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Black Wolf d-12 Page 3
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“Not so coincidentally, the sum coincided with money the Russian owed the mafioso,” added Reid. “He didn’t even try to haggle. He was very angry — in his mind, the businessman had caused his father’s death, and the reluctance of his associates to authorize revenge added insult to injury.”
The Russian had then contacted someone outside of Russia with details. Unfortunately, information had been sent in at least three different messages, all via e-mail. Only one had been recovered — and that was by accident, part of an NSA program aimed at Russian intelligence. But it was enough to connect the murder definitively to the Wolves, even if the bullet hadn’t been recovered.
The Russian contact was subsequently placed under electronic surveillance.
“Unfortunately, he is no longer with us,” continued Reid. “The Italian was not the only person to whom he owed money.”
“So we’re going after criminals now?” asked Nuri.
“The assignment is a little more complicated than that,” said Breanna. “The Russians seem to be hoping to disrupt the NATO meeting in Kiev set for ten days from now. The ministers are supposed to vote on Ukraine’s membership, and the thinking is that this group has been hired to kill some of the ministers supporting the addition.”
“Or members of the Ukrainian government who support membership,” added Reid. “It’s not clear. They have been used for some political assassinations before. Most notably, Deng Pu’s death.”
Deng was a Chinese foreign minister who had opposed a new trade agreement with Russia. After his death — an assignation at his country house outside of Berlin — the treaty was signed.
“We’re still working through the intelligence,” admitted Reid after turning the projection image off. “Simply disrupting the meeting may be the Russians’ primarily goal. And it’s possible they’re not after the entire NATO board. They may just want the possible Ukrainian representatives to it.”
“What do the Ukrainians say?” asked Nuri.
Reid shook his head. “I haven’t a clue whether they’ve been told. I suspect not.”
“Apprehending the Wolves would be beneficial for a lot of reasons independent of NATO,” said Breanna. “They’re pretty dangerous assassins. Think about whom they’ve killed — a Chinese minister, a Polish defense official, a banker. And those are the murders we know about.”
“So where do we start?” asked Danny.
“Berlin,” said Reid. “Find out what information they have on the shooter and see if it can be added to our data. Anything is potentially of use, but a DNA sample would be useful.”
“How unique is the bullet?” asked Nuri. “Carbon fiber has been around for a while.”
“It’s a carbon-based composite, not a fiber,” said Reid. “It appears to be unique. The design is reminiscent of experiments the Soviets were doing roughly twenty years ago.”
Reid clicked up a fresh slide of the bullets, showing close-ups of the bullets. He then proceeded to a series of cross sections, and finally comparisons with different types. Danny found himself starting to tune out due to information overload. The amount of data the CIA could gather on things dazzled him sometimes, but it was also frustrating — they knew all this, yet what they didn’t know loomed much larger.
“One guess is that the bullets were left over from this old project,” said Reid, his voice increasingly professorial. “That would fit with the theory that the Wolves are a group headed or sponsored by former Russian KGB or military, now on their own. But there’s no hard evidence about that. And some of the murders we think they participated in didn’t have these weapons. The choice would be made to evade metal detectors,” he added. “They’re a versatile group.”
* * *
They spent the next half hour discussing logistics. Intelligence gathering wasn’t Danny’s forte, so he had no problem letting Nuri take the lead in handling Berlin. Danny would work from the other end, concentrating on Kiev and the upcoming NATO meeting.
For him, the key question was how closely to work with the security apparatus in Kiev. Close cooperation — under the cover of being a State Department security team — would mean immediate access to whatever intelligence NATO and the Ukrainian intelligence forces developed. But they would also put themselves in a position where they could compromise their own operation.
There was also a subtle conflict between the goal of protecting the NATO delegation and capturing the Wolves. As Nuri pointed out, it would be easier to identify the Wolves once they made an attempt on the NATO ministers. Ideally, once an assassin was identified, they could follow him and gather intelligence on the rest of the group. That meant letting him survive and even escape — or at least think he had. Anyone charged with protecting the NATO ministers wasn’t likely to let that happen.
“Neither should you,” said Reid. “Liaison with the security forces at the appropriate time. We’ll establish you as members of the State Department security team, assigned to guard the American delegates.”
“What’s our prime responsibility then?” asked Danny. “Protect the delegates or catch these guys? Which do you want us to do?”
“Both,” said Breanna. “We know it’s a hard job. That’s why you have it.”
“If these guys are so good, why don’t we just hire them over to our side and be done with it?” asked Nuri.
“As usual, Mr. Lupo, you have the logical solution,” said Reid. “Perhaps when you meet them, you will be in a position to propose it.”
4
Swamp Hill, Georgia
With Nuri heading to Berlin, Danny needed someone on the team with experience in Europe — preferably the Ukraine. Hera Scokas, a CIA covert officer who’d worked with him in Africa and Iran, had been in Kiev a few times, but couldn’t speak the language fluently and didn’t have a deep knowledge of the city.
