The FBI director closed the door behind him and glared at Speers, who was working behind a 19th century oak partner’s desk that looked like it weighed more than his car.
“I’ll say this for you, Julian. You’ve got cajones.”
With Eva’s blessing, Speers had just reclaimed the same office he’d had during the Hatch Administration. It was an insanely good space. A corner office complete with a view of historic 17th Street NW, a fireplace and a dumb waiter.
“It was the only sensible solution,” Speers said. “I need to be in close proximity to you and the president during this crisis. McLean’s just too far.”
Fordham sat down in the chair before him. “When you hear what I’ve got to say, you’re going to wish you were a lot farther away than McLean.”
“Try me.”
“The preliminary report on the Preston fire points to arson.”
Speers nodded. “I assume the target was first responders. What did they use as a detonator?”
“You’re thinking way too sophisticated. I’m talking pedestrian, no frills, old school arson. You might remember a stack of paint cans in the basement?”
Speers’ face lost some of its color. “You’re telling me someone just lit a match and set fire to the house?”
Fordham folded his hands in his lap. “And left the gas stove on, which caused the ensuing explosion.”
Speers leaned forward. “When we left, the only two people in the house were Mary Borst and your guy, what’s his name?”
“Hank Bowers. According to him, he stepped into the front yard to take a confidential phone call a few minutes after we left, leaving Mary in the home alone.”
“I know Bowers is a trusted member of your team, but did you check out his story?”
Fordham nodded. “Phone records match up. But the other thing is…” Fordham leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees. “They only pulled one body from the ashes.”
“Which one?”
“Preston’s. And that can only mean one thing. Mary Borst is alive.”
SIS Building
Seven went back to the enormous monitor and touched one of the folder icons. A set of grisly crime scene photos appeared onscreen. Finally, Carver thought. This was what they had flown all the way across the Atlantic to see.
“Severe trauma around the wrists?” Carver asked.
Seven touched one of the thumbnail autopsy photos and dragged it to the middle of the screen, then zoomed in until Gish’s wrists were visible. Deep flesh wounds, an inch wide, ground down to the bone. Much like Preston’s.
“And were Sir Gish’s shoulders dislocated?” Carver said.
“Two for two,” Seven replied with some amazement.
Carver turned to Ellis. “Ropes again.”
Prichard popped out of his seat. “Pardon?”
“The D.C. crime scene burned down before we could do a proper forensic examination, but I was reasonably sure the senator was subjected to rope torture.”
Carlisle grimaced at the thought of Nils Gish strung up by a rope. “I suppose that is consistent with the predilections of this Black Order group you told us about?”
Carver nodded. “The strappado. They would tie the victim’s hands together behind his or her back, loop the rope over a high point in the room, and hoist them up. At a certain point, the body would be suddenly dropped. The shoulders and wrists were the first things to break, but it also put pressure on the lungs, making it increasingly difficult to breathe.”
“Bloody hell.”
“But the strappado has made a comeback of sorts in recent years. It would be impossible to tie it to any particular group.”
Seven touched the screen and opened another photograph. It was far more grisly, a photograph of Gish’s legs, which were severely lacerated. “Poor man was cut to ribbons. They started with the balls of his feet and made their way up his ankles and legs. The first few dozen were shallow enough so that he might not have bled to death, but eventually, they punctured a main artery in the left leg.”
Carver stood. “I don’t think these were ritual killings at all. The rope is far from the quickest or cleanest assassination method, and if they really wanted to be sadistic, they would’ve cut genitals, ears or faces.”
“Agreed,” Carlisle concluded. “The killers were after information.”
Government Flat
London
By the time they left MI6 headquarters for their flat, it had been approximately 14 hours since the killings of Nils Gish and Rand Preston. No group had yet claimed responsibility.
Or had they? It occurred to Carver that the entire point of placing the octagon-shaped fabric inside the mouths of the victims was to claim credit. Only the message wasn’t for them. It was for someone who already knew who the killers were.
The St. James-area flat Speers had retained for traveling intelligence operatives was on the sixth floor of a building that had the old-world charm that Carver had missed at the ultra-modern MI6 headquarters. Carver and Ellis opened the door with the security code Speers had given them, and wordlessly set about sweeping the two-bedroom apartment for bugs. Ellis was done with her part in six minutes. It took Carver a few minutes longer to feel secure. After both electronic and manual inspections, he finally sat on the couch and switched on his computer.
“It’s actually charming,” Ellis remarked as she took in the hardwood floors in the living room, and the windows that, if she stood at just the right angle, had a view of Green Park. “Why would the ODNI spring for a place like this?”
“London hotel rates, obviously,” Carver shrugged. “At 300 pounds a night, a place this close to Parliament probably paid for itself within the first eight or nine years.”
Ellis scratched her underarm and caught a whiff of her own odor. “Mind if I shower?”
“Ladies first.” The gesture was pure chivalry, as he himself had not had so much as a sink shower in the past 24 hours.
As he heard Ellis turn the shower on, Carver powered up his tablet, linked to the secure DNI satellite feed, and logged into the mission cloud. He was eager to see what, if anything, had been accomplished since they had stepped off the plane.
