Changing of the Guard nf-8

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Changing of the Guard nf-8 Page 4

by Tom Clancy


  Natadze had two of the Korths. If he had to shoot somebody with one — and he had not had to do so yet — that gun would have to be destroyed, to avoid any possible ballistic connection to him. It was unlikely that investigators would think of the Korth as a possible weapon. They would examine any spent rounds they might find in a body, but the rifling was standard and not the European hexagonal often used in German guns. If he did have to shoot it, there would be no expended shells to worry about, since revolvers did not eject those. And if the authorities did by some chance suspect a Korth, they would hardly expect the shooter to destroy such an expensive machine. It would break his heart to do so, but in the end, it was a tool, and tools could be replaced. Dead was dead forever.

  Not that he would need the gun for this mission. His preferred weapon at close range was a roll of quarters in his left hand — his left hand, never his right. He had to be too careful about the fingernails on his right hand, and so, over the years, had learned to punch left-handed. He also liked to wrap his hard fist in a leather glove. A roll of coins gripped to add heft and mass to his fist was a formidable weapon, especially against someone not expecting it. And burning a pair of twenty-dollar gloves was much cheaper and easier than getting rid of a revolver or pistol. But if he needed it, he had the gun, and he could get to it in a matter of a second if things did not look as he thought they should look.

  He should not need his fists for this, either, though. Only his wits.

  He smiled at the thought of what they would think back home if they knew that he was willing to smash and grind to bits a five-thousand-dollar handgun. A family in rural Sakartvelo — formerly Soviet Georgia — could live on half that for a year. Then again, the authorities in his homeland did not have the resources that the United States had at its beck. There, if you weren’t noticed in the act of shooting somebody by a dozen witnesses, you might stay free forever. Of course, you also might be unjustly accused of some other crime, tried, convicted, and executed for it. That happened all the time. If they needed a criminal and could not find the right man, anyone nearby would serve. There was a kind of balance, if not one that was fair.

  As he waited for the target, he checked to make certain there was nobody watching him. This was a public parking lot and he had been parked here for less than a minute, so it was unlikely anybody would have paid him any mind. Part of the reason he had been able to operate outside the law for as long as he had without being caught was adherence to the Six-P Principle he had learned from an American movie: Proper planning prevents piss-poor performance. The less you left to chance, the less that bad luck had to work with. Think of everything that could go wrong, then have a way to deal with that; and a way to deal with the back-up going wrong, as well.

  In this case, the job was simple, and chances of failure small; still, it paid to be as certain of every detail as possible.

  The target arrived and alighted from his automobile — an expensive late-model whatever — and walked the few meters to the 7-Eleven’s entrance. He did this every morning — or at least he had every morning for the week that Natadze had observed him. Inside, the target would buy a cup of bad coffee, a sugary confection — usually a doughnut, sometimes a cinnamon twist or a danish — and a morning newspaper. He would then return to his car and drive to work, sipping coffee and eating the empty calories of his breakfast, and often trying to read the newspaper as he drove. Dangerous and stupid, this process, but one he had apparently been managing for some time.

  The man entered the store.

  Natadze exited his own car and headed for the market, walking behind the target’s auto. He had untied his shoe lace before he left his car, and now he stopped, squatted, and began to re-tie the lace. His briefcase covered the right rear tire from view, and it was the work of only a couple of seconds to pull the cut-down ice pick from where it was tucked away in his sock. Only three inches of the shaft remained on the handle, filed to a needle point, plenty long enough. He thrust the point into the tire — once, twice, thrice — between the treads, and heard the hiss of escaping air. Self-sealing tires would have likely stopped the leaks, but the target did not have those on his car, Natadze had checked the brand and model the day before to be certain.

  He put the pick back into his sock, re-covered it with his trouser cuff, and stood. Nobody was near. He went into the market and to the rear of the place, selecting a bottle of water from the cooler. Part one was complete.

