80
Garfield Kromly blinked into the glare of the headlights as he turned onto Jefferson Davis Highway. Shit, he was tired. Two fucking a.m. and just getting home. Barely enough time to catch a catnap before heading back to Langley. A left on 15th Street and then straight across Crystal Drive and he was back at the apartment he had called home for the last eleven years. Water Park Tower South.
The high-rise apartment tower, or condos if it tripped your trigger to call them that, ran north–south, bowing gently away from the river. It was exactly the opposite of its twin tower a little farther north. A pair of twin parenthesis, offset from one another in an oddly artistic way, each having a side that looked out over the Potomac River, just north of Ronald Reagan National Airport.
Kromly pulled into his parking spot, rolling down the window to nod at a pair of CIA agents prominently posted near the building entrance. And those were just his visible guardians. Amazing, really. Since President Harris’ assassination yesterday, all of the high-level CIA staff had their special bodyguards, the CIA’s best of the best, assigned to babysitting duty. And that was in addition to the security that had locked this city down as tight as a snail’s ass, turning a normal half-hour drive at this time of the night into an hour-and-a-half crawl down the GW Parkway.
Clicking the lock button on his keychain, Kromly left the red Mustang convertible wedged in close to a black Caddy that had pulled in crooked and made his way inside the large foyer. The ride to the eleventh floor was notable only for the seventh-floor light that failed to illuminate. Nothing surprising about that. Lucky number seven just wasn’t coming up lately.
At the door to his apartment, Kromly fumbled with his key ring. Damn. Gonna have to get rid of some of these things. He couldn’t even remember what two of the small ones unlocked.
The door swung open to a dark apartment, the only light coming in through the large window that looked out across the Potomac to the Washington Monument and the rest of DC. Without bothering to switch on the light, Kromly moved to the window. God he loved this city. Since Pam had died, his work, one bedroom, a small kitchen, a living room, and this view were all he had to keep himself sane.
Looking down at the Potomac, Kromly shook his head sadly. Another president shot down in a motorcade, this time only a few miles from this very spot. The assassin had made the shots that had almost cut the president’s body in half and slid down a zip line into those muddy waters to make his escape. Except for the fifty-caliber rifle secured to the tree and some ancillary equipment, the killer had vanished without a trace.
Kromly stiffened. Had he heard something? His hand moved toward his shoulder holster.
“I wouldn’t.”
The familiar voice raised the fine hairs along the back of his neck. Kromly let his hands fall back to his sides, turning slowly toward the speaker. There in the darkness across the room, a shadow leaned back in his reading chair.
“Jack.”
A low chuckle. “Now, Garfield. Is that any way to greet an old friend?”
Kromly struggled to control his elevated heart rate, applying the same techniques he had drilled into field operatives for the last thirty years, including the man who now sat shrouded in darkness. His ultimate student.
“Sorry. I didn’t expect to see you.”
“Not surprising. Have a seat.”
Kromly moved to the couch, keeping his hands well away from his body at all times. No use giving Jack an excuse to pull the trigger. Not that he needed much of an excuse, not after what had happened to his team.
“Why, Jack?”
“Why what?”
“Why the president?”
Jack paused several seconds, the silence in the room growing thicker with each passing moment. Kromly considered triggering the panic button on his key ring but discarded the idea. Jack would kill him before his hand reached his pocket.
“How many years have we known each other?”
Kromly cleared his throat. “Twelve.”
“How long has it been since you considered yourself my friend?”
The question stunned him. Christ. Jack had been the best student he had ever had at the CIA. He was the whole package: dynamic personality, quick wits, lightning-swift reactions. But it had been his instincts that set him apart. Jack had always seemed to sense what was about to happen before it did.
Kromly had been drawn to the young man early on, pulling strings to get Jack the assignments he desired. And Pam had loved him like the son they had never had. She had succumbed to breast cancer shortly after Jack was reported killed in Pakistan in 2002. It just seemed that she had lost part of her will to keep fighting. If a young god like Jack could fall, then maybe she could let go too.
“I guess it was when I thought you were dead.” Kromly felt the anger edging into his voice. “You damn sure didn’t go out of your way to let me know that wasn’t true. You must have been busy those five years. You’ll have to forgive me for not being thrilled to see you now.”