Arunus Roth had been tasked with mashing up all public information about Preston and Gish and looking for common links. He cringed when he read the kid’s summary statement: No obvious connections.
Roth had prepared a grid with key information in categories, summarizing everything from education to public perceptions about each man’s political positions. It was unlikely that either man would have been paired through an online matchmaking algorithm. Although both were politicians, Gish was socialist-leaning in his beliefs, and Preston was so far right that he was even considered a hardline conservative in his home state of Texas. Preston was so religious that he had led prayer circles on the campaign trail, whereas the only times Gish attended church were for weddings and funerals.
Neither man had any known relatives in the other man’s country. They did not appear to be connected through any social networks. Gish had studied in D.C. for one year of college, but he was older than Preston, who would have been in high school in Texas at the time.
There were no known photos of Gish and Preston together.
There were no news articles in which they appeared at the same time.
Nothing to go on.
The trail was getting colder every minute, and yet no one had yet analyzed the two men’s social networks for common connections. No one had yet cross-indexed the two men’s standard contacts for first and second-degree connections. No one had yet analyzed their travel itineraries for common destinations.
As Carver stared at the depressing report, a new entry came onto the screen:
Mary Borst’s body NOT FOUND on arson site. Subject is now considered a person of interest in both the arson and the death of Senator Preston. POI has been added to federal NO FLY LIST. TSA is to notify Hank Bowers immediately should she book tickets or attempt to board any airc
raft. Attempts being made to contact mother and stepfather. No classified information will be offered. As far as the public is concerned, she will be considered a missing person.
Carver got up, went down the hall and found that Ellis had left the bathroom door slightly ajar.
“She’s alive,” Carver shouted through the opening in the door.
“What?”
“Mary Borst is alive!”
He heard the water shut off and trickle to a halt. “Oh my God.”
“This is getting very deep, very fast,” Carver said, still standing in the hallway, trying not to be distracted by the fact that Ellis was stark naked on the other side of the door. “Even if they manage to catch her, she couldn’t have done this alone. She’d had to have help in D.C., to say nothing of London.”
“We need to tell MI6.”
“What we need is some decent support. It’s been eight hours since we left Washington, and our guys haven’t been able to find a single connection point between Gish and Preston, other than the bizarre way they were killed.”
“You heard the president. We can’t put 50 analysts on this without raising huge red flags.”
“We don’t need 50 analysts, Haley. All we need is one incredible geek in front of a computer.”
He heard the steel O-rings slide across the shower bar, then the smack of Ellis’ wet feet on the bathroom tile. The door opened. Elis stood in a towel before him, her wet hair slicked back on her head.
“What do you suggest?” she said.
Eastern Cape
South Africa
Carver drove through scattered rain over twisting one-lane mountain roads. The rental car’s GPS was useless, and his phone hadn’t gotten a signal since leaving Johannesburg early that morning. He stopped for directions often. This was not only because there were so few road signs in the rural Eastern Cape. It was also because most of the people he asked for directions had never been more than 20 miles from home.
As night fell he listened to African pop music to stay awake. The highway became a series of mesmerizing canyon switchbacks that hugged steep cliffs without so much as a single guardrail. Ten hours after leaving Johannesburg International Airport, he got petrol in Stutterheim, a sleepy little town in the heart of farm country, and went on through the hilly, golden boondocks toward the backwater village of Kei Mouth on the eastern shore.
The last terrestrial radio station fizzled out as he entered the former Transkei, land of the Xhosa tribe. The Transkei region had been part of a wider homeland for the Xhosa tribe. Some of South Africa’s greatest leaders had emerged from these hills. Nelson Mandela, Thabo Mbeki, and Govan Mbeki. But the rural areas were still virtually lawless, diplomatically isolated, and legally recognized only by the country of South Africa. Unification with the Eastern Cape had brought few tangible benefits over the past couple of decades. There were a few businesses, to be sure, and a few beach homes owned by white ranchers. But it was still so poor that many of the native Xhosas were still without basic plumbing. It was the perfect place to hide.
Xhosa children bartered beaded necklaces for candy bars as he waited 20 minutes for a single-car ferry to take him across the Kei River.
Carver entered the village two hours later. There were few services in town, and the few that existed had posted signs saying CLOSED FOR WINTER in English and Afrikaans. Business windows — all of them — were dark. Finally he spotted the sign that read BED AND BREAKFAST. He turned down a spooky-looking street that led to a gray cement building. This was supposed to be the place. It had better be, Carver thought. He had come a very long way from London under completely unreasonable time constraints.
He shut off the car engine and opened the car door. A pack of dogs raced out from under the front steps. Skinny, tenacious mutts. All bones and teeth. In the face of a hard drizzle, Carver fended off these hounds of hell with the car door, bonking their bony heads with it as they bit and tugged at his left ankle. He felt the familiar warm trickle of blood dampen his sock. Barking in the distance spared him further bloodshed as the pack suddenly broke away, howling at breakneck speed down the street he had driven in on.
