Collision(118)
“I don’t know,” she said.
“I thought . . .” Ben stopped. “Adam Reynolds originally designed this software to find terrorists. Did he call you Monday because he found, not the Cellar, but actual terrorists?”
Pritchard rubbed her temples, as if fending off a migraine.
“Answer him, Margaret,” Vochek said.
“He made a mistake,” she said. “He found suspicious activity centering on a group of men using suspect IDs traveling to New Orleans. But they’re not terrorists.”
“Who are they?”
Pritchard seemed not to hear him. “I came to New Orleans to check it out. That’s why I was here. It’s not a problem.”
“Who is Hector targeting?” Ben asked. “Because whatever’s here, it’s why he’s taken over the Cellar.”
“He couldn’t be after them,” Pritchard said in a whisper. “No reason to go after them.”
Ben grabbed her shoulders. “Tell us.”
“Reynolds’s search queries . . . they found a group of Arabic men traveling under a pattern that suggested assumed names, coming into the country a few weeks ago, all ending up in New Orleans. But these men aren’t terrorists. They’re training at a CIA safe house.” Pritchard swallowed.
“Oh, my God,” Ben said.
“They’re Arabs preparing to infiltrate and spy on terrorist groups overseas. To be the native eyes and ears we haven’t been able to have in places like Beirut and Baghdad and Damascus. We’ve never had true, trained spies working deep cover inside Hezbollah or al-Qaeda or any of the other networks. Our best hope of destroying terrorist networks from inside.”
Ben let her go. “Where is this safe house?”
“I don’t have the location . . . that’s classified . . .”
“But Adam gave Hector the same information he gave you,” Vochek said. “Hector’s going to use the Cellar to kill a CIA team. Why would he—”
“Because Hector needs the war on terror to keep going for a good long time,” Ben said. “It’s fueling his bottom line.” He thought of Pilgrim’s Indonesian story; framing Pilgrim in turn for a security contract for his new company, profiting from fear and chaos.
Hector was repeating his own history, but now on a much wider and more dangerous scale.
The knock on the door came, a man announcing room service.
The waiter, a gentle, hardworking man who had been with the hotel for twenty years and had been one of the first employees to return in the wake of Katrina, knocked on the door, announced, “Room service.” He was tired, his feet ached, and he was ready to go off duty. He nodded at the young man ambling down the hallway, turned back toward the door, and felt the cool metal touch his temple. He froze.
“You’re going to walk in and leave the door propped open. Do it and you won’t get hurt. Argue and you’re dead. I don’t want to hurt you. Nod if you understand.” The voice was a lightly accented whisper.
The waiter, stiff with fear, nodded. The young man stepped back against the wall, where he wouldn’t be seen.
The door opened.
41
Pilgrim watched the cars leave—two of them. One was a van holding the Cellar agents, the other a sedan with just Hector. Jackie had taken off five minutes earlier in a third car, and Pilgrim let him go. He had to stay with Hector.
The two vehicles pulled onto Veterans Boulevard, headed east, then headed north toward Lake Pontchartrain. Traffic was heavier than normal— Saturday night in New Orleans—and he hung back, keeping an eye on Hector’s car. They weren’t wasting any time; whatever this job was, they were moving now.
He did not want to kill anyone in the Cellar. They had made the same choice he had, to take a broken life and rebuild it into meaningful work. Perhaps they hadn’t chosen entirely for virtuous reasons; he himself had no desire to rot in an Indonesian prison. They had all done work that would offer no acclaim and few rewards, other than Teach’s assurance they had done a Good Thing.
What could be in New Orleans that interested Hector so that he needed the Cellar? Hector Global could command a thousand trained men for action anywhere in the world. But those men wouldn’t kill at will, especially outside a war zone.
This had to be a job that his normal security forces would refuse to do. Because there would be questions. Repercussions. Hector needed deniability.
If he could take Hector out with a shot—then the rest of the group would come after him, perhaps abandon the target if they lost the element of surprise.
He stayed close as they began to head into the patchwork of rebuilt and devastated neighborhoods close to the massive lake.