Permanent Interests (24 page)

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Authors: James Bruno

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BOOK: Permanent Interests
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"Yes. For your own good…and safety."

"What are you doing here? Who are you? How'd you find me here?" Innes sat up and took Lydia in with wide eyes.

She sat beside him. "It is, as you say in English, a long story, Mr. Innes."

"Call me Bob. And you are…"

"Lydia. Lydia Puchinskaya. I am Russian. I live now in Washington. I phoned the State Department. They told me that you worked here. I have been observing you." She giggled. "I am not a spy. I have only seen you when you go to work and when you come out here, at lunchtime. I wanted to choose the best moment to talk to you."

Innes nodded deeply, taking it in.

"I have information. Very important information which I want to give to you."

"Me? Concerning what? Mortimer?"

"Yes. And more. About some people. Also important."

Innes's long dormant mental computer began clicking.

He became alert, his mind raced.

"Wait. Don't tell me. Criminals and spies and the U.S.

government."

She nodded.

"And Russians. You're Russian. Mortimer. Was he a spy? Who killed him? The mafia? SVR? Pimps?"

"Bob. We need time. Can you come with me? I want you to meet someone. Another American. We can discuss this. All of it. Do not be afraid."

They flagged a taxi.

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Al's generous bonuses were making Wentworth a moderately rich man. He and Lydia took a suite at the Four Seasons in Georgetown. There they could be reasonably sure that the rooms weren't recording studios. After the initial shock that came with Lydia's revelations about herself, Wentworth resolved to help her. He'd asked her to marry him.

Innes knew he had seen Wentworth somewhere before.

They shook hands. Before Innes could ask, Wentworth replied, "Marine detachment, Embassy Rome, 2000 to '02.

Lieutenant Charles Wentworth. Now just Mr. Wentworth.

Call me Chuck."

"Now I remember. Small world."

"Bob, Lydia's in a real fix. She's got some serious dirt on some significant people in this administration. She, we, need help."

"Hold on. Why me?"

Lydia sat close to Wentworth on a sofa. "In Rome, I remembered that you were the only American who seemed to know where to look for the truth on Ambassador Mortimer," she said. "You were the only person who was interested in the truth. When I spoke to you at the airport, I warned you to not pursue your investigation. I did not want you to get hurt."

"By whom?"

"By Russian mafia."

"Did they kill Mortimer?'

"I believe so."

"What about the Italian and American mafias?"

"I am not sure."

"SVR?"

"Russian mafia and SVR are the same, Mr. Innes."

"CIA?"

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"No. I don't hear much."

"Hear? Through whom?"

Wentworth and Lydia looked at each other. He took her hand and nodded for her to continue.

"Horvath."

Innes squinted. "Horvath? You don't mean the President's National Security Adviser?"

"Yes. Him."

She proceeded to recount Horvath's recruitment by Yakov and her role. She described the Russian mob's criminal inroads in the U.S., starting with her own illicit visa, and Yakov's involvement.

"Yakov is not what we call
Vory v Zakone
-- a kind of Godfather. But he wants to be." Conspicuously missing was any mention of Al. Wentworth needed time to sort things out in his mind about his boss and his future relationship with him. He and Lydia decided that part could wait a bit longer. Besides, neither knew anything about Yakov's dealings with Al. For all Wentworth knew, they could actually be legitimate. But he had his doubts.

"Why are you telling me all this? What do you want me to do with this information?"

Wentworth leaned forward. "She wants out. And we want to get married."

"And have five children," she added. "And live in South Carolina where I will make pies between making babies."

They looked lovingly at each other, holding hands tightly.

Innes fell back in his chair and massaged his forehead with his fingers. "Oy veh!"

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211

Berlucci didn't want them to come to FBI headquarters.

He asked Innes to come alone to receive instructions on where they would all meet. It was an aging, nondescript apartment building on upper Wisconsin. There the FBI had a safehouse flat. He gave Innes the code with which to get through the front door. Innes was to arrive fifteen minutes ahead of Lydia and Wentworth. On a busy rush-hour morning, Innes arrived at 9:00 sharp. Wentworth and Lydia -- he sporting large shades, she a floppy hat --

slipped through the door precisely a quarter of an hour later.

