Tom Clancy's Op-center Novels 7-12 (9781101644591)

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Tom Clancy's Op-center Novels 7-12 (9781101644591) Page 13

by Clancy, Tom


  “Under guard from his fellow CIA operatives,” Hood said.

  “Exactly,” Herbert replied. “Pretty maids all in a row.”

  “Which leaves the Harpooner free of CIA interference to do whatever he’s planning,” Hood said.

  “That’s what it looks like,” Herbert said. “No one but the United States, Russia, and probably Iran has any kind of intelligence presence in Baku.”

  “Because of the Caspian oil?” Rodgers asked.

  Herbert nodded. “If the Harpooner also hit operatives from Moscow and Teheran, we haven’t heard about it.”

  Hood thought about that. “Iran,” he said softly.

  “Excuse me?” Herbert said.

  “That’s the second time we’ve been talking about Iran today,” Hood said.

  “But not for the same—” Herbert said, then stopped.

  “Not for the same reason?” Hood asked.

  “Aw, no,” Herbert said after a moment. “No.”

  “Hold on,” Rodgers said. “What am I missing?”

  “You’re thinking the game of telephone could go from the Harpooner to Teheran to Jack Fenwick to the NSA to the CIA,” Herbert said.

  “It’s possible,” Hood said.

  “That would put Fenwick in bed with them on something involving the Harpooner,” Herbert said.

  “Something he would not want the president to know about,” Hood pointed out.

  Herbert was shaking his head. “I don’t want this to be happening,” he said. “I don’t want us working with the sonofabitch who killed my wife.”

  “Bob, I need you to calm down,” Hood said.

  Herbert was glaring at Hood’s desk.

  “If the Harpooner is up to something in Baku, we might still be able to get him,” Hood said. “But only if we stay focused.”

  Herbert did not respond.

  “Bob”

  “I hear you,” Herbert said. “I’m focused.”

  Hood looked at Rodgers. A minute ago, Hood wanted to lash out. Now that one of his friends was hurting, the desire had subsided. All he wanted to do was help Herbert.

  Why did he never feel that way about Sharon when she was angry?

  “Mike,” Hood said, “we really need to pin down what Fenwick’s been up to and who, if anyone, he’s been working with.”

  “I’ll get that information,” Rodgers said. “But I can tell you this much. I found two e-mails in my computer files from six months ago. They were written by Jack Fenwick and Burt Gable.”

  “What were the memos about?” Hood asked.

  “They were responding to a Pentagon white paper,” Rodgers said. “The paper was about the minimal threat of possible Russian military alliances with neighbors who were not part of the former Soviet Union. Fenwick and Gable took issue with that.” “The head of the National Security Agency and the president’s chief of staff both took issue to the report, independently,” Hood said.

  “Correct,” said Rodgers. “The memos were sent to all the members of congress and various military leaders.”

  “I wonder if the two men met philosophically on-line,” Hood said. “What was the time code on the memos?”

  “A few hours apart,” Rodgers said. “They didn’t appear to be part of a concerted effort. But they both shared an aggressive disapproval of the report.”

  “I guess it doesn’t matter whether Fenwick and Gable issued those memos independent of one another or whether they found out they had something in common when they read them,” Hood said. “The question is whether they did something about it. Whether they got together and did some plotting.”

  “What makes you think they might have?” asked Herbert, easing back into the conversation.

  “Gable’s name came up today in my talk with the president,” Hood said. “He and Fenwick’s assistant Don Roedner were responsible for keeping the CIOC in the loop about that UN initiative.”

  “And didn’t,” Herbert said.

  “No, they didn’t.” Hood tapped the desk slowly. “We’ve got two issues here,” he said a moment later. “Fenwick’s activities in New York and the Harpooner’s activities in Baku.”

  “Assuming they are separate.” Herbert said. “The two operations do have Iran in common. The Harpooner has worked for Teheran before.”

  Hood nodded. “What if he’s working for them again?”

  “Against Azerbaijan,” said Herbert.

