The outlaws pa-6

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The outlaws pa-6 Page 4

by W. E. B Griffin


  The waiter delivered three Bombay Sapphire gin martinis, no vegetables.

  "That was quick, wasn't it?" Eleanor Dillworth asked.

  "That's why I like to come here," Patricia Davies Wilson said.

  The three took an appreciative sip of their cocktails.

  "I was asking, 'What's this all about?'" Danton said.

  "Disgruntled employees, Mr. Danton," Patricia Davies Wilson said.

  "Who, as you know, sometimes become whistleblowers," Eleanor Dillworth said, and then asked, "Interested?"

  "That would depend on what, or on whom, you're thinking of blowing the whistle," Danton replied.

  "I was about to say the agency," Patricia Davies Wilson said. "But it goes beyond the agency."

  "Where does it go beyond the agency?" Danton asked.

  "Among other places, to the Oval Office."

  "In that case, I'm fascinated," Danton said. "What have you got?"

  "Have you ever heard of an intelligence officer-slash-special operator by the name of Carlos Castillo?" Eleanor Dillworth asked.

  Danton shook his head.

  "How about the Office of Organizational Analysis?"

  He shook his head, and then asked, "In the CIA?"

  Dillworth shook her head. "In the office of our late and not especially grieved-for President," she said.

  "And apparently to be kept alive in the administration of our new and not-too-bright chief executive. But that's presuming Montvale has told him."

  "What does this organization do? What has it done in the past?"

  "If we told you, Mr. Danton, I don't think you would believe us," Eleanor Dillworth said.

  Danton sipped his martini, and thought: Probably not.

  Disgruntled employee whistleblowers almost invariably tell wild tales with little or no basis in fact.

  He said: "I don't think I understand."

  "You're going to have to learn this yourself," Patricia Wilson said. "We'll point you in the right direction, but you'll have to do the digging. That way you'll believe it."

  "How do I know you know what you're talking about?" Danton challenged.

  "Before I was recalled, I was the CIA's station chief in Vienna," Dillworth said. "I've been in-was in-the Clandestine Service for twenty-three years."

  "Before that bastard got me fired," Patricia Wilson added, "I was the agency's regional director for Southwest Africa, everything from Nigeria to South Africa, including the Congo. You will recall the Congo is where World War Three was nearly started last month."

  "'That bastard' is presumably this Mr. Costillo?"

  "'Castillo,' with an 'a,'" she said. "And lieutenant colonel, not mister. He's in the Army."

  "Okay," Danton said, "point me."

  "You said you were going to the four-fifteen White House press conference," Dillworth said. "Ask Porky. Don't take no for an answer."

  John David "Jack" Parker, the White House spokesman, was sometimes unkindly referred to-the forty-two-year-old Vermont native was a little on the far side of pleasingly plump-as Porky Parker. And sometimes, when his responses to questions tested the limits of credulity, some members of the Fourth Estate had been known to make oink-oink sounds from the back of the White House press room.

  "Okay, I'll do it. How do I get in touch with you if I decide this goes any further?"

  Eleanor Dillworth slid a small sheet of notebook paper across the table.

  "If there's no answer, say you're Joe Smith and leave a number." [FOUR] The Press Room The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 1715 2 February 2007 "Well, that's it, fellows," Jack Parker said. "We agreed that these would last one hour, and that's what the clock says."

  Ignoring muted oink-oink sounds from the back of the room, he left the podium and headed for the door, where he was intercepted by Roscoe J. Danton of The Washington Times-Post.

  "Aw, come on, Roscoe, this one-hour business was as much your idea as anybody else's."

  "Well, screw you," Danton said, loud enough for other members of the Fourth Estate also bent on intercepting Porky to hear, and at the same time asking with a pointed finger and a raised eyebrow if he could go to Parker's office as soon as the area emptied.

  Parker nodded, just barely perceptibly.

  Danton went out onto the driveway and smoked a cigarette. Smoking was prohibited in the White House, the rule strictly enforced when anyone was watching. And then he went back into the White House. "What do you need, Roscoe?" Parker asked.

