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Brooks defiantly shook her head. "No. What are you going to do? Hit me? Throw me out off the plane? I don't think so. You need help. You're just too scared to admit it."
"I don't need any help." Rapp stood.
"Keep telling yourself that. You might actually believe it someday."
18.
R app opened the door at the rear of the cabin and stepped into the forward pressurized cargo area. He closed the door behind him and leaned against it. The metal floor was streaked with dirt and grease where cargo had been pushed in and dragged out. A series of three overhead lights lit the s.p.a.ce. It was empty except for one half-moon cargo container that was secured flush against the far bulkhead. Rapp looked at the s.h.i.+ny, dented aluminum container with a complete lack of enthusiasm. Subconsciously, he'd been hoping to put this off. Let someone else deal with it. Someone who was properly motivated. He was sure they could find plenty of Secret Service agents who would give up their badge for five minutes alone with Gazich. Maybe even the president-elect himself would like a private audience with the Bosnian. app opened the door at the rear of the cabin and stepped into the forward pressurized cargo area. He closed the door behind him and leaned against it. The metal floor was streaked with dirt and grease where cargo had been pushed in and dragged out. A series of three overhead lights lit the s.p.a.ce. It was empty except for one half-moon cargo container that was secured flush against the far bulkhead. Rapp looked at the s.h.i.+ny, dented aluminum container with a complete lack of enthusiasm. Subconsciously, he'd been hoping to put this off. Let someone else deal with it. Someone who was properly motivated. He was sure they could find plenty of Secret Service agents who would give up their badge for five minutes alone with Gazich. Maybe even the president-elect himself would like a private audience with the Bosnian.
Rapp tried to focus on his next step, but couldn't get his mind off what Brooks had said. He'd allowed a twenty-something rookie to get under his skin to the point where he'd actually thought of hitting her just to get her to shut up. She'd driven him out of the windowless cabin and back into the cargo hold, simply because he didn't want to hear another word. He was not well. He knew it. He just didn't want to hear it. Especially from someone he barely knew.
With two hours left in the flight he could think of only one excuse to get away from her. The unofficial manual on interrogation was pretty straightforward when it came to a situation where time was not critical. You softened up the detainee by stripping them of all sense of time and place, while at the same time building up a dossier on their history. Then you carefully crafted your plan of attack in the same way a prosecutor prepares to question a defendant at trial. Except in this situation there is no defense attorney to object and no judge to sustain the objection.
You start by asking only questions that you already know the answer to. That way if the detainee lies, you have grounds to make him uncomfortable until he tells you the truth. When he finally does, you move on to the next question. If he is honest, you move on again. If he lies, the pain/pleasure principle is put in to play. This continues until a pattern of honesty is developed and then you begin with the important stuff.
Usually twenty-four hours was the minimum time needed to properly disorient a subject. Gazich had been in the container going on thirteen hours. Not ideal, but then again the man had four gunshot wounds to very sensitive areas of the body. His last morphine shot had been delivered on the tarmac in Germany. Right about now, the drug would be wearing off and the pain would be hitting him in waves-increasing in frequency and strength.
Rapp approached the aluminum box and grabbed the handle. The front wall was basically two interlocking doors. Rapp was not worried that Gazich would be able to make any attempt at escape. He twisted the handle, spun it ninety degrees, and then swung the right door open. The inside of the door, as well as the rest of the container, was lined with gray acoustic foam. The box was five feet deep by eight feet wide. Rapp grabbed the other door and opened it as well.
Light spilled into the dark chamber throwing Rapp's shadow onto Gazich's body. The Bosnian was lying on a nylon field stretcher that sat only a few inches off the ground. His pants had been cut away so Stroble could clean and dress the gunshot wounds to his knees. Rapp looked at the bandages. They were clean and white. No sign of blood. Four wide straps secured Gazich to the stretcher as well as two wrist cuffs. Even if he were healthy he would have a hard time breaking free. With the wounds to his knees and hands it was hopeless.
Gazich squinted and turned his head just enough to look at the shadowy figure before him. "Is it time for my in-flight meal?"
Rapp laughed. "Yeah...filet mignon accompanied with a first-cla.s.s Cabernet."
"I prefer Bordeaux."
"Great. So in addition to being a terrorist you're also a wine sn.o.b."
"No. I just hate America." Gazich smiled showing off a slight gap between his top two teeth.
The fact that Gazich might harbor ill will toward the United States was something he had not considered. "So you have a beef with America?"
"Doesn't everybody?"
"No. Actually we get along pretty well with most people." As Rapp's eyes adjusted to the change in light he could see that Gazich was sweating. "Would you like another shot of morphine?"
Gazich hesitated. He was not stupid. He had a fairly good idea how this game was played. "Not very sporting of you, the way you sneaked up behind me."
