White Cargo
Page 19
Cat wrote down the airplane’s tail number and gave it to the woman.
Hedger showed him to the elevator. “When you come back, don’t bring Garcia-Greville with you. I don’t want her on the premises.”
“Whatever you say, Hedger,” Cat said, wearily, punching the elevator button. Downstairs, he turned in his visitor’s pass and was let through the embassy gate by a Marine guard. A long line of Latinos stretched from the gate to the front door of the building, waiting to apply for visas, Cat supposed. He found a taxi, and on the ride to the hotel, took time to look at Bogotá. He had been too preoccupied to notice much of it yesterday. He tried to put Hedger’s ranting about Meg out of his mind.
The city was a jumble of the modern and the decrepit. Traffic was heavy and noisy, with gaily painted schoolbuses, like those in Santa Marta, jammed with passengers. Green mountaintops hung about the city, occasionally obscured by clouds. The day was gray and cool, and there was a feeling of rain in the air.
At the Tequendama, he asked for his key. There were no messages. He let himself into the suite. “Meg?” he called out. He was greeted with silence. He went into the bedroom. His bags lay open on the bed, just as he had left them the day before. Meg’s bags were gone; nothing of hers was in the room.
He looked around for a note, but there was none. He called the hotel operator and asked her to double-check for messages. There were none.
He sat down wearily on the bed and tried to think where she might be. Had she gone back to her house near Cartagena? He suddenly missed her terribly, wanted her. Why would she simply walk out, leaving no message? Was what Hedger had said about her true? Did it matter? Not to him, not really. She must have known that Hedger would tell him about her father. He wanted to hear her side of it.
He lay back on the bed and gave way to soreness and fatigue. He thought about Drummond and what had happened to his family. They had a lot in common, the Drummonds and the Catledges.
22
AT FOUR O’CLOCK CAT PRESENTED HIMSELF AT THE EMBASSY gates, identified himself with his passport, and was searched and admitted.
A few minutes later Hedger showed him to a chair and picked up a telephone. “Both of you come in here when you’re finished with your meeting.” He hung up and was silent, apparently waiting for some others to join them.
“How’d you get into this line of work?” Cat asked, curious about Hedger’s career since Quantico.
“I worked with these people a lot in Vietnam. When I got back, I had an invitation. It was a good offer.”
Cat still didn’t know exactly who Hedger worked for, but it wasn’t hard to guess. He looked for confirmation. “You were working with the CIA in Vietnam? I’d have thought you’d have had a battalion by then.” He couldn’t help needling.
Hedger shook his head. “I only made light colonel. They found other uses for me.”
He hadn’t denied the CIA, and it seemed obvious that he had been passed over for promotion. If an Academy man couldn’t make bird colonel in a war, he was going nowhere. Cat let it pass. He was going to need Hedger’s help.
“I hear you did okay for yourself,” Hedger said, sourly.
“Yeah, not bad. I had a good idea and a brother-in-law who was a good businessman.”
Hedger nodded as if he had known all along that Cat’s success was the result of somebody else’s work. “We’ve got a bunch of your printers around the embassy. Pretty slick.”
“Thanks.” Cat wished that whoever was joining them would do so. Hedger had always been difficult to make small talk with.
As if in answer to his prayer, the office door opened and Candis Leigh and a young man came in.
“You’ve met Leigh,” Hedger said. He nodded at the young man. “This is Sawyer.”
Cat shook the man’s hand.
“Okay, bring us up to date,” Hedger said.
Cat hesitated. He didn’t trust Hedger, and he wasn’t sure whether it was simply a hangover from their old relationship or something more. “As Drummond may have told you, my daughter’s telephone call was confirmed as having been dialled from a hotel in Cartagena. I went there and traced her to Cali, and maybe to Bogotá. I think she may have been on the Gulfstream jet I mentioned to you.”
Candis Leigh spoke up. “We checked on the airplane. The pilot filed for Cali, then, as soon as he took off, re-filed for Leticia. The airplane has an American registration number; Langley is checking ownership now.”
