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Authors: Larry Bond,Jim Defelice

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BOOK: Soul of the Assassin
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“They put him jail? I can’t hear you.”

 

“They’re holding him.”

 

“Do you want me to try and get him out?”

 

“No, it’s not a big deal. I think the British are trying, because they think Atha’s going to meet with him again and they want to be there. The British MI6 agent who’s working the case is rather dull.”

 

“Does MI6 know about T Rex?”

 

“Not from me, but the Italians may tell them. Then again, maybe not. Imperiati isn’t dumb. Maybe he won’t like Hamilton, either.”

 

~ * ~

 

21

 

BOLOGNA, ITALY

 

“If you hold him, they won’t be able to meet. There won’t be a transaction. Months of work will be lost.” Hamilton pitched forward on the small metal chair, trying to drive his point home to the Italian. It was more like several days—the tip that Atha was traveling to Europe had been passed last week—but
months
sounded considerably more impressive.

 

“I don’t want a catastrophe in Bologna,” said Imperiati.

 

“This isn’t about Bologna. It has nothing to do with Bologna. They came here because the conference gave Rostislawitch a pretext. It has nothing to do with him.”

 

“The Americans had information that there will be a terrorist attack.”

 

Hamilton snorted.

 

“They believe an assassin has been hired to kill someone here and in the process he will kill very many other people.”

 

“The Americans don’t know their arm from a tree trunk.”

 

“Scusi?”

 

“The American CIA is not what it once was,” said Harrison. “We’ll leave it at that. Ferguson? You’re best off ignoring anything he tells you.”

 

“He seems competent enough.”

 

“I could tell you stories, believe me.”

 

One thing about Ferguson did impress Hamilton—he had an uncanny knack of getting people to think he was God, or at least his stand-in. Persuading the Italian might not take much, but Hamilton had seen him turn several accomplished Algerian double agents into putty. Women he might understand—the rogue was good-looking, after all. But men? He was nothing but a smart aleck.

 

“The decision on what to do with Signor Rostislawitch must be made by someone above me in rank,” said Imperiati. “It is not my decision.”

 

“Well, who is that then? How can I talk to him?”

 

“She—Gina Assisi. You would speak to her in Roma.”

 

“Great,” said Hamilton. He rose. “In the meantime, take my advice and ignore half of what Ferguson tells you.”

 

“Only half?”

 

“The other half will be the opposite of truth. So if you switch it around, you’ll be all right.”

 

~ * ~

 

I

mperiati found Ferguson in the squad room after he finished with Hamilton. The America CIA officer was examining some of the surveillance feeds.

 

“Anything interesting?” asked Imperiati.

 

“Everything’s interesting,” Ferguson told him. “It’s just a question to what degree.”

 

“And so is anything here interesting to the proper degree?”

 

“No. If T Rex has been watching Rostislawitch he’s been very careful about doing so.”

 

“Why do you call the assassin T Rex?”

 

“It was a code name he used on one of his cases.”

 

“The one where he killed a CIA officer?”

 

“Yes, actually.”

 

“My superiors spoke to your superiors. They wanted to impress on us the importance of capturing this man.”

 

“Did they?”

 

Imperiati shrugged. “Everyone has matters of importance. Perhaps you would like lunch?”

 

“Why not?” said Ferguson.

 

~ * ~

 

T

he small trattoria two blocks away had been recommended by one of the local police detectives, partly for its discretion and partly for its minestrone. Imperiati savored both, getting a back booth and sorting through the soup as if he were looking for gems in a pan of stream sand. He poked the vegetables and beans and macaroni with his spoon, herding them to the center of the bowl, then scooped and slurped.

 

Ferguson stuck with the veal piccata. He liked his food both solid and stationary when he ate it.

 

“Signor Hamilton doesn’t like you much,” said Imperiati.

 

“Not much. But then I don’t like him. He screwed up something I was working on in Algeria two years ago. Almost got me killed.”

 

“And what was that?”

 

“You’ve worked on things you can’t talk about, I’m sure.”

 

“I’m sorry. My career has been very boring,” added Imperiati. “I’ve never had action outside of the country.”

 

Imperiati paused;
action
was not quite the correct word, but apparently it had served.

 

“So yes, very boring,” he said, continuing. “But I like it that way. I can go home to my wife, my children. A boring father. But a successful one.” Imperiati snared a piece of celery in the soup. “Now, the Americans and the British come to Italy, come to my city, and for them, boring is no good. They want adventure.”

 

“Not me,” said Ferguson. “I want T Rex.”

 

“But to get him, you are willing to have some adventure, yes?”

 

“I’ll take whatever comes.”

 

“While I would prefer things to be boring.”

 

They ate in silence for a while. Both men realized they had different agendas, and both had been told to pursue them at all costs.

