Thomas offered Battat his hand. “Are you all right?”
“A little banged up,” Battat said. “I’m sorry about all this, Pat.”
Thomas made a face. “Nothing’s guaranteed, David. Let’s see how we can fix it.”
Thomas looked at Moore, who was standing beside Battat. The men had met several times at various Asian embassy conferences and functions. Moore was a good man, what they called a twenty-four/seven-an agent who lived and ate his work twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Right now, Moore was making no attempt to conceal his dark, unforgiving mood.
Thomas extended his hand. Moore accepted it.
“How have you been?” Thomas asked.
“That isn’t important,” Moore said. “I’m not happy now. There was no reason for this to go down the way it did.”
“Mr. Moore, you’re correct,” Thomas said as he released his hand. “In retrospect, we should have done this all differently. The question is, how do we fix it now?”
Moore sneered. “You don’t get off that easily,” he said. “Your team mounted a small operation here and didn’t tell us. Your man says you were worried about security risks and other factors. What do you think, Mr. Thomas—that the Azerbaijani are wet-wired into the system? That we can’t conduct a surveillance without them finding out?”
Thomas walked to an armchair across from Williamson. “Mr. Moore, Ms. Williamson, we had a short time to make a quick decision. We made a bad one, a wrong one. The question is, what do we do now? If the Harpooner is here, can we find him and stop him from getting away?”
“How do we bail you out, you mean?” Moore asked.
“If you like,” Thomas conceded. Anything to get this out of reverse and moving ahead.
Moore relaxed. “It isn’t going to be easy,” he said. “We’ve found no trace of the boat Mr. Battat says he saw, and we have a man watching the airport. No one who fits the description of the Harpooner has left today.”
“What about working backward?” Thomas said. “Why would the Harpooner be in Baku?”
“There are any number of targets a terrorist for hire could hit,” Moore said. “Or he may just have been passing through on his way to another republic or to the Middle East. You know these people. They rarely take a direct route anywhere.”
“If Baku was just a layover, the Harpooner is probably long gone,” Thomas said. “Let’s concentrate on possible targets in the region and reasons for hitting those targets.”
“The Nagorno-Karabakh and Iran are our biggest concerns,” Williamson said. “The people in NK have voted themselves an independent republic, while Azerbaijan and Armenia are both fighting to claim it. The whole region will probably explode when Azerbaijan gets enough money to buy more advanced weapons for its military. That would be bad enough for both nations, but with Iran just fifteen miles to the south, it could end up being quite an explosion. As for Iran, even without the NK situation, Teheran and Baku have been gnawing at each other for years over access to everything from offshore oil to Caspian sturgeon and caviar. When the Soviet Union watched over the Caspian, they took what they wanted. And not only are there problems, but the problems overlap,” Williamson added. “Sloppy drilling by Azerbaijan has caused a quarter-inch-thick oil film in parts of the sea where Iran fishes for sturgeon. The pollution is killing the fish.”
“What is the oil situation, exactly?” Thomas asked.
“There are four major oil fields,” Williamson said. “Azeri, Chirag, Guneshli, and Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan and the Western Consortium members that underwrite the drilling are convinced that international law protects their exclusive rights to the sites. But their claim is based on boundaries that are defined by fishing rights, which both Iran and Russia insist do not apply. So far, the arguments have all been diplomatic.”
“But if someone perpetrated a new action somewhere,” Thomas said, “such as an embassy explosion or an assassination—”
“There could be a disastrous chain reaction reaching into a half-dozen surrounding nations, affecting oil supplies worldwide, and drawing the United States into a major foreign war,” Williamson said.
Moore added sarcastically, “That’s why we like to be kept informed about covert actions in our backward little outpost.”
Thomas shook his head. “Mea culpa. Now, can we all agree to look ahead instead of back?”
Moore regarded him for a moment, then nodded.
