“Similarly, if someone asks the President’s chief of staff what he knows about C. G. Castillo or the Office of Organizational Analysis, he can honestly say he doesn’t know anything about it. If we get caught—which is a real possibility—we can hide behind the President’s finding.
“The further you distance the Office of Organizational Analysis from the President, the better. That’s why he’s hiding it in Homeland Security. As far as you working for him directly, there’s a lot of captains through colonels—the aides, the guys who carry the football, for example—who work for him directly, and if some enterprising reporter sniffs you out, you can answer the same way they are instructed to. ‘Sorry, my duties in the White House are classified. You’ll have to ask the White House.’ Still with me?”
“Sir, what I was really asking was how much of what I’m doing do I tell him. Or you.”
“As far as ‘or me’ is concerned: Whatever you tell me I will tell the President when I think I should, and only then. The President is not interested in the means, just the end. That’s what puts me back in the loop. I will tell him only those things which may require some action on his part—I’m thinking of ‘Hell no, we can’t do that; tell him to stop.’” He paused, then asked, “You understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Okay. Now is there anything you need?”
“Just one thing I can think of, sir. I asked Tom McGuire to do it for me, but I’m not sure—don’t misunderstand this, I have a profound admiration for his abilities—that he’ll be able to do it.”
“You have ‘a profound admiration for his abilities’?” Hall asked.
“Yes, sir.”
“How would you like to have Tom working for you?”
“Is that possible, sir?”
“Joel suggested he would be very useful to you. I agree. Should I ask Tom?”
“I’d really like to have him, sir,” Castillo said, and thought, I have just proved that I, too, am learning to be a Washington bureaucrat. Those answers were, without being out-and-out lies, certainly designed to mislead. I already know Tom wants to work for me and that it’s possible.
“Okay, I will. Now what don’t you think Tom will be able to do?”
“Find out what FBI agent Yung is really doing in Montevideo. If he’s doing something covertly, they’re not going to tell Tom.”
“What makes you think he’s not doing what he says he is?”
“I don’t think you want to know, sir.”
“Ah, you’re learning,” Hall said. “Has this guy got a first name?”
“David William, sir. Junior.”
Hall pushed the speakerphone button on his telephone.
“Mary-Ellen, will you get me Director Schmidt on a secure line, please?”
“Right away, Mr. Secretary,” Mary-Ellen Kensington said.
He pushed the button again and looked at Castillo.
“I know the DCI knows about the finding; he called me first thing this morning to feel me out about it. I don’t think Schmidt has seen it yet. This is one-upmanship, Charley. A dirty game we all have to learn to play.”
The speaker came alive with Mrs. Kensington’s voice:
“Director Schmidt is on one, Mr. Secretary, the line is secure.”
Hall pushed the speakerphone button again.
“Good morning, Mark,” Hall said cordially. “How are you?”
“What can I do for you, Matt?”
“You’ve seen the Presidential Finding vis-à-vis the Masterson assassination, right?” Hall asked, ignoring Schmidt’s abruptness.
“As a matter of fact, no.”
“Well, hell. That makes this a little difficult, Mark. Obviously I can’t talk about it if you haven’t seen it. So forget I mentioned it. Just take this as a routine request for information. If you don’t mind a suggestion, you might ask the attorney general what’s new.”
“What sort of information do you need, Matt?” Schmidt said, his voice betraying his annoyance.
“Would it be easier for you if I called the attorney general? I don’t want to put you on a spot.”
“What information do you need, Matt?”
“You have an agent in the embassy in Montevideo. David William Yung, Junior. He’s supposed to be working on money laundering. What I need to know is what he’s really doing down there.”
“What makes you so sure he’s not doing what he says he’s doing?”
“We’re back to that area I can’t talk about,” Hall said. “Are you sure you don’t want me to go to the attorney general with this? I know he’s in the loop, and I’m surprised that you’re not.”