  “It’s possible,” Rodgers said. “The Iranians have two potential areas of conflict with Azerbaijan. The Caspian oil reserves and the bordering Nagorno-Karabakh region.”

  “But why would Fenwick want to be involved in something like that?” Herbert said. “Just to prove the Pentagon wrong? Then what?”

  “I don’t know,” Hood said. He looked at Rodgers. “Get to him and make him open up. Not only about Iran but about why he lied to the president.”

  “Tell him you’ve got information you can only tell him face-to-face,” Herbert said.

  “Right,” Hood said. “Have Liz work out a psych profile of the president. One based on firsthand observations, including my own, that makes it look as though Lawrence is losing his grip. Bring that to Fenwick, ostensibly on the Q.T. Ask if he’s heard anything about this.”

  Rodgers nodded and left.

  Hood looked at Herbert. “If Iran has any military adventures on the drawing board, they may have moved troops or matériel. The NRO may have noticed something. Has Stephen Viens gone back to work there?”

  “Last week,” Herbert said.

  The NRO was the National Reconnaissance Office, the top-secret facility that manages most of America’s spy satellites. An agency of the Department of Defense, the NRO is staffed by personnel from the CIA, the military, and civilian DOD personnel. The existence of the NRO was declassified in September of 1992, twenty years after it was first established. Stephen Viens was an old college buddy of Op-Center’s computer chief Matt Stoll. He had been extremely helpful getting information to Op-Center when more established groups like military intelligence, the CIA, and the NSA were fighting for satellite time. Viens had been accused of hiding money in a black ops situation but was later vindicated.

  “Good,” Hood said. “See if Viens can find anything. The NRO may have spotted activity in Iran without perceiving any immediate danger.”

  “I’m on it,” Herbert said.

  The intelligence chief wheeled his chair from the office. Hood sat back. He looked at the phone. He wanted to hear from Orlov. He wanted to hear that the Russian had someone in place and that Battat would be all right. He wanted to hear that they had managed to put the brakes on the bad news and could start turning this situation around.

  We have to, Hood thought. There was something out there. Something big and dangerous. He did not know what it was or who was behind it. He did not know if the pieces Op-Center had collected would fit together. He only knew one thing for certain: Whatever it was, it had to be stopped.

  TWENTY-SEVEN

  Baku, Azerbaijan Tuesday, 5:01 A.M.

  David Battat felt frigidly cold and light-headed. He could hear his heart in his ears, feel it in his throat. He was aware of being wheeled somewhere. There were faces over him. Lights flashed by. Then he felt himself being lifted. He was placed on a bed, still experiencing a sense of forward motion. He was not strapped down, but there were raised metal gates on the side of the bed.

  Battat shut his eyes. He did not know what had happened to him. He remembered waking up at the embassy, perspiring and shaking. Moore and Thomas brought him to the car, and then he must have slept. The next thing he knew, he woke up on a gurney.

  He heard people moving around him. He coughed and opened his eyes. There was a white-haired man looking down at him.

  “Mr. Battat, can you hear me?” the man shouted.

  Battat nodded.

  “We are going to undress you and put you in a gown,” the man said to him. “Then we need to get an IV into you. Do you understand?”

  B
attat nodded. “What . . . happened?”

  “You’re ill,” the doctor told him as a pair of male nurses came over. They began lifting and undressing him. “You have a very high fever. We have to bring it down.”

  “Okay,” Battat said. What else could he say? He could not have resisted if he wanted to. But he did not understand how he could have gotten sick. He had felt fine before.

  The medical team worked on him for several minutes. Battat was not entirely aware of what they were doing. He only knew that he was being shifted and turned and poked. He felt a pinch in his right arm, at the elbow, and then there was no further pain. He was also shivering, and he felt cold. Sweat had soaked into Battat’s pillow. His fever warmed it quickly. His head sank into the down, muffling the sounds of the people and whatever it was they were doing. He shut his eyes again and allowed his mind to go wherever it wanted.