Had this been a standard CIA operation, an officer or two or three could have been siphoned off from the station, temporarily assigned to help. But Whiplash was isolated structurally from the “regular” CIA, and Reid wanted to keep the partition in place. So he suggested they use an operative who was currently on leave from the Agency, but whom he felt might be talked back into active service for the job.
“Her name is Sally McEwen, and she knows Kiev very well,” said Reid. “She was stationed there for years. She speaks the language like a native, and I suspect she’ll be more than willing to come back to work for you. But you don’t have to decide until you meet her.”
“Can I get her personnel file?” Danny asked.
“I’d rather you drew your own conclusions once you meet her. She’s the sort of officer you really have to meet in person. She is the right choice, Danny. I’m positive. But of course it’s up to you.”
“All right,” he said. “How do I get in touch with her?”
“Ah, that is the problem,” said Reid. “At the moment, she’s not reachable by phone. And obviously we’re not going to trust an e-mail or anything that’s not encrypted. I’m afraid you’ll have to contact her in person. She shouldn’t be hard to find. I’ll give you her address.”
* * *
Sally McEwen lived in a small hamlet just outside the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge in southern Georgia. The hamlet consisted of a few houses, a church, a restaurant that served only breakfast, and a small shop that proclaimed itself a Notions Store. All but the last were located on the old county highway, which had been bypassed in favor of a straighter route some eighty years before. From the size of its potholes, Danny wouldn’t have been surprised if that was the last time it had been paved as well.
The Notions Shop sat on the hamlet’s lone side street, a narrow, muddy street that dead-ended in a thicket of punk weeds and a murky pond after twenty yards. There were no numbers on the building, but since it was the only building on James Road, Danny guessed it had to be 19—McEwen’s address. Except for the large sign along the roof that read NOTIONS in five-foot letters, it looked like a small ranch house. There was no driv
eway, or lawn for that matter — judging from the tracks, cars pulled into the muck between the road and house.
“What do you think happened to one through eighteen?” asked Hera, who’d come down with him.
“Probably sank into the swamp,” said Danny.
Danny maneuvered the car into a three-point turn and slid the car into the most solid spot he could find.
“Cripes, Colonel — are you sure the car’s not going to sink? All I see here is mud,” said Hera, opening the door.
“Get out on my side if you want,” said Danny. “Bag the colonel stuff for now, all right?”
“Aye aye, skipper.”
A dog began barking as Danny got out of the car. A small patch of bricks marked a stoop at the front door. He went to the door, then rang the bell.
“It’s a store — you can go right in,” said Hera behind him.
“It’s polite to ring the bell.”
“It’s a store,” she said, reaching for the screen door.
The barking increased in intensity, then suddenly changed to a howling cry.
“Hush now, Brat. Hush now,” yelled a woman in her early seventies as she opened the door.
She was short — perhaps five-two — and wore an oversized cotton sweater over a simple black skirt. Her shoulder-length hair was pulled back into a knot behind her head. She had the look of a slightly genteel lady who had fallen on more difficult times and had to support herself by muscle and ingenuity.
“Come on in, come on in, don’t mind the dog,” she said. “He gets lonely sometimes and wants to play.”
Danny stepped inside. The front room was crowded with tables featuring an assortment of items. Everything from handmade tobacco pipes to an old mechanics tool set was on sale, crowded next to each other in a mishmash. Most had small tags with handwritten figures. A few had two or three, each price different.
The room extended to the left, then to the back of the house in an el shape. The leg of the el contained an assortment of different paintings, watercolors and acrylic landscapes. Directly ahead of them was a small kitchen.
“Are you looking for anything particular?” asked the woman, her voice sweet with the old South. “We have many fine items for sale.”
“I wasn’t actually looking to buy anything,” said Danny.
“Well I’m sorry, suh, but the kitchen is closed today,” said the woman. A slight edge crept into her voice. “If you’re lookin’ for any liquid refreshment, I’m afraid you’ll have to move on.”
“I’m looking for a Sally McEwen.”
“Is that so?” answered the woman.
“You know her?”
“I might. Don’t touch any of those paintings, girl,” added the woman sharply. “Unless you’re fixin’ to buy one of ’em.”
“Sor-ry,” said Hera sarcastically.
“If you could tell me where to find Ms. McEwen, I’d be much obliged,” said Danny, borrowing one of his uncle’s South Carolina mannerisms and his accent.
“And if I did, who would be going to call on her?” asked the woman.
“Well, that would be me.”
“And you’re with what government agency?” the woman demanded.
“Well, uh, the Air Force.”
“The Air Force? Air Force? Not the Treasury?”
“Treasury?”
“I told you not to touch,” said the old woman, darting past Danny to Hera.
She was quick for an old bat, thought Danny. He followed her around the room to Hera, who was standing in front of a painting of a city.
“This is a very nice painting,” said Hera, who was holding the painting in her hands.
“Flattery ain’t gonna warm the skillet today, hon,” said the old woman. “You’re interested in buying, then you can put your paws on it. Otherwise, put it back.”
“How much?”
