Against All Enemies (10 page)

Read Against All Enemies Online

Authors: John Gilstrap

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Military, #Spies & Politics, #Espionage, #Political, #Thrillers

Jonathan held up a hand for silence, and reached for the television remote control. Someone had muted the third reel of
Saving Private Ryan,
and Jonathan cranked up the volume to a level north of loud, but barely south of painful.

“Jesus!” Ryan shouted. “What the—”

Jonathan held up a hand for silence again. He motioned for everyone to lean in closer. “You need to assume that your house is bugged,” he said.

Christyne’s hand shot to her mouth. “Oh, my God.”

“Are you shitting me?” Ryan said.

“I can’t say for sure,” Jonathan said, “but for this conversation, it’s not worth the risk.” He shifted his eyes to Christyne. “So, let’s get to it. Do you know—”

“Uh-uh,” she said, and she held up her own hand. “No answers for you until we get some. Why is the world looking for Dylan?”

The question seemed to come from an honest place, and it took Jonathan off guard. “You really don’t know?”

“You’re asking questions out of turn,” she said. “This is answering time.”

Jonathan shot a look to Ryan. He might be older than last time, but he was still a kid, and there were some things that a boy should never hear about his father.

“All Ry and I have left is each other,” Christyne said. “What you can say to me, you can say to him.”

Jonathan didn’t approve, but it wasn’t his call. “Big Guy and I were approached by his former commanding officer,” he said.

“Colonel Rollins,” Ryan said, as if to emphasize that he already knew some of what was going on.

“Exactly,” Jonathan said. “He, uh, well . . . Oh, crap. There’s no soft way to say it. He accused Dylan of murder and treason.”

“Bullshit.” Mother and son said it together.

“I’m reporting, not accusing,” Jonathan said. “And it doesn’t matter what you think. What matters is that that’s what the government thinks, and they’ve dispatched shooter teams to kill him.”

Ryan’s eyes glistened red as he retreated into the sofa’s back cushion. “They’re trying to kill my dad?” He pivoted his head to engage his mom, who to Jonathan’s eye looked sad yet not shocked. “Mom?”

“Either you want to hear this or you don’t,” she said. Jonathan doubted that she wanted her words to sound as cold as they did.

Ryan redirected to Jonathan. “Who do they think he killed?”

Jonathan watched for a reaction from Christyne as he said, “Some CIA agents.”

“You can’t believe that,” Ryan said. “You know my dad. He would never murder anyone.”

Jonathan said nothing. It was
because
he knew Boomer that he knew that he likely did do the killing—for precisely the reason why Jonathan had himself killed so many people over the years. There were bad guys in the world whose positions shielded them from the rules of justice that governed everyone else.

Addressing Christyne, Jonathan said, “Colonel Rollins mentioned some
unpleasantness
—his word—that transpired during Dylan’s last tour of Afghanistan. Do you know anything about that?”

Christyne’s face remained blank as something passed behind her eyes. Jonathan interpreted it as a flash of panic. She recovered by looking heavenward, as if to receive a divine answer. “No,” she said.

She was lying. Jonathan drilled her with a glare, yet said nothing.

“No,” she repeated, as if to fill the silence. “I don’t know anything about that.”

Ryan clearly read the body language the same way Jonathan did. “Mom?” he said. “What happened?”

Christyne showed fear. She’d been caught unprepared. She’d allowed a peek at her cards, and she clearly did not know how to recover.

Jonathan let the silence rule. Ryan’s question had accomplished more than anything he could say.

Christyne’s shoulders sagged. She was done. “Ryan, I want you to go to your room.”

“The hell I will.”

Jonathan’s peripheral vision caught Boxers’ flinch. He didn’t like it when kids cursed at adults. But Big Guy didn’t say anything.

“You don’t need to hear this,” Christyne said. Something inside of her seemed to have broken. She seemed close to tears.

“You said we were a team. You said I could hear anything.” He was close to tears, too. “I’m staying.”

Christyne looked to Jonathan for help.

“Nope,” he said. There was exactly zero upside to getting sucked into a family dispute. His vote had been overridden once. It made no sense to walk into the same propeller a second time. Besides, it appeared that one way or the other, he was going to hear the story he’d come to learn.

“Please, Ry. I don’t want—”

“No!” He nearly shouted it. “We’re talking about
Dad
! I’m not going anywhere. It’s not fair for you to ask me.” Tears overran his eyelids and tracked down his cheeks. “This can’t possibly get worse than it already is.”

