121
The rural house just off Mattaponi Reservation Circle backed up against heavily wooded Virginia countryside. Although the tribe claimed over four hundred members, the number of residents living on the hundred and fifty acres of reservation land that snuggled up against the Mattaponi river had shrunk to around seventy-five. Seventy-six if you counted Janet. Clad in the manner of the locals, with her dark hair, skin, and pregnant belly, few outsiders would have given her a second glance.
Tall Bear’s connections never ceased to amaze her. She had been accepted into the tiny community with a warmth and protectiveness beyond what she could have expected. And although she received more than a few questioning looks from the young ones, the stoic elders of the river people quickly squelched any open inquiries. Janet didn’t know what Tall Bear had told them, but they seemed to regard her with a respect reserved for heroes from the Indian nation’s proud past.
The location was exactly what she needed, an isolated community just on the northwestern side of West Point, Virginia, less than a three hours’ drive from D.C. She’d been given access to a high-speed Internet connection, provided food, fresh clothing, and a secure place to stay. The nine members of the tribal council had been unwilling to accept her thanks. Whatever they thought she was doing had been deemed worthy of their support. As far as they were concerned, that ended all discussion of the matter.
So, while the tribe went about their daily business, Janet returned to hers. Jack was out there somewhere within half a day’s drive from where she sat with her laptop. The first thing she needed was to let him know what she’d learned about the Colombian known as El Chupacabra. Next she needed to ask Jack for a meeting time and location to share her theory about the McFarland and Smythe kids.
Janet smiled to herself as she rubbed her abdomen. Jack’s child. What would he think when he saw her dark brown, round little body? It’d be worth the trip just to see the expression on his face. At least she hoped it would.
Pulling the Heckler & Koch 9mm Compact from the small holster strapped beneath her left arm, Janet set it on the table beside her laptop. Even after she finished posting her coded message to the Internet, it might be a long wait before Jack got back to her.
Might as well get comfortable.
122
President Gordon leaned back in his chair, feeling the even bulges in the burgundy leather press against his back. Pushing away from his desk, he glanced at the narrow grandfather clock that occupied the wall between the window and the large painting that hung immediately behind his desk.
10:36 p.m.
The White House Treaty Room had always been his favorite. He had to admit that his late predecessor’s interior decorator had hit a home run with the room’s simple elegance. The off-white walls and ceiling perfectly framed the dark furniture, and even the wildly colorful rug somehow added to the room’s comfortable feel. Its location next to the Yellow Oval Room on the second floor of the White House made it the perfect private office.
Hearing the distant rumble of thunder, President Gordon walked to the window that looked out across the Truman Balcony over the South Lawn. As a flash of lightning ripped the sky, he began a slow count. Six, seven, eight. The rumble was louder this time, only a mile and a half away. Fat raindrops spattered the room’s eastern window, although none carried beneath the overhang to strike the panes where he stood.
Sliding the latch, the president lifted the window, letting the damp, musty-smelling air fill his lungs. The Secret Service hated for him to stand by a window, much less open one. Didn’t matter. He was the boss and he’d do as he’d always done, exactly as he pleased.
Washington, D.C., rarely got thunderstorms this late in the year, November lending itself more to cold, foggy rain. Tomorrow some damn fool congressman would probably be on television claiming this was proof of global warming.
Gordon glanced up at President Grant’s portrait staring down at him, as if he were expecting something. Shit. The whole fucking world was expecting something.
The news out of Africa couldn’t have been better. Although there’d been some trouble with rioting at distribution centers that ran out of serum, the Marines had quelled the mobs with no loss of American life. And from every region where the nanite formula had been delivered, the effectiveness of the treatment stunned the world monitoring organizations.
Doctors Without Borders reported the complete eradication of HIV and AIDS in the injected populations. Not just AIDS. Every single known disease was being wiped out across Africa. There were even reports of late-stage Ebola virus infections being cured.
But such success had a price. Riots had broken out in countries that were not on the early distribution list. Despite the extensive US production program, the United Nations was up in arms over the limited quantities of serum currently available. They wanted nanites and they wanted them now. When the United States refused to publish the procedure for manufacturing the nanite serum, several countries established scientific programs to reverse engineer the formula by extracting blood from people who had received the injections or by stealing shipments of formula from the distribution centers.
The Russians and Chinese had gone so far as to threaten a military response if the United States failed to assist them in setting up their own production facilities, only backing down after President Gordon threatened to stop all serum shipments.
