Beirut
Staring at Camille, Tanner felt the final pieces of the puzzle fall into place.
For a moment, he felt disconnected from what was happening, as though he were watching a scene from a movie. In the next instant, he felt a rush of emotion: anger, betrayal, and happiness. Get ahold of yourself, he commanded.
Camille was staring back at him. In the dim light he could see her eyes were wet, but there was something else there, too: anger. He suddenly realized she was feeling the same things as he. They had trusted but not quite trusted one another.
He could think of nothing to say. “It wasn’t you,” he finally whispered.
“Pardon me?”
“The wig. It just wasn’t you.”
They spent an awkward ten minutes waiting for room service to bring up breakfast, and then, glad to have something to busy themselves with, they sat and ate.
To the southeast, a dozen pillars of smoke rose into the sky, each representing a bomb or a mortar round that had found its mark the night before. In contrast to the carnage, the ocean was an unruffled blue, and sky clear save a few cotton puff clouds.
Finally Tanner said, “So, how are we going to handle this?”
“What?”
“This. Us.”
She shrugged and averted her eyes.
Like a little girl whose feelings are hurt, Briggs thought. He set down his coffee cup. “Damn it, Camille, you lied—” He stopped himself. And you lied to her. Did he really expect her to have admitted she was a Mossad katsa?
“Lied to you?” she said. “Yes. Does that really surprise you?”
“Forget it.”
“You’re angry.”
“Yes.”
“Well, so am I! Briggs, you have to understand. I can’t tell you—”
“I know who and what you are, Camille, and I know why you’re here. We asked for your help, and you want to know why. Why you, though?”
“You think it’s because of you and me?”
“I’d be stupid not to.”
“The answer is no,” she said. “I’ve been here for almost a month.”
“Why?”
She waved her hand at the city. “That. We got caught unaware in eighty-two, and we learned our lesson.”
“And Asseal?”
“I learned about him four days ago. Given his tastes and my cover, I was the obvious choice. I didn’t know you were here until last night when I saw you on the street. My people have no idea it’s you.”
“But they do know about Japan.”
“Yes.”
Tanner went silent. He’d been wrong about her in Japan. Was now any different? He felt like a fool and couldn’t decide if it was because she’d duped him or because he’d opened himself up to her. “Tell me about Japan,” he said.
“I was on vacation, Briggs. They do allow that, you know—”
Tanner chuckled without humor. “I’ll give them this: They trained you well.”
“What do you want from me! We met, we had an affair, and we parted. Briggs, I cared … I care … very much for you. Why are you doing this?”
“Okay. If this is how you want it. Do you remember Umako Ohira?”
“The man we saw killed? What about—?”
“It must’ve been a big surprise to see him jumping over the fence like that. And then when he was gunned down … I’ll bet it put a real damper on your plans.”
“What?”
“When you tried to recruit him, did you know he was already working for us?”
Camille blinked hard. She toyed with her napkin.
“The night he died, Ohira had two meetings,” Tanner continued. “The first was at the shipyard, the second with an unidentified agent who was trying to recruit him. A false flag, in fact … a Mossad specialty.”
“What do you want me to say?”
Good question; he had no idea. He decided it didn’t matter. He had a job to do, but he couldn’t simply dismiss her. As the saying went, the town wasn’t big enough for the both of them.
She asked, “Briggs, aren’t you wondering why I came here?”
“I assumed—”
“That I was here to find out why you’re in Beirut. I could have done that by following you. Do you think I am naive enough to believe you would jump into bed with me and spill the potatoes?”
“Beans.”
“What?”
“Spill the beans.”
“You understand my meaning.”
It was true, Tanner realized. She could have accomplished more by watching from a distance. What would Mossad do if they knew about her coming to him? “So why, then?” he said.
“I came for you,” Camille replied. Her eyes glistened. “It’s stupid. I think about what I’m doing … about what they’d do to me … and I don’t care.” Tears trickled down her cheeks. “Please, Briggs, can’t we just—”
“Camille—”
“Don’t you understand? None of this matters. Tell me to leave and stay away, and I will. But please, can’t we …” She trailed off.
Suddenly Tanner realized he believed her; he believed all of it. God help me, he thought. He opened his arms. “Come here.”
They made love for the better part of the morning, and it felt like Japan all over again. They laughed and reminisced and never said a word about what was happening outside their door. Just before ten, they got up and showered together. When they emerged, they were wrinkled and breathless with laughter.
“If every shower was like that one, I would never leave the house,” Camille said. “I’m surprised the hot water lasted. Oh, I’m starving. Let’s have a giant, unhealthy breakfast, then go back to bed.”
