Harvath looked at her.
“It’s not that kind of flight,” she replied, sensing that he suspected it might be drug related. “It’s all completely legal. I have contact with someone who runs a shuttle service that flies wealthy Regios back and forth to Texas for daily shopping trips.”
“
“Where do they fly into?” Harvath asked.
“A city called McAllen.”
“What about customs and immigration?”
“It’s a small airport,” she responded, “and the pilot is American. He brings people in and out all the time and they all know him there.”
“But his passengers still need to clear customs and immigration, even if they’re just visiting for the day to go shopping and then turning around and flying back to Monterrey.”
“That is correct, but it is much less formal than at a major port of entry. As long as you have a valid passport, they swipe it and you get waved through. You do have a valid passport?”
Harvath nodded. “I do.”
“Then you shouldn’t have any problem. You should be able to walk right through.”
“I don’t understand why you’re doing this.”
“You don’t need to understand.”
“Why would you risk yourself for Nicholas?” he asked.
“What am I risking? I helped arrange a seat for you on a popular charter flight.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Do I?” she replied. “Nicholas has been very generous to our orphanage. When he found out that Momo was having trouble with the cartels, when they wanted to use his bar to move money and weapons and drugs, he made it all go away, all of it. He didn’t want any of that near us. He’s a good man. I have no idea about his past and I don’t want to know. That is between him and God. All I know is that he has made a significant difference in the lives of the children here.”
“Do you do many favors for him?”
“In all these years, he has never asked me for one until now. I can only imagine you are very important to him.”
Harvath wasn’t quite sure how to respond to that.
“He told me that you’re a good man,” she continued. “He said that you have spent most of your life in the service of others. That was all I needed to know. That’s why you’re here and that’s why I’m taking you to the plane in a few hours.”
“And when I land in McAllen?”
Sister Marta removed a piece of paper from her pocket and showed it to him. “He said you’re supposed to look for this.”
CHAPTER 29
VIRGINIA
Reed Carlton wanted to avoid the D.C. area at all costs, and that included Georgetown. There were just too many cameras. He had risked it once to load Tommy’s dead drop and set up their first meeting, but that was enough. Banks agreed with him.
Banks suggested that they communicate via the classified section of the
Carlton explained to Banks how classifieds worked on the Internet. Thankfully, the older man was well versed enough in the Web that they were able to set up a system quickly.
The best way to hide their communications was to go to Craigslist where they selected two crowded but not obvious source cities. Outgoing messages were disguised as ads on the Oakland list and responses were posted on Tampa’s. This way, there was no billing trail. And while their communication wasn’t exactly instantaneous, it was about as close to real time as they could get in exchange for such a low-level risk of being intercepted.
Twenty-four hours after setting everything up, Banks placed a coded ad on the Oakland Craigslist, requesting a meeting as soon as possible. Carlton responded through an ad of his own on the Tampa list, and a few hours later, they were seated at a late-night restaurant outside Fredericksburg.
“You’ve got big troubles, my boy,” Tommy said after the waitress had poured their coffees and walked away. “Your office has been locked up tighter than a bank vault.”
“What are you talking about?”
“It’s been sealed and they have guards on it.”
“Who does?” said Carlton.
Banks raised his coffee cup and took a sip. “FBI, but it feels like CIA.”
“So this
“It’s suspicious, I’ll give you that. I reached out to a whole bunch of my Agency contacts and not a single one of them would talk to me. Not one.”
“So what does that tell you?”
“It tells me,” replied Banks, “that something pretty serious is afoot.”
“Yup.”
“But just because nobody wanted to talk to me didn’t mean I rolled over and gave up. Somebody, somewhere in the chain, scared the hell out of everyone and ordered them to play dumb. That’s some pretty serious pressure, so I decided to apply a little pressure of my own.”
Carlton studied the man sitting across from him. “I love you, Tommy. You Hoover’d somebody, didn’t you?” Much like storied FBI Director, J. Edgar Hoover, Thomas Banks had been rumored to have developed dossiers over the years on Agency higher-ups he didn’t care for. He wasn’t a blackmailer per se. The files in his mind were only for insurance, to be played like cards if and when he ever needed to accomplish an honest objective while a dishonest obstacle sat in his path.
“It’s probably better you don’t know the details, but yeah, I pulled a file I have on somebody there and I played it. It’s some pretty bad stuff from the 1970s. I don’t know what the statute of limitations is, but it’s enough to cause him a whole mess of problems and hold up his pension, not to mention the PR nightmare it’d be for the seventh floor.”
“I appreciate your doing this for me.”
“Don’t thank me,” Banks replied. “The guy’s a weasel. He deserves it. The problem is that he didn’t give me very much.”
“One step at a time. I’m all ears. What’d you get?”
“The Agency can’t go after American citizens on American soil. That’s why the domestic legwork has fallen to the FBI. The real momentum behind this thing, though, seems to be coming from somewhere else. Someplace pretty clandestine with a lot of power.”
“More clandestine than the Agency? What are we talking about? The Director of National Intelligence?”
“Whoever it is, they’re the ones who appear to have built the case against you.”
“Me?” replied Carlton. “What are you talking about?”
“Actually, it’s not
“My ops division, you mean?”
“My guy wouldn’t say.”
“What’s their case? What do they think they have?”
Banks again raised his coffee cup for a sip, but this time stopped partway. “Treason,” he replied, half