Tom Clancy - Op-Center 06 - Divide and Conquer

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Tom Clancy - Op-Center 06 - Divide and Conquer Page 25

by Eikeltje


  Behind her was an array of cleaning carts. To her right was a Peg-Board

  with keys for all the rooms. A row of master keys was located on the

  bottom. These were given out to the cleaning staff each morning. Two

  keys remained. Odette asked the elderly clerk if she could have more

  shampoo. Smiling pleasantly, the clerk rose and went to one of the

  carts. While the woman's back was turned, Odette took one of the master

  keys from the wall. The clerk returned with three small bottles of

  shampoo. The woman asked if she needed anything else. Odette said that

  she did not. Thanking her, Odette returned to the lobby and walked to

  the bank of telephone booths that lined an alcove in the back. As she

  was walking, her phone beeped. She tucked herself into one of the

  booths, shut the door, then answered it. Orlov said his team had broken

  into the hotel computer and they had five possibilities. Odette wrote

  down the names and room numbers.

  "We might be able to narrow it down a little more," Orlov told her.

  "If someone wanted to get out of the country quickly, he would assume a

  nationality the Azerbaijani would not want around."

  "Iranian," Odette said.

  "No," Orlov countered.

  "Iranians might be detained. Russian is more likely. And there are two

  Russians at the hotel." Odette said she might be able to narrow it down

  even further by checking the room telephone records.

  "Good thinking," Orlov said.

  "Hold on while we're checking. Also, Odette, there's one thing more."

  Odette felt her lower belly tighten. There was something about the

  general's voice.

  "I spoke with Mr. Battat a few minutes ago," Orlov said. Odette felt as

  if she'd run into a thick, low-lying tree branch. Her momentum died and

  her head began to throb. She did not think she had done wrong, leaving

  a sick man at home. But she had disobeyed an order and could think of

  nothing to say in her defense.

  "The American is on his way to the hotel," General Orlov continued

  evenly.

  "I told him to look for you in the lobby. You're to wait until he

  arrives before you try to take down your man. Do you understand,

  Odette?"

  "Yes, sir," she replied.

  "Good," Orlov said. The woman held on as Orlov's staff checked the

  records. Her palms were damp. That was less from nervousness than from

  having been caught. She was an honest woman by nature, and Orlov's

  trust was important to her. She hoped he understood why she had lied. It

  was not just to protect Battat. It was to allow herself to concentrate

  on the mission instead of on a sick man. According to the hotel's

  records, two of the five men staying there had not made any calls from

  the room. One of them, Ivan Ganiev, was Russian. Orlov told her they

  were also checking the computer's housekeeping records. According to the

  last report, filed the day before, Ganiev's room, number 310, had not

  been cleaned in the three days he had been there. Meanwhile, Orlov went

  to his computer and asked for a background check on the name. It came

  up quickly.

  "Ganiev is a telecommunications consultant who lives in Moscow. We're

  checking the address now to make sure it's valid. He doesn't appear to

  work for any one company," Orlov said.

  "So there's no personnel file we can check for his education or

  background," she said.

  "Exactly," Orlov said.

  "He's registered with the Central Technology Licensing Bureau, but all

  it takes to get a license is a bribe. Ganiev does not have family in

  Moscow, does not appear to belong to any organizations, and receives his

  mail at a post office box." That made sense, Odette thought. No mail

  collecting in the postbox, no newspapers piling up on the stoop. None of

  the neighbors would be certain whether he was there or not.

  "Hold on, we have his address," Orlov added. He was silent for a

  moment. Then he said, "It's him. It has to be."

  "Why do you say that?"

  "Ganiev's residence is a block from the Kievskaya metro stop," Orlov

  told her.

  "Which means--?"

  "That's where we've lost the Harpooner on at least two other occasions,"

  Orlov said. Battat walked into the lobby just then. He looked like

  Viktor did after ten rounds of boxing in the military amateurs. Wobbly.

  Battat saw Odette and walked toward her.

  "So it looks as though he's our man," Odette said.

  "Do we proceed as planned?" This was the most difficult part of

  intelligence work. Making a determination about life and death based on

  an educated guess. If General Orlov were wrong, then an innocent man

  would die. Not the first and certainly not the last. National security

  was never error-free. But if he were correct, hundreds of lives might

  be spared. Then there was the option of attempting to capture the

  Harpooner and turn him over to Azerbaijani authorities. Even if it could

  be done, there were two problems with that. First, the Azerbaijanis

  would find out who Odette really was. Worse, they might not want to try

  to extradite the Harpooner. It was an Iranian rig he had attacked. And

  Russian buildings. And American embassies. The Azerbaijanis might want

  to make some kind of arrangement with him. Release him in exchange for

  his cooperation, for help in covert actions of their own. That was

  something Moscow could not risk.

