Stepping inside, he was shaken by the destruction. The art and cultural icons on display had been looted or destroyed. Cabinets lay on their sides with doors smashed to splinters. Bullet holes tore up plaster and marble tables lay in pieces. The paintings were gone from the wall, every niche that had once held a pot or basket—Namibian heritage—had been emptied. Some of these things lay broken on the ground. Most were simply gone.
A half dozen rebels made a stand in the hallway off the cabinet meeting rooms. Charles lost one, killed three, took three more captive. He lay the prisoners side by side on their bellies, had his men jab them with gun barrels.
“Where is he? Your so-called president?”
They were quiet.
“It’s over, he’s lost. And you are the traitors who supported him. Speak up or I’ll line you up against the wall and execute you for treason.”
“End of the hall. Last room on the right. He’s trying to call an American helicopter to send a rescue.”
Charles left two of his men to guard the prisoners. He led the others down the hall. They kicked in each door in turn, to guard against ambush, but most of the rooms were empty. He took two more prisoners, but avoided more firefights.
There were only two men in the last room, William and a single bodyguard. William was speaking on a cell phone, pleading with someone on the other end. He turned as Charles entered and his face fell.
The guard threw down his weapon and lifted his hands. He stepped away from William, distancing himself from the former Minister of Mines and Energy, the self-proclaimed president of Namibia.
William dropped his phone and bent as if to grab for the man’s gun. Charles didn’t shout a warning, just waited with a feeling of grim satisfaction for his brother to make the move. He had a dozen men in the room already, each with a weapon pointed at William Ikanbo. Let him do it, let him pay for his crimes right here and now.
But his brother seemed to think better of the move, no doubt making the same calculation. He stopped, straightened and lifted his hands to put them over his head.
Charles ordered the two men taken, searched, then sent most of his men to continue to search the palace for holdouts. He sent the bodyguard off to join the other captives, but kept his brother lying on his belly in the middle of the room with his hands bound behind his back.
He wasn’t given to gloating, but couldn’t help but say, “How did the Americans come through for you, then?”
“You ruined everything,” William said. “If only you’d helped me, we could have saved Namibia’s oil for Namibians.”
“For you and your friends, you mean.”
“You think it’s going to be any better now? You think the Chinese are going to give you their profits? Believe me, I’ve seen the leases. They’re keeping the oil, keeping the money. This was a gift and you threw it away.”
“Oil is a curse, not a gift,” Charles said. “I don’t care how much money it gives us—whatever it is, it will be plenty, I’m sure—but we’d have been better off had it never been found.”
“You’re a fool.”
“And you’re a traitor who threw everything away. You had plenty, but you got greedy and now you’ve got nothing.”
“You won’t keep me in prison. There are too many men in Parliament who helped me. You can’t get rid of them all and sooner or later they’ll pardon me. I’ll get out and I’ll have more influence than ever.”
“You might be right,” Charles said. He took out his sidearm, kneeled with his knee against William’s back and placed the barrel against his brother’s head. His voice hardened. “I’d better make sure that doesn’t happen.”
“What? No!”
He pulled the trigger. A shot echoed in the room. From the corner of his eye, Charles saw his men flinch. And then his brother’s blood and brains splattered his hands and face.
“My God.”
It was a woman’s voice, and Charles turned, surprised, to see Julia Nolan standing in the doorway, followed by Ian Westhelle. The CIA agent wore a look that was both exhausted and alert, depending on whether you were looking at the intensity in his eyes or at battle fatigue in the rest of his features. He seemed to take in the entire room with a glance.
Julia rushed to William Ikanbo’s side. She felt for a pulse, then shook her head.
“There are more wounded. I’m going to see what I can do.” She stepped from the room, and was joined by a pair of Blackwing bodyguards.
“The battle is over,” Ian said to Charles after Julia was gone. “The rebels are either surrendering en masse or throwing down their weapons, stripping off their uniforms and trying to disappear into the city.”
Charles gave Ian a hard look. Time to find out what kind of man this South African turned American really was. “And what about your Blackwing forces?”
“Still securing the city. As soon as you’re ready, I’ll pull them back, out of Windhoek.”
“As soon as I’m ready?”
“You give the word and I’ll have my men moving in ten minutes.”
“Good enough.”
“I hope you do the right thing for Namibia,” Ian said. “You’ll have emergency powers, and sometimes these emergencies never end, if you know what I mean.”
“This one will,” Charles said, firmly.
“Good. Then it’s over.”
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
For a hedge fund manager, getting an unexpected visit from the SEC was as welcome as seeing a SWAT team at a crack house.
Malcolm Hathwell sat in his power chair, behind his ten foot long granite desk, with the views of Wall Street at his back. The two SEC guys sat on the other side. A pair of men in dark suits with ear pieces—like secret service agents—stood at the doorway to his office. Another man walked through the room, picking up objects casually and rudely from his shelves, as if examining them for bugs or other evidence.
“You’d better get to the goddam point,” Malcolm said.
