The Courier: A Ryan Kealey Thriller (12 page)

BOOK: The Courier: A Ryan Kealey Thriller
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“You’re taller than I remember,” Largo said.
“You’re the same.”
Largo said, “Truer than you know.”
Kealey wondered what Allison would have made of that remark. God, she had him thinking like her now. “This is Rayhan Jafari,” Kealey said.

Rayhan
,” he repeated. “You’re Ryan . . . she’s Rayhan. That would’ve been confusing in the old days, on those big, crackly radios.”
“We would have had more colorful
noms de guerre
,” Ryan suggested.
The older man backed away in little steps and waved them in. His shoulders were hunched with age but his hands were as steady as his gaze. He seemed to be studying the younger man—critically, but with a dawning admiration.
“Yes, I can see now it’s you,” the older man said. “I never noticed your mother before, only your dad. She’s in the strong set of your mouth, mostly.”
“She got hers dealing with Dad,” Kealey said. “I got mine dealing with bureaucrats.”
Largo smiled and closed the door. He motioned the two up a short flight of stairs. “Why didn’t you call? I could have dressed for the occasion.”
“You look fine,” Rayhan assured him.
“Besides, if you turned me down I wouldn’t have gotten to see you,” Kealey said.
Largo followed them up, holding the banister. “Why would I have turned you down?”
Kealey waited until his uncle reached the top of the stairs. “Because I’m here on business.”
CHAPTER 7
SALÉ, MOROCCO
S
alé comes from
asla
, which means “rock” in Berber. Dating back to the seventh century BC, it is the oldest city on the Atlantic Coast. Today it is a rock of extremist Islam, the home of many active jihadist groups and fanatical Muslim beliefs and practices. With radicalism at its core, and staggering poverty throughout the streets and alleys, the city is effectively isolated from the rest of modern Morocco.
Mohammed and Aden, the men who murdered Qassam Pakravesh, drove a rusting, thirty-year-old VW van from the N1 to the N6. Mohammed was behind the wheel. It was late at night, the highway was relatively free of traffic, and the men were both more relaxed now that they’d achieved their goal.
They didn’t speak, each man lost in reflection. Mohammed’s head was full of remembering. Not just about his brother; that was in his body, in his flesh. What was in his mind was training he had undergone with al Qaida in Yemen. First, the manual that had comic strip illustrations of how to stab a man or woman, where to shoot to kill or cripple, sensitive areas of the body to extract information with anything from a pencil to a shard of brick—of which there were many from explosions caused by enemies without and rival factions within, like the misguided Shi’ite separatists who fought them instead of the imperialists. He remembered the awful heat at the training camp in Southern Yemen, a flat, barren desert where nothing grew but men. The hours spent under the sand at night, breathing through a straw; learning to use his ears to listen for vehicles and voices; learning to lie still for hours at night so the sand would blow naturally above him. And the days learning to endure the heat; digging tunnels with hands or a child’s plastic shovel for concealment and storage of weapons; and physically toning by climbing on or swinging from ropes.
Putting knives or bullets in dead bodies taken from morgues. Tying wire around throats and garroting them. That came naturally.
His grief was tempered with excitement that the arduous months had borne fruit. The men were also tired from the long shifts of watching and tracking the Iranian. Before they hurried away, they collected what they thought was useful from the dead man—the belt he wore with the passports and cash and the box he was trying to carry off, but not his gun. That was a sad reminder of why Mohammed and Aden were here. The dead man’s identity would probably never be known, but his controllers in Iran would know what happened to him—and they would figure out why. Mohammed had shot him in the mouth the way his brother had been shot by this man for defying an order to assassinate a local mayor who was hostile to Iranian influence in the nation. He was a leader in the Zayi order of Shi’a, to which Mohammed and his brother belonged, and that took precedence over the funds Tehran gave to Yemeni al Qaida—the group to which Mohammed and his brother also belonged.
They were staying in the back room of a café across the street from the railway station. It wasn’t until they parked—in the darkness beside the metal trash barrels near a high wooden fence—that they completely relaxed.
Mohammed leaned across the seat and embraced his companion.
“Thank you, dear friend, for making my vengeance your own,” Mohammed said.
“We have an unbroken bond now,” said the younger man. “I am your brother now and proudly so.”
