The Lucifer Code (2010)

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The Lucifer Code (2010) Page 4

by Charles Brokaw


  ‘Get me that pilot,’ Dawson said.

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  Out of habit, Dawson shot his cuffs and adjusted his jacket. Sartorial elegance was his preference, the armour he wore among politicians. It also impressed the little people. The fact that the pilot would never see him didn’t matter. If Dawson was going to talk to the man, he was going to know that he looked his best.

  ‘What’s this man’s name?’ Dawson asked.

  ‘Metternich, sir. Johan Metternich. He’s a South African mercenary currently in Istanbul while assigned to a pharmaceutical corporation smuggling blood diamonds out of his native country.’

  ‘We’ve used him before?’

  ‘Yes, sir. Three times on other operations. The Brits and Chinese have used him as well. He’s been a solid asset. He doesn’t ask questions, doesn’t cause problems and hasn’t failed yet.’

  He’s also still alive. Dawson knew that was more telling than anything else in the mercenary’s resumé.

  ‘Okay, patch me through to him.’

  Almost immediately, the up close and personal hammering of the helicopter’s main rotor filled Dawson’s hearing. The bull-roar of the fully automatic weapon punctuated Dawson’s presence aboard the helicopter.

  ‘You’re risking our package.’ Dawson kept his voice calm.

  ‘Who is this?’ the South African asked.

  ‘I’m the man who cuts your cheques. If our package gets damaged in any way,’ Dawson threatened, ‘not only will you not get paid, but I’ll also put a bounty on your head. Do we understand each other?’

  The helicopter swung round so the nose cam pointed down into the alley. Lourds and the woman ran to the other end where a sedan glided to a quick stop.

  Dawson covered the microphone with a hand and looked at the technicians. ‘Who’s in that car?’

  ‘Checking, sir.’

  Another window opened up on the wallscreen, then zoomed in on the vehicle registration plate at the back of the sedan.

  ‘It’s registered in Istanbul.’

  ‘Then find out who it’s registered to.’ Dawson cursed vehemently and turned his attention back to the action.

  ‘Who’s in the car?’ Metternich demanded.

  ‘Doesn’t matter,’ Dawson said. ‘They’re in our way. I want our package.’

  ‘If they’re not part of the package, that makes it easier.’ Metternich raised his voice. ‘Take out the car.’

  On screen, Lourds halted as men boiled from the back of the sedan.

  Machine-gun fire opened up again as the helicopter canted to the right. The heavy-calibre rounds strafed the wall beside the sedan. Two of the men from the ground vehicle raised machine pistols and opened fire.

  ‘I’ve got access to the second camera now, sir.’

  ‘On screen.’ Dawson shifted his attention to the new image.

  Dawson took a deep breath and let it out. He told himself that the op was going to play out just fine. But they hadn’t run one this hot in years. Whoever Lourds was, whatever he represented to the vice-president, he’d better be worth the risk they were all taking.

  Bullets from the men beside the sedan crashed through the helicopter’s Plexiglas shield. Metternich cursed ferociously and struggled to bring it under control. The aircraft swung out over the rooftops and the alley was obscured.

  ‘Get on the skids,’ Metternich ordered. ‘We’ll strafe them on a straight run.’

  The two gunmen moved out to either side of the cargo area and clambered out onto the skids. They hunkered down into position as Metternich piloted the helicopter round to approach the sedan once more.

  ‘I want that package,’ Dawson growled. ‘Unharmed.’

  ‘We’re going to get it for you,’ Metternich said. ‘Just shut up and let us do our job.’

  Dawson covered the microphone and made a mental note that Metternich was going to get a bullet instead of payment for this one. His insolence, never mind his proximity to the vice-president’s pet project, rendered him expendable. Dawson took satisfaction in that.

  One of the men stopped firing, yelled hoarsely, and pointed at the back of the sedan. One of the new arrivals pulled a rocket launcher from the vehicle’s trunk. He settled it over his shoulder and aimed even as Metternich tried to pull up from the attack run.

  The helicopter filled with flames and the cameras went offline.