  "Tell me about the Office of Organizational Analysis and Colonel Carlos Costello. Castillo."

  Parker thought, shrugged, and said, "I draw a blank."

  "Can you check?"

  "Sure. In connection with what?"

  "I have some almost certainly unreliable information that he and the Office of Organizational Analysis were involved in almost starting World War Three."

  "One hears a lot of rumors like that about all kinds of people, doesn't one?" Parker said mockingly. "There was one going around that the Lambda Legal Foundation were the ones behind it; somebody told them they stone gays in the Congo."

  "Shame on you!" Danton said. "Check it for me, will you?"

  Parker nodded.

  "Thanks." [FIVE] The City Room The Washington Times-Post 1365 15th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 2225 2 February 2007 Roscoe Danton's office was a small and cluttered glass-walled cubicle off the large room housing the "city desk." Two small exterior windows offered a clear view of a solid brick wall. He had wondered for years what was behind it.

  His e-mail had just offered him Viagra at a discount and a guaranteed penis enlargement concoction. He was wondering whether he could get away with sending either or both offers to the executive editor without getting caught, when another e-mail arrived. FROM: White House Press Office ‹[email protected]› TO: Roscoe J. Danton ‹[email protected]› SENT: 2 Feb 19:34:13 2007 SUBJECT: Costello/Castillo Roscoe

  After you left, I had a memory tinkle about Costello/Castillo and the Office of Organizational Analysis, so I really tried-with almost no success-to check it out.

  I found a phone number for an OOA in the Department of Homeland Security with an office in the DHS Compound in the Nebraska Avenue complex. When I called it, I got a recorded message saying that it had been closed. So I called DHS and they told me OOA had been closed, they didn't know when. When I asked what it had done, they helpfully told me my guess was as good as theirs, but it probably had something to do with analyzing operations.

  At this point, I suspected that you had been down this route yourself before you dumped it on me.

  So I called the Pentagon. You would be astonished at the number of lieutenant colonels named Castillo and Costello there are/were in the Army. There is a retired Lt Col Carlos Castillo, and he's interesting, but I don't think he's the man you're looking for. This one is a West Pointer to which institution he gained entrance because his father, a nineteen-year-old warrant officer helicopter pilot, posthumously received the Medal of Honor in Vietnam.

  The son followed in his father's footsteps, and before he had been out of WP a year had won the Distinguished Flying Cross flying an Apache in the First Desert War. He went from that to flying in the Special Operations Aviation Regiment, most recently in Afghanistan. He returned from there under interesting circumstances. First, he had acquired more medals for valor than Rambo, but was also a little over the edge. Specifically, it was alleged that he either had taken against orders, or stolen, a Black Hawk to undertake a nearly suicidal mission to rescue a pal of his who had been shot down. Nearly suicidal, because he got away with it.

  Faced with the choice of giving him another medal or court-martialing him, the Army instead sent him home for psychiatric evaluation. The shrinks at Walter Reed determined that as a result of all his combat service, he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder to the point where he would never be psychologically stable enough to return to active service. They medically retired him. His retirement checks
are sent to Double-Bar-C Ranch, Midland, Texas.

  I suggest this guy was unlikely to have tried to start World War III from the psychiatric ward at Walter Reed.

  Sorry, Roscoe, this was the best I could do. If you get to the bottom of this, please let me know. My curiosity is now aroused. Best, Jack The message gave Danton a number of things to think about. He would not have been surprised to receive a one-liner-"Sorry. Nothing. Jack."-and this one meant that Porky had spent a lot of time, of which he understandably had little, coming up with this answer.

  Possibility One: His curiosity had been piqued and there had been time to do what he said he had done.

  Possible but unlikely.

  Possibility Two: This was a carefully thought-out ploy to get Danton off the track of a story which might, if it came out, embarrass the President, the White House, the department of State, or the Pentagon. Or all of the above.

  Possible but unlikely. There was a hell of a risk, as Porky damned well knew, in intentionally misleading (a) The Washington Times-Post and/or (b) Roscoe Danton personally.

  A short "Sorry. Nothing. Jack." e-mail maybe. But not a long message like this one. Including all the details of this Castillo character's military service.