“So,” Williamson said, looking down at her notes. “As I understand this, there are two possible scenarios. First, that the individual who attacked Mr. Battat was not the Harpooner, in which case we may have nothing more than a drug smuggler or gunrunner on our hands. One who managed to get the drop on Mr. Battat and then slip away.”
“Correct,” said Thomas.
“What are the chances of that?” Williamson asked.
“They’re unlikely,” Thomas said. “We know that the Harpooner is in the region. An official from the Department of State Bureau of Intelligence and Research was on a Turkish Airlines flight from London to Moscow and made a tentative ID of the Harpooner. He tried to follow the target but lost him.”
“You’re saying an INR guy and the world’s most wanted terrorist just happened to be on the same flight?” Moore said.
“I can’t speak for the Harpooner, only for the DOS official,” Thomas replied. “But we’re finding that more and more terrorists and spies take the diplomatic routes. They try to pick up intel from laptops and phone calls. DOS has issued several alerts about that. Maybe it was a coincidence; maybe there was a diskette or phone number the Harpooner wanted to try and steal when the official went to the rest room. I don’t know.”
“The official was able to identify the Harpooner based on what?” Williamson asked.
“The only known photograph,” Thomas told him.
“It was a good picture, reliable,” Moore assured her.
“We were notified and did some checking,” Thomas went on. “It fit with some intel we had picked up independently. The passenger was traveling under an assumed name with a fake British passport. We checked taxi records, found that he had been picked up at the Kensington Hilton in London. He’d only been there for one night, where he met with several people who, according to the concierge, looked and sounded Middle Eastern. We tried to track the individual in Moscow, but no one saw him leave the terminal. So we checked flights to other areas. Someone matching his description had shown a Russian passport in the name of Gardner and flown to Baku.”
“It is the Harpooner’s boat,” Deputy Ambassador Williamson said suddenly. “It has to be.”
The others looked at her.
“You’ve heard of it?” Thomas asked.
“Yes. I went to college,” Williamson said. “Gardner is the captain of the Rachel in Moby-Dick. It’s one of the ships that was chasing the elusive white whale. She failed to capture him, I might add.”
Thomas regarded Battat unhappily. “The Harpooner,” Thomas said. “Dammit. Of course. He planted that for us to find.”
“Now, there’s a smart terrorist,” Moore said. “If you recognize the allusion, you would have thought it a joke and wouldn’t have bothered to pursue. If you thought it was real, then the Harpooner knew just where you’d be looking for him. And he would be there, waiting to stop you.”
“But the boat was real,” Battat said. “I saw the name—”
“A name that was put there to hold your attention for a while,” Thomas said. “Shit. We fell for that one, big time.”
“Which brings us to the second and suddenly very likely scenario,” Williamson said. “If the Harpooner has been in Baku, there are two things we need to find out pretty damn quick. First, what he wanted and second, where he is now. Is that about right?”
Thomas nodded.
Moore rose. “I’m betting he’s no longer using the Russian passport. I’ll get into the hotel computers and check the names of the guests against our passport registry database. See if any new
names pop up.”
“He may also be working with people here, in which case he may not be staying at a hotel,” Thomas said.
“I’ll give you a list of known or suspected foreign cells,” Moore told him. “You and Mr. Battat can cross-check those with people the Harpooner might have worked with before.”
Battat said he would do that.
“There’s one other thing we should try,” Thomas said. “We pretty much tapped out our Moscow-based sources on this before Mr. Battat came down. It wasn’t very productive, but that was all we had time for. What about other governments in the region?”
“We haven’t made any significant intelligence inroads with any of them,” the deputy ambassador admitted. “We don’t have the personnel to nurse the relationships, and a lot of the republics, including Azerbaijan, have had their resources strained with internal problems. Everyone is busy spying on each other, especially on Chechnya.”
“Why there?” Battat asked.
“Because despite the coalition government that exists on paper, Chechnya is really controlled by Islamic militias intent on destabilizing and bringing down the other republics, including Russia,” she said. “I’m hoping that the initiative the president announced last night in Washington will remedy that.”