The men unloaded the van—the supplies they had carried with them in case their stay in Rabat had been a long one, rolls of money, maps, the diagram the stevedore had drawn them of the hotel interior, and the box they had taken from the dead man. A box, they now saw, that was more than it had appeared in the dark. They had known right away that it was heavy, and presumed it held ammunition or gold, which was why they had taken it. Now that the two men looked at the gunmetal container in the open hatch of the van, and saw a black swastika stenciled on the four sides, they knew it was something more. Especially since someone had taken the pains to weld it shut.
“What do we do with it?” Aden asked.
Mohammed shook his head. He tried to go through the victim’s phone messages, but the phone was locked with a password. He stuck it in his back pocket.
“I’ll find tools,” he said upon reflection.
“Maybe we can use the tire iron.”
“Why not a rock or a brick?”
“Why not?” Aden asked.
Mohammed smirked. “I was joking.” He handed Aden the pistol. “You wait here. I’m sure I can find a hammer and chisel. We
may
want to close it again.”
“What is the story about the box? The curious girl?” Aden asked.
Mohammed did not know, and he couldn’t imagine why Aden knew a story about a girl.
He was raised on the Koran and tales of the great caliphs. Nothing else mattered. He walked off, thinking he could find something in the rail yard. Aden watched him go, then ran his fingers along the silver weld.
“It doesn’t look that strong,” he muttered. He moved the container aside and opened the tool compartment in the back. He removed the tire iron, tapped at the weld, then noticed a crowbar in the well. He took the warm, rusty tool out and angled it against the thick smudge of melted lead. He stabbed it repeatedly until the weld started to come away from the metal. It did not break off but remained attached, like a tight metal band; still, the slight gap allowed him to work along the front side of the box. Jiggling it with the crowbar inserted in the gap allowed him to loosen the broken lid.
Setting the crowbar aside, Aden put both his hands on the sides of the top and wriggled it until it came free.
 
 
Mohammed returned after ten minutes. He saw his friend slumped half in, half out of the back of the van interior and ran over. He dropped the tools he’d stolen and ran forward. His first thought was that the young man had been shot, since Aden appeared to be lying in a soapy pool of reddish blood. As he neared, however, he saw that Aden was not dead and that the fluid was vomit, not blood. Then he saw that the young man’s limbs were convulsing with short staccato tics.
Mohammed pulled him to the ground, laid him out gently, saw in the light from the van that his eyes were rolled back in his head. Aden was trying to raise his arms.
“Lie still,” Mohammed said. He winced as he used a sleeve to wipe the young man’s mouth. There was blood in his spittle. “I’m going to find a medic.”
Aden shook his head once.
“I must—” Mohammed said but Aden tried to grab his shirt, stop him.
“Box . . . hot,” he croaked.
“Hot?”
Aden lay back. He nodded, gagging on the froth in his throat.
The realization hit Mohammed like a bullet—what was in the box. He looked over at it. The contents—were radioactive. The Iranian had picked
something
up on the ship, perhaps uranium, and was carrying it to a destination. Most likely on a schedule, with other intermediaries to meet him.
That was a delivery someone would absolutely be expecting. And would miss. What had they stumbled into?
Mohammed looked down at his friend. The lid was shut but the seal had been broken. Was this his own fate now? He had to do something about that.
And about Aden. That is, if anything
could
be done for him. The young man was trembling and red-tinged saliva was dribbling from both sides of his mouth. Either he was biting his tongue or he was hemorrhaging internally. In either case, he would not leave him lying on the ground. Mohammed scooped him in his arms and laid him in the back of the van. He picked up the tire iron and used it to nudge the box back just enough so that he could close the back door. Then he stood away from the van.
For something to work this fast, with so brief an exposure—the purity and deadliness was unfathomable to him. This was too important for Mohammed to decide. Aden, like himself, was a martyr to the cause of Islam: to obtain—and protect—a weapon this powerful he would gladly give his life.
And now Mohammed was being asked to give over his new brother’s life for the cause. He knew he was being asked to do so because it had to have been the Hand of God that sent him away while Aden opened the seal. Otherwise, they should have opened it together and both men would have perished.
Mohammed would not stay here, at the café. It occurred to him that he must first locate a dentist’s office. They had coverings to shield radiation. That would help to slow whatever exposure Mohammed might be receiving. Then he would go somewhere and get rid of the van, steal a different vehicle, and contact Yemen. He would find out if there were contacts here he could trust. Salé was rich with sympathetic souls, but he could not be certain which of those souls might also be sympathetic to Iran. Many would be happy to take his money to provide safe haven—then report him to agents of Tehran. Mohammed needed to get away from here. That was first.
