FIFTEEN

Central Intelligence Agency, Virginia, U.S.A.

Tuesday

06:07 EST


Procter noted the mandarins were all absent at this early hour, so it was just Chambers, Ferguson, and Sykes around the table with him. Chambers looked as presentable as ever, but both Ferguson and Sykes were looking a little rough around the edges, Ferguson especially. He was too old to still be doing six am starts and only had about a year left before retiring.

Alvarez’s voice came through the speakerphone. “I’ve spent all night liaising with the French police and their intelligence services, who have thankfully cut us some slack. I’ve got a copy of their crime-scene and lab work, but unfortunately it doesn’t help us a whole lot. As I expected there’s nothing useful from the scene where Ozols was killed. The way the cops have it the killer was waiting in the alley for Ozols and shot him from close range. He took his empty shell cases with him, not that it would have mattered as you’ll understand in a minute.

“Now, at the hotel we got a second chance at getting something from this guy, but it doesn’t get any better. No unidentified hairs or traceable fibers. The only fingerprints found in the killer’s room belong to the maid who cleaned it. This time he didn’t take his empty shells with him, but no fingerprints on them either.”

“He wore gloves the whole time?” Procter asked.

“Negative,” Alvarez replied. “Surveillance footage shows the killer didn’t wear any. If he had wiped down everything he’d touched there wouldn’t have been the maid’s fingerprints left behind in the kinds of places you would expect to find them. What the lab people did find were traces of silicone. So far I haven’t been able-”

“Washing your hands with silicone solution prevents fingerprints,” Ferguson interrupted.

Procter looked Ferguson’s way.

“It creates a waterproof barrier over the skin,” Sykes continued for his boss. “The oil from your fingers can’t get through it, so you don’t leave prints behind on anything you touch. You can’t tell if someone is wearing it either as it’s completely clear. It was developed to help prevent industrial dermatitis in factory workers.”

Procter nodded. You learn something every day, he thought.

“Okay,” Alvarez continued. “That solves that little mystery, so thanks. We haven’t got a shot of his face from the surveillance tapes as he kept it angled away from the cameras at all times. He’s white though, tall, wearing a suit, he’s got dark hair and blue eyes, wearing glasses. Had a beard too. If he takes the glasses off and has a shave no one’s going to pick him out of a crowd though. Ballistics is a dead end like everything else. The ammunition was made in Belgium but, although not something you see every day, is too common to trace further.

“He was checked in to the hotel under the name Richard Bishop, a British citizen. No one by that name has left the country since yesterday and from what I’m hearing no British citizen by the name Richard Bishop even entered France in the last month. It’ll be bogus, I’m sure, but it would be worth just double-checking with the Brits.”

“I’ll get someone on it,” Chambers said and scribbled herself a note. “I’ve personally contacted the heads of station in London, Moscow, Berlin, Riyadh, Delhi, Islamabad, and Seoul. So far no one’s hearing anything suspicious about Ozols. I’m expecting callbacks throughout the day, but I’m not hopeful. Whoever organized this assassination has done a good job keeping themselves hidden.”

Procter hadn’t made up his mind about Chambers yet. He considered her to be just a stopgap, someone to keep the chair warm until a long-term candidate could be found. How she performed on this would answer his doubts one way or the other. On the one hand the brain on her practically poked through her skull, but on the other Procter just wasn’t sure she had the balls for the role. Literally more than figuratively.

He leaned forward. “And we’ve had no intercepts relating to Ozols, Paris, or the missiles. No known assassins have been spotted in the region recently and we haven’t got a hope of ID’ing him based on the few details we have. I’ve been on the phone to my equivalents in allied countries to see if anyone recognizes the MO but it’s too vague to produce any leads.”

It was Sykes’s turn to speak. “We’ve been checking the Russian angle, and no matter who we speak to it’s the same. Moscow believes the frigate lost in ’08 and everything on board it is unrecoverable. Obviously we can’t ask too many questions unless we tip them off to what we’ve been doing.”

Alvarez continued, “Interpol likewise can’t do a lot with what we have so far but we might have caught a break with this hotel incident. What the CCTV footage showed us with the way I’ve pieced it together is as follows. The killer murders Ozols and returns to his hotel approximately two hours later. When he gets there he spots two men and he either recognizes them or something makes him suspicious. He keeps out of sight until they’re out of the lobby, but they come straight back down in the elevator. But he avoids them and gets in the elevator, but not before being spotted himself.

“A few minutes later he kills them in the corridor outside his room, shooting through a door opposite. A couple of minutes later two more men enter. He waits for them, follows one, and ends up killing them both. Disabled or tortured one with an exploding aerosol if you can believe it. All these people are armed by the way and aren’t carrying ID. Next, he kills a woman in the hotel kitchen, a guy in the apartment building opposite, and from the same building shoots another outside with a rifle. An old lady gets murdered along the way, but the bullets that shot her match the gun of the sixth guy killed, so she probably just got caught in the cross fire.

