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Authors: David Hagberg

Dance with the Dragon (11 page)

BOOK: Dance with the Dragon
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“Am I that obvious?” McGarvey asked. He kissed her upturned cheek, and poured a glass of wine for her.

“Transparent,” she said.

“Sorry about lunch, sweetheart,” he said. “Couldn’t be helped.”

Her lips compressed and she nodded. “When are you leaving?”

“In the morning.”

“Maybe I should fly up with you,” she suggested hopefully. “While you’re out at Langley doing your thing I could see Audie, and take Elizabeth shopping or something. Afterward you could join us and we could make a nice minivacation out of it. What do you say?”

McGarvey shook his head. “Not this time, sweetheart.”

Her face fell. “Washington is just a way point.”

He nodded.

“You promised that you wouldn’t get involved with anything unless it was important to both of us. Is it?”

“I don’t know,” he admitted. But his gut feeling was as strong as ever, and Rencke’s programs were lavender and deepening. “I’m just going to take a closer look, and maybe turn around and come home.”

“Any hint where you’re going?”

He shook his head.

“How long you’ll be gone?”

“With any luck only a few days,” McGarvey told her.

“And without any luck?”

He shrugged. “I don’t know, Katy. Could be a week, maybe longer. Maybe even a lot longer.”

“Goddamn it to hell!” Katy shouted. She jumped up, threw her glass away, shattering it against the railing, wine flying everywhere, and stormed out of the gazebo and down the thirty yards to the wooden dock.

It wasn’t often she had these outbursts because of his profession, but he’d learned the hard way that when she did it was best to let her work it out on her own. She would calm down, and they could talk it out.

Early in their marriage he’d been sent to Santiago, Chile, to assassinate a general who’d been responsible for the torture and deaths of thousands of people, and who, if he had lived, would possibly have become president of Chile and would have killed even more of his people.

When he’d come back to Washington he’d learned that the operation had been called off at the last moment, but it had been too late to stop him. It had been a setup to get rid of him, and he’d been fired from the Company.

That afternoon when he walked through the front door of his house, bag in hand, Katy had been there in the stair hall with an ultimatum. She’d had no idea where he’d been or what he had been doing, but she’d had enough of him running around the world at a moment’s notice, leaving her to sit at home half out of her mind with worry and fear. It was her or the CIA. He would have to make the choice.

He’d been mentally fried at that moment. Not only had he killed the general, he’d been forced to kill the man’s wife, putting a bullet in her head when she and her husband were in the act of making love, lest she sound the alarm and bring the guards down on him. It didn’t matter when he stood just inside the door facing Katy that the general’s wife had been just as responsible for the killing and torture as her husband, because he didn’t know it then. All he knew was that he had gunned down two people, one of them a woman, in cold blood, he’d been fired from his job, and the one person on earth whom he desperately needed to make it right was treating him as if he were a criminal who needed to change his ways or get out.

His marriage was new enough that he hadn’t learned how to react when his wife threw a tantrum. He’d turned around without a word and walked out the door. By the next morning he was on an Air France flight to Paris, and then to Switzerland.

He and Katy had been separated for a lot of years as their only daughter was growing up. And looking back, those wasted years made no sense to him. They had always loved each other; they’d just not been able to keep in step. They hadn’t learned how.

After a few minutes he went down to the dock and stood beside her, watching a snowy egret fishing for its dinner on the opposite bank.

She looked up and smiled wistfully. “I was thinking about the time when you came home after one of your … trips, and I told you it was me or the CIA.”

“I was thinking about it too,” McGarvey said. “We were pretty stupid.”

“I’m not that dumb anymore, Kirk,” she said, turning to him.

“Neither am I,” McGarvey said, and he took her in his arms.

“It was a long time ago.”

“Yes, it was.”

Katy looked deeply into his eyes, and after a moment she nodded. “I wonder what would happen if I threw down the gauntlet now?”

“I’d probably turn down the trip,” McGarvey told her.

“Thank you for that much,” she said. “Please be careful and come back to me.”

