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Authors: Anthony Shaffer

BOOK: The Last Line
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Long ago … when it was so much easier to believe.

Surrounded by chattering tourists with their cameras and backpacks, the CIA's Mexico chief of station glanced around him, catching a glimpse of his reflection in the polished steel columns—gray hair, distinguished features, conservatively dressed in his usual navy blue Brooks Brothers suit and red tie. He was reminded of how much like an investment banker he appeared—like his father and his father's father. He hadn't chosen that path, though. His had been a life of clandestine intrigue, of service to his country.

Fletcher passed the glass display cases containing trinkets from the country's past—a muscled G.I. Joe action figure, a chipped wooden cradle, a curvaceous Barbie in a black-and-white swimsuit—and headed up the wide staircase. He strolled through the second floor and stooped to inspect a letter by George Washington, squinting to make out the looped script.

If we consider ourselves, or wish to be considered by Others as a United people,
Washington had scrawled,
why not adopt the measures that are characteristic of it—Act as a Nation
 …

He smiled again, reflecting on his life, on a career in the service of his nation. His start with paramilitary and field operations training at the Farm, then the long climb through the ranks. The days of dust and sorrow in Beirut as a young case officer working to solve the marine barracks and U.S. Embassy bombings. His stint in Sudan—what a godawful place—trying to prevent the fall of the government to forces that would be less inclined to see things the American way. The trip to North Korea in 1994 with former president Jimmy Carter on his mission to defuse tensions there; that had been a close one, the time when he'd first recognized his own mortality.

Five years later, he'd had a closer brush with death, when he'd been deputy chief of station in Côte d'Ivoire. He'd helped save the life of the Chilean ambassador in Liberia during a tense stand-off with the Liberian monster Charles Taylor.

That encounter had earned him the CIA's ultimate honor, the Intelligence Medal of Merit. Now, at a time when intelligence collection had never been more imperative to the security of the United States, he knew more than ever the significance of the honor bestowed on him. Honor was at the core of everything he had done, everything he had become, everything he truly cherished.

Fletcher wasn't sure what he was looking for in the museum—if, indeed, he was looking for anything at all. Reaching the third floor, he swung to his left, stopping with a cluster of people in front of a glass case to inspect a rickety high-back wing chair. Faded orange tweed, it looked like, with plenty of stains and a greasy spot where a head had once rested. Archie Bunker's chair from the 1970s TV show
All in the Family,
the sign read.

Fletcher had been abroad during that turbulent period of America's history, but he had watched as the nation had wrestled with its internal demons and had survived and endured—the ultimate demonstration of America's greatness.

Later, when America—when America's
honor
—was betrayed … Fletcher's thoughts veered back to what he had discovered in Mexico at the end of his two years as the CIA's chief of station there. In an instinctive gesture, he glanced around and touched his hand to his tie, ensuring it was straight.

Honor.

He had to do this.

Fletcher made his way out of the museum and down its snow-dotted granite stairs. It was chilly for mid-April in Washington, and a gust of wind seemed to claw its way underneath his coat. He'd not yet adjusted to the climate here after the humid heat of Mexico City, and he felt a chill in his bones that was as much psychological as physical. The cherry blossoms, though, provided an orgy of glorious pink among D.C.'s granite and marble edifices.

He struck out across the National Mall, the white dome of the U.S. Capitol Building rising on his left and the soaring Washington Monument on his right, the heavy gray of a leaden sky emphasizing their vibrancy. The magnificent sight brought back that first, sharp sense of patriotic wonder that had overcome him during his first visit to Washington at the age of seventeen. That had been … when? '73? '74?

A hell of a long time ago.

Fletcher took a deep breath, drawing in the chilly spring air before releasing it slowly and deliberately.

It was time.

With renewed energy, his pace increased. He headed toward the Smithsonian Castle. As he approached, he made the slight right off the frozen path to stride down the escalator of the Metro, brushing past those clinging to the handrail.

He was warm now in his own knowing, and he felt an inner glow as he pulled out the fare card from the inside pocket of his suit, put it into the turnstile, and descended the stairs to the tiled platform for the Blue Line train headed to Largo Town Center.

The lighted overhead sign indicated a train was approaching, and the embedded red lights on the granite platform edge began to flash as Fletcher moved up to stand with the rest of the crowd. He smiled graciously at the woman next to him, well dressed, with two children—a young boy and a toddler in a stroller.

“You know,” he said softly, “you have a beautiful family. It's people like you who make this country great.” Surprised, the woman returned Fletcher's smile. Before she could thank him, the roaring train thundered out of the tunnel. He patted the shoulder of the boy.

Then, in one graceful movement, Galen Fletcher stepped off the platform.

SOUTH MONTEZUMA STREET

PHOENIX, ARIZONA

1220 HOURS, MST

They called Phoenix the kidnap capital of the United States, the second in the world after only Mexico City. In recent years, the flood of illegal immigrants north across the border had brought with it a wave of crime, of kidnapping and extortion especially.

At nightfall, the coyotes had marched their human cargo northeast, deeper into the desert, until the light of a vehicle, an ancient and time-worn panel truck, had shone out of the dark. Saeed Reyshahri and the others had been crammed into the back of the truck and told to lie down under a tarp.

The heat and the stink of sweat and fear, the sobbing of the women, the nausea and disorientation all had been miserable. Hours later, they'd met with another, larger truck somewhere outside of Tucson, changed vehicles, and continued driving through the night, this time with a different group of coyotes in charge.

