The Widow's Strike (12 page)

Read The Widow's Strike Online

Authors: Brad Taylor

Tags: #Thriller

25

C
hip Dekkard heard
the name
of the company and felt the blood drain from his face. He prayed nobody noticed, glad to see the rest of the members of the Oversight Council focused on Kurt Hale.

“We dug pretty hard, and we can’t find any reason why the IRGC would be interested in Cailleach Laboratories. Most all of their research is for benign things, like acne. There’s nothing dangerous that we could find, but there’s no other reason for kidnapping the boy. Once we got him evacuated and stable, he said he had no idea why he’d been taken. The family had no money to speak of, but they made him call his father and set up a meeting. It has to be something at Cailleach.”

Jesus. They’re after the virus.

He heard President Warren say, “What about the father? The scientist? What’s his story?”

Kurt said, “He does have a pretty extensive résumé working with infectious diseases, most notably H5N1 for the government of Thailand, but since he’s gone into the private sector he’s mainly worked on over-the-counter remedies for the common cold. A waste of talent, but that’s what he does.”

I need to tell them. Let them know what the Iranians are after.
And yet he waited, not wanting to cross that Rubicon. As the conversation continued, he began to rationalize why he shouldn’t.

They haven’t made the connection to my conglomerate. It’s too deeply buried, and the virus has been destroyed. The Iranian will get nothing, and no good will come out of laying myself bare. There are stockholders to consider. Ordinary people who will lose if I bring this up to the president of the United States. I have a greater responsibility.

He heard his name a second time, as if from a dream, and realized it was the president.

“Chip? You with us here?”

“Sorry, sir. What was the question?”

“You know anything about this Cailleach Laboratories? It’s in your neck of the woods.”

He paused, giving the impression he was cataloging what he knew. In reality, he was fighting a war inside his soul. The battle raged, and one side eventually won.

“No, sir. It’s not one I’m familiar with, but there are literally thousands of international pharmaceutical companies.”

The secretary of defense said, “Why don’t we just call the guy? Set it up without Taskforce fingerprints and find out what’s going on? If his son was kidnapped, finding out he’s safe should get the doctor to immediately quit whatever he’s doing. No more leverage.”

Kurt said, “Of course, that was our first priority, but the doctor doesn’t answer his phone. It goes straight to voice mail, and it was the only number the boy knew. We have the numbers for Cailleach, but I didn’t want to unilaterally call without talking to the council first. I do agree with the thought, though. My recommendation is to simply alert the authorities in Singapore. Have them go get the doctor, let him know his son is safe, and give him protection until we can sort this out.”

Jonathan Billings, the secretary of state, said, “You mean including the Iranian connection? How are we going to do that without getting into a huge diplomatic row? The Thais will eat us alive. It’ll expose Taskforce operations.”

Kurt said, “No, no, definitely leave out the Iranians. We can craft a simple kidnapping story. Something criminal. The boy doesn’t know they’re Iranian. He doesn’t have any idea why this all happened. We can keep a break between what transpired in Thailand and what we tell Singapore.”

The director of the CIA spoke up, enthused. “We’ve got a very good relationship with our Singapore liaison service, and they’re pretty damn good on counterterrorism. They’ll play ball and won’t ask too many questions.

The SECDEF said, “Speaking of what transpired in Thailand, what did the team do with the two dead terrorists?”

Kurt said, “Rolled them up in the carpet and dumped them in the river. Pike said the Iranians had put a little thought into disposing of the boy, and the team simply used their method. Pike’s convinced they’ll rot before anyone finds them. Maybe a finger bone a few years from now, but nothing will surface any time soon.”

Chip Dekkard winced at his straightforward delivery, a subtle reminder of the stakes involved.

“What about the other Iranians?” the SECDEF asked. “The general?”

“Well, what we know from the boy is that three are unaccounted for. We have no evidence that Malik left Thailand, but I’m convinced he’s in Singapore with the two other unknowns, traveling under a different passport.”

President Warren said, “Okay, let’s get on the Singapore authorities. Get that in motion now. Run it through official channels. State and CIA have the lead. Work it through the ambassador and the station.”

