He thought ahead and knew he’d have to stop in a few hours. He didn’t want to be driving through the night, when traffic would be sparse and when police roadblocks might pop up. He couldn’t chance staying in any hotels either. A motel would have been doable, but Europe had never embraced the concept or the anonymity such places afforded. No, he and Simmons would be spending the night in the SUV. In a few hundred miles or so, at around the halfway point of his journey, he’d pull into a lay-by, tuck in between some eighteen-wheelers, and, after giving Simmons a knockout dose, wait for morning. Then he’d be on his way again, bright and early, riding the
otoyol
east to Ankara and on to Aksaray before taking the ancient silk road toward Kayceri and to the prize he so desperately sought.
Chapter 25
T
he thing is, with an area this big,” the CIA station chief told Reilly and Ertugrul, “it’s going to be tough getting hold of something that’ll do the trick.”
They were in a windowless room deep inside the U.S. Consulate, a squat concrete bunker of a building that huddled defensively behind fortified walls and security checkpoints. Located twelve miles north of the city, it looked more like a modern prison than a proud emblem of its mother nation. It was a far cry from the stately, old-world elegance of the Palazzo Corpi, the previous consulate that had mingled with the bazaars and mosques in the bustling center of the old city. That consulate, sadly, was part of a long gone world. The new facility, built on a hill of solid rock shortly after 9/11, looked like a prison for a reason. It had to be impervious to any kind of attack. Which it was, so much so that one of the terrorists who was captured after the bombings of the British Consulate and a British bank there told the Turkish authorities that he and his men had originally intended to attack the U.S. Consulate but had found it to be so well secured that, to quote the terrorist himself, “they don’t even let birds fly there.”
Three men did try to attack the consulate a few years later. All three were shot dead before they even made it to the gate.
“What do you mean?” Reilly asked.
“Well, we can probably re-task a Keyhole satellite to pass over the area within the right time frame, but we won’t get real-time video or a constant feed, it’ll just show us what’s going on during the time that it passes over the area with each orbit. And that’s not gonna do it for you.”
Reilly shook his head. “Nope. We don’t know when he’s going to show up.”
“Better would be to see if we can wrangle one of our UAVs out of Qatar for a constant grid search, but—”
“—he’ll spot it,” Reilly interjected, shaking his head, nixing the suggestion of using a remote-controlled, unmanned surveillance drone.
“I’m not talking about Predators. I’m talking about the new kids on the block. RQ-4 Global Hawks. Those babies hang out at forty thousand feet. Your guy doesn’t have bionic vision, does he?”
Reilly frowned. He didn’t like it. “Even with the high altitude … This guy knows what he’s doing, he knows what they look like. The skies will probably be clear this time of year. He might spot it. Can’t we get one of the big birds?”
Like the station chief, Reilly knew the more widely used surveillance satellites—the Keyhole class popularized in movies and on TV—wouldn’t do, not in this case. They were more suited to monitoring a location once every couple hours for, say, the construction of a nuclear plant or the appearance of missile launchers. What they couldn’t do was provide live, constant monitoring of a fixed location. For that, Reilly needed something the National Reconnaissance Office tried to keep under the radar, so to speak: a surveillance satellite that could maintain a geosynchronous orbit above a fixed point on the Earth’s surface and relay live video back in real time. It was a very hard thing to achieve. Satellites drifted away from their positions due to all kinds of perturbations—variations in the Earth’s gravitational field in part due to the moon and the sun, solar wind, radiation pressure. Thrusters and complex “station-keeping” computer programs were needed to keep the satellite over its target for extended periods. And as the birds needed to be deployed at an altitude of twenty-two thousand miles to make this possible, they also needed to have exceptionally advanced imaging technology. Which was why they were bigger than a school bus and were rumored to cost more than two billion dollars each—if, that is, they existed at all. And why there weren’t enough of them to go around.
The station chief’s face crinkled at the request. “Not a chance. With all that’s going on out in that idyllic little part of the world, they’re constantly fully tasked. It’d be impossible to get hold of one. Besides, I don’t think we could even re-task one within the time frame you’re talking about.”
“We need something,” Reilly insisted. “This guy’s already done some serious damage, and he’s intent on causing more.”
The station chief spread out his hands appeasingly. “Trust me on this. An RQ-4 will give you what you need, and then some. Our boys in Iraq and in Afghanistan swear by them. More to the point—they’re your only option. So I’d say, embrace it and hope for the best.”
The station chief was underplaying the Global Hawk’s talents. It was an awesome piece of technology. A big aircraft with a wingspan of more than a hundred feet, the unmanned, remote-controlled drone could travel three thousand miles to its target zone, where it would have “long-dwell”—meaning it could spend many hours watching the same spot—and “broad area coverage” capability. It could carry all kinds of imaging cameras and radars—electro-optical, infrared, synthetic-aperture—and relay back images of the target, day or night, no matter the weather. At a unit cost of thirty-eight million dollars, it was a stunningly powerful and cost-effective way of obtaining IMINT—imagery intelligence—without any risk of ending up with a Francis Gary Powers kind of debacle.
The station chief regarded the map of the mountain again. “Now, assuming we get one, we still have some problems to work out. For one thing, there are too many approach routes to keep under watch. The target area’s just too big to have a constant fix at any resolution that’s useful. Unless we can narrow it down, we’ll need to rotate around it. In which case we might miss our target.”
“It’s all the information we’ve got right now,” Reilly grumbled.