A tall, slender man gave him a smile through thin lips. He’d introduced himself only as Mr. Bishop. “You know why we’re here. Let’s get that out of the way up front.”
“No, I don’t.”
“You really only have one hope, Mr. Hathwell, and that is to cooperate immediately and fully. I know that most insider trading involves a hefty fine, maybe a weekend stint in a country club prison. This is not like most cases. It encompasses possible treason, a scandal that must be snuffed out before it spreads, and a clear and present danger to the U.S. financial system. How does life in maximum security prison with no hope of parole sound to you?”
Any hope that this may have involved something else, some other, more minor indiscretion, vanished at once. Malcolm couldn’t remember the last time he’d felt fear at someone’s threats. He was very, very afraid now.
“The funny thing about insider trading cases,” Mr. Bishop said, “is that everybody thinks their situation is different. Somehow they’ll get away with it, because somehow this is not the same as at that other firm. Guy like you, rich beyond belief, gets so greedy for that next billion that he doesn’t stop and think of the risks. What’s the difference between having one billion or ten? Seriously.”
There was no answer to that question. If you didn’t already understand the difference, nobody could explain it to you. “What do you want?” he asked. “Is there something specific you’re looking for? Some sort of confession?”
“Unnecessary,” Mr. Bishop said. “Your partners already capitulated. They were all too happy to let you take one for the team. I think they might escape with five, ten years. That’s not my decision.”
“Then what?”
“I need names. You got this information from somewhere. I need to know who and what. And I need it now.”
“Are you making some sort of offer?”
“No. Except to promise that my pleasant demeanor changes in sixty seconds if you don’t start talking.”
He needed to talk to legal, better yet, find a criminal
defense lawyer. He hadn’t admitted anything, and surely shouldn’t. All the stuff about his partners was probably a bluff. They would be talking to their lawyers even now, refusing to communicate to the SEC except through their attorneys.
“Thirty seconds, Mr. Hathwell.”
“An old college buddy,” he blurted.
“Go ahead.”
“He works for the CIA. He came to me last week with information about an oil play in Namibia.”
From there, it didn’t take long for Malcolm to tell the man everything he knew. He worried that the confession would do nothing to save his skin. But he was too scared. Once he started talking, he couldn’t shut up. Terrance Nolan had it coming to him, involving Malcolm in all this.
Dumbass.
________
Sarah Redd grew impatient while waiting in the hotel room for Markov to arrange her escort. Bastard hadn’t bothered to call off the media hordes. In fact, she could still see him out the window from time to time, watching her room. It was raining and he wore a trench coat with his hands shoved deep in its pockets. No doubt his tiny brain was still scheming for a way to arrest her for her alleged crimes.
“Good luck with that, you idiot,” she muttered.
It was insufferable that she was in this position at all. She was a patriot. She had almost single-handedly engineered the most lucrative U.S. foreign policy initiative ever. What would it do to rid the U.S. of independence on Middle Eastern oil? Stripped of their stranglehold on the American economy, the whole lot of them could go off and have towel fights with their turbans for all she cared. Well, when all the details were out, the cowards who failed to follow-through with her Namibian foreign policy would pay the price in public opinion. Maybe when she’d had a chance to tell her side, her political fortunes would more than rebound. She might be the one running for President in the next election.
It was Markov who was the traitor, betraying top secret U.S. intelligence to the media. He would pay for that. She would see to it personally.
Getting out of the hotel would be the easy part. With so many dignitaries and other celebrities as guests, the hotel had multiple exits from the underground parking garage, some of them ingeniously designed to pop out on the far side of the block, via some other business’s parking. They’d whisk her away in a car with darkened windows and the media would never know the difference.
Facing the President in the Oval Office would be the hard part. He would demand Sarah’s resignation, no doubt with the plan to scapegoat her for the whole debacle, depending on how badly the Namibian situation blew up in their faces.
She could fend that off, too, but it would help if she had access to her personal computer. She needed her special files, with all of her notes collected over the years. Leverage. A career in military intelligence had no end of leverage.
A man wasn’t born President, after all. He spent decades climbing, kicking aside rivals, screwing beautiful women who were not his wife. Whatever wired a man’s brain to seek that kind of power also left him a thrill-seeker that often manifested itself in sexual conquest. This President was no exception.
Her personal files had details that may shock even the President with their specificity. Perhaps encourage him to look elsewhere for his scapegoat. Such as Anton Markov. Oh, that would be cruel justice.
A knock at the door disturbed her from the pleasant thought of revenge. She turned, startled.
“Who is it?”
“Ms. Redd? They sent me to pick you up.”
“Okay, just a second!”
Sarah ran her fingers through her hair, straightened her clothes. Too bad she couldn’t do anything about her makeup, at least cover the bags under her eyes. No choice in the matter, unfortunately.
She stepped up to the door and looked through the peep hole just to be sure. There was a secret service agent in a suit and with dark glasses outside her room. He shifted awkwardly from foot to foot and spoke into a headset that curved down from his ear. Looked like they’d sent one man so as not to alarm her, but no doubt a full team spread throughout the hotel and the parking garage, in case she tried anything stupid. No worries there.