“I will make sure that your sacrifice matters, my brother,” he said as he climbed into the van.
He could hear Aden breathing in desperate little gasps. Mohammed wasn’t sure how he himself felt, whether the weakness in his arms, the trembling in his wrists, was shock or exhaustion or something worse. He didn’t think that anything in nature, other than a snakebite or certain kinds of poison gas, could kill so swiftly. If it was something radioactive—he had always heard that even intense radiation, like the fallout in Hiroshima or the meltdown in Chernobyl, killed over time. Days on average, hours at the worst.
What in the name of God had that Iranian been carrying
?
Whatever it was, the toxicity made it imperative that Mohammed make his next moves quickly and carefully. He pulled away from the café and drove to a new medical center the United Nations had helped to build. He would get what he needed there, then drive to the Bou Regreg River. The waterfront was populated by people who were accustomed to smuggling arms, drugs, people. Now, with the cash he had taken from the Iranian, he should have enough money to buy information, allies, pockets that would serve as sanctuary. It could only be temporary, until someone on the other side came along with more cash. But he didn’t think he would need very long.
Something more important was beginning to take root in his mind.
A way to use what they had found.
VALLEY STREAM, NEW YORK
They sat in the living room with its worn gray carpet and sofas in need of reupholstering. There was an old, black Baldwin upright piano opposite the sofas and shelves lined with framed photographs. None was from the war. None was only of Largo. All had May or Largo and May. On the piano, on the glass coffee table, were trinkets like snow globes and music boxes Kealey was sure May had placed there. There was a hardcover novel with a toothpick stuck in the middle.
War and Peace
. It seemed eerily appropriate.
Largo gestured to the sofa while he sat in an armchair kitty-corner from his nephew.
“This is a cozy home,” Rayhan remarked.
“I’m comfortable,” Largo said. “All my good memories are here. They’re tough to move.” His eyes were on Kealey. “How are you, Ryan?”
“I’m okay, Uncle. You seem well.”
“I am. My life is about day-to-day contentment. The sound of the poplars in the wind, the chatter of the birds, the smell of the roses. I walk. I garden. I read. It’s a little like a hoedown.”
Kealey smiled a little at that. Either it was intentional or Largo was slipping. That was an old OSS term for someone in the center of an operation. With no way out, the only option was to keep dancing with an eye on the exit. The country boys among them gave the expression their own down-home twist.
“You don’t have people shooting at you,” Kealey said. “That must mean something to you.”
Largo turned to Rayhan. “Did you ever see or hear a car accident?”
“Once,” she said.
“Do you remember the sound of the crash and the silence?”
“Vividly,” she replied, shuddering.“I was just five or six—both sounds were terrible.”
“That’s just one bomb, one bullet chipping a stone near your cheek, the spark stinging you and leaving a phantom burn that never goes away.” Largo looked back at his nephew. “You’ve experienced that, I’m sure.”
“I have,” Kealey said. “But it’s different for me.”
“How?”
“I’m still in the game,” Kealey said. “Remembering is part of the survival drill, keeping the instincts sharp.”
Largo said, “Don’t worry: they never dull. The word Ms. Jafari said—‘vividly.’ It’s all there, still.” The older man looked at Rayhan. “Can I get you anything? Juice? Tea?”
“Thank you, no.”
Largo’s gaze shifted back to Kealey. They were guarded now, those old eyes that had seen so much. “How about you?”
“I’m fine,” Kealey said.
The innocuous phrase hung in the air. Largo was waiting.
Old habits
? Kealey wondered
. Social talk, activities, were completely safe to engage in . . . while you watched, listened.
“Uncle Largo, I want to talk about Brest,” Kealey said. “About the U-246.”
Kealey watched his uncle carefully. His gaze was impenetrable. It was like a clash of two different generational mind-sets. The post-9/11 field agents of which Kealey was one—not the bureaucrats Clarke had been complaining about, but the spies—had a shared-information mentality. But the old guard who fought the Nazis, the Communists, were all a tight-lipped, eyes-only breed. Talking to colleagues came only a little easier than talking to the enemy. Kealey had seen that in the debrief. Even though the war was over, getting Uncle Largo to loosen up took time.
“The enemy lost a lot of good men that day,” Largo said. He seemed to choke up. His hands were fists, twisting slightly; he probably wasn’t even aware of it. The older man looked back at Rayhan. “What is your specialty?”
She looked to Kealey for guidance. He nodded his okay.
