Black Flagged Redux

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Black Flagged Redux Page 10

by Steven Konkoly


  Unlike the first Black Flag program, the new program was not designed to create long-term undercover operatives for strategic placement. The support requirements needed to adequately prepare operatives for deep cover placement proved to be prohibitive and unrealistic given Sanderson’s budget and need for operational security. General Sanderson had no shortage of funding for the new program, but the human logistics required to recreate the first program caused Sanderson to rethink the program. The U.S. military had not only provided him with a generous budget, but had also given him a full battery of psychologists and counselors, critical to trainee selection and conditioning. Carefully screened political refugees had been funneled by the State Department to his program and paid generously to live among the trainees to ensure full immersion.

  Beyond these limitations, Sanderson had a more practical reason for redesigning the program. Sanderson couldn’t afford the time it would take to find candidates suitable for deep cover assignments. Without the screening tools used to find the earliest batches of Black Flag operatives, he now had to rely on a cautious process to recruit new operatives. The process was slow and inherently risky, exposing Sanderson’s new program to the outside world more often than he would like. Still, it was the only way to gauge the limited pool of recruits he could access. Mostly hardened combat veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, the new batch of operatives were different, and he had so far only identified two that would have passed the first program’s initial psychological assessment.

  The new program created undercover operatives suitable for short term or quick response operations. The first batch of trainees were ready for deployment, though based on Jessica’s next three quick kills, the casual observer might consider sending them back through the program for further knife training.

  The last body hit the deck with a solid thud, followed by two quick knife stabs to the neck that hissed red paint. Dhiya Castillo lasted longer than any of her previous attempts, having rapidly absorbed Jessica’s instruction. For her small size, she fought viciously and relied heavily on her martial arts training to disarm Jessica. Inevitably, all of their matches ended with Dhiya eating dirt, the victim of splitting her attention between edged combat and martial arts acrobatics. With a little patience, Jessica always found an opportunity to knock her off-balance, though she had to admit, as Dhiya shifted more of her attention to the blade, Jessica had experienced some close calls. A few more months of intense knife work would turn the tide for this one, she thought.

  With no more takers, she took a deep breath and sheathed her knife. She glanced around for Daniel, who she thought had been present earlier. She shook several hands and accepted a dozen or more slaps on the back as she waded through the group looking for her husband. She saw Richard Farrington breaking free from the group and jogged over to talk to him.

  “Rich! I missed you in the circle today,” she said.

  Farrington turned and regarded her with a grin. “I can only have my ass handed to me so many times in one month before I develop a complex. You start to join us on the range, and I’ll jump back into the circle,” he said.

  “I hate guns, but I might take you up on that. I know Danny likes to see you get your ass kicked. Might bring him around to watch. Have you seen him today?”

  “He was there for a few minutes. I saw him head off to the armory.”

  “Thanks. See you around,” she said and took off jogging, energized by the prospect of seeing her husband after his two-week absence in the field.

  She still felt a twinge of disappointment that he never stuck around for “the circle.” Logically, she knew that their strong attraction and protective instinct for each other would make it almost impossible for him to stay and watch. From an observer’s point of view, every attack looked like a close call, and some were closer than she would care to admit. He’d seen the results of the closer calls. A black eye, split lip or bloodied nose wasn’t uncommon. Every Friday yielded multiple bruises, and she knew that Leo’s desperate attempt to take her down would leave several bruises on her forearms from blocking his devastating strikes. She’d have to wear long sleeves on their trip to Buenos Aires. Luckily, she had been spared any damage to her face.

  As she approached the armory door, she heard him talking inside the secure facility. Constructed of log and timber on the outside, the inside of the armory had been considerably upgraded to store the program’s weapons and ammunition. Personal weapons were also kept in the armory, though they served no real purpose in the grand scheme of the program, other than an indulgence. Operatives mastered weapons common to their AO and were familiarized with weapons beyond that scope, in case they were needed in a more general role outside of their specialty area.