“What initiative?” Battat asked.
“An intelligence cooperative with the United Nations,” Moore told him. “He announced it last night in Washington.”
Battat rolled his eyes.
“You know, there is one place we might be able to try,” Thomas said. “A couple of years ago I remember hearing that the National Crisis Management Center was involved with a Russian group based in Saint Petersburg.”
“A Russian crisis management group,” Moore said. “Yeah, I remember hearing about that.”
“I can call Washington and have them contact Op-Center,” Moore said. “See if they still have a relationship with the Russians.”
“When you do, have them contact Bob Herbert over there,” Thomas suggested. “He’s the head of intelligence—a really capable guy from what I hear. I understand that the new guy running the place, General Rodgers, is something of a hard-ass.”
“He’s not running Op-Center,” the deputy ambassador said.
“Who is?” asked Thomas.
“Paul Hood,” said the deputy ambassador. “We got a directory update this morning. He withdrew his resignation.”
Moore snickered. “I’ll bet he won’t be involved in the UN intelligence program.”
“Regardless,” Thomas said, “have them contact Herbert. The Harpooner may try to slip out of the region by heading north, into Scandanavia. If he does, the Russians may be able to help us up there.”
Thomas agreed. Everyone rose then, and Thomas offered his hand to the deputy ambassador. “Thank you for everything,” Thomas said. “I’m truly sorry about all this.”
“So far, no real harm has been done.”
“We’re going to see that it stays that way,” Thomas said.
“I’ll have a room prepared for the two of you,” Williamson said. “It’s not fancy, but it’s a place to crash.”
“Thanks,” Thomas said. “But until we find our man, I have a feeling I won’t be getting a lot of sleep.”
“None of us will, Mr. Thomas,” Williamson assured him. “If you’ll excuse me, Ambassador Small is due back from Washington at ten P.M. He’ll want to be briefed on this as soon as possible.”
Thomas left and walked down the corridor to Moore’s office. The ADPI hated having lost the Harpooner. But he also hated the fact that the bastard was probably laughing at them for taking the whale bait. He also wondered if the Harpooner might somehow have known that Battat had come from Moscow. Maybe that was why he’d let the agent live, to create conflict between the CIA office in Moscow and Baku. Or maybe he did it just to confuse them, have them waste time wondering why he hadn’t killed Battat.
Thomas shook his head. Your mind is all over the damn place, he chided himself. Stop it. You’ve got to focus. But that was going to be tough, Thomas knew, because the Harpooner was obviously a man who liked to keep his trackers off balance by mixing games with reality.
And so far, he was doing a helluva job.
ELEVEN
Washington, D.C. Monday, 3:00 P.M.
The cell phone rang in the office of the red-haired man. He shooed out two young assistants who closed the door behind them. Then he swiveled his chair so the high leather back was facing the door. He looked out the window, drew the cell phone from his inside jacket pocket, and answered on the fifth ring. If the phone had been stolen or lost and someone answered before that, the caller had been instructed to hang up.
“Yes?” the red-haired man said softly.
“He’s completed phase one,” said the caller. “Everything is exactly on schedule.”
“Thank you,” said the red-haired man and clicked off. He immediately punched in a new number. The phone was answered on the fifth ring.
“Hello?” said a gravelly voice.
“We’re on track,” said the red-haired man.
“Very good,” said the other.
“Anything from Benn?” asked the red-haired man.
“Nothing yet,” said the other. “It will come.”
The men hung up.
The red-haired man put the phone back in his jacket pocket. He looked out across his desk and the office beyond. The photographs with the president and foreign heads of state. The commendations. A seven-by-ten-inch American flag that had been given to him by his mother. The red-haired man had carried it, folded, in his back pocket during his tour of duty in Vietnam. It was framed on the wall, still creased and soiled with sweat and mud, the lubricants of combat.
