by Ty Patterson
In another email Spadea replied, ‘Boss, we’re going into dangerous territory. We can’t use kids. There’s no more labor to be recruited. We just have to accept reduced output.’
To which RH came back, ‘Fuck that shit. Minerals are at an all-time high. We need labor, and kids can get the rocks out as well as anyone. Let Joop handle it.’
‘Boss, getting Joop in is going wild.’
‘So? We’re in the jungle, in case you forgot. Wild is normal.’
Another thread of mails starts from Spadea.
‘The natives are getting restless. One of the children working in the mines died.’
‘Use Joop. He’ll know what to do.’
‘That’s a last-ditch option. Are you sure?’
‘Yes, I am fucking sure.’
‘Chief, we have to be careful. The company is much more visible because of your public profile; we can’t go around doing shit like this.’
‘Listen, asshole, I pay you to manage security not to be my conscience or my PR agent. Joop knows how to deal with the natives. Let him. You just make sure the work continues.’
Zeb finishes reading all the papers, which contain many more emails in a similar vein, hands them across to the others and sits watching out of the window.
Broker looks at Connor. ‘These are genuine?’
‘All verified, authenticated by some of the best cryptos in the country, guys who analyze IP addresses, that kind of stuff.’
‘Well, hell, we just lost a Senator, then.’
Connor notes Chloe’s troubled expression. ‘Something bothering you?’
‘How is it that he wrote all this so openly? Surely he isn’t that stupid?’
‘He isn’t. He’s one of the smartest people on the planet. However, his blind side is that his wealth and power make him believe he’s untouchable, and it’s gone to his head. Power makes people do stupid things and behave as if they’re bulletproof.’
Anne, who has joined them, looks shaken. ‘This is so vile…so monstrous. It makes me feel sick that he can hold political office and go about his business while those he’s affected have no future or are dead.’ She sniffs and scrubs a tear away.
‘What will happen in all probability is someone from his office will lean on your editors, hush this up, and his life will continue on its merry way. Either that or he’ll denigrate your credibility, your sources – everything to discredit this story. You know it’s happened before.’
‘Won’t happen this time. For one, the NYT is not known for buckling under pressure. For another, this email trail is fully authenticated and verified by all kinds of technology specialists. There is absolutely no way Hardinger can deny he sent those mails. And finally, if the NYT does give in to pressure, then I’ll publish the story on the Internet. It’ll go viral and in many ways be more powerful than traditional publishing.’
He passes another sheaf of papers to Zeb. ‘This is as much of the story I’ve written so far. It still needs some editing and some tweaks, but is almost ready to go to press.’
Zeb speed-reads through the story and finds it a hard-hitting exposé of the mining industry in Africa with a special focus on Alchemy. Connor has neatly laid out Alchemy’s activities without resorting to emotion, letting the facts and the photographs tell their own story. The story is backed up by interviews, statistics and the damning email trail. Connor has also interviewed the specialists who have verified the emails.
Connor hands over a bunch of photographs. ‘These are going with the story. Not all of them will be printed. Most of them will go on the online edition.’
In several photographs, Connor has circled key characters and described their relationship to Hardinger and their role in Alchemy.
Broker takes some of the photographs and starts going through them and grabs the rest of the photographs that Zeb tosses over. Zeb goes to the windows and looks out, suddenly wondering what he’s doing here. He’s pretty sure Connor got them together so that he can have a sounding board and at the same time has some heavies around him to reassure Lauren and Anne.
The more time he spends here, the more time Holt gets to secure his witness protection status with the FBI or escape from the country.
He senses the sudden stillness behind him before he turns around.
Broker is staring hard at a photograph, and the rest are looking at Broker’s face.
Zeb strides across to him, and Broker hands him the photograph.
It’s a bunch of people gathered around Hardinger, all of them smiling or laughing as if Hardinger had cracked the funniest of jokes. There’s Hardinger’s head of security, Spadea, neatly ovalled by Connor, various security guards, and mining personnel. The photograph was taken at one of the mines, and Zeb can see the equipment in the background, the Kleig lights standing sentinel over them all.
