and he will leave them alone. Slaughtered a poor woman in Dubai and took down an important network there, and yet they have agreed.”
Lauren stood abruptly and crossed her arms as she stalked to the long side window and looked out. “They give him a free pass but are coming after us! That’s not fair!”
“Fairness has nothing to do with it, dear girl.”
“And they still haven’t figured out how much money he has stolen over the years. They don’t know the half of it.”
“We will let them know at the appropriate time,” said Jeff, “but let’s deal with the here and now.” He turned to Kyle. “You cannot stay aboard the
Kyle nodded. “Yeah. I agree. We need to get off the boat if we want to find Jim and take him down. That will make all of the troubles go away.”
Lauren turned toward them, and this time tears were on her cheeks. “How? Jim knows what he’s doing, and he was a great field agent.”
Kyle rose and walked over to her, putting a strong hand on each of her arms and locking onto her eyes. “We’re partners in this, Lauren. Putting the two of us together was Jim’s first mistake and probably his biggest. No offense meant, but you were once his mistress. I was once his student and his friend. Between us, we know this guy in every way possible, both personally and professionally.”
Lauren opened her arms and put them around Kyle, hugging him close, with her face against his chest. There was warmth there. And safety. “What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to kick his ass and put him in the grave,” Kyle said, returning the embrace and rocking her back and forth.
37
WASHINGTON, D.C.
THE CIA DID NOT have the only computer in town, and many experts considered the system rather primitive. Lieutenant Commander Benton Freedman of Task Force Trident thought the Agency’s Directorate of Intelligence was about five years behind the curve on hardware alone, and losing ground. They were barely in the game on software development.
Technology was constantly evolving, but the Agency was always slow to adapt. It was not unusual for public sector companies to ramp up new programs and tweak techniques faster than the Agency could follow. The CIA believed in keeping secrets, while the rest of the computerized world was dedicated to sharing as much knowledge as possible, as fast as possible. Just a routine task like moving an e-mail from an unclassified computer system over to a classified channel was tantamount to hard labor for a CIA worker. Swapping vital information with other government agencies did not work smoothly, and the entire World Wide Web was never really embraced at the Langley headquarters, because it could not be controlled.
Other intel agencies were doing only slightly better in stumbling around the secrecy problem: Anything put into a computer became prey for some dedicated hacker, and Freedman was a shadowy god to hackers everywhere. They were aware of his prowess but never discovered his identity. Bolstered by Top Secret clearances, the superhacker known as the Lizard trolled with ease through the CIA’s internal system.
“What do you have, Liz?” asked General Brad Middleton when Freedman tapped on the open door of his Pentagon office. Middleton respected Freedman’s electronic prowess but sometimes needed a translator when the Lizard lapsed into rapid-fire geek.
“Sir, you told me to follow the money, and I did.” The brows behind the thick eyeglasses arched.
“And…?”
“I can now prove for a fact that former agent Hall is a thief.”
“That is excellent work, Lieutenant Commander Freedman. However, no one gives a healthy crap that he stole some money. We want to find him because he is a treacherous bastard and he set up Kyle Swanson to take a mass murder rap.”
“He stole quite a bit, sir. Thought you would like to know.”
Middleton felt his eyes beginning to cross as the Lizard ignored his comments and took a chair, uninvited, then opened his notebook. “You’re going to tell me anyway, aren’t you?”
“Why, yes, sir. Of course.”
“I’m a general. I have rights.”
“Sir, you are the very model of a modern major general, with information vegetable, animal, and mineral.”
“Don’t go there.” If Freedman launched into
“Sir, Agent Carson, in her debrief before she left, gave me a list of former agent Hall’s secret bank accounts that she had memorized. She has a remarkable ability of recall and, on instructions from Agent Hall, had not written them down anywhere. He believed that he alone had the codes, but she did, too. As I say, she is remarkable. And quite beautiful. Did you know that she was in the Miss America-”
“Back to the money, Liz.”
“Sir. This is information that the CIA does not possess. The Agency still thinks the single account set up for the Pakistan operation was the only one Agent Hall looted, and he took the five million dollars that was left in it. That isn’t even close.”
“How much?”
“In total, sir, or in each individual account?”
“I have a pistol in my desk drawer, Lizard. I am going to take it out and shoot you in the head.”
“One hundred and three million dollars and change, sir. Total. That’s just rounding it off to the nearest million.” He gave the general a printout with the names of the banks, the account numbers, and the amounts currently in each.
Middleton blew a low whistle as he studied the numbers. Coax the Lizard a little bit and eventually he would say something worthwhile. “Can you track all of these?”
“Oh, yes, certainly, sir. Money goes in, money goes out, and it’s all routed through other banks. Former agent Hall cannot let it all just sit there, but false names on the accounts won’t matter, just the numbers. For instance, his last electric bill at his apartment in Georgetown was for a hundred and thirty-eight dollars and twenty-six cents. It is now overdue. That is how we’ll get him, sir.”
“The electric company will send out a bill collector to find a CIA assassin?” General Middleton began to scratch the stubble of his short hair, a sure sign of impatience.
Freedman looked puzzled for a moment. “I don’t think that would work very well…”
The general threw him a stern look. “Get back on track,
“Umh. Yes, sir. Even traitors and sources and snitches have to pay their bills. Former agent Hall is going to have to dip into those accounts at some time, perhaps not for a million dollars, that would be unlikely, I think, but to pay a credit card or start a new checking account or rent a car or buy a dinner. Something cheap. When he does, the trap programs I have set in place will locate the banks involved and the billing source. When he moves money, I will see it.”
Middleton tapped his pen against the desk a few times. Frustration was growing. “So has he paid some utility company a hundred and thirty-eight bucks?”
“And twenty-six cents, sir. Oh, no, sir. I would not expect him to start paying routine bills for some time. I, I doubt if he’s ever going to pay that bill.”
“Has he made any withdrawals at all?”
“No, sir. Not that I can tell. I would have known.” The Lizard smiled like a college freshman who had finished a chemistry experiment.