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The Julian Secret

Page 9

by Gregg Loomis


  Lang turned to watch two German shepherd dogs

  sniff the landing gear as a uniformed agent stood on tiptoe to peer into a wheel well. "Better to be a little late than take a chance."

  Burt was wide-eyed. "I don't understand, Mr. Reilly. If somebody put a bomb on the plane, why would they turn around and make an anonymous call to report it?"

  Lang shifted his weight, his hands behind his back. "Oh, I'd guess some organization we turned down for a grant got pissed, and somebody decided a bomb hoax would be a way of getting even."

  "But what about the guy who was in the hangar?" Burt was nervous, afraid he'd somehow get blamed for whatever bad might happen. "I mean, I'm careful to lock up every time I leave-honest."

  Lang put a reassuring hand on the young man's shoulder. "I'm surprised you don't guard it twenty-four/seven, careful as you are. No doubt in my mind you locked up."

  "But how ..." A large uniformed black man wearing a TSA windbreaker approached. "Mr. Reilly? Step over here, please." Lang and Burt followed to the base of a ladder resting

  against the rear of the aircraft. The man pointed, looking at Burt. "You might want to take a look."

  Lang watched Burt climb the ladder and peer into the small hole created by the removal of an inspection plate. Even from the floor, Lang could see the pilot's face go white. "Oh, shit!"

  Lang arched a questioning eyebrow at Burt. The pilot's legs were-less than steady as he climbed back down. "Main control cable, one to the horizontal stabilizer," Burt managed with difficulty. "It's all corroded."

  "Logbook shows the aircraft had a hundred-hour inspection less than two months ago," the TSA man said. "That cable couldn't corrode that fast." Lang was becoming as uncomfortable as his pilot. "Unless?"

  The government man shook his head. "Not sure. There was an odor, though, soon as the A & E pulled the plate. That's what made him call me over."

  "Give me a swag, some wild-ass guess," Lang said evenly.

  The TSA man took one look at the anger burning in Lang's eyes, the threat he seemed to express without words, and decided this was a man who wasn't going to accept the usual government-speak nonsense. He made a most ungovernment like decision to exceed his authority. "Can't be sure, but I'd make a personal guess it was some sort of acid."

  "Acid?" Lang was puzzled.

  Burt, still looking like he might be ill any moment, nodded. Acid eats almost through the cable. Leaves enough connection to respond to the controls

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  during preflight, then snaps."

  "And then?" Lang asked.

  "Horizontal stabilizer controls altitude, nose up, nose down. If it went out on takeoff, say, we couldn't lift the nose of the plane to get into the air; we'd crash off the end of the runway."

  Lang's knowledge of aeronautics was basic at best. "I thought the air speed controlled when the plane left the ground."

  "It does, but unless the plane lifts off, it would just increase velocity until it hit something. Even if the horizontal stabilizer held for takeoff, we'd be unable to climb. For that matter, we couldn't lift the nose on landing, either."

  Once again, the TSA man beckoned. "Come with me."

  Lang guessed he was used to being obeyed.

  Lang spoke to Burt. "Make sure she's properly buttoned up, will you?"

  ''You can count on it."

  Lang followed the man to what he guessed were the

  airport's administrative offices. In one room, six people were watching a television monitor of Lang's hangar. He had not seen the camera. If there was doubt in Lang's mind that they were all some species of cop, the letters on various windbreakers dispelled them: FBI, ATF, US Marshal, Treasury Department. The only departments missing seemed to be Health and Human Services and the IRS.

  A woman, middle-aged and probably once attractive, extended a hand with a badge in it. "Sheila Burns, Special Agent, FBI."

  All agents-were "Special Agents" unless they were "Special Agent in Charge" or some other derivation. It had been a subject of humor at the Agency. Lang said nothing, waiting for her to continue.

  He wasn't disappointed. "An attempt to sabotage your aircraft, Mr. Reilly. That's a federal crime." Her words capitalized the offense. "Just as effective as a bomb, with the added benefit of maybe passing as an accident."

  "Any ideas?" a man from the Marshal's Department asked without introduction. Burns silenced him with a glare. Obviously, she was the chief honcho on the investigation.

  She asserted her authority by asking, "Know somebody who'd want you or the executives of your foundation dead?"

  "No."

  She glanced around the room, making sure she was asking the questions Lang knew they had all agreed upon before he got here. He was well familiar with interrogation by committee. "The Holt Foundation was chartered as a charity a little less than a year ago, right?"

  Lang had been wrong. The IRS was here, just not in person. That left Health and Human Services.

  "That's correct. We fund programs to provide pediatric care in undeveloped countries."

  "Do you mind telling us the source of that funding?"

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  "Our sources are confidential."

  Not entirely a lie. The Pegasus organization would hardly want its identity known.