Christyne considered her son for a solid thirty seconds. Finally, she inhaled deeply. “Okay,” she said. “His name was Behrang, an Afghan boy, an orphan. The Taliban had slaughtered his family. His code name was Bulldog.”

“An informant,” Jonathan said.

“That’s how it started, for sure. Dylan developed him. I think that’s the right term.”

“Close enough,” Boxers said. His tone told Jonathan that Big Guy had arrived at the same unhappy conclusion to which Jonathan had already jumped.

“He developed him over multiple deployments. We’d actually—” A painfully uncomfortable look to Ryan. “We’d actually put the wheels in motion to adopt him.”

“Oh, God,” Boxers said. Jonathan’s insides churned. It was the ultimate of terrible mistakes. Informants were resources, objects with heartbeats. Their purpose was to propel the larger mission, and then to be discarded if necessary. The relationship required abject coldness—the very opposite of what Christyne was revealing.

Ryan gaped. Clearly, no one had told him that he’d been scheduled to be a big brother.

Christyne continued. “We were almost to the finish line during Dylan’s last deployment. The paperwork was processed, and we were
this close
to everything coming together. Behrang had one last task to do. He knew a Taliban commander who was at the top of the Most Wanted list. The worst of the worst.”

“Satan?” Jonathan guessed.

“How did you know?”

“I try to stay plugged in,” he said. He knew that this story wasn’t going to end well.

Christyne said to her son, “Are you okay?”

“I don’t know. I haven’t heard any of this before.” He cocked his head. “I was going to have a
brother?

Christyne offered up a kind, motherly smile and touched Ryan’s face with the tips of her fingers.
You’re sweet.
She returned to her story. “Dylan was scheduled to meet Bulldog in a town square or something—a bazaar, I guess—and they were within sight of each other when Satan arrived.”

“Did Dad shoot him?” Clearly, in Ryan’s mind, there was only one right answer.

“He had orders,” Christyne said. And then her voice stopped working.

“It works that way a lot,” Jonathan explained. “On an intel operation like that, the rules of engagement almost always preclude enemy contact unless fired upon first.”

Christyne pointed her agreement at Jonathan. Her voice was still not accessible to her.

“Did Bulldog get killed?” Ryan asked. His nightmares continued to bloom.

Christyne nodded some more and pleaded to Jonathan with her eyes.
Please don’t make me do this.

“You’re making this harder on your mom than it needs to be, Ryan,” Jonathan said.

“I don’t care. This isn’t about Mom or her feelings. This is about my
father.
You had a father once, right, Scorpion? I have a
right
to know this.”

The kid had no way of knowing that Jonathan’s father was serving a no-hope life sentence at a supermax prison—or that he should have been sent there a hell of a lot earlier than he was.

Christyne’s eyes continued to plead for Jonathan’s intervention. Finally, he said, “I don’t know what you want me to say, ma’am. If you send him to his room, do you really think that you’re not going to have to fill him in eventually? It’s inevitable, and when you do, the pain of the message is going to be compounded by the pain of the insult.” She shouldn’t have played the
we’re a team
card if she wasn’t willing to see it through to the end.

“Yes,” she said. “They killed Behrang. They . . . killed him.” In the hesitation, Jonathan saw the flash of an additional detail nearly shared but then abandoned.

“How?” Ryan asked.

“Oh, for Christ’s sake,” Boxers said. “Give her a break. This is hard enough.”

Hearing it come from Big Guy must have made a difference. Ryan’s shoulders relaxed and he leaned back into the seat cushion. He looked spent.

Jonathan let silence reset the emotion in the room. As much as he did not want to be a bully, the conversation had to go on. For the next part, he’d have paid Ryan ten thousand dollars to leave the room. He cleared his throat, then went for it. “Did he blame the CIA for the boy’s death?” He avoided using the name in hopes of gaining some distance from the horror of the event.

Christyne seemed spent as well. “He never
said
that.”

“But he implied it?”

She looked to the ceiling. “Well, no. Not really. Not in so many words.”

“Come on, Christyne,” Boxers said.

“I’m really not trying to be difficult. Given the stakes, I want to take care to stick with what I
know
before I get to what I
feel.

Jonathan got it. He resented the waste of time, but he got it. When it came to husbands and wives, intuition almost always trumped the bare facts.

