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The Mac Ambrose Series: 1-3 (Boxed Set)

Page 20

by HN Wake


  “Except he is.” She reached out to grasp Amanda’s wrist. “The SFG is going to need you when this comes out. You did the right thing.”

  Twenty minutes later, Mac opened up the folded paper. It was an internal SFG email chain.

  To: Charles Osbourne

  From: Neil Koen

  Subject: Response to Newtown

  Date: Dec 18, 2012

  1. Newtown was a shock to the culture. Key demographics question defense of firearms.

  2. Demographic Background: Our base has declined since 1970s.

  Rural: from 27% to 17% of population

  Rural household gun ownership: from 70% to 56%

  Montana, New Mex, Wyoming gun ownership: from 65% to under 40%

  Northeast gun ownership: from 29% to 22%

  Our base is dangerously homogenous.

  They are of the lowest income and education levels, based in Southern, Red States (OK, TN, IN, NV, AL, LA, KY, AR, MS, WV)

  Older

  Republican

  White

  Primary Source of News: Fox News

  Secondary Source of News: Conservative radio talk shows (Research - significant tendencies toward anger and protectionism.)

  3. SFG research shows key demographic is activated (read donations) through the emotions of fear, anger and pride (e.g. patriotism.)

  Recommendation: Refocus strategy on a) increased hyperbole and misinformation and b) on urgent, dramatic fear of gun restrictions.

  To Sum: Misinformation > Fear > Increased SFG Donations

  Actions:

  Campaign jargon should utilize key words: steal, affront, infringement, freedom, gun ban, founding fathers, tyranny, government thugs, constitutional rights, break in doors, seize guns, destroy property, common law, natural right, inalienable, fundamental principles, enemies of the constitution, confiscation.

  Target advertisers/appearances on Fox News and conservative talk shows.

  Intentional misinformation: spin all national, state and local efforts for gun regulation on government persecution of gun owners and confiscation of guns.

  To: Neil Koen

  From: Charles Osbourne

  Subject: Re: The 2012 elections: New 5 Year Strategy

  Date: Dec 19, 2011

  Agreed. Approved.

  Mac stared out the front window of the Alfa at the top dome of the Capital building in the distance.

  Amanda had not only given her Neil’s head on a platter, she’d also delivered Charles. Had she known what she was doing? Mac surmised not. Amanda’s trust in Dora had blinded her.

  It was a huge victory.

  But the layers of deception tasted sour, bittersweet. It was the same metallic hint that preceded bile. She closed her eyes and the memories of similar, successful operations flickered past in a parade of lies wrapped in lies. Was there a penultimate deception that would finally cause the bile to erupt?

  She reached for her courier bag and pulled out her laptop. She opened an app and began a fast-forward scan through a black-and-white video of Pretzel Park cached on the hard drive in the loft.

  Ten minutes later, she slowed the fast-forward. In the grainy background, a shadowy, ghostlike image of a man walked a dog. The date stamp read 8:05 a.m. He started in the northwest corner and followed the dog to the dog park. He let the dog in through the gates and sat on a bench reading a book for ten minutes. Then he whistled for the dog, snapped on the extendable leash, and rambled around the park to the northwest exit.

  In her Alfa, Mac released a long-held breath.

  38

  North Capital, DC

  The elevator in the ATF headquarters stopped on every floor, disgorging and ingesting puffed-up, harried agents. When it finally reached the seventh floor, Cal waited for it to clear then pushed off the back wall and stepped toward the open door.

  Standing in the elevator lobby, Director Wilson glanced up and saw Cal. He barked, “Goddamnit! No. No. No. The Task Force has taken over. I do not see you here. Because you are out in Arlington closing out Fast and Frenzied.”

  The elevator doors began to shut. Behind Wilson, three agents stood frozen in place.

  Cal slid his toe between the doors.

  Wilson breathed in deeply through his nose and glared.

  Cal held up a manila folder. “Maar sent another email.”

  Wilson spun and strode back down the hall, mumbling, “Jesus, Mary and Joseph.”

