The Fellowship
( Blake Carver - 2 )
William Tyree
William Tyree
The Fellowship
Caracalla Baths
Rome
The second act of the Teatro dell'Opera’s outdoor production of Attila was coming to a close. Performed in the ruins of the Caracalla Baths, the 1800-year-old carved stones were tinged in magnificent red light under a starry Italian sky. And the actress playing the warrior maiden was just bludgeoning the audience with her vocal chords.
Adrian Zhu looked up at the postcard-perfect scene before him, drinking it in, trying to preserve it within his memory. In less than two minutes, his world would change. And in less than 10 days, he would change the world.
As Verdi’s music swelled in preparation for the climax, Zhu felt his business partner, Spencer, tense beside him. Hours earlier, they had capped off the third stop in a lecture tour that had showcased their latest achievement and set the tongues of the European biotech community wagging. Although Zhu had been the unqualified star of the show, Spencer’s role as sideman had been the highlight of his career.
This was the happiest he had seen Spencer in the three years since they had moved their company, LifeEmberz, from Boston to Beijing. He was riding high on Italian beer, opera and unregulated hotel WiFi. They had been accompanied to Rome by two high-ranking government officials and a couple of their best lab assistants. Spencer loved traveling with an entourage.
But Zhu was all too aware that this joyride was about to end. His friend would soon be inundated with interrogations by detectives and bureaucrats. He would be subjected to unimaginable scrutiny. Their corporate offices, and even their apartments, would be torn apart by investigators. Spencer would certainly be banned from the government research lab. He might even be forced to go back to the U.S.
Onstage, the actress playing Odabella raised her knife to stab Foresto. Three conspirators cried out, and the stage went black. As expected, a brief intermission was announced. It was time.
Zhu rose from his chair. “Be right back.”
His colleague rose and raced after him, nearly knocking over an old woman. “You getting more beer?”
Spencer and the others had gotten smashed in the VIP area before the play. Zhu had been there too, but he had only pretended to drink, finding opportunities to drain his beer in the restroom on multiple occasions. This was the biggest night of his life. He needed full control of his faculties.
“Just hitting the restroom,” Zhu said.
Spencer glanced at his black sport watch. “I might as well join you. Gotta make room for more beer anyhow.”
The crowd began to stream around them as they headed for the restrooms and concessions. Where was the exit his contact had told him to take? And even if he found it, how could he shake Spencer?
At six foot five, Spencer towered over the much smaller Zhu. He was usually a gentle giant, but when he was drinking, he could get carried away. One year back in Boston, after the Patriots had made it to the AFC championship game, Zhu had watched his inebriated friend pick up a plus-sized woman, lift her up onto his shoulders like a toddler, and do laps around the stadium.
“I never guessed Italy would be this great,” Spencer said now. “We should open an office here, dude! Everyone is so friendly.”
These feelings of alcohol-inspired world unity were the same ones Adrian Zhu had felt years before. One of his early LifeEmberz projects had sought to clone and grow human skin. He had then gone to a tissue-engineering conference in Paris where he had met a burn victim who had benefitted from his research. He had been greeted as a hero. Zhu felt like he was on top of the world. But everything had changed after they moved the business to China. The money had been fabulous, but the corruption and the politics had gradually left him feeling empty and immoral. But now he had perspective on it. China was just part of his journey. It had all led him to this moment.
Now he saw the sign for Exit 16. The one his contact, Lars, had told him to take.
“I think I’m gonna be sick,” Zhu said, placing a hand over his mouth. He dry-heaved, hoping the performance would be enough to gross Spencer out and send him back to their seats.
“You still can’t hold your liquor!” Spencer roared, pulling his phone out of his pocket. “Ha! Tell me when you’re gonna hurl. I’m gonna get this on video!”
Zhu stooped slightly as they emerged into the autumn night. The scientist scanned a small grove of trees and stone benches. Spencer was still fidgeting with the camera on his phone. Zhu ran out and ducked behind the shortest, thickest tree he could find.
