Man in the Middle

Home > Other > Man in the Middle > Page 17
Man in the Middle Page 17

by Brian Haig


  “The newspapers said—”

  “I know what the media reported. He experienced some political squabble with Saddam and was forced to flee for his survival. Where do you think they obtained that story, Major?”

  “I see. Then what did Charabi forget to include?”

  “Charabi was a banker in those years. A midlevel account executive at the Iraqi national bank. A virtual nobody”—he smiled—“for Saddam, a nonentity. The man and his views were irrelevant.”

  “But Saddam later went through a lot of trouble to have him murdered. There had to be something.”

  “Over three million Iraqis went into exile during Saddam’s rule. Many of these people were politically opposed to Saddam. He would’ve run out of bullets if he tried to kill all of them.” He stared at Bian. “When he went to that much trouble, the motive was always personal.”

  “I see.”

  “But you still haven’t guessed, have you?” He gave us both one of those triumphant, I-know-something-you-don’t little grins and said, “Charabi was an embezzler. He moved about twenty million dollars from one of Saddam’s personal accounts to his own personal account in Switzerland. It had nothing to do with politics.” He added, “It was, for Saddam, a matter of personal honor, of principle.”

  Bian remarked, “That principle being that Saddam could loot billions from his own people, and they couldn’t steal it back.”

  Don laughed and awarded her a wink. “Hey, I like that.” He said, “Here’s another insight I think you’ll find fascinating. After the invasion, we found, inside Saddam’s palaces, dozens of copies of The Godfather videos.” He added, “It seems Saddam perceived himself as a godfather figure—that formed his self-image, and that inspired his style of leadership. Pathetic, isn’t it? Life imitating art.”

  This was interesting; also, it was irrelevant. Returning to the topic, I said, “So you told Charabi you weren’t interested. What happened next?”

  “You never say no in this business. I just let it hang when I left.” He stared at me a moment. “But Cliff Daniels, while still on the Iraq desk at DIA, also attended that meeting.”

  “I’ll bite. Why?”

  “There is, inevitably, something of a rivalry between our two agencies for good sources. As first among equals, we generally get first pick. Sometimes,” he added, smiling, “sources we don’t want end up in the arms of our friends across the river. Sloppy seconds.”

  On a hunch, I asked Don, “Did your shrink friend also assess Daniels?”

  He paused, then said, “In fact, he did.” It appeared to amuse him that I would pick up on this. He looked at Bian and said, “Pardon my French, it was in the nature of a sport fuck for him. You know how weird those guys are.”

  Don winked at Bian and with a sort of mocking smile turned back to me and, regarding that assessment, asked, “What do you think?”

  I thought Don needed ten pounds of saltpeter pumped up a catheter. But I recalled everything I knew about Daniels, his life background, Theresa’s description of their marriage and their life together, his e-mails to his ex, and those to Charabi. “A classic passive-aggressive personality. Right?”

  He seemed at first irritated by my guess, but eventually said, “Well, I suppose he’s not that difficult to figure out.” Up yours, Don. “In fact,” he continued, “Cliff was one of those people who stank of ambition and frustration. He kept trying to impress Charabi—dropping hints about his own importance, his own brilliance, his ability to make things happen.”

  He turned once again to Bian and asked, “What do you get when you put a passive-aggressive in the same room with a manipulative narcissist?”

  Bian replied, “A marriage made in hell.”

  Again, he laughed. Don had his own metaphors, however, and said, “It was like watching a leech attach itself. You know? Daniels was an accident waiting in the wings, and Charabi a hundred-car pileup in search of a busy intersection.”

  I liked Bian’s metaphor better. Less wordy.

  But recalling the letters I had just read from Crusader Two—that mixture of cloying friendliness and ingratiating coercion—any or all of these analogies and/or metaphors seemed to fit what occurred. As they say, no man is more dangerous than he with a will to corrupt. Charabi was that man, and he had skillfully worked his seduction, and Daniels was so absorbed by his own ambitions and his own professional and personal frustrations that deciding between right and wrong meant only what was right for him.

  “How was this meeting arranged?” Bian asked.