Sarah unbolted the various locks and opened the door. The man stepped inside. To her surprise, he pulled the headset out of his ear and tossed it to the floor. Belatedly, she saw that it was not a secret service issue headset at all, but nothing more than bits of styrofoam and a plastic straw, cut, stuck together, and colored with a black marker.
On closer inspection, the man’s suit looked curiously out of date, either retro or some old thing taken from the back of the closet. His face was pale and there were razor cuts on his face, as if he’d shaved without a mirror. Too late, she recognized him and drew back with a terrified shudder. He was already shutting the door and bolting it behind him.
“Oh, my God, it’s you.”
The man smiled. “Hello Annalisa, or rather, Sarah Redd.”
He took a step toward her and she shrank back, toward the window, thinking furiously. There was nothing in here to defend herself; she’d looked already. And the privacy demands of the hotel meant this was the sort of building where screams didn’t carry. Could she get to the window, get a message somehow to the reporters down there?
“How did you get in here?”
“Trivially easy,” he said. “I won’t bore you with details, but anyone could have done it.”
“What do you want?”
“I want to know why. It’s the only thing I can’t figure out. Why? Why you did this to me, after everything. After everything!” His voice grew high, excited and there was an insane glint in his eyes.
She took another step backwards, but he took two steps and now he was standing very close indeed. Her back pressed against the wall, against the steel reinforced, extra thick wall built for safety and privacy.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about. Please, for God’s sake.”
“Do you remember that time we took a picnic on the banks of the Seine, about fifty kilometers out of Paris?”
“Yes, yes, I remember.” She seized on the lifeline. “It was a beautiful day, we watched the barges and you bought a bouquet of flowers from that fleuriste.”
His eyes took a faraway look. “Ah, oui. C’etait un tres belle jour. What a beautiful day. The camembert, that bottle of Bordeaux. You. Maybe the most beautiful day of my life.”
“Remember the swans?” Sarah forced a laugh. “Came up and snatched the baguette while we weren’t paying attention.” Her breathing came quickly, the words in a jumble as they came out of her mouth.
He gave her a knowing smile. “We were too busy to notice the swans, weren’t we, my dear? You wore that sun dress and no bra, just like a Parisienne on picnic. I wanted you so badly, I didn’t care if anyone came by and saw. I can still feel the breeze, smell your hair, with that scent of lavender from your shampoo. The feel of your skin under my hands, your breasts, your panties, damp with desire as I peeled them off…” A sigh.
It had been a beautiful moment; that was for sure. Mingled with regret, of course, since she’d known all along that they would come for him that night, now that she’d identified his flat, and carry him away, tranquilized, with a sack over his head. He’d never see daylight again.
The poor fool had never suspected a thing. And yet, here he was.
“But how did you…?” She stopped herself, knowing at once that it was a mistake. She needed him to talk about Paris, needed him to remember that moment, not the ten years following.
“Funny, I never even suspected,” he said. “All that time in the cell, trying to figure out who the Fer-de-Lance could have been, never once did I think it could be you. Not one time. But someone would know. Someone in Washington. I just needed to find the right person, absorb his or her memories.
“As soon as I got out, I went to a library, got on their computer,” he continued. “Amazing how much search engines have changed in the last ten years. There were pictures of the Director of
National Intelligence all over the web. My God, it was you. The only thing left is to figure out why.”
“I’ll tell you everything, I swear. I’ll tell you everything I know.”
“Of course you will,” he said. “But maybe not in the way you think.” He reached into his jacket and pulled out a small tool with a toothed metal disk on the end.
“What’s that?” she asked in a near scream.
“It’s a Stryker saw, for autopsies. Cuts right through bone.”
She tried to push past him, run for the door, but he caught her by the hair. He swung her around, toward the bed. She sprawled over the mattress and then tried to regain her balance and scramble away. But he was on top of her. With greater strength than she could have thought possible, he flipped her over to face him.
“No, James. No!”
“My name isn’t James,” he said in an unnaturally calm voice as the Stryker saw whirred into action with a horrible buzzing sound. “My name is Joe Kilroy, and I eat brains.”
________
Terrance Nolan had two bags, one with a few personal effects and changes of clothes, hastily gathered, and the other stuffed with cash.
One hundred thousand dollars, to be exact. A pitiful sum, but it would have to do. So much for the fantasy of retiring to his own private island, serviced by a fleet of helicopters and a staff of young females from all over the world, each one with perkier nipples than the last.
He stood in the hallway and couldn’t help but give a final glance over his shoulder, at the living room, at the woods behind the floor-to-ceiling windows. This place had seemed cramped for months now. Looked pretty good at the moment.
Terrance was on his way to some Third World shithole; he wasn’t sure where yet. Slink away, take on a false identity. His hundred thousand would disappear in a blink, if he wasn’t careful. He had to figure out some way to make it last. Quietly buy a piece of property on a beach somewhere in Malaysia or maybe Sri Lanka, develop it.
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