“I know you were advising the FBI unit that took down my team.”
Shit. This was it. Nothing to do now but bend over and kiss his ass good-bye.
“You know me well enough to know that you’d already be dead if I wanted that.”
“Yes.” A faint glimmer of hope that he might yet see another sunrise sharpened Kromly’s focus. “I’m listening.”
“You think I killed the president.”
“There aren’t many that could have made that hit. You’re at the top of the list.”
“But here I am, sitting in your living room.”
Kromly shrugged. “You might have stopped by to scratch another name off your list.”
“You’re still alive.”
“True.”
“When were you first aware that Admiral Riles had a special NSA team looking into the Rho Project?”
“I only found out shortly before his suicide. The FBI was keeping the investigation very close-hold.”
“What do you know about what Admiral Riles was up to at NSA?”
“Not much more than was in the press. He was trying to discredit the Rho Project in order to prevent the president from publicly releasing the technologies coming out of it.”
“Let me paint a different picture. Admiral Riles called me in on a meeting at the NSA in early January of this year. The subject of that meeting was what was being called the New Year’s Day Virus. I led the team that secured a computer from the house in Glen Bernie.”
“Then Riles exceeded his authority by sending your team in on that one.”
“Maybe. He had a Presidential Finding. That was good enough for me.”
“Okay.”
“The NSA was able to extract information from that computer which could only have come from within the Rho Project. The Rho source indicated that something was dangerously wrong inside the project.”
“Pretty weak justification to send you to Los Alamos. Why didn’t Riles notify the FBI? That’s their area.”
Jack shifted positions ever so slightly, the movement producing a barely visible reflection of the DC lights from the barrel of a weapon.
“I don’t know how he justified it. I do know he had a damn good reason to think the Rho source was legitimate enough to send me to check it out. That investigation left no doubt in my mind that the project is corrupt, with support from the highest levels of the government. I sent back an interim report along with the decapitated body of Carlton ‘Priest’ Williams.”
Kromly shook his head. “You’re losing me. What did Priest have to do with any of this?”
“Other than being the sick psycho bastard he always was, his blood carried proof of secret illicit testing of alien nanotechnology outside the confines of the national laboratory.”
“Yeah, I read about it in the papers. But that story is old news. It was all explained by Dr. Stephenson a couple of weeks later.”
“About the time the FBI came after my team.”
“Coincidence.”
“Let’s talk about coincidences. First, I send my report to Riles. Two days later he is dead. Second, I steal Priest’s body and provide evidence to the reporter who broke the nanite story. Immediately my team is taken down. Third, the president starts to back off on his commitment to release the Rho Project nanotechnology and he is assassinated.”
Kromly shook his head. “You left out a couple of other killings in the sequence. The FBI man in South Dakota and the FBI director, both people you had good reason to kill. That also applies to the president.”
“That’s true. You still have the scenario you have been operating under, the one that assumes Riles went nuts and that I’m a revenge killer working my way back up the chain of command. Everyone is so busy barking down that trail, they can’t see any other possibility.”
Jack stood. “I came here to tell you something’s very wrong with the work being done within the Rho Project, wrong enough to make someone kill the director of the NSA, the director of the FBI, and the president of the United States.”
“Jack, that’s one crazy story.”
“I’ll make you a deal.”
“I’m still listening.”
“You tell me you’ll do some digging into what I told you, and you’ll live to see tomorrow. Lie to me and you’re dead.”
Kromly stared at the shadow standing above him. It hadn’t been the barrel of a gun that had glinted in the dim light, it was Jack’s knife. There was no doubt in his mind that judgment was now being passed.
“I, ah,” Kromly swallowed hard to wet his throat. “I’ll look into it.”
“Right answer. Sleep well, my old ex-friend.”
The cold spray of knockout gas hit Kromly in the face as he was inhaling, wrapping his brain in a fog in which the carpeted floor rose up to kiss him. He hadn’t felt the Berber against his cheek since he had made love to Pam on this floor. God, I miss you, baby. As his consciousness faded to black, a single tear rolled down his cheek and into the fibers of the carpet.