“Nuclear physics,” she told him—quietly, as though she were reporting the death of a loved one.
Largo’s demeanor changed. Something seemed to sink inside, slowly, dragging the rest of him down with it. “Oh, God.” His eyes rolled toward his nephew. “Someone found it.”
Kealey nodded. “Yes, Uncle. Not us.”
Largo’s hands relaxed and he sat very still for a moment. He seemed to be staring through Kealey—into the past or into the future, neither of his guests could be sure. He inflated as slowly as he had deflated moments before and nodded. His eyes came alive: they were young eyes again, not weary but curious. “We didn’t have the technology to go and retrieve it, though I heard we got most of the scientists. I often wondered about it, if it was forgotten. That bomb. What do you want to know?”
“I read the transcript of your debrief,” Kealey told him. “You were thorough. It was brilliant. It was also very, very factual. What I want to know is what did you think or guess about the project itself? What did the OSS fear? It wasn’t just the plutonium.”
“No,” Largo agreed. He seemed to be searching his memory for long lost, perhaps long suppressed details. “It was frightful to them, I know. I heard hints about a debate, whether to storm the pens and try to retrieve the cargo. What to do about plans and blueprints in Berlin. A team was being assembled to try and infiltrate the German high command, get it before the Russians. But apparently everything was burned.”
“There were no V-2s where the U-boat was headed,” Kealey said. “Was there any indication that the bomb they were constructing was going to be an airdrop, like Hiroshima? Do you have any idea how far along the device was?”
Largo placed his palms on his knees and stood. Decades seemed to fall away. This was his life, his life’s blood, the thing he had lived, that had powered his actions, his psychology for those hellish years. Now the dragon was back and he had risen to meet it.
“I had no evidence of what I am about to say, only a feeling,” Largo said. “An impression. I did not have it then, of course. This was all undiscovered country at the time. After Hiroshima, when we learned some of the details of the Little Boy bomb, I realized that the Nazis had apparently taken their research in a different direction. Radioactive material alone could have been smuggled from the country in a smaller package than my initial recon suggested they were carrying. I believed—this was in 1947, when it no longer mattered—that their bomb was not designed to be fired by missile or dropped from an aircraft. It was created to be exploded on the ground.”
A chill went through the two guests as though they were one. It was enough for Largo to notice.
“You are not talking about a dirty bomb,” Rayhan said, “a mass of TNT packaged with exposed radioactive material.”
“I am not,” Largo said.
“A suitcase bomb?” she said.
“We called it a trunk bomb back then, but it made sense,” Largo said. “Security-wise, there was no advantage to having the Kriegsmarine carry out the mission instead of the Luftwaffe. And there were disadvantages. Those submarine pens in Brest were a rich, looming target. The chances of them being hit before the transfer could be made were high. A solitary aircraft, a Stuka, leaving at night, flying low, would have had a better chance of avoiding Allied attention. But an aircraft could not then fly to Paris or London or New York harbor.”
“You think they were that close?” Kealey asked.
“Why not? They had the scientists, the resources, the will, and the greatest need,” Largo said. “After the war, I was allowed to go through the German naval charts and records. I was looking for mines and secret missions involving stolen art and gold. Most of that material—” he stopped. “Forgive me. Most of those
possessions
, those treasures that belonged to families and national institutions, were smuggled out by train. But so much was still unaccounted for. It was in the records of the Baltic Command in Kiel that I came across the mission log for the U-246. There was a red line through the dates following its mission from Brest. When a vessel was destroyed, a black line was put through the remainder of the diary. A red line indicated ‘top secret.’ ”
“There was no black line after that?” Kealey asked.
“There was no black line after anything,” Largo said. “It was over for the Baltic Command, and after the Bulge a few months later, it was over for the Reich.”
“A portable device,” Kealey said. He looked at Rayhan. “You know what that means?”
She nodded.
“There was one other piece of evidence,” Largo went on. “At a time when Berlin needed its best men at sea, its very best to cut the supply lines from America and Britain to France, they were prepared to hold one of their top submariners, Korvettenkapitän Karl Rasp, in port. Doing nothing but waiting.” He grew thoughtful. “And yet, waiting there gave him something we all had in common. The desire to die with his boots on.”
“Sorry to get clinical on you, because I understand that sentiment—but if it were only a matter of connecting a few wires, why didn’t they just finish up in France?” Kealey asked.
“It would have been more than that,” Rayhan said. “They could have been close but not in that way. During the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union both had nuclear bombs that were compact enough to be carried in a large backpack. We always suspected that technology came from the German scientists both nations had captured. But there was a lot of work left undone.”