Chip thought,
Need to get word out fast. Make sure the traces of the research are completely cleaned up before the authorities get involved.

President Warren said, “What about the team?”

Kurt said, “We need to get them out of Thailand immediately, along with the boy. He needs to be isolated until we can figure out how to mitigate any damage. I can do that with internal Taskforce assets if you give the word.”

“You mean bring them home?”

“Well, yes for the boy. Get him in a comfortable hotel, treat him like a king, have him talk to his father once we get things sorted out.”

“And the team?”

“Sir, we still have a Quds Force general running around trying to do something bad. We don’t know what that is. We might find out from the doctor once the Singaporeans have him safe, but we should pursue this from both ends.”

“Which means what?”

“Send Pike to Singapore. Let him do what he was already doing. I’ve got the follow-on team prepped for Thailand, so it’ll be two or three days until we can integrate a long-term cover for operations in Singapore, but there’s little threat from Pike poking around for a few days to prep the battlefield.”

Secretary Billings snorted. “‘Prep the battlefield’ is right. Every time that guy gets involved people start dying.”

Kurt locked eyes with him. “
Terrorists
start dying, and you’d do well to remember the difference. There really
are
monsters in the world no matter how hard we try to pretend there aren’t. Pike doesn’t make them up, but he
does
hunt them down. And yes, he kills them if he’s forced to. Right now there’s a boy in Thailand who’s damn glad of it, even if you aren’t.”

26

D
r. Nakarat felt
the sweat
beading under his arms and knew he looked guilty as sin. Knew the man behind the counter was going to arrest him, but it was too late to turn back now. He’d already badged in through the anteroom door, then signed a hard-copy roster with his name and reason for entering.

He’d spent all day on Monday brewing up a bunch of false cocktails, trying mightily to create a problem that only something from the patent reefer might fix. Eventually, he’d found an excuse, but it was so weak anyone with any scientific background at all would question its validity. Nakarat prayed the man behind the counter had no such skill.

The guard barely glanced at the reason given, instead focusing all of his attention on Dr. Nakarat’s badges, ensuring they were not forgeries. After scanning a hologram through a black light, he instructed Nakarat to place both thumbs on a blank screen to his front. The image came back positive, and the guard was satisfied.

“Fifteen minutes. No more.”

The guard punched a button, and the reefer door opened, exposing a large vault maybe thirty feet deep, with row after row of small drawers, each with a complex scientific label.

Dr. Nakarat entered, not sure what he was looking for. He’d only been inside the reefer a few times, and it was always as a tag-along, following someone else. Someone who knew where he was going. He stared at the nearest row of drawers, feeling again like a grad student trying to decipher a test question he hadn’t studied for. He turned and saw the guard staring at him, a question on his face.

He hurried deeper into the vault, acting like he had a destination in mind. He began running his fingers down a row as if he was searching a library shelf and noticed the drawers were color coded. He recognized many of the labels and realized he was in the dermatology section.

Where would they hide it? Where would I put it if I were going to hide it? Would I use the sections to camouflage it, or would I use the space, regardless of what section it was in?

He decided it would be a little bit of both. They’d want it out of sight from casual discovery, but also in a section that had little habitual traffic. Which meant something old. Something no longer hot in the research hierarchy.

Having a healthy knowledge of the goings-on of the lab, he knew that Cailleach’s current focus was dermatology, or, more precisely, acne, so he immediately dismissed that entire section.

He scooted to the back and began searching each section on the lower level, near the floor. He recognized every label as legitimate and wondered if he should just begin opening drawers to see what was inside. He glanced at his watch and felt the panic rise.

He was killing his son. His hands began to tremble at the futility of it all. There were over five hundred drawers, and he didn’t even know if there
was
a sample to begin with.

He reached a section with labels marking a failed attempt at a new form of eyedrop. Dr. Nakarat remembered it well because they’d dumped an enormous amount of money into the research but just couldn’t get rid of some nasty side effects. In the end, they’d chalked it up as a loss and kept the patent samples just in case something in the future would bring them value.

