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“Unfortunately, my friend, I’m afraid this time I am powerless to meet your request.”

“If it would—”

“It is not to be negotiated.”

Mark thought for a moment. If Orkhan couldn’t be bribed, he’d bribe the guards at Gobustan.

“Well then, I won’t take up any more of your time.” He started to walk away, then added, “I appreciate your meeting with me.”

“You may,” called Orkhan, “be interested to know that as part of the increased protection I mentioned, I will be moving the girl from Gobustan Prison to a detention center here in Baku. We must keep her safe not only from potential attackers, but also from the other inmates. And sickness. Tuberculosis is an unfortunate problem at Gobustan.”

“I see.”

“I will order her moved later today.”

Mark studied Orkhan. “I suppose she will be guarded.”

“Of course. But how many guards I can get on such short notice, I don’t know. Maybe one, two?”

“I should think one would be plenty.”

“Perhaps you are right.” Orkhan checked his watch. “I will see who is available for a five o’clock departure.”

Mark knew not to thank Orkhan. It was better just to walk away. But he’d only taken a step when Orkhan spoke again.

“I have told you of my son?”

“Sure. Heydar.” Mark had met him once. He remembered a mean-spirited teen who’d talked a big game about following in his father’s footsteps but was probably too stupid to do so. “How is he?”

“When he finishes his studies in Baku, he hopes to go to America. He’ll be applying to the University of Texas next year. Wants to get a degree in geosystems engineering and hydrogeology.” Orkhan enunciated each word clearly, as if he’d taken great care to memorize the exact phrasing. “Petroleum engineer,” he added. “It will help him when he returns to Azerbaijan.”

“That so?”

“Of course, his grades could be better.” Orkhan shook his head. “He’s a bright boy—”

“That was my impression.”

“But he should apply himself more.” Orkhan stuck his hands in his pockets. “I understand to go to an American university, one needs to fill out long applications, get letters of recommendations, take tests — what do you call them, the SAT? A very, very difficult test I hear.”

“I’ll help him.” Jesus, thought Mark.

“He could use it. The teachers here, they mean well, but they don’t know the American system. You could be good for Heydar.”

Or not, thought Mark. But he also thought it would be a smart move for Orkhan to send his son abroad. Many of the best jobs in the oil industry went to Westerners, with their Western educations. The average Azeri was often shut out.

Not that Orkhan’s son qualified as an average Azeri. But to Mark it said something that even the minister of national security felt his son needed to leave the country for a while to get ahead in life.

“Have him call me. When I finish with this, I’ll see what I can do.”

18

John Decker sat on a bench in Fountains Square, wearing black leather boots, a tight-fitting brown button-down shirt, and black jeans that were way too small.

“They don’t have big-and-tall shops in Baku,” Decker said preemptively as Mark approached.

“Thousand dollars a day. First week in advance.”

“Damn. That works.”

For himself, Mark had figured $2,000 a day. “Starting now.”

“Am I still taking orders from the embassy?”

“No. You’re working for me.”

“Ah, I guess that’s OK,” said Decker. And then, “Who are you?”

“I’ve been hired by our government as an independent contractor to investigate the murder of Jack Campbell and some other things that have been going on in Baku.”

“Like what happened to that guy Peters?”

“Yeah, like that.”

“I’m your guy.”

“I’m not done yet. I have no intention of sharing anything but the most basic information with you. We’re not partners. You’re a hired gun. If you’re not comfortable with that, and you’re not comfortable taking orders, now’s the time to tell me.”

“I can follow orders.”

“Good.”

19

Washington, DC

Colonel Henry Amato didn’t like the CIA.

He didn’t like all the lies and the sneaking around. By his reckoning, nine times out of ten it was better to just have the balls to say what you believed up front, back up those words with a military that could pack a serious punch, and let the chips fall where they may. To be sure, he hadn’t always followed those principles himself, but at least he hadn’t made a career out of being a sneak — the way CIA Division Chief Ted Kaufman had.

“Thank you for coming,” said Amato as he walked out from behind his desk and extended his hand. They were in his office at the Old Executive Office Building, across from the White House. It was seven in the morning, on a Saturday. Amato had been awake all night. “I’ve been asked to extend the president’s appreciation for all you’re doing during this difficult period.”

Kaufman was a short guy, with a thin neck, spindly arms, and a little belly that popped out over his belt. Amato had met him a few times before, at obligatory Washington social functions. Kaufman had always struck him as a tired bureaucrat who’d climbed up about as high as he was ever going to get on the CIA ladder.

After answering a few questions about the attack on the CIA’s Baku station, Kaufman said, “You can assure the president we’ll have a replacement team in place by the end of today. I brought the personnel files you requested.”

“I understand you’re also coordinating with the FBI’s forensic unit?”

“We are. A team will be landing in Baku shortly.” Kaufman took a folder out of his briefcase. “These are the Agency assets en route.”

Amato grabbed the file a little too eagerly and began to page through it. A former Baku-based operations officer was being transferred from his desk job in Istanbul; a young operations officer — an alleged Central Eurasia counterterrorism expert — was on his way from Uzbekistan; and a deputy chief of station from Moscow was being flown in. The investigation would be based out of the US embassy in Baku, said Kaufman.

Amato nodded as he flipped through the pages, decidedly unimpressed.

Then he came upon Daria’s photo. He leaned forward a bit, trying to mask his reaction. “What’s her status?”

“She’s the woman I told you about, the one who was with Campbell when he was shot. The Azeris arrested her and brought her to a prison on the outskirts of Baku—”

“Arrested her?”

“That’s what I’ve been told by our ambassador in Baku.”

“They don’t think she had anything to do with what happened to Campbell, do they?”

“We’re not sure yet what they think.”

“What prison?”

“Gobustan. It’s outside of—”

“I know where it is.”

“We believe she’s still alive — which would make her our only operations officer in Azerbaijan to have survived the purge.”

“What are we doing about her?”

“Well, you have to understand that she was operating under nonofficial cover—”

“She’s also an American citizen. The president—”

“Not according to her Iranian passport. But we do have a former operative who’s looking into who killed Campbell who might be able to help her too. Go to the next file.”

Amato turned the page and found himself looking at a picture of an unremarkable man — a good quality in a spy, he conceded — with graying brown hair and dark brown eyes.