by Steve Berry
He headed across the hall.
They passed through a series of rooms, each sparsely decorated with European Renaissance furniture and wall tapestries. Durant stayed fifty feet ahead.
Malone saw him stop.
He and Pam entered the room identified as the Corner Chamber. Hunting tapestries adorned plain white walls. Only a few pieces of furniture dotted the dull black-and-white tile floor.
Malone shook Durant’s hand and introduced Pam. “Tell me what’s happening.”
“Stephanie said to brief you, not her.”
“As much as I’d like for her not to be here, she is, so don’t sweat it.”
Durant seemed to consider the situation, then said, “I was also told to do whatever you ask.”
“Glad to hear Stephanie’s being so accommodating.”
“Get to the point,” Pam said. “We’re under a deadline.”
Malone shook his head. “Ignore her. Tell me what’s happening.”
“Access was gained to our secured files. No evidence of hacking or forced entry through the firewalls, so it had to be by password. That’s changed at regular intervals, but there are several hundred people with access.”
“No traces to a particular computer?”
“Zero. And no fingerprints in the data. Which indicates that whoever did it knew what they were doing.”
“I assume somebody is investigating.”
Durant nodded. “The FBI, but so far nothing. About a dozen files were viewed, one of which was the Alexandria Link.”
Which might, Malone thought, explain why Stephanie had not immediately alerted him. There were other possibilities.
“Here’s the interesting part. The Israelis are super-hyper right now, particularly during the last twenty-four hours. Our sources tell us that information was learned yesterday out of the West Bank from one of their Palestinian operatives.”
“What does that have to do with this?”
“The words Alexandria Link have been mentioned.”
“How much do you know?”
“I was just told this an hour ago by one of my contacts. I haven’t even fully reported to Stephanie yet.”
“How is any of this helping?” Pam asked.
He said to Durant, “I need to know more.”
“I asked you a question,” Pam said, her voice rising.
His civility ended. “I told you to let me handle this.”
“You have no intention of giving anything to them, do you?” Her eyes blazed and she seemed ready to pounce.
“My intention is to get Gary back.”
“Are you willing to chance his life? All to protect some damn file?”
A group of camera-clad visitors wandered into the room. He saw that Pam had the wisdom to hush, and he was grateful for the interruption. Definitely a mistake bringing her. He’d have to ditch her as soon as they left Kronborg, even if it meant locking her in a room at Thorvaldsen’s manor.
The visitors wandered off.
He faced Durant and said, “Tell me more about—”
A bang startled him, then the ceiling-mounted camera in the corner exploded in a shower of sparks. Next came two more bangs. Durant lurched backward as blood roses blossomed from punctures in his olive-colored shirt.
A third shot and Durant collapsed to the floor.
Malone whirled.
A man stood twenty feet away, holding a Glock. Malone stuffed his right arm under his jacket to find his own weapon.
“No need,” the man calmly said, and he tossed the gun.
Malone caught it. He gripped the pistol’s stock, finger on the trigger, aimed, and fired.
Only a click came in response.
His finger worked the trigger.
More clicks.
The man smiled. “You didn’t think I’d give it to you loaded.”
Then the shooter fled the room.
TEN
WASHINGTON, DC
4:40 AM
Stephanie considered Brent Green’s inquiry—why don’t you trust me?—and decided to be straight with her boss.
“Everybody in this administration wants me gone. Why I’m still here, I don’t know. So I don’t trust anybody at the moment.”
Green shook his head at her suspicion.
“Those files were accessed by someone with a password,” she added. “Sure, they scanned through a dozen or more, but we both know the one they were after. Only a few of us are privy to the Alexandria Link. I don’t even know the details—just that we went to a lot of trouble for something that was seemingly meaningless. Lots of questions. No answers. Come on, Brent. You and I haven’t actually been asshole buddies, so why should I trust you now?”
“Let’s be clear,” Green said. “I’m not your enemy. If I were, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.”
“I’ve had friends in this business say that to me many times and not mean a word.”
“Traitors are like that.”
She decided to test him further. “Don’t you think we ought to bring more people into the loop?”
“The FBI is already in.”
“Brent, we’re operating in the dark. We need to know what George Haddad knows.”
“Then it’s time we deal with Larry Daley at the White House. Any road we take will lead straight to him. Might as well go to the source.”
She agreed.
And Green reached for the phone.
Malone heard the person who had just murdered lee Durant scream that there was a man with a gun who’d shot somebody.
And he was still holding the Glock.
“Is he dead?” Pam muttered.
Stupid question. But standing with the murder weapon in hand was even more stupid. “Come on.”
“We can’t just leave him.”
“He’s dead.”
Hysteria filled her eyes. He recalled the first time he’d watched someone die, so he cut her some slack. “You shouldn’t have seen that. But we have to go.”
A warning rush of heels on tile echoed from beyond the room. Security, he assumed. He grabbed Pam’s hand and yanked her toward the opposite end of the Corner Chamber.