None of those interest Zeb after he gives them a cursory glance. It’s the figure in the corner of the photograph who is shielding his face from the camera, unsuccessfully, who has his attention.
Carsten Holt.
Chapter 15
Connor sees his fingers whiten on the photograph, then relax, and curious, he steps across to look at the snap himself. ‘What’s it that has got you guys in a tizzy?’
‘Who’s that guy?’ Broker asks.
‘That? That’s Joop.’
Broker and Bear look at Zeb, while Connor, Lauren and Anne look increasingly puzzled.
‘Someone you know?’
‘Yup.’
‘Connected to whatever you’re doing now?’
No answer.
Zeb is still, yet Connor can sense something powerful swirling inside. ‘Zeb?’
Zeb tells him.
The story sounds grimmer when told in the middle of Manhattan, the background sounds of New York present though muted, with an uninflected voice-over by Zeb. Lauren disappears during his narration, and they can distantly hear sounds of her throwing up.
Zeb resumes when she returns, and the silence and the darkness in the apartment grows deeper. Connor lets out a long, loud breath when he’s finished and paces around the apartment, saying nothing. ‘So all this while…’ He begins and then stops.
‘You mean to say this guy and the others…’ He has no words. ‘Oh, fuck it,’ he finally says and pours himself a triple scotch. He offers the bottle to the others, then replaces it when all of them decline.
He composes himself and asks Zeb, ‘So this guy is here in New York? And being protected by the FBI?’
Zeb nods.
‘And you know where he is?’
‘We think we know where he could be,’ says Broker.
‘Just who’s this guy in Hardinger’s world?’ he asks Connor.
‘Joop is some kind of freelance Mr. Fix-It for them. He’s not an Alchemy employee, and he’s not a security contractor either – I wasn’t able to work out how he got paid, but he was always around when Hardinger was there and was very close to the security people. I never spoke to him. He took great care to distance himself when I was there.’
Broker looks at Zeb. ‘That’s why we couldn’t find him.’
‘Now what?’ asks Connor.
‘Nothing,’ replies Zeb, getting up and preparing to leave. Broker, Bear and Chloe start moving out along with him.
‘You go ahead with your exposé, but you leave Joop or Holt, or whatever name he goes by, to us.’
‘My story has wider implications now, hasn’t it? Now I can also prove that Hardinger associates with monsters. And there is the FBI angle, that they’re protecting this guy.’
‘Sir, Hardinger will just deny that he knows this person in the photograph. He can just as easily say that the Joop he is referring to is someone else. It’s not that uncommon a name in that part of the world. Don’t forget that there’s no record of this guy on Alchemy’s payroll or the payroll of its contractors. Broker checked that out thoroughly. As for the FBI, the Patriot Act was made for them. They can do anything under the name of terrorism p
revention.’
Broker smiles grimly. ‘This guy is dangerous. I strongly suggest you don’t involve him in your series. Leave this guy to the authorities or to us.’
‘How about my going to the police or challenging the FBI with my story?’ Connor asks.
‘I can’t advise you on what you should do, other than telling you that if I were you, I would think twice about involving Holt in this story. The police? This is beyond their jurisdiction, I’d say. The FBI might just arrest you for obstruction of justice or whatever they can think of. We tried going to them and were warned off. Whatever you do, I strongly suggest that you get yourself and your family well protected.’
Broker nods in Lauren and Anne’s direction. ‘This is why Zeb’s got Bear and Chloe hovering around Cassandra,’ he adds as they file out of Connor’s apartment.
Once outside Connor’s apartment, Zeb turns to Bear and Chloe and asks them to be even more vigilant with Cassandra. ‘I’m not convinced Connor will leave this alone, and if he includes Holt in his story, then that crazy might do anything.’
