“That’s right.”
“I take it you had quite a drama in Rio’s slums, judging from your face.”
“A little bit.”
“Dangerous stuff, given what happened to our friends there. Why don’t you let us help you here, Jack? We do know something about the U.K., enough to ensure you aren’t taken hostage.”
“Thank you. I’m good right now.”
“I see. George called you a lone wolf, or some such thing.”
“I’m sure he did. Ian, what I’d like to do is get a hot shower. New York said that after I checked in here, the bureau would have a hotel for me?”
“Yes.” Shelton searched the top of the vacant desk, finding an envelope with Gannon’s name on it. “You said you need to be in Kensington. We’ve got you at the Seven Seas, in Kensington, Earl’s Court, on our account. Not as close to the bureau as we’d hoped, sorry.”
“Thank you.” Gannon tucked the envelope into his bag.
“Call us if there’s anything we can do,” Shelton said.
During the cab ride Gannon reflected on what Melody Lyon had said when she hired him-how she’d warned him to expect tension, even resentment, if he were sent to help out at the international bureaus.
“They’re turf-protectors. They consider anything and anyone from headquarters a challenge to their expertise about their coverage area.”
She was right about that, he thought, as he reached his stop. The Seven Seas Inn was a town-house hotel, a four-level building attached to other four-level buildings that, together, resembled wedding-cake layers where Penywern Road led to the gentle curves of Eardley Crescent.
Gannon’s room was the equivalent of a cramped closet with frayed carpet. It was on the third floor, overlooking the street. He started his laptop and sent Oliver Pritchett an e-mail telling him he had arrived. Then he showered. He was unpacking when Pritchett called.
“Trust you had a safe trip.”
“It was all right.”
“Fancy a walk to our office, then?”
Using his map to follow Pritchett’s directions, it took Gannon thirty minutes to walk along Earl’s Court Road to Kensington and a side street, Stafford Terrace. Equal Globe International’s nameplate was on a battered red door, shoehorned between Mae’s Flower Shop and First-Rate Tuxedo Rentals. Gannon pressed the button for EGI, and the intercom buzzed. He looked into the small security camera, held up his WPA ID and said, “Jack Gannon, WPA New York.”
“Right,” Pritchett said and the door clicked.
Gannon climbed the staircase to a second floor, where he could hear music turned low. “I Don’t Like Mondays,” the old Boomtown Rats song.
“Oliver Pritchett,” said the man waiting at the top of the stairs.
Pritchett had a full salt-and-pepper beard, small round wireless glasses and long silver hair tied in a ponytail. He wore sandals, torn faded jeans and a T-shirt with the face of an emaciated child with huge pleading eyes, under the words Don’t Let Another One Die.
Gannon followed him into an office that had a hardwood floor and wooden tables cluttered with computers, and towers of newspapers, books and reports alongside walls papered with posters of Live Aid, protests, starving children, children toiling in sweatshops and prisoners facing torment. Pritchett shoved some files into a faded military canvas shoulder bag, then snatched his keys and a cell phone.
“We’ll talk in the park.”
A few blocks later they arrived at Holland Park, a glorious field of tranquil green space. They sat on a bench. Across the pathway a white-haired man was reading a newspaper. Pritchett waited for a couple conversing in German and pushing a stroller to pass before speaking.
“Sarah’s team in Rio said we could trust you, Jack.”
“I won’t run anything based on information your group provides until we’re both comfortable with it.”
Pritchett considered the situation.
“Why don’t you tell me about Equal Globe International and what you think you’re on to?”
“Give you my spiel?” Pritchett looked off to the trees.
“Beyond what’s on your Web site.”
“We’re an ideal really. We hold dear the belief that everyone is equal and we strive to make it a reality. EGI is an umbrella of social justice organizations around the planet-church groups, charities, labor groups, student associations. We fight injustice in all its manifestations-poverty, hunger, crime, war. We lobby governments. We are on the front lines. We issue reports and, well, lately we gather intelligence on acts of injustice and all that they entail.”
“That’s what Maria Santo was doing in Rio de Janeiro?”
Pritchett removed his glasses and pinched the bridge of his nose.
“She was brave. We think she was the target of the cafe bombing in Brazil because she’d infiltrated the law firm, Worldwide Rio Advogados. You see we had long suspected that firm of illegal activity around the world-money laundering, bribery, police corruption. Their activities seemed to escalate. Maria worked at getting a job inside, then started sending us reports, files.”
“And you found a link to something bigger?”
“It’s complicated. Very complicated. But some of her files seem tied to what we were getting from another EGI worker, Adam Corley. He thought there was a link to a vast and organized human trafficking network.”
“Wait, who is Adam Corley?”
“Adam is Irish, an ex-cop from Dublin who’d worked in the Irish Garda’s Special Branch as a low-ranking security and intelligence officer. When his wife died suddenly of a brain tumor, he left his career, devoted himself to his church and pursued a PhD in humanities abroad.”
“So how did he come to work with your group?”
“Through his church’s global charity network. When Corley learned of us and what we did, he volunteered. He gathers intelligence. He’s one of our best people.”
“And he thinks Worldwide Rio Advogados is involved in a global child-stealing operation that involves illegal adoptions?”
“Yes, but he thinks there’s more. Recently Corley got word of a private meeting of traffickers and their associates in Libya. He managed to observe the players and obtain more intelligence. He now believes the child-stealing network is tied to something bigger.”
“What could be bigger than stealing children for illegal adoptions?”
“Corley thinks there’s a purpose.”
“Money, I would think.”
“No, bigger.”
“Like what?”
“Not sure, but he hinted that there were scary elements lurking in the shadows. He was pressing his sources and hoping to learn more for a detailed report he’s preparing for us. We may take it to a special committee on human trafficking at the United Nations.”
“I need to talk to Corley.”
“I’ve arranged it. He’s agreed to talk to you.”
“Can we do it tonight?”
“No. This is very dangerous. Adam’s convinced that the people behind it are vigilant. He insisted on a face-to-face meeting with you.”
“Fine, where is he?”
“Rabat, Morocco.”
“Morocco? I’ll get my bureau to get an airline ticket and a visa for me.”
“Contact me when you get there, then Adam will get in touch with you.”
When he returned to his hotel, Gannon alerted Lyon in New York about what he’d learned from EGI and that he’d gotten a lead that required him to go to Morocco.
“It’s a good thing you got your shots. I’ll authorize the travel and get the London bureau to get you a ticket and visa as soon as possible,” she said, adding, “We want this story, but I need you to be very careful given all that’s happened so far.”
“I know.”
“That means no more risks, Jack. We’ve lost too much already.”
“Melody, this story was a risk from the get-go.”
38
Rabat, Morocco
The sound of seat belts unbuckling filled the cabin as Gannon’s Air France flight came to a stop at Sale International Airport.