“Sorry I took so long getting back to you, but this is the most incredible maritime puzzle I’ve ever seen. For thirty years somebody has been playing musical chairs with ships like you wouldn’t believe.”
“Try me.”
“First, let me ask you a question,” said Perl mutter. “The name on the stern of the ship you found in Alaska?”
“The
“Were the painted letters framed by welded beading?”
Pitt thought back. “As I recall it was faded paint. The raised edges must have been ground away.”
Perlmutter uttered a heavy sigh of relief over the phone. “I was hoping you’d say that.”
“Why?”
“Your suspicions are confirmed. The
“Damn!” Pitt said, suddenly excited. “How’d you make the link?”
“By discovering what happened to the genuine
“What did he say?” Pitt asked impatiently.
“He recalled in great detail when he was in charge of the crew who converted the
“But the shipyard records?”
“Obviously falsified by the shipyard owners, who, by the way, happened to be our old friends the Sosan Trading Company. The foreman also remembered breaking up the original
“Where does the
“She was a legitimate purchase by Sosan Trading. You may be interested to know the International Maritime Crime Center has her listed with ten suspected customs violations. A hell of a high number. It’s thought she smuggled everything from plutonium to Libya, rebel arms to Argentina, secret American technology to Russia, you name it. She sailed under a smart bunch of operators. The violations were never proven. On five occasions she was known to have left port with clandestine cargo but was never caught unloading it. When her hull and engines finally wore out, she was conveniently scrapped and all records destroyed.”
“But why claim her as sunk if it was really the
“Because questions might be raised regarding the
Pitt glanced down at his toes and wiggled them. “Did the old foreman talk about other ship conversions for Sosan Trading?”
“He mentioned two, a tanker and a container ship,” Perlmutter answered. “But they were both refits and not conversions. Their new names were the
“What were their former names?”
“According to my friend’s report, the foreman claimed that all previous identification had been removed.”
“Looks like somebody built themselves a fleet out of hijacked ships.”
“A cheap and dirty way of doing business.”
“Anything new on the parent company?” Pitt asked.
“Still a closed door,” Perlmutter replied. “The foreman did say, however, some big shot used to show up to inspect the ships when they were completed and ready to sail.”
Pitt stood up. “What else?”
“That’s about it.”
“There has to be something, a physical description, a name, something.”
“Wait a minute while I check through the report again.”
Pitt could hear the rustle of papers and Perlmutter mumbling to himself. “Okay, here it is. ‘The VIP always arrived in a big black limousine.’ No make mentioned. ‘He was tall for a Korean—’ “
“Korean?”
“That’s what it says,” replied Perlmutter. “ ‘And he spoke Korean with an American accent.’ “
The shadowed figure in Pitt’s dream moved a step closer. “St. Julien, you do good work.”
“Sorry I couldn’t take it all the way.”
“You bought us a first down.”
“Nail the bastard, Dirk.”
“I intend to.”
“If you need me, I’m more than willing.”
“Thank you, St. Julien.”
Pitt walked to the closet, threw on a brief kimono and knotted the sash. Then he padded into the kitchen, treated himself to a glass of guava juice laced with dark rum and dialed a number on the phone.
After several rings an indifferent voice answered: “Yeah?”
“Hiram, crank up your computer. I’ve got a new problem for you.”
38
The tension was like a twisting knot in the pit of Suvorov’s stomach. For most of the evening he had sat in the monitoring room making small talk with the two psychologists who manned the telemetry equipment, telling jokes and bringing them coffee from the kitchen. They failed to notice that Suvorov’s eyes seldom strayed from the digital clock on one wall.
Lugovoy entered the room at 11:20 P.M. and made his routine examination of the analogous data on the President. At 11:38 he turned to Suvorov. “Join me in a glass of port, Captain?”
“Not tonight,” Suvorov said, making a pained face. “I have a heavy case of indigestion. I’ll settle for a glass of milk later.”
“As you wish,” Lugovoy said agreeably. “See you at breakfast.”
Ten minutes after Lugovoy left, Suvorov noticed a small movement on one of the TV monitors. It was almost imperceptible at first, but then it was caught by one of the psychologists.
“What in hell!” he gasped.
“Something wrong?” asked the other.
“Senator Larimer — he’s waking up.”
“Can’t be.”
“I don’t see anything,” said Suvorov, moving closer.
“His alpha activity is a clear nine-to-ten-cycle-per-second set of waves that shouldn’t be there if he was in his programmed sleep stage.”
“Vice President Margolin’s waves are increasing too.”
“We’d better call Dr. Lugovoy—”