The station chief mulled it over for a beat, then nodded. “Okay. I’ll talk to Langley. See if we can get the guys over at Beale to free one up for us pronto.”
“We just need it for a day or two,” Reilly told him. “But we need it now. No point in having it otherwise.”
“We’ll bust some balls and get one lined up,” the station chief reaffirmed. “But then, we still don’t know what we’re looking for, do we?”
“Just give me some eyes,” Reilly said. “I’ll make sure they have something to look for.”
HE FOUND TESS IN AN empty interview room, sitting at a table that was swamped by big maps. She had her laptop open beside her and was deep in thought. She only noticed his presence when he was standing next to her, and she looked up at him.
“So?” she asked. “How did it go?”
Judging by the tone of her questions, his funk was clearly visible.
He shrugged. “We can’t get the satellite I want, but I think we’ll get a surveillance drone. The target area’s too big, though … the coverage window won’t be as tight as I’d like it to be.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means we might miss something,” he said, his tone somber and heavy with fatigue. He pulled out a chair and plopped himself into it.
Tess smiled. “Maybe I can help.”
Reilly’s brow furrowed, then he managed a small grin. “Not a good time to be taunting me with a back rub.”
Tess shot him a look. “I’m serious, doofus.” She reached for a map of the whole country, laid it on top of the topographic map of Mount Erciyes, and tapped her finger on Istanbul, in the upper left corner. “Take a look.”
He moved closer.
“Okay,” she began. “Constantinople’s up here. That’s where Everard and his merry men, the first Templars to visit the monastery, started their journey.”
She glanced at Reilly to make sure she had his attention. He gave her a “go on, I’m all ears” nod.
“They were trying to get back to here,” she continued, “to Antioch, the nearest Templar stronghold.” She pointed out its location, on the Eastern Mediterranean, in present-day Syria. “But, as we know, they only made it as far as here,” she said as her finger arced back to the center of the map, “Mount Argaeus, where the monastery is.”
“That’s just … astonishing,” he ribbed.
“Look at this mountain, you bonehead. It’s round. Round like a dormant volcano should be. They could have easily gone around it, right?” She derisively stretched out the word “round” and twirled her finger around it on the map. “It’s not like it’s a wall or a barrier that they had to cross. And yet, for some reason, they decided to climb up it.”
Reilly thought about it for a second. “Doesn’t seem reasonable—unless they were trying to stay out of sight.”
She grinned with mock admiration. “God, that Quantico training of yours, the way you just see the most obscure connections … It just boggles the mind, you know that?”
“Well unboggle yourself and tell me what you’re thinking.”
Her tone reverted to serious. “Everard and his troupe
were
trying to stay out of sight. They had to. This all happened in 1203, and back then, the Seljuk Turks had taken over a big chunk of this area.” Her fingers circled the middle of the country. “So as far as the Templars were concerned, it was enemy territory, teeming with roving bands of Ghazi fanatics. So if they had half a brain cell between them, our little gang of Templars would have definitely wanted to avoid wide open spaces. Hence sticking to mountain trails, wherever they could find them. Hence the pit stop at the monastery.”
“Hang on, a Christian monastery in Muslim territory?”
“The Seljuks tolerated Christianity. Christians were free to practice their faith openly. They weren’t persecuted. But this was before the sultans and the Ottoman Empire. This area was like the Wild West, with all these gangs roaming around, looking for blood—kind of like the gangs of Confederate soldiers after the Civil War. They were dangerous, which is why the churches and the monasteries were tucked away in caves and mountains and not just out in plain sight.”
“Okay, but that doesn’t really help us,” Reilly told her. “Once Everard and his people started climbing, they could have gone clockwise or counterclockwise, right? Which means we still have the whole mountain to watch.”
“Maybe. But, check this out.” Now visibly enthused, she brought the mountain-climbing map back out. “Look at the contour lines, here and here.” She was pointing out an area just west of the north side of the mountain, kind of at the volcano’s eleven o’clock line. “See how tight they are?”
The contour lines that showed the elevation levels—in this case, at regular intervals of fifty meters—had converged and were virtually on top of one another, meaning that area was very steep. In fact, more than steep—it was a vertical drop.
“It’s a cliff,” Tess explained. Her eyes were ablaze with excitement. “A pretty big one, in fact. They would have seen it as they started heading up the mountain. And they would have had to go the other way—counterclockwise. Which, as it turns out, is the more direct route for them anyway.”
Reilly leaned in for a better look, his interest piqued. “What if their approach was from farther east? They would have hit the mountain on the other side of that cliff and gone around it the other way.”
“I doubt that,” Tess countered. “Look at the area here, north of the mountain. Kayseri’s been around for over five thousand years. It was one of the most important Seljuk cities. If our Templars were looking to go unnoticed, they would have steered clear of it too—and given that they were coming from the northwest, they would have skirted around it from the west, maybe through the valleys of Cappadocia, where they would have found good cover with the Christian communities who’d been sheltering in that area’s caves and underground cities since the earliest days of the faith. And I did some more digging around, if you’ll pardon the pun. This area right here?” She indicated the northwestern flank of the mountain. “Very popular with mountaineers, year-round. I’ve got to think that if the ruins of the monastery were there, I would have found some mention of it on some Web site. And this side, the north face, is where the skiing resort is. Same thing there. The whole face must have been surveyed to death. Someone would have seen it and made a note of it.” She framed Reilly with an assured, adrenaline-charged look. “You want a smaller search area? Forget about the right side of the mountain, Sean. Concentrate on the western half.”