  Off Istanbul Cd

  Yesilkoy District

  Istanbul, Turkey

  15 March 2010

  Stunned, Lourds watched the helicopter go to pieces in the sky above the alley. Flaming wreckage flew in all directions. Some of it dropped onto the rooftops, but a lot of it fell into the alley. The cacophony of explosions and their echoes rolled through the confined space and physically battered him.

  Still on his feet, but only because he hadn’t thought to throw himself to the ground, Lourds ran his hands over his body. As far as he could tell, he was still in one piece. But he didn’t think he was in a good position to know for sure.

  By the sedan, the man with the rocket launcher calmly reloaded his weapon. Sirens shrilled behind Lourds. When he turned to look back, he spotted two police cars on the other side of the flaming debris. The wreckage blocked them from approaching.

  Lourds turned and fled back toward the policeman. He raised his hands and shouted, ‘Don’t shoot! Don’t shoot!’

  Lourds repeated his entreaty in two different languages and was on his third when Kristine tackled him. Her arms encircled his knees and he plummeted forward just as the police opened fire. The bullets passed overhead within inches.

  Kristine slithered up his body and settled on top of him in a prone position.

  ‘You’re going to get yourself killed,’ Kristine shouted into his ear. ‘You must have some kind of death wish.’

  She slapped the back of his head.

  The man with the rocket launcher fired again. This time the round streaked for the police car. The police officers had just enough time to abandon their positions before the explosive slammed into the vehicle. The car flew up from the ground and flipped over backwards. As the vehicle lay rocking like an overturned turtle, flames wreathed it.

  Rubber shrilled behind Lourds as the sedan navigated the alley and skidded to a stop beside him. Kristine rolled off and grabbed him under one arm while one of the men grabbed him under the other.

  ‘This is the professor?’ the man asked.

  ‘Yes,’ Kristine answered.

  Together, they unceremoniously shoved him into the sedan’s rear seat. Thinking quickly, Lourds grabbed the door handle, yanked, and tried to escape. Another man filled the door and batted Lourds back into the car with a hard elbow to the head. Lourds’ hat fell into the alley as

  Kristine crowded in on Lourds’ other side. The two other men slid into the front seat beside the driver.

  ‘Go! Go!’ the man in the passenger seat roared, and slapped the dash impatiently.

  The driver pressed his foot heavily on the accelerator and they shot out of the alley into the street. They skidded wildly for a moment, losing traction across the pavement, then the driver regained control.

  Lourds glanced through the back window and hoped to see a police car there. He didn’t know how he was going to explain his current predicament, but having to explain it rather than survive it had to be an improvement.

  A sharp pain bit into the inside of his right thigh. When he looked down, he saw the man beside him had stabbed a hypodermic into his leg. He grabbed for it but the man was already pushing the plunger. More pain invaded Lourds’ leg, along with a cool sensation that quickly spread.

  ‘What is that?’ Kristine asked.

  ‘Something to knock him out.’ The man withdrew the hypodermic. ‘From what we’ve seen, he is nothing but trouble.’

  Lourds wanted to object. None of this had been his fault, but a warm lassitude drifted through him and he found he couldn’t quite gather his thoughts.

  Then the waiting dark
ness claimed him.

  Zola

  800 F Street

  Washington, D.C.

  United States of America

  15 March 2010

  Dawson grabbed his briefcase, slid out of his Dodge Charger, and tossed the keys to the young female valet.

  ‘Good evening, sir.’ The valet caught the keys one-handed and held the door for him.

  ‘Somewhere close.’ He handed her a twenty-dollar bill. ‘I may be leaving quickly.’

  ‘Of course, sir.’

  The International Spy Museum and the Spy City Café sat adjacent to Zola in the Le Droit Building. The vice-president had chosen to meet him there for a late dinner. The refurbished restaurant was a favourite of the man’s, but wasn’t one that the Agency often used. Dawson thought it amusing that the vice-president wanted to meet his private spy there.

  The Le Droit Building was old, a hangover from past glories in the nation’s capital, but it had been recently remodelled and shone like a jewel. Zola was one of the district’s chic places to eat and had private dining rooms.

