somebody. When is that going to happen?’
‘Hopefully, not on this trip,’ Cobb said.
‘Bite your tongue,’ McNutt snapped.
Sarah rolled her eyes. McNutt was still having trouble with the big picture. ‘Let me ask you a question: why would anyone try to stop us when we have no real idea where we’re going?’
‘Because Russians are ornery that way.’
‘You make it sound like we should be watching out for Cossacks on horseback.’
‘Hey, watch what you say,’ Jasmine cautioned from the engine. ‘There are still large pockets of Cossacks, and they are intensely xenophobic.’
‘See?’ McNutt said.
Sarah and McNutt both happened to glance over at Cobb. He seemed to have tuned them out. His focus was a pin that let the air out of the conversation. The car was quiet, save for the endless clack of the heavy cars passing over old rails set in a slightly uneven track bed.
They were all wearing what had rapidly become their uniforms. Black, ultra lightweight, long-sleeve T-shirts made of the latest sports fabric. It kept them cool in heat and warm in cold. Their Eisenhower-style jackets and cargo pants were dark olive and featured stealth material that made the soft, strong cloth virtually silent. They were equipped with cunningly placed pockets for a variety of each person’s needs — mostly extra ammo, since the jackets were long enough to cover their dark brown holster belts. Their shoes were also black and looked like a cross between hi-top slippers and combat boots. They were waterproof, slip-proof, and insulated, much like their shirts. In addition, every team member wore a watch that was synchronized and had a reflection-free face. The crystals were polarized along a vertical axis, meaning no one could read the watch except the owner, and ambient light bounced up, not out.
After a few minutes of silence, Cobb told Sarah to bring up a specific map on her iPad. He pointed to a variety of lines he had made on his own map with different colored pencils.
‘I think the prince was trying to both find a place to hide the treasure and make sure his family’s path to Yalta was still clear,’ he said. ‘So we’re looking for a road less traveled.’
‘To Yalta?’ she said.
‘Toward Yalta,’ he corrected.
‘Aren’t we a bit far afield, then?’ Sarah asked, pointing east. ‘We’re headed southwest. Isn’t Yalta a few hundred miles that way?’
‘I don’t think the prince wanted to hide the treasure in the Ukraine — or, as it was known then, Little Russia.’ He shook his head. ‘Too close to anti-Romanov armies. I’m betting that somewhere along this path he split the two groups — family one way, the way which led out, and the treasure another way.’
‘Was it Malta or Yalta that his family left from?’ McNutt wondered, chewing on a crunchy bite of sandwich. ‘I can never keep those straight.’
‘Malta,’ Jasmine said. ‘British warship — remember?’
‘No,’ he said as he wiped his mouth with a cloth napkin.
Changing the subject, Cobb drew his thumb across his throat, signaling that everyone should deactivate his or her microphone. He wanted a private conversation.
Everyone nodded in understanding. Around the room, team members whispered their personal codewords, the ones they had personally chosen to mute their individual microphones. One after another, their vocal feeds shut down. Cobb scanned the room, watching his team as they gave him the sign they were all clear.
He finished with Garcia, who gave him a thumbs-up.
‘We’re good, Hector?’ Cobb asked.
‘Good as gold,’ Garcia replied.
‘You’re sure?’
‘Of course, I’m sure. Why wouldn’t I be?’
Cobb held up his hand, signaling Garcia to be quiet.
‘Panther,’ Cobb stated. It was the code word for his microphone, which was now reactivated. ‘Jasmine, do me a favor.’
Garcia scanned the room nervously, suddenly realizing that not everyone was present and accounted for in the command center.
Cobb continued. ‘Please confirm that Garcia’s microphone is still active. Did you hear his chatter from a moment ago?’
‘I sure did,’ Jasmine said. ‘He said we’re as good as gold, then you challenged it.’
Cobb grimaced. ‘That’s what I figured.’
McNutt instantly raised his MP7 and aimed it at Garcia’s chest. Garcia looked down and saw the bright red dot that was projected by the laser sight attached to the rifle’s barrel.
One false move, and he was dead.
44
As part of his operational checklist, Cobb had insisted that Garcia divulge the location of every camera on the train. That way, Cobb knew every angle he could call upon if there was an emergency.
Shortly after the train had left the station, Cobb asked McNutt to check the control center for renegade cameras. The weapons man had found one, and only one. It was set in a screw at the base of a window. It was also a camera that Garcia had not mentioned in his discussion with Cobb. At the time, they weren’t sure who had planted it: the Black Robes, the Russian government, or someone on their team.
So Cobb and McNutt had run an internal op to find out.
While glancing at Garcia’s wall of monitors, Cobb had found the diagnostic screen that tracked the status of every video and audio signal being fed into the system. To the untrained eye, the feeds appeared as little more than solid green lines that continually scrolled across the screen. Only the time stamps that periodically marked their progress gave any indication as to what these lines represented. Fortunately, Cobb was familiar with the software. A green line meant that the feed was streaming normally. If the line turned red, it meant that an error had occurred. Clicking on any point in the timeline would open the data stream and allow the user to view or listen to anything recorded by the device.
In his gut, Cobb sensed that Garcia was involved.
To test his theory, Cobb monitored the communication feeds on Garcia’s computer screen while McNutt placed a mug of coffee in front of the camera. A few minutes later, the coffee had spilled, as planned, when the train took an especially hard turn. The liquid caused a short circuit in the camera. Cobb knew if Garcia had been aware of the hidden camera, its feed would be among those listed on his screen. As Cobb watched, the corrupted feed had changed from green to red on Garcia’s system. Just like that, they knew that Garcia had planted the rogue camera in the control center. They weren’t sure why, but they knew he had done it.
Of course, they didn’t challenge him right away.
That would have been a wasted opportunity.
Instead, Cobb called the team together, minus Garcia, for a private meeting. He warned them to watch what they did and said in front of Garcia until they could use the hidden camera to their advantage. Cobb guessed it would take twenty-four hours — tops — for the circuits to dry, and that time was almost up.
That meant it was time to confront Garcia.
Garcia went from relatively calm to totally panicked in a flash. His face, which was normally a medium brown, turned shockingly pale — as if he was about to pass out.
‘I had to!’ Garcia pleaded. ‘Papi’s got enough on my hacking to put me in jail for years!’
Cobb dismissed that with a grimace. ‘I’m sure he’s got something on all of us, Hector. That’s irrelevant.’
‘To you, maybe. But not to me! I’d never survive in pris-’
Cobb cut him off. ‘Not interested. Just shut up and listen.’
Garcia forced himself to sit still. At least as still as a terrified man with sudden facial tics could manage.