“We’re closed!” yelled a woman’s voice from the motel office. She spoke from behind a screen. She sounded American. Good. This was definitely the place.
He unfurled himself from the car, smoothed the wrinkles in his gray suit and approached the building with his hands in the air.
“I’ll shoot,” the voice warned.
“I’d rather you didn’t,” Carver said as he measured his approach. He stood several feet from the door and could only make out a shadow in the dense screen door. “It’s Madge, right?”
More silence. Then the voice said, “I suggest you get back in the car.”
“Tell your husband Blake Carver is here to see him.”
He heard her step away from the door. She returned moments later and opened it wide for Agent Carver to enter.
He stepped inside. The house smelled of barbecue. Aside from an expensive-looking entertainment console at the living room’s far wall, the place was sparsely furnished. There were few books and no pictures on the wall except for a print of DaVinci’s The Last Supper.
Nico’s girlfriend, Madge, held a sawed-off shotgun. She looked unhappy. She had gained a great deal of weight since the CIA had last photographed her. Her long brown locks were graying around the temples and had been clipped into a short, unflattering cut. Judging by the jagged pattern of her bangs, Madge had done it herself using shearing scissors.
“Nice dogs,” Carver said. “Yours?”
Madge didn’t smile. “The kitchen.” She pointed to the next room.
Carver found Nico Gold sitting at the kitchen table with three kinds of meat on a plate before him. He looked much as he had when Carver had first met him in the Lee Federal Penitentiary the previous year. The African sun had added little color to his pale skin, and the meat-centered African diet had hardly fleshed out his lanky frame. He had, however, dispensed with his eyeglasses and had dyed his hair blonde. The tattoos that had read “EVA” on both forearms were gone. He wore a t-shirt that said OBEY in stylized font.
“Close the door,” Nico told him.
Carver sat in the chair where Madge had no doubt been eating across from her husband minutes before. The ex-con’s face was full of dread. He had the sweet smell of alcohol on his breath. There was an empty pinotage bottle on the table and another that was half-full.
“Dreamed the grim reaper was coming for me last night,” Nico said. “Couldn’t shake the feeling all day. Never had a dream like that before. So bad.”
Carver said nothing. He watched Nico’s hand shake as he held his wine glass.
“I need to know how you found me,” Nico continued. “I don’t use credit cards. I’ve taken nobody into confidence. My only bank accounts in this country are in a town 200 miles away under a different name. They draw their funds from banks abroad that have no idea who I am.”
“Don’t blame yourself,” Carver consoled him. “You were good. The best.”
“So how in God’s name did you find me?”
“Your eyes gave you away,” Carver said, referring to the corrective vision procedure Nico underwent in Durban earlier that year. “Organ theft is a bit of a problem here. The government requires that doctors document every eye that gets the surgery. The images are uploaded into a national database. Naturally, we have a script running that scans every image of every retina and matches them up with profiles on our list.”
Nico pounded the table with his fists, bouncing the dinner plates.
“Everything okay?” Madge yelled from the other room.
“Fine dear,” Nico yelled back through the door. He steadied his gaze on Carver and lowered his voice.
Nico reached for the open bottle of pinotage on the table and poured himself a full glass. He offered some to Carver, who politely declined. “I’d forgotten what a teetotaler you are. Probably made it all the way to Africa without
so much as a wink of sleep or a drop of caffeine.”
“I’m not here to talk about me.”
“I read about O’Keefe,” Nico said. “I’m sorry. I could tell you two were close.”
Meagan O’Keefe, a young cryptologist from NSA whom Speers had turned into a field operative, had been Carver’s partner. The auburn-haired firecracker was untrained in combat, but her grounded, pragmatic procedural style had proved to be the perfect match for Carver’s aggressive energy. The two had worked together just long enough to get close when they were thrust into what would later be known as the Ulysses Coup. O’Keefe had died serving her country during the six-day siege. Carver missed her like crazy.
Carver got up, pulled a cup from the cupboard and helped himself to some tap water. He drank eight ounces and put the cup down. “I don’t discuss Agent O’Keefe with anyone.”
Nico finished his glass. “So. I guess Eva sent you?”
“Careful. Nobody calls her by her first name now. Not even me. It’s Madam President.”
“She’s going to hand me over to the Saudis, isn’t she?”
“She was thinking about it. Then she read Haley Ellis’ report detailing the miraculous way that five Ulysses Bradleys disappeared from the South Lawn just in time for the motorcade to come through.”
Nico folded his arms across his chest, looking partially validated. “Well, if you’re packing a presidential pardon, I’d say it’s high time you whip it out.”
“The way the president sees it, you owe her one more favor.”
Carver, of course, was taking liberties with the truth. The president had no idea he was there, and neither did Speers, yet. The way he saw it, if his mission status was deniable, then the methods and resources he used to complete it were up to him.
“I’m retired,” Nico said. “Don’t even own a computer. I’ve spent the last year learning Afrikaans and Xhosa. Madge tends to the guests during fishing season and cooks. I make repairs to the place, read books. We’re not hurting anybody.”
The Fellowship bc-2 Page 8