  So what do I do?

  Forget it?

  No. I smell something here.

  The thing to do is find this Castillo character and talk to him; see if he has any idea why Meryl Streep and the other disgruntled whistleblower, whose thigh "accidentally" pressed against mine twice in the Old Ebbitt, are saying all these terrible things about him.

  But only after I talk to Good Ol' Meryl and her pal, to see what else I can get out of them.

  He tapped keys on his laptop, opened a new folder, named it "Castillo," and downloaded Porky's e-mail into it. Then he found the piece of paper on which Good Ol' Meryl had given him her phone number. He put this into the "Castillo" folder and entered it into his BlackBerry.

  Then he pushed the CALL key. [ONE] La Casa en el Bosque San Carlos de Bariloche Patagonia Rio Negro Province, Argentina 1300 3 February 2007 "I believe in a democratic approach when having a meeting like this," Lieutenant Colonel Carlos G. Castillo, USA (Retired), announced. "And the way that will work is that I will tell you what's going to happen, and then everybody says 'Yes, sir.'"

  It was summer in Argentina, and Castillo, a well-muscled, six-foot-two, one-hundred-ninety-pound, blue-eyed thirty-six-year-old with a full head of thick light brown hair, was wearing tennis whites.

  There were groans from some of those gathered around an enormous circular table in the center of a huge hall. It could have been a movie set for a motion picture about King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. When this thought had occurred to Sandra Britton, Ph.D., Dr. Britton had thought Castillo could play Sir Lancelot.

  Two people, one of each gender, gave Castillo the finger.

  "We told quote unquote those people in Las Vegas that we would give them an answer in three weeks," Castillo said. "Three weeks is tomorrow."

  "Go ahead, Ace. Let's get it over with," Edgar Delchamps said. He was a nondescript man in his late fifties. The oldest man in the room, he was wearing slacks with the cuffs rolled up and a dress shirt with the collar open.

  "I would like to suggest that we appoint a chairman for this, and a secretary, and I recommend Mr. Yung for that," Castillo said.

  "Cut the crap, Ace," Delchamps said. "Everyone knows you're calling the shots, but if you're going to make Two-Gun something, I more or less respectfully suggest you make him secretary-treasurer."

  Men who have spent more than three decades in the Clandestine Service of the Central Intelligence Agency tend not to be impressed with Army officers who had yet to make it even to West Point while they themselves were matching wits with the KGB in Berlin and Vienna.

  "Two-Gun, you're the secretary-treasurer," Castillo said to David William Yung, Jr.

  Yung was a round-faced, five-foot-eight, thirty-six-year-old, hundred-fifty-pound Chinese-American whose family had immigrated to the United States in the 1840s. In addition to a law degree, he held a master's degree in business administration from the University of Pennsylvania, and was fluent in four languages, none of them Asian.

  Before he had become a member of the OOA, he had been an FBI agent with a nearly legendary reputation for being able to trace the path of money around the world no matter how often it had been laundered.

  Before his association with OOA, Yung had never-except at the Quantico FBI base pistol range-taken his service pistol from its holster. Within days of being drafted into the OOA, he had been in a gun battle and killed his first man.

  But the "Two-Gun" appellation had nothing to do with that. That had come after Delchamps, who was not authorized at the time to be in possession of a firearm in Argentina, had Yung, whose diplomatic status at the time made him immune to Argentine law, smuggle his pistol across the border. Yung thus had two guns and was thereafter Two-Gun.

  Two-Gun Yung signified his acceptance of his appointment by raising his balled fist thumbs up, and then opening up his laptop computer.

  "First things first, Mr. Secretary-Treasurer," Castillo said. "Give us a thumb-nail picture of the assets of the Lorimer Charitable and Benevolent Fund."

  Two-Gun looked at his computer screen.

  "This is all ballpark, you understand," he said. "You want the history?"

  "Please," Castillo said.

  "We started out with those sixteen million in bearer bonds from Shangri-La," Yung said.