  Cal swept between the three immobilized agents and fell in line with Wilson, handing him the folder. “This one is Top Secret.”

  They reached Wilson’s office.

  Cal continued, “It connects the missing Scimitar guns to the killing of a US Diplomat in Afghanistan.”

  Wilson stopped.

  Cal added, “But we never heard about that. As ATF, we should have heard about that.”

  Wilson glanced down at the folder in his hands like it was burning him.

  “So I did some digging around.”

  Wilson’s eyes closed and his chest rose and fell in deep breaths.

  “There’s been a cover up.”

  Wilson stepped into his office, circled behind his desk and sat down slowly. “Do you have some kind of career death-wish, Agent Bertrand? You successfully handed over a very high-profile trafficking investigation to a cross-agency Task Force. You redeemed yourself in my eyes and in most of senior management here in this building. You made your way back in. Now you come here a week-bloody-later with tales of a cover-up of a diplomatic shooting?”

  “A diplomat got shot in Afghanistan six months ago. In July. The M4 in the shooting was under the same Scimitar Pakistan license - 88088”

  “Jesus.” Wilson slowly opened the folder and read.

  Cal summarized the background for the folder’s contents. “So first, as we know, the M4s go missing from Pakistan. Blue Lantern investigates but hits a dead end. Here in the US, using domestic phone records, we find out it was actually Scimitar who sold the guns and ran them into Afghanistan.” He nodded to the folder. “Then eight months later a separate Blue Lantern investigation - that cable there, Sir - finds one of Scimitar’s missing M4s has killed a US diplomat in Khandahar. That cable was seen by the most senior people over at State and CIA. They knew a US-made gun killed one of ours. But they didn’t know Scimitar had actually trafficked it.” Cal paused. “Either way, they buried that cable.”

  Wilson was deep in thought.

  “So I dug in to it,” Cal said. “Who had the motive to bury it? Sir, I believe Scimitar paid off the Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee to bury the cable under cover of ‘national security’.”

  Wilson’s head snapped up. “Senator Blake Scott?”

  Cal nodded.

  “Please, for the love of god and his children on this earth, tell me that’s some kind of sick, sick joke.”

  “I’m afraid I can’t do that.”

  “Scott?”

  “Yes.” Cal indicated the folder. “The most obvious player is Scimitar. They had already gotten away with trafficking these guns. They certainly didn’t want anyone finding out one of their guns also killed a US diplomat. So if I’m Chuck Boare, and this cable pops up, what do I do? I call up my friends over at the SFG because I’m their biggest corporate donor and tell them to fix it with one of their most beloved Senators - one Blake Scott, Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee - that oversees State Department Blue Lantern Operations and budgets.”

  A stunned Wilson asked, “Did you just say SFG?”

  Cal nodded.

  Wilson’s eyes drilled into Cal. “You had better have something solid, Agent.”

  “It was actually not so difficult to connect the dots. We had all of Scimitar’s documents from the raid last week.” Cal nodded to the folder. “Chuck Boare called Neil Koen at the SFG Lobby office five times and Charles Osbourne’s private cell phone two times once that cable was sent up.”

  Wilson flipped through to the phone records and saw the highligh
ted calls.

  Cal continued, “So Scimitar wanted this buried. Obviously. But a scandal is also not in Scott’s or the SFG’s interest either. Nobody wants the very lax arms export control framework examined. Too many of their constituents - the manufacturers - benefit from the status quo. Scimitar, Scott, and the SFG all have motive.” Cal leaned over and pulled up the last paper in the folder, the accounting spreadsheet with one highlighted transfer. “In the same week as the phone calls, Scimitar transferred $50,000 to the SFG.”

  “Can you connect that $50,000 to Senator Scott?”

  “Not yet. But I’ll bet a large amount of my salary, Sir, that an amount similar to $50,000 made it from SFG Lobby into Scott’s re-election campaign.”

  Wilson leaned far back in his chair and stared at the ceiling. “Jesus, Mary, Joseph and the mules you rode in on, Bertrand. What you’re saying…” he coughed. “What you’re saying is that Scimitar, Senator Scott and the SFG covered up the killing of one of our guys by a Scimitar M4 that Scimitar had trafficked. Jesus.”