“I’ll look into it, Matt,” Schmidt said, “and get back to you.”
“I need this information yesterday, Mark,” Hall said. “So I have to ask, how long do you think it will take for you to get back to me?”
“I’ll get back to you just as soon as I can. Probably this morning.”
“I appreciate that, Mark. Thank you.”
“Anytime, Matt.”
Hall pushed the button, breaking the connection.
“See how it’s done?” he asked. “I’ll bet you two dollars to a doughnut that Schmidt is already trying to get the attorney general on the horn. The attorney general will tell him about the finding, and that he has to go along with it. Which will also make the point that I knew about it before he did, suggesting he’s not as important as he likes to think he is.”
“It’s childish, isn’t it?”
“Absolutely, but that’s the way things work,” Hall said. “Now that I’ve annoyed him, is there anybody else you’d like me to annoy?”
“Sir, when he calls back, could you ask him to contact the FBI people in Paris—and in Vienna, come to think of it—and ask them to give me whatever I need?”
“I will tell him that the chief of the Office of Organizational Analysis wants to make sure they know that when they are contacted, they will make any information they have on any subject available to him, and that they will probably be contacted by a man named Castillo.” He paused, and then went on. “And I will contact Ambassador Montvale and tell him to do essentially the same thing vis-à-vis his CIA station chiefs in Paris and Vienna. And Montevideo, too, if you’d like.”
“Thank you. It would probably be a good idea when you speak with Director Schmidt to ask him to tell the FBI in Montevideo to give me what I ask for.”
Hall nodded his agreement.
“Anything else, Charley?”
“I can’t think of anything else, sir.”
“Let me run this past you,” Hall said. “You’re going to need someone to handle your paperwork, someone who knows her way around Washington. What would you think about me asking Agnes Forbison if she’d like to work with you?”
“I could really use her.”
“I’ll have a word with her as soon as I can,” Hall said.
[THREE]
Over Wilmington, Delaware 1225 26 July 2005
They had been in the air only a few minutes when Castillo sensed the Lear had changed altitude from climbing-to-cruise-altitude to descent. There was only one reason he could think of for that; they were about to land.
Oh, shit, that’s all I need! Red lights blinking on the panel! The goddamn bird is broke!
He got out of his seat, walked to the cockpit, and dropped to his knees between the pilot’s and copilot’s seats.
“What’s going on?”
Fernando, who was in the left seat, looked over his shoulder.
“Please return to your seat, sir, and don’t interfere with the flight crew in the performance of their duties.”
“What’s wrong with the goddamn airplane?”
Colonel Torine took pity on him.
“You really didn’t want to go to Paris without saying goodbye to your girlfriend, did you, Charley?”
Castillo didn’t reply.
“Does it make any real difference if we get to Paris at four in the morning, or five?” Tor
ine went on. “I’ll top off the tanks, get us something to eat en route, get the weather, and file the flight plan to Gander while the Secret Service runs you back and forth to the hospital.”
When Castillo didn’t reply to that, either, at least partially because he didn’t trust himself to speak with the enormous lump in his throat, Torine went on: “Tom McGuire called and set it up.”
Castillo laid a hand on Torine’s shoulder, and then got off his knees and went back to his seat.
[FOUR]
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Fifth Floor, Silverstein Pavilion Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania 3400 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1340 26 July 2005
As the Secret Service Yukon pulled up outside the hospital, the agent sitting beside the driver spoke into the microphone under his lapel.
“Don Juan arriving.”
Fernando chuckled. Castillo gave him the finger. He wondered, now that he had been given a hell of a lot of power, if it would be enough to have the Secret Service change the code name Joel Isaacson had given him when he’d gone to work for Secretary Hall.
The Secret Service agent led them to the elevator bank, waved them inside, and then said, “Fifth floor, Mr. Castillo. We’ll be right here.”
