Clancy, Tom - Ballance of Power

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by Balance of Power [lit]


  EIGHTEEN

  Tuesday, 4:19 a.m. San Sebastian,

  Spain

  The helicopter set Maria and Aideen down south

  of the city. It landed atop a hillock along a

  deserted twist in the Rio Urumea, the river that

  ran through the city. A rental car, reserved by a

  local police officer who worked with Interpol, was

  waiting for them near the road. So was the police

  officer, thick-mustachioed Jorge Sorel.

  During the helicopter trip, Maria had

  studied a map she'd brought with her. She knew the

  route to the radio station and Aideen could tell that she

  was anxious to get there. Unfortunately, as Maria

  lit a cigarette, Jorge told her there was no

  reason to go.

  "What do you mean?" she demanded. "Someone attacked

  the staff a little over an hour ago," he said.

  "Someone?" Maria said. "Who?" "We don't know

  yet," admitted the officer. "Professionals?"

  she said impatiently. "Very possibly," he

  acknowledged. "The attackers seemed to know exactly

  what they were doing. There were numerous broken limbs and

  everyone had a broken jaw."

  200 OP-CENTER

  "What did they want?" Maria asked.

  Jorge shook his head. "Again, we can't even begin

  to speculate. The only reason we went up there was

  because the station suddenly went off the air."

  Maria swore angrily. "This is

  maravilloso,

  was she said. "Marvelous. Are there

  any

  leads?"

  Jorge was still shaking his head. " "The victims were

  unable to speak and now the doctors have them

  sedated. We assume the attackers were looking for

  whoever provided them with the audiotape."

  "The idiots," Maria snarled. "Didn't they

  anticipate that? Didn't they take

  precautions?"

  "Yes," said Jorge. "The irony is they were very

  well prepared. The station has always been a target

  for malcontents. Their politics, you know-very

  antigovemment. The facility is surrounded with

  barbed wire and is constructed like a bunker. It even

  has a metal door. The employees keep guns

  inside. But deterrents only sway the timid

  hearted. And these attackers were not timid."

  "Constable," Aideen said patiently, "do you have any

  idea who it was that provided the tape?"

  Jorge snuck an uncomfortable look at Maria.

  "I'm afraid the answer is once again no," he

  said. "We have two patrols going through the surrounding

  villages. They're looking for groups of people who

  may be searching for the person or persons who

  provided the tape. But we came to this relatively

  late. So far, we've found no one."

  "The attackers would probably separate once they

  left here," Maria said. "They wouldn't want

  to risk everyone getting caught. They also

  wouldn't stay to BALANCE OF POWER 201

  gether after they found whoever they were looking for," Maria

  said. She drew on her cigarette and exhaled through

  her nose. She regarded Jorge intently. "Are

  you sure that's all you can tell us?"

  "I'm sure," he replied. His gaze was equally

  intent.

  " "What are the chances that the person who had the

  tape was from this area?" Aideen asked.

  "Very good," said Maria. "Whoever planned this would have

  wanted someone who knew the waters where the yacht was

  destroyed. Someone who knew the town and the people at the

  station." She looked at Jorge. "Give me a

  place to start looking."

  Jorge shrugged. "The town is small. Everyone

  knows it. For someone who knows the waters, talk to the

  fishermen."

  Maria looked at her watch. "They'll be going out

  in about an hour. We can talk to them at the docks."

  She pulled hard on her cigarette. "Who blesses

  the waters for the fishermen?"

  "That would be Father Norberto Alcazar," Jorge

  said. "He will only do it for the old families, not the

  companies."

  "Where is he?"

  "You will probably find him at the Jesuit church

  in the hills south of Cuesta de Aldapeta,"

  Jorge said. "That's on the west side of the river just

  outside of San Sebastian."

  Maria thanked him. She took one last drag from

  her cigarette, then she dropped it and crushed it

  hard under her heel. She let out the smoke as she

  walked toward the car. Aideen followed her.

  "Father Alcazar is a very pleasant man," Jorge

  said

  202 OP-CENTER

  after them. "But he may not be forthcoming about his flock.

  He is very protective of them."

  "Let's hope that he wants to protect one of them

  from being murdered," Maria said.

  "You have a point," Jorge said. "Call on your

  cell phone when you are ready. The helicopter will

  come back for you here. The airport is small and

  has been reserved for military business-as a

  precaution."

  Maria acknowledged brusquely as she got behind the

  wheel of the car and started it up. Dirt and clods of

  grass spit behind them as the car tore away from the

  foot of the hillock.

  "You're not happy," Aideen said as she

  took the map from her backpack and unfolded it.

  She also had a loaded .38 in the backpack which

  Maria had given her during the flight.