  “Actually, Sir, it was one of our gals.”

  “Excuse me?”

  “It wasn’t one of our guys. The diplomat was one of our gals.”

  Wilson watched as Cal dropped a black and white photo from the web of Neha Malhotra onto the center of his desk and whispered, “Fucking hell.” He stood, turned to the window, weighing his options.

  Cal concluded. “I believe this last cable reveals a lot about Maar. First, I believe this is personal. He must have known Malhotra. So this feels like he’s getting justice. Second, I believe he played me. I believe he reeled out the emails like breadcrumbs, just enough to get me to pursue each lead: first he wanted me to find Scimitar’s involvement, then he wanted me to find that Scimitar paid off Scott through the SFG. He walked me right to it.” Cal paused. “Third, I believe Maar has ‘need to know access’ which means --”

  At the window, Wilson’s head dropped in defeat.

  Cal finished the thought. “Maar is one of us. Maar is American. CIA, DOD intel somewhere, NSA or maybe State.”

  “Ok, leave this with me. I need to figure out who’s going to lead this.” Wilson turned, his anger building. “Agent, it sure as the fucking dawn follows the night is not going to be you.”

  Cal turned to leave.

  “You’ve done it again, Agent. You’ve dropped me so far into the shit I may not make it out.”

  Cal was through the door when Wilson yelled, “If Maar sends you another email, I’m assigning it to a different agent. We’ll take care of Maar later.”

  Cal was halfway down the hall when Wilson yelled louder, “No more chasing Maar, Bertrand. You hear me? That’s an order. No more Maar. Get back to Arlington and do your job.”

  The elevator was slow arriving to the top floor. In the elevator bank, the two warring news stations blared.

  CNN played a clip of Senator Martha Payne talking to reporters in the Capital Rotunda. “The influence of the gun lobby is extraordinary. We’re watching the votes for next week. This will be a fight to the last vote. I’m confident my colleagues will vote in the interests of the American people.”

  The elevator arrived and Cal stepped in, his mind racing. The elevator stopped on every floor, letting agents off and on.

  It took another ten minutes for him to walk across the ground floor lobby and out onto New York Avenue where he squinted into the glaring sun. His mind replayed the moment he dropped the black and white photo of Neha Malhotra on the Director’s desk.

  So this feels like he’s getting justice.

  Cal’s head snapped up.

  Maar dropped the Scimitar, Scott and SFG breadcrumbs in the lead up to the vote.

  FOUR DAYS BEFORE THE SENATE VOTE

  Picasso's ''Weeping Woman,'' stolen 17 days ago…was found undamaged today in a locker at a railway station, the police said.

  - New York Times, August 20, 1986

  With public sentiment, nothing can fail; without it nothing can succeed.

  - Doris Kearns Goodwin

  39

  Philadelphia, PA

  “It’s weird you wanted to meet here.” Penny took in the hushed atrium, the pale walls, and the modern angles of the new Barnes Foundation museum.

  “I like museums.”

  “It’s just…this wasn’t here when we were kids. I would have thought we would have met at like the Art Museum or something. You know, somewhere we knew.”

  “Nothing wrong with trying something new. How was the train down?”

  “Totally easy. I’m going see my mom for dinner then head back. Nice to get out of the city once in a while.”

  “How’s she doing?”

  Penny said, “Fine. You know, same, same.”

  They wandered into the first room. Modernist paintings in rich gilded frames cluttered the walls. Tourists surrounded them, many listening to audio tours on rented equipment.

  Penny said, “You know you never really did tell me what you do. I imagine it isn’t all James Bond stuff, right?”

  “The James Bond stuff happens like once a year. Those movies are the condensed, edited version of spy work. Walking into a casino and playing cards against a target is so not what I do.”

  “Have you done that?”

  Mac laughed. “Played cards against a target? Nah. But I’ve bluffed a lot.”

  Penny grinned. “Do you read spy novels?”