  Burns's eyes narrowed, the equivalent of a horse laying its ears back or a dog growling. Law-enforcement agencies assumed that any information withheld was incriminating. Privacy was a bothersome subterfuge of the guilty.

  "You know I can find out." Lang gave her a smile with no humor in it. "Be my guest."

  The labyrinth of foreign banks, dummy companies, and assumed identities would take an army of accountants to unravel. Well, a regiment at least.

  A half hour of evading further questions left the FBI agent frustrated and Lang mentally fatigued. He could have gone on, however. Agency training included aggressive interrogation, a course its students referred to as "creative obfuscation." This woman was a sweetie compared to the instructors under whom Lang had suffered. His training had also included ascertaining exactly what the person asking the questions did and didn't know from the line of inquiry. Same, similar, and re-asked questions made it clear to him that the Feds suspected the foundation was into something other than charity work. Exactly what, he was fairly certain, they had no idea.

  She was clearly winding down, asking, "You're a lawyer, right?"

  She made it sound like an accusation.

  Lang was tired of standing, but he understood asking to sit would be interpreted as a sign he was weakening. Actually, it was a sign his new toe caps hurt. "That's right."

  "No wonder we can't get a straight answer," said an anonymous voice from the back of the room. Lawyer-bashing, a sport even government bureaucrats could play.

  Special Agent Burns sounded like she had just discovered his darkest secret. She pounced. "So you're used to interrogation procedures."

  "That's what lawyers do, ask witnesses questions." There was a snicker from the back of the room that drew a dagger like stare from the FBI woman.

  A few more questions and he was told to go, excused like an unruly child from after-school detention. Since no one had a clue as to the source of the attempted sabotage, he, Lang, was the convenient suspect, he was sure, although it was unclear why an extremely wealthy charitable foundation would want to destroy either a multimillion-dollar aircraft or the executives who flew on it.

  Lang did have an idea, though he wasn't about to share it. So far, it had no name, no face. But it was linked to Don Huff. First Lang's car, then his foundation's plane. What was next, the thirty-story building in which he lived?

  Finding Don's killer had become very personal. Personal and a matter of life and death.

  Lang's life and death.

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  CHAPTER TEN

  Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, Delta Crown Room, Concourse B

  The next day

  Gurt was sipping a beer, her eyes wan
dering across the crowded room.

  "Explain again why we are going to Chicago."

  Lang was stirring sweetener into a cup of flavorless coffee. "These people, whoever they are, obviously have someone watching."

  Gurt waited for the wail of a nearby infant to subside rather than raise her voice. "Obviously?"

  Resigned to the fact that he was going to add-no taste other than sweet to his beverage, Lang took a sip and grimaced. "First, they know I usually park and pick up the Porsche myself. How many residents you think pay the same fees I do and still fetch their own car?"

  Gurt shrugged. "Those who do not need wheelchairs or walkers?" The building had a fair percentage of what management euphemistically referred to as "seniors."

  Lang was uncertain if Gurt was serious or making a joke. It was hard to tell with Germans. "Actually, almost everyone, old or young, uses the valet car service. Whoever planted the bomb knew I didn't. They also knew I was going to use the Gulfstream for this trip."

  Gurt set her glass down. "Or were willing to wait until your next flight in it."

  "Possible," Lang conceded, "but I don't think so. The acid would have completely eaten through that cable in a day or two, and then the sabotage would have been detected." He frowned. "Of course, that's why we're flying commercially now, so the plane can be completely torn down and inspected, make sure there are no more surprises waiting."

  Gurt stood and went to refresh her beer. Admiring glances from men and jealous ones from women followed her like the wake of a ship.

  She returned with a glass in one hand and a paper cup of snacks in the other. "Did you ever consider that was what these people wanted you to do, fly the airlines? It would be much easier to know your wheneabouts."

  "Whereabouts."

  "Whatever."

  The implication that he was being manipulated was disturbing. "Why would they do that? I mean, if the cable had parted, they would have succeeded."

  "Only if killing you was what they wanted," Gurt said.

  She took a sip and made a face as though she had bitten into something tart. "To call this beer is to advertise falsely."

  ''You say that about every American beer."

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  "It is true with every American beer."

  "If they wanted to know where we were going, all they had to do would be call up the international flight plan that has to be filed with the FAA. I'm pretty sure they're more interested in making sure whatever we found in Spain stays a secret. Problem is, what did we find?"

  Falsely advertised or not, she took another drink, this time without the face. "It is also a simple matter, is it not, to chop into the electric files of either the airline or credit card company and see what your flight reservations are?"

  They both knew the answer. Even with the technology available when Lang was with the Agency, obtaining the passenger manifests of any carrier had been simple. In fact, the lists of Iron Curtain airlines were routinely scrutinized.

  Cooling had not improved the taste of Lang's coffee. He put the cup down, pushing it away in unconscious rejection. "We can't keep our destination secret, but we can make sure no one is actually following us by taking an indirect route."