“For you?” The woman looked at Danny and then back at Hera. “Not for sale. I wouldn’t take money off a group of liars like yourselves. Pretending to be from the Air Force.”
“I’m not with the Air Force,” said Hera.
“Well, at least one of you values the truth.” She took the painting. “But I’m still not selling you the painting.”
“I was told that Ms. McEwen lived here,” said Danny. “I’d like to talk to her.”
“Well, you can’t. Who told you she lived here anyway?”
“Friend of hers named Jonathon Reid.”
The woman frowned, then put the painting back on its easel. She walked back to the front of the room, looking over the display of items.
“Did you hear me?” said Danny.
“Damn straight I heard you. Who the hell are you? Really?”
“I’m Danny Freah. I want to talk to Ms. McEwen.”
“Why?”
“I’m afraid I can’t tell you. It’s kind of a personal thing. About a job.”
“A job?” The woman laughed.
“You’re her mother, right?” said Hera. “Or grandmother?”
“Whose mother, darlin’?” said the woman, laying her accent on thick.
“Listen, I’m sorry to bother you,” said Danny. He reached into his pocket and took out a business card. It had his name and rank, along with a generic Washington-area phone number that could not be traced. He took a pen out and wrote down his personal cell number. “If you could tell Ms. McEwen to give me a call, I’d appreciate it. Either number. My cell’s quicker. She could call or text me.”
“She don’t put much store in texting,” said the woman, taking the card. “And she don’t phone.”
“Whatever,” said Danny.
He reached for the door. The dog, which was somewhere downstairs, started barking again.
“I told you shut your trap, Brat,” yelled the woman.
She reached over and closed the door.
“I’m Sally McEwen, Colonel Freah.”
“No offense, but I’m afraid there must be a misunderstanding somewhere,” said Danny. “I, uh — I’m looking for somebody—”
“A lot younger,” said Hera.
“If Jonathon Reid sent you here, you’re looking for me,” she said. “He just neglected to give you all the details. Which is pretty much par for the course.”
* * *
Sally McEwen had worked in various jobs for the State Department and CIA for more than forty years before being eased out by the past administration.
Eased as in pushed, and none too gently. But she had not retired. She damn well was not going to retire, and in fact went to great lengths to keep her classified clearance in order. She was officially on leave.
The Agency allowed its officers to take leaves of absence for up to five years while they pursued interests in the private sector. The supervisors who had signed off on McEwen’s leave looked at it as a pleasant fiction for a field agent who was well past the freshness date but wanted to save face.
“I can have my bags packed in ten minutes,” she told Danny, who was still having trouble believing the woman was, in fact, the CIA op he’d come for. “We must be going to the Ukraine. It’s about the NATO thing, right?”
Hera whistled. “Good guess.”
“More than a guess, sweetie. Russia must be plotting to keep them out, right? Of course.”
“She’s sharp,” said Hera.
It didn’t sound quite like a compliment.
“I, um — I have to talk to Reid,” said Danny.
“I don’t have a phone,” said McEwen.
“That’s all right.” Danny took his sat phone out. “I’m going to just make the call outside.”
The dog started barking again.
“Don’t worry about him,” McEwen told Danny. “His bark is worse than his bite.”
Outside, Danny went over and leaned against the car before dialing.
“This is Reid.”
“Jonathon, this is Danny Freah. I found Ms. McEwen.”
“Is she willing to help?”
“She’s more
than willing. But she’s — old.”
Reid didn’t answer for a moment. He wasn’t exactly a spring chicken himself. If anything, he was several years — maybe even a whole decade — older than McEwen.
“Let me ask you a question, Colonel. Why do you want Sally on the mission?”
“I don’t want her, not her per se,” answered Danny. “I need someone who knows Kiev, who can talk the language like a native, and who can help make arrangements.”
“And you think she’s too old for that?”
“Yeah. And she’s a moonshiner.”
Reid laughed. “I don’t think that disqualifiers her. Assuming, of course, it’s true.”
“Seriously—”
“Who you choose is up to you, Colonel. You know that. But I wouldn’t have recommended Sally if I didn’t think she could handle the job. You’re not asking her to jump out of planes, correct?”
“No.”
“She could probably do that.” Reid laughed. “I know she’ll pass whatever physical the Agency offers.”
“Yeah, but—”
“Your call.”
Reid hung up.
Danny put the sat phone back in his pocket. He thought of himself as pretty old. In fact, he’d questioned himself several times during the last mission, wondering if he was still up to the rigors of an operation.
But McEwen — she was at least seventy.
He walked back into the house, not quite decided what to do.
Hera and McEwen were back by the paintings. Laughing.
Hera, laughing? That was a first.
Danny found McEwen pointing to a building in one of the paintings. He hadn’t looked at it very carefully before; now he realized it was a street in Kiev.
“They had rented the flat out to a prostitute,” said McEwen, continuing her story for Hera. “The prostitute got evicted, and we got it. Of course, we didn’t know about the previous occupant. So here we are, trying to set up a safe house, and men knocking at all hours of the night, asking for Olga. Ulll-ga.”