“Information on the seven others our guy killed is coming through all the time. They look like hired shooters. The way they acted tells me they were in Paris to take out Ozols’s killer. Obviously he took them out instead.”

Ferguson’s brow furrowed. “So you’re telling us that one assassin kills Ozols, and a couple of hours later seven other assassins try and kill him, but he shoots them all dead?”

“That’s exactly how it appears.”

Ferguson raised his palms. “Someone please explain to me how this makes any sense?”

Chambers took off her glasses. “Is there any indication who sent the team?”

“At this stage no,” Alvarez answered regretfully. “But I don’t think it will be too long before we have them all identified. That gives us seven chances to find out who sent them. And whoever did send them obviously knows a hell of a lot about Ozols’s killer. So if we can find out who hired these guys, we’ll have a good shot of getting the killer, and maybe we can still get those missiles too.”

Chambers and Ferguson were nodding, but Procter noticed Sykes wasn’t looking so relaxed. Procter understood why. The kid was out of the loop, had nothing to say, no opinion to offer, and he didn’t like it. He was still comparatively young, and Ferguson obviously thought highly of him, so he shouldn’t be worried by his lack of contribution. There was no point speaking just for the sake of it. Ferguson should have taught his apprentice that much at least. If Sykes was really smart he should be satisfied at this stage of his career just to watch and learn from the playmakers.

“The final and maybe most important thing I’ve found out,” Alvarez announced, “is that the killer didn’t leave Paris straightaway after being attacked. Seems he hung around to investigate the guys who tried to whack him.”

Ferguson spoke. “How do you know that?”

“Because one of the gunmen, found riddled with.45-caliber slugs in the building opposite the killer’s hotel, checked out of his own hotel about an hour after he was killed.”

There was a momentary silence in the room. Procter could hear the creak of leather.

“That’s a clever trick for a dead man,” Sykes offered with a smirk that showed his bright teeth. Everyone ignored him, and Procter shook his head imperceptibly.

“The clerk at the hotel described the man as quite tall, lean, with dark hair, glasses, and a beard,” Alvarez explained. “The real man, Svyatoslav, doesn’t match that description. He’s shorter, stockier. The description of Ozols’s killer, however, does match.”

Procter leaned forward. “Let me guess, the assassin acquired Svyatoslav’s things?”

“Yes,” Alvarez agreed. “He pretended to be him and signed out. The clerk gave him Svyatoslav’s passport, plane tickets, etcetera that were stored in the hotel safe. They haven’t popped up on the grid, so he didn’t use the passport to leave the country.”

Chambers asked, “What do you think the killer would want with Svyatoslav’s things?”

“I think he must be trying to learn about him,” Alvarez said. “That’s why he went to the hotel. He didn’t flee the country; he went to where one of the guys who tried to kill him was staying.”

“And if he is trying to identify his attackers, and who they were working for, what’s his next logical step?” queried Procter.

“To check out Svyatoslav’s address,” Alvarez answered.

“Please tell me we know where that is,” Chambers said.

“Munich.”

Chambers placed both hands on the table. “Okay, this is what we’re going to do. We’re going to contact German intelligence straightaway and get them to put the address under immediate surveillance. Let them know what kind of person they’re dealing with. I don’t want them trying to apprehend him, just keep him in sight. I’m not having anyone else getting killed because of this. Alvarez, as soon as you’ve finished briefing them, I want you on the next plane to Germany to see what you can find out. Call me from Munich. If he’s still there you’ll have as much support as you need.”

When Alvarez was off the phone it was Ferguson who spoke. His thick silver hair, normally swept neatly backward, was looking a little unruly today. “The chances of this killer still being in possession of the information are slim at best. If his job was to intercept Ozols and take the drive, then he will be delivering it to his employer-he won’t be off chasing leads in Germany. That makes no sense whatsoever.”

Chambers sighed. “Maybe it was his employer who tried to have him killed. Saves paying him. Or maybe he’s already done it. But until we have more indication on who sent him, this is our best approach. We’re against the clock here; as soon as that information is delivered, those missiles are going to vanish in a matter of days, and the next we hear about them will be when someone uses the technology against us. If there is a slim chance the man who killed Ozols might have gone to Germany, then so must we.” Ferguson didn’t look convinced. “Unless you have any other ideas you’d like to share with us.” The challenge in her voice was obvious.

Ferguson’s expression was one of quiet contempt. He shrugged his narrow shoulders. Procter looked at Chambers. Evidently she wasn’t bothered about getting the old guy’s back up whatever his history.

Maybe there was a pair dangling between her legs after all.

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