He ordered a breakfast of eggs, toast, date muffins, fresh fruit, and a pot of coffee. They were about to start eating when there came a knock on the door. Tanner picked up the Glock, tucked it against his leg, and walked to the door. “Aiwa? Shoo fi?”
“It is I, effendi.”
Safir. Tanner opened the door.
“Good morning, effendi, I—” Safir saw Camille, then grinned at Tanner. “Oh. Oh, you scoundrel.”
Briggs smiled. “What is it?”
He handed Tanner a morning newspaper. The English headline read:
SHUTE MULAH SLAIN
“Give me the gist of it,” Tanner said.
“Hamdi was a leader in the Shiite community, especially in neighborhoods near the airport. Last night as he was leaving his mosque, a group of nine men ambushed his car with RPGs. He and all his bodyguards were killed.”
“Has anyone claimed responsibility?”
“Three so far, but I did some checking. There were eyewitnesses who swore the attackers shouted a name: the Arab Liberation Command.”
The Arab Liberation Command? The ALC was pro-Iraq. Though it wouldn’t be unusual for them to attack Shiites, they hadn’t been active in Lebanon for five or six years.
“Amal and some other splinter groups are swearing vengeance,” Safir said.
“No surprise there.” Tanner lowered his voice: “What about the warehouse?”
“Nothing. I’ll have Sadiq watch until dusk; I do not think anything will happen until then.”
“I agree. Can you find out more about this attack?”
“I will look into it.” Safir peeked over Tanner’s shoulder and grinned. “I will leave you to your breakfast.”
As Briggs returned to the table, Camille asked, “A friend?”
“He’s not involved, Camille.”
“I was just asking,” she replied with smile.
They were halfway through breakfast when Tanner’s cell phone pager went off. He retrieved it, read the display, and cleared it.
Camille smiled at him over her cup.
“Business,” he said.
“I didn’t say a word.”
They parted ways and agreed to meet later that afternoon. Neither asked what the other had planned, but Tanner was under no illusions: The issue would have to be settled sooner or later. He had no idea how, though.
Once satisfied he wasn’t being followed, he spent fifteen minutes looking for a working phone booth. When the overseas operator answered, he gave the account number of a sanitized credit card. After two minutes, the line started ringing.
“Hello,” said Leland Dutcher.
“It’s me. I got your page.”
Whether from his distrust of Stucky or his habit of always having a backup plan, Dutcher had arranged a secure means of communication separate from that of Langley’s. “Good to hear your voice,” Dutcher said.
“You, too.”
“Tell me how you’re doing.”
“I called the branch office; the phones are working fine. As for finding a manufacturer, I’m still looking, but I’ve found a good middleman.”
Behind the padded language was the same message he had forwarded to Stucky the previous day: He hadn’t yet found Azhar, but the fly had been taken, and Tanner was tracking him.
“Good,” said Dutcher. “There’s something else, Briggs. It’s about Ian. His hiking trip. There was a storm, and he and his group got lost They’re looking, but it doesn’t look good.”
Tanner felt his heart lurch. He leaned his head against the booth’s wall and closed his eyes.
“Briggs, you there?”
“I’m here. What happened?”
“We don’t know yet. There might even be something in the papers.”
Papers? What could have gone so wrong that the mission would fall into the public eye? “Have you told Maggie?” Tanner asked.
“I’m driving over this afternoon. Briggs, if it’s true, you’re going to have to take over his share of the business.”
The message was clean Tsumago was on her way. There would be no further boarding attempts. “I understand.”
Tel Aviv
Stucky had in fact received Tanner’s last message. He’d lain awake staring at it. By dawn, he made his decision. He was considering the angles when the message from Langley arrived: The boarding had failed. Hostages were involved. Tsumago would enter the Mediterranean within twenty-four hours.
It was just the incentive he needed. The plan would work, he decided. And if not, he’d be covered. In a lot of ways, Stucky thought, this had been over a decade in the making. Time to pay the piper, Briggs ol’ buddy.
He burned Tanner’s message in the ashtray, flushed the remains down the toilet, then retrieved a onetime decoding pad and started working. Once done, he checked and re-checked the message until satisfied it would bear scrutiny, then picked up the phone and dialed Avi Haron’s private number.
“Haron, here.”
“It’s Stucky. I need to see you. It’s urgent.”