Hedger looked annoyed at her for having spoken up. “Who does the airplane belong to?” he asked Cat. “Or do you know?”
“A drug dealer, I think. A big one.”
“No shortage of those down here,” Hedger snorted. “What else can you tell us?”
“That’s about it,” Cat replied.
“Well, guys,” Hedger said to his two colleagues, “I think Mr. Catledge had better meet Buzz Bergman.” He turned back to Cat. “My people don’t get all that involved in the drug stuff,” he said. “Our mission here is the political side, the guerrillas. That keeps us pretty busy.” He picked up the phone and tapped in an extension number. “Buzz? Barry. There’s somebody I’d like you to talk to. Got a minute? Yeah, right now.” He hung up the phone and started for the door. “Come on, I’ll introduce you to the head of the Narcotics Assistance Unit.”
Cat followed him out of the office and down the hallway. Candis Leigh and Sawyer hung back. Hedger led the way through another reception area into a large office. The walls were covered with maps and photographs. A short, thick man walked from behind his desk.
“This is Buzz Bergman; Buzz, Wendell Catledge. I expect you’ve read about what happened to Catledge and his family, Buzz.”
Bergman offered a hand. “Yeah, I’m sorry, Mr. Catledge.”
Cat shook the man’s hand. “Thanks.” He liked Bergman immediately, he wasn’t sure why.
Bergman showed them to a sofa, but Hedger hung back. “Buzz, my headquarters and the Ambassador have offered Catledge any assistance we can muster in finding his daughter, who may still be alive. He thinks her disappearance has something to do with drugs, so I’ll let him brief you, and you can tell him what you’re doing down here and see if you can be of any help to him. Call me when you’re through.” He left them and closed the door behind him.
“I’m confused,” Bergman said as they sat down. “I thought your daughter had been killed.”
“It seemed that way at first, but a lot has happened since.” Cat went through his story yet again.
Bergman looked at him silently for a moment when he had finished. “And the Gulfstream headed for Leticia?”
“That’s what Candis Leigh said she learned. Where is Leticia?”
Bergman stood up and led him to a large map of Colombia on the wall. The country narrowed as it went south from Bogotá. Bergman’s finger went to the southernmost tip of the country. “Here,” he said, “on the Amazon.”
“I never knew the country reached as far south as the Amazon,” Cat said, studying the map.
“Yes, Leticia is at the very point where Colombia, Peru, and Brazil meet. The Amazon turns southeast where it meets the Colombian border. As you can see, Leticia is also at the southernmost tip of a trapezoidal area of Colombia bordered on the east and west by straight borders, on the north by the Putumayo River, and on the south by the Amazon. That area, the Trapezoid, is a hotbed of cocaine-making activity. The coca leaves are grown in Peru and Bolivia, then flown or shipped down the Amazon to Leticia and transported to factories in the Trapezoid, where cocaine is made.” He led Cat to a bulletin board pasted with photographs of shacks and equipment, some of it on fire.
“From there it goes all sorts of places, but mostly north to the Guajira Peninsula, in the northeastern part of the country, from where it is smuggled into the United States.”
“Yeah, I’ve been to the Guajira.”
“No kidding? It’s pretty rough up there.”
“Tell me again—what is it you’re the head of?” Cat asked.
“NAU, the Narcotics Assistance Unit. We were formed to help drug-producing countries cut off the supplies of narcotics at their source, before they can be shipped to the U.S.A.”
“That’s a new one on me,” Cat said. “Are you something to do with the Drug Enforcement Agency?”
“No, the DEA is a law enforcement agency of the Justice Department that operates both in the United States and abroad. We’re part of the State Department; we have no specific enforcement role. Our job is to motivate and materially assist the governments of narcotics-producing and trafficking countries.”
“What sort of luck are you having?”
