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Shah nodded and handed him the false order. Peterson quickly flipped it over to see if there was anything written on the back (there wasn’t), before placing it flat on the desk in front of him. He pulled a pair of reading glasses from a drawer and put them on.

Shah studied Peterson’s face while he examined the paperwork. One hand rubbed the side of his face as if massaging a cramp, while his eyes alternately squinted and relaxed as he read.

“…in keeping with this directive, all embassy facilities are to be properly discontinued and the premises safely evacuated until further notice,” he finished aloud, looking up at Shah, who nodded authoritatively.

“So they’re caving in to terrorist demands now?” Peterson shook his head in disgust.

“Trying to save lives. Don’t want another event like Monday Night Football, right?”

The embassy man threw up his hands. “But if we start giving in to demands, what happens when they want something else a couple years down the line? What kind of example does this set for other terrorists watching and waiting in the wings?”

“Hey, I don’t make the rules, either. You know how it is. They say ‘take that hill’, and we take that hill, right?”

Shah hoped a little civil service camaraderie might make the man feel more at ease. Instead he stood and pointed out the room’s single window, at a busy street down below.

“What’s going to happen here without any kind of sanctioned American presence? It’s an open invitation to terrorists — c’mon over to The Hague! It’s the Wild West out here!” He turned back from the window and put his hands on the desk on either side of the bogus presidential shutdown document.

“I guess U.S. travelers who lose their American Express will have to find some other way to get an emergency loan for return airfare,” Shah joked.

Peterson actually seemed to brighten a little at that one. “Hey, that is a service we provide from time to time. Just one of the many things we do here. I can’t help but wonder if they’re using this terror thing as an excuse for downsizing. You know, budget cuts! For all I know, it’s a false flag thing and they set that damn chemical bomb off themselves just so they’d have an excuse to close down a bunch of embassies!”

Shah felt his gut turn over at that. Here was a career government man, highly placed at an American embassy, with such a lack of trust in his own government. It reminded him of why he’d joined OUTCAST.

“Let’s not get carried away. All it amounts to is a temporary cease-operations order. You see it says, ‘until further notice’.” Shah immediately regretted refocusing Peterson’s attention back on the document. He’d already seemed to have bought it; no need to get him to look at it some more, you idiot, Shah chastised himself.

“Yeah,” Peterson said, scanning the paper once again, “but we all know what that means.” He raised his head from the paper, thankfully without having concentrated on it further. But now he was staring at Shah’s badge.

“Say, who’re you with, anyway — White House?”

“State Department.”

“So don’t I have to sign off on this? Or Ebeling?” Shah knew Alfred Ebeling was the Ambassador of the Embassy, the top dog.

“You just have to close the embassy down, Mr. Peterson. The best way is to get most of your personnel out of here now. Keep on a skeleton crew for the safeguarding of critical documents, the shutdown of computer systems, data backup to the cloud, that kind of thing. When that’s done, the rest of you leave and lock the door behind you.”

Peterson appeared flabbergasted. “Lock the door behind us…” he stammered. Then he perked up. “And then what? Will we still get paid? Or is this some kind of furloughing, or even worse — layoffs?”

It never ceased to amaze Shah how much these government employees were really looking out for number one, even though they put on such a professional facade of caring about their country.

“…still two years away from my twenty years when my pension kicks in, you know, a lot of us are! I wonder if that has anything to do with this decision!”

Shah continued to shake his head. He was getting the opposition he’d expected all right, but not for the reason he’d anticipated. This guy wasn’t worried about keeping the embassy running so that it could continue to provide needed services, he was worried about his own paycheck and his retirement package. It disgusted Shah to no end. He realized that these were the type of self-serving bureaucrats who had slowly but surely driven him out of government service.

“I assure you that if it does, it would be news to me, Mr. Peterson. To the best of my knowledge the decision to close the embassy has only to do with wanting to at least appear to comply with the terrorists’ demands in order to prevent further bloodshed of innocent American citizens.”

Peterson’s eyes brightened. “So you think it’s just a temporary ploy to keep Hofstad happy and then they’ll reinstate us as soon as Hofstad is under control?”

“That is my understanding, yes. So the sooner you can commence with the shutdown procedures, the sooner everything will get back to normal again.”

Peterson stared into Shah’s eyes for a moment and then picked up his desk phone.

SIXTEEN

Charleston, South Carolina

Tanner Wilson and Danielle Sunderland approached the main entrance of Amir’s hotel. They’d parked a block away so as not to be associated with a vehicle. Danielle eyed her tracking device and gave Tanner a nod. It’s in here.

Tanner keyed his radio and transmitted to Liam.

“If you’re not busy come to the hotel and meet us in the lobby.”

The message was pseudo-coded in case someone managed to break the encryption on the secure frequency. Difficult, but not impossible. Given that they’d been chatting during the scooter chase, however, Tanner decided to exercise the caution that was hard-coded into his DNA. Liam would know now to come to Amir’s hotel, and that Tanner meant for him to patrol the perimeter for any sign of trouble while they were inside.

Tanner and Danielle walked up the circular drive and into the lobby, then took the elevator to the second floor of the ten-story hotel. Tanner looked ahead as they walked while Danielle consulted the tracker. About halfway down the empty hallway she stopped. She jerked a thumb at the nearest room door on their right.

“I think it’s in here.”

“You think? We don’t need to be busting into random rooms.” Tanner was known for being sharp with his people, but he was also known for getting results.

“I know that. The tracker does give altitude — which is lucky enough as it is — but it’s plus or minus about ten feet, which means it could be this floor, or the one above.”

“What about the first floor?”

“Looks like it consists of all common areas.”

Tanner put his ear to the door while Danielle continued to consult the tracking device.

“I don’t hear anything in there and it’s too early for most people to be asleep, unless there’s a jet-lagged traveler in there.”

Danielle didn’t respond, but only kept her nose buried in the device.

“Something else wrong?”

“Maybe. The other problem is that this place seems to be built on a small rise — you saw how the driveway is raised from the street and the first entrance is out onto that?”

“Yeah.”

“I don’t have the blueprints, but since the tracker’s elevation is from ground level and reads 30 feet, and floor one starts ten feet high…”

“Third floor.”

“Right. Plus or minus ten with the error factor, though, which means it could either be two, three or four.”

Tanner exhaled heavily. Then they heard the elevator open, a group of people talking loudly getting off. Tanner grabbed Danielle’s hand and they started to walk like a couple toward the elevator.