The drawers were all low to the floor, and the section was definitely not one that would be accessed any time soon. He began running his fingers down each one, looking for something that didn’t fit. Praying for a miracle. He found it in the second drawer from the bottom. A label that held the number 33 and
As
. The chemical symbol for arsenic.

Poison
.

He pulled open the drawer and found a small Pelican box with a biohazard symbol. Now trembling from fear of what was in front of him, he fought to remain calm. He glanced back at the door and saw the guard had lost interest in him.

He opened the box, seeing a single vial inside, stoppered in rubber and padded with foam. No labels on it at all. He reverently slid it out of its foam cocoon, holding it gently in both hands.

He looked at his watch and saw his fifteen minutes were up. Carefully, gently, he placed the vial in the small of his back, trapped by the elastic of his underwear. He waddled to the front of the vault, moving stiffly to prevent the vial from shifting.

He passed the guard and thanked him for his time, shuffling to the door, feeling the sweat rolling down his sides.

The guard said, “Hang on.”

Nakarat turned, his heart racing, knowing he was caught.

“You have to sign out the sample. You can’t just take it.”

What sample? Can he see the vial in my underwear?

Then it hit home: He’d forgotten to take out the sample for his concocted experiment. The excuse that gave him the reason to enter in the first place.

He felt light-headed and faint. He wiped his brow and said, “I decided to try something else. While I was looking, a thought came to me about another solution. You just never know when inspiration will strike.”

The guard said, “Yeah, well, you need to sign to that effect. Every time the reefer is opened, I have to account for the actions that occurred. They’ll marry up the time of opening with the log. Something’s gotta go down in it.”

Nakarat walked back to the desk and slowly bent over, dreading that he would feel the vial sliding down his haunch, then down his leg, only to break on the floor.

He made his statement, then placed his hand on the small of his back as he stood upright, grimacing as if he was in pain. He felt nothing. No lump. No vial.

Satisfied, the guard bade him good day. Nakarat stood for a moment, afraid to move. The vial had slipped from the elastic in the small of his back, which meant it was now somewhere in his underwear. Hopefully snagged in the crotch, but possibly about to slide down his leg.

The guard gave him a strange look, and Nakarat came close to blurting out the problem. He caught himself and turned away stiffly, feeling the vial for the first time. Against his rump. He took a small step forward and sensed it shift lower. Another step, and he felt it caress the back of his thigh, held precariously by the fabric of his pants. The door was a mere three steps away.

Three paces. Three paces of slippage. This is insane.

He stared at the portal of freedom for an eternity, his conscious mind unwilling to cause his muscles to trigger potential disaster. From somewhere far away, he heard the guard ask if he was all right. He needed to move. He forced his legs to function, walking like a marionette. One. Two. Three.

He turned the corner and clamped his hands on his calf, trapping the vial before it could travel farther. He slid it down, cupped it in his hands, and walked as fast as he dared back to his office. He closed the door and gingerly set the vial down. He created his own padded case using a box of gauze and locked the makeshift ensemble in his lower desk drawer, next to the two samples of the vaccine he’d already taken from his laboratory. Then he collapsed into his chair.

He was breathing in a rapid pant, his eyes closed, wiping the clammy sweat from his neck, when his intercom buzzed.

“Dr. Nakarat? Could you come downstairs to the front office? There are a couple of policemen who need a word with you.”

* * *

Malik scooted his
chair back into the shade of the canopy, pushing away the plate of “Persian” food. The restaurant claimed to be authentic, but the Indian doing the cooking could have used a few hometown lessons.

All in all, he was pleased with the progression of the mission. He’d put Sanjar and Roshan on the doctor his first day back at work following the meeting. When he’d left the lab and traveled in a beeline to the Marina Bay Sands, Malik was convinced he was in the pocket and would do nothing stupid.

Thailand was coming to closure as well. After getting briefed on the plan for the disposal of the boy from the team, he’d given the go-ahead, and one more loose end was done, he was sure. The body wouldn’t be found for weeks, if not months, and there would be no way to tie it to his team. He was looking forward to getting a complete report later today, at the prearranged contact time.