“Over the years, I lost track of the number of times Dylan was deployed,” Christyne explained. “You know how it is. One time he’d be gone for a week, and then he’d be gone for three, four, six months. It’s the job. And I presume he was good at it. There was always a hard separation between his work and his life. He never brought the work home.”

But this time was different,
Jonathan thought.

“But this time was different. He was so
angry.
So disappointed. I knew it was about Behrang, but I sensed there was more. For weeks, I begged him to tell me, but all he would say was things like, ‘I hate those assholes’ and ‘the spooks are running the military.’ But there were never any overt threats. Yes, he was angry, and yes, he’s clearly capable of violence, but he’s been angry before and he’s been trained in violence for a long time.”

“We were told he abandoned the family,” Boxers prompted.

Christyne cut her eyes toward Ryan again, but he seemed lost in a place inside his head. “I wouldn’t call it
abandoned,
” she said. “He told me that he was going to be going away for a while.”

“Why?” Jonathan asked.

“He said there was something that he had to do.”

“Did you know that he had left the army?” Jonathan asked.

“Yes.”

“Was that a sudden decision for him? Did it surprise you?”

“He’d been in for a long time,” Christyne said. “He’d done his duty.”

“But he was less than a year shy of his twenty,” Boxers said. “That’s a lot of retirement to leave on the table.”

“I’d rather have him alive than retired,” Ryan said.

Jonathan was grateful that Boxers let it go. Much of this conversation was beyond the understanding of a teenager.

“Clearly he was agitated,” Christyne said. “I think he’d just had his fill and was ready to move on.”

“To where?” Jonathan asked.

Christyne’s jaw locked and she looked to the floor. This was the step too far, apparently.

“You’re in this far, ma’am,” Jonathan prompted. “You wouldn’t have told us what you have if you didn’t trust us to help him. Trust us for the next part, too. Where is he?”

Silence. She seemed to be on the fence, struggling deeply with the whole trust thing.

“Is he in the country or out of the country?” Jonathan pressed.

“Out, I think,” she said. “I’ m really not sure, but that’s what I think.”

Jonathan saw that as a point of confirmation for what they already thought they knew. “Is it Venezuela?” he asked. As an added precaution against suspected listening devices, he more mouthed the word than spoke it.

The flash behind her eyes told him what he wanted to know, even before she could mount an effort to deny it. Which she didn’t. “How did you know?”

“Because I think that’s where the feds are looking for him. I assume you have the means to contact him?”

Stone face.

“Of course you do,” Jonathan said. “Tell him to remember Acid Gambit. There’s a huge graveyard across from where the Commandancia used to be.”

“Acid what?” Christyne asked.

“Gambit,” Ryan said, his first words in a while. “Like the X-Men character?”

“Sure,” Jonathan said. He had no idea. “G-A-M-BI-T. Acid Gambit.”

“What does it mean?”

“Dylan will know. And there’s no way to miss the cemetery. It’s huge.”

“The Commandancia? What’s that?”

“He’ll know. Trust me, he’ll know. How much time will he need?”

“For what?”

“To get mobilized to meet us in Panama.”

Christyne stewed. “A week,” she said.

Jonathan said, “Fine. Have him meet us there one week from today. At noon.”

“What happens after he meets you?” Christyne asked. “If I can contact him, that is. And if he agrees.”

“We talk,” Jonathan said. “After that, the rest is up to him.”

“How will he know it’s not a trap?”

“Because we all have to trust each other right now.”

“No police, right? No FBI or CIA?”

“Cross my heart.” Jonathan made a giant X over his left chest. “Our mission is far enough off the grid that we wouldn’t want their involvement any more than Dylan would. And by the way, make sure he knows that one mistake will ruin everything for him. He needs to be careful.”

“Which brings up another point,” Big Guy said. “I get it that you love Dylan. I get that he’s your husband and your father, and that you’d do anything to protect him, but I want to make one thing as clear as it can possibly be. If you intentionally mislead us, jam us up and get us into trouble—if you set us up for some kind of a double-cross—I’ll forget all about you being part of the Special Forces family. All I’ll remember is that you tried to hurt us, and trust me when I say that that would be a terrible, terrible mistake.” He bored his eyes through Ryan. “The kind of mistake that keeps a teenager from seeing drinking age. Am I making myself clear?”

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