  "You're going to wait for the American to arrive?" Orlov asked.

  "He's here now," Odette said.

  "Do you want to speak with him?"

  "That won't be necessary," Orlov said.

  "The Harpooner will probably be traveling with high-tech equipment to go

  with his cover story. I want you to take some of it and any money he's

  carrying. Pull out drawers and empty the luggage. Make it look like a

  robbery. And work out an escape route before you go in."

  "All right," she said. There was nothing patronizing about Orlov's tone.

  He was giving instructions and also reviewing a checklist out loud. He

  was making sure that both he and Odette understood what must be done

  before she closed in. Orlov was quiet again. Odette imagined him

  reviewing the data on his computer. He would be looking for additional

  confirmation that this was their quarry. Or a reason to suspect it was

  not.

  "I'm arranging for airline tickets out of the country in case you need

  them when you're finished," Orlov said. He waited another moment and

  then decided as Odette knew he must.

  "Go and get him." Odette acknowledged the order and hung up.

  Washington, D.C. Tuesday, 2:32 a.m.

  Hood shut the door of the Cabinet Room behind him. There was a coffee

  machine on a small table in the far corner. The first thing Paul did

  upon entering was brew a pot using bottled water. He felt guilty doing

  that in the midst of a crisis, but he needed the caffeine kick.

  Desperately. Though his mind was speeding, his eyes and body from the

  shoulders down were crashing. Even the smell of the coffee helped as it

  began to brew. As he stood watching the steam, he thought back to the

  meeting he had just left. The shortest way of defu
sing the crisis on

  this end was to break Fenwick and whatever cabal he had put together. He

  hoped he could go back there with information, something to rattle

  Fenwick or Gable.

  "I need time to think," he muttered to himself. Time to figure out how

  best to attack them if he had nothing more than he did now. Hood turned

  from the coffeemaker. He sat on the edge of the large conference table

  and pulled over one of the telephones. He called Bob Herbert to see if

  his intelligence chief had any news or sources he could hit up for

  information about the Harpooner and possible contact with the NSA. He

  did not.

  "Unless no news is news," Herbert added. Herbert had already woken

  several acquaintances who either worked for or were familiar with the

  activities of the NSA. Calling them in the middle of the night had the

  advantage of catching them off guard. If they knew anything, they would

  probably blurt it out. Herbert asked if any of them had heard about

  U.S. intelligence overtures to Iran. None of them had.

  "Which isn't surprising," Herbert said.

  "Something of that magnitude and delicacy would only be conducted at the

  highest executive levels. But it's also true that if more than one

  person knows about an operation over there, then everyone has heard at

  least a piece of the story. Not so here."

  "Maybe more than one person at the NSA doesn't know about this," Hood

  said.

  "That could very well be," Herbert agreed. Herbert said he was still

  waiting to hear from HUMINT sources in Teheran. They might know

  something about this.

  "The only solid news we have is from Mike's people at the Pentagon,"

  Herbert said.

  "Military Intelligence has picked up signs of Russian mobilization in

  the Caspian region. Stephen Viens at the NRO has confirmed that. The

  Slava-class cruiser Admiral Lobov is apparently already heading south

  and the Udaloy II-class destroyer Admiral Chebanenko is joining it along

  with several corvettes and small missile craft. Mike expects air cover

  over the Russian oil installations to commence within a few hours."

  "All from something that started with the Harpooner-or whoever first

  hired him," Hood said.

  "Eisenhower was the first to use the metaphor in 1954," Herbert said.

  "He said, "You have a row of dominoes set up; you knock over the first

  one and what will happen to the last one is that it will go over very

  quickly." He was talking about Vietnam, but it applies to this."

  Herbert was right. You could count on the fact that dominoes not only

  fell, but they dropped quickly. And the only way to stop dominoes

  falling was to get far enough ahead of the chain and remove a few tiles.

  After hanging up. Hood poured himself coffee, sat down in one of the

  leather seats, and called Sergei Orlov. The fresh, black coffee was a

  lifesaver. In the midst of chaos even a small respite seemed enormous.

  The general brought Hood up to date on the situation with the Harpooner.