A tall, stocky woman—visibly some kind of Latin— was standing in the lobby of the fifth floor when the elevator door opened. Her hair was drawn tight against her skull, and Castillo could see the flesh-colored speaker in her ear. He could also see a bulge on her left hip that was almost certainly a handgun.
“This way, please, Mr. Castillo. Special Agent Schneider has been put in five-twenty-seven.”
“Muchas gracias,” Castillo said. “Muy amable de su parte.”
It wasn’t hard to find room 527. There were two law enforcement officers sitting in folding chairs on either side of the door. One was wearing the motorcyclist’s boots and other special uniform items of the Philadelphia Police Department’s elite highway patrol. The other was a large and burly man in civilian clothing with the telltale ear speaker of the Secret Service in his ear.
As Castillo got close to the room, both of them stood.
Castillo glanced to his left and saw a glass-walled waiting room. There were more than a half dozen people in it. Castillo recognized three of them as Philadelphia police officers: Chief Inspector Fritz Kramer, the commander of the counterterrorism bureau; Captain Frank O’Brien, who headed the intelligence and organized crime unit and for whom Betty Schneider had worked as a sergeant; and Lieutenant Frank Schneider of the highway patrol, who was Betty’s big and, it could be reasonably argued, somewhat overprotective brother.
There were also a couple who Castillo decided were Betty’s parents, a clergyman, and several other people.
Well, what the hell did you expect? That it would be just the two of you?
He had what he realized was the vain hope that no one in the waiting room would see him.
The Secret Service agent at the door said, “Special Agent Schneider is in X-ray, Mr. Castillo. She should be back any moment. There’s a waiting room. . . .” He pointed.
“Any reason we can’t wait in there?”
“No, sir.”
Castillo and Fernando entered the room. The bed was mussed, but Castillo could see no other sign that Betty had been in the room.
And I didn’t see Jack Britton in that waiting room. Where the hell is he?
He walked to the window and looked out into an interior courtyard, and turned only when he sensed the door to the room was opening.
Betty was wheeled in on a gurney. She didn’t see Castillo until the technicians had moved her from the gurney onto the bed and moved out of the way.
Then she raised her hand and almost moaned, “Oh, Charley!” through her wired-shut jaws.
Castillo went to the bed and took her raised hand, and kissed it, and then bent over and kissed her very gently on the forehead. Then they just looked at each other.
Thirty seconds or so later, he took a chance that his voice would work.
“Wiener schnitzel, baby,” he said.
Betty smiled at him.
“If you don’t mind, Costello, our mother wants to see her!” Lieutenant Frank Schneider said behind him.
Castillo turned.
Standing behind Betty’s brother was the couple Charley presumed were the parents. Behind them were the clergyman and another man.
“What’s the matter with you, Francis?” Betty’s mother snapped. “Can’t you see the way she’s looking at him?”
“I’m sorry,” Castillo said.
Reluctantly, Betty let go of his hand.
Betty’s mother touched Castillo’s cheek, and stepped around him to the bed.
Betty’s father eyed him icily.
Castillo walked out of the room, followed by Fernando, and a moment later by Lieutenant Schneider.
Did he leave because he wanted his mother and father and the minister to be alone with Betty? Or did his mother tell him to get out?
“Costello!” Lieutenant Schneider said.
Castillo turned. Schneider walked very close to him and asked, “You remember one time I promised to break both your legs?”
Both the highway patrolman and the Secret Service agent guarding Betty’s door were now on their feet.
“The name is Castillo,” Charley said evenly. “And, yes, I seem to remember something like that.”
“I knew you were bad news the minute I laid eyes on you,” Schneider said. “She’s in there because of you.”
Castillo nodded slightly. “Guilty.”
“If you ever show your face around her again, I swear I’ll break both your legs and then tear off your arms and shove them up your ass!”
Castillo didn’t reply.
Fernando took a couple of steps closer. “Let me tell you something, Shorty,” he said, aware that “Shorty” was relative. Lieutenant Schneider, at six-feet-one, was at least two inches shorter—and maybe forty pounds lighter—than Fernando Lopez.
