Read The Carolina Coup: Another Rwandan Genocide? (The Jeannine Ryan Series Book 4) Online
Authors: James E. Mosimann
He retrieved the shotgun from the corner, and sat.
Jeannine was too exhausted to argue. She stumbled towards the stairs.
In the FBI Resident Agency in Wilmington, North Carolina, Stew Marks and Jack Marino sipped coffee. Stew was quiet. His boss at the Joint Terrorism Task Force in DC was distinctly displeased with “Agent Marks” - First, because of Stew’s long absence from his desk at the JTTF, and second, because Marks had not produced either the fugitive, William Hamm, or his apparent collaborator, Dr. Ryan.
Jack broke the silence. His words did little to comfort Stew.
“You didn’t think that the Ryan woman would try to claim her car from the impoundment lot, did you, Stew?”
Stew threw a pained look at his partner.
“Technically, she’s not a fugitive like Hamm. So why not?”
Stew still harbored the hope that somehow the attractive redhead was the evil Hamm’s unwitting dupe.
Jack divined those thoughts.
“Face it, partner, Ryan got Hamm out of the hospital. She’s with Hamm now. The only way she can be innocent in all this is for Hamm to be innocent too. And Hamm is a rat. Remember how he contradicted my testimony about the Unity Pavilion.”
He kept on.
“Stew, you don’t know the woman. What’s wrong with you? You’re a trained agent. Focus, damn it, focus!”
Stew thought for a moment and switched topics.
“Jack, I think Hugh Byrd is bad news. I’m pretty sure that he and Tom Holder tried to kill Ryan at the beach house. I’ll bet Holder was shot. Byrd said he had an accident, no way.”
“Are you that sure? Why?”
“My damn gut has been screaming at me. That great room was wrecked by a shooter with an M16. He emptied an entire 30-round magazine. You’ve met Holder. He’s an overkill kind of guy. It was him all right, and he’s Byrd’s man all the way.”
“So?”
“So, Byrd has access to military M16’s, like were used in the assault. And we haven’t seen that creep Holder since. I’ll bet that was his blood on the deck? What more do you want?”
Jack thought a moment.
Proof would be nice.
Stew continued.
“And when we entered that DNA into the data base, it was blocked. No access. Whatever group those two jerks belong to knows how to cover their official butt.”
“All right Stew, suppose you are right, and Byrd and Holder are bad guys. How does that affect our mission to find Hamm.”
“Think, Jack, think. Byrd found Johnson and Ryan at the beach house before we did. He’s always been one step ahead of us. He has resources that we do not. Maybe if we follow Byrd he will lead us to Hamm.”
“Our guys say Byrd is at a motel in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.”
“He must think Hamm is there. We need a car.”
“We can get one from the pool.”
Stew and Jack left the agent’s lounge.
In Florence, South Carolina, Angelique Uwimana stepped out of her bedroom. She went to the couch where Paul Mutabazi slept and shook his shoulders.
“Paul, wake up. You must leave now. I have to go to class.”
“Can’t I stay here?”
“No, Henri is meeting me here later to go eat. You wouldn’t want him to see you.”
At the mention of Henri Duval, Paul sat up awake and swung his legs over the edge of the couch.
“There’s some coffee on the counter. Grab a cup and get dressed. We’re leaving in ten minutes.”
“Angelique, like I told you last night, Hakizimana is alive. He is not dead. He had Smets killed. Smets told me before he died.”
“Smets told you that to scare you. Troops of the
Front Patriotique Rwandais
killed Hakizimana in 1994 as he was fleeing Rwanda. It was in the papers and photos too.”
“Smets was dying. His story makes sense. He said that the French helped both him and Hakizimana to escape the
FPR
and hide among the refugees in Goma. Not only Hakizimana, but a number of other leaders of the Interahamwe genocide.”
“Yes but, everyone knows the leaders of the genocide were in Goma. They set up their own rule there.”
“But Smets warned me that now Hakizimana and other Hutu killers live here, in South Carolina. And yesterday, I saw Hakizimana outside my motel. He and two others I didn’t know.”