 

“Did Hamilton tell you why he’s here?” Ferguson asked.

 

“He is trying to stop a business transaction.”

 

“I doubt that. More than likely he’s not sure what’s going on. Except for the obvious.”

 

“The obvious?” asked Imperiati.

 

“Germ warfare expert talks to a country looking to replace nukes on its weapons of mass destruction menu. Pretty simple.”

 

“Too simple maybe.”

 

“Maybe,” agreed Ferguson.

 

“And so your man is trying to kill him?”

 

“Maybe. If he’s working for the Iranians.”

 

“Do you see my difficulty?”

 

Before Ferguson could answer, Imperiati’s cell phone rang.

 

“Scusi,”
he said. He took out the phone and walked a short distance away.

 

Ferguson guessed who it was and what they said from the frown on Imperiati’s face.

 

“Signor Rostislawitch will be released,” Imperiati told him when he came back to the table.

 

“Are you going to warn him?” Ferguson asked.

 

“I am not sure what use a warning would be,” said the Italian. “We are to watch him. We may make a decision to arrest him if necessary. He will only leave the country if we wish it.”

 

“And if MI6 wants it.”

 

“Why do you think the British put pressure on us?”

 

“Because I know we didn’t.”

 

“A decision to arrest him would be made by my superiors,” said Imperiati. “If it were my decision, he would be deported now.”

 

“A boring solution,” said Ferguson. He got up. “Time to get back to work, I’m afraid. Good luck with the soup.”

 

~ * ~

 

22

 

CIA HEADQUARTERS, LANGLEY, VIRGINIA

 

Daniel Slott got up from his desk and began pacing around his office, holding the phone up to his ear and trying not to knock anything over with the long cord.

 

Corrine Alston was on the other end of the line, calling about the British and wondering why they hadn’t told the CIA what they were up to.

 

While he would hesitate to call himself fond of Corrine Alston, Slott had come to respect her over the past year or so that they’d worked together. She labored under two great handicaps—her age and her good looks, both of which made people think she was an intellectual lightweight. But she handled things with tact and even finesse, managing not only to do her job as the President’s “conscience” on Special Demands but in several instances actually helping the group accomplish its goals.

 

Still, though, she was an outsider, and even though she’d worked for the congressional intelligence committees, Corrine needed to be educated in some of the most basic intelligence “facts.”

 

Including the one stating that one’s allies were never to be trusted.

 

“We do work with MI6, and MI5, very closely,” Slott told her. “We are allies. But believe me—
believe me
—they don’t tell us everything they’re doing. Just as we don’t trust them. I mean tell them.”

 

It was a Freudian slip, but it was definitely the truth. There was a great deal of rivalry between the U.S. and British intelligence services. Even on matters that they worked closely on—in Iraq and Afghanistan, for example—there were rivalries and jealousies and what the State Department people called “lack of candor.” On both sides.

 

“What are they doing with the Iranian then?” Corrine asked.

 

“I have a call in—”

 

“What’s your best guess?”

 

“I really don’t like to guess.”

 

“Make an exception.”

 

Slott glanced down at the one-page Agency dossier on Anghuyu “Atha” Jahan. It claimed that he was a legitimate banker, and that while he had worked for the Iranian Interior Ministry some years before, he no longer had any formal connection with Iran’s foreign service or any part of its government. This was supposedly because of conflicts with high-ranking members of the Revolutionary Guard, which controlled much of Iran’s foreign services and spy network. Lately he had traveled to Africa, though the paper did not say why.

 

Obviously the dossier was not complete.

 

“If Ferguson thinks the Iranians are trying to get some sort of access to the Russian biological warfare program, he may be right,” said Slott. “Rostislawitch would be a good point of contact. Maybe this is a preliminary recruitment. The British may know more.”

 

“Will they tell us?”

 

“Maybe. I can’t guarantee anything, Corrine. We don’t control them. I have a few things going on with them now, including the guerillas in Indonesia, but I have to tell you, they can be damn tight about saying anything they get—if things were reversed, I wouldn’t be telling them anything about T Rex. Or as little as necessary. It was the same thing with the Italians. Really, we only went to them because you insisted.”

 

“If the British aren’t going to cooperate, maybe the President should talk to the Prime Minister.”

 

“I didn’t say they weren’t going to cooperate.” Slott put his finger into the phone cord, twisting it around. “I just said they haven’t gotten back to me yet. Maybe they’re checking with their people in the field.”

 

“I’d like to talk to them myself.”

 

“That’s my job.”

 

Suddenly angry, Slott set himself behind his desk, physically ready for battle.

 

“You’re right,” said Corrine, realizing she’d overstepped her bounds. “I’m sorry. Of course you’re the one to talk to them.”

BOOK: Soul of the Assassin
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ads

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