Not that everyone was thrilled with the worldwide distribution of nanites. Several Muslim leaders had issued a fatwa proclaiming that the serum was a product of Satan and that anyone using it was condemned, both in this life and the next.
Gordon shook his head. No virgins for them.
Numerous American Christian groups hadn’t been happy about the nanite serum either. Between the religious nuts and the right-wing conspiracy theorists, the Secret Service was so busy following up on presidential death threats that he couldn’t sneeze without five agents throwing their bodies on top of him.
The sound of the secure phone ringing brought the president out of his reverie. Returning to his chair, he lifted it to his ear.
“Yes?”
“Mr. President, this is Bob Adams.”
“Okay Bob, what’s wrong.” A call from his national security advisor this late at night was never good news.
“We’ve got a problem at Henderson House.”
“Go on.”
“Last night, a janitor without the appropriate clearance gained access to the underground levels and then escaped from the building. So far he’s managed to evade the special security teams sent out to collect him.”
“Why am I just now finding out about this?”
“Apparently, Dr. Frell felt the situation could be contained before he reported it.”
“That stupid bastard!”
“Unfortunately, it gets worse. The janitor was using a false identity.”
“How’d it pass security checks?”
“That’s just it. This was a very professional job, fake background investigation, the works. We still don’t know how he managed it. From items our team found in the hotel where he’s been living, we know who it was.”
“And?”
“And it was Freddy Hagerman. DNA samples from blood found on razor wire at Henderson House confirm it.”
George Gordon clenched his right fist so tightly that his fingernails dug into the skin of his palm, the small cuts healing before he could notice. The name left him cold. Freddy Hagerman. The fucking New York Times reporter who had broken the Priest Williams story.
“Listen to me, Bob. You know as well as I do what a public release of information on that program would do to us, to the country.” President Gordon paused. “I want this moved to absolute top priority. I don’t care what it takes; I want you to nail that son of a bitch before he can go public. You follow me?”
Bob Adams cleared his throat. “Yes, Mr. President.”
“And get me Dr. Frell. I want his ass on the next plane to D.C.” President Gordon slammed the telephone into its cradle without waiting for a response.
The rumble of thunder rattled the window frame, pulling the president’s gaze outward once again. No doubt about it. The coming storm would be a bad one.
123
Jennifer rolled over in bed, stretching her arms until they were fully extended above her head. The sheets smelled good, and the clean smell of freshly laundered linens reminded her just how much her circumstances had improved this last week.
The light of the early morning sun slanted into her room through the French doors, opened wide to the balcony. A loud squawk brought her gaze around to the bird perched atop her open laptop. It was about the size of her hand, its body a brilliant orange from its underbelly to the tip of the long, pointed crest that extended outward from its forehead. Jorge had told her it was a vermillion cardinal, a species native to Colombia and Venezuela. Beautiful.
But it was sitting on her laptop. Probably getting ready to poop all over it.
"Hey. Scat!" Jennifer tossed a pillow in its general direction, sending the bird flying back out through the balcony doors toward the gardens below.
A low chuckle caused her to sit up, pulling her sheet up to her chest.
"I see you had an unwanted helper." Jorge Espe?osa leaned back in the wicker chair across the room, his warm smile spreading the narrow lines of his Fu Manchu moustache.
Jennifer relaxed. "Don Espe?osa. You startled me."
It was the truth. Not needing sleep, Jennifer had been deep in meditation, but not so deep that she shouldn’t have heard him enter her room and sit down.
"My apologies. I thought you'd be up by now. It's a beautiful morning. I came up to invite you to breakfast. There is someone I would very much like for you to meet."
Jennifer let her gaze wander out the window to the gardens that dominated the north side of the drug lord's estate. "Will we be eating down on the patio?"
"Precisely."
Jennifer smiled. "Sounds lovely. Give me twenty minutes."
Don Espe?osa rose from the chair. "Twenty minutes then."
As the don closed the door behind him, Jennifer made her way to the shower, discarding pajamas as she went. Standing under the pounding water, she thought about who she would be meeting. Clearly it was someone the don thought important. His voice had held a hint of uncharacteristic eagerness.
This thought gave her pause. By reputation and from her limited dealings with the man, she knew that Jorge Espe?osa had few attachments. He had no wife or children. His only brother had been killed in a battle with Colombian government troops thirteen years ago. His paranoia and distrust of others had led him to create a security structure composed of independent cells, each constantly checking on the others, each cell leader reporting directly to the don.
