上灵宝玉匮明真斋忏方仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 多利亚的战纪

    多利亚的战纪

    年轻的冒险者杜瓦,背负着仇恨与责任踏上征途,却发现陷入惊天阴谋,为了挽救苍生,他做出了一个不得已的决定。。
  • 史玉柱最有价值的商场博弈

    史玉柱最有价值的商场博弈

    对于巨人的失败,史玉柱总结的教训是:“以前很少想输赢,经历了一次挫折,现在会知道做任何事不能太浪漫,成功、不成不败和失败三种情况都要想到。成功了,接下来要做什么;失败了,我应该用什么方法去应对。比如巨人那一次,我应该预计到有没有钱去填窟窿。现在我做一件事,三种情况都会想到。这是摔一跤摔出来的。史玉柱的商场博弈,是智慧的博弈,是勇气的博弈,更是精神的博弈。史玉柱的历程告诉我们,只要精神在,是什么都无法把我们打倒的。史玉柱似乎没有失败过,因为他的精神没有被击倒过。史玉柱是永远的巨人。
  • 愤怒的石头

    愤怒的石头

    《愤怒的石头》的作者非常出挑。他的作品,技巧圆熟,虚实相生,留白很大。文字也流畅通达,是完成度很高的小小说作品。类似《刀马旦》这样的小小说,描摹的是人世间的男女情爱。说一个暗恋者自认为苦心和痴心都足够,人又刚直,追求同事。被请到同事家中,才发现自己所爱的人,已经将身心和忠诚奉献给了卧床在家的病人。故事非常动人周正,发乎情,止乎礼。类似这样的故事,在作者笔下还有很多,如《江南好》《娘在烙一张饼》,等等,都歌颂了至纯至净的爱情。类似《领养一条狗》《我讨厌我身上的汗味》等,则临摹的是当下的世情。可以想见,作者应该是有一颗诗心的小小说作家,他时而反讽,时而愤怒,时而温情脉脉,但是这一切的态度,他都不肯简单地表态,他让他的作品表态。这是很厉害的创作手段,他的感受力到了,锐度够了,文章自然就圆熟了。
  • 特许连锁经营运作操典

    特许连锁经营运作操典

    《特许连锁经营运作操典》就特许连锁经营概述、特许连锁经营项目开发、特许连锁经营的购买、受许人的评价与招募、特许经营合约的拟订与订立、特许经营双方关系的处理、特许连锁经营的融资、特许连锁经营的法律问题、特许连锁总部的运作、特许连锁分店的运作等方面。作了详细介绍,对特许连锁经营进行了全面的阐述,言简意赅。
  • 黑灵卫

    黑灵卫

    起死回生,战魂附体,灵界之旅,斩魂兽,入十八层地狱。
  • 爱你的路我走了好长

    爱你的路我走了好长

    去年的秋天,当第一片落叶飘零,我走入了你的世界,从此沉醉在你温柔多情的怀抱。每一次灵感的突袭,每一次失落的宣泄,每一次意气的风发,使我已然悄悄的融汇到了你灵魂的深处,虽然你总是默默无言,但我知道,和你接触的刹那,我们都已在心中建立了永恒的友谊,辗转了多个日夜的相知相遇,无须用言语来表白什么,因为那无边的大网早已将你和我紧紧的套牢,我只需乘一叶轻舟,便可在你宽广的海域中自由的潜航,你只需荡一粼碧波,便可送我一去千里,即使在旅程中漂染了岁月的霜痕,我依旧会执手那片挚情,和你相约,共同去欣赏云开雾散时天边的那一轮晨阳。
  • 管窥《道德经》

    管窥《道德经》

    本书旨在向朋友们推荐《道德经》这部非常经典的著作。希望读者们读了它之后能够有所解,有所思,有所悟,有所得,发现和顿悟生活中的“道”,进而循“道”而行,成为“修善”,“有德”的人。
  • 倾微念

    倾微念

    她在佛前,苦苦求了很多年,用尽一生却也换不回曾经。他在她身后,静静地守护着她,分享着她的喜怒哀乐,陪着她辜负虔诚。他以为,自己受的难可以抵过一切,殊不知,那不过是一个开始。诡谲阴谋,生离死别。他最后,败给了世故。终究不能无邪。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。