  "I wanted to kick him," Maria grumbled. "They

  only went up there because the station went off the air. The

  police should have

  known

  that someone would go after the radio crew."

  "Maybe the police wanted the station to be

  attacked," Aideen said. "It's the same way with

  gang wars. The authorities stand back and let the

  bad guys kill each other."

  "It's more likely that they were told to stay out of it,"

  Maria said. "The men who were killed on the yacht were

  influential businessmen. They headed devoted

  familias-

  employees who will do anything for them, including

  murder. The police are paid to stay out of such things."

  "Do you think the constable-was

  BALANCE OF POWER 203

  "I don't know," Maria admitted. "But I can't

  be sure. One can never be sure in Spain."

  Aideen thought back to what Martha had said about the

  police in Madrid cooperating with the street

  extortionists.

  That might be diplomacy,

  she thought,

  but it stinks.

  She was forced to wonder if even the government police

  in Madrid were giving the investigation of Martha's

  assassination their all.

  "That's one of the reasons I left Interpol,"

  Maria went on as she headed north along the river.

  "Dealing with these people is more frustrating than it's

  worth."

  "But you came back," Aideen said. "For Luis?"

  "No," Maria replied. "I came back for the

  same reason I left. Because there is so much

  corruption the rest of us can't afford to give up.

  Eve
n to manage my small theater in Barcelona,

  I had to pay fees to the police, to the sanitation

  workers, to everyone but the postal workers. I had to pay

  them to make sure that they did the jobs they were already

  paid to do."

  "So the government workers have their cushion and the

  industrial workers belong to families," Aideen

  said. "Independent workers end up paying extortion

  to one or fighting the strength of the other."

  Maria nodded. "And that is why I'm here. It's like

  love," she said. "You can't give up because

  it doesn't work the first time. You learn the rules, you

  learn about yourself, and you get back in the arena for

  another run at the bull."

  The first pale red light of dawn began to brighten the

  skies. The hilltops started to take shape against the

  lighter sky. As she glanced eastward, Aideen

  thought how funny it was that she liked and admired

  Maria.

  204 OP-CENTER

  The woman was no less confident and aggressive

  than Martha had been. But except for when she'd had

  to face Darrell back at the airport, there was

  something selfless about Maria. And Aideen could hardly

  blame Maria for throwing a little attitude

  Darrell's way. Regardless of who was right and who was

  wrong, seeing him again had to be rough.

  They reached the outskirts of San Sebastian in

  less than thirty minutes and crossed the bridge

  at Maria Cristina. Then they headed southwest

  toward the church. They stopped to ask a shepherd for

  directions and were at the church just as the rim of the sun

  flared over the hill.

  The small stone church was open. There were two

  parishioners inside, a pair of fishermen, but not the

  priest.

  "Sometimes he goes to the bay with his brother," one of the

  fishermen told the women. The men told them where

  Adolfo lived and the route Father Alcazar usually

  took to get there. They got back in the car and headed

  north, Maria opening the window, lighting another

  cigarette, and puffing on it furiously.

  "I hope this doesn't bother you," Maria said of the

  cigarette. "They say that the smoke is bad for

  others but I can assure you that it saves lives."

  "How do you figure that?" Aideen asked.

  "It keeps me from getting too angry," Maria

  replied. She did not appear to be joking.

  They found Calle Okendo and drove two blocks

  to the southeast. The street was narrow; when they reached the

  two-story apartment building Maria had to park half

  on the sidewalk. Otherwise there wouldn't

  BALANCE OF POWER 205

  have been room for another vehicle to get by.

  Aideen put her .38 into the pocket of her

  windbreaker before she slid from the car. Maria tossed

  her cigarette away and slid her gun into the rear

  waistband of her jeans.

  The downstairs door did not have a lock on it and

  they entered. The dark stairwell smelled of a

  century of fishermen and dust, which tickled

  Aideen's nose. The steps creaked like dry old

  trees in a wind and listed toward the dirty white

  wall. There were two apartments on the second

  floor. The door to one of them was slightly ajar.

  Maria gave it a push with her toe. It groaned as

  it opened.

  They found Father Alcazar. He was kneeling beside the

  naked body of a man and weeping openly. His back

  was toward them. Maria stepped in and Aideen

  followed. If the priest heard them he made no

  indication of it.

  "Father Alcazar?" Maria said softly.

  The priest turned his head around. His red eyes were

  startling against his pale pink face. His collar was

  dark where it was stained with tears. He turned back

  to the body and then rose slowly. Backlit by the sharp

  morning light his black robe looked flat, like a

  silhouette. He walked toward them as though he were

  in a trance. Then he removed a jacket from a

  hook behind the door, went back to the dead man, and

  laid it across his body.

  As he did, Aideen had a chance to study the body.