  After the target checked out his purchase, Natadze paid for the water and returned to his car. The tire was flat, and the target stood next to it, glaring at it as if that might matter.

  Natadze moved toward his car slowly, opening the cap of the bottled water.

  The target pulled a small cell phone from his jacket pocket.

  As he did, Natadze reached into his own jacket pocket and triggered a cell-phone jammer. This was of Japanese manufacture, not legal to use in the U.S., but with quite a following in more civilized countries. Larger models were utilized in restaurants, theaters, and anywhere else people were unwilling to listen to their fellows yammering on a mobile phone, especially in Japan. The devices produced a signal that made wireless phones useless. This small one would work for a short range, enough for this.

  The target grumbled something and slapped his phone closed.

  “I beg your pardon?” Natadze said. His intonation was a studied and much-practiced British. Maybe not enough to fool somebody with a genuine posh accent, but it had gulled plenty of Americans.

  “Oh, sorry. My tire is flat, I need to call Triple-A, and my cell phone isn’t working!”

  “Oh, dear,” Natadze said, frowing. “You can use my phone if you would like.” Natadze retrieved the little Motorola phone inside its leather case from his shirt pocket, took it from the case, and offered it to the target.

  “Thank you,” the target said, as he took the phone. Natadze reached into his pocket and shut the jammer off.

  The target made his call, and handed the phone back. Natadze carefully replaced the phone in its case, then put it back in this shirt pocket.

  “Thanks, friend.”

  “No trouble at all.”

  Natadze went to his car, entered it, and carefully drove away. He waved at the target as he left.

  He smiled as he departed. He could have done it one of several other ways — could have slipped into the man’s condo when he was gone, or to his office, but this was easy, involved no real risk, and it amused him to have the man hand him his fingerprints.

  The phone had been treated with a special surfactant that would promote a good impression. A little super-glue vapor and he would have the print he needed. Some adapto-gel and a mold, some silicone, and he would have a fake thumb that would fool most of the print readers made — including the one that admitted the target to places where computers would record his coming and going. That would be the really easy part.

  Mr. Cox, he knew, would be pleased.

  Net Force HQ Quantico, Virginia

  Colonel Abraham Kent arrived at General Howard’s outer office thirty seconds early. He paused outside the door for almost that long, took a deep breath, squared his shoulders, and went in.

  Through the open door to Howard’s inner office, he saw Howard glance up, then down at his watch, then smile.

  There wasn’t a secretary in evidence. Howard stood and waved him in.

  “Abe. Come on in.”

  Kent tried to keep it from being a march, but it certainly wasn’t a stroll. Thirty years in the Corps gave you a posture that was hard to abandon.

  “And don’t salute, you old jarhead.”

  Kent grinned. He and Howard had known each other for twenty years, and they had a mutual respect. Howard hadn’t gotten into combat when he’d been Regular Army, but he’d had a few dustups since joining this organization and had, by all accounts, acquitted himself well. One could never be sure — once the bullets began to fly, many a paper tiger turned pale and hugged the ground. He was gl
ad that his old friend had been made of sterner stuff. And that there was still action to be had somewhere.

  Howard gestured at the chair next to his desk. Kent nodded and sat in the hard-backed chair, his own back straight enough so he didn’t need the support.

  “You ready to do this, Abe?”

  “Yes, sir, I believe I am.”

  “It won’t be like the Marines.”

  “I don’t see how it could be, John.”

  “But you could make General here. They reward results.”

  Kent nodded. Howard didn’t need to mention what that meant. Kent had been a Colonel for years. Unless a shooting war broke out, he was never going to get his star in the Corps. There were too many other birds roosting and waiting for the same thing.

  “I’ll give you the fifty-cent tour,” Howard said, “as soon as my secretary gets back. You know Julio Fernandez?”

  “That scrounger?” Kent said with a grin. “You bust him from sergeant lately?”

