Dead Eye (25 page)

Read Dead Eye Online

Authors: Mark Greaney

Tags: #Thriller

BOOK: Dead Eye
5.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Russ tried to calm himself before continuing, taking two long, silent breaths and telling himself everything was riding on his powers of persuasion. “I understand your concerns. I do. I am disappointed in some aspects of the operation. But I am who I say I am, and you only have to ask yourself who else could have executed this operation on such a tight timeline to see that I am telling the truth.”

“There is only one way you can convince us.”

Russ knew Hussein was referring to Kiev. He closed his eyes; he had to force himself not to throw the phone into traffic and then turn around and slam his fist into the wall of the hotel.

The Quds Force officer said, “We have statements from all the Iranians present the night in question at Vasylkiv Air Base in Kiev, Ukraine. If your description of the events of that evening coincides with what we already know, then we have a deal regarding Ehud Kalb. If you will not tell us, or if what you tell us does not agree with the witness statements, then there will be no further communications between us.” The line went quiet for a moment, then Hussein said, “It is as simple as that.”

Russ felt himself losing control of his emotions. The anger welled within him, pushing hot blood through his heart and his brain. There on the sidewalk Whitlock thought he might explode with the fury inside that had no way to vent from his body and into the atmosphere.

“I’ll call you back,” was all he could say before he hung up the phone.

Russ knew there was no way around it now. He had to somehow get Gentry to tell him about Kiev. Before he even began thinking of a way to achieve this seemingly impossible objective, his phone buzzed in his hand. He looked down at it, hoping like hell it was Gentry.

Instead, it was Townsend House. Distractedly, Whitlock answered.

“Go.”

Babbitt’s voice came through his phone. “It’s Graveside.” After the identity check, Babbitt asked, “Have you made it to Stockholm yet?”

“Yes,” Russ lied.

“Jumper hit a dry hole this morning. Looks like Gentry slipped the Mossad watchers the night before.”

Whitlock breathed a slow sigh of relief. Finally, some good news. Then, “No ideas where he is?”

“The UAV team is up and Jumper has split into four two-man teams. They are watching choke points.”

“And Mossad?”

“They are still in the city, but operating independently of us for the time being. We expect they will bring in reinforcements from Tel Aviv.” He paused. “If you were ever going to use your sixth sense about Gentry and what he’s up to, this would be the time.”

“Understood. I’ll work on it.”

He hung up the phone and stood there on the sidewalk, struggling with his own next move. He’d planned on flying from here in Genoa to London so he could start the prep for his hit on Ehud Kalb eight days from now, but he could not just assume Court would be able to avoid all the forces lining up against him in Stockholm. And if Gentry died before Kalb died, then Whitlock knew he’d lost his lifeline.

He knew he had no choice. He had to rush to Stockholm, to help Gentry slip the noose and somehow convince him to talk about Kiev.

THIRTY-FIVE

Court chose to spend the majority of the day in his small attic room in the Gamla Stan. The accommodations were opulent compared to where he had spent the previous few evenings, as this unit had its own bathroom and shower, and even a small refrigerator. But as the day turned into night and snowfall picked up outside, Court felt like he was going a little stir-crazy. He decided he would head up the narrow street to a corner market and grab dinner, and then perhaps even venture out for a beer in a dark local bar he had noticed earlier in the day.

At 7-Eleven he bought some cheese spread and packaged toast to smear it on, along with a bottle of water. As he stood in line to pay he noticed a table in the back, upon which three computer terminals had been set up, serving as a tiny Internet café. After paying he strolled to one of the machines and sat down, and soon he was reading up on the Department of State facial recognition system, thought to be the most advanced recog software in use today. Court suspected there were technologies out there that hadn’t made it to open source just yet, although whether Townsend possessed such capabilities he had no idea.

He spread cheese on his dry toast and sipped water, flipped his eyes up to the front of the market, and noticed a woman entering. He looked her over quickly and perfunctorily, and then went back to his online reading.

 

Thirty-three-year-old Mossad targeting officer Laureen Tattersal stepped through the doors of the 7-Eleven, brushed snow off the hood of her down coat, and pulled off her gloves. She took a few seconds to warm her face with her hands and then headed to the coffee area hunting for an espresso, desperately needing one last jolt of caffeine before checking the twenty-first potential target location, just up the street.

It was past eight
P.M.
now; fat snowflakes drifted around the gas lamps hanging from the colorful buildings of the Old Town. The temperature was heading back down to single digits, and the Israeli woman planned to enjoy every second of warmth she could before heading back outside.

It had been a long day for the entire team. They’d moved into a hotel in the city center, less than a half mile from the Townsend safe house and only a hundred yards or so from the bridge to the Gamla Stan, where Ruth had last tracked Gentry. They had then bundled up in their cold-weather gear and hit the area, visiting hotels, apartments, tenements, and B&Bs and even checking under bridges where the homeless lived on cardboard in dirty rags.

So far they’d found nothing, and they planned to knock off for the night in two hours and try again the following day.

