“How do you know her?” Myers asked.
“In 2007, Early was going to run an op in the Persian Gulf near Iranian waters and he’d requested one of the new UAV support teams for an intel assist, but the local commander turned him down.”
“But Dr. Ashley stepped in?” Myers asked.
“It was a good thing she did. Her drone disabled an Iranian patrol boat and saved the lives of Early and his team, but it nearly earned her a court-martial. She told Early she didn’t care because she thought she had done the Lord’s work. That makes her good people in Early’s book.”
“Mine, too,” Myers said.
“Early pulled a few strings and got her off the hook. In fact, he even got her promoted. But she resigned her commission right after that and took a research position with the University of Texas. That’s when I tried to hire her into my firm, but she turned me down. She’s a dyed-in-the-wool patriot and wanted to get back into government service.”
“Sounds like she’s the one,” Myers said.
“She won’t say no to Early.”
“Okay.”
“One more thing. Please tell me that Jackson didn’t turn off DAS.”
“You’d have to speak with him about that.”
“He needs to get Stellar Wind rolling, too, if it isn’t already. And we can’t keep pointing both of them in just one direction, if you catch my drift.”
“Stellar Wind?” She wasn’t expecting that. The libertarian in her struggled with the idea of using warrantless antiterror search technology on her fellow citizens, even the rotten ones.
“Dillinger said he robbed banks because that’s where the money was. A lot of the bad guys you’ll be hunting are running around up here.”
“You’re right. Still…”
“Something else bothering you?” Pearce asked.
“It’s ‘Big Brother’ technology. I just hate the idea of the government knowing everything there is to know about everybody.”
“You’ll hate not knowing where your targets are even more.”
“I’ll tell Mike I’m authorizing Stellar Wind. Thanks again for your help. Your country owes you a great debt.”
“Yeah, it does. Early still hasn’t cut me a check for the last job. So, how about that favor?”
Myers was caught between a rock and a hard place. She wanted to help her friend, but the nation came first. “How about a compromise? I can’t redeploy any of our intelligence assets away from our search, but I can give your people full access to everything we generate in the data stream. Will that work for now?”
“I’ll take what I can get. Thanks.”
“But it’ll cost you,” Myers said.
“Why am I not surprised?”
“I need you to talk to somebody for me.”
Myers posted Cruzalta’s name and address to Pearce.
Pearce read it. “In person, I take it?”
“I’ve found that face-to-face is always more effective.”
“I’m not so sure about that.”
She smiled coyly. “It worked on you, didn’t it?”
Pearce remembered his first meeting with Myers with a grin. “Apparently.”
She turned serious. “Just be sure you realize that without him, we can’t move forward.”
Pearce’s grin faded. “Yes, I believe I do.”
“Good. Because we’re totally FUBAR if you drop the ball on this.”
36
Boca de Tomatlan, Mexico
Just a quarter mile north of the sleepy little bay village was an open-air bar called El Pirata Libre. It perched on a collection of steps on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean, its various palm-frond roofs jutting up at sharp angles. The place felt more Polynesian than Mexican despite the stone floors and round tiled tables. It was a favorite haunt of Canadian snowbirds and retired Americans who crowded the place every sunset to say good-bye to the great golden disc as it plunged into the sea. Cruzalta liked it because the booze was cheap and strong, and the endless tracks of Jimmy Buffett music were loud enough to drown out the mindless conversations taking place all around him. A perfect place for a middle-aged man to hide in plain sight.
Cruzalta wore the same gaudy tropical shirt, cargo shorts, and flip-flops that every other
Cruzalta stood at the far rail on the lowest level of the bar nearest the ocean, drink in hand, staring out at the purpling sky, the setting sun half submerged on the far horizon.
“Colonel Cruzalta, a word, please,” whispered in his ear.
Cruzalta’s first instinct was to reach for the pistol in his concealed holster, but the voice in his ear was distinctly American and he felt neither the point of a blade nor the blunt edge of a pistol barrel in his back.
“Why not?” Cruzalta said.
Cruzalta turned around. He didn’t recognize the fortysomething-year-old man standing in front of him, but he had the poise of a fighter in repose, completely relaxed and yet able to strike at the blink of an eye. There was a fierce, welcoming intelligence behind the man’s clear blue eyes as well.
“You must be Pearce,” Cruzalta said. “You travel fast. I wasn’t expecting you until tomorrow.”
“My pilot has a lead foot,” Pearce said. He was referring to Judy Hopper, of course. She’d flown Pearce down in the company HondaJet and was getting the plane refueled at that very moment. “What’s good to drink here?”
Cruzalta held up his whiskey glass. “Anything without an umbrella. Follow me.”
Cruzalta slipped into the gray-haired crowd, brushing past the wide asses and veiny legs peeking out of too-short shorts. They made their way to the bar at the top level and ordered a couple of Johnnie Walker Blacks.
“Cheers,” Cruzalta said as he clinked glasses with Pearce. They both tossed back their drinks.
“Another round,” Cruzalta barked in Spanish to the barkeep. Two more were set up. Two more tossed down.
“You’re the man who took out our friend Castillo, aren’t you?” Cruzalta asked.
“Me and my team.”
“Impressive. You did more in one day against Castillo than I was able to do in twenty years. I just wish you’d done it earlier.” Cruzalta picked up a third whiskey and knocked it back. Pearce didn’t touch his.
“You tired of feeling sorry for yourself, Colonel?”
Cruzalta’s face hardened. “How would you feel if it was your soldiers who were burned to death?”
“For what it’s worth, I think you ran the operation as well as could have been expected, given your orders.”
“I did what I was told to do. That was my error. A good commander takes initiative. I should have disobeyed my orders. Taken more precautions.”
“Soldiers are supposed to obey orders. Your reward was to be treated dishonorably. But then again, what else should one expect from a dishonorable man like Barraza?”
Cruzalta cursed. “Politicians. They’re all the same, no?”
“I used to think they were. But I’ve recently learned that a few are capable of doing the right thing for the right reasons.”