CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
Saturday. Light rain today and showers forecast for Sunday. Good weather to kill a Libyan terrorist.
I called for my government vehicle at 10 A.M., and visited Kate at Bellevue.
She seemed in a good mood, knowing she'd be out soon.
I asked her, 'Is Tom okay with you leaving?'
'He is,' she informed me, 'as long as I go to my parents' place.'
'Okay. Does he know that you want me to go with you?'
'Yes. He's fine with that.'
That was a surprise, and I asked, 'Are you sure?'
'Yes. I convinced him that you shouldn't be doing what you're doing.'
'I like doing what I'm doing.'
'Well, I don't.' She informed me, 'I had a very frank talk with Tom-a tough talk. And I told him that, one, he couldn't keep me here against my will, and two, Washington might not approve of him using you-a contract agent- as live bait to trap a terrorist. If something happened to you-'
'Hold on. I volunteered for this.'
'I didn't. And you never consulted me.'
I seem to remember my life and job being simpler before I got married-both times.
She also informed me, 'Tom doesn't believe this is working anyway, and it's taking a lot of manpower and resources that could be better used elsewhere to find Khalil.' And then the clincher. 'In fact, if something happened someplace in the city, and it came out that half the surveillance teams were watching our apartment and following you around, Tom would have a lot of explaining to do in Washington.' She also informed me, 'Tom would like us- including you-out of here and on a plane to Minneapolis on Monday.'
Kate is a smart lady, and she knew how to play Tom Walsh better than I did. In fact, I was sure that Walsh would rather have his FBI agents kill or capture Asad Khalil so he didn't have to pose for photos with me.
Kate said, 'Don't sulk.' She assured me, 'I'm doing this for us.'
'Well… I'm touched… but this is not the old gung-ho Special Agent Mayfield I used to know.'
She replied, 'John… I just had a near-death experience. That changes a person.'
'Yeah… I nearly bled to death myself once. But I got over it.'
She took my hand and said, 'If you love me, you won't want to put yourself in danger-'
'Of course I love you. But I don't want us looking over our shoulders for the rest of our lives.'
'John, there are hundreds of people, here and around the world, who are now looking for Asad Khalil. They will find him without your help.'
Kate was apparently having a weak moment; it happens. But knowing Kate, it wouldn't last long. After two days with her mother, she'd be back in New York kicking down doors in Bay Ridge.
She informed me, 'We are booked on a Monday night flight to Minneapolis.' And more bad news. 'I also called your parents and told them we'd be visiting them in Florida, right after our visit to my parents.' She instructed me, 'Plan to be gone for two months. We're on administrative leave.'
'Two… months. With your parents and mine?'
'Isn't that wonderful?'
'Can I borrow your gun?'
She took my hand again, looked at me, and said, 'You've become obsessed with this, and that's not healthy. You need to get away from here.'
I didn't reply.
She said, 'I'd like to leave tomorrow, but the doctors won't let me travel until Monday, so Tom wants me to stay in the hospital until then. He feels I'm safer here, and he doesn't want me back in the apartment. The staff and the neighbors could see me, and that could leak out to the wrong people, who think I'm dead.'
'Right.' Plus, Tom didn't want me deprogramming her. I think it's called divide and conquer. Tom is an asshole.
Kate made sure I understood all this and said, 'It's a done deal. In fact, it's an order, Detective.' She switched to the honey trap. 'John, I love you. You saved my life, and this is how I'm repaying you.'
I must have missed a link in that chain of logic. I needed to speak to Walsh, and also Paresi, but in the meantime, I said, 'Okay. Monday to Indianapolis.'
'Minneapolis.'
'Right. Okay, I have to go.'
'You have no place to go. Stay for lunch.' She smiled and said, 'The dessert today is early release dates.'
She must have been thinking about that all morning. I smiled, but I guess it wasn't a sincere smile because she said, 'Be happy, John.' She assured me, 'You'll be a new man in a week.'
I kind of liked the man I was, even if nobody else did.
So it was a long afternoon in the hospital room, but I managed to look happy and share Kate's happiness.
Before I left, Kate said to me, 'I feel so much better knowing you won't be out tonight.'
'Me too.'
'And before we leave, you will call Tom and tell him about Boris.'
'Yes, ma'am.'
'And make sure you're all packed Monday morning so we have time.'
'For? Oh… yeah. Yeah.' Finally, a plan I could approve of.
'See you tonight.'
We kissed and I left.
Well, I had less than forty-eight hours before I was on my way into exile. I might have one, maybe two plays left before then.
Or I wasn't fully appreciating the fact that I'd been boxed in by the boss and the wife-the perfect one-two punch. This sucked.
Back in my apartment, I called Paresi to bitch about this turn of events, and to see if he'd go to bat for me. But my call went into his voice mail, so I left a message that was a nice balance of professional concern and personal disappointment. Plus, I threw in a few unspecified threats and ominous predictions of disaster. That usually gets the bosses rethinking what's best for the case, and what's best for themselves.
I then called Tom Walsh, but it was Saturday and apparently Tom wasn't taking business calls-not mine, anyway. I left a message that addressed his concerns, and I made a convincing argument for continuing the operation, or at the very least letting me back into the office to work the case. I was doing pretty well until I said, 'And I'd appreciate it in the future if you'd speak to me before you spoke to my wife.' I didn't want to end on a sour note, so I said, 'Give me a call, and we can discuss this, man to man, instead of you going behind my back-' Whoops. 'Call me.'
I hung up.
I would have told him about Boris if he'd taken the call, and if he agreed with me that I needed to stay here, on the case. In any event, I'd tell him Tuesday, when Boris's time was up to see if Khalil tried to whack him. Unfortunately, I might be making that call to Tom from a cow pasture.
As I was getting ready for my evening visit to Bellevue, my house phone rang, and the Caller ID said 'Blocked.'
No one on the ATTF, including Paresi and Walsh, would normally call that number, and Kate's new cell phone wouldn't say 'Blocked.' So maybe it was my parents. Or hers. But they never came up 'Blocked'-they came up 'Nuisance Call.'
Well, the best way to find out… I answered and said, 'Corey.'
Silence. I knew who it was.
A voice with an accent said, 'It is me.'
I didn't reply.
'Mr. Corey? It is Asad Khalil.'
I replied in an even tone, 'I've been expecting your call.'