With Berlucci were Speedy and a special agent named Hanks whose specialty was Russian and East European crime gangs.

Innes recapitulated what he had told Berlucci and Speedy at headquarters, bringing Hanks up to speed.

"Tell us about this Yakov character," Berlucci said without further ado.

"Yakov is a very dangerous man. And very clever. He reaches to the top and is frightened by no one," Lydia answered. The apartment was obviously not lived in. Its circa 1975 decor and drawn curtains did not put her at ease.

Neither did a large, whirring tape recorder in front of her on the coffee table.

"What do you mean by 'reaches to the top'?" Berlucci probed.

"He stops at nothing to get what he wants. He has seduced some very important people in your government."

"You mean recruited?"

"Yes. He traps them. Then he makes them do his will.

He forces them to give him information."

"What kind of information?" Hanks asked.

"I don't know. I never see it. But I believe secrets of your government."

212 JAMES

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Berlucci and Hanks looked at each other gravely.

"Is Yakov SVR, you know, formerly KGB?" Speedy asked.

Lydia smiled and looked at the floor. She held her hands demurely in her lap. Wentworth sat in a chair to her left. "I am not expert on these things. But in Russia we see now no difference between SVR and mafia."

"Can you name names?" asked Berlucci.

"Yes. Nicholas Horvath. Senator Rory MacDonnell.

General Cordner…"

"Jack Cordner? Deputy Army Chief of Staff?" Speedy interrupted.

"Yes, him." Lydia went on to name several additional officials holding high positions in the Pentagon, State Department, CIA and even one in Justice, as well as several members of Congress and their staff.

"How does Yakov entrap these people?" Berlucci asked.

"Different ways. Mostly through women…such as myself." Lydia looked away and wiped her eyes and nose with a handkerchief. Wentworth reached over and gripped her forearm. "I am not the only Russian woman who works like this for Yakov. He has houses for us. Nice houses.

He also has Ukrainian, Byelorussian and Polish women.

Also in New York. Also in Rome and Berlin."

"Are you his girlfriend?"

"No. He likes to show off beautiful women. But he is not capable of loving a woman. He is impotent."

Speedy was mesmerized, frantically jotting notes.

Berlucci appeared to hesitate for a moment, then asked,

"Any FBI people? Has he entrapped anybody from the FBI?"

"No. At least I know of none."

Berlucci appeared relieved.

Innes spoke up. "Do you know the name Dennison?"

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213

"Yes. He is your foreign minister, yes?"

"But, has Yakov recruited him?" The FBI men leaned forward in their chairs.

"I do not know. I am not sure."

Innes nodded pensively. His brow furrowed in concentration. The session continued till past midnight.

214 JAMES

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CHAPTER TWENTY

Horvath looked nervous. Normally, Dennison's White House counterpart would attack his food with gusto. This luncheon, he barely picked at his salad and declined wine, opting instead for two double vodkas.

Horvath talked languidly and disjointedly about Africa and Japan. He appeared distracted. Unusually, Horvath wasn't noticing the shapely waitresses of Les Nigauds.

"Senator Weems says he's going to try to slash State's budget. Has it in for us more than ever, the son of a bitch,"

Dennison said. "I've got a contact who's sleeping with his top legislative assistant. He tells me that Weems is trying to pull in his chits with foreign leaders to get their businesses to buy more tobacco from Weems's state. I'm passing the message back that if he goes after our budget, I'm gonna gin up the anti-tobacco lobby and embarrass the fucker to blue blazes."

Horvath was hearing, but not listening. His mind was focused on the previous evening. He had rendezvoused with Yakov through a now set procedure. He walked his Samoyed in Rock Creek cemetery where Dimitrov picked him up and drove him off to a safehouse near Dupont Circle. Yakov ordered him to recruit Dennison. When PERMANENT INTERESTS

215

Horvath protested, Yakov flashed an evil grin which made very clear what the alternatives were. "Don't worry,"

Yakov added. "He's as squalid as you are. It will be a cinch."

"Roy, how're things looking for the campaign? What are the plans for organizing things?" Although he was one of highest officials in the administration, Horvath, as a foreign policy professional from academia, didn't normally get involved in party matters or domestic affairs.