“Better and better, but it’s a huge problem. These people are working in very remote areas under cover of jungle. They’re hard to find, and when we do find them and wreck their facilities, they start rebuilding right away. We’re dealing with a criminal group that has resources that are greater than those of a lot of countries. A concrete airstrip? Means nothing in terms of money. The Colombians bomb it one day and the next, these guys are repaving.”
“With all that money around, there must be a big problem with corruption, too.”
“Huge. If you’re a police captain out in the sticks somewhere, and you’re offered the choice between a couple of hundred thousand bucks in cash or being shot-gunned in your bed, it’s tough to say no. These people operate at a very high level of violence. The problem reaches higher, too, but for the most part, we think we’re working with a group of clean government officials. Of course, it’s tough to maintain security on an operation when some clerk or secretary may be getting thousands of dollars for just making a phone call to tip off somebody.”
“Are you getting all the resources you need?”
“We’ve got a decent budget, but we could be doing better if we could reach across agency boundaries and get help. For instance, there’s a sort of airplane graveyard in Texas, with all sorts of military aircraft in mothballs—everything from Huey helicopters to C-130 transports. I can put a big aircraft back in shape for less than a hundred thousand bucks, and the Colombians could put it to good use, but I can’t get the airplane. Red tape and interdepartmental rivalries screw it up every time.”
“There’s no cooperation between federal agencies?”
“Oh, sure, there is. I mean, the DEA guys and I are working together with the Colombians right now on something really big, but when you try to reach across from the State Department to the Air Force—well, sometimes I think that dealing with the Soviets would be easier.”
“What is it you’re working on right now?”
“I can’t go into that, but I’ll tell you, in strict confidence, it’s the biggest thing we’ve ever gotten together, and it’s in jeopardy because of just the sort of thing I’ve been telling you about.” He collapsed back onto the sofa. “But enough of my problems; it’s your problem we’re supposed to be talking about.”
Cat sank into a chair. “Yeah, and it looks like I’m going to have to go to Leticia.”
Bergman shook his head emphatically. “Stay out of there. You’ll be mistaken either for a dealer or a narc. If the cops think you’re a dealer, they won’t be nice to you, and if the dealers think you’re a narc—well, the DEA is losing guys in fairly horrible ways. Anyway, you wouldn’t have a chance of learning anything on your own down there.”
“Well, what am I supposed to do? It’s the only lead I’ve got.”
“The airplane interests me. I mean, I’ve never heard of a Gulfstream down here. No Colombian business could afford it. That’s a fifteen-million-dollar aircraft; it’s got drugs written all over it. What else do you know about it?”
Cat leaned forward. “Do you think it might have something to do with this big operation you’re working on?”
“Maybe. It’s certainly a new wrinkle.”
“It went to Leticia. Is that where your operation is going to be?”
“I can’t discuss that,” Bergman said, firmly. “Listen, you’ve told me you followed the airplane from Cartagena to here, but you haven’t told me why. I get the feeling you know more about it than you’re telling me.”
Cat leaned back in his chair. He had always had a poker face, and he needed it now. “Maybe. You show me yours, and I’ll show you mine.”
Bergman had a pretty good poker face, too. He stared silently at Cat for about a minute, then he got up and started for the door. “I’ll be back in a minute,” he said.
He was gone for a lot longer than a minute. Cat walked around the room, looking at the material on the walls. There were charts showing tons of drugs captured and destroyed, photographs of crude living quarters attached to the factories, pictures of airstrips, rough and smooth.
Bergman came back into the room followed by Barry Hedger and another man, a Latino. “Mr. Catledge, this is Juan Gomez, agent in charge for the DEA in Colombia.”
Cat shook his hand. “Are you Colombian, Mr. Gomez?”
Gomez was big for a Latino, athletic-looking. “Californian,” he said. “Call me Johnny.”
“I’m Cat.” They all sat down.
“Okay, Cat,” Bergman said, “I’ll tell you what’s on, but you can’t go back to your hotel and chat with the bartender about it, understood?”
“Understood.”