  “I prefer romance,” Mac deadpanned.

  “Seriously?”

  She grinned wider. “Seriously. You read John Grisham?”

  “Hell no! I’m a lawyer.” Penny laughed. “So what do you do the rest of the time?”

  “Surveillance. Eavesdropping. It can be super boring to build an asset. Lots of high tech. Emails and cell phones are where most people spend their time. So that’s where we get most of our intel.”

  Penny said knowingly, “SIGINT.”

  “Yeah. Nice word usage. Exactly.”

  “What’s getting HUMNIT like?”

  “Nice word usage again.” Mac smiled back at Penny. “A lot of it is instinct. One time I was on a meet and the guy was saying all the right things, but I just didn’t trust him. I remember checking out his ears. They were flashing pink, then white. Like he had hot flashes or something. It wasn’t really obvious. In fact, his eyes were totally trained on me, giving me all the right signals. He wasn’t giving me any other indication that he was lying.”

  “Really?”

  “Yeah. But I just couldn’t stop fixating on his ears.”

  “What did you do?”

  “I ended the meet early and got out.”

  “Were you right about him being a bad guy?”

  “I don’t know. But I never approached him again. There was something about him that just sent up warning signals.”

  “Wow.”

  The next room was empty and quiet. They circled the perimeter, careful to keep their voices low.

  Penny asked, “We’ve really gotten ourselves deep into something haven’t we?”

  “Yup.”

  “What you’re doing, to the SFG, is something big isn’t it?”

  “Yup.”

  “I never imagined a world so complicated that I felt compelled to insert myself into something like this.” Penny observed the quiet tourists concentrating on the tours, completely tuned in to their earphones. “I never thought I’d see Americans so complacent, so focused on their own small worlds, that they abandoned any kind of responsibility for the wider issues. Lord. I sound like a politician.” She fell silent and they continued walking.

  In the next room, Mac said, “I found Joe.”

  “What?” Penny jerked her head up. “Wait. Where?”

  “Here. He lives in Manayunk.”

  “Wait, what? Oh. My. God. In Manayunk? Is that why you’re here?”

  A slow grin appeared on Mac’s face. “He took over his dad’s company. He moved back to Philly about five years ago.”

  “Are you going to cont
act him?”

  “I haven’t decided.”

  “Have you seen him?”

  “Not in person, no. Not yet.”

  “Are you ok chasing him while you’re, I dunno - running our operation?”

  Mac grinned wider. “I’m pretty good at what I do. I’m capable of juggling a few balls at one time.”

  “But won’t that, like, compromise you?”

  “I’ll be smart.” She gave Penny a shrug, trying on indifference, but failing. Instead, she went for realism. “He could be married with kids. Then it’s a moot point.”

  “Or not.” Penny’s eyes rounded. “God, if he’s single the shizizelle is gonna shizizelle.”

  Mac chuckled. “Ok, Snoop Dog.”

  “Snoop Lion, dude, Snoop Lion.”

  “Ok, Mom of two tween boys.”

  “How’d you find him?”

  “I looked up his property.”

  “You can do that?”

  “Totally. When you buy a house, it’s public information.”

  “So you know where he lives.” It was a statement.

  “I do.”

  “No shit!”

  “No shit.”

  “That’s so insane.” The intimacy between them struck Penny. “It’s weird to have you home. To be in touch so much. For so long it was like we lost you. For a long while.”

  “Yeah. I get it.”

  “Did it bother you? To be so disconnected?”

  Mac nodded. “A lot. But it took me a long time to recognize it.”

  “You lied to us.”

  “I had to.”

  “I’m trying to deal with that - that it wasn’t a choice, that you had to. I’m trying to reconcile it.”

  “Yeah, I get it.”

  They walked into the next room and stopped in front of a Picasso sketch of three women, bathing. Penny glanced over it. “Huh, look at that. It’s like you, me and Freda. Except naked. Bathing. Nowadays, that would be kinda weird, but not really. Like when would we be naked together? Maybe a steam room?” She turned to Mac. “You knew this was here.”

 

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