There was a couple of hours’ hiatus. Food was eaten, email checked. Then Seamus spun his laptop around. It was playing a video window: a reasonably high-definition feed from a small, windowless, brightly lit room. A man, stripped to the waist, was sitting in a wooden chair, hands behind him as if cuffed. His features were Malay/Filipino, but he had been growing a scruffy beard. One eye was closed off by a huge shiner, and at the places where bony ridges had once sat close beneath the skin, butterfly bandages were straining to hold lacerations closed. The swelling extended down toward his chin, and she wondered whether his jaw might have been broken. He was mumbling in some language that Olivia didn’t recognize.
One of Seamus’s men, whom she had previously pegged as Hispanic, scooted closer, plugged in a pair of large, expensive-looking headphones, and leaned forward to listen. After a few moments, he began to rattle off sentence fragments in English: “It’s like I said before … honest to God … I’ll tell you anything you want to hear, you know this now … but you want the truth, don’t you? The truth is we didn’t see him. Didn’t hear anything until a few days ago. Then we got word … send out emails, you know. They could be anything, just random.”
Seamus explained, “According to the analysts at Langley, that laptop was used to send out a bunch of junk emails starting a few days ago.”
“Like spam?” someone asked.
“They were just cutting and pasting random scraps of text from instruction manuals, encrypting it, sending it out. Trying to create the illusion of traffic. False chatter.” Seamus swiveled his eyes to look at Olivia. Then he made a little jerk of his head toward the door. She got up, headed for the exit, and he followed in her wake, all the way to her quarters.
“This is not about fucking, I assume?” she asked.
He rolled his eyes. “No, I’m in a completely different state of mind now; I regret what I said earlier.”
“Very well,” she said levelly.
“Though that is a cute haircut.”
This was certainly an attempt to bait her, and so she remained silent and, she hoped, inscrutable.
“What I really wanted to tell you was that … you’ve got what you came here for,” Seamus said.
“What did I come here for, do you imagine?”
“Evidence to support the theory you really believe.”
“Which is?”
“You’re asking me?”
“I thought I would get your opinion,” Olivia said, “before showing my hand.”
He stuck his tongue in his cheek and thought about it.
“It’s not poker,” she said. “There’s no disadvantage in your telling me what you think. We’re both trying to get the same rat bastard.”
“If Jones had something as awesome as a bizjet,” Seamus said, “would he use it to scurry like a mouse back into the nearest hole? I think not.”
“He’d do something really cool, like fly it into a building,” Olivia said, nodding.
Seamus held up one admonishing finger. “Oh, no,” he said, “because that would involve dying, wouldn’t it?”
“I suppose very likely, yes.”
“And he doesn’t want to die.”
“For a man who doesn’t want to die, he puts himself in some quite dodgy situations,” she pointed out.
“Oh, I think he’s conflicted,” Seamus said. “Someday he’s going to be a martyr. Someday. This is what he keeps telling himself. Then he looks around himself, at the wack jobs and goat fuckers he has to work with, and he sees how much more he has to offer the movement by staying alive. Putting his expertise to work, his languages, his ability to blend in. And so the day of martyrdom keeps getting postponed.”
“Convenient for him, that.”
Seamus grinned and shrugged. “I actually don’t know whether the man is a coward, or really trying to use his skills in the most productive way by staying alive. I’d love to ask him that someday. Before sticking a knife into his belly.”
“So. He didn’t come here. He didn’t crash it into a building. He didn’t get caught. Where’d he go?”
“All of his instincts,” Seamus said, “would move him in the direction of the United States.”
THEY SPENT THE rest of the day writing reports to their respective higher-ups. The next morning, Seamus and Olivia flew back to Manila. Seamus had business there at the U.S. embassy, and Olivia needed to make arrangements to fly home. The route back to Olivia’s hotel was almost a perfect reversal of the trip out, complete with the sweaty hike across the city to get around traffic. They reached the hotel at 10:12 A.M. and the hotel bar at 10:13, and after dutifully gulping down glasses of water for technical rehydration purposes, they moved on to alcohol.
“You can’t tell me that bizjet doesn’t have enough fuel to reach the States,” Seamus said.
She twiddled her hand in the air. “Northern tier,” she said.
“Bang! Mall of America,” Seamus proposed, reenacting the dive and crash with the hand that wasn’t holding a drink.
“Northwest corner much more likely,” she said. “Seattle, of course.”
“Bye-bye, Space Needle.”
“But the Space Needle’s still there, last time I checked. So if your theory is right—”
“My theory and yours, lady.”
“All right, all right. If our theory is right, he somehow got in without being picked up on radar and landed out in the middle of nowhere.”
“Do your analysts have any ideas as to how he could avoid radar?”
“Come in very low, of course,” Olivia said, “which burns fuel at an insane rate. Or else fly in formation with a passenger aircraft. Right under its belly.”
He held his hands up. “Why is that so difficult? Why is it so hard to get people to believe that Jones could do something like that?”
“Occam’s razor,” she said. “The Mindanao theory had fewer moving parts. So it has to be done away with before anything else can even be discussed.”