  The victim had been tortured, though not out of

  vengeance. There were no burn or knife marks on his

  torso. His eyes, ears, breast, and groin

  appeared to be intact; only his limbs had been

  worked over. He'd

  206 OP-CENTER

  been tortured for information. And his windpipe had been

  smashed; to kill him slowly, as opposed to a blow

  to the head. Aideen had seen this before, in Mexico.

  It wasn't pretty, but it was prettier than what

  the drug lords did to people they tortured for betraying

  them. Strangely enough, it never stopped other people from

  betraying the Mexican

  senorios,

  as they called them. The dead men and women always

  believed that they were the ones who would never be caught.

  The priest turned back toward the women. "I am

  Father Alcazar," he said.

  Maria stepped toward him. "My name is Maria,"

  she said. "I'm with Interpol."

  Aideen wasn't surprised that Maria had told

  him who she really was. The killings were escalating.

  This wasn't the time to go undercover.

  "Did you know this man?" Maria asked.

  The priest nodded. "He was my brother."

  "I see," Maria said. "I'm sorry we couldn't

  have gotten here sooner."

  Norberto Alcazar gestured weakly behind

  him as fresh tears spilled from his eyes. "I tried

  to help him. I should have tried harder. But

  Adolfo-he knew what he had gotten himself

  into.""

  Maria stepped up to the priest. She stood as tall

  as he did and looked flush into his bloodshot

  eyes. " "Father, please-help us. What

  had

  Adolfo gotten himself into?"

  "I don't know," the priest said. "When I arrived

  here he was hurt and talking wildly."

  "He was still alive?" Maria asked. "You've got

  to

  BALANCE OF POWER 207

  try to remember. Father, what he said! Words, names,

  places-anything."

  "Something about the city," Norberto said. "About a

  church. He said a place or a name-Amadori."

  Maria's eyes burned into his. "General

  Amadori?"

  "It could be," Norberto said. "He ... he did

  say something about a general. I don't know. It was

  difficult to understand."

  "Of course," Maria said. "Father, I know this is

  difficult. But it's important. Do you

  have any idea who might have done this?"

  He shook his head. "Adolfo was going to the radio

  station last night," he sobbed. "That is all I

  know. I do not know what business he had there other

  than to deliver a tape recording. I came back

  this morning on my way to bless the waters. I wanted

  to see if he was all right. I found him like this."

  "You saw no one coming or leaving?"

  "No one."

  Maria regarded him for a moment lon
ger. Her brow was

  deeply knit, her eyes smouldering. " "One

  question more. Father. Can you tell us where to find the

  Ramirez boatworks?"

  "Ramirez," the priest said. He took a long

  tremulous breath. "Dolfo mentioned him. My

  brother said that Ramirez and his friends were responsible

  for killing an American."

  "Yes," said Maria. She cocked a thumb over

  her shoulder. "They killed this woman's partner."

  "Oh-I'm so sorry," Norberto said to Aideen.

  His eyes returned to Maria. "But Ramirez is

  dead. My brother-saw to that."

  208 OP-CENTER

  "I know," Maria said.

  "What do you want with his people?"

  "To talk to them," Maria said. "To see if they were

  involved in this." She nodded toward Adolfo.

  "To see if we can prevent more murders, stop the

  fighting from escalating."

  "Do you think that's possible?"

  "If we get to them in time," Maria said. "If we

  learn what they know about Amadori and his people. But

  please, Father. We must hurry. Do you know where the

  factory is?"

  Norberto took another deep breath. "It's

  northeast along the shore. Let me come with you."

  "No," said Maria.

  "This is my parish-was

  "That's right," she said, "and your parish desperately

  needs your help. I don't. If the people panic,

  if their fear frightens away tourists, think what will

  happen to the region."

  Norberto bowed his forehead into his hand.

  "This is a lot to ask of you now, I know," Maria

  said. "But you have to do this. I'm going to go to the factory

  to talk with the workers. If what I think is happening

  is

  happening, then I know who the enemy is. And maybe

  it's not too late to stop him."

  Norberto looked up. He pointed behind

  him without turning. " "Dolfo thought he knew who

  the enemy was. He paid for that belief with his life.

  Perhaps with his soul."

  Maria locked her eyes on his and held them.

  "Thousands of others may join him if I don't

  hurry.

  BALANCE OF POWER 209

  I'll phone the local police from the car. They'll

  take care of your brother.""

  "I'll stay with him until then."

  "Of course," Maria said, turning toward Aideen.

  "And I will pray for you both."

  "Thank you," Maria said. She stopped and turned

  back. "While you're at it. Father, pray for the one

  who needs it most. Pray for Spain."

  Less than two minutes later they were back in the

  car and heading northeast across the river.

  "Are you really just going to talk to the factory

 

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