Angelique frowned.
“Paul, you couldn’t have seen Hakizimana. He’s dead. Besides, after all these years who knows what he would look like”
A shadow of doubt dulled Paul’s eyes.
“I saw his photo once.”
Angelique stood still. This was America. Hakizimana was dead and that meant that Smets was an evil liar, dying or not.
But Paul was frightened, and Smets
had
been hacked to death. Henri Duval had seen it. The killing was real.
“All right Paul, I’ll take you to a friend of mine, Milton. He’s a grad student in computer science like me. I’m sure he’ll let you stay in his apartment tonight.”
Angelique went to the door.
“But hurry, I have to be at the university in thirty minutes.”
In Chantilly, Virginia, Denise Guerry looked out the wide window of her office at Guerry Electronic Systems. From the sixth floor she had an expansive view of Route 28 and other tall buildings that housed various high tech enterprises. The traffic on Route 28 was light, the morning rush hour had ended some thirty minutes earlier. She punched a number on her cell.
“Henri, where are you?”
“In Florence, near Carolina Technical University.”
“So you’re visiting that sweet innocent Tutsi. Poor Henri, you need a real woman not a little girl.”
Henri twisted in silence. Denise continued.
“Where is Byrd? Why haven’t you found him?”
Again Henri chose silence.
At that, Denise threw her phone on the desk. It bounced off and slid out of sight.
Damn you Angelique, leave Henri alone. I need him.
Denise stared out the window. The traffic on Route 28 had slowed due to the wet road. The gray scene matched her mood.
The fallen phone buzzed from under the desk. She stooped to retrieve it.
“Henri?”
But it was her cousin at SÉGAG in Paris.
“It’s your favorite cousin, Jacques. Forget Henri.”
“Jacques, what do you want?”
“The RadGuard report succeeded. Plant 47 was shut down and its reactor has been completely dismantled. The rods have been made into radioactive missile modules as per your specs. The modules were shipped last week from le Havre.”
“Jacques, that’s old news. Get to the point. Why are you calling?”
“My father wants the papers back. He’s mad at my beautiful Denise.”
“Your Denise? Jacques, I’m your cousin!”
“So what, you’re still beautiful. And I don’t want you sleeping with Duval. Besides, have you dealt with Byrd?”
“I will soon, but Byrd may yet be of use. He is in South Carolina, trying to find Ryan and the papers.”
“You said Ryan was in Maryland.”
“I was wrong. The northern team is coming back south, and Bruno Belli is already in South Carolina, in Florence.”
“Denise, don’t cross father. Find those papers. He’s livid!”
“Fine!”
She slammed the phone down. This time it stayed on the desk.
At Mary Dean’s mother’s house in Dillon, South Carolina, Wayne and Bill looked on as Jeannine pushed several security tokens to the side and reached in the briefcase for a document.
“Bill. this report talks about a group fighting in Africa that wants to restore Hutu rule in Rwanda.”
“Right. Its leaders were responsible for the 1994 genocide. They fight in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the ‘
DRC.
’ They want to retake Rwanda. But there is also a rebellion against the
DRC
. Those rebels sympathize with the present Rwandan government.”
“Bill, this is complicated. What does it all mean?”
He pointed to the briefcase.
“Messages in there show that a Hutu group under a man named Maximilien Gutera plans to commit mass atrocities in the North and South Kivu provinces of the Congo. Some members of the government in France support them. The idea is to blame the atrocities on the current government of Rwanda so that French sympathizers will ask the UN to condemn Rwanda, and restore a ‘Hutu Power’ government there.”
“I can’t believe it. That would risk another genocide? Why?”
“Why not? At the time of the first genocide, the French prime minister was a friend of the Rwandan president, Juvénal Habyarimana, whose death provided the excuse for the mass killings. And maybe some Frenchmen want Rwanda to be French-speaking again. The Rwandan Patriotic Front was started by English-speaking Tutsis from Uganda and the current constitution has a ‘National’ language, Kinyarwanda, and three ‘Official’ languages; Kinyarwanda, English and French.