Haron sent his private car, and soon Stucky was sitting in his office. Stucky explained the situation. The Shin Bet man was first astonished then alarmed. Was Stucky sure of his information? Yes. Did he realize what he was proposing? Yes again. “Listen, Avi, I don’t like doing this. It makes me sick. But if the worst happens …”
“This is unusual, Art. I will forward the information—”
“No. I want to see Sherabi myself. This is my ass on the line. I want some assurances. Either I see him personally, or the deal’s off.”
An hour after Haron placed his call, he and Stucky arrived at the Mossad director’s private home north of the city. The Spanish-style house was surrounded by a high stone wall. Haron and Stucky were cleared through the gate by a guard from Mossad’s internal security branch, then they were met at the front door by another guard who led them into Sherabi’s study.
Sherabi shook Stucky’s hand and gestured him to an overstuffed leather chair. One glance at Stucky’s heavily veined nose and nicotine-yellow fingers told Sherabi what the CIA man did with his leisure time. Another Aldrich Ames, he thought. But then, even bullies and drunks have their uses.
“Avi tells me you have some concerns,” Sherabi said. “First, tell me: Why haven’t you taken this to your people?”
“I have. They won’t listen. If this were any other operation, I might overlook it, but too much is at stake. I can’t just sit by and let it happen.”
“But you are a division chief. Certainly you have access to your DDO.”
“He overruled me. The problem is, they don’t see the danger. The man in question is someone I’ve worked with. I know him. We were even friends, once.” Stucky paused and shook his head sadly. “That’s what makes this so hard.”
“I see. Tell me.”
“I should back up and start at the beginning. You know we have an operative in Beirut who’s trying to track a man … Hossein Asseal.”
“Yes.”
“What reason did my people give you?”
“To recover a missing agent.”
“That’s a lie,” said Stucky. “Or at least a partial lie. The primary mission is to penetrate the group that took an agent of ours and identify its leadership. Through a conduit, we fed them a story that Asseal was in Beirut to locate the group’s second-in-command.”
“Hoping they would kidnap Asseal and lead your man to them.”
“Right.”
Sherabi was impressed. He hadn’t thought Dick Mason capable of such ruthlessness. As he’d suspected, the CIA was not going to all this trouble to simply recover an agent. “Go on.”
“As we speak, a ship is en route to your country. Aboard her is the group’s second-in-command, about three dozen terrorists, and a cargo. I don’t know what it is, but my government is very concerned.”
“Where is this ship?”
“It’ll enter the Mediterranean tonight Three or four days after that, it should be off your coast”
Good lord, Sherabi thought. No wonder Mason was in such a hurry. But why hadn’t they shared this information? Only one answer made sense: The CIA had known about the ship, failed to act, and was now scrambling to cover itself.
“And you know nothing about this cargo? Or the terrorists’ intentions?”
“No.”
“Why bring this to us? Why take the risk? Your people would consider it an act of treason.”
“Believe me, I know that. I’ve watched your country fight for survival all my adult life. You’re surrounded by neighbors sworn to destroy you. And now, because somebody hasn’t got the balls to do the right thing, you’re staring down the barrel of a gun.” Stucky shook his head. “I can’t sit still and let it happen.”
Stucky had just verbalized the thoughts of the average Israeli citizen and soldier. The never-ending fight for survival was a heritage with which they all lived. “We’re grateful you’ve brought this to our attention,” Sherabi said. “We’ll consider—”
“There might be a way to handle the situation.”
“I’m listening.”
“The man we sent into Beirut is familiar with the leader of the group. They’re close friends, in fact … almost family as I understand it.”
“Pardon me?”
“Langley thought it would give him an advantage. I disagreed. I thought it would cloud his judgment. I kept my mouth shut. Unfortunately, it looks like I was right. Here.”
Sherabi took the slip of paper and read it.
TARGET TAKEN. UNABLE TO TRACK DUE TO GPS MALFUNCTION. WILL ATTEMPT TO TRACK BY ALTERNATIVE MEANS.
“That’s his most recent transmission,” Stucky said.
“And?” replied Sherabi.
“I ran a system test on the GPS link. It’s working perfectly.”
“You believe he is lying.”
“I think it’s worse than that I think he has no intention of doing the job.”
Sherabi suddenly understood where Stucky was going. The CIA man had a personal agenda. They were in very dangerous territory now, Sherabi knew. Was it worth the risk to have a CIA division chief in their pocket?
He shrugged. “I’m sorry to hear that However, I don’t see how it affects us.” Sherabi saw a flicker of frustration on Stucky’s face. Anxious boy.
“Don’t you get it? We’ve got a golden opportunity.”
“Speak plainly, Mr. Stucky. What are you suggesting?”
“He’s in place; he has the access. I say we use him.”