Turning to Broker, he adds, ‘It might be good if you kept your distance and got back to your information business. You’ve neglected it long enough.’
Broker gives him the finger. ‘I’m sticking closer to you than a wart on your ass. Focus on how we deal with Holt now. I don’t think the FBI are going to release Holt, so how long are you going to play nice?’
‘I’m going to the DRC’s mission at the UN and tell them everything. I expect them to burn the wires to Washington or wherever and lodge this issue with the Secretary-General.’
‘Well, hell, why didn’t you do this before?’
Zeb shrugs. ‘Time was on our side. Now it isn’t.’
‘I think I’ll tag along. You have a habit of finding trouble…even your shadow steers clear of you.’
‘Don’t. I’ll go alone. You try to find out where Holt is holed up. Do another search, this time for houses or apartments that have been leased out in the last two to three months to start with.’
‘I end up doing the dirty work while you get the glory,’ grumbles Broker as they part.
The next day sees Zeb struggling to get around the Congo’s bureaucratic reception desk to set up a meeting at their mission in the UN. Exasperated, he puts his phone down, thinks for a moment, and then dials a number he thought he would never have to use.
‘Hello,’ says the dry precise voice.
‘Sir, this is Zeb, Zebadiah Carter. We met–’
‘I remember, Major. How can I help you? I didn’t think I would hear from you again,’ says the Secretary-General.
Zeb explains his predicament to him and goes silent as the Secretary-General thinks.
‘Major, may I ask why you want to meet with them?’
‘I would rather you didn’t, sir.’
‘Is this related to Luvungi?’ and then he continues when Zeb doesn’t reply, ‘Of course – it has to be. Very well. Someone will be in touch with you.’
A couple of days later, Zeb gets the call from the DRC mission asking him to meet with the Permanent Representative of the DRC in the UN.
Jimmy Atoki, a tall African with regal bearing, is waiting for Zeb once he has cleared security. After introductions, he leads the way silently to his offices, and once there, he regards Zeb, expressionless.
‘Major, I have taken time to meet you because I got an intriguing call from the Secretary-General suggesting that meeting you would be worthwhile to my country.’ He gestures to Zeb, saying, ‘Make it worth my while.’
Zeb looks around, taking his time to frame his words, knowing that the PR’s office would be recording the conversation.
The PR observes him with a knowing look. ‘You requested this meeting, Major. It’s a bit late to be thinking about blowback.’
Zeb looks back at him and does something he has never done in a long time: takes a leap of faith. He tells him everything, without naming the agency or the key players in it.
The PR sits without moving, without emotion, looking right into Zeb’s eyes as he listens.
‘An interesting story, Major. Luvungi happened, but why should I believe it happened the way you say it did? Back home the story is that it was a bunch of rebel soldiers who committed the atrocities.’
‘Sir, there is no reason for me to spin a story and waste your time and mine. I have been to your country a few times. There are a few people in your current government who can vouch for me.’
Atoki’s eyebrows rise as Zeb mentions a name. He gestures towards a telephone and lifts it when Zeb gestures a ‘sure’ back.
Atoki speaks in rapid-fire French to the person at the other end, raises his eyebrows, then hangs up the phone.
‘You are well connected, Major,’ he says in French, the official language of the Congo.
‘Requirements of the job,’ Zeb replies in the same language, impressing the PR twice in as many minutes.
‘So you want us to shake your FBI tree and be a nuisance so that you can deal with this Holt? And what will you do with Holt once you capture him?’
‘That will depend, sir, upon how we capture him.’
A silence fills the room, and then Atoki smiles faintly. ‘And if you arrest him as he is jaywalking?’
‘I shall hand him over to you.’
The smile grows brighter and then fades as Atoki stares into the distance, letting the silence build, noting that Zeb is relaxed, yet alert. ‘Very well. We’ll see what falls out when we shake that tree. No doubt you’ll discover how successful we are through your connections.’
He escorts Zeb out, and as Zeb is leaving, he calls out, ‘Major.’