  The maître d’ greeted Dawson when he stepped into the foyer. ‘Do you have a reservation, sir?’

  ‘I’ll be joining someone,’ Dawson replied.

  One of the vice-president’s security people stepped forward. Dawson didn’t remember the man’s name.

  ‘He’s with us,’ the security man said.

  The maître d’ smiled. ‘Of course.’

  ‘Good evening, Special Agent Dawson.’ The security man nodded to the CIA SAC.

  ‘Good evening.’ Dawson shot his cuffs. ‘Is he already here?’

  ‘Yes, sir. He’s in the same dining room. Do you know the way?’

  Dawson said he did and started off at once. Anxiety knotted his stomach as he strode through the red and black décor. The thick carpet muffled his footsteps.

  Two security guards stood outside the private dining area. Like the first, both wore black suits and earwigs.

  ‘Good evening, Special Agent Dawson,’ the older of the two said.

  ‘Good evening, Special Agent Reeves.’ Dawson remembered this man’s name easily. The vice-president never went anywhere without him. Without being asked, Dawson gave his briefcase to the younger of the two agents.

  Reeves made no apology for their quick search of the briefcase’s contents. The vice-president was adamant about his personal security. All the briefcase contained was Dawson’s encrypted notebook computer and a satellite phone keyed to it.

  Dawson accepted the case, then Reeves knocked on the door.

  ‘Yes?’ the vice-president called.

  ‘Special Agent Dawson is here, sir.’

  ‘Good,’ the vice-president said. ‘Show him in.’

  Elliott Webster, former senator from New Hampshire and party whip and now vice-president of the United States of America, stood at one end of the intimate dining table. He was an inch over six feet tall and maybe twenty pounds overweight but it looked good on him. He was in his late forties but easily looked twenty years younger due to the strong jawline and the dark blond hair that had refused to grey. His cerulean blue eyes invited friendship and promised trustworthiness within a nano-second of being turned on someone. Many men instinctively trusted him and many women wanted to coddle him. No matter how imposing the setting in which Dawson saw Webster, the vice-president seemed to fill the room. The man oozed charisma.

  He’d grown up in a small town in New Hampshire and started his own software company when he was sixteen. By the time he was in college at Harvard, majoring in business, he’d created two dot-com search engines that had boosted him into millionaire status. At about the same time, he’d become interested in politics because the oil shortage of the 1970s had impacted his business.

  ‘You just can’t do business in this day and age without knowing something about the national and international political climate,’ Webster had said. A lot of businessmen had followed his example.

  Webster hadn’t pawned off the responsibility to lobbyists, though. He’d dug into the legislation himself. As he’d learned how to negotiate those murky waters and become even more successful, a groundswell of grass roots support had sprung up to put him in office as a New Hampshire senator. He’d graciously turned down the offer.

  With the advent of stem cell research and his own investments in the field, Webster had again been stymied by legal pressures. That had been the first major stumbling block in his career, but it hadn’t lasted long.

  Webster’s wife, Vanessa Hart Webster, the former Miss America who had won the hearts of a nation with her beauty and glorious voice, had been the perfect foil for her husband. She was glamorous and educated, and loved children and animals. The camera loved her, too. After she’d retired from her year as Miss America, she’d gone to work with Webster. They’d married soon after. They’d been practically inseparable since. Vanessa Webster had spent several stints in the Middle East shoring up troop morale. Her husband’s gaming companies had donated millions of dollars worth of products for the young sol

  The country had grieved with thirty-one year old Elliott Webster when he’d buried his beautiful and generous bride. After a year spent out of the eye of the public, Webster had returned and said he was going to run for senator in New Hampshire.

  ‘Since I was a boy,’ Webster had said with grim resolve, ‘I have pursued technology and science. I only became involved with business because I needed funding to continue my exploration of emerging technologies. My time with my dear Vanessa has taught me a lot. Her loss, when we have turned away from the very science that might have saved her life as well as the lives of millions of other people, is unconscionable to me. When I’m a senator, I’m going to work to free up the

  That declaration, RETURNING THE FUTURE, had become the rallying cry first of New Hampshire, then of the nation. Twelve years later when President Michael Waggoner had selected Webster as his running mate, it surfaced again. They had won the election in a landslide victory.