SEVENTEEN

MEXICO CITY

McGarvey had booked a pair of first-class seats on a United Airbus A320, leaving Dulles at 3:00 p.m., just forty minutes after his flight from Sarasota had touched down. His diplomatic passport identifying him as Thomas Higby had not been given a second glance, and he’d been allowed to step around the security arch with his leather bag in hand. At the counter he’d checked one hanging bag with his clothes, which was tagged with a diplomatic status, and since he’d booked two seats he wasn’t bothered with a neighbor.

As soon as they were in the air and had reached cruising altitude the captain turned off the Fasten Seat Belt sign and announced that portable electronic devices including cell phones would be okay to use. McGarvey ordered a Martell cognac neat from the stewardess, and after she’d brought it he took out Rencke’s DVD and powered it up.

The personnel files on Gil Perry and the people working for him out of the embassy didn’t contain much of any interest besides what Rencke had told him, and from what he’d gathered from Perry himself and from the woman. The entire station seemed to be composed of field officers who had their own agendas. Everyone was looking for the “big score,” as Updegraf had called it. Perry was looking to make his mark so he could take the next step toward becoming DDCI. Chauncy wanted his own station, and he was willing to push Perry at every opportunity, hoping that his boss would make a career-busting mistake. Updegraf had been up to something that no one else knew about. And the only reason Gloria Ibenez had apparently made no splash was because Perry hated her for some reason.

It was one piece of the puzzle that McGarvey didn’t quite understand. The Gloria he knew was an extremely ambitious woman, who had never let anyone or anything stand in her way. She wanted big things for herself—though what exactly those were wasn’t quite clear—so why she wasn’t demanding a transfer out of a station she had to know was a dead end for her was puzzling, unless, like Chauncy, she was pushing Perry into making a big mistake. It was possible that she was hoping for a COS whom she could work to her advantage.

The dossiers on General Liu and Shahrzad contained almost nothing of any use beyond what McGarvey had already learned at the Longboat Key interview, except that the FBI had twice reported its suspicions of the general to the government in Beijing through the Chinese embassy in Washington. The first time was in New York, when Liu had been working with the Chinese delegation to the UN. Within a few days he had been recalled to China, only to surface one year later in Washington at the Chinese embassy. The Bureau again sent a warning to Beijing that Liu was suspected of being a murderer. This time the general left the U.S. apparently without being recalled.

McGarvey looked up from a photograph of the general displayed on the tiny screen. It made no sense. If the Bureau had twice suspected Liu of being a murderer, and both times had been able to convince the State Department that there was enough of a case that a warning should be transmitted to Beijing, why hadn’t Liu been declared persona non grata and kicked out of the country? The balance-of-trade issue had been on the table, and it was possible that the White House had not wanted to add any fuel to the firestorm over something so relatively minor as a suspected killer. Liu hadn’t actually been
proved
guilty of anything.

Updegraf had probably been assassinated by the Mexicans on Liu’s orders. It was also likely that Updegraf had found out something about the general and what he was doing in Mexico. It was this last business that apparently worried Adkins enough to send Rencke to Florida to ask for McGarvey’s help. Perry and his crowd were evidently incapable of finding out what was going on, and if Adkins sent a flying team down there to help out, even a half-blind man watching our embassy would know something big was in the wind.

McGarvey stared at Liu’s image on the small screen for a long time. Shahrzad had seen him and Updegraf together at the compound in Chihuahua, and more than anything else that had frightened her enough to bail out, leaving her hard-won money behind. He had to wonder what she’d expected to say to Updegaf when they met again.

He skipped back to the beginning of the disk, but the files had been erased and the screen stayed blank.

“Would you like another drink, sir?” the pretty flight attendant asked at his shoulder.

He glanced up at her. “Sure, why not,” he said. He had a feeling he was going to be away from home a lot longer than he’d first guessed.

*   *   *

Aeropuerto Internacional Benito Juárez was a madhouse when McGarvey cleared passport control a few minutes after seven in the evening local. Mexicans referred to their capital city as D.F., Distrito Federal, just as many Americans referred to theirs as D.C., and the main airport was every bit as busy as Dulles usually was on an early weekday evening. Once he retrieved his check-through bag, he paid his cab fare at the teller window just outside the customs area, and took his receipt out to the
sitio
at curbside, where he climbed in the backseat of the lead cab.