The only glitch in the entire operation was from his own hierarchy. The IRGC had demanded the vaccine before he could proceed, something he obviously couldn’t provide. He’d assured them it was on the way and had set things in motion anyway.

He held no illusions about what he was doing but knew that his choice was the right path. If you wanted to take on the superpowers, you needed to be willing to risk it all. He was now convinced the mullahs were defeatist sheep, afraid to step into the arena. Afraid to risk what was necessary. He knew the West would be brought to its knees long before the virus struck Iran. By then, they’d be able to use the Great Satan’s own research to overcome any pandemic in Iran. He didn’t have a vaccine now, but he would before it was needed.

Let it destroy America first. By the time she is a smoldering ember, she will have figured out how to stop the onslaught. And give us the solution for free, as a gesture of humanity.

The IRGC, of course, didn’t see it that way. He’d had to think about how to keep them at bay until the mission was done.

The groundwork in place and with nothing else to do, he was burnishing his cover on the off chance he would need it as an alibi. Exploring Little India, he’d found an Arabic section, with the streets named after Middle East capitals, like Baghdad and Muscat. Sprinkled throughout were various Persian-carpet stores, along with shops selling other textiles he could plausibly claim, such as scarves, drapes, and raw fabric.

He plied them all and had even managed to get further contacts for two who had shown interest in his “business.” Something that would go a long way to backing up his story, should he ever be pushed.

He’d eventually tired of the charade and had stopped for lunch within view of the great Sultan Mosque, toying with the idea of attending midday prayers. When the call came through the loudspeakers of the mosque, he pushed his plate away, waving at the waiter to bring his bill.

He’d decided that consideration of prayer was good enough, but the guilt forced him to leave. He couldn’t listen to the rhythmic chanting while sitting in a restaurant drinking tea. He paid his bill and began walking back the way he’d come, away from the mosque and toward the Bugis MRT stop.

Moving south on North Bridge Road, he rounded the corner to a large hospital and felt his phone vibrate. He snatched it out of his pocket, saw it was the doctor’s number, and smiled. The mission was going as smoothly as he could have wanted.

“Hello, Dr. Nakarat. You called quicker than I thought you would. I guess getting my material wasn’t as hard as you predicted.”

What he heard next came out in a jumble, and he was sure he’d misunderstood.

“I don’t have it! The police showed up at the lab. They were looking for me. I didn’t call them, I swear! I don’t know what they wanted.”

“Slow down. What happened?”

“I don’t know. I went to the patent reefer and found the virus. When I got back to my office the secretary on the first floor told me some police were there to see me. I swear to God I didn’t call anyone!”

All Malik heard was that he’d found the virus. The fact that the doctor was calling meant he wasn’t in police custody. Malik wasn’t even upset at the lack of operational security on the phone.

“So you have the material now? What did the police say when you met them? How did you get away?”

“I didn’t meet them! I went down a back stairwell and fled!”

“With the material?”

“No, it’s in my office. I swear I didn’t call anyone. Please don’t hurt my son.”

“In your office? With the police?”

“I don’t know. . . . I ran out of there. . . . I’m not sure what they wanted. Maybe there was an alarm on the virus case or something.”

“An alarm that triggered someone to come from the outside in? Instead of the internal security already in place? No. That’s not it. It’s a coincidence. You need to return to your office and obtain the virus. Do you understand?”

“I can’t! They’ll just capture me! Please! I tried. . . . I tried. . . .”

Malik heard the doctor break down, with nothing but sobbing coming from the phone.

He said, “Doctor, listen,” and waited for the weeping to fade. When it did, he continued. “Wait until late tonight, then go back to your office. Get the material and call me.”

His voice hitching, Nakarat said, “But I’ll have to go through a security gate. The guard will stop me.”

“Maybe he will and maybe he won’t. We won’t know until you try. Let me clear things up for you, because it’s really quite simple. One, you do nothing, in which case your son dies. Two, you attempt to get the material and get arrested, in which case your son dies. Three, you get the material and call me. In this case your son lives. This is the only option favorable to you. Understand?”

After a moment of breathing hitches, Malik heard, “Yes, yes. I understand.”

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