“For the last year and a half—especially for the last six months—we’ve been getting reports of a new drug organization, something bigger than anything we’ve ever dealt with before. Rumor has it that this outfit controls huge chunks of coca production in Peru, cocaine manufacture in Colombia, smuggling in the Guajira, and distribution in the United States.”
“Mafia?” Cat asked.
“No, not in the conventional sense, at least. These people may be dealing with Mafia figures at some level, but it seems to be something separate and apart, something newer. It’s said that they put their early profits into corrupting officials, and that’s the reason we know so little about it. It has been operating, virtually unmolested, for an undetermined length of time, but probably not more than four years. What is so threatening about the group is that it is being run with very advanced business techniques. Most of its members are said not to have criminal backgrounds, which makes it very hard to get a handle on them. Someone has apparently recruited otherwise legitimate business people around the United States and has used them to establish a distribution network. Officials of reputable banks have been corrupted and are laundering money; well-placed executives of major international companies are employing their import facilities to smuggle drugs; small retailers are being recruited as a sales force—shopkeepers, hairdressers, salesmen—people who used to be straight are now dealing.”
“All this in four years?” Cat asked.
“Our guess is that if this were a legitimate business, it would be in the top fifty of the Fortune 500. In a couple of years, if it continues to expand, it could be in the top ten, and it’s their expansion that may give us a shot at them. We’ve heard that they’re about to go multinational, that they’re about to open up distribution in Europe and Asia, while doubling their volume in the United States. All at once, within a single year.”
“Jesus,” Cat said. “I know something about manufacturing and distribution, and that sounds impossible. Nobody could do it, not IBM, even.”
“Suppose IBM could pay distributors a million dollars a month for the first six months and a million dollars a week after that,” Bergman said. “Think that might speed up the process?”
“I suppose so,” Cat admitted. “Is there really that kind of money available?”
“You better believe it,” Bergman replied, “and when an organization is being run as ingeniously as this one, it can be put to very effective use.”
“What about product? Can they get enough raw material and increase their production enough to keep up with all this new demand?”
“We hear there’s a gigantic new factory in the Trapezoid that’s already in production. At the moment, they’re said to be produc
ing an extremely pure product and stockpiling it.”
“Do you know who runs the organization?” Cat asked.
“No,” Bergman said. “We don’t. We’ve heard all sorts of things—a Colombian, an Englishman, a consortium of Frenchmen. We just don’t know. But he wouldn’t have any trouble affording a Gulfstream jet for his personal use.”
“By the way,” Hedger interrupted, “we got a report. The jet landed at Leticia, then took off again last night; filed for Bogotá.”
“Then it’s here now?” Gomez asked.
Hedger shook his head. “No. It never arrived. It simply vanished. From Leticia, it has the range to fly anywhere in South America. We checked the tail number; it’s bogus.”
“Shit,” Bergman said.
There was a long silence; Cat finally broke it. “Gentlemen, I can tell you that the jet is registered to the Empire Corporation of Los Angeles. The number on its tail doesn’t match the one on its registration certificate.”
“How the hell did you know that?” Hedger demanded.
“Something else,” Cat said. “I don’t know who the head of this outfit is, but I think I can give you his description. He’s American, about five feet seven or eight, a hundred and fifty pounds, fair complexion, light brown hair worn long, in a ponytail. He dresses in fine London tailoring and keeps a suite in the Caribé Hotel in Cartagena; he has a house up in the hills above Cali, and he has something to do with an agricultural conglomerate called the Anaconda Company.”
The others stared at Cat. Bergman spoke up.
“I’ve heard of Anaconda; they’re in fruit, or something. They’re reputable.”
Cat looked at Bergman. “I can introduce you to a drug dealer in Riohacha, a hotel manager in Cartagena, and a cab driver in Cali who will disabuse you of that notion.”
23
CAT’S INFORMATION SET OFF A FLURRY OF ACTIVITY, BUT AS SOON as he had told them what he knew, they had dismissed him like a child, told him to go back to his hotel and wait for them to call. Cat did as they asked, but he didn’t like it.