  She entered the armory and heard the distinctive metallic snap of a rifle bolt sliding forward. Daniel looked up as she crossed the threshold, placed his sniper rifle against the bench, and sprang up to greet her. He had nearly two weeks of grit and camouflage grease on his face, compounded by thick, filthy stubble. She knew he would reek of dirt, sweat and possibly urine, but she didn’t care. She embraced him, and they held each other for a few seconds, until one of the other operatives grunted.

  “I’ll be up in about an hour. We need to clean all of the rifles and stow our gear,” he said and gave her a quick kiss on the cheek.

  “I’d tell the two of you to get a room, but you already have one,” said Enrique “Rico” Melendez, ex-marine sniper, and Daniel’s most promising trainee.

  “Rico, don’t upset the lady. I’d hate to see her turn up the heat on you in the ‘circle’ next week,” Daniel said.

  “We’re not headed back out?” Rico said.

  The other trainee started to add to the complaint, but Daniel cut them off. “We’re taking a little R&R trip to the city, but we’ll be back for next Friday. Jess didn’t want to miss out on the fun.”

  “I need to make sure he’s not coddling you guys out there. Put a little balance back into your lives,” she said, and her long, black Simknife flashed out of its sheath in a blur.

  “Shit. More of that? I thought I wouldn’t have to deal with that anymore.”

  “Nobody has to participate, especially a fragile guy like you, Rico,” she taunted, and the other sniper trainee, a harsh-looking Caucasian with a flat nose, blurted out laughing.

  “You’re fucking pure evil, you know that? You and your husband. And what are you laughing at, Jared? Who the fuck names their kid Jared, anyway?”

  “It’s a Jewish biblical name. At least my parents didn’t idolize Julio Iglesias. Fucking Rico? Living la vida loca,” he started to sing.

  “That’s Ricky Martin, you racist Hebrew,” Enrique countered.

  “I thought they were the same, man. They look the same,” he whispered.

  “Don’t make me come over there and shove this sliding bolt where the sun doesn’t shine,” Enrique said, and Daniel pulled Jessica out of the armory.

  “You might want to get out of here before this escalates. It was a long field exercise. I’m really looking forward to spending some time alone with you. Out of here,” he said, and they touched hands briefly.

  “They’re in separate dorms, right?” she said.

  “Thankfully. See you in few,” he said.

  She kissed him again softly. “The quicker you get me out of here, the better chance you have of getting lucky tonight,” she said, turning to walk away.

  “I thought my chances started at one hundred percent?”

  Jessica stopped and turned around. “That’s usually at the beginning of any given day, and goes downhill from there, but when you go into the field and leave me here by myself…you start at zero, and work your way back up. Time’s a wasting,” she said and twirled around again.

  She heard him walk back into the armory, followed by some laughter. She accepted the fact that it might be longer than an hour before Daniel reached their “residence.”

  As part of their agreement with Sanderson, they occupied a
stand-alone residence, unlike the rest of the staff and operatives, which didn’t strike anyone as particularly unusual, since they were also the only couple at the compound. Sanderson housed the instructors and other support staff, like Munoz, Parker, Farrington and many others, in separate dormitories from the “trainees,” due mostly in part because of the continued immersive environment maintained for each SAO’s operative.

  On the inside, each of these dormitories was a separate world, where the food, merchandise, furniture, appliances, everything, was imported directly from the assigned SAO. Internet service, satellite TV, magazines, books, even the linen, was all designed to give the trainees lasting, imprinted memories that could spell the difference between success and disaster in an overseas operation. They would be required to blend in with local populations on the surface, and the deeper they could take the deception, the better. Something as innocuous as referencing the wrong magazine or an unavailable satellite channel could draw the wrong kind of attention and bring an operation to a grinding halt.