“Butt out, lardass!” Lieutenant Schneider said.
“That’s enough, Lieutenant!” Chief Inspector Kramer barked. “Back off! Now!”
“What I was about to tell the lieutenant,” Fernando said, matter-of-factly, “is that the way it is in our family, anyone wanting to get at Charley has to get past me first.”
“Don’t pour gas on a fire,” Chief Inspector Kramer said. “Ask any fireman. Both of you shut up.”
Castillo chuckled.
“You open your mouth once more, Schneider, and I’ll order you out of here. Capische?”
Schneider nodded.
“Say ‘Yes, sir,’ Lieutenant!”
“Yes, sir,” Schneider said, reluctantly.
“Charley, I need to talk to you,” Kramer said. “And O’Brien wants to know what’s going on, too. If I order our gorilla to wait at that end of the corridor”—he pointed—“can you get your gorilla to wait down there?” He pointed in the other direction.
Castillo looked at Frank Schneider. “I think you have a right to hear what I’m going to tell the chief,” he said. “Can you behave?”
Lieutenant Schneider nodded curtly.
“Say ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ goddammit, Schneider,” Kramer snapped.
“Okay, okay,” Lieutenant Schneider said.
“We can use the waiting room,” Kramer said, and pushed the door open.
“Well, Frank, what do you think?” Chief Inspector Kramer inquired of Captain O’Brien when Castillo had finished.
“A lot of cocaine comes here from Argentina,” O’Brien said.
“I didn’t know that,” Fernando said.
“They fly it from Colombia to Bolivia or Paraguay— sometimes direct to Paraguay—and then get it into Argentina,” O’Brien explained. “And then they mule it to Miami from Buenos Aires. The Argentine drug cops— they call them SIDE—are smart. Instead of arresting the critters, they let them get on a plane, and then call our DEA guys down there. The
DEA in Miami meets the airplane. That way the cocaine gets stopped, and we have to pay to try the critters and the cost of keeping them in the slam for fifteen to twenty.”
“SIDE does more than drugs, Captain,” Castillo said. “It’s the Argentine FBI, CIA, and DEA under one roof.”
“I didn’t know that,” O’Brien said. “What I’m thinking is that the drug guys—here, there, everywhere—do this kind of casual whacking. Anybody they think might be in the way of anything, anybody they think may have seen or heard something, gets whacked. Including members of their family.”
“I’m not saying you’re wrong,” Castillo said. “But that didn’t come up down there, either from a DEA guy I know, who would have told me, or from the head of SIDE.”
“What did they think was going on?”
“They had no idea,” Castillo said. “All we know—and I didn’t know this in Argentina—is that somebody wants to get their hands on Jean-Paul Lorimer, and is perfectly willing to kill anybody to do that.”
“We had a job here in Philadelphia a couple of years ago,” Kramer said. “Drugs shipped from . . . where, Frank?”
“Senegal,” O’Brien furnished.
“From Senegal to their UN Mission in New York. With diplomatic immunity. What happened was . . . out of school?”
Castillo nodded.
“Our dogs—not K-9, but the drug sniffers, those little spaniels or whatever—sniffed the cocaine in freight handling. We couldn’t get a warrant to open the boxes, of course, but I happened to be down there looking for explosives and one of the boxes happened to get knocked over. Not much damage, but put enough of a crack in the box for me to be able to stick one of those meat-basting hypodermic needles . . . You know what I mean? They have great big needles?”
Castillo nodded again.
“. . . into the box and come out with a white powder that tested to be really high-grade coke. So we called in the DEA. Who called in the FBI and customs and the State Department. It got to be a real Chinese fire drill. The State Department didn’t believe the white power had just dribbled out of the box; they as much as accused us of violating diplomatic immunity. They were afraid the Senegalese ambassador would be pissed and give an anti-American speech to the general assembly.
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