by Alex Lukeman
"Alpha One to all units. Subject is moving."
His teams acknowledged.
Monroe and the others climbed into a Land Rover Defender painted military green. The plates began with EI, identifying it as a unit of the Carabinieri. No longer just a police force, the Carabinieri were professional, well armed and now a full fledged unit of Italy's armed forces. They also had an attitude. Everyone in Italy knew you didn't piss off the Carabinieri.
Louis got behind the wheel. He wore the standard issue police uniform, dark blue with red stripes down the trousers, black, high-topped shoes, flashes on the collar, a peaked military style hat with badge. A white, buckled strap crossed his chest. He wore a black patent leather holster with a standard issue 9mm Beretta 93R. Enzio wore an identical uniform. Eddie and Monroe wore dark colored, casual clothes.
Enzio and Louis sat in front, Monroe and Eddie in the back. It would have looked odd for a black man to wear the police uniform. Monroe didn't mind. He was comfortable. At his feet was an MP-5 submachine gun, everyone's favorite. Under his jacket he carried a .40 Glock. In the rear of the vehicle was an RPG launcher, but Monroe didn't plan on using it. He wanted Azhrakov alive.
Monroe had another toy to stop the Mercedes, a Barrett 82A1 CQ that Eddie carried in his lap. Fifty caliber, semi-auto, with a barrel just over twenty inches in length. It was a bear to shoot, but the grip on top of the barrel helped hold down the recoil and stay on target. A fifty would take care of that armored glass. Even Mercedes didn't plan on stopping something bigger than a .45 or a three fifty-seven, or a burst from a nine mil Uzi. When a fifty hit something, it landed with 5000 foot pounds of extremely destructive force. A glancing blow from a fifty would hurl a man into the air. A direct hit would leave pieces everywhere.
Eddie was six-two, two hundred fifty pounds and built like a tank. He was left handed. He could handle the Barrett without a rest or bipod.
What was that old saying? Man plans, God laughs? Monroe hoped God wouldn't be laughing today.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
"Why are we slowing, Grigor?" Azhrakov looked up from his papers at the back of the driver's head.
"Accident ahead."
Yuri was annoyed. He'd wanted to take the speedy route to town, but there had been a roadblock. He'd chosen the next best route. Normally he didn't mind the slower, scenic routes but he was anxious to get to the airport. He had a meeting with an important client at his Dacha on the Black Sea. It wouldn't do if he wasn't there to greet him.
Ahead, Yuri saw a blue Fiat with a crumpled hood and fender halfway across the road. Another car, a red Alfa, sat hanging over a broken guardrail, the grill and windshield smashed, steam rising under the hood. A motorcycle cop stood by his BMW talking to a man holding a bloody bandage to his head. An ambulance sat behind the vehicles, lights flashing.
There was a curve and a turnout here. On the left, the road fell away into the trees and dropped for hundreds of feet. On the right, the mountains rose in a sheer wall. The road was completely blocked, except for a small section to the right.
"Go around it." Yuri gestured. As the Mercedes moved forward the cop turned and held up his hand. Grigor slowed.
A green police Land Rover, lights flashing, came up behind. Then the world exploded.
Eddie fired as the Land Rover came alongside. The armored glass shattered. One second, Yuri was looking at Grigor. The next, Grigor's head disappeared in a red mist. Blood, bits of bone and gray, soggy clumps covered Yuri's two thousand Euro suit and carefully pampered face.
The fifty caliber round passed through Grigor as if he wasn't there. It mangled the second bodyguard in the front seat. It continued on through the passenger window and impacted against the mountain. The Mercedes slewed off the road and came to a jolting stop.
The last guard was named Alexei. He opened the door and rolled onto the road, firing his Skorpion as he hit the ground. The motorcycle cop had his Beretta out. The Skorpion cut him down. Alexei turned and had just enough time to see a black man pointing a sub machine gun at him. It was the last thing he would ever see.
Enzio dragged Yuri from the car and threw him down onto the hard pavement. Azhrakov felt a sharp pain as someone jabbed a needle in his neck. Then, blackness.