Laureen dropped a sugar cube into her espresso and brought it to her lips. As she did so her eyes lifted up to the rear of the brightly lit store, and she froze, nearly scalding her mouth and tongue on the hot coffee.

Laureen looked back down as the man glanced up from the computer in front of him, and she added another sugar to her drink. Then she turned and headed to the register to pay.

It was him. The Gray Man sat at a tiny three-station Internet café set up in the back of the 7-Eleven. He wore his black knit cap just over his eyes, and a scarf hung loosely around the lower portion of his face. He’d bought a new coat since the last time she’d seen him, but still she felt certain this was her target.

She left the convenience store and, in an abundance of caution, walked a full winding, descending block, checking to make certain she was not herself being followed before she pushed the button on her earpiece and announced to her team that she had located the target.

 

Ruth, Mike, and Aron converged on Laureen a few minutes later. They parked the embassy Skoda in an hourly-rate lot there on the Gamla Stan and sat in the sedan for a few minutes, satisfied with the location though it had no line of sight on their target at the convenience store, because Ruth did not dare risk compromise. For now they searched the Internet on their smart phones, looking for tenements or inns around the neighborhood where the Gray Man might be staying, and searching for suitable rooms for themselves to rent in the neighborhood so they could set up a base of operations close by.

Mike called out, “Castanea hostel is two minutes away from the market. It’s the closest location that looks like his kind of place.”

Ruth pulled it up on her phone. “Yeah. I don’t see anything else around here this cheap; I think this has got to be it. We’ll check it out in the morning to make sure.”

Aron was researching places for the team to use to bed down for the night. “There’s a place called the Gamla Stan Lodge just around the corner from us now. I can go get us a couple of rooms there.”

“Do it,” Ruth said.

Aron climbed out of the car and headed up the street on foot.

Ruth decided to give Yanis Alvey the news about finding Gentry, but before she could make the call there was a beep in her ear. Ruth looked down to her phone and saw that it was Yanis calling her.

“Hey,” she said.

“Where are you?”

“I’m in Stockholm. We found the target. He’s still here.”

There was a short pause. “Are you sure?”

“Of course I’m sure. Laureen picked him up thirty minutes ago.”

“But you’ve had no visibility on him all day, is that correct?”

“Correct. But we’ve got him now. We think we know where he’ll stay the night, and we’ll move into a place a couple blocks away.”

“You lost coverage last night at . . . ten
P.M.
?”

Ruth was confused by the questioning. “Around that, I guess. Maybe nine thirty. Why?”

Yanis said, “Because your target went to the south of France and killed a man. If you are certain he is there now . . . you
are
certain?”

“Back up. What do you mean he killed a man in
France
?”

“Amir Zarini was murdered this morning.”

“Oh shit,” she said. Then quickly she added, “But not by Gentry.”

“We just got off a conference call with Langley. They say all their preliminary intel indicates Amir Zarini was gunned down by none other than Court Gentry. He must have flown down from Stockholm last night. I can get you airline manifests, but for anything chartered, you’re better off going yourself to the fixed-base operators at Stockholm Arlanda and talking to them directly.”

“He did
not
go to Nice. That’s impossible.”

“Why is it impossible? You lost him for twenty-four hours. It’s not only possible, it’s perfect. He left Stockholm last night, did the hit this morning, and arrived back this afternoon or this evening. You guys picked him right back up. Nice work.”

Ruth knew Gentry had been in Stockholm that morning; she’d seen him herself. But letting Alvey know she’d purposefully short-circuited the Townsend attack in violation of her orders would get her pulled off the case and recalled to Tel Aviv.

She said, “Send me everything you have on the Zarini assassination.”

“What we have is preliminary. Hell, it was only nine hours ago. But CIA is working with French federal police and they—”

“Just send me everything. Now, please.”

 

The Mossad team moved into two rooms at the Gamla Stan Lodge, a small hotel in the Gamla Stan that looked out over a tiny cobblestone square. Across the street a bar popular with students and other patrons of the cheap hotels and hostels in the area was in full swing; young men and women moved across the snowy open space heading to and from the bar’s bright entrance in a steady stream.

While Mike parked the car at a neighboring lot and Aron and Laureen unpacked, Ruth sat at a little desk and read everything Yanis had sent her about the assassination in Nice. Ruth also scanned online news reports of the hit on the websites of CNN and the BBC.

When Mike returned, they turned on the TV hoping to find more information on the attack. The lodge’s satellite broadcaster received France 2, and the state-owned station showed a lengthy story on the attack, with footage from the scene. Twisted wreckage, bodies covered in yellow tarps, incongruous in front of a backdrop of azure water dotted with pleasure craft. As she watched the news, the others read the CIA info sent by Yanis. When they were finished Ruth said, “You guys have read the after-action reports from the operations Court Gentry has pulled off?”

Everyone had read the Mossad files, and Ruth had filled them in on the dossier she was allowed to see at Townsend House.

“Then you see this is bullshit. This operation in Nice does not fit the Gray Man pattern at all.”