As the red-haired man called his two aides back to the office, the ordinary nature of that act, the return of routine, underscored the extreme and complex nature of what he and his partners were undertaking. To remake the international political and economic map was one thing. But to do it quickly, in a stroke such as this, was unprecedented.
The work was daunting, and it was exciting. If the operation ever were to become publicly known, it would be considered monstrous by some. But to many, so were the American Revolution and the Civil War in their day. So was the involvement of the United States in World War II, before Pearl Harbor. The red-haired man only hoped that if their actions were ever revealed, people would understand why they had been necessary. That the world in which the United States existed was radically different from the world into which the United States had been born. That in order to grow it was sometimes necessary to destroy. Sometimes rules, sometimes lives.
Sometimes both.
TWELVE
Camp Springs, Maryland Monday, 3:14 P.M.
Paul Hood called Senator Fox after returning from the White House. She admitted being totally confused by the president’s remarks and had put in a call to him to talk about it. Hood asked her to hold off until after he had had a chance to review the situation. She agreed. Then Hood called Bob Herbert. Hood briefed the intelligence chief on his conversation with the First Lady, after which he asked Herbert to find out what he could about the phone call from the hotel and whether anyone else had noticed any odd behavior from the president. Because Herbert stayed in touch with so many people—never asking them for anything, just seeing how they were doing, what the family was up to—it was easy for him to call and slip in important questions among the chitchat without making it seem as though he were fishing.
Now the two men were back in Hood’s office. But the Herbert who wheeled through the door was different than before.
“Is everything all right?” Hood asked.
The usually outgoing Mississippi native didn’t answer immediately. He was extremely subdued and staring ahead at something only he could see.
“Bob?” Hood pressed.
“They thought they had him,” Herbert said.
“What are you talking about?”
“A friend of mine at the CIA slipped me some news from the embassy in Moscow,” Herbert said.
“Why?”
Herbert took a long breath. “Apparently, they had a solid lead that the Harpooner was in Baku.”
“Jesus,” Hood said. “What for?”
“They don’t know,” Herbert said. “And they lost him. They sent one freakin’ guy to do the recon and—sur—prise!—he got clocked. I can’t blame them for wanting to be low profile, but with a guy like the Harpooner, you have to have backup.”
“Where is he now?” Hood asked. “Is there anything we can do?”
“They don’t have a clue where he went,” Herbert said. He shook his head slowly and swung the computer monitor up from the armrest. “For almost twenty years what I’ve wanted most out of life is to be able to hold the bastard’s throat between my hands, squeeze real hard, and look into his eyes as he dies. If I can’t have that, I want to know that he’s decaying in a hole somewhere with no hope of ever seeing the sun. That’s not a lot to ask for, is it?”
“Considering what he did, no,” Hood said.
“Unfortunately, Santa’s not listening,” Herbert said bitterly. He angled the monitor so he could see it. “But enough about that son of a bitch. Let’s talk about the president.”
Herbert shifted in his seat. Hood could see the anger in his eyes, in the hard set of his mouth, in the tense movements of his fingers. “I had Matt Stoll check the Hay-Adams phone log.”
Matt Stoll was Op-Center’s computer wizard.
“He hacked into the Bell Atlantic records,” Herbert said. “The call came from the hotel, all right, but it didn’t originate in any of the rooms. It originated in the system itself.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning someone didn’t want to be in one of the rooms where they might have been seen coming or going,” Herbert said. “So they got to the wires somewhere else.”
“What do you mean ‘got’ to them?” Hood asked.
“They hooked in a modem to transfer a call from somewhere else,” Herbert said. “It’s called dial-up hacking. It’s the same technology phone scammers use to generate fake dial tones on public phones in order to collect credit card and bank account numbers. All you need to do is get access to the wiring at some point in the system. Matt and I brought up a blueprint of the hotel. The easiest place to do that would have been at the phone box in the basement. That’s where all the wiring is. But there’s only one entrance, and it’s monitored by a security camera—too risky. Our guess is that whoever hacked the line went to one of the two public phones outside the Off the Record bar.”
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