  The post and beam house gave them about 800 square feet of privacy, which included a bedroom loft. Designed in a basic A-frame style, the entire first floor was open, except for the home’s only bathroom, which was stashed behind the stairs on the right side of the large room. A large two-story stone hearth, with imbedded wood-burning stove, adorned the left side of the structure and kept them toasty during the frigid, snowy winter months. As Jessica opened the unlocked door, she took in the comfortable, rustic design and felt a slight longing for the home in Maine that she couldn’t fully erase from her mind. They had done pretty well given the circumstances, but they both wanted more than this life at Sanderson’s commando training sanctuary.

  Because it had been in everyone’s best interest at the time, they had agreed to stay on for three years to help Sanderson get the program back on its feet. They were growing weary, but continuously assured each other and Sanderson that they would honor the agreement and give it one hundred percent. Jessica had found the work fascinating at first, taking the time to join the trainees in building skills she had never developed with the CIA and had never really needed in Belgrade.

  This aspect of “compound” life, combined with frequent trips to Buenos Aires and Patagonia with Daniel kept her focused on what needed to be done, but her interest in compound life waned. Buenos Aires had become an addiction, and even Sanderson had voiced the concern that she might soon spend more time in Buenos Aires hotels than at the compound. Buenos Aires provided a sense of freedom and escape that had at first satisfied her cosmopolitan cravings and need to get away. However, the cravings came stronger and faster, and before she realized it, she could no longer wait for Daniel to return from one of his unpredictably long field exercises. She had previously grown accustomed to a life that couldn’t be satisfied in the western hinter-regions of Argentina and needed to get away from here as often as possible.

  Nearly fifteen years ago, she had boarded a United Airlines flight at Dulles International Airport as Nicole Erak, a woman who had never been given anything more expensive than a Sony sports Walkman in her life. Several hours later, she had stepped off the same plane at Paris-Charles De Gaulle Airport as Zorana Zekulic, one of several identities that would never be denied any indulgence, no matter how expensive or exotic…until now.

  She had been doing better recently. Daniel had committed to giving her solid timelines for his training, so she could plan their trips together, spacing them out more evenly. Tonight, they would fly out of Nuenquen Regional Airport for the short one and a half hour flight to Ministro Pistarini International Airport in Buenos Aires, followed by a thirty-minute taxi ride to their rented flat in the trendy Palermo Soho barrio. They would arrive late, on the last flight out of Nuenquen, but the city would wait. It always waited, and they would spend five days in paradise, to return fully vested once again in each other’s bodies and souls. She closed the door behind her and glanced at her watch impatiently. She’d give him forty-five minutes before dragging him out of the armory. She didn’t want to miss the last flight.

  **

  General Sanderson stared at the Jeep Wrangler speeding south along the camp’s only road, headed for Route 46, a two-lane provincial road that would carry Daniel and Jessica to Nuenquen Airport. The Jeep’s headlights illuminated the deep blue remnants of a shadowy dusk that had crept down the eastern face of the Andes mountain range, bringing darkness to their valley well before flatter lands just ten miles east of the compound.

  “We’re losing her faster than I had anticipated,” Sanderson said.

  “She’s been through more than either of us can imagine. Frankly, I’m surprised she’s lasted this long. I expected her to disappear on one of her solo trips to Buenos Aires,” Parker said.

  Sanderson was about to respond when Richard Farrington opened the front door and walked inside, followed by Jeffrey Munoz.

  “Rich. Jeff. Have a seat,” he said, indicating the large wooden table near the open fireplace.

  Sanderson tossed another thick, hand-split log into the fireplace, sending a cascade of burning embers up the chimney.

  “I’m growing concerned with the Petroviches, Jessica in particular. I’m considering putting them under surveillance in Buenos Aires,” Sanderson said, waiting for a response.

  “She seems stable enough, for now,” Farrington said.

  General Sanderson glanced at him with a raised eyebrow, prompting Munoz.