They scampered through more rooms, each like the next, sparsely furnished with period pieces, illuminated by dim morning light. He noticed more cameras and knew he’d have to eventually avoid them. He stuffed the Glock into his jacket pocket and brought out his Beretta.
They entered a room identified as the Queen’s Chamber.
He heard voices from behind. Apparently the body had been found. More shouts and footfalls, coming their way.
The Queen’s Chamber was an apartment. Three doorways led out. One to a staircase up, the other down, the remaining portal opening into another room. No security camera in sight. He scanned the décor trying to decide what to do. A large armoire towered against the exterior wall.
He decided to play the odds.
He rushed to the armoire and grabbed the double-door iron handles. Inside was spacious and empty. Plenty big enough for them both. He motioned at Pam. For once she came without comment.
“Get in,” he whispered.
Before entering, he cracked open both stairway exits. Then he climbed in and eased the doors shut, hoping their pursuers assumed they either went down, up, or back into the castle.
Stephanie listened as Brent Green briefed Larry Daley about what had happened. She couldn’t help wondering if the arrogant ass on the other end of the phone already knew every detail, plus more.
“I’m familiar with the Alexandria Link,” Daley said through the speaker.
“Care to tell us?” Green asked.
“Wish I could. Classified.”
“To the attorney general and the head of one of our most elite intelligence agencies?”
“For a select set of eyes only. Sorry, neither of you qualifies.”
“Then how did someone else manage a peek?” Stephanie asked.
“You haven’t figured that out yet?”
�
�Maybe I have.”
Silence stung the room. Daley apparently received her message.
“Wasn’t me.”
“What else would you say?” she asked.
“Watch your mouth.”
She ignored the jab. “Malone is going to give them the link. He won’t risk his son.”
“Then he’ll have to be stopped,” Daley said. “We’re not handing that over to anyone.”
She caught his meaning. “You want it for yourself, don’t you?”
“Damn right.”
She couldn’t believe what she was hearing. “A boy’s life may be at stake.”
“Not my problem,” Daley declared.
Calling Daley had been a mistake, and she could see that Green now realized that fact, too.
“Larry,” Green said. “Let’s help Malone out. Not make his task more difficult.”
“Brent, this is a matter of national security, not a charity case.”
“Interesting,” she said, “how you’re not the least bit concerned that someone accessed our secured files and learned all about this highly classified Alexandria Link—a matter of supposed national security.”
“You reported that breach more than a month ago. The FBI is handling the situation. What are you doing about it, Stephanie?”
“I was told to do nothing. What did you do, Larry?”
A sigh came through the speaker. “You truly are a pain in the ass.”
“But she works for me,” Green made clear.
“Here’s what I think,” Stephanie said. “Whatever this link is, it somehow fits with whatever it is you geniuses at the White House have conceived as foreign policy. You actually like the fact the files were compromised and that somebody has this information. Which means you’re going to allow them to do your dirty work.”
“Sometimes, Stephanie, enemies can be your friend.” Daley’s voice had fallen to a whisper. “And vice versa.”
A knot formed in her throat. Her suspicions were now fact. “You’re going to sacrifice Malone’s boy for your president’s legacy?”
“I didn’t start this,” Daley replied. “But I intend to use it.”
“Not if I can help it,” she said.
“Interfere and you’ll be fired. Not by you, Brent, but by the president himself.”
“That could become a problem,” Green said.
She caught the threat in his tone.
“You’re saying you’d stand with her?” Daley asked.
“Without question.”
She knew that this was a threat Daley could not ignore. The administration possessed a measure of control over Green’s actions as attorney general. But if he quit, or was fired, then it would be open season on the White House.
The speakerphone sat silent. She imagined Daley sitting in his office, puzzling over his quandary.
“I’ll be at your house in thirty minutes.”
“Why do we need to meet?” Green asked.
“I assure you, it’ll be worth your while.”
The line clicked dead.
Malone stood in the armoire and listened as footsteps rushed into the Queen’s Chamber. Pam was nestled beside him, the closest they’d been to each other in years. A familiar smell rose from her, like sweet vanilla, one he recalled with a mixture of joy and agony. Funny the way smells triggered memory.
He still held the Beretta and hoped he didn’t have to use it. But he had no intention of being taken into custody, not when Gary needed him. Surely one reason for killing Durant was to isolate them. Another had been to prevent them from learning any useful information. But he wondered how anyone had known of the meeting. They hadn’t been followed from Christiangade, of that he was sure. Which meant Thorvaldsen’s phones must have been monitored. Which meant that his going straight to Christiangade had been anticipated.
He couldn’t see Pam, but he sensed her discomfort. Considering all the intimacy they’d once shared, now they were simply strangers.
Perhaps even enemies.
Voices outside grabbed his thoughts. Footsteps grew fainter, then became lost in silence. He waited, finger on the trigger, sweat breaking in his palms.
More silence.