The smuggling operation appeared to be superbly organized, with chains of rendezvous and safe houses, vehicle switches, and well-armed gangs of men stretched across the desert, all the way from deep inside northern Mexico. The actual border crossing near Nogales had been through a network of lighted and well-ventilated tunnels several hundred meters long. Despite his concerns, at no point had Reyshahri even seen an American Border Patrol or customs officer.

Just after dawn, however, they'd arrived here, in a grimy and run-down section on the south side of Phoenix. The
pollos
—“chickens” in the slang of the coyotes—had been herded into a dilapidated house, forced at gunpoint to strip in order to make escape more difficult, and locked up together inside one of the tiny bedrooms. They were guarded by three armed men under the apparent command of a harassed and shrill-voiced housewife with a baby and a toddler still in diapers.

Reyshahri retained a bit more freedom and at least a measure of dignity; they allowed him to sit in the living room with two of the coyotes and a too-loud television set tuned to a Spanish soap opera. Thanks be to Allah he would be leaving soon. A VEVAK agent code-named Kawrd, “knife” in English, would be arriving momentarily to bring Reyshahri's forged ID and to pay the final installment of Reyshahri's transport fee.

It could not possibly happen too soon.

“Hey, Arab,” one of the men said in English. He held out a brown bottle. “Wanna beer?”

Reyshahri could only shake his head. Alcohol was
har
m
to good Muslims—strictly forbidden. Surely these animals knew that.

The coyote laughed and said something to his partner, eliciting a nasty grin. “They say you also no like women, mister,” the second man said. He jerked a dirty thumb over his shoulder at the guarded bedroom down the hall. “You maybe want one of the boys instead? That it?”

“Some of them
muy bonito,
man, very pretty,” the first said, laughing.

Reyshahri leaned back on the filthy sofa and closed his eyes. If he ignored them, perhaps they would tire of the sport and leave him alone.

The plight of the fifteen
pollos
in the party continued to weigh heavily on Reyshahri. The rape tree in the desert had only been the nightmare's beginning. He'd heard stories from some of the coyotes during the trip north. One at a time, now, the migrants would be forced to call relatives, either back in Mexico or, often, here in the States, asking for more money. Each had already paid something between $1,800 and $2,500 American to get them this far—a fortune for impoverished families in Mexico. Now the coyotes were demanding more money. If the additional cash—“ransom” was the only possible word for it—was not paid, the immigrants would be forced to work for the cartel, or, worse, taken to a
casa de la violencia
and tortured, often with their relatives listening over the phone line. Human traffickers had been known—with horrible frequency—to send relatives hands or other body parts, or photos of their loved ones being beaten or sexually abused, in order to speed up the payments.

How in the name of Allah the most merciful had he fallen into this nightmare?

Smothered beneath the tarp, packed in with the migrants in the back of the panel truck, he'd missed Fajr, the morning prayer, but he had a feeling that prayer of any sort would be impossible until he got away from these men. God, in his infinite love and sense of ultimate justice, would understand.
Surely
he would understand …

A pounding on the front door brought him out of increasingly despondent thoughts, as the two coyotes pulled automatic weapons from behind the furniture. A moment later, the housewife led Ernesto Mendoza and another man into the living room.

“Hello, Arab,” Mendoza said. “I find your friend, see?”

Reyshahri didn't know the other man, but he was dark and bearded and carried a large briefcase. “
Salaam,
Okawb,” the man said, using Reyshahri's code name, “Eagle.”


Salaam,
Kawrd,” Reyshahri replied. Sign and countersign. Kawrd nodded, then spoke in Spanish to Mendoza. He opened the combination lock on the briefcase and showed the coyotes the contents—ten thousand American dollars. Reyshahri noticed that Kawrd stepped back and put his right hand inside his jacket as they counted it; it was not at all impossible that the Sinaloan coyotes would take the money and demand more.

There would be other VEVAK men outside, armed and waiting. Mendoza couldn't be that stupid …

“All correct,
señores,
” Mendoza said with a toothy smile. “It's been good doing business with you, as always.”

As always.
“Let us leave this place,” he said to Kawrd in Farsi. “It sickens me.”

Together, they stepped outside into the cool April air. Two more Iranian agents were waiting for them beside a rented car. One gave Reyshahri an envelope containing a U.S. driver's license and citizenship papers.

Reyshahri didn't relax, however, until they were well clear of the city.

The mission. He needed to forget the coyotes and focus on his mission.

 

Chapter Two

INSCOM HQ

FORT BELVOIR, VIRGINIA

0925 HOURS, EDT

14 APRIL

Located twelve miles south of Washington, D.C. and just three miles west of George Washington's Mount Vernon, Fort Belvoir is home to elements of ten U.S. Army Major Commands, nineteen different agencies and direct reporting units of the Department of the Army, and some twenty-six different DoD agencies, among many other units. One of these is the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command, INSCOM. Its headquarters is a four-story building, but only two are aboveground. The wood-paneled office of Colonel Audrey MacDonald was on the top floor, with a window looking out across the brand-new headquarters of the 29th Infantry Division (Light), the National Guard unit known as the “Blue and Gray.”

That was
his
unit, the unit that had slashed through the German lines in twenty-one days of blood at the Meuse-Argonne in 1917, that had charged up out of the slaughter at Omaha in 1944. Chris Teller had transferred to the 29th several years ago, after starting off his military career as an enlisted man in the Alaska National Guard. Now, eight years after OCS in Fort Benning and his entry into the murky world of army intelligence, he was a captain, an O-3, though his GS-12 civil service category was the equivalent of an army major.

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