“
“No one wants Malik’s head on a pike more than I do,” Carter agreed. “He deserves it for the mayhem he caused in Iraq, and his removal from the face of the earth will make us all safer. Suicide bombers are a dime a dozen. But masterminds—true terror masterminds—are extremely hard to replace. Eliminate the masterminds like Malik, and you’re left with a bunch of jihadist wannabes trying to figure out how to mix their peroxide bombs in their mother’s basement.”
“So why not let Nadia make the meeting?” asked McKenna. “Why not let her listen to what Malik has to say about his future plans?”
“Because I’ve got that funny feeling at the back of my neck.”
“But they trust her. Why wouldn’t they? She’s Zizi’s daughter. She’s a descendant of Wahhab himself, for God’s sake.”
“I’ll grant you they trusted her
“You’re jumping at shadows,” McKenna said. “But I suppose that’s to be expected. After all, you’ve been at this a very long time. For the last ten years, you’ve been reading their e-mail and listening to their phone conversations, looking for hidden meaning. But sometimes there is none. Sometimes a wedding is just a wedding. And sometimes a meeting in a hotel is just a meeting in a hotel. Besides, if we can’t get a heavily guarded businesswoman like Nadia al-Bakari in and out of the Burj Al Arab safely, then maybe we’re in the wrong business.”
Carter was silent for a moment. “Any chance we can keep this professional, Jim?”
“I thought we were.”
“Should I assume you’re speaking for the White House?”
“No,” said McKenna. “You should assume I’m speaking for the president.”
“Since you’re so in tune with the president’s thinking, why don’t you tell us all what the president wants.”
“He wants what all presidents want. He wants a second term. Otherwise, the inmates will be running the asylum again, and all the progress we’ve made in the war against terrorism will be wiped away.”
“You mean
“Both the president and I would like her to attend—with the good guys looking over her shoulder, of course. Listen to what he has to say. Take his picture. Get his fingerprints. Record his voice. Determine whether he’s Malik or some other heavyweight member of the network.”
“And what do we tell our friends in the Emirati security services?”
“Our friends in the Emirates have been less-than-reliable allies on a number of issues ranging from terrorism to money laundering to the illicit arms trade. Besides, in my experience, one never quite knows just whom one is speaking to in the Emirates. He might be a committed opponent of the jihadists, or he might be a second cousin once removed.”
“So we say nothing?” Carter asked.
“Nothing,” McKenna replied.
“And if we determine it’s Malik?”
“Then the president would like him taken out of circulation.”
“What does that mean?”
“Use your imagination, Adrian.”
“I did that after 9/11, Jim, and you said publicly that I should be put in jail for it. So if you wouldn’t mind, I’d like to know
It was Shamron, not McKenna, who answered.
“He’s not asking
“I was told to watch my step around you.”
“I was told the same thing.”
McKenna seemed pleased by this. “The president is unwilling to authorize an American covert action in a quasi-friendly Arab country at a sensitive time like this,” he said. “He feels it could embarrass the regime and thus leave it vulnerable to the forces of change sweeping the Middle East.”
“But Israelis running amok in Dubai is another matter entirely.”
“It does happen to dovetail nicely with the facts.”
“What facts are those?”
“Malik has a great deal of Israeli blood on his hands, which means you have every reason to want him dead.”
“Well played, Mr. McKenna,” Shamron said. “But what do we get in return?”
“The gratitude of the most important and transformative American president in a generation.”
“Equity?” asked Shamron.
McKenna smiled and said, “Equity.”
Chapter 50
The Plains, Virginia
IT WAS AT THIS POINT in the proceedings that James A. McKenna, special assistant to the president for homeland security and counterterrorism, thankfully chose to take his leave. Carter summoned his secret brethren to the sitting room and asked whether anyone could recall where Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, mastermind of the 9/11 plot, had been hiding the night of his capture. They all did, of course, but it was Chiara who answered.
“He was in a house in Rawalpindi, just down the road from the headquarters of the Pakistani military.”
“Of all places,” Carter said, shaking his head. “And do you happen to remember how we got him?”
“You sent in an informant to confirm it was really him. After laying eyes on the target, the informant slipped into the bathroom and sent you a text message.”
“And a few hours later, the man who planned the worst terror attack in history was in handcuffs, looking shockingly like the guy who works on my wife’s Volvo. I took a great deal of grief for the things we did to KSM and the places we put him, but that picture of him being led away was worth it all. And all it took was a guy with a cell phone. Simple as that.”
“If we agree to do this,” Gabriel said, “you may rest assured Nadia won’t be running to the toilet to send any text messages.”
“
Gabriel looked to his superiors for guidance. Navot was rubbing at the spot on the bridge of his nose where his fashionable eyeglasses pinched him. Shamron had yet to move. He was staring past Gabriel toward Chiara, as if offering her a chance to intervene. She didn’t take it.
“For the record,” Gabriel said, “we’re not going to Dubai to capture anyone. If it’s Malik, he won’t leave there alive.”
“I’m quite certain I didn’t hear McKenna mention anything about an arrest.”
“Just so we’re clear.”
“We are,” said Carter. “Think of yourself as a Hellfire missile, but without the collateral damage and innocent deaths.”