  Soon it was quiet and dark. Battat began to feel a little warmer, more comfortable. He no longer heard drumming in his ears. He was awake, but his thoughts were dreamlike. His mind went back over the days. He saw short, blurry visions of the embassy in Moscow, the trip to Baku, the seashore, the sudden pain of the attack. A pinch in his neck. He was unaware of time passing or the hospital room. There was just a strange, not unpleasant sense of drifting. There must be something in the IV. Something that was relaxing him.

  Then Battat heard something click. It sounded like a gun hammer cocking. He opened his eyes. There was a window to the left of the bed, but it was shut. He glanced toward the foot of the bed. The last time he had looked, the door was ajar. Now it was shut. A doctor or nurse must have closed it. The room was even quieter than before. It was nice. He shut his eyes again. There were no more visions, only darkness. Battat slipped quickly into a dreamless sleep.

  There was another click. The sound woke Battat, and he opened his eyes. The door was still closed. But now there was someone in the room. He could see a dark figure standing in front of the door. The figure was black against the darkness behind it.

  Battat was not sure he was awake.

  “Hi,” he said. He heard his own voice. He was definitely awake.

  Slowly, the shadow moved toward him. Someone must have come to check on him.

  “It’s all bright,” Battat said in a soft slur. “You can turn on the light. I’m awake.”

  The figure did not speak. Battat could not make out whether it was a man or a woman. It appeared to be wearing a medical robe of some kind. And it was holding something long and slender. Battat could see the silhouette low at its side. It looked like a knife.

  “Do you speak English?” Battat asked.

  There was a monitor on the wall behind Battat. The green glow threw a faint light on the figure as it stopped beside the bed. It was a man. And he was definitely holding a knife. The long blade gleamed in the dull light.

  “What is this?” Battat asked. It was beginning to penetrate his foggy mind that the newcomer was not a doctor. Battat tried to move, but his arms felt like they were full of wet sand.

  The man’s arm went back.

  “Someone!” Battat said, trying to raise his voice. “Help me—”

  And then the man vanished.

  A moment later, sounds came from the floor. There were low grunts, chattering, and then a long, slow groan. They were followed by silence.

  Battat tried to raise himself on an elbow. His arm shook, and he fell back down.

  Suddenly, someone rose beside the bed.

  “There may be others,” said the figure. “We have to leave.”

  The sharp, thickly accented voice belonged to a woman. There were an awful lot of people here.

  “I thought this was a private room,” Battat said.

  With swift, sure movements, the woman lowered the gate beside the bed, unhooked the IV, and raised Battat to a sitting position. She kept her hand on his back.

  “Can you walk?” she asked.

  “If you let go ... I’m not sure I can sit,” he replied.

  The woman lay Battat back down and stepped away from the bed. She was a tall, lean woman with broad shoulders. He could see now that she was wearing a police uniform. The woman went to the window and pulled the curtains aside. She turned the latch and raised the window. A cool, salty breeze blew in. It made him shiver. The woman looked outside. Then she grabbed a bathrobe from a hook behind the door and returned to the bed. She sat Battat up again and pulled the robe around his shoulders.

  “What are we doing?” he asked. Without the IV in his arm, he was feeling a little more focused. His head was also hurting from sitting up.

  “No talk,” she said.

  “But wait,” he said.

  “They’ve killed your companions, and they’re trying to kill you,” she snapped. “I was sent to get you out.”

  “Killed them?”

  “Quiet!” she hissed.

  Battat stopped talking.

  His head ached as the woman helped him stand. She grabbed Battat’s clothes, then slipped his left arm around her shoulder and helped him to the window. As they hobbled over, Battat tried to focus on what she had just told him. Were Moore and Thomas dead? If so, it had to be the Harpooner. Maybe he thought they knew more than they did. But if they were dead, who had sent this woman to help him? And how did he know that she was not working for the Harpooner? She might be taking him somewhere so the killer could finish the job.