Jeannine shook her head.
“No Frenchman I know would endorse racism and genocide just to restore French as the dominant language.”
“I agree. But the leaders of the Hutu-Power movement have no place to go. They caused the genocide. Their only hope is to take over Rwanda. And all they need to assure French involvement is one or two highly-placed officials who use
‘la gloire de la France’
as a pretext to fatten their personal bank accounts from a restored Hutu government.”
Jeannine groaned.
But another genocide?
Bill bent over. He appeared exhausted. His shoulders slumped. She steadied him.
“Bill, enough talk. Here, take your antibiotics and rest.”
His fingers clasped the pills and pressed them into his mouth.
Jeannine wrapped her arms about him and settled him on the sofa. She tucked a blanket about his shoulders and stood back.
In seconds he was asleep
In Chantilly, a frustrated Denise Guerry arrived early at the offices of Guerry Electronic Systems. She had fought her way through the heavy traffic on Route 28, most of whose cars were headed for offices in the District of Columbia.
But Denise’s concern was for Henri. Was she losing her touch?
Henri,
do not be distracted by that twit of a Tutsi! You need a woman, not some silly girl.
She ignored the mail in the inbox and paced back and forth. She only stopped when the phone rang. She set it to “speaker.”
Maximilien Gutera’s voice boomed forth.
“Mlle. Guerry!”
“I’m here.”
“I informed your uncle that Dr. Smets betrayed me and that I had dealt with him. Did he notify you?”
“Of course!”
She lied.
Thanks for nothing, uncle.
Maximilien continued.
“But now I have another problem. I just found out that a Tutsi woman is studying here in Florence. She gave a seminar at the university. She studies encryption. Would this Tutsi be associated with GES?”
“What is her name?”
“Angelique Uwimana. Some of my men attend that university. I will not tolerate a Tutsi presence there. Apparently some of them find her attractive. I will not tolerate my men being infected by such a cockroach.”
Maximilien pushed ahead.
“Mlle. Guerry, your uncle informs me that you had your Dr. Belli attend Uwimana’s seminar. I must repeat. Is Uwimana supported by GES?”
“She is not, but Henri Duval is and he may be with her. I insist that he not be harmed. He has a key assignment.”
Maximilien ground his teeth.
She insists? How dare she!
But he held his tongue. He needed GES and SÉGAG.
“Agreed, of course, Mademoiselle. Henri will not be harmed.”
He hung up.
Unless he gets in my way!
Denise was conflicted.
Maximilien’s solution for the Tutsi distraction would be extreme, but uncle Roland insisted that she not oppose the man in any way. But if Henri tried to defend Angelique from the Hutus, he could fall along with her.
Damn!
Denise stayed at her desk. She needed to make one more call. She punched the number of Dr. Bruno Belli. It was he whom she had sent to hear Angelique’s talk.
“Bruno, are you still in South Carolina, in Florence?”
“Of course.”
“Why haven’t you reported to me on Angelique Uwimana’s seminar on breaking the RSA encryption scheme?”
“Because I’ve been studying it and I had Greg go over it too. Her factorization method is clever, but it certainly will not work in polynomial time as she hopes.”
“Does she suspect GES of breaking RSA messages?”
“No way. She’s strictly into the math. She has no clue about how we obtain the primes for decryption. She knows nothing about manipulating human factors. Uwimana is no threat to us. Don’t worry about her.”
“Bruno, you are naïve. Her research alone makes her dangerous. The belief that she is correct could cause some governments to abandon RSA encryption.”
“But two of the top experts in the country, one of them from Stanford, did not believe her either. Sure, they encouraged her to continue her work. She has a novel approach that has possibilities in other areas, but she cannot do the impossible. She’s no threat to RSA encryption
He added.
“The bottom line is they say that her algorithm cannot be any faster than what’s now available. Her approach to speed up integer factorization is flawed. It won’t do that. Period!”