"Back in Cyprus?"
"You hid behind that doorframe like a woman. The same way your pilots like to drop bombs from the sky."
Rapp laughed. "Yeah, you Bosnians are famous for fighting fair. Is that what you were doing when you rounded up all those innocent Muslim women and children and slaughtered them?"
"I have no idea what you are talking about."
"So you're not a Bosnian?" Rapp asked in a sarcastic voice.
"I am Greek."
Rapp shook his head. "You're a liar. And a bad one at that, but I'll play along with you for a while. What were those Russians doing in your office last night?"
"I don't know. I have never seen them before."
"So the guy on the street. The one sitting in the front seat of the parked car...you just shot him for no reason."
"I do not know what you are talking about."
For the first time Rapp was starting to think that Gazich might not be very smart. "I watched you walk down the street, stroll up to the open window, and shoot the man twice in the heart. And then you stood there and talked to him for a while before you took off and did your little dance across the roof tops."
Gazich squirmed under the straps. After a long moment he said, "It was a disagreement."
"So you do know them?"
"No."
"Who was the disagreement between then?"
"A friend of mine and those Russian gangsters."
Rapp eyed Gazich with suspicion. He wondered for a moment if it was possible that the attack in America and the Russians showing up in Cyprus were in fact unrelated. Once he started with the Russian he'd get to the bottom of it. The man would not be hard to break.
"The cafe owner?"
"Yes."
"That's interesting."
"Why?" Gazich shut his eyes as he was. .h.i.t with a wave of pain.
"The cafe owner says those Russians were looking for you."
"He's not all right in the head. He owed them money. They were threatening him, so I stepped in to help him out. We Greeks stick together."
Rapp looked down at him, his patience quickly running out. He squatted down on his haunches and said, "I'm not a particularly patient man, so I'm going to get down to business. I know who you are. I know you're not Greek, I know that those Russians were sent to Cyprus to kill you, and I know you were in Was.h.i.+ngton two and a half months ago."
"I'm afraid you are confused."
"Confused." Rapp chewed on the word for a moment. "I'm a lot of things, but confused is not one of them. I'll tell you what I am, though. I'm the last man on the planet that you want to p.i.s.s off any further than you already have. I don't enjoy this s.h.i.+t, but each time you jerk me off with one of your bulls.h.i.+t answers, I lose what little sympathy I have for you."
"You don't strike me as the caring type anyway."
"You'd be surprised."
"Do you care about the truth? About justice? Are you open to the idea that maybe your c.o.c.ksure American att.i.tude has blinded your judgment? Do you think it's possible that maybe I'm not the man you're looking for?"
Rapp grinned and scratched the black stubble on his chin. "Oh...boy. You just don't get it. You're in way over your head."
"I would like to speak to a lawyer."
"Lawyer," Rapp laughed. "That's a good one. Did I forget to show you my badge?" Rapp patted his pockets. "Oh that's right. I forgot. I don't carry one." He leaned in closer. "There aren't going to be any lawyers. No judge. No jury. Just a really painful interrogation, a confession, and then your execution. Based on your att.i.tude so far, I'd say there's about a ninety-five percent chance that's the way things will turn out."
Gazich licked his lips and blinked his eyes. Rapp's words were having very little effect on him due to the fact that he was more focused on the ever-increasing pain that seemed to be shooting from every inch of his body. "And the other five percent?"
"Compared to option A, I think it's a pretty easy choice, but then again you haven't shown yourself to be the most rational person so far."
"What is it?"
"You tell me everything. Who hired you, how it was planned, where the money is. Everything." Rapp could see Gazich weighing his options. "You and I both know," Rapp added, "you're going to tell me either way."
"Then why not torture me? You seem like the type who would enjoy it."
Rapp shook his head. "I'd prefer to do it the civilized way."
"And when you're done with me?"
"We'll stick you in a prison for the rest of your life. Maybe you'll be eligible for parole in thirty years, I don't know." Rapp was making it up as he went. He knew he had to give the man some hope. "Someone higher up than me will be making that decision."
"Doesn't sound like a very good deal."
"Compared to months of torture and an execution, I think it's a pretty great deal."
"You're not the one on the receiving end."
"I'm not the one who set off a car bomb that killed the new president's wife." Rapp watched as Gazich blinked and then looked away. The words had hit home.
"How about a shot of morphine?" Gazich asked in a tight voice. "I'd like to think about your offer."
Rapp reminded himself that time was on his side. "All right. I'll show you how nice we Americans are. I'll give you the shot and then..."
The cabin door opened and Brooks stepped into the s.p.a.ce. She had a satellite phone in her outstretched hand. "Someone needs to talk to you."
There was something about her tone that told Rapp it was serious.
"All right." Rapp looked back at Gazich and said, "I'll be back in a minute." He stood and started shutting the container doors.
