“Damn it!”
“What difference does it make? They’re gone now.”
“Right, and one of them has the bag, the stuff from the drawer.” I am looking over the crowd to see if the girl is gone. “I couldn’t tell if she got on the bike or if she just gave him the bag.”
“What drawer?” says Harry.
“Never mind. I’ll fill you in later.” I hear sirens in the distance. “Let’s get Joselyn and get the hell out of here.”
Harry and I slip back inside the building. We climb the stairs and I tap on the dark glass. “Open up!”
A few seconds later Joselyn opens the door.
“Let’s go.” I tell her.
“What happened?”
“I’ll tell you later.”
Just then we hear footsteps coming down the stairs. Joselyn, Harry, and I head toward the back of the building. We leave the way we came, out the back and down the steps next to the loading dock. We cross the parking lot and escape through the narrow gap between the two buildings.
Charlie Three got to the Marriott and called Madriani’s room using one of the house phones. He was prepared to hang up if anybody answered. No one did. He tried the partner’s room and got the same result.
He stood in the lobby debating whether he should call the bad news in to Charlie One using the radio, or if it might be wiser to switch to the cell phone. Just as he reached for the phone on his belt, a silver lining appeared over the hotel’s main entrance.
He pulled out his phone and turned his back so they wouldn’t get a good look at his face as he pushed a single button and did a quick dial to Charlie One. The phone rang three times before it was answered.
“Yeah!” He didn’t sound happy. Charlie One was yelling into the phone over the din of background noise. He was obviously under some stress.
“Thought I’d let you know the three of them just walked into the hotel,” said Charlie Three.
“You just made my day. Are they all right?”
The agent looked over his shoulder and took a peek at the three Americans as they walked by him toward the elevator. “They look fine to me.” There was music and crowd noise on the other end of the phone, then a quick siren punctuated by a buzzer. “What the hell’s goin’ on over there?”
“You don’t want to know,” said Charlie One.
“You want I should call Charlie Four and we can pick up the three of them over here and put ’em on a plane in the morning? I don’t want to have to go through this again,” said Charlie Three.
The agent in charge thought about it for a second and then said: “No. All we were asked to do is to follow them and provide protection. If they’re OK, leave ’em alone. Just stay there and make sure they don’t leave the hotel again unless you’re on them like second skin. Understood?”
“Got it.”
“Call Charlie Four and tell him to get over there and provide some backup. And stay off the radio. Whatever you do, don’t come back over here.”
“Why not?”
“I’m afraid we’re gonna be here for a while.”
“Got it.”
Charlie One ended the call and was about to slip the phone into his pocket when a hand reached around from behind and took it away from him.
“I will keep this for now.”
When the agent turned around, he saw the uniformed Thai policeman standing there in front of him. He could tell this was no ordinary cop. The man was maybe five foot eight, tall for a Thai, and very fit. He was wearing a military-style five-point hat with a shiny visor. The starched uniform bore captain’s bars and looked as if it was molded to his body. “We will have that as well.” He took the handheld radio and handed both the cell phone and the radio to the officers standing behind him.
By now there was a good-size crowd forming out on the street in front of the green door, all jostling for position to see what was happening. Two police cars and a police pickup were parked on the road, blocking traffic in the first lane, their light bars flashing red, blue, and gold.
“Your friend tells me you are the one in charge.”
“Lucky me.”
The cop smiled. “Are you armed?”
“No.” The two agents inside the building had enough sense to lock up their. 40-caliber Glocks along with the extra clips and the fanny pack holsters in the embassy car before they radioed in and told the Pattaya police who they were and where they were located. Charlie One produced his FBI credentials and then handed over his passport.
The cop glanced at the ID and handed it to one of the other officers, who made notes while his boss looked at the passport. “I see. I take it then that you are assigned to the legal attache in Bangkok?”
“That’s correct.”
“And your friend here?”
“Same, same,” said Charlie One.
“You will find that I speak fluent English. Would you like to try Thai?”
“I’m sure that your English is better than my Thai,” said the agent.
The officer considered his options, which were now much more limited. The agents had diplomatic passports and hence diplomatic immunity. He could take them into custody, but to do so would cause a big stink. “Would you mind telling me what you’re doing here?”
Charlie One didn’t say anything.
The cop lowered the passport and tapped it against his thigh for a moment. “Are there any more of you?”
“Here, you mean?”
“Yes.”
“No,” said Charlie One. Of course, that all depended on how you defined the word here.
“Do you mind my asking why, if there are only two of you and you’re both standing here together, why do you need radios to communicate?”
“Certainly you can ask.” Charlie One had no intention of telling him anything, not now, not with the three Americans safely back in their hotel. The agent didn’t know much, but what little he knew he was fairly confident Washington would not want disclosed. Besides, the three Americans were running out of time. According to the information from bureau headquarters, they were scheduled to be back in D.C. in two days. They would either have to leave in the morning or catch a red-eye the following night. By then they would be somebody else’s problem.
“So I take it you’re not going to tell us anything?” said the officer.
“I’m sorry, but at the moment I’m not at liberty.”
“I see. Well…” The cop took a deep breath and stood there for a moment. “Since we can’t arrest you and since you’re not willing to cooperate, I suppose there’s not much we can do, is there?”
The agent didn’t want to rub it in. Instead he stood there trying to look sufficiently rebuked so as not to make the man feel bad. He was, in fact, sympathetic to the cop’s position. Guests in their country and brothers of the badge, they had needed help many times from the local authorities. The agent knew that it was inevitable that in time they would once again need the help of the Pattaya police.
“Do you mind telling me how long you have been on assignment in Thailand?” said the cop.
“Six years,” said the agent.
“Do you like your duty here?”
“Very much.”
“Then I would advise that in the future it would be wise to inform us before you do something like this again. Whatever it was you were doing.”
“Understood,” said the agent.