  Hood could hear the tension in the Russian's voice as he explained what

  the overall plan was. Hood related to Orlov's concern completely. There

  was worry for his operative Odette and a desperate desire to end the

  career of a notorious terrorist. Hood had been in that place. And he

  had both won there and lost there. This was not like a film or novel

  where the hero necessarily won. Hood was still on the phone with General

  Orlov when the door opened. He glanced up. It was Jack Fenwick. The

  time to think was over. The NSA head entered the room and shut the door

  behind him. The Cabinet Room was a large room, but it suddenly seemed

  small and very close. Fenwick walked over to the coffee and helped

  himself. Hood was nearly finished with the call. He ended the

  conversation as quickly as possible without seeming to hurry. He did

  not want Fenwick to hear anything. But he also did not want to show the

  NSA chief a hint of desperation. Hood hung up. He took a swallow of

  coffee and glanced over at Fenwick. The man's dark eyes were on Hood.

  "I hope you don't mind," Fenwick said. He indicated the coffee.

  "Why should I?" Hood asked.

  "I don't know, Paul," Fenwick shrugged.

  "People can get protective about things. Good coffee, by the way."

  "Thanks." Fenwick perched himself on the edge of the table. He was just

  a few feet from Hood.

  "We've taken a little break," Fenwick told him.

  "The president is waiting for the joint chiefs and secretary of state

  before making any decisions about the Caspian situation."

  "Thanks for the update."

  "You're welcome," Fenwick said.

  "I can give you more than an update," he went on.

  "I can give you a prediction."

  "Oh?" Fenwick nodded confidently.

  "The president is going to respond militarily. Emphatically. He has

  to." Both Op-Center and the NSA had access to photographic

  reconnaissance from the NRO. No doubt Fenwick knew about the Russians

  as well. Hood got up to freshen his coffee. As he did, he remembered

  what he had been thinking just a few minutes before. The only way to

  stop the dominoes falling was to get far enough ahead of the chain and

  remove a few tiles.

  "The question is not what the president will do, what the nation will

  do. The question is what are you going to do?" Fenwick said.

  "Is that why you came here? To pick my brains?"

  "I came here to stretch my legs," Fenwick said.

  "But now that we've gone there, I am curious. What are you going to

  do?"

  "About what?" Hood asked as he poured more coffee. The dance was on.

  They were each watching their words.

  "About the current crisis," Fenwick replied.

  "What part are you going to play?"

  "I'm going to do my job," Hood said. He was either being interviewed or

  threatened. He had not yet decided which. Nor did he care.

  "And how do you see that?" Fenwick asked.

  "The job description says'crisis management,"" Hood said. He looked

  back at Fenwick.

  "But at the moment, I see it as more than that. I see it as learning

  the truth behind this crisis and presenting the facts to the president."

  "What truth is that?" Fenwick asked. Though his expression did not

  change, there was condescension in his voice.

  "You obviously don't agree with what Mr. Gable, the vice president, and

  I were telling him."

  "No, I don't," Hood said. He had to be cautious. Part of what he was

  about to say was real, part of it was bluff. If he were wrong it would

  be the equivalent of crying wolf. Fenwick would not be concerned about

  anything Hood had to say. And Fenwick could use this to undermine

  Hood's credibility with the president. But that was only if he were

  wrong.

  "I've just been informed that we captured the Harpooner at the Hyatt

  Hotel in Baku," Hood said. He had to present it as a fait accompli. He

  did not want Fenwick calling the hotel and warning the terrorist.

  "Then it's definitely the Harpooner?" Fenwick said. Fenwick took a sip

  of coffee and held it in his mouth. Hood let the silence hang there.

 
; After a long moment, Fenwick swallowed.

  "I'm glad," Fenwick said without much enthusiasm.

  "That's one less terrorist Americans have to worry about. How did you

  get him? Interpol, the CIA, the FBI--they've all been trying for over

  twenty years."

  "We've been following him for several days," Hood went on.

  "We were observing him and listening to his phone calls."

  "Who are we?"

  "A group comprised of Op-Center, CIA, and foreign resources," Hood

  replied.

  "We pulled it together when we heard the Harpooner was in the region. We

  managed to lure him out using a CIA agent as bait." Hood felt safe

  revealing the Cia's role since it was probably Fenwick who had given the

  information about Battat to the Harpooner. Fenwick continued to regard

  Hood.

  "So you've got the Harpooner," Fenwick said.

  "What does all this have to do with the truth about what's going on? Do

  you know something that I don't?"

  "The Harpooner apparently had a hand in what happened in the Caspian,"

  Hood said.

  "That doesn't surprise me," Fenwick said.

  "The Harpooner will work for anyone."

  "Even us," Hood said. Fenwick started when he heard that. Just a

  little, but enough so that Hood noticed.

  "I'm dred, and I don't have time for guessing games," Fenwick

 

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