He had to think fast. He had virtually no fighting skills. Even as drunk as Spencer was, there was no way Zhu would be able to subdue his massive friend, nor could he outrun him.
“Hey pukester!” Spencer called as he stumbled closer.
Zhu stepped back, nearly falling as he slipped on an empty beer bottle.
A beer bottle. Of course. He picked it up and raised it high above his head. He waited for Spencer to duck underneath one of the lower branches. Then he brought the bottle down hard over his partner’s skull.
To his amazement, the bottle didn’t break over Spencer’s head, but the blow dropped him to his knees.
“Ow! Okay, okay! I won’t video, all right? Just calm down!”
Heart pounding within his chest, Zhu sprinted through the grove and toward Via Antonina, across which he saw a parking lot full of taxis and buses. Spencer gave chase, and it was only moments before his long strides nearly made up the distance between them.
Zhu barely noticed the headlights of the black Range Rover flash as he sprinted across the busy street. He was already on the other side when he heard the sickening thud of a body against the SUV’s grill, followed by a screech of tires.
The bioengineer stopped, looked back and glimpsed the broken and bloodied body sprawled on the pavement before the headlights turned away. It was Spencer. He stood frozen as the Range Rover’s motor gunned again and swerved in his direction. A group of taxi drivers was running toward the scene of the accident.
Zhu wandered back out into the street and knelt at Spencer’s side. A smear of tire cut across his business partner’s khaki pants. His eyes rolled backwards into his head as his body convulsed.
The vehicle pulled up alongside him. The driver pushed the passenger door open. He wore driving gloves and a tight leather jacket that was crisscrossed with gunmetal-colored zippers.
“Get in!” he shouted in German-accented English.
National Counterterrorism Center
McLean, Virginia
Blake Carver peered at his opponent through the black mesh of his fencing helmet, right foot forward, waiting for the telltale sign of an imminent lunge. At six feet tall, he was at a slight disadvantage over his lankier opponent. His counterpart held his foil out to the side, as if inviting Carver to attack. But his right foot betrayed his true intentions. He lifted his toes slightly, preparing for a balestra — a short forward hop that would end in a quick thrust. Anticipating the move, Carver responded with a deft parry riposte to the gut.
The sprawling intelligence complex had taken a page out of the Silicon Valley office model. The newly expanded gym provided spaces where employees could join pickup games of basketball, foosball, handball and even fencing, which was surprisingly popular among the agency’s left-brained workforce.
Carver knew the agency’s facilities investment was designed to keep him working harder and longer hours than were really good for a person. But Carver didn’t mind hard work. Having been tied to a desk job these past few months, he found the gym a welcome refuge from the endless hours spent in front of a computer.
Carrying a bag full of pricey foils
, the younger analyst had entered the gym bragging about his exploits fencing on a championship team at Princeton and, later, with the U.S. National Team. Carver had also come to fencing in college, although his experience was hardly Ivy League. After failing to make the swimming team at the University of Arizona, the swim coach had waved his hand at the bronzed hardbodies chatting each other up in tight speedos around the sun-drenched pool. “These aren’t your people,” the coach had told the future intelligence operative. “Go on over to the rec center. The fencers practice in the basement. You’ve got the wingspan for it.”
It was true that Carver’s arms were freakishly long in comparison with the rest of his body. “Orangutan Arms,” his sisters had called him. So against his better judgment, Carver had followed the coach’s advice. But upon seeing members of the fencing club, he instantly resented the notion that these were “his people.” They had been, without exception, engineering students with bad skin and worse social skills. Nevertheless, it had taken him only one private lesson to get hooked. He found fencing simultaneously cerebral and physical, like chess with swords.
He had only recently had time to come back to the sport after a 15-year hiatus. One of the only positives to a situation that had found him tied to a desk. It wasn’t going so badly today. He had now scored eight touches in a row on the younger man with the fancy pedigree, and the analyst’s mounting frustration would only continue playing to Carver’s advantage.
