“I’ve got you outgunned,” Harrow said to Mac.
Emma smiled. “We have
60
DAY FIVE
NORTH OF DISCOVERY PASSAGE
4:01 P.M.
Let’s cut the bullshit,” Harrow finally said. “We need to get a locator on
“Not going to happen,” Emma said.
“Joe Faroe assured me that St. Kilda would cooperate,” Harrow said with an icy kind of neutrality. “He knows they can’t afford the kind of trouble I can cause.”
Emma met his eyes calmly. “Is it as big as the trouble that would come down on you if the sovereign nation of Canada discovered the CIA was running a covert op in its territorial waters?”
“We’re not running an op,” Harrow said.
“Exactly,” she said crisply. “You
“You have no need to know,” Harrow said.
“Think of it as a need to survive,” Mac said.
“Mac and I have our asses on the firing line,” Emma said. “If we get caught with whatever prize everybody is chasing, we might convince the Canadians we were good guys investigating an international smuggling operation.
“But the odds are that we’ll draw a long prison sentence,” Mac said. “That probably would depend on what goods we were caught with.”
“So tell me, Tim, what we’re going to go to jail for,” Emma said.
“You want me to believe you don’t know what you’ll be smuggling?” Harrow laughed without humor. “Not going to happen.”
“Mules don’t have to know what’s on their backs,” she shot back. “What difference does it make? They’re just dumb muscle.”
Harrow stared at them.
“Right,” Emma said. She turned to Mac. “About that seaplane.”
“You really don’t know what’s going on?” Harrow asked in disbelief.
“Now you’ve got it,” Mac said.
“Bloody, buggering hell,” Harrow said in disgust, proving that he was an internationalist when it came to language. “This is a three-star cluster. What
“You first,” Emma said.
Harrow hesitated, then shrugged. “I was told that there was an old op, one that began years back, before the present administration.”
“Sweet,” Mac said under his breath. “Feasible deniability, all present and accounted for. Public theater in an off-Broadway opening, soon to be in D.C.”
Harrow ignored him. “We didn’t want to use drugs to pay our secret allies, or arms, because there was a huge political downside if the press found out. And when the presidency changes hands, so do secrets. For our covert allies, any diamonds that aren’t Russian goods are automatically suspect on the market.”
“How could anyone know the difference?” Mac asked.
“Russian diamonds have a very faint green tinge,” Emma said. “Not enough to be noticed by anyone but a real expert.”
“Our allies didn’t want to be carrying bales of American money around in satchels, either,” Harrow said, “so we sent them some embryonic currency.”
“What-” Mac began.
“You gave them printing plates?” Emma cut in, startled.
Harrow nodded. “They were old. Not good for more than a few hundred passes before they would be too worn to use.”
Emma waited, listening very carefully to what Harrow said. Or more important, what he didn’t say.
He stopped talking.
“Who were your dollar allies?” Mac asked.
“Georgia. The Ukraine. A few of the ‘-istan’ governments.”
“So you were bankrolling insurrections,” Emma said.
“Can we help it if a few old printing plates go missing?” Harrow asked, shrugging. “It was years ago. Shit happens.”
“Fascinating and all that,” Emma said, “but what does it have to do with
“The op went south. Russia got hold of the plates and began minting new hundreds. A lot of them.”
“Where did they get the good paper to go with the plates?” Mac asked.
“Same place they get truckloads of blank passports,” Harrow said. “They hijacked what they needed. Now they’re trying to smuggle tens of millions into the U.S. to leverage some financial deal that will at best break a few hedge funds and at worst drag the economy into another Great Recession. If that happens, the party that doesn’t believe in war anywhere will be in control, which would please the hell out of our enemies.”
“Our economy eats billions and looks around for a real meal,” Mac said. “What good is a few million?”
“Spoken like a true warrior,” Harrow said. “You flunked advanced economic manipulation, didn’t you? A few hundred million can be a lot of leverage, but I don’t have time to explain calculus to a kindergartener. All I want is
Mac and Emma looked at each other.
“Keep talking,” Emma said. “I’m having trouble envisioning a multimillion-dollar yacht being used to smuggle currency.”
“Abkhazia,” Harrow said in a clipped voice.
“Suspicious tribes, clans, and gangs,” Mac said. “Fallout of the FSU. Criminal Central for Middle Europe. Specialty, counterfeiting. Pounds, euros, dollars, whatever sells. And they’re good at what they do. Very good. They damn near put Lithuania’s economy under. It’s war without firing a shot.”
Harrow studied Mac, then nodded. “Your file didn’t mention that you spent time there.”
“Spent time where,” Mac said without inflection.
Harrow nodded again. “Warlords,
“Crime is where the money is,” Emma said.
“Exactly,” Harrow said. “Our best estimate is that the Russians either have taken over or are in a power struggle with the Middle Europeans over the hundred million dollars that is somehow connected to
“A hundred million bucks at a crack,” Mac said. “Even in hundred-dollar bills, that’s a big pile of green.”
“A million C-notes,” Emma said, doing the math in her head. “That’s a hundred thousand bundles of a hundred bills each.”
Mac smiled slowly at her, then said to Harrow, “I’ve been all over