Yousef’s annoyance had grown to epic proportions by the time he reached the Royal Empire Hotel. Dante Payne had called three times, demanding progress reports. The slur in his voice was quite distinct on the third call, and Yousef suspected he was taking out his impatience on the bar in his limousine.
Then he called the Royal Empire Hotel and asked the operator to connect him with Amy Sparrow’s room. The operator had reported that no such guest existed. Yousef hadn’t really expected pinpointing the woman to be easy, but it would have been nice for something to be simple for a change.
The fact that Yousef couldn’t get Reagan on the phone annoyed him most of all. He had explicitly ordered the Chechen to stand down until Yousef had arrived.
I am surrounded by idiots.
Yousef entered the hotel with two of Payne’s flunkies. As foot soldiers, they were third rate but better than nothing. He told one to station himself in the lobby and keep an eye on who got on and off of the elevator. Sparrow and his woman were in this hotel somewhere. Yousef could feel it.
He told Payne’s other flunky to follow him.
They looked for the hotel manager in his office, but he wasn’t there. They found a door marked security and entered.
Two men were there. They sat in swivel chairs looking at monitors that showed various locations around the hotel and convention center. The men swiveled around to look at Yousef. One was a black man in a sports coat, the coat of arms of the hotel over the pocket. The other wore a khaki security guard’s uniform.
The security guard rose casually from his chair. “I’m sorry, gentlemen, but this is a restricted area.”
Yousef motioned to Payne’s flunky.
The flunky pulled a knife from his belt, stepped forward, and brought it up hard under the security guard’s rib cage. The guard went stiff a moment and then fell forward. The flunky stepped out of the way and let the man fall.
The other one stood abruptly.
Yousef drew his pistol. “I don’t think so.”
The man froze.
“You are the manager?” Yousef asked.
“I’m Larry Meadows, the manager, yes,” he said. “Whatever the problem is I’m sure we can work it out without anyone else getting hurt.”
Yousef gave the manager credit. Upon first glance, he seemed competent and unflustered.
“I certainly hope so, Mr. Meadows,” Yousef said. “You have an unregistered guest in your hotel. I need to find Amy Sparrow, and I’m in a bit of a hurry.”
“I assure you, all guests are registered,” Larry said. “If she’s not in the computer then she’s not here.”
Yousef gave the flunky a short nod, and he punched Larry hard in the stomach. Larry grunted and bent double. The flunky punched him again across the jaw, and Larry went to the floor.
Yousef knelt and frisked the manager, found his wallet and stood again.
“This doesn’t get any better for you,” Yousef said. “We want the Sparrow woman.”
“I … I don’t know who that is,” Larry said from the floor. He made no attempt to get up. “We have hundreds of guests. I have no idea who you’re talking about.”
Yousef nodded, and the flunky kicked the manager in the face. He spit blood.
The flunky drew the knife again. “I could take a thumb. That usually does it.”
“I’m confident you could wear him down eventually,” Yousef said. “But we are pressed for time, and I sense Mr. Meadows is made of sterner stuff than the average hotel manager.”
Yousef squatted next to the manager. “Look at me, Mr. Meadows.”
Larry didn’t move his head, but his eyes shifted up to Yousef.
Yousef held up the wallet so Larry could see it. “Do you know what this is, Mr. Meadows?”
“My wallet.”
“It was your wallet,” Yousef said. “In my hands, it has become an instant interrogation kit. Everything I need to get what I desire is contained within.” He opened the wallet and took out the driver’s license. “This has your address. Now I can visit your home if I wish.” He took out a picture of a handsome woman and showed it to Larry. “Is this your wife?”
Larry said nothing.
“I will presume she is.” Yousef removed another picture from the wallet, a young boy, maybe nine years old. “And this good-looking young man is your son.”
Yousef let the silence hang a moment.
He bent his head lower so he could speak softly right into Larry’s ear. “Now, I’m going to ask you some questions. I want you to think very carefully before you answer. Your answers should be as complete and as detailed as possible. I’m asking for an attitude adjustment, really. You should want to help me. You should be trying hard to think of anything you can tell me that I would find helpful. All the time, consider this. Anything that I or my associate are willing to do to you, we are more than willing to do to your wife and son. More, frankly. I assure you we would take our time to do things properly.”
The fear in Larry Meadows’s eyes told Yousef that the hotel manager would now be more receptive to his questions.
Yousef cleared his throat. “So. Amy Sparrow.”
* * *
David didn’t like the idea of stepping off the elevator into a busy lobby. Payne and Haddad had probably noticed by now that one of their men had gone missing. Maybe they’d called in reinforcements. Maybe they’d be waiting for him. Maybe a hundred different things.
He got off the elevator on the second floor. No guest rooms here, instead a business center, a gym and spa, meeting rooms and more convention facilities. He stepped into a little alcove with an ATM to get out of sight. He had one more errand.
David took out the cell phone and dialed Charlie Finn.
“You shouldn’t go so long between calls,” Charlie said. “Mama worries.”
“Calvin Pope shot himself.”
“Fucking shit.”
“Charlie, I’m about to get to the end of this,” David said. “There’s no guarantee the good guys win this one. If you don’t hear from me by morning, I need a final favor.”
“Name it.”
David briefly related to Charlie what Pope had told him, focusing especially on the NSA’s and FBI’s interest in the matter. “You know the only thing I care about is my family. This isn’t about politics for me. But if I don’t make it, find somebody at the FBI and give them the flash drive. Do it anonymously and then step away. The ball will be in their court then.”
“You have my word, man,” Charlie said.
“Charlie.”
“Yeah?”
“Thanks for everything. You didn’t have to help me when I called, but you did.”
“Good luck, Major.”
David hung up and put the cell phone in his pocket. He checked his guns and spare magazines. He took a deep breath.
Go time.
* * *
Charlie felt a tightness in his gut after he hung up with David.
You didn’t help him enough. You could have done more.
Even as a cooler part of his brain realized this was nonsense, the rest of him couldn’t stop thinking he needed to do something better.
David had told him to contact somebody at the FBI. Maybe he could fulfill David’s request in a way that would be a little more helpful than a final posthumous favor.
He pulled up his electronic Rolodex and scrolled through the names. Charlie had been meticulous about maintaining the database and keeping it as current as possible. He marked some as deceased and others retired. He also made note if the person moved from one department to another.
Charlie hit one of the filters that only scanned FBI names. One stood out, somebody who’d recently retired but probably still had some juice back in Washington.
Maybe this person could put him in touch with somebody reasonable, an agent with a head on his shoulders not too eager to shoot first and ask questions later.
It was a start.