“Again,” the analyst said wearily. He was stiff now, standing nearly straight up. He had a bad habit of moving his blade in a predictable semi-circular oval pattern while preparing an attack. Carver had knocked the foil out of his hand a few minutes earlier, and now the analyst clutched the grip hard, decreasing his flexibility.
Carver bided his time, waiting for the next offensive. When it came, Carver angled his body away from the lunge, pivoting with his rear foot while simultaneously bending down and thrusting. A well-executed inquartata.
The analyst went into a rage, ripping off his mask, hurling it across the room.
“Agent Carver?”
The voice belonged to Arunus Roth. The skinny kid in the secondhand suit standing in the doorway was the last person Carver expected to see in the gym. Roth was 100 percent geek. His idea of a workout was an all-night hackathon with friends.
Roth scurried over to him. “We need you in the NCC,” he said. “It’s Crossbow.”
Carver removed his helmet, running his fingertips through his gentleman’s haircut and down his sideburns, which had always been slightly too long for conservative Washington. He stuffed his blade into the oblong gray sports bag containing his work clothes and headed for the door. It was drizzling as they made their way, walking and talking, across the sprawling campus. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence, or ODNI, was located, along with the National Counterterrorism Center, in one of the most modern complexes in the agency system. Its lone downside was its physical location, which was far from downtown D.C. and even farther from CIA headquarters.
“What’s happening?” Carver said.
“Zhu’s team was attending the opera,” Roth said.
“Was?” Carver said, checking his watch. “It shouldn’t be over yet.”
“I’m getting to that.”
“Is Callahan there?” Their man on the ground in Rome, Thomas Callahan, had only last night managed to infect Zhu’s phone with malware that would allow them to both intercept his communications and track his location.
“Yeah, Callahan was there. His seats were about 10 meters behind Zhu’s. He’d just called in saying Zhu and his partner had stepped out for intermission. Then all of a sudden, I get an alert that Zhu’s on the move.”
Carver walked faster. “What do you mean, on the move?”
“He was suddenly moving at 60 miles per hour, or about 96 kph.”
“Stop converting everything to metric.”
“Sorry. Okay, so then Callahan calls in. He says there was just a hit and run outside the Caracalla Baths. He has no idea where Zhu is.”
“Great.”
“At least we can still track his location.”
“Don’t be so sure. You said Callahan didn’t see where Zhu went. For all we know, he tossed the phone into the back of a truck, and it’s zipping along the freeway right now while Zhu is busy watching the third act.”
The two men entered the National Counterterrorism Center, a massive X-shaped structure. Carver stood for a moment on the concourse, looking down on the pods of analysts dutifully going about their business. Immense screens on the room’s outer walls displayed feeds from websites, TV stations, satellites and cameras around the globe.
“Are we getting any data from Zhu’s phone?”
“Already intercepting data,” Roth said. “We have full touchpad monitoring on his device, so we can see anything he does, bro.”
Had the kid really just called him “bro”? He took a deep breath, reminding himself that Arunus Roth was only 21 years old. Like many of the agency’s newest geek recruits, he hadn’t even finished college. The American university system wasn’t producing nearly enough computer science degree holders these days, and venture capital-funded companies were out-recruiting the federal cybersecurity teams.
Last year, Roth had been expelled from an Albuquerque community college for playing an elaborate prank. Roth had used his burgeoning hacker skills to infiltrate the school’s vocational aptitude software, which several thousand new students were required to take each year. During the college’s busy enrollment week, the administration office had been flooded with complaints after the guidance software recommended that students pursue a variety of unusual occupations, including Alpaca husbandry, buffalo slaughter and gang thuggery.
Roth may not have been disciplined enough to stay in school, nor was he brilliant enough to head out on his own and create the next Facebook. But in this talent-starved environment, he was good enough to groom for cybersecurity work. As a first step, he was on track to spend one probationary year doing technical mission support, which meant doing pretty much anything Carver asked of him.