Monroe looked at his agent, the one Alexei had shot. Blood pooled around him. His vest had stopped two rounds but another had struck his neck. He was dead.
"Get him into the ambulance with Azhrakov. Throw the bike over the edge. Get the bodies into the Mercedes and push it over. The Alfa, too. Get the Fiat out of here."
The vehicles went over the edge, crashing down into the trees. Monroe got back in the Land Rover. They headed for Milan.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
Carter's important phone rang. The signal for the secured line to Langley flashed. He picked up.
"Yes."
"Director Carter?"
"Yes."
"Please hold for the DNCS Hood."
Carter knew who Hood was. Director of National Clandestine Services, one of the top four directorates at Langley. In charge of all clandestine ops worldwide, HUMINT and who knew what else. Carter pressed a button to alert Stephanie.
"Director Carter, this is Clarence Hood." The voice was warm, with a hint of southern accent.
"Yes, Director. What can I do for you?"
"Let's drop the titles, shall we? How about I call you Nick and you call me Clarence? Less formal."
Interesting, Carter thought. "All right, Clarence."
"I'm calling about Sudan, and your, ah, adventures in Mali and Mauritania."
"You're well informed."
Hood chuckled. "That's my job. I'd like to get together with you. Share a little information. It's time we cooperated more closely."
When CIA offered cooperation it meant something big was in the air. It meant they were worried. Nick thought of the old warning to beware the Greeks bearing gifts.
"I'm sure the President would like to see more cooperation. What did you have in mind?" No harm in reminding Hood of where the Project's authority came from.
"How about lunch up here on the Seventh Floor? They do a great prime rib. At one, if you can make it."
Nick rustled papers on his desk. "One is tight. How about one-thirty? I can make that work." Through his office window, Nick saw Stephanie nod her approval.
"One-thirty, then. I'll have a car pick you up. I'll look forward to it." Hood ended the call.
Stephanie came in and sat down.
"My, Nick. Welcome to the big time. Prime rib, no less."
"Yeah. I'm looking forward to more cooperation. What do you think they're playing at?"
"They're worried about something. If they're laying out the red carpet it means they want something from us they can't do themselves."
"Something that might get them in trouble if it came out?"
"Maybe. They might need someone to do their dirty work for them."
"They're pretty good at that. Why us?"
"I guess you're going to find out. Nice move with the papers and the time change."
"Let's see...says here I have a beer with Ronnie around one. Tight schedule."
Stephanie laughed. "Seriously, watch your step. That's the lion's den over there. No one's better at half truths and misleading information."
"Hood wants to talk about Sudan. Remember you said you thought they knew more about that truck than they were letting on? Then they laid on the plane and weapons. Cooperating."
"See if you can find out why. What they know that we don't."
"Hey, I'm just an amateur. New kid on the block, hired gun. I'll bet they think I'm in over my head. It gives me an advantage."
"Well." Stephanie toyed with a bracelet. "It wouldn't be the first time someone underestimated you."
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
An earnest man in a dark suit met Carter at Langley. He introduced himself as George Burch. Burch gave Carter a visitor's pass, had him leave his pistol with security and escorted hi
m through the lobby. Their footsteps echoed on the granite floor. They walked across the CIA seal, a sixteen pointed compass star with shield and eagle. On the north wall, rows of stars memorialized agents killed in the line of duty.
On the south wall a life-sized bronze figure of William Donovan, leader of the World War Two Office of Strategic Services, kept endless watch on those who passed. Wild Bill would have been astounded at what his OSS had become.
They walked down a hallway lined with portraits of former Directors of the agency. At the end of the corridor Burch used a card to bring down an elevator from the Seventh Floor. It was always the Seventh Floor, capital S, capital F. The intelligence empire of the U.S. was largely run from there. Every career CIA officer wanted to make it to the Seventh Floor.
Burch showed Carter into the executive dining room and left. DNCS Hood rose from a comfortable leather chair and came forward, hand outstretched.
