support a smuggling network that stretched from the jungles of Guatemala’s Peten, where Jude bought artifacts from Mayan Indians who raided archaeological sites, to Houston, the destination of the merchandise and its distribution point.
When Ahmad expressed an eager curiosity about Jude’s operation, Jude invited him along on a couple of trips, and Ahmad got a firsthand look at Jude’s entire system. Shortly after the second trip, Ahmad introduced Jude to the cell’s leader, Khalil Saleh. After another month of wary association, Khalil was also shown the smuggling route, and very soon afterward, it was mentioned to Jude that they were looking for a safe conduit into Texas for certain items. Would Jude be interested? The Texan was always interested in making a tax-free dollar.
Eventually, Khalil took Jude to Paraguay’s Ciudad del Este, located in the Triple Border region, and introduced him to Baida. Suddenly, security backstop flutters were rippling all the way back to the second level of Jude’s layered legend. Baida was looking into him in a serious way. When that didn’t throw up any flags, Baida called Jude back to Paraguay. At the third meeting, Baida agreed to move some contraband in a trial run through Jude’s underground system.
But when Jude returned to Mexico City from his last trip to Ciudad del Este, he disappeared. Now here was confirmation of what had happened to him, but for some reason, Kevern had withheld this information from Langley for four weeks. Now Gordon was waiting for an explanation.
After his last enigmatic statement, Kevern was silent. He leaned forward, resting one elbow on the arm of his chair. Gordon could hear him softly grunting under his breath, a big animal, forced to make nice in an environment that constrained and frustrated him. But he was calm. When Kevern was getting close to something he wanted, he became very placid. Achieving proximity to his prey was like putting him on ice. His metabolism dropped to the level of a scorpion’s.
Finally, Kevern nodded. “Turn off that light,” he said. “You need to see something else.”
Again the screen came alive in a fluorescent haze of static. The images were indistinct at first, and this time the dateline indicated a period twenty-four hours after the first recording.
The opening images are murky and then a door is flung open to a lighted room-the same room as in the first recording, but this time the camera is being held by someone coming into the room. Khalil, the bald man, and the two Koreans wheel around in stunned surprise. The camera hurtles into the room behind the intruders, who are clad in black balaclavas. They begin firing their automatic weapons immediately, and then receive a few bursts of fire from two of Khalil’s men, who rush into the room through another door. The intruders spray the room with more automatic-weapons fire, and everyone in the room is down in less than fifteen seconds. The black-hooded intruders then methodically go to each of the victims and finish them off with short bursts at point-blank range.
The bald man, still dying, is recorded up close, black-gloved hands lifting his head off the floor and holding his face straight so that he can be identified. The dead Khalil is also recorded up close for identification, as are each of the three Koreans and the two other men. Three times, a shirt is lifted and pants are pulled down to record tattoos or scars to corroborate the ID.
Someone gathers up piles of money on the table around which the men had been gathered, as well as a dozen kilo packages of drugs stacked beside the money. Then the handheld camera records the removal of the ceiling-high surveillance camera that had been secretly mounted in the corner by the Agencia Federal de Investigaciones, and which had captured the previous recording. One last pan of the silenced room, and the images end.
Kevern snicked off the CD player and the television.
Gordon sat in stunned silence. The entire cell they had spent nearly a year to penetrate was gone in less than five minutes.
He suspected he knew what he had just seen, but he stopped himself from saying so. He had to hear this out. He had to wait and take it as it came, and he had to read very closely between the lines. He wanted Kevern to explain every step of this, everything, especially the stuff Gordon thought he had already figured out.
He reached up and flipped on the lamp again. This time, he wanted to see everything Kevern’s face had to offer, though it seldom offered much.
Kevern, grunting, sat up in his chair and leaned forward a little.
“Unlike his Muslim buds, Baida’s never been squirmy about the ethics of drug trafficking to finance his operations.” He nodded toward the television. “That’s what Khalil was doing here. Hezbollah’s accelerating its initiatives in South America. Those crumbling economies down there are like fertilizer to organized crime, and Hezbollah’s sucking into that.
“My guess is that Baida’s turning some of the people from those criminal organizations into surrogate soldiers. They’ve got the infrastructure he needs for transborder operations. They’ve got no national or religious loyalties. They’re greedy, so their services go to the highest bidder, and with the drug money, Baida can bid high. They’re ideal terrorist mercenaries.”
Kevern paused. Gordon could hear him breathing, as if his lungs and throat were laboring under the compression of secrecy.
“This is our situation: Until Jude, we’d never been able to make any headway getting inside one of Baida’s damn cells because of his obsession with three things: compartmentalization, decentralized organization, and fractured communication.” He paused for emphasis. “And those are exactly the things we’re going to use to bury him.”
Gordon wasn’t sure where this was going, but he was getting an edgy feeling that they were headed toward one of Kevern’s more creative enterprises. Kevern was famous in special operations for designing and executing impossible schemes that paid off beyond anyone’s wildest expectations. He had engineered some legendary operations. At the same time, when one of these things went awry, someone higher up always had his head handed to him on a platter for having authorized the scheme. But somehow, Kevern always survived.
The reality was that managers and administrators could always be replaced. They came and went with inevitable regularity, like the changing seasons. But a creative operations officer who was also meticulous was a rare commodity, and every intelligence agency had to have a few men like Kevern, men who didn’t mind playing the role of Satan in the complex moral drama of clandestine operations.
“We’d already documented everyone in the cell,” Kevern said. “Even the Korean guards they’d hired to provide them with protection and freedom of movement in Tepito.”
Kevern tossed a glance at the television, as if reminding Gordon of what he’d just seen.
“Those were Mondragon’s men who made the raid and shot the video. We got the whole fuckin’ cell, roots and all.”
Gordon couldn’t get his breath. Good God. Even in this new terrorist-harried environment that allowed more lenient uses of lethal force, it was a dumbfounding act of preemption for an American officer to arrange the slaughter of cell members who weren’t even remotely important enough to be on the Directorate of Operation’s high-value target list, along with a roomful of men who were nothing more than hired local gang members. And all of this done without any directive from the DO. It was a totally independent act.
Kevern must have seen the look on Gordon’s face.
“Just a second, Gordy. Listen to me here.”
Kevern was the only person on earth who called him Gordy. It was a shrewd mixture of good ol’ boy camaraderie and subtle derision, the difference at any given moment depending on Kevern’s nuanced manner.
“Now listen, okay?” Kevern repeated. “By killing these assholes and taking the money and the drugs, we made it look like one of Baida’s drug deals had gone sour. That’s what Baida heard from the security guy he sent up to Mexico City to find out why he wasn’t hearing anything from Khalil’s cell.
“Postmortem: Baida writes that cell off to the cost of doing business. As far as he’s concerned, it’s a total wash. And, because there’s no communication between Baida’s cells, each one locked down, totally independent except for communication to and from Baida himself, Baida never learned that Jude was a spy. Khalil sure as hell didn’t report it to him. He was trying to cover it up. So as far as Baida’s concerned, Jude’s still clean.
“But Baida’s worried: Where’s Jude? He hasn’t heard anything from Jude. Not a damn thing. Baida made four calls to Jude’s dedicated cell number in the five or six days following the Tepito massacre. He wants him. He wants Jude’s underground route north. The story on the street is mixed. Some say Jude was killed in the raid. Some say-a rumor we started ourselves-no, he’s laying low until he figures out what the hell happened that night. Baida’s investigator takes this mixed report back to him in the Triple Border.”
Kevern stopped and looked at Gordon like a challenging professor looks at his brightest student, waiting for