“Bruno, you may know math and algorithms, but you don’t know people. It’s like this. Gutera thinks Uwimana is a threat to his men. He is going to eliminate her. Understood?”
“You mustn't allow that. Those genociders mutilate people!”
“Talk to my uncle about that. Your problem is to make sure that Maximilien’s men do not harm Henri Duval. Henri thinks he likes this Tutsi. And be careful, Maximilien is dangerous.”
Bruno swallowed.
So are you!
She hung up.
In Florence, South Carolina, Henri Duval sat at a secluded corner table in the small Italian restaurant. Opposite him was a beautiful African, Angelique Uwimana. Her eyes shone in the wavering candle light.
She was bubbly with the success of her seminar the day before.
“Henri, I did it, and nobody shot me down, not even that hot shot computer guru from Stanford. I have a chance, my ideas might work.”
She hesitated.
“My only problem is to speed up the algorithm.”
Henri was not thinking of algorithms. He reached across the table and took both her hands.
“Angelique, I knew you would. You are an extraordinary woman.”
“No Henri, don’t say that. I’m very ordinary.”
The slightest shadow flicked across his eyes. She withdrew her hands from his.
“Henri, something is bothering you. What? Are you scared that I’m a mathematician? You needn’t be. People are more important than any career. You have to know that.”
Angelique ’s openness endeared her to Henri who dealt mostly with deception. And she was right, he was disturbed. Denise Guerry was angry.
Still he determined not to spoil Angelique’s celebration.
“I’m not worried, Angelique, and you are not only beautiful, but intelligent. Still, you must keep your career.”
Abruptly the glow in her eyes dimmed.
“Angelique, what did I say wrong? I’m sorry.”
“Henri, that man who just sat down. The suit and tie over in the corner. He was at my seminar. He’s the one that implied that I might have stolen encription secrets from the government.”
Henri looked up.
“I know him, his name is Bruno Belli. He’s an Italian computer scientist who works in northern Virginia, sometimes for my company.”
Inwardly, Henri shuddered. Belli at the seminar meant that Denise Guerry was monitoring Angelique and her research.
“Like you work for that ‘Guerry’ woman.”
Henri did not answer. He stood up and signaled the waiter for the check.
“Angelique, we should leave now.”
But Angelique, half-risen in her chair, froze. A tall black man had joined Bruno at his table. She whispered.
“Henri! That man sitting with your ‘Bruno.’ That’s Maximilien Gutera, a Rwandan, a Hutu. His father was Charles Hakizimana, a leader of the Interahamwe and the genocide. Maybe Maximilien is the one Paul saw. He looks like his father.”
Henri turned. Bruno and his African partner were staring in their direction.
He pulled Angelique from her chair and headed for the door.
Outside the restaurant, the clouds burst. Churning winds and rain splattered the street in whirling sprays that stung Henri Duval’s eyes. Half-blinded, he guided Angelique on the sidewalk next to the overflowing gutters.
She clung to him as horizontal gusts lifted the water from the asphalt and flung it against their legs. He lowered his head and pulled her towards the car.
They arrived drenched.
Henri drove. Angelique, her hair damp and disheveled, leaned on the glove compartment without speaking. He could barely see through the water that cascaded against the windshield. Neither of them spoke. The rapid thump-thump of the wiper blades provided the only sound.
After a few blocks, the rain lessened, and the wipers cleared semicircles through which Henri could see. He turned to her.
“Angelique, you are in danger, you must trust me. I can help you.”
She lifted her head, but before she could answer, he spoke.
“This ‘Paul’ you mentioned before. Do you mean ‘Paul Mutabazi,’ you know him, don’t you?”
She nodded and reached for Henri’s shoulder, but he kept on.
“And he was at the farm where Smets was killed, right.”
She withdrew her hand. She nodded again.
Henri kept on.
“It was Mutabazi who shot at me when I arrived at the farm, wasn’t it? He has a hunting rifle doesn’t he?”