"Nick. Thank you for coming."
"My pleasure." Hood's hand was dry, his grip a practiced firmness.
Hood was lanky and tall, cadaverous in his look, with watery blue eyes. He was sixty-four years old and in less than the best of health. His skin was dry and colorless. He wore a plain suit that failed to reflect his position of power.
Carter considered Hood brilliant and effective, a five star general in a dirty, undeclared war that operated far outside the convenient fictions of public thinking about right and wrong. He was ruthless in his pursuit of America's enemies.
The DCNS was career Agency, like his boss. Unlike his boss, he had put in a lot of years in the field before he'd been given a series of bigger desks. He'd been boots on the ground in the bad old days of Vietnam, East Germany and the Russian war in Afghanistan. He looked like what he was. An old spy come in from the cold, near the end of his career.
Hood and Carter had common ground between them. No one knew what it was like in the world of clandestine ops unless they'd been there. They shared a mutual desire to protect the country. Nick was prepared to respect him. He didn't know if he would like him.
They sat down at the table. Two place settings of linen, white china, crystal and silver shone against the polished walnut surface. A steward entered, poured coffee and water and set a fresh salad in front of each man.
Carter waited.
"This thing in Africa." Hood sipped his water. Right to business.
"Yes. Thanks for your help in getting my team out of Khartoum."
"Khartoum is one reason I wanted to chat with you today."
Nick took a forkful of salad. "They were determined to protect that truck. My team saw something loaded on it before the fireworks started. We think it might have been VX."
"A reasonable assumption. However, it wasn't VX."
Hood waited while the steward placed plates of thick prime rib before them. Nice potatoes, greens. Fresh horseradish. Sprinkles of something green. All very nice. Nick noticed the bulge of a pistol under the steward's jacket. The steward left the room.
"If it wasn't VX, what was it?"
"Bausari has gotten his hands on a WD-54 SAM. A big one. Six kilotons."
Nick set his fork down. He'd just lost his appetite. SAM. Special Application Munition. "A backpack nuke? One of ours?"
"Yes."
"Didn't we stop making those?"
"We did, in '88. But several were kept in storage at Ramstein. One went missing sometime in '93. An arms dealer named Yuri Azhrakov ended up with it. We've learned he sold it to al-Qaeda."
"Why the hell didn't you let us know? For that matter, why didn't you have your own guys on it?" Nick felt his blood pressure rising. "You told us you weren't interested, that you didn't think that truck was important."
"We didn't know, then. We weren't sure. We knew that plant wasn't making VX..."
Nick was angry. "So you let us go in there and, as far as you're concerned, waste our time and resources. Put my team in danger. Why?"
Hood shrugged. "Wasn't my call, Nick. For what it's worth, I apologize. But when you called for help, we did our best to back you up. Please, let's not get into blame here. We're both on the same side. We need to move on. We need to work together. Someone's got it who doesn't like us. You seem to have a lead on that. We need your help, now."
"Does the President know about this?"
Hood looked at Nick. "No. Director Lodge has decided we need to get more information before we inform him. The DCI doesn't want to unduly alarm him."
"You have got to be kidding." Nick forced himself to be calm. "Six kilotons. If something like that went off in Washington or New York..."
He left the thought unfinished.
Hood cut a piece of rib, chewed. "What did you discover in Mali?"
Nick briefed him.
"You think this secret order of assassins is back in business."
"It doesn't make much sense, but that's our conclusion."
Hood seemed thoughtful. "Shia. Bausari is a Sunni. They don't cooperate."
Nick drank some water. "This cult thought of itself as guardians of the pure Faith. True believers. They thought everyone except them was a heretic."
"I hate true believers," Hood said. "They make so much trouble. Unless they're on our side, of course."
Hood paused as the steward cleared the plates and poured fresh coffee.
"That will be all, Robert."
"Yes, Director." He left the room.
Hood said, "Someone killed Imam Ahmed Sahar in Kabul this morning. They left one of those tokens on the body."