No way to see anything without cracking the armoire’s doors. Which could prove disastrous if someone remained in the room.
But he couldn’t stand here forever.
He eased open the door, gun ready.
The Queen’s Chamber was empty.
Down the stairs, he mouthed, and they rushed through the open portal and descended a circular staircase that hugged the castle’s outer wall. At ground level they came to a metal door that he hoped wasn’t locked.
The latch released.
They stepped out into a bright morning. A sea of shiny grass littered with swans stretched from the castle walls to the sea. Sweden loomed on the horizon, three miles across the gray-brown water.
He stuffed the Beretta beneath his jacket.
“We need to get out of here,” he said. “But slowly. Don’t draw attention.” He could tell she was still rattled from the killing, so he offered, “You’ll see it over and over in your brain, but it’ll pass.”
“Your concern is touching.” Her voice was again filled with menace.
“Then chew on this. That’s probably not the last person who’s going to die before this is over.”
He led the way across the ramparts that overlooked the sound. Few visitors milled about. They came to a spot he knew was Flag Battery, where ancient cannons once stood and where Shakespeare had allowed Hamlet to meet his father’s ghost. A wall rose from the sea. He lobbed the Glock out into the choppy water.
Sirens wailed from beyond the grounds.
They slowly made their way to the main entrance. Seeing flashing lights and more police rushing onto the grounds, he decided to wait before heading out. Unlikely that anyone would have a description of them, and he doubted that the shooter had stayed around to provide one. The idea was surely not to have them arrested.
So he blended with the crowd.
Then he spotted the shooter.
Fifty yards away, heading straight for the main gate, strolling, not trying to attract attention, either.
Pam saw him, too. “That’s the guy.”
“I know.”
He started forward.
“You’re not,” she asked.
“Couldn’t stop me.”
ELEVEN
VIENNA, AUSTRIA
11:20 AM
The Blue Chair wondered if the Circle had committed itself to the proper course. For eight years die Klauen der Adler, the Talons of the Eagle, had dutifully carried out his assigned tasks. True, they’d collectively hired him, but on an everyday basis he worked directly under the Blue Chair’s control, which meant that he’d come to know Dominick Sabre far better than the rest.
Sabre was an American, born and bred, which was a first for the Circle. Always they’d employed Europeans, though once a South African had served them well. Each of those men, including Sabre, had been chosen not only for his individual ability but also for his physical mediocrity. All had been of average height, weight, and features. The only noticeable trait about Sabre was the pockmarks on his face, left over from a bout with chicken pox. Sabre’s black hair was cut straight and always held together with a dash of oil that added gleam. Stubble often dusted his cheeks partly, the Blue Chair knew, to conceal the scars, but also to disarm those around him.
Sabre maintained a relaxed look, wearing clothes, usually a size too big, that concealed a lean-limbed muscular frame—surely more of his effort to be constantly underestimated.
From a psychological profile Sabre had to endure prior to being hired, the Blue Chair learned that there was something about defiance of authority that appealed to the American. But that same profile also revealed that, if he was given a task, told the intended result, and left alone, Sabre would always perform.
And that was what mattered.
Both he and the Chai
rs could not care less how a given task was completed, only that the desired result be obtained. So their association with Sabre had been fruitful. Yet a man with no morals and little respect for authority bore watching.
Especially when the stakes were high.
As now.
So the Blue Chair reached for the phone and dialed.
Sabre answered his cell phone, hoping the call was from his man at Kronborg Slot. Instead the strained voice on the other end belonged to his employer.
“How did Mr. Malone enjoy your initial greeting?” the Blue Chair asked.
“Handled himself well. He and the ex-wife crawled out through the window.”
“As you predicted. But I wonder, are we drawing unnecessary attention?”
“More than I’d like, but it was necessary. He tried to call our bluff, so he had to see he’s not in charge. But I’ll be more discreet from here on out.”
“Do that. We don’t need law enforcement overly involved.” He paused. “At least not any more than they are as of now.”
Sabre was ensconced in a rental house on Copenhagen’s north side, a few blocks inland from Amalienborg, the seaside royal palace. He’d brought Gary Malone here from Georgia on the pretense that his father was in danger, which the boy had believed thanks to falsified Magellan Billet identification Sabre had showed him.
“How is the lad?” the Blue Chair asked.
“He was anxious, but he thinks this is a U.S. government operation. So he’s calm, for now.”
They’d terrorized Pam Malone with a photo of her son. The young man had cooperated with that, too, thinking they were producing security credentials.
“Isn’t the boy located too close to Malone?”
“He wouldn’t have gone voluntarily anywhere else. He knows his father is nearby.”
“I realize you have this under control. But do be careful. Malone may surprise you.”
“That’s why we have his son. He won’t jeopardize him.”
“We need the Alexandria Link.”
“Malone will lead us straight there.”
But the call from his man at Kronborg still had not come. For everything to work, it was critical that his operative perform exactly as he’d instructed.