  He answered her question with a question. “Why do you think DIA was present?” So we thought about it, before he informed us, “Albert Tigerman—a few months before this meeting, he had met Charabi at a Georgetown cocktail party, was impressed by the possibilities he presented, and thought it would be a smart idea to develop a relationship.” He looked pointedly at me and noted, “This is what happens when neophytes dabble in intelligence work.”

  In fact, Don’s suffocating air of superiority was pissing me off. We were discussing, after all, how a manipulative liar weaseled his way into our intelligence system, how he misled us, fed us false intelligence, and caused incalculable damage.

  Don should’ve felt some remorse over this, even been deeply embarrassed. Yet in his mind this was just more proof of his own virtuosity. Don was smart, Cliff was an idiot; this was zero-sum gamesmanship, and Don won.

  I knew I shouldn’t, but I said, “You know what? I can’t believe you still have your job.”

  “What the—”

  “You were there, Don. At the beginning. Did you intervene? Did you keep Charabi and Daniels apart?”

  “What are you—”

  “You left that room knowing Clifford Daniels was an easy mark for this shyster. You allowed this to happen.”

  Don was a little put off by this charge, and he stared at me with those flat brown eyes. “That’s utter nonsense, Drummond. I’m not the least bit responsible for what happened.”

  “Bullshit. After that meeting, Charabi turned Daniels into his boy toy. Over the next decade, Charabi got money from the Pentagon and institutional support in Washington. Worse, he got a conduit to feed his lies and deceptions into, a river of lies that flowed straight to the Oval Office.”

  “You’re forgetting something. The Agency made well-known our view that Charabi wasn’t credible. On numerous occasions we conveyed this to the White House. We even went to the unusual length of leaking this to the press.”

  “That’s covering your ass, not preventing a disaster. The ass you failed to cover was the country’s.”

  “You don’t know what you’re talking about.” Don was staring at me now with some intensity, I’m sure wishing he had brought a gun to this meeting.

  Phyllis snapped, “That’s enough. We’re not here to affix blame. Right now we need to understand what damage was done, and how it can be fixed.” After a moment of reflection, she amended that. “If it can be fixed.”

  Phyllis was right. Don and I exchanged looks. I think we both felt bad about our little display of bad manners, not to mention our failure to keep our eye on the ball. In fact, Don said to me, in a very apologetic tone, “Fuck you.”

  “Up yours.”

  What this meeting needed was a commercial break, and on cue, Bian’s cell phone began bleeping—it had one of those irritating musical ringtones. She flipped it open. “Major Tran . . . Oh, hi, Barry. You’re working late . . . I—Well, hold on . . .”

  She looked at me. “Detective Enders.” She looked at Phyllis and Don. “Please excuse us a moment.” She looked back at me. “It’s important. Let’s step out to take this.”

  Which reminded me; in addition to investigating Daniels’s crimes, we were also investigating his murder. I got to my feet and reoriented my mind-set back to the A-to-Z mode.

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  We walked out and headed straight to the coffee bar, where we discovered a pot, quarter filled with gooey black tar. It looked like
it had been brewing for a week. “Can I pour you a cup?” I asked Bian.

  “You can’t be serious.” She appeared horrified. “It looks poisonous.”

  My ass was really dragging, and if I didn’t get a jolt of caffeine I would pass out. I filled a paper cup for myself, and when it didn’t melt the paper, took a long sip. “Ummh . . . good.”

  “Why do men do such stupid things to prove their manhood?”

  “Men don’t—”

  “Of course they do.” She laughed. “You’re really funny.”

  Actually, if it was possible, it tasted worse than it looked. But as Mom always reminded little Sean, waste not, want not. I set aside the cup for later.

  Into the phone, Bian said, “I’m back, Barry,” then went into listening mode for about two minutes. She made a few verbal nods and once or twice prodded Enders to elaborate on some point, but I had no idea what they were discussing. Eventually she said, “Okay . . . yes, I’ve got it . . .” Pause. “Yes . . . Colonel Drummond’s also here.” She looked at me and said to him, “Why don’t you repeat this to him directly?”