  Now, with all the contacts he’d made while helping his wife’s efforts in the Middle East, Webster was point man for the Middle East peace talks.

  And a whole lot of other things, as well.

  ‘Good evening, Jimmy,’ the vice-president said. ‘It’s good to see you.’

  ‘It’s good to see you, sir.’ Dawson took Webster’s hand and shook briefly. As always, the familiar electric tingle ran through Dawson. Just being near the vice-president seemed to inspire well-being and a positive attitude in people, even people who knew him well. The brief contact of flesh almost made Dawson forget the snafu in Istanbul.

  ‘Please have a seat.’ Webster waved his napkin to the plush chair to his right. The room was small and elegant, set up for an intimate party.

  Dawson sat. Whenever he had dinner with the vice-president, Webster always had him sit on his right. Dawson liked the feeling of being the vice-president’s right-hand man. It was the little things, these small details, that Webster was so good at.

  ‘I’m sure whatever you ordered will be fine, sir.’

  Webster poured two glasses of wine, then handed one to Dawson.

  ‘Let’s say we get rid of the white elephant in the room, Jimmy,’ Webster said. ‘That way we can get on with our dinner.’

  ‘Yes, sir.’ Tension rattled through Dawson.

  ‘I’m not happy with losing Professor Thomas Lourds over in Istanbul.’

  ‘No, sir.’

  ‘I know you’re not happy about it either.’

  ‘No, sir. I don’t want to make a habit of letting you down.’

  Webster clapped Dawson on the shoulder and smiled. ‘I have a shortlist of people I know I can count on for anything. You’re right there near the top.’

  ‘Thank you, sir.’

  Webster took a roll from the covered basket in the middle of the table, then offered the basket to Dawson.

  ‘No, thank you, sir.’

  ‘Nonsense. You need to eat. Keep your strength up. W
e’ve got a lot to do if we’re going to pull a win out of this.’

  Dawson took a roll and put it on the small plate in front of him. The vice-president buttered his own roll, then pushed the butter dish towards Dawson.

  Dawson buttered his roll.

  ‘How long ago did we lose Professor Lourds, Jimmy?’

  Dawson glanced at the PDA he’d deliberately placed on the table within his view. The number in the upper left-hand corner revealed how long ago Lourds had gone missing.

  ‘Five hours and forty-two minutes, sir.’

  Webster bit into his roll and chewed thoughtfully. ‘That’s a long time.’

  ‘I’ve got people on it, sir. We’re using all available intel sources. Including ELINT and HUMINT.’

  The vice-president nodded. ‘I know you’ve got good people over there.’

  ‘We’ve got good people over there, sir.’

  ‘Of course. We do.’ Webster sipped his wine. ‘This is my fault, actually. I didn’t get the information to you about Lourds in time for you to make all the preparations you needed to. I shot you in the foot on this one.’

  That was another reason everyone liked Elliott Webster so much. When he made mistakes, he owned up to them and then he worked to correct them.

  ‘I assume the men killed at the airport were our assets?’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  ‘What about the other men who were killed in the car crash and in the alley? Do you have anything on them yet?’

  The vice-president nodded and reached for another roll.

  Dawson took out the encrypted computer and placed it on the table. He opened it, powered it up, entered his password, and pressed his right forefinger and left ring finger on the two fingerprint scanners. The password changed hourly and the combination of fingerprints changed twice daily. In the beginning, getting the rhythm of those changes had been difficult.

  The screen flared to life and quickly searched for the local WiFi connection. Once the connection had been accessed, a red and yellow CIA TOP SECRET screen saver flashed on. But that was just window dressing to scare off normal hackers who might have got their hands on the computer. Dawson entered a series of keystrokes that shut down the main drive and opened up a small partition drive disguised within the computer’s OS file registry.

 

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