"And you're not worried about the Chairman? Isn't he going to naturally side with the brass hats?"
"No," Donovan said.
"Despite what you might have heard, Admiral Leahy and I agree far more often than we disagree. And besides, I'm sure he has drawn the correct inference from the fact that not only was he not given the right to pick the director of the OSS, he wasn't even asked for a suggestion.
Canidy chuckled.
"I get the point."
"That's about as much of a blanket authority as I think anyone could get under the existing bureaucracy," Donovan said.
"It's more, frankly, than I thought I was going to get."
"Does it come with money, too?"
"Whenever possible, we're going to draw our funds from the non accountable funds allocated to the Joint Chiefs. If it's not there, we can get what we need from the President's discretionary funds. That airplane of yours, for example, will be charged against the Joint Chiefs. The money we're spending on the African flight operation is coming from the President."
" Interesting. "Getting back to Baker," Donovan said.
"We're about to start recruiting people on a large scale. Baker is the man to handle that, I think, and also to run the school. Have you heard about that?"
"Back when he was still talking to me, Baker threatened to send me to it," Canidy said.
"But all I know is that there is a school."
"One now, more later. We're going to take over the Congressional Country Club in Maryland, and we're taking over a country place, the estate of a duke, in England. The place we have right now is an estate made available to us in Virginia, not far from Washington," Donovan said.
"I think we can give you and Whittaker-especially Whittaker-credit for on-the-job training and excuse you from going through it; but from now on, just about everybody we recruit will go through formal training."
"Espionage 101?" Canidy said. "Just about," Donovan said.
"Some of the people we're going to recruit will come from the military, but many others will come directly from civilian life. They'll need to acquire some basic skills-firearms, for example-and a little belly flattening and muscle toning. Sort of our version of basic training."
41 understand," Canidy said. "Baker wants Jimmy Whittaker
as an instructor, and I think for once he will be a round peg in a round hole. And young Martin, too."
"You mean to go through the school, don't you? Not as an instructor?
"Martin was commissioned when he finished basic training," Donovan said.
"From then on, he's been at either Fort Bragg or Fort Benning working with the people developing parachute operations. He's actually something of an expert. He's made sixty or seventy jumps, many at night, and he's spent a lot of time learning how to drop cargo by parachute."
"I thought he was involved with us because he knew Fulmar-and because of his father," Canidy said. "That, too," Donovan said.
"If you need him to deal with Fulmar, he'll be available. Or just go get him. There's an airfield on the estate." He dipped into his briefcase again and came up with an Esso road map. On it was marked a surprisingly large area about thirty miles from the District of Columbia.
"The field was a private strip," Donovan said.
"And is not, I understand, on FAA aerial charts. Can you find it from that?"
"I can find it, but will it take the Beech?"
"I'm sure it will," Donovan said.
"I was once picked up there in a DC-3."
"I can find it," Canidy said, making a careful mental note of where the estate was in relation to Washington. "Can you get everybody in the Beech?"