“But he told me he didn’t try to hit you. He shot high. He only wanted time to get away. Paul is no killer. I mean he hated that man, Smets, and wanted to kill him, but when the time came he couldn’t finish him.”
She shook some of the moisture from her hair.
“Smets was dying when Paul found him. Whoever did it used a panga.”
She sobbed
, a panga!
Poor little Augustin, my baby brother.
She bit her lips and continued.
“All right, here is what I know. Someone had told Paul of a new Hutu Power movement that wanted to restore Hutu rule in Rwanda with the aid of the United Nations. Key people in the movement were living in the Carolinas, including a Belgian doctor who lived near Wilmington. Paul saw a photo of that doctor in a local newspaper. He clipped it out.”
She took a breath.
“Paul recalled that a Belgian doctor named Smets had escaped to Goma with the other killers when they were driven out of Rwanda by the FPR, and he knew that a Doctor Smets, a Belgian, had refused to shelter me and my brother from the Interahamwe, a death sentence for us.”
She paused
“But I told you how they chopped my baby brother to pieces, and how God saved me, a miracle!”
She sobbed.
Augustin, why am I alive and not you?
After a moment she continued.
“Paul showed me the photo. It was Dr. Smets, the supposed friend of my mother, the one who turned me and my baby brother away. When Paul told me that Smets was living in North Carolina, near Wilmington, I was upset. He was determined to accost Smets. He wanted to find out what Smets knew about the Hutu plot, but he was too late. Smets was chopped and dying.”
Henri stopped for a red light. The water on the windshield was reduced to trickles. The rain had ceased.
“How do you and Paul know each other?”
“Nothing romantic, if that’s what you think. We were neighbors in our village, but I was away at school when my father was killed. Paul was only a boy. My father and he sought help at the local soccer field, but Government troops surrounded them and several hundred Tutsis. They slaughtered them, first with grenades, then guns. As he died, my father saved Paul. He shielded him with his own body as he fell.”
“Where is Paul now?”
“With a fellow graduate student, at his apartment.”
The light turned to green. Henri drove off and continued.
“Angelique, this Gutera, how did you recognize him?”
“My wonderful ‘diversity’ university invited him to present the Hutu side of the Rwandan ‘conflict,’ that’s their nice term for ‘genocide.’ I didn’t go to the talk, but his photo was on the flyers. It made me sick.”
“But not all Hutu … ”
“Stop! There can never be justification for the genocide. You were there. You saw!”
She continued.
“Of course not all Hutus are guilty! My mother was Hutu and they killed her. But Hutu leaders corrupted my neighbors, my friends. Most of my village joined them, some out of fear. The Interahamwe killed those who befriended us.”
Angelique choked on her tears.
“We have to forgive any of them who ask us. The new government’s focus is on reconciliation. We have to forgive each other. There is no other choice. But Maximilien Gutera’s father was one of the leaders! He belonged to the devil.”
A final sob.
“And his son says it was right to kill us. We deserved it! Gutera brags that he wants nothing of the Tutsi, only our deaths.”
Henri reached for her hand and squeezed, but she was not done.
“Before he died Smets told Paul that Gutera’s father, Charles Hakizimana, killed him. Paul believed him.”
“I thought Hakizimana died fleeing Kigali.”
“He did, but some Hutus pretend he survived and anyway Smets is a liar. The French, your countrymen, helped Smets escape to Goma, but Charles Hakizimana was killed. Paul thought he saw Charles here in Florence, just yesterday, but I convinced him he was wrong. Now I know that he saw Maximilien. My God! The son is a beast like his father. And he is here to avenge him. God help us.”
Henri stopped the car, pulled her close, and held her. Neither spoke.
Back at the restaurant, Maximilien Gutera ate his Steak Toscana while a pale Bruno Belli watched in silence. Bruno had lost all appetite. He lifted his glass to his lips, but his hand shook and he put it down. He spoke, but his voice was a whisper.
“You should have told me before setting the trap for Uwimana. Duval is with her. Denise Guerry specifically instructed me not to involve him. She will not be pleased.”