  Primary instruction at The Farm, the Agency's training facility in the Virginia countryside.

  Gurt finished her beer, shot a look at the bar, and decided against another. "Why would they follow us if they know where we are flying?"

  Lang leaned across the table. "They might not, but an indirect route might very well make them think we believed we were evading them." He proffered two sets of tickets. "Take a look."

  Gurt frowned, squinting at the small type. "But these ..." She grinned.

  "The shuffle is on again?"

  He nodded.

  Lang's eyes felt as though they had sand in them, and his lids weighed a ton each. Sleep had evaded him on the flight from Chicago to Paris. It was as if his subconscious kept him awake in the belief that, should an emergency occur at 35,000 feet, he could do something about it if sufficiently alert. Tired of the novel he had brought along, he tried to get interested in the in-flight movie. A childish comedy sufficiently sanitized by the airline to offend no passenger, it had also been leeched of any entertainment value.

  Idly, his mind wandered. How many times had he crossed the ocean? At least once or twice a year while he was with the Agency. Then there had been that trip with his wife, Dawn.

  The memory was weighted with sadness. Dawn, bright and cheerful, had been only too happy to work while Lang attended law school after leaving government service. After all, the law practice would mean she would have her husband home at night instead of excuses phoned from undisclosed places. He would succeed, she was certain.

  And he had.

  An unexplained gap in his resume between college and law school had made him less than attractive to the big law firms, but he had no intention of spending the rest of his life in stuffy boardrooms, toadying to corporate clients.

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  Instead, he had relied on his Agency contacts for a steady flow of the less reputable part of the practice. Seedy, but able to pay their legal bills. A member of an ambassador's staff involved in a scheme to bribe an official of a foreign government; a national floral chain importing more than roses from Colombia.

  His practice had become profitable, and Lang and Dawn had taken the first of a planned series of trips to Europe before beginning a family. Instead, their lives were commandeered by the silver spider, the name he gave the arachnid-like form that appeared in X-rays of his wife's reproductive system. The spider grew while Dawn seemed to shrink, until she was little more than a nearlifeless bag of skin-and bone. At her bedside, they planned trips both knew they would never take. Away from the hospital room and the stench of certain death, Lang cursed a god whose eyes might have been on the sparrow but whose back was turned to Dawn.

  The end had been anticlimactic and merciful. He had missed her long before.

  The empty months spent in an empty house made for an empty life. At first, he dated tentatively, more to please friends than from any desire of his own. The women all had one defect or another, defects he realized were more in his eyes than real. What was missing was that they were not Dawn. He finally sold the house and most of the furnishings and moved to his present high-rise condo.

  Even the new place seemed empty. He took on more cases than he could effectively handle, hoping to leave no time for sorrow. That didn't work, either.

  In the search for his sister's killers, he had renewed his acquaintance with Gurt, a coworker he had bedded on an irregular basis until he met Dawn. At first he had felt guilty, as though' betraying his wife with another woman. The priest, Francis, wise in the way only a man who had never had woman problems could be, had pointed out that Lang did not have to stop loving Dawn to love Gurt, too.

  And he had.

  The only problem was Gurt's systematic refusal to even discuss a more permanent arrangement. Sooner or later, Lang supposed, she would go back to Germany, back to the Agency, leaving him as bereft of children and family as before. Until then, though, he had intended to savor every moment.

  He had almost managed to doze off when the flight attendant announced an imminent landing. Gurt was bright-eyed and eager for whatever the day held. As always, she had slept soundly from the moment the 757's wheels retracted into their wells.

  Lang felt it was one of her most unattractive attributes.

  Both retrieved their single bags from the overhead bin. Checked luggage meant a predictable stop at baggage claim as well as the possibility that the suitcases might well take off on an excursion of their own.

  Modern travel: breakfast in New York, dinner in Paris, and baggage in Istanbul.

  More important, a person standing at a baggage carousel was a fixed

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  target, vulnerable to a point-blank shot or the stab of a knife. The Agency had discouraged any bag that could not be carried aboard.

&nb
sp; He had never been in Paris's Charles de Gaulle air terminal when it was not mobbed. Africans in bright colored cotton robes mixed with the pastel Hindi saris, while mustachioed men in caftans herded their wives and children along. Overhead speakers kept up a stream of unintelligible announcements that blended with a hundred different languages in a re-creation of Babel.

  Little had changed since his last visit.

  Without further communication, Gurt ducked into the ladies' toilet, leaving Lang to guard her bag. When she reappeared, he headed for the men's while Gurt strained to recognize anyone from their flight. When Lang emerged, he feigned interest-in a magazine rack while Gurt disappeared into the crowded exits. Lang kept an unobtrusive surveillance of reflections of passengers scurrying by the glass of the newsstand. He noticed no one purposely hovering nearby. In exactly five minutes, he hurried after, Gurt.

 

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