Now they proceeded down the stairs toward Roth’s pod. “What about voice monitoring?” Carver asked. “I want a recording of everything he says.”
“I’m trying to make that work. Should be able to get it done tonight.”
Carver checked his watch. The timing of this couldn’t have been worse. He was due to give a briefing on Crossbow in an hour.
Rome
The Range Rover’s velocity took Adrian Zhu’s breath away. He hung on as the vehicle weaved in and out of the rows of headlights racing toward the suburbs. Zhu cast a sideways glance at Lars. Although the two men had met numerous times during Lars’ trips to China, he hardly recognized him tonight. The security specialist had dyed his hair black and styled it into a short, fashionable cut. He was clean-shaven now, and he had gotten some sun on his face. He could have easily passed for a local.
He didn’t know what title Lars held in the organization, or how he had joined. He only knew that the Shepherd himself had entrusted Lars to deliver him safely.
A few minutes later, Lars swerved the Range Rover abruptly into the parking garage of a large hotel. His black shirtsleeves had receded, revealing a set of thick, veiny forearms.
“The Shepherd is here?” Zhu said.
Lars didn’t answer. He took a ticket at the parking gate, then drove quickly up the second-floor ramp, then the third, and finally to the fourth, where there were no other cars. He pulled into the middle of the otherwise empty row and kept the vehicle idling.
He activated a small silver device about the size of a credit card and pointed it directly at Zhu. A blur of yellow numbers began flashing on the device screen. It seemed to be scanning frequencies. Some type of bug detector, Zhu figured. It seemed that Lars was a cautious man. He wanted to make sure Zhu wasn’t wired.
The German’s serious, black eyes rolled up at Zhu. “What’s in your pocket?
”
Zhu pulled out his phone. He turned it this way and that in his hand, as if to demonstrate its innocuousness.
“Not good,” Lars said. “They can track our location with it. Pull the battery out.”
“Okay, but can I keep the phone for later? All my pictures and stuff are on it.”
“No.” He pointed to a white handkerchief neatly folded into a cup holder. “And wipe your fingerprints off the door panel and anything else you touched.”
Zhu wasn’t used to being talked to like this. Even his customers within the Chinese government treated him like a prince. “What’s the point?” he said. “Spencer’s blood is already all over the grill.”
“Just do as I say, and you will survive.” He pulled a duffel bag from the back seat and tossed it into Zhu’s lap. “Then change clothes. I have a motorcycle waiting on the other side of the garage.”
Zhu unzipped the bag and found a pair of black jeans, a motorcycle helmet, a white V-neck T-shirt and blue Superga sneakers. He picked up the helmet and flipped down the visor. It was painted black.
“The Shepherd is in a secret location,” Lars said, explaining the blackout visor. “Trust me. A helmet is more comfortable than a blindfold.”
Then Zhu saw them. Over Lars’ shoulder, a black Mini Cooper with tinted windows pulled up abruptly. There would have been nothing particularly threatening about such a small car, except that the cockeyed parking job made it clear that they didn’t intend to stay long. The passenger-side window lowered.
The bioengineer’s eyes suddenly expanded into coin-size saucers. Before Lars could turn to see what had frightened his passenger, the Range Rover’s driver side was taking automatic gunfire. The side windows were instantly crystallized. Zhu ducked for cover.
National Counterterrorism Center
Carver stood in a darkened conference room, pointing a laser dot at a magnified surveillance photo. His jet-black hair — a gentleman’s cut that was closely cropped around the sides, but short on top — was still damp with perspiration. The speed with which Crossbow had spun out of control had stunned him. He rubbed his unshaven chin with the back of his hand and looked at the five agency suits sitting around the conference table. The briefing had been planned as a simple FYI describing the ground game in Rome. Now it was damage control.
The Fellowship bc-2 Page 1