"That's bad news." Nick toyed with a spoon. "He was our last hope for a negotiated peace over there. It throws the whole thing back into the fire."
"Exactly. What is your analysis?"
"Without more info? If they found one of those discs, it's the assassins. Taking out the Imam is a strategic move. The killings of Senator Randolph and the Brit make it look like Iran is behind it. Off the cuff, I'd say we're dealing with an organized and well-funded group of terrorists we haven't run into before. They're doing a pretty good job of fanning the flames. If they're working with Bausari it makes them an even higher priority threat with that nuke loose."
Nick picked up his coffee, drank, set the cup down.
"We don't think it's Tehran. Our reading is the deliberate clue that this is a Shia op, meaning Iranian, is misdirection."
Hood nodded. "That is my analysis as well, but you and I are in the minority." He sipped coffee. "This artifact in the cave. Do you have anything else?"
"Not yet. It's probably a relic of Muhammad. From what we know about the assassins, it could be the sign they've been waiting for. One of my team has been digging into that. If it turns out to be the sign, the assassins will think it signals the imminent coming of the Mahdi. That's bad news for everyone who's not Muslim."
"Like Chinese Gordon."
"Gordon?"
"The British general commanding Khartoum back in the nineteenth century. He was besieged and those idiots in London dithered over whether or not to reinforce him. He was fighting someone who claimed to be the Mahdi, a tribal leader with an army. They took Khartoum and slaughtered the British. The rebellion was crushed, but it was a little late for Gordon."
"If someone shows up with a sign from Muhammad and says he's the Mahdi, he could kick the Jihadist war up to a different level."
Hood nodded. "Indeed. Especially with an atomic bomb."
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
"A suitcase bomb?" Stephanie went pale. Selena and Ronnie were stone faced. Lamont was at Bethesda, but Nick knew he'd have something to say about it when he found out.
"More a backpack than a suitcase. With the shielding, it must weigh over a hundred and fifty pounds. Not your average carry-on."
"Hood is certain of this?"
Nick nodded. "Yes. He's nervous."
"Gee, I wonder why? Rice will put Langley's balls in a wringer when he finds out. And we have to tell him."
"Nice turn of phrase, Steph. Warning Rice, yes, we have
to do that. But what do we tell him? And if we tell him, there goes our new found love affair with Langley."
"We have to get them to do it. That way it doesn't make us rat them out."
"Langley? How do we do that?"
Stephanie was silent for a moment, thinking. Carter waited. "If we give Rice a big problem like that," she said, "then we have to come up with a solution. It could be a joint CIA/Project op. DCI Lodge might go for that. Rice longs for more cooperation between the agencies. Langley's been a pain in the ass for a long time. Lodge would score some points if it looked like Langley wanted to work with us. It would validate Rice setting the Project up in the first place."
"You sound like Harker."
"She was a good teacher." Steph twisted a bracelet on her wrist. "I wouldn't mind it if she came back."
"I wouldn't either. But we've got it now." Nick scratched his ear. "I think Hood will go for it, to cover his ass if nothing else. Shared responsibility means shared blame if it goes south. So we'd better have a damn good plan. Which means we need a clear mission. What is our mission, Steph?"
Steph faced her computer. "Let's break it down. What do we need to accomplish?"
"Find Bausari and the bomb. Find out where the assassins are hiding out. We find them, we might find out what was in that cave."
"And we do that by...?"
Selena sat up in her chair. "I found hints of a refuge for the assassins in one of those manuscripts. If there is such a place, it's in the northwest mountains of Pakistan. We could look for it."
"Wait a minute," Nick said. "Mali's one thing. That part of Pakistan is another. That's the Hindu Kush."
"You have a better idea?"
"These guys have been hidden for centuries," Ronnie said. "How are we going to find them?"
"I admit, it's a needle in a haystack. There were just a few vague landmarks in that manuscript."
Nick considered for a moment. "We could come in from Afghanistan, disguised. Avoid the checkpoints. Selena speaks the language. Ronnie and I know a few words. But we can't go in blind and wander around."