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Authors: Rachel Grant

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BOOK: Covert Evidence
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“Did you believe him?”

“I did.”

“Why?”

“Because Hejan was the money guy. He didn’t move the weapons that killed his brother, he moved the money that paid for the weapons. And when they were sold to al-Qaeda, he received, for his group, the payment.”

“Hejan was a…
banker
? I thought he was a kid. A college student out to make extra money with translation work for the university.”

“That’s because that’s what Hejan wanted you to see. He was young—early twenties—he grew up near Van and moved to the city when he was sixteen, determined to get away from rural farm life. He got a job at a bank there as a teller. He worked his way up from simple transactions and account setups to more complex business accounts and finally to money laundering for the local PKK group. So, you see, when he told me the microchip would contain names, I believed him. He’d spent months tracing back through accounts, connecting names to account numbers. Information that was supposed to be buried.”

“Why did he do that—put the list on the chip?”

“I think it was another carrot for me, but he said his leader was hoping to identify who was funding both sides to keep the unrest ongoing. Organizations like Raptor—”

“Alec Ravissant would never—”

“—
used
to be, under Robert Beck. As I said before, Ravissant checked out. So did Hatcher. But the former CEO was dirty as hell and stirring up the Middle East pot with abandon.”

She nodded. “Keith spent too many years with the SEALs, putting terrorists down, to have any part in funding them.”

“He was a sniper, right?”

“Yes.”

Ian’s voice dropped, showing a hint of respect. “I look forward to meeting him.”

She liked the lack of equivocation. That he
would
meet Keith. Because meeting Keith meant they’d both make it back to the US. And she was having trouble believing this un-fairy tale could have a happy ending that included their safe arrival in the US.

She touched the pendant that was once again around her neck. “What do we do with this, then? Do you think the list is on it?”

“I do.”

“Is that why Zack and Todd were following us? Even more than wanting the location of the tunnel, they need the microchip?”

“I think Zack is primarily after the chip. According to Hejan’s note, Todros is after the tunnel.”

“Todd had plenty of time to catch up with us as we were digging our way out. But he never showed.”

“A reason to think Hejan was right about Todros. Hejan
knew
him—meaning that fight in the bar wasn’t what it seemed to us at the time. Hejan was sent here—in the weeks he’d disappeared—to act as translator for Todros and help find the tunnel.”

“I guess I was the perfect patsy,” she said. “A clueless American academic, unable to speak even simple Kurdish words, no one would suspect me of carrying a microchip to further a violent insurrection.
I
didn’t even suspect me.” She frowned. “But Hejan crossed everyone and hid the chip in the necklace instead of storing the information on the USB drive in the digital recorder. He made sure you’d follow me and made me promise not to take off the pendant. Ever.”

“Hejan had his own agenda,” Ian said. “Revenge for Berzan.”

“Why was Todd in Antalya? Did he kill Hejan?”

“I don’t think so. My guess is he felt remorse for what was about to happen to you and went to the bar to warn you. To stop you.”

“I never would have believed him.”

Ian frowned. “But Hejan couldn’t take that risk. He couldn’t let you talk to Todros, not until after you’d reached Van, so he ejected him from the bar and later convinced you to flee the hotel.”

“But then who killed him if not Todd?”

“Hejan double- and triple-crossed so many people that night. Anyone in his cell was capable of killing him.”

“He was late meeting me. By over an hour.” Movement in the stars above caught her eye. A spy satellite? Never in her life had she considered such a thing when spotting a faint moving light in the sky, but now, she couldn’t shake off the idea as nonsense, as she would have done ten days ago.

“That was unusual for him,” Ian said. “His evasive route probably took longer than he’d planned. I didn’t need to follow him—he’d told me where the drop would take place. And the people who knew you were the intended mule would have known to follow you.”

She considered that night as they slowly strolled over dry ground. “The nightclub was my research trip send-off party. Suzanne planned it—everyone on the project was invited. She invited Hejan when he came out to our camp on the island—he was doing translation work for my advisor as well.” She inhaled a deep breath of cool night air. “I want to hate Hejan for giving me that chip. For setting me up. But I would have been in danger even if he hadn’t given me the pendant, wouldn’t I?”

“Todros said you could find the tunnel. You were in danger no matter what. Hejan made sure I’d follow you, and he was confident we’d end up working together—the note was addressed to us both. I think he wanted me by your side to protect and guide you.”

“So I’d deliver his damn chip or out of concern for me?”

Ian shrugged. “All I know is Hejan had no intention of you delivering the data to anyone but the CIA.”

They reached the top of a rise, and the steppe unfurled before them: miles of nothing, but in the far distance, she thought she saw dark structures dotting the landscape in the early dawn light. The edge of civilization at war.

Ian pulled out his cell, inserted the battery, and dialed. Again he spoke in rapid Kurdish. Call completed, he removed the battery from the phone and handed both to her. “I want you to hide below, in the thick shrubs at the base of the hill. Watch. Wait. If they shoot me, don’t move. Don’t make a sound. Not until they leave. Then call Logan. Understand?”

Her throat had gone dry, but she nodded.

“Even if they torture me and I beg you to come out of hiding, do not do it. Only come out if you hear me say—” He paused, then said, “Hay-Adams.” His jaw tensed. “You got that? Hay-Adams. If I don’t say Hay-Adams, stay put.”

She gave a sharp nod. If he could be calm and detached, so would she. “How long until they get here?”

“They said thirty minutes—so my guess is ten. You need to get out of sight. They’ll have binoculars and will see us long before we see them.”

She nodded and pivoted on her heel. He’d just said being shot or tortured were on the short list of possible outcomes, then dismissed her without consulting her first. She was back to feeling helpless and was terrified for his safety.