Zeb turns back.
‘We are a nation rich in minerals and yet a poor nation. Our people fight one another and others while our women and children die of hunger. Many here’ – he indicates the UN – ‘look down on us and deem us unworthy of their attention. But we are also a proud nation. We would not want to see Holt live a comfortable life.’
Zeb looks at him, tall, dark and hard angles, comfortable in a Western milieu but equally comfortable in the warrior’s garb in the plains of Africa.
‘You are Zande?’ Zeb asks.
Atoki inclines his head.
‘Holt will not live.’
Atoki looks at him. Zeb is standing relaxed, something in his eyes that Atoki recognizes, another warrior who would be equally comfortable in the African plains. Atoki nods.
Zeb leaves the building. At the gates he sees Broker waiting in a Jeep.
He knows immediately.
Broker speeds off without a word as soon as he seats himself.
‘What?’
‘Lauren and Rory.’
Chapter 16
Broker looks at Zeb out of the corner of his eye. No reaction, not a single muscle twitch on his face, just a quiet stillness surrounds the most lethal man he has ever come across.
He sends the Jeep barreling through New York, through red lights and pedestrian crossings, controlled madness at the wheel, motion unleashed on the streets. The streetlights whiz past, etching streams of light on Broker’s face.
‘He made a big mistake,’ Zeb says finally, and Broker just nods.
It is time to rectify the mistake.
Bear and Chloe are outside the apartment and nod in greeting. They are alert, and the bulges under their jackets are reassuring.
Inside, Connor is slumped over in his armchair, with Anne and Mark fussing over him when they reach his apartment.
Cassandra briefs them calmly.
Lauren and Rory had gone to play in the park after Rory’s return from school, and they never returned. Connor organized a frantic search for them when he came home from work, but he couldn’t find any trace of them.
Before he could call the police, he received an anonymous call. The message was chilling.
Lauren and Rory had been abducted, and Connor should stay by his phone for further instructions.
‘I should have
listened to you.’ Connor looks at him with dull eyes. ‘I wrote my story the day you told me about Holt and included him in it. I contacted Hardinger, wanting to get a quote from him before running it. He denied knowing Holt, just as you said he would. In fact, he denied everything in the story and said he would sue me into oblivion.
‘I then told him that there were eyewitnesses to Holt’s atrocities in Africa and the photograph linked him directly to Holt. My ego got the better of me, and I mentioned you by name.
‘I returned home and…’ He trails off, waving his hand around helplessly.
‘What did the caller tell you?’ Broker asks.
‘That I should stay by the phone and not call the police. That I should await instructions.’
Broker turns to Zeb. ‘He’s moved fast in just one day. Assuming it’s Holt.’
‘It’s Holt. He said he was Holt,’ says Connor.
Zeb nods and looks at Broker. ‘Can you–’
‘Of course I can. I have everything in the Jeep.’ Broker cuts him off and heads out.
‘Shouldn’t we be calling the police, the FBI?’ Anne asks.
Zeb looks at Connor. ‘Yes.’
Zeb drifts outside and joins Broker in his Jeep.
Broker is looking at some graphical image on his laptop. ‘I narrowed down the recently leased houses in Williamstown to about ten, and I’m looking into who rented them.’
‘If a phone got turned on in any of those houses, would you be able to pinpoint which house it was?’
Broker looks up and catches on where Zeb is going with this. ‘Do fish fuck in the ocean?’ He narrows his eyes. ‘What are you doing out here? Shouldn’t you be creating an action plan with Connor? And why are we doing this shit, anyway? The NYPD or the FBI can hunt Holt down and rescue them. This has gone way beyond WITSEC now. The FBI can’t stand by their witness protection story anymore.
‘Oh, all right,’ he growls when Zeb continues to stare at him, and gets back to his laptop. ‘I’m into the systems of the different cell phone networks and am using a better system than the FBI or the NYPD use to triangulate. If a call originated from those houses, we’ll know which house it came from.’