"What about the morphine?" Gazich yelled.
Rapp sealed the doors and Gazich's screams were reduced to a hollow m.u.f.fle. Rapp walked across the open s.p.a.ce and asked, "Who is it?"
"Director Kennedy."
Rapp took the phone from Brooks, held it to his ear and asked, "What's up?" He listened for ten seconds and then said, "Have you people lost your f.u.c.king minds?"
19.
OVAL O OFFICE, WAs.h.i.+NGTON, DC.
T he horse had left the barn. That much Kennedy understood, and there was no getting it back. Attorney General Stokes and FBI Director Roach were over by the president's desk using two separate secure phones to get their people moving. The president and presidentelect were talking in earnest, still in the two chairs in front of the fireplace. The news of his wife's killer's capture had melted the wall between them. Kennedy had seen Alexander on only two occasions since the election. Both times the future leader seemed somber and detached, which was very uncharacteristic for the charismatic forty-five-year-old from Georgia. The news had reignited a spark in him that had been missing since the tragic death of his wife. he horse had left the barn. That much Kennedy understood, and there was no getting it back. Attorney General Stokes and FBI Director Roach were over by the president's desk using two separate secure phones to get their people moving. The president and presidentelect were talking in earnest, still in the two chairs in front of the fireplace. The news of his wife's killer's capture had melted the wall between them. Kennedy had seen Alexander on only two occasions since the election. Both times the future leader seemed somber and detached, which was very uncharacteristic for the charismatic forty-five-year-old from Georgia. The news had reignited a spark in him that had been missing since the tragic death of his wife.
Kennedy watched the president and president-to-be talk one on one. She couldn't help thinking of the photos Baker had shown her less than twenty-four hours ago. Based on the way Alexander had acted over the last few months, Kennedy doubted he knew of his wife's infidelities. But she had seen stranger things. Was.h.i.+ngton was replete with torrid tales of the rich and powerful and their strange marital arrangements. Her instincts told her Alexander was genuinely bereaved, but she'd been fooled by politicians before. Thomas Stansfield, her mentor, had taught her that the good politicians were better than any actor in Hollywood. They were real stage actors; performing in front of a live audience three or four times a day. And they often did it on the fly.
With Alexander, though, there was something about his pain that seemed very real. Kennedy wondered how much of her a.s.sessment was formed by wishful thinking. The alternative made her shudder. The best part of her wanted to believe that he was a good man. A man she could support. That was back on the table now. Kennedy could see clearly now what President Hayes had been up to. What he'd been trying to do for her and for the CIA. With Vice PresidentElect Ross in Europe, Hayes saw his opening and used it. Ross and Kennedy did not get along. Alexander had virtually turned over the national security piece of the puzzle to his running mate, the former director of National Intelligence. Alexander was focusing on the domestic and economic teams and Ross the defense and intelligence. Translation: Kennedy would be out of a job shortly after the two were sworn in.
What Hayes was trying to do was show Alexander that Kennedy and her people were really effective at what they did. Not the type of people you simply threw overboard because your running mate doesn't like them. A running mate who happens to have a ma.s.sive narcissistic complex. While all of these kudos felt good for a change, Kennedy saw a potential problem. The president should have seen it as well, but he probably thought the ends would justify the means. The problem was Mitch Rapp. He'd sooner get a colonoscopy than deal with the Justice Department. Add to that the media firestorm that was sure to follow, and he was sure to be in a foul mood for months to come. She could try to lay it all at the feet of the president, but Rapp would be so upset that an operation was dragged into the public eye he would feel the need to spread his anger around.
Kennedy stood and took a step toward Hayes and Alexander. They stopped talking and looked up.
"I'd better inform Mitch of the change in plans. If you'll excuse me I'm going to go down to the Situation Room and call him."
"We'll come with you," announced Hayes. "I'd love to congratulate him."
"And I'd like to thank him," Alexander added.
Kennedy winced ever so slightly and said, "I don't think that's a good idea. At least not at the moment."
Alexander looked confused and asked, "Why?"
President Hayes laughed. "Mitch does not like the limelight. He's going to hate all of this."
"You're right, sir."
Hayes seemed to take great joy in the fact that all this would bug Rapp. Alexander was frowning like he didn't get it.
Hayes looked at him and said, "He's not like us. We hang all of our awards on the wall for everybody to see. His medals and commendations are kept in a safe out at Langley, and I'll bet not once has he ever gone to look at them. Am I right?" he asked Kennedy.
"Yes, sir. You are."
"Have you met him?" Hayes asked Alexander.
"No. I've heard a lot about him, though."
"Don't believe everything you hear. Especially if it comes from your vice president's mouth."
Kennedy decided this would be a good time to exit. "As soon as I'm done I'll come back and give you an update."