Dylan stopped next to the vehicle and pulled a cigar out of his pocket.
“You could have told me,” Creed said, loosening the straps on his rucksack.
Dylan lit the cigar and got it going before handing it over.
“Command decision” was all he said.
“Bullshit.” Creed took a long draw on the cigar, letting the smoke fill his mouth. Dylan always had the best cigars.
“Throwing that information, and that photograph, down in front of the whole team would have started a riot, and you know it. I still haven’t figured out how to tell Kid.”
“Bull,” he said again, then blew out a cloud of smoke. “You give the ‘telling Kid’ part to Superman.” That’s what any of them would have done.
“Yeah,” the boss said, wiping his hand over his face, sounding as weary and worn out as the dump they were using for mission headquarters looked. “But we need better facts than we’ve got.”
“I figure that’s why you brought me and Zach down here, boss.” He pulled five empty pistol magazines out of one of the pockets on his ruck and started loading them. “Fact. Finding. Mission.”
“The CIA has those four dead agents on this thing already, and that’s if they’re telling us the truth.”
“Which they probably aren’t.” And that was a fact he would take to the bank.
“Yeah, that’s what I figure, too.”
Taking one last long draw, Creed gave him the cigar back and started in on his second magazine.
Dylan took a short puff and kept the cigar clenched in his teeth. “The spooks were also saying there’s a girl up there at Costa del Rey. That she’s been seen with Farrel in Bangkok and Berlin.”
“That’s convenient.” Damned convenient.
“Hawkins and I thought so, too, and the third time we went up there to run our recon, Hawkins saw her checking the compound’s perimeter. She does that real regular-like.”
“And?”
“She’s good in the woods, and she takes Costa del Rey’s security damned seriously.”
So they were going to grab the girl. Creed was fine with that, whatever it took.
“I put in a request a couple of weeks ago,” Dylan said, then paused for a moment. “I’ve asked Grant to have the body exhumed for DNA testing.”
Fuck. He kept on loading, sliding one cartridge in on top of the last, kept on breathing.
“Body?” he said, when he figured he could do it without chewing up the damn word. “What body, Dylan? We buried bones, burned bones. There was no body.”
Butchered and burned-that’s what the NRF had done to John Thomas Chronopolous. It had been overkill, none of it making sense, except to some twisted cocaine bastard out of Colombia named Juan Conseco trying to make a point, trying to send a message to the U.S. government.
Message received and returned in kind. None of them had been left alive. Not kingpin Juan, not his nephew Ruperto, who had delivered the death order, not the fucking guerrillas who had carried it out.
“Grant’s been working on this thing and coming up with nothing. The file on Conroy Farrel is buried in the Mariana Trench. We’ve got one damn lousy photograph and no corroborating evidence that he even exists. I need some facts, either of who he is or who he isn’t.”
“Whoever he is, it’s a dirty deal, Dylan.” And there wasn’t a man jack of them who hadn’t thought it, who didn’t know it.
“That’s why we’re going to bring Farrel in alive.”
Dylan was right, they needed to capture Conroy Farrel. They needed to talk to the man up close and personal, whatever it took. Nothing else would do. Creed didn’t know what had gone wrong for those four CIA agents, but he didn’t have a doubt in his mind that SDF could bring the guy in.
“What about this snatch on some antique Suzi Toussi was going to tag for the DIA?” he said. “You said Grant had that mission on his priority list.”
“Against his will,” Dylan admitted. “Suzi is in Ciudad del Este. She arrived earlier today and is staying at the Gran Chaco, a luxury hotel near the country club. We were in contact this morning, and she had a meeting set for this afternoon with the gallery owner, a man named Remy Beranger, who is supposed to be selling an Egyptian statue, a sphinx with some kind of special powers that was stolen from the spooks over at DIA.”
Geezus. Creed gave him a look that said he had to be kidding. Dylan just shrugged.
All right, then. He wasn’t going to ask what in the hell the Defense Intelligence Agency had been doing with a magical Egyptian statue, or how in the hell it was important enough to involve General Grant and SDF, but DIA, CIA, hell, yeah, they were definitely on sinking sand everywhere they stepped in this hellhole.
“Suzi’s good,” he said. “She’ll get the job done. I helped her and Cody bring one of her girls out of Bulgaria last year. She had everything set up just so.”
“Yeah, but she lost that one in Ukraine, and I think she took it real personal.”
She had. Creed knew it for a fact. His wife, Cody, did a lot of footwork for Suzi on the girls, and more often than not provided tactical support. But Cody hadn’t been able to get into Ukraine three months ago, some problems with her passport, the Ukrainians had said. Some problems with her past, was what she and Creed and Suzi had figured, and maybe some trouble with what she and Suzi had been doing the last couple of years in that part of the world. Cody and Suzi had decided to abort the mission-but the girl, some little southern chick, had not been able to keep her cool, and her house of cards had tumbled down on her real hard. She’d ended up dead, and Suzi had ended up finding her, and it was just a big mess, with everybody feeling guilty, except Viktor Kravchuk, the guy who had killed the girl. Creed could guarantee Viktor had not lost a wink of sleep over the murder. There was nothing weighing on that guy’s conscience.
Suzi, though, she’d gotten herself all locked up over Lily Anne Thompson. She was tough, though, he’d known that about her for a long time. She’d work it out.
“I don’t like it,” Dylan said, looking at the cigar before putting it back in his mouth and puffing on it quietly, looking around, thinking. That’s what the boss did best, thinking.
After a few moments, he took the cigar out of his mouth and blew out a large cloud of smoke.
“I’m changing the lineup,” the boss said. “I don’t care how good she is, I want her out of here. Grant gave her an RFID scanner to pick up a signal off the statue, and I want you to go get the scanner, get Suzi on a plane out of Paraguay, and get back here. We’ll do what we can with the DIA’s magic sphinx business, but Farrel is here, right now, and he is our priority mission.” That was a set of orders, not a string of suppositions, and Creed didn’t misunderstand for a second.
“Yes, sir,” he said.
And that was the right answer, the only answer Creed had, no matter what Dylan asked him to do.
Suzi followed Dax into the gloomy interior of the Galeria Viejo. She knew she’d shown her hand by taking out the scanner, but she hadn’t had a choice. The day’s events had narrowed her options at a dramatic rate, and she wasn’t about to search this damn place by herself in the dark, even packing a pistol. Oh, hell no, but she still needed a solid hit on the scanner. From there, one phone call would complete her mission-maybe. If the SDF operators wanted eyes-on, she’d give them eyes-on, if she could, but if it got to eyes-on, it was going to be hands-on, and one set of those hands was going to belong to Dax, and her money said he wasn’t going to play nice and let the girl have it, even if he had kissed her.
Fifty-fifty. Right. He’d been lying, too. Nobody cut a fifty-fifty deal on immortality-and that’s what everything was about. Not the inherent value of an ancient antiquity. Not its historical significance. And not its price on the open market.
Everyone was in Paraguay because of what the statue was supposed to be able to do tomorrow night.