  But Battat knew he might as well trust her. He was certainly in no condition to resist. Besides, the woman was being gentle with him. And if she had wanted him dead, she could have killed him in the bed. Or she could have let the other intruder kill him.

  When they reached the window, the woman told Battat to lean on the sill. He did, unsteadily. She kept a hand on him, helping to keep him upright as she slipped around him. She landed quietly among the hedges outside the window and then helped him down. She put his arm back around her shoulder and then crouched. They listened for several seconds.

  Battat was shivering again, his teeth clattering. But at least he was more awake than before. After a moment, they were on the move again. He felt as if he was being carried through the night. They had emerged in back of the hospital and were making their way around to the north side. They stopped at a car. To Battat’s surprise, it wasn’t a police car but a small black Hyundai.

  She probably was not a policewoman at all. Battat did not know if that were a good thing or a bad thing. But as she laid him across the backseat and climbed behind the wheel, he knew one thing for certain.

  If he remained conscious, he would find out very soon.

  TWENTY-EIGHT

  Washington, D.C. Monday, 10:03 P.M.

  The red-haired man sat behind his large desk. The office was dark, save for the glow of a green-shaded desk lamp and the red light on top of the phone. That meant the scrambler function was engaged.

  “People are asking about Fenwick’s trip,” said the red-haired man.

  “What people?” said the man on the other end of the line.

  “The intelligence unit at Op-Center.”

  “Op-Center is well removed from the president,” the other man said. “They don’t have the same clout as the CIA—”

  “I’m not so sure about that,” the red-haired man interrupted.

  “What do you mean?”

  “I was told that Director Hood asked for and received a private meeting with the president a few hours ago,” said the red-haired man.

  “I know.”

  “Do you know what they discussed?” asked the red-haired man.

  “No. More fallout from the United Nations affair. I’d guess. Do you have reason to believe otherwise?” the man asked.

  “Paul Hood spoke briefly with the First Lady last night.” the red-haired man said. “I checked his file. They knew each other in the past.”

  “Knew each other in a way we can use?”

  “No,” said the red-haired man. “It was platonic. Anyway, she might have seen a change in the pr
esident. Maybe she said something to Hood. I just don’t know.”

  “I see,” said the other.

  There was a long silence. The red-haired man waited. He was concerned about the unexpected presence of Op-Center. The other agencies had all been covered. He and his partners had been counting on the transition period between Paul Hood and General Rodgers to keep Op-Center’s eyes looking inward. Unfortunately, that had not happened. But with H-hour approaching on the foreign operation, they could not afford to have anyone watching. Harpooner had seen to it on his end. They must see to it on their end.

  “Is the other documentation ready?” the other man finally asked.

  The red-haired man looked at his watch. He really needed glasses to read this close, but he was fighting that. He was fighting a lot of things. He moved his wrist back slightly. “In another hour or so,” he replied.

  “All right,” said the other man. “I don’t want to move against Op-Center directly. There isn’t time. And without careful planning, we might do more harm than good.”

  “I agree,” said the red-haired man.

  “Let’s continue with the plan,” said the other man. “If Op-Center is watching Fenwick or the president without any real idea what we’re up to, that should keep them busy enough. Just make sure Fenwick. doesn’t do or say anything that might give them more information.”

  “Understood,” said the red-haired man. “I’ll let Fenwick know.”

  The other man thanked him and hung up.

  The red-haired man placed the receiver in the cradle. He would call Fenwick in a minute. This was serious, unprecedented business. He needed a moment to remind himself that this was all being done for a good reason: to make sure that the United States survived the new millennium.

  Despite this small setback, everything was still working the way they had planned. Reporters had been calling his office to find out about the new UN initiative, an initiatve that only the president seemed to be aware of. Members of the CIOC and even people at the UN apparently had not known about it. One very dogged TV reporter had called this evening to ask if the president had imagined “this whole thing, too.” And Red Gable, the president’s chief of staff, had answered off the record, “I honestly don’t know, Sam. I do not know what is wrong with the president.”

 

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