  She handed me the phone. Enders said, “I hope you two are working late, not screwing around.”

  “You have a filthy mind, Detective.”

  Bian was looking at me inquisitively.

  Enders said, “Give me a break, Drummond. Tell me you’re not thinking about it.”

  I looked at Bian. “My God, you’re right. There’s a female inside that uniform.”

  “Who you trying to bullshit? The lady can make cooked spaghetti stiff again.”

  Bian seemed to be seeking my attention by sort of waving her middle finger.

  Well, enough male bonding. In fact, Bian’s expression indicated it was beyond enough. “Where are you?” I asked him.

  “The lab. The autopsy wrapped up an hour ago, and now I’m here.”

  “I wish my laundry worked that fast.”

  “Slow day.” He added, “Where were— Oh yeah . . . the autopsy—” Then, as if reading off a page, “Stomach contents: steak, well done, and a baked potato, with a spinach salad. That was probably dinner. Serology results: high alcohol content, point one nine, so Daniels was legally stewed. That’s not uncommon with suicides, incidentally. Cause of death: gunshot to the head, fired two to three inches from Daniels’s skull. Death: immediate—sometime between midnight and one.”

  “Okay, that’s how it looked.”

  “Was it? There were no open bottles or empty glasses in Daniels’s apartment.”

  “So he went out and got smashed beforehand. Does it matter where he got drunk?”

  “Probably not. Now guess what you saw but didn’t see?”

  “Let me see . . .” I knew this contradiction was coming and answered, matter-of-factly, “Cliff Daniels was right-handed and the entry wound is in his left temple.”

  A little miffed that I ruined his surprise, for a moment he said nothing. Then he found his inner voice, which was pissed off. “You bastard. You knew . . . and you never mentioned it.”

  “I recall you saying my views weren’t welcome.” Which was true, of course, and petty of me to bring up. I added, “Anyway, it’s irrelevant. Also, probably misleading.”

  “The hell it is. This is highly suggestive that a right-handed killer fired the bullet. Then, to cover it up, the killer had to place the gun in the victim’s left hand.” As if I needed it spelled it out, he added, “In other words, it wasn’t suicide—it was murder.”

  I allowed him a moment to cool off, then asked, “Are you armed?”

  “Of course.”

  “Good. Work with me here.” I instructed him, “Remove your pistol from the holster.”

  “Okay . . . it’s out.”

  “You right- or left-handed?”

  “Normal. Right-handed.”

  “As was Daniels. Switch the pistol to your left hand.”

  “Okay.”

  “Now raise the pistol . . . now aim the barrel at your temple . . . just above your left ear.”

  “There’d better be a point to this, Drummond. People are staring at—”

  “Is the pistol there?”

  “Yeah . . . okay, it’s—”

  “Quick—pull the trigger.”

  He said, after a long moment, “Very fucking funny.”

  “I didn’t hear a bang. I knew you were smart.”

  “If you were standing here, you’d hear a bang, you son of a bitch.”

  “How hard would it have been?”

  “I got your point. But it’s not natural. Unnatural things are always cause for suspicion.”

  “Not always. Sometimes they merely require alternate explanations.”

  “I’m dying to hear this one.”

  “Think of what you observed inside Daniels’s bedroom. The television was on, a porn flick in the video machine, the victim had an erection, and his right hand was gripped on his doolie.” I added, “The term is multitasking.”

  He did not reply.

  I said, “Cliff Daniels, not being ambidextrous, faced a choice. Which takes more strength? Greater deftness? Spanking your donkey or pulling the trigger?”

  After a moment, he replied, “I wouldn’t know, would I?”

  In spite of himself, he laughed, and I, too, laughed. Actually, I liked this guy. No good cop ignores his gut instincts; his were telling him this was wrong, and he was going with it. Well, it was wrong; he just didn’t know why. He lacked what Bian and I possessed, factual knowledge of Daniels’s professional and extracurricular activities, or about the large and growing population who might want him dead, and why.

  To tell the truth, I felt a little guilty; he was one of the good guys, diligent, honest, good cop. But his concern was law and order in his county; mine was peace and security throughout the entire United States. Bottom line—you can rationalize just about anything under the guise of “for the good of the country”; it’s a slippery slope, and I might have been overstepping that line.