  Howard didn’t smile back. “Actually,” he said, “I promoted him. Lieutenant, now. He got married, has a son, and has settled down considerably. I know you’ll want your own team, but he’ll be sticking around a few weeks to make sure you get settled in.”

  “I appreciate that.”

  Howard nodded. “The new boss should be in his office,” he said. “Have you two met yet?”

  Kent shook his head. “Not formally. I saw him at some political thing once.”

  “He seems okay, for a civilian. Michaels was a good man — backed me up every turn, and was willing to get his own hands dirty. I hope you do as well with Thorn.”

  “Me, too.”

  “Ah, there’s Betty. Come on, I’ll show you your new toy.”

  “Sir,” Tom Thorn’s secretary said, “Marissa Lowe is here.”

  “Send her in.”

  Lowe was an attractive black woman, a few years older than he was, and tall, maybe five-ten. Her curly hair was cut short, and her gray suit was businesslike enough, the skirt reaching nearly to her knees. She wore a red silk blouse, and what looked like gold and ruby earrings that dangled an inch below her lobes. Dark brown eyes and lots of smile wrinkles at the corners. A fine-looking, very… earthy woman.

  Thorn shook the woman’s hand. She had a firm grip.

  “Please, have a seat,” he said with a smile.

  She flashed him a smile in return, her teeth very white against her milk-chocolate skin. She walked to the couch and sat. She moved very well, he saw, smooth and controlled.

  “What can I do for the CIA, Ms. Lowe?”

  “Marissa, please, Commander.”

  He smiled again. “Call me Tom, then.”

  She nodded. “Shortly before you took over Net Force, our embassy in Ankara had a little visit from the Turkish ambassador, Mustafa Suleyman Agar. The Ambassador’s people had come across some intel he figured might be important to the Turks’ national security.” She had a silky, deep voice.

  Thorn nodded. “Okay.”

  “Well, calls were made, people talked to, and someone somewhere decided that Net Force ought to be asked to help out the ambassador by having a look at the information — which was hidden somehow on a disk of tourist photographs that came from Iran. The Turks were fairly certain something was there because their agent got himself killed in the process of collecting and bringing it home.”

  “I see. Go on.”

  “Your Jay Gridley has been digging into it and found a code. He managed to crack part of it. It turned out to be a list of secret agents from the former USSR stationed in Africa and the Middle East, going as far back as the nineteen sixties.”

  Thorn seemed to remember a report he’d barely had time to glance at from Gridley, who he had just met. “Ah, yes. I recall Jay said something about Russian spies.”

  “Well, it has been a while since the evil empire collapsed, but the Russians never throw anything away, you know, so some of the agents were still in place, if a bit long in the tooth. Real names, code names, dates, places, everything.”

  He nodded. “I can see where that would be very valuable.”

  She echoed his nod. “The Turks scooped up the ones in their territory, and passed out names of the others to their friends in the region.”

  “So we get points for helping the Turks?”

  “Oh, yeah, big time.”

  Thorn searched his memory, which was usually pretty good about such stuff. There was something else…? Ah, he had it.

  “I’ve been swamped with e- and paperwork and I’m not up to date,” he said, “but if I recall correctly, Gridley said he thought there was more material to be decoded.”

  “Yes, sir, that’s what we understood. And we are hoping that it is a continuation of the list into our geography.”

  “Any reason to believe that?”

  “Your man seems to think so, from the report he sent. The way the countries and spies are listed shows a progression in this general direction, going from east to west. We’re hoping it will jump the ocean.”

  “You’re thinking maybe there are some Russian spies still knocking around in the U.S.?”