Aron disagreed. “The rifle used in the Zarini hit was a Blaser R93, a favorite of the Gray Man. A weapons smuggler in Austria identified the Gray Man as the purchaser of said rifle. Witnesses at the scene described the Gray Man. Zarini was a known target of Iran, which has also been linked to the Gray Man, just in the last week.” He shrugged. “Sure, certain aspects do not fit, and I can’t deny that, but most of the details do fit, and you should not deny that either.”

Ruth countered. “There are a lot of white guys with brown hair in their thirties. Anyone can use a particular weapon. But the target, the collateral damage . . . the killing of the police officer.
That
is not Gentry.”

Mike said, “He got sloppy. He missed the target and hit the driver, and that caused the collision. After that his operation went tits up, and the cop had time to close in on him, so he didn’t have any options. He took him out.”

“Missed his target? The Gray Man doesn’t miss his target!”

“Listen to yourself,” Aron said. “You sound like you are infatuated by a myth.”

“It’s not a myth. He’s that skilled. And that principled. He doesn’t shoot innocent cops.”

“You told us yourself that he killed his own field team.”

“I told you the CIA
says
he killed his own field team.”

“And you don’t believe them?”

Ruth hesitated. “I think that
if
he killed those guys, he had a reason.”

Aron said, “Well, the timeline doesn’t rule him out of the Zarini hit. Nice is fifteen hundred miles away. Four hours flying time tops with a small corporate jet. Add an hour each way in a turbo prop. That is more than enough time for him to fly to Nice, whack Zarini, and then get back to Stockholm.”

Ruth couldn’t argue with this, because she did not want to reveal to her team that she’d seen Gentry that morning.

Mike Dillman had been standing by the window. He looked out, then quickly moved to the overhead light switch. He flicked it off and said, “Speak of the devil.”

Ruth leaned away from her desk to take a look into the little square. Within a half second she shot back straight up, removing herself from the window. Quickly she turned off the TV with the remote, enshrouding the room in complete darkness.

“Is that him?”

“Yep,” said Mike.

She looked again now and saw a lone man heading toward the lights of the little bar on the other side of the courtyard. She would be invisible up here in the dark from this distance, but still she felt his eyes on her as he glanced around.

After he entered the bar Laureen said, “I guess he doesn’t want to drink alone tonight,” she said.

“Sad life this guy lives,” Dillman said. “No wonder jackasses like him go out to kill people. They get trained, the humanity is drained out of them, and they don’t know how to do anything else.”

Ruth disagreed. “If there were no humanity in the man, his career as an assassin would be very different. He would take money and kill people, no questions asked.”

Aron said, with no small amount of frustration in his voice, “He’s taking money to kill Ehud Kalb. Are you okay with that?”

“We don’t know that.” After another moment she said, “And we aren’t going to find out sitting here.” Ruth stood. “I am going in.”

“You’re joking,” Laureen protested. “You can’t go in there. He’ll make you.” And then she added, “He’s a killer, unless you forgot.”

“There is nothing in his file that gives me any indication he will shoot a woman in the head if she sits down in the same bar as him.”

Aron was against it as well. “Way too risky. You might need to get close to him in another environment. Don’t blow your cover then by your actions now.” He talked to her the way she lectured her team about tradecraft and operational security, and Ruth knew he was right, but she knew something he did not. Gentry had not been involved in a massacre that day in Nice. Someone was railroading him into taking the fall for that, and Ruth wanted answers. She was willing to gamble on pushing this investigation by getting closer to her target.

To justify herself she said, “Is he in there meeting with the Iranians? How the hell are we going to know what he’s up to if we don’t press this?”

Aron looked at her like she was crazy. “I’m going to go out on a limb and say he’s not having a powwow with the Iranians in a Swedish pub.”

“I can’t just follow this man around and wait for the Americans to exterminate him.” She stood and turned on the light, pulled a blond wig and a wig cap out of her bag, and rushed to the mirror.

Aron stood by the door. “Can I speak with you privately, Ruth?”

Ruth pulled her brown hair back and slipped it all inside the wig cap. “Just say what you want to say, Aron.”

He did so. “This is because of Rome.”

Ruth shook her head angrily, her blond locks drooped into her eyes for an instant before she brushed them back. “This is because of right here, right now. If I had fought harder against the system in Rome, then five innocents would not be dead. I will
not
make that mistake again.”

“But—”

Ruth cut him off. “I’m going into that bar, and I will decide how to proceed from there.”

“You aren’t going to bump him, are you?”

She walked over to her makeup case on the desk. “I don’t know. You are welcome to come in and watch over me, but don’t get in my way.”

A few minutes later the three junior Mossad officers watched from the window as Ruth Ettinger crossed the square.

“This is a bad idea,” Laureen said, and neither of her colleagues argued the point.

Other books

La vendedora de huevos by Linda D. Cirino
Road Rage by Robert T. Jeschonek
Positively Criminal by Dymond, Mia
Goddess by Kelly Gardiner
Murder on High Holborn by Susanna Gregory
Situation Tragedy by Simon Brett
The Magic Cake Shop by Meika Hashimoto