  Shangri-La was not the mythical kingdom but rather Estancia Shangri-La, in Tacuarembo Province, Republica Oriental del Uruguay. When Castillo had led an ad hoc team of special operators there to entice Dr. Jean-Paul Lorimer to allow himself to be repatriated, Lorimer was shot to death by mercenaries seeking to recover from him money he had stolen from the Iraqi oil-for-food scam, for which he had been the "bagman" in charge of paying off whomever had to be paid off.

  His safe had contained sixteen million dollars' worth of what were in effect bearer bonds, which Castillo had taken with him to the U.S. When this was reported to the then-President of the United States, the chief executive managed to convey the impression-without coming right out in so many words-that justice would be well served if the bearer bonds were used to fund the OOA.

  The following day, the Lorimer Charitable amp; Benevolent Fund came into being.

  "Into which Charley dipped to the tune of seven and a half million to buy the Gulfstream," Yung went on. "Call that eight million by the time we fixed everything, and rented the hangar at Baltimore/Washington. Et cetera.

  "That left eight, into which Charley dipped for another two point five million to buy the safe house in Alexandria. That left five point five million."

  The house in Alexandria was used to house members of the Office of Organizational Analysis while they were in the Washington area, and also to conduct business of a nature that might have raised eyebrows had it been conducted in the OOA's official offices in the Department of Homeland Security compound in the Nebraska Avenue complex in the District of Columbia.

  "To which," Two-Gun went on, "Mr. Philip J. Kenyon the Third of Midland, Texas, contributed forty-six point two million in exchange for his Stay Out of Jail card."

  Mr. Kenyon had mistakenly believed his $46,255,000 in illicit profits from his participation in the Iraqi oil-for-food scam were safe from prying eyes in a bank in the Cayman Islands. He erred.

  The deal he struck to keep himself out of federal prison for the rest of his natural life was to cooperate fully with the investigation, and to transfer the money from his bank account in the Cayman Islands to the account of the Lorimer Charitable amp; Benevolent Fund in the Riggs National Bank in Washington, D.C.

  "There have been some other expenses, roughly totaling two million," Yung continued. "What we have left is about fifty point five million, give or take a couple of hundred thousand."

  "That don't add up, Two-Gun," Edgar Delchamps challenge
d. "There shouldn't be that much; according to your figures, we've got two point something million more than we should have."

  "There has been some income from our investments," Two-Gun said. "You didn't think I was going to leave all that money in our bank-our banks plural; there are seven-just drawing interest, did you?"

  "Do we want to start counting nickels and dimes?" Colonel Castillo asked. "Or can we get to that later?"

  "'Nickels and dimes'?" Sandra Britton, a slim, tall, sharp-featured black-skinned woman, parroted incredulously. "We really are the other side of Alice's Looking Glass, aren't we?"

  Possibly proving that opposites attract, Dr. Britton, who had been a philologist on the faculty of Philadelphia's Temple University, was married to John M. Britton, formerly of the United States Secret Service and before that a detective working undercover in the Counterterrorism Bureau of the Philadelphia Police Department.

  "I was going to suggest, Sandra," Charley Castillo said, "that we now turn to the question before us. Questions before us. One, do we just split all that money between us and go home-"

  "How the hell can Jack and I go home?" Sandra interrupted. "Not only can I not face my peers at Temple after they learned that I was hauled off by the Secret Service-with sirens screaming-but the AALs turned our little house by the side of the road into the O.K. Corral."

  Dr. Britton was making reference to an assassination attempt made on her and her husband during which their home and nearly new Mazda convertible were riddled by fire from Kalashnikov automatic assault weapons in the hands of native-born African-Americans who considered themselves converts to Islam and to whom Dr. Britton referred, perhaps politically incorrectly, as AALs, which stood for African-American Lunatics.

  "If I may continue, Doctor?" Colonel Castillo asked.

  Dr. Britton made a gesture with her left hand, raising it balled with the center finger extended vertically.

  "I rephrase," Castillo said. "Do we just split that money between us and go our separate ways? Or do we stay together within what used to be the OOA and would now need a new name?"

  "Call the question," Anthony "Tony" J. Santini said formally.

 

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