Death Echo
dial, and braced herself to tell St. Kilda some really bad news.
64
DAY FIVE
MANHATTAN
10:49 P.M.
A lara sat in Steeleâs office as she had for hours, talking on her phone, trading favors, calling in IOUs, bribing, threatening careers, and looking more exhausted with each lost minute.
Steele didnât look any better. St. Kilda had been combing through its own mazes, searching for somethingâa hint, a tone of voice, a choice of words, something done or undoneâanything that would indicate that someone knew more than he or she was telling.
Nothing had come his way.
âDeputy Director of Operations on line four,â Dwayne said to Steele. âTwo other calls standing by, but theyâre just lower-level screamers.â
Steele nodded. He paid Dwayne very well to sort out important calls; at times like this, he was worth double his salary.
âSwitch Duke to my phone,â Steele said.
Alaraâs black eyes narrowed as she focused on each nuance of Steeleâs expression and words. The image of a dying city haunted her, slicing her soul with the knowledge that her childrenâs children had inherited a world gone mad.
But when was it ever sane? she asked herself bitterly.
She had four advanced degrees in global history. She was no closer to answering the sanity question than she had been as an eager student whose mind was on fire with the beauty and complexity of the worldâs cultures and history.
The complexity, at least, remained.
Even the beauty, sometimes.
Without realizing it Alara shook her head. She had lived too long knowing too muchâand not nearly enough.
Steele watched her as he listened to Duke. If her eyes had been open, he would have thought she was warning him against talking to the CIAâs Deputy Director of Operations. But her eyes were like her past, closed.
âDuke,â Steele said finally, âI give you my word that you have everything we have. More. You know what originally kicked this avalanche off the mountain. St. Kilda doesnât, which places us at a real disadvantage.â
âYouâre in a tough place,â Duke agreed. âWe all are. This kind of investigation is difficult in the extreme. People wonât, often canât by the very description of their office, say anything until there is agreement that itâs necessary to reveal highly, highly sensitive secrets. Decades of careful placement of agents and officers is at stake.â
âIf you make Seattleâs memorial big enough, your explanations might fit on the plaque.â
âDamn it, Steele. Itâs not only our people at risk. Our alliesââ
âWill pass the hat for the plaque,â Steele said. âSo will our enemies. When it comes to sharing real information, thereâs little difference.â
âWe have sat intel people working 24/7,â Duke said. âProblem is, thereâs a storm moving down the northwest coast from Alaska. Itâs already hammering the Queen Charlotte Islands. Northern Vancouver Island will feel it tomorrow, but the clouds are coming in right now.â
âIâm certain your satellite intelligence technicians are capable of penetrating a few clouds.â
âWhether or how much is classified,â Duke said.
Steele bit off a particularly vicious oath. It seemed that the only thing unclassified about this steaming pile of shit was the finger-pointing.
âLook,â Duke said, âIâve given you all that I can and more than I should. Tim Harrowâs diver confirmed that Blackbird is on the bottom. He and the team are standing by for any hint, however unlikely, of Black Swan. Another team has joined them. They are highly specialized and so secret that Iâm the lowest ranking officer who knows of their existence. Every sign of Blackbird âs scuttling is being mopped up.â
âThe environment thanks you.â
Duke swore. âIf I could get away with giving you men and material, I would. But until you give me a Swan sighting, my hands are tied. You sure your agents havenât really gone rogue and are playing for the other team? You know it happens.â
âUnlike you, Iâm very certain of my employees.â
âHackers, then.â
âIâll note your suggestions for the feasible deniability file.â
âSteele, if Iâ¦â Dukeâs voice died.
There was nothing to say.
Both men knew it.
65
DAY
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