But within that paranoid mind, Jennifer had found a deep loneliness. Ironically, it was by manipulating both the loneliness and paranoia that she had gained such rapid acceptance into his inner circle, something that had produced a great outcry of distrust from his other advisors. And although Jorge Espe?osa listened to their concerns, he ignored them.
For her part, Jennifer had moved rapidly to prove herself worthy of his trust. Don Espe?osa had set her up with the finest high-speed network money could buy, through which she had immediately begun a scan of all of the cartel accounts. Within hours, she had identified twenty-seven different transaction traces, some initiated by the US government, some by the Colombian government, some from other cartels.
By the end of the first day, she had not only cleansed the suspect transactions, she had hacked her way back through the computer networks conducting the trace, eliminating each record trail at the source.
And as Jennifer worked, the Espe?osa Cartel's top computer experts watched her, stunned by what they were seeing. Her delicate fingers worked the keyboards that surrounded her workstation so rapidly, they found themselves unable to follow what she was doing. But they knew she was breaching the toughest computer firewalls as easily as a husband brushed aside a wedding veil.
By her third day in her new job, cartel operatives began receiving reports that the US Internal Revenue Service and Drug Enforcement Agency were in a panic about the worst cybernetic attack in history. Although the full extent of damage to their computer archives was being kept secret, rumor had it that data critical to several ongoing investigations had been completely destroyed. Even worse, their effort to restore the data from off-site archives was being circumvented by an aggressive new type of computer virus.
Jorge Espe?osa was so thrilled that he had asked her to implement a new computer tracking and security program for all cartel accounts.
Jennifer finished dressing, selecting a pink cotton blouse to go with her white cargo pants and sandals. Then, with one more glance in the mirror, she made her way down to breakfast.
The north patio dining area was the most beautiful spot on the entire estate. In the midst of flower gardens rivaling those she had seen on a family trip to Lake Chiemsee in Bavaria, several outdoor tables protected by colorful umbrellas provided an atmosphere so inviting that Jennifer often found herself lingering over her meal, reluctant to finish.
This morning several of the tables had been set with trays of fresh fruit, hot pastries, and a large assortment of cold cuts, breads, and cheeses. Don Espe?osa sat alone at a table set for three. Seeing Jennifer, he arose from his seat.
"Come. Let's fill our plates. I'm afraid my other guest will be a bit late."
Jennifer had grown accustomed to the buffet layout so favored by Don Espe?osa. Although he could order whatever he wanted, the drug lord most enjoyed making up his mind by looking at an assortment of food spread out before him.
Jennifer filled her plate, but Don Espe?osa seemed distracted, taking just half a grapefruit. He sprinkled it with salt before digging out a slice with his spoon.
"So who am I going to meet?" Jennifer asked.
"Someone whose judgment I trust completely." Jennifer searched Don Espe?osa's face for a smile, but found none.
"Mysterious."
Jorge leaned back in his chair, lifting a cup of frothy cappuccino to his lips before responding. "I don't mean to be. As a matter of fact, I'm a bit nervous." Recognizing what he had just said, the drug lord smiled. "I don't believe I've ever said that before. You see? You confuse me. I'm not a trusting man, yet I find myself trusting you. My key people all tell me to go slow, that I'm behaving irrationally."
Jennifer felt a flash of anger. "The same people who provided such great security for your accounts? I think they’re angry about me making them look bad."
Jorge laughed. "That's exactly what I told them. Of course, I said it with a gun in my hand."
Jennifer's mouth dropped open. "You didn't kill them?"
"No, of course not. It just lets them know I'm not in the mood for an argument."
"I make you nervous?"
"A poor choice of words. You make me feel different. Unusual. It's why I wanted you to meet my associate, so he could form his own impression. I think you'll find him interesting."
Suddenly, Don Espe?osa glanced up. "Ah, here he comes."
As the don rose from his chair, Jennifer turned to see a very handsome young man walk out onto the patio. Dark hair, light skin, dressed in a mocha suit, he moved with easy grace and self-confidence.
"Jennifer Smythe, I would like to present my good friend, Eduardo Montenegro."
Jennifer stood, extending her hand, which was grasped and gently raised to Eduardo's lips. The touch, cool and soft on the back of her hand, matched the look in those beautiful dark eyes.
So this was the one whose judgment Don Espe?osa trusted more than his own. So be it.
Jennifer took a deep breath and centered. Then, with a small smile on her lips, she stepped across the threshold of those dark orbs and into the soul beyond.