“What did the Germans need to finish the project?” Largo asked eagerly. “I’ve always wondered about it.”
“According to the few records that survived, they were trying to find a means of stabilizing the nitroglycerin that would be necessary to trigger the blast,” she said. “Some sort of gyroscopic system or neutralizing agent that would have kept it from blowing up prematurely, especially in a U-boat that would be surfacing and diving and experiencing changes in pressure that might not affect a sailor but could impact an explosive mechanism.”
“What would the potency have been of such a weapon?” Kealey asked.
“A bomb like that would have been limited in its sheer destructive power and localized radiation, because it cannot cause a fission progression,” Rayhan said. “That’s the domino effect that produces the exponential blast. But a bomb like that would still explode at a level comparable to some twenty tons of TNT and—this is important—it would yield a five-hundred-rem burst of radiation. That would produce a one hundred percent fatality result roughly fifteen hundred feet beyond the blast radius. Probably higher in a city because the heat of any metropolis would cause the irradiated particles to rise and carry the fallout even farther. Of course, that would diminish the potency of the fallout, but that is all relative. Such a device would have destroyed several city blocks and poisoned the survivors for a wide radius beyond that. And think of the medical resources the survivors would have consumed, the military patrols that would have to have been diverted from combat to guard ports, terminals, and airports.”
Largo was nodding. “My biggest fear was never the one bomb alone but that others might be produced if this one reached its destination. We believed the Nazis lacked additional stores of plutonium. But we did not know that for sure. There was talk that Japan was working on enrichment programs in conjunction with German scientists, possibly in one of the Japanese-occupied islands or in South America. We never found evidence of that, but it was a major concern.”
Kealey regarded Rayhan. “I gather, from your expression, that whoever has this might not need an R&D program like the Nazis were running.”
Her face had been taut, unhappy. She relaxed a little.
“Nothing like it, unfortunately,” Rayhan said. “These days, any capable IED maker could find a way to set that off.” She turned to Largo. “How much do you estimate this device weighed?”
“That’s an interesting question,” he said. “We had no idea, other than to guess by what you would now call reverse engineering. In order to fit the bomb through the hatch of the submarine, it could not have been much larger than one of those carrying cases, the kind people use for cats. A large cat. A solid lead container would have been too large for that purpose, so we believe they came up with a kind of layered mesh of lead film and lead-laced fabric to contain the radiation by steps.”
“So there would have been a little flexibility and possibly reduced weight overall,” Rayhan said.
“Exactly,” Largo said. “There was corroborating evidence in plans we found entirely unrelated to this involving bullet-resistant vests for soldiers made the same way we figured the lead box would be made.”
“Spin-offs,” Rayhan said. “Even then.”
“We also knew the package would have to be loaded and unloaded quickly, for secrecy. That meant no block-and-tackle rigs.
That
meant something one or two men could handle. To answer your question, we put the weight of the device, fully loaded, at around eighty to one hundred pounds.”
“Not fun but not a backbreaker,” Kealey said.
“Moving it along the conning tower, two men under, two man above, we figured it was manageable,” Largo said. He snickered humorlessly. “An odd kind of word, a little neutral, don’t you think?”
“Sorry?” Kealey said.
“I just remembered it. We kept referring to the device container as ‘manageable.’ Like it was a problem child. You have to remember that none of us knew about the Manhattan Project. We suspected our people were working on something but we didn’t know what or where or how it would be delivered. And we really didn’t know what our bomb would be capable of. We thought—well, it will be a bigger bomb than we were used to, is all. And we’d seen the results of some pretty awful sorties. Multi-ton bombs, carpet bombing, firebombs. We saw films of poison gas from the previous war. We never really quantified what ‘much worse’ would be until after Hiroshima.”
“What did you think then?” Rayhan asked.
Largo was still and silent for several seconds. “I thanked the good Lord in Heaven and all His angels that we had got it and not Hitler or Tojo. That was all. Every other thought, about the casualties and the aftershocks, were—I’m sorry to say—insignificant beside that. Years later, when I heard that the Russians had it, I still wasn’t scared. I met some of those guys from Moscow and Kiev and Leningrad during the war. They were chest-thumping, hard-drinking loudmouths, but they weren’t nuts. I wasn’t worried until the religious crazies got enough cash to try and buy them. There’s no quicker way to get to Paradise than on the wings of a mushroom cloud.”

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