  “Back to the autopsy,” he said, after a moment. “Other than that, Daniels was missing his tonsils. Twice had his left knee cut on, and—”

  “Was there blood splatter on his left hand?”

  “Well . . . yeah—there was. Not a lot. Also there was some burnt powder. Blowback.”

  “And has this blood been tested? Was it his?”

  “It’s the right blood type, A pos. The DNA test will take longer, of course.”

  For some reason this did not surprise me. After a moment he added, “One other observation. His liver showed the beginning stages of cirrhosis. Daniels was a big-time boozer.”

  “It’s the family hobby.”

  “No shit. The Mrs., too? Hey, how’d that go?”

  “Different. His ex celebrated with a fresh bottle of gin.”

  “She want him dead?”

  “Yeah . . . but no. She’s going to miss him. Busting his balls was the one great joy in her life.”

  He thought about that a moment, then said, “Tim . . . the forensics guy you spoke with . . . he told you about the hair fibers?”

  “Three types as of last count. Why? Were there more?”

  “Isn’t three enough? Personally, after looking at Daniels, I never would’ve pictured it. You know?”

  I glanced at Bian. “My partner says it’s all about size.”

  “That right?” he replied. “My wife’s always telling me it’s all about becoming more sensitive, about helping around the house more. Shit—you’re saying all I had to do was grow a bigger dick.”

  I laughed.

  “According to his former,” I told him, “Clifford had a thing for the ladies. He screwed his way out of the marriage.”

  “Well . . . that can happen.” He informed me, “Anyway, two of these hair specimens turned out to be organic. The redhead and brunette.”

  “Organic? What does—”

  “Straight from the head. That’s what it means. The follicles come off with the strands. That’s how you tell.”<
br />
  “And the third sample . . . the blonde?”

  “Yeah . . . the blonde. The hair was real enough, only the ends were cut at the end, and knotted. Know what that means?”

  “A wig.”

  “Hey, I knew you CIA guys were sharp. Thing is, the cheap ones have synthetic hair—manufactured stuff. Better ones are made from authentic hair, contributed by real people, and knotted into a wig piece.” He asked, “What do you think about that?”

  “Hold on . . . I’m trying to picture Daniels in a blonde wig . . . Wait, it’s coming to me—oh my God . . .”

  “What?”

  “I went out with her—him.”

  “Very funny.”

  “What am I supposed to think, Detective? Maybe he had a lover with premature baldness. Maybe he told the redhead or the brunette he was in a blonde mood, and one or both obliged. Maybe Daniels attended a costume party as Marilyn Monroe. Possibilities abound.”

  After a pause, he replied, “You left out a possibility.”

  “Did I?”

  “You know you did.” He then told me what I left out, saying, “Maybe he had a visitor who wore a disguise because this visitor didn’t want to be recognized by the neighbors. And maybe this visitor didn’t want to leave DNA traces. Add that up, and once again, maybe he didn’t kill himself.”

  “I didn’t want to insult your intelligence.” I asked, “Fingerprints?”

  “We collected four or five samples. We printed the maid’s before we released her, and lifted Daniels’s prints off his corpse. Disqualification and isolation will be finished tomorrow.”

  I was sure that would lead nowhere, but kept the thought to myself. I asked, “As of this moment, what’s your thinking on this case?”

  “You know what? I was leaning toward suicide. It sure looks like suicide. But some guy from the Defense Department called like six times today. Waterbury?”

  “I know him.”

  “He every bit the tightass he sounds like on the phone?”

  “Jam a quarter up his ass and you get a dime.”

  He laughed. “Who is this guy?”

  “Bian’s boss.”

  “I’ll bet people are beating down the door to work there.” Apparently we had exchanged enough slapstick and insults, because his tone turned serious. “Point is, I’ve got this corpse, and who shows up and starts nosing around? A CIA guy, an MP, and now I’ve got this Pentagon jerk looking over my shoulder.” He asked, “See my problem here?”

 

‹ Prev