  “Oh, we know that. We even know who some of them are. The regular FBI keeps account of them, devil-you-know-versus-the-devil-you-don’t and all. Everybody has secret ops over here — our enemies, our friends, probably even the Swiss — just like we do in their houses. Today’s best friend might be tomorrow’s worst enemy and vice-versa, so we need to stay on our toes. Look at how many times in history we fought knock-down-drag-out wars against folks who are now our best allies: British, Spanish, Mexican, Germans, Japanese, Italians, that wheel just keeps on spinning.” She gave him another little smile. “Anyway,” she went on, “the question is, would this Iranian-Turkish list tell us about a bunch of others we don’t know about? That would be very useful to us.”

  “Indeed. So, what is it you want me to do, Marissa?”

  “Nothing, really. We’d just like to make sure you keep this one on the front burner. We would appreciate it.”

  “I believe we can do that.”

  She gave him her brilliant smile yet again. He liked it, and he liked her. She seemed grounded, no-nonsense, straight to the point, and there was never enough of that to go around.

  She stood. “I’d like to drop by from time to time, touch base, since I’m kind of the de-facto liaison from the spooks to the computer nerds. I’ll call before I show up.”

  He grinned. “You’ll be welcome any time, Marissa. A pleasure to have made your acquaintance.”

  “You, too, Tommy.”

  Normally, he didn’t much care for that nickname, but it didn’t sound so bad coming from her.

  A few minutes later, his secretary beeped him. “Sir. General Howard and Colonel Kent are here to see you.”

  “Great. Send them in.”

  4

  Trans-Planet Chemical HQ

  Manhattan, New York

  Samuel Cox sat staring at his desk, as if the solution to his problem might be found between the computer and the hard-copy outbox.

  His first reaction to the phone call had been close to panic. Not because he was worried about anybody overhearing it — Vrach’s voice was disguised, distorted far beyond vox-pattern recognition. The call was also scrambled, using state-of-the-art equipment. The NSA itself would bang their heads against the code if they tried to break it. After all, they had devised the scrambler, and they said their code was practically unbreakable.

  No, it wasn’t that he was worried about being overheard. But the words that the Doctor had spoken so matter-of-factly? They had chilled Cox right to the bone.

  The Turks had given Net Force a computer disk to decode. Thus far, the organization had been successful in finding at least some of the information hidden on the disk. They had uncovered a list of agents who had worked for the former Soviet Union in the Middle East forty years ago.

  Cox had merely shrugged at that part of the news. It meant nothing to him.


  Ah, the Doctor had said, but there could be more, much more — including a list of Soviet spies elsewhere in the world.

  When Cox heard that, he felt his belly go cold. That meant something to him.

  Where else in the world? he had asked.

  The irritatingly calm Doctor had spoken of it as he might the weather or a football score: Among others, he said, the United States. We think. We cannot be sure. No one seems to know how the information came to be in the hands of the Iranians, or how the Turks got it from them.

  At that, the cold in Cox’s belly had turned into a lump of dry ice.

  He could almost hear the Russian’s pragmatic shrug over the no-pix connection. There is nothing to be done. Either they will decode it or they will not. We will deny all, of course, but done is done. You should know. Perhaps you might consider buying an island in some friendly country, and moving your money there.

  Cox disconnected without another word and sagged back in his chair.

  So much for being a valuable, protected asset. The Russians would be sorry to lose him, but they weren’t going to help him, Cox was sure of that.

  Was he to be outed as a former spy? His good works since those foolish days would be ruined; he would be made into a villain, maybe even put in prison. It would kill his family. His wife would probably have a stroke. His children and grandchildren would be shamed. His friends would be astonished. But even if he held the government at bay and beat the charge, the taint would never leave him. Sam Cox? The billionaire? A Russian spy, did you hear? Hard to believe somebody with all that wealth and power could be so stupid, isn’t it?

  He stared at the desk and shook his head. He was a powerful man. He had access to a giant fortune, he had the ears of presidents and kings. That was a long way to fall. A terrifyingly long way.

  It couldn’t happen. Couldn’t. He would not allow it!

  But — what could he do about it? They hadn’t uncovered anything yet, so he had some time, but how to stop it?

 

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