  “She’s a city girl, General. We can’t keep her cooped up here forever. Maybe we could institute a week on, week off training schedule for her. Keep her happy.”

  “I don’t think we’re seeing this in the same light,” Sanderson said. “Trust me when I tell you that Jessica is highly unstable, emotionally. I spoke at length with our friend at Langley about her…Daniel won’t say a word…and from what he shared, they pretty much lost her in Belgrade to severe mental illness, first identified by her handler. We’re talking schizophrenia and dissociative identity disorder…multiple personalities. Most likely stress induced, but Berg has gone back through her file and thinks she might have shown some signs of this during training. Either way, she clearly came apart under assignment in Serbia, but somehow kept producing results…right up until the moment she vanished.”

  “But you knew about her in Serbia, right? That was how you got Petrovich back,” Munoz said.

  “I didn’t make the Jessica-Zorana connection until late in the game. I was aware of Daniel’s relationship with Jessica…Zorana, in Serbia, but I never suspected she was CIA. Parker took some background pictures of them in Maine, and I couldn’t shake the feeling that something wasn’t right about the two of them. Daniel disappeared for three months after sending Hadzic’s money into an untraceable zigzag across four continents, and given the pressure on our program back in the states, I had never given his absence much thought. We had the money. He made it out alive. I had other things to worry about.

  “I wasn’t altogether surprised when he suddenly reemerged and announced that he was done with the program. He was pleasant, which was a change for Daniel, and said he had enrolled in graduate school. I put on the usual dog and pony show to keep him in the program, which was about to fold anyway, but I could tell he had moved on. I should have figured out that something didn’t add up. I had always thought the plan to steal the money from Hadzic had been his idea, but now I’m not so sure.”

  “So, what are we worried about with Jessica? What’s her biggest liability?” Farrington said, leaning back at the table.

  “I’m worried about losing Daniel. The two of them share an unusually tight bond, and Daniel will do anything to protect her, physically or mentally. If she slips too far into Zorana’s personality, we’ll lose them both. He’ll leave us before his work is done, and I need his skills here to train one more batch.”

  “Have you talked to Daniel about her?” Munoz said.

  “Yes. He admitted similar concerns. He thought the combination of he
r training duties and frequent trips to the city were dangerous, in that she was being exposed to a set of conditions that evoked strong associations with her last assignment. Look, I can’t stop her from going to Buenos Aires any more than I can really keep Daniel at the compound. I’ve always known that they’d never fully take to the new program. Staying here has been beneficial to both parties. They remain under radar, and we get their expertise. Unfortunately, I think they’ll be leaving much too soon, and I’m not exactly sure how long they’ll stay hidden in Buenos Aires. The place is crawling with Serbian emigrants. Given their histories, Buenos Aires is not the best city for them, which brings me to the purpose of this meeting.”

  “Surveillance?” Farrington said.

  “Exactly. For two reasons. One, to get a better assessment of Jessica’s habits and mental state. Two, because if the wrong people find them, the entire program could be jeopardized. Jeff, I want you to take Mr. Melendez to Buenos Aires for some filthy city air. He could use some time practicing his skills in a more hectic, confined environment. Keep an eye on them. Full surveillance. Pictures of people they interact with, names of places they frequent, schedule, personality observations. Long distance stuff, and for God’s sake use disguises. The last thing I need is for either of them to figure this out. Keep an eye out for any competition. If they’re being watched, you’re authorized to use any and all means to neutralize and interrogate.”

  “Do you want us out tonight?” Munoz said.

  “No. I’ve made arrangements to have the two of you privately flown out of our local airfield tomorrow morning. You can pick up their trail in Buenos Aires during the day. You’ll have plenty of time to observe them. They’ll be there for five days. I’ll fly you back ahead of them on Wednesday. Bring some goodies to keep Mr. Melendez occupied…you won’t have to worry about checking bags.”

 

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