She’d taken three steps when he said, “Cressida…”

She stopped, her back stiff. She couldn’t turn and face him.

Footsteps scraped across the rocky ground. He halted, so close she felt the heat of his body. “I’m not sending you away because you have the pendant.” His voice was low, raspy, positively bursting with emotion that pushed up against the dam of his control.

“Then why are you sending me to hide, Ian? Because I really don’t relish the idea of watching people torture you and not being able to do anything to stop it.”

He let out a harsh growl. “I’m sending you away because if I’m wrong about these people, you could get hurt. And I can’t let that happen.”

At last she turned. “
Why,
Ian?”

His nostrils flared, then his expression shuttered. “Because getting you to safety is my mission.”

The hope that had been building deflated, bouncing around in her chest like an untied balloon that had slipped from her fingers. “Okay, then. If you need me, you know where I’ll be.” She turned and set off down the hill.

“Hay-Adams, Cressida.” The words floated in the air, full of meaning he wouldn’t voice.

He’d kissed her, held her, let her know in a dozen ways in the last twenty-four hours that he wanted her, and, more important, he cared about her. But he’d also made it clear his life was here, in the Middle East. She wanted The Hay-Adams, held on to that fantasy like the lifeline it was meant to be, but not if he wasn’t offering her more than orgasms. She could have those on her own.

She scanned the low shrubs and spotted a decent hiding place. She took off her backpack and tucked herself down into the thick branches, then pulled the gun from the pack and checked the load. She was ready.

She studied Ian, who stood ever vigilant at the top of the rise. He was different, nothing like any man she’d ever known. And for the first time in her life, she knew without question her instincts about him were solid. He was the one for her, and she wanted all of him. Everything. Love. Commitment. Cohabitating. She hated picket fences, but if he was a fan, it wasn’t a deal breaker.

But for that reason, she couldn’t show up for a weeklong tryst at The Hay-Adams. It would hurt too much when he walked away.

If he intended to check his emotions at the door, she’d check out altogether.

But before it was time to face everything she couldn’t have with him, he had to survive the next ten minutes. She heard the low rumble of a vehicle and was thankful the shrubs were thick and concealing. Not to mention that her top was so coated in dirt, it was now mottled earth tones—a perfect, natural camouflage.

The vehicle, an old Toyota Land Cruiser, approached slowly, and Cressida suspected the two dark bars poking out on both sides were gun barrels of one kind or another. Sure enough, as the Toyota drew closer and turned to go up the hill toward Ian, she got a better view. Machine gun muzzle. Maybe an AK-47? She didn’t really know guns.

Her heart went into overdrive as the old Cruiser pulled alongside Ian—who stood as remote and still as a marble statue with his hands in the air.

A door on the Toyota opened, and someone got out. Only bits of the words came down to Cressida, the voice so faint, she wasn’t even certain they spoke Kurdish.

She should have chosen a closer shrub.

They spoke for several minutes, Ian never taking his eyes off the muzzle pointed at his chest. Finally, he moved forward and pressed his hands against the vehicle as someone patted him down.

They must have determined he was safe, because he dropped his hands. He never once looked Cressida’s way. She marveled at his control and wondered if it was military training or CIA.

Probably both.

One of the YPG soldiers laughed, and the melodic sound carried down to her. A woman? How…surprising. Wasn’t this a Muslim group?

After several minutes of conversation, Ian started down the slope toward her. When he was within easy earshot, he said, “Hay-Adams, Cressida.” The soldiers waited behind him, but their machine guns were pointed up, not at his back, thank goodness. “Ollie ollie all come free.”

She smiled and shook her head. Worst. Hide-and-seek game.
Ever.

“I thought it was Ollie ollie oxen free?” she said as she extracted herself from the bush.

He chuckled. He seemed lighter somehow. “Now how would that make sense?”

“Well, for starters, who is Ollie?” She brushed brambles from her clothes as she stood up straight. With a glance up the hill, she said, “Are we really free oxen?”

He plucked a twig from her hair. “Yes. They want us to locate the tunnel on a map. They’ll send out a team to confirm. If they find it, then an hour after sunset tonight, they’ll take us across the river. All we can do is wait and pray for a cloudy night.”

She nodded. One day in Syria. Then on to Iraq.

 

 

 

Chapter Thirty-Seven

A
ll four soldiers were women, and they were curious about Cressida, wanting to know her relationship with Ian and about her work in the US. But none of them spoke English, so Ian provided the translation for both sides of the conversation, which made it interesting when they asked about Ian.

“He’s arrogant and bossy,” she answered. “Refuses to voice his emotions and likes to pretend he doesn’t have them. He’s dedicated to his mission. Being a spy is probably the only thing he really cares about. But he’s decent in bed.”

Ian choked on a laugh and said something in Kurdish to the soldiers without missing a beat.

Cressida was similarly curious about the women and asked several questions of her own. Ian explained that the Kurds in Syria had no problem with training women for combat. Kurdish views on women’s rights were one of the reasons jihadists and al-Qaeda had targeted them.

There was no doubt these women were true soldiers. They moved with the same skill and agility as any man in uniform she’d ever seen, ever alert and ready to lay down bullets to clear their path if need be.

Fortunately, there was no need, and they were taken to a house in the heart of a Kurdish stronghold. Somehow, telling these women fighters the location of the tunnel felt better to Cressida. Not just better, it felt good. Which made no sense, because, regardless of gender, the tunnel would be used strategically. But maybe this wasn’t a choice of lesser evils. Maybe they’d allied with the right side.

Cressida couldn’t fault what these people—these
women
—were fighting for: freedom from an oppressive government, the right to an education, the right to work, the right to live and make their own choices, and the right not to be subjected to chemical weapons attacks.

BOOK: Covert Evidence
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