Dennison was surprised by Horvath's abrupt change of subject. "Well, uh, not too good so far. The President's way down in the polls. People are already deserting. It's going to take a lot of money this time around. Much more than before."

"Where's it going to come from?"

"That's a difficult point. But we're working on it."

"What is needed?" Horvath persisted, "Hundreds of thousands? Millions? What?"

Dennison fished out and gobbled the green olive from his martini glass. "More like the latter. Why?"

"Oh, I don't know. I just thought that I'd do my bit this time."

Dennison blinked. "Do your bit? What do you mean?

Campaigning? Speeches? You haven't really been the garden variety political partisan, Nick."

"With funds. Contributions. You know."

Dennison looked at him hard. "Nick, we're talking big money. Really big money. Your government salary and your pension or whatever you get from Harvard isn't going to make a dent. Nice of you to offer though."

"I can find 'big money' for you." Horvath cleared his throat.

Dennison looked dubiously at his lunch mate.

"I know a rich…uh…financier. He wants to help."

216 JAMES

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"Who?"

"He, uh, wants to remain anonymous for now. But he's willing to give a lot." Horvath mopped the sweat from his forehead.

"Just like that. That's it? Is he angling for an ambassadorship? That's no problem at all. Does he have a college education?"

"No. Nothing like that. He wants information."

Dennison pondered this a few seconds.

"Information, like inside information? On the administration?"

"And

more."

Dennison quickly caught on. "Tell him it's a deal. But it won't come cheap."

Horvath couldn't believe his ears. Just like that. The Secretary of State just agreed to sell state secrets, no ifs, ands, or buts. "Roy, you sure you understand me? What I'm asking?"

"You bet. Ohh! Look. We don't have to give away the store. We selectively pick out some marginal stuff. Stuff that's in the papers every day. Add to that some made-up stuff on the President's thinking, crap like that. Listen, I know politics. The important thing is to get the best guy re-elected. You have to bend the rules sometimes. You don't think the other side's not up to their own tricks?

What's that theory that made you famous? 'Controlled inevitability'? It's like that. We steer events to the desired outcome, making it look inevitable, but sacrificing as little as possible along the way. This is what makes democracy stronger and healthier."

"He wants to know your travels over the coming months."

"Piece of cake. Here." Dennison fished out a piece of paper from a jacket pocket. "Take this. It outlines where PERMANENT INTERESTS

217

I'm scheduled to go till mid-August. Of course, surprise trips come up. Others get dropped, and so on. Uh, that'll cost your friend ten grand. There's other stuff I'm getting that you're probably not. You name when and where for delivery every week and I'll name the price."

He slapped Horvath on the shoulder. "Hey! Welcome to the rough and tumble club of domestic politics. But it's all hush-hush. Got me?" Dennison winked as he gulped the last of his martini.

The Secretary of State suddenly took a keen interest in counternarcotics policy. He wanted the troubled administration, of which he was a key player, to make some headway in a high-profile area like drugs. He called back to Washington for urgent consultations his ambassadors to Afghanistan, Bolivia, Colombia, Pakistan, Burma, Thailand, Laos and other countries where narcotics production or trafficking figured prominently.

He held pow-wows as well with the chiefs of the major law enforcement agencies involved with fighting narcotics trafficking, and with top Coast Guard, Pentagon and intelligence officials. He put State's public affairs machinery into overdrive to get media coverage. He got other governments to agree to send their foreign ministers to an international conference on counternarcotics cooperation in Miami in June. As a preliminary step, he obtained their consent to broaden intelligence-sharing on the drug trade. Dennison designated the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research to be a repository of this data, as well as CIA, DEA, NSA, Coast Guard and Defense Department narcotics intelligence. And he tasked the Bureau with providing him with a seemingly endless 218 JAMES

BRUNO

stream of not only finished analytical overviews, but also raw intelligence. This included top secret plans to interdict couriers and knock out production labs, and transcripts of high-tech electronic eavesdropping of American and foreign crime figures. The workabee analysts who put it all together could only scratch their heads as to why the Secretary would want so much detailed data. But they and his staff dutifully packaged the stuff in black binders embossed with the gold State Department seal and passed it up the chain.

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