“Yes, on all counts.”
“Who’s the meeting with?”
“None of your business. I have critical contacts to maintain, and an opportunity presented itself.”
“How long will the meeting take?”
“Why do you care?” she asked as she slipped into her suit jacket.
“I just got word about the Failaka mission. We’re taking a helicopter ride to Michigan tonight. We head out from the safe house at 7 p.m.”
“I’ll be back by then,” she said as she wrapped the hijab around her hair and neck, leaving her face exposed.
“Is this a risky meeting?” he asked, noting that Khalila hadn’t yet tested the knives strapped to her forearms, as she usually did after donning her suit jacket. She also lacked the tension she had exuded prior to meeting with the Kuwait Security Service agents and Rashidi.
“There is always risk in these types of meetings, considering the people I deal with.”
Harrison’s curiosity was piqued. That Khalila was well connected was obvious, and it made sense that she had to nurture those relationships, instead of engaging only when she needed assistance. Harrison’s thoughts went to the conversation they’d had on the flight to Syria, where she had admitted that she was essentially a double agent, providing information to both sides. He wondered, who — or what — was the other side?
Perhaps, if he could get a look at whoever she was meeting…
“Need a ride, or is Mussan driving you?”
“Neither. I’m on my own today,” she said as she tucked the scarf under her blouse collar.
“Be careful,” he said, adding a grin. “If anything goes wrong, I won’t be there to save you this time.”
Khalila smiled. “I’ll keep that in mind.”
As she moved toward the door, Harrison surveyed her preparations. She carried a purse, but had left her pistol behind; she was armed with only the two knives.
He wished her luck as she left. After the bedroom door closed, he threw on his shoulder harness and pistol and a light sport jacket, then hurried to the stairs, descending to the ground floor. He cracked the door open as Khalila stepped from the lobby onto the sidewalk.
He moved to the front door, watching through a sidelight as she hailed a cab passing by. As the cab pulled back into traffic, Harrison exited the safe house, immediately raising his hand to flag down one of the other cabs passing by. One stopped and Harrison jumped in, providing a movie-worthy quote.
“Follow that cab!”
The driver didn’t bat an eye, as if this were an everyday occurrence, pulling quickly back into traffic, matching the speed and turns of the lead car.
They were soon back in the center of Kuwait City, following Khalila until her cab pulled into the entrance concourse of the Al Hamra Tower, the tallest curved concrete skyscraper in the world, rising over 1,300 feet. Khalila waited in the taxi, and Harrison instructed his driver to pull over to the other side of the street.
A few minutes later, a black limousine stopped at the tower entrance and four Arab men emerged, each wearing the white dishdasha robe traditionally worn by many Middle Eastern men. Harrison recognized one of the men immediately — Abdallah bin Laden, Osama’s eldest son.
Khalila emerged from her taxi and walked toward the four men. Harrison pulled his cell phone from his jacket pocket and started a video recording, capturing the occurrence and the four men’s faces.
When Khalila reached them, she extended her hand to Abdallah, and they shook and exchanged greetings. Abdallah smiled and seemed pleased to see her. Khalila turned to greet the other three men, but didn’t extend her hand. Each man placed a hand over his heart and bowed his head slightly in respect.
Abdallah and Khalila headed into the Al Hamra Tower lobby, walking side by side as they talked, while the three other men followed. Harrison recorded the interaction until they disappeared into the lobby interior.
As Harrison slid his cell phone back into his jacket pocket, he wondered whether the meeting with Abdallah was coincidental or somehow related to their mission to Kuwait. That Khalila seemed driven to determine who was taken prisoner at Abbottabad was obvious. But now, he wondered why.
If the prisoner turned out to be Osama bin Laden, that information would be incredibly valuable. In the wrong hands, it would also be quite dangerous.
42
ARABIAN SEA
Christine O’Connor’s hair fluttered in the brisk wind as the forty-meter-long ship sped through the choppy water. She was seated in the flying bridge of a CIA-owned, Spanish-built superyacht capable of sixty-plus knots. Joining her on the bridge was her four-man security detail, doubled from its normal size due to her overseas journey.
After departing Reagan National Airport, her flight had landed in Mumbai, India, where she had boarded the high-tech and speedy CIA boat waiting at a nearby pier. The yacht was now on an intercept course for another ship in the Arabian Sea, and it wasn’t long before their target appeared on the horizon: the black-hulled research vessel Atlantis.
Atlantis was an oceanographic research ship operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. More important, she was the host vessel of DSV Alvin, a deep-ocean research submersible owned by the U.S. Navy. Atlantis and Alvin had been chartered by the CIA for the critically sensitive and challenging effort to obtain a sample of Osama bin Laden’s body for DNA analysis.
The CIA yacht eased off on its speed as it angled into a parallel course with the 274-foot-long research ship, preparing to transfer Christine and her protective detail aboard. They were escorted to a transfer boat, which made the short trip across the water, and she was soon in the research vessel’s wardroom, where she was greeted by the ship’s captain and Alvin’s operations officer.
After the introductory pleasantries, they got down to business, beginning with a high-level review of Alvin’s upcoming mission. It was classified at the highest level, and no one aboard Atlantis knew what they were sending the deep-submergence vehicle down to take a sample of. However, Alvin’s team seemed prepared for a rather straightforward dive, sample collection, and return to the surface. Then Alvin’s operations officer, Brian Humm, provided a dose of bad news.
“A storm is moving in,” he said, “which means we’re not going to be able to launch tomorrow morning as planned. If we don’t go tonight, we’ll have to wait several days. Do you have a preference?”
“Sooner would be better,” Christine replied.
“We’ll plan for tonight, then, as soon as we’re ready.
“Also,” he said, “we have an issue with your stipulation that only the pilot be aboard for the mission.”
Langley had requested that only the DSV pilot, and not a full three-member team, descend with Alvin, to minimize the number of people involved who could piece together what was being sampled.
“We normally have two other personnel aboard to handle ancillary issues or if the pilot is incapacitated for some reason. At a minimum, one person must accompany the pilot during the dive.”
As Christine considered the request, Humm offered, “One option, Miss O’Connor, is you could do the dive.”
Humm went on to explain that the pilot was typically accompanied by scientists, not DSV copilots, and with a short walkthrough of emergency procedures, she would know enough to bring Alvin to the surface in an emergency. Also, as far as how dangerous the dive was, Humm assured her there was little to worry about. Alvin had made hundreds of dives, many to deeper depths than they’d be going down to tonight.