“Hotel Four Seasons,” he told the driver, and settled back for the ride into the city. He had some serious history here with Russian KGB General Valentin Baranov. Although that had been more than fifteen years ago, nothing seemed to have changed; there were still the same cardboard and shipping-container slums to pass through on the half-hour trip into the city; the same burned-out hulks of cars and trucks lying along the road; the same frenetic pace; and nearly the same pall of exhaust and smoke of burning garbage thick in the air.

Despite the cab’s air-conditioning McGarvey felt a little tickle at the back of his throat from the foul air, and a shortness of breath from the altitude. Twenty-two million people lived in the D.F., which sprawled across a dry lake bed above seven thousand feet and was ringed by snowcapped mountains, which tended to keep the pollution in place. The locals never seemed to notice, but most visitors did. At some tourist spots around town there were vending machines that sold a couple of minutes of oxygen for a few pesos.

At the hotel, McGarvey gave the driver a small tip, and checked in under his own passport. The arrival of another courier traveling under a diplomatic passport wouldn’t be flagged, but if he’d checked into a hotel instead of going straight to the embassy a few eyebrows might have been raised.

He was given a small suite on the hotel’s eighth floor that looked down into a pleasant inner courtyard with a fountain. From here he was only a few blocks from the American embassy in the city’s historical downtown district.

When he was settled in, he took a quick shower, changed clothes, and went back downstairs, where outside the bellman summoned him a cab.

“Where would you like to be taken, sir?”

“I want to take a look at a house up in Tizapan San Angel,” McGarvey told the bellman. “I want to make sure it’s in a good neighborhood before I meet the agent tomorrow.”

“That’s a very nice neighborhood, señor,” the bellman said as a taxi pulled up. He opened the door. “Do you have an address?”

“It’s just off the Avenida Rio Magdalena,” McGarvey said, giving the man a tip. “I’ll direct the driver.”

The bellman said something to the driver, and closed the door.

The cabbie merged with traffic, and a couple blocks later passed the modernistic U.S. embassy. Thirty minutes later they came to an area of graceful hillside homes in the Spanish hacienda style, many of them behind tall stucco walls, with winding cobblestoned side streets and far less traffic. The Chinese embassy occupied one of these upscale houses: four stories behind a tall stucco wall topped with iron spikes and secured by a tall wrought-iron gate.

“Slow down,” McGarvey told the driver. “I think it’s somewhere around here.”

The cabbie did as he was told and they passed the embassy at a crawl. The roof of the main building bristled with antennae and satellite dishes. Lights were on in most of the windows, and perhaps two dozen cars were parked along the curb on both sides of the street. Evidently there was something going on inside, a diplomatic reception or party.

Passing the gate, McGarvey could see a second, much smaller, building to the right of the main house, and the edge of another, perhaps a garage, around back. A man dressed in dark clothing stood just inside the gate, and he raised something in his hand to point at the cab. McGarvey got the impression it might have been a camera or perhaps a Starlight Scope, because the man held it to his eyes.

McGarvey turned his face away from the window. “I was mistaken,” he told the driver. “I’ll just have to wait until morning. Take me back to the hotel.”

“As you wish, señor,” the cabbie said, and at the next corner he made a U-turn.

*   *   *

Back in his suite McGarvey ordered a light dinner and a couple bottles of Dos Equis beer from room service. While he waited he used his sat phone to call Rencke.

“I’m at 805 at the Four Seasons. I need you to send me a few things.”

“Dick wants to know what you think about the girl,” Rencke said.

“Does anybody know I’m here?”

“No.”

“Tell Dick I’m still working on it,” McGarvey said. “I’ll get back to him in a couple of days. Are you and Perry still in Florida?”

“Perry left a half hour after you did, and I got home last night,” Rencke said. “Toni knows what she’s doing.”

“Okay, this is what I want sent down here.”

EIGHTEEN

BOOK: Dance with the Dragon
12.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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