Выбрать главу

Mark said, “Dubai’s the place to be — good for you.”

“Don’t patronize me, Sava.”

Mark had no love for Dubai. The place was like Disneyland. The tallest building in the world! An island resort shaped like a palm tree! A mall with a ski resort inside of it! But it was also true that Iranian and American spies were all over the city — the Iranians to keep an eye on antiregime activity and to protect the flow of black market goods going from Dubai to Iran, and the Americans to keep an eye on their business interests and on the enormous port of Jebel Ali, which the US Navy used more than any other port outside the United States. The whole spy-versus-spy game that had developed as a result reminded Mark of the Cold War.

“It’s a spy’s paradise,” he said.

“If you’re actually in the game. Which I’m not. But I’ll grant you that being a spectator is better than rotting away at home. Believe me, I tried rotting. A lot.”

Mark tried to picture Bowlan gardening, or even just playing golf — ridiculous notions unless paired with booze and some duplicitous espionage-related scheme.

“The thing is,” said Mark, “something’s come up. I’ve come back temporarily on a contract basis.”

“Well, I hope they’re paying you better than they’re paying me.”

“Two thousand a day.”

“What?” said Daria. “Are you kidding me?”

“You bastard,” said Bowlan. “Well, good for you. What’s the contract?”

“You heard Jack Campbell was assassinated?”

“Damn, they pulled you in for that?”

“They didn’t have much choice.”

“That’s big time.” Bowlan coughed.

People were beginning to sit down at the tables now. The noise of chairs being pulled out, silverware clinking, and conversation was growing louder. Mark glanced around to assure himself that he couldn’t be overheard.

“Who hired you?” asked Bowlan.

“Kaufman. Larry, I could use your help.”

Bowlan stared at him for a while. Mark noticed the thin spider veins around his nose, evidence that Larry still liked his cocktails.

“Shoot.”

Mark took the coffee-stained napkin out from under Bowlan’s coffee cup and scribbled down a series of numbers and letters. “This is the registration ID of a Lockheed Jetstar that flew from Sulaimaniyah, Iraq, to the airport here in Dubai on July sixteenth. I need to know where it went after it landed in Dubai, and who owns the plane.”

Bowlan took the napkin and stared at it for a moment. “Why me? Why not go through Kaufman?”

“Because Kaufman will want to know more than I prefer to tell him at this point.”

“Whereas you figure you can get by without telling me jack shit, is that it?”

“Pretty much. We have history, Larry.”

Bowlan fingered the napkin. “I’m aware of that.”

Mark had just been twenty-two years old when he’d first met Bowlan.

“Can you do it?” Mark pressed. “Do you still have your security clearances?”

“When do you need this?”

“Now.”

“Is this going to come back to bite me in the ass?”

“I doubt it.”

“Why don’t I feel reassured?”

“Because you’re not an idiot.”

“Meet me back here in an hour. I’ll see what I can do.”

* * *

Bowlan returned to the restaurant at the appointed time and handed the napkin with the Jetstar’s registration code back to Mark.

“The plane’s been sold — by a company called Bede Limited to a company called the Doha Group. Bede is registered on the Isle of Man and the Doha Group is registered in the Seychelles, but the Doha Group also has an address here in Dubai. The transaction took place here the same day the plane flew in from Iraq.”

“Private companies?”

“I think — couldn’t find either listed on any exchanges. Couldn’t find out who owns them either.”

Bowlan handed Mark a few more sheets of paper. “This is everything I’ve got on the Doha Group. They’re a small oil services company whose specialty is injecting carbon dioxide into aging fields to boost production. Dubai address actually looks legit. I checked — it’s not just a mail drop.”

Mark leafed through the information Bowlan had printed out. The Doha Group was operating in United Arab Emirates, and…“Says here they have a contract to develop the Maraj field in Iran?”

“Yeah,” said Bowlan. “That’s their biggest project as far as I can tell.”

“I know that field,” said Daria warily. Bowlan and Mark turned to her. “The Revolutionary Guard company that was supposed to redevelop it wound up backing out of the contract after getting paid for two years and doing nothing. A newspaper in Tehran made a stink about it, but the government killed the story.”

Mark was reminded of how much Daria had taught him about Iran.

It was common knowledge that Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard troops were heavily invested in a variety of businesses throughout Iran. But Daria had dug deeper and found out the names of the life insurance companies and banks and shopping malls owned by the Guard — along with the names of the top generals who ran those businesses. And Daria had been the one who had given him a better sense of all the factions within the Guard: the professional soldiers truly dedicated to protecting the Islamic regime; the businessmen soldiers who only paid lip service to Islam; the politicians who only joined the Guard to advance their careers…It was a complicated organization, and no one knew it better than her.

She said, “So if this Doha Group is working on the Maraj field, it’s because the Guard subcontracted the work. But I’m sure some general is getting a big cut out of whatever the Doha Group is getting paid.”

Mark considered what Daria had told him. If anything he was more confused than ever.

The MEK had stolen highly enriched uranium, allegedly to give to the International Atomic Energy Agency. But instead of handing it over to the IAEA, it looked likely that they’d instead transferred it to the Doha Group, a company that was tight with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.

But why? The MEK wouldn’t have stolen the uranium from the Iranians just to give it back to them.

Mark said, “So this Lockheed Jetstar plane that Daria and I are tracking flies from Iraq to Dubai, and right after it lands in Dubai it’s sold to the Doha Group. Do we know what happened next? Is the plane still here?”

“I made some calls,” said Bowlan. “The same day it was sold, it took off for Salalah, Oman. I know a Brit that works down at the embassy in Muscat. He talked to the Omanis. They have no record of the plane ever landing.”

“So it just disappeared.”

“It just disappeared.”

“We could check other airports.”

“There are a lot of airports out there. And half of them are private, or military.”

With records that neither Bowlan nor the CIA would be able to get at, Mark knew. Bottom line was that if whoever was flying that plane had wanted to disappear, it wouldn’t have been difficult.

“So we go after the Doha Group,” said Daria. “They bought the plane. Someone in the company has to know what happened to it.”

55

Mark bought a new pack of SIM cards for his cell phone and checked into a room at a Ramada Hotel. Larry Bowlan met him there after telling the consulate he was sick and needed to leave early.

“Just like old times,” said Bowlan cheerfully.