“More than you, I suspect.”
Ott’s eyes became uncertain again. His right hand was fidgeting with the fork.
“Here’s the thing,” Charlie said. “I don’t want to hurt you, I want to help you. But I need to ask you a few questions, and I need you to answer them. Okay? If you do, everything will be all right. You can leave and you won’t have to ever see me again. If you don’t want to.”
Charlie knew that Ott might have been weighing some wild options at this point—bolting, attacking, shouting for someone to call 911—but that he was too paralyzed to actually act.
A waitress came over, smiled. Charlie waved her away.
“It was connected with a project in Kampala, Uganda,” he said. “You may know that. But I don’t think you know that it was connected to a larger project. In other words, I don’t think you really know what you’re working on. Or where the information you’re gathering is ultimately going.”
Ott looked quickly at Mallory’s hands.
“You were hired to monitor the surveillance of Frederick Collins. You arranged for the relay with Albert Hahn. Ahmed Hassan.”
Charles Mallory saw the recognition sweep across his face.
“But despite your surveillance, you couldn’t get him. You still can’t. Even when Collins is sitting right across from you.”
Charlie smiled and leaned forward slightly. He pulled the handgun from the front of his jeans and let Russell Ott see it. That was enough. Charlie had long ago found that showing a gun to someone unexpectedly was a most effective way of learning about that person’s character.
Third observation: This was a man who would give up information before he would risk his life. A man of deception in his work, perhaps, but not when faced with a pointed gun.
He sensed something else, too, which was surprising: Ott did not know him as Charles Mallory. He knew him as Frederick Collins, and that was all. That was the project he had been hired to work on. Tracking Frederick Collins. It was that compartmentalized.
“What do you want?”
“I want to know who your employer is. And I want to know how you’re able to make contact with the Hassan Network.”
Ott closed his eyes and breathed heavily. His left eye began to twitch, his forehead appeared to be dampening. He opened his eyes and looked straight at Charlie. He wasn’t reacting well to this. “I can’t say.”
“All right.” Charlie nodded, genially, as if he had just said something agreeable. He took a quick scan of the restaurant and lifted the gun in his right hand. “And what if the stakes were raised, what if it became a matter of life and death?”
The lies that he had been told about Frederick Collins would only make him more fearful, Charles Mallory knew. For a moment, he played out the scenario that couldn’t happen: if Ott refused to talk, he would have to shoot. Once he did, he would probably be able to walk out the front door and just disappear. It was unlikely anyone in the restaurant would try to become involved. They would be too stunned to react immediately.
But that was not how this was going to happen. Eliminate that possibility.
“Let me just clarify the situation,” he said. “One more time. You answer my questions and you can walk out of here. You don’t, and you can’t. Okay? That seems pretty straightforward to me. So, again: I want to know who your employer is. And how you communicate with the Hassan Network. How you reach them, how they reach you.”
Charlie was smiling slightly, his expression conveying a different impression than his words, so that someone glancing over might think they were having a friendly conversation. But his heart was racing.
Ott hunched forward and straightened the knife, then the fork, his body language indicating that he was about to give in. “I don’t communicate with them,” he said, in almost a whisper. “I do surveillance contracting. Okay? The other’s not my part of the deal.”
“Even if that were true, though, you worked with Hassan in the past. But let’s not take these questions out of order. Start with the first. Who were you working for when you made your mistake in Nice?”
“Mistake.”
“Yes.”
Ott’s eyes kept going to the gun, which Mallory held in view just below the tabletop. “What mistake?”
“You coordinated a surveillance operation designed to take out a bad guy—a guy named Frederick Collins. The problem is, Frederick Collins was not a bad guy. So someone must’ve given you incorrect information. You trusted this person enough that you didn’t bother to properly check out what you were told. That alone tells me a great deal about your client. And it almost makes me think it has something to do with the government.”
“No.” Again he saw a change in Ott’s eyes, some vague confusion clouding his thinking. “What are you going to do with this information?”
“Doesn’t matter,” he said.
“I don’t know who the client is.”
Charlie adjusted the gun.
“There’s a middleman,” Ott said. “Someone who represents the client. The client is larger than what happened in Nice. It’s a much larger project.”
“I know that. Who?”
“I don’t know.”
“You wouldn’t be doing this if you didn’t know that you have a trustworthy client.”
“It’s a military contractor. URW Industries. It’s based in Texas.”
A subsidiary of Black Eagle Services, the largest military contractor in the United States. Mallory didn’t let on anything.
“Okay. And who’s your contact there?”
“There’s no contact. It’s handled through an attorney. A middleman, as I say.”
He sighed and seemed to wince. And then he gave Charlie what he wanted, a name: Douglas Chase.
“Okay. How do you reach him?” Mallory lifted the weapon slightly, knowing that if anyone in the restaurant saw the gun, there was a chance he or she would call 911. He needed to get this over with.
“Chase is an attorney. He has a private practice in Houston.”
“And who is his boss?”
“I don’t know. Someone nicknamed ‘the Administrator.’ I know nothing about him.”
The Administrator. He had heard that before. Where?
“Okay. Now tell me about the Hassan Network.”
“I don’t know.”
“You were able to reach Albert Hahn, though. How?”
He was pushing the fork to a new position on the placemat. “The same.”
“The same?”
“Doug Chase. He has a client who’s able to reach them.”
“Okay. So your client isn’t Isaak Priest?”
“Who?” Ott stared back at him, his thin lips forming an O. “No. I don’t know who that is. It’s this other person.”
“The Administrator.”
“That’s right.”
Mallory studied his face. Believed him. “Okay.” Good. “Now. Final question: Who’s working for you?”
“What? What do you mean?”
“Satellite imaging. You’re outsourcing, developing systems with subcontractors. There are very few corporations capable of doing that, at the level you’re working at. Give me a name.”
“Sky Glass Industries.”
“Okay.” Good again. Gus Hebron’s company, in Virginia.
“Thank you.” Ott exhaled. Mallory nodded, and Ott got to his feet.
He kept a grip on the handle of the gun as Russell Ott lumbered away, pushed against the door and walk-limped into the parking lot. Charlie was ready in case he decided to retrieve a handgun and come back in, or to fire at him through the plate glass. But he didn’t. He unlocked the SUV, sat behind the wheel for a moment and then pulled out wildly, almost hitting an oncoming car.