“Graham Winston did not skim it.”
“He wants some rug factory shut down?”
“. . . they’re called knot shops.”
“I think of Winston as one of those names you hear on Terry Gross. He writes checks he can deduct. What’s he want with financing a battle with a bunch of Afghan thugs? If it backfires, he’ll bring them to his door. I hope you warned him.”
“He’ll bring them to our door. And it’s believed they’re Turks, not Afghans.”
“That article was a couple weeks ago,” Knox said, suddenly interested in the contents of the more current newspaper.
“Bottom of page six.”
Knox locates the article. Three inches alongside a two-column ad for couples performance videos. He knows that Dulwich is monitoring the telltale vein in his forehead. He attempts a Zen technique to control his heart rate. But it’s like trying to hold back a barn-sour nag.
“A car bomb,” Knox says. “A choke point.”
“Indeed.”
“Killed the driver and passenger.”
“A low-level EU bureaucrat who was sadly so insignificant they had to work the obit to make him appear otherwise.”
The paper’s placement of the article—buried deeply—speaks to Knox: the man’s death was insignificant as well.
“It’s better than sex, isn’t it?”
Knox says, “You’re treading on the sacrosanct.”
“This EU guy is so far down the ladder, he’s holding it for others. So why kill him?”
“Why are you screwing around with me? If you want me for this—and we wouldn’t be here if you didn’t—offer me the job and be done with it. I can tell you why: you think you’re on such thin ice that you have to let me sell myself. You condense this down to a couple of lines and you know I won’t be interested.”
“But you are interested. They killed the bureaucrat because he was a source for the article. They’re trying to kill the truth.”
“Spare me!” But there are style points to be awarded here. Dulwich is beating a drum and making it louder with every hit. He has it all choreographed. He assumed it would be a tough sell. Knox wants to make sure to see it from both sides before feeling the trap door give way. Graham Winston. A knot shop. Some low-level bureaucrat reduced to toast.
Knox still can’t see it perfectly. He’s pissed at himself.
“Why would Brian Primer,” he says, mentioning Dulwich’s boss, president of the Rutherford Risk security firm, “accept a job to shut down a sweatshop ring? It sounds more like something for a police task force.”
“Because he has a paying client.”
“Brian has plenty of paying clients.”
“Because these guys are scum holes. They kidnap ten-year-olds and chain them to posts and make them work eighteen-hour days. You know the drill. It’s repugnant.”
Knox needs no reminder why the op appeals to him—Dulwich had him at ten-year-olds in chains; he’s less sure about Rutherford Risk’s motivations. No matter how Dulwich pumps him up, he has always assumed he is expendable to these people. Rutherford’s clients pay well for a reason: the work is typically unwanted by, or too dangerous for, others.
“I’m appealing to your savior complex,” Dulwich says, being honest for a change.
“The girl.”
“The girls. And you need the money.”
Knox is in financial quicksand. A $300,000 nest egg to provide for his brother’s exceptional medical needs was embezzled by a woman who took advantage of his brother’s diminished abilities. Without that nest egg, should anything happen to Knox, his brother, Tommy, will be institutionalized. The irony Dulwich forces upon Knox each time he makes an offer is that Knox must risk his own safety to win the money to provide for his brother in case he’s not around.
Dulwich reaches down and comes out with another newspaper that contains the original article about the young, injured girl fleeing the health clinic.
“I did read this,” Knox says, remembering. The byline is Sonia Pangarkar. It’s as much a story about the poorer neighborhoods of Amsterdam and the European struggle with immigrants as it is a cry for this runaway girl’s life. The reporter is smart, thorough, and the piece engaging. There are names and places to back it up.
One of the names jumps out at him. “The car-bombing victim was one of her sources,” Knox says. “We discussed it already. So, it’s hardball.”
“Bingo.”
“In addition to wanting to protect those who cannot protect themselves, the benevolent Mr. Winston draws a line at murdering those willing to whistle-blow,” Knox says. “I’m touched.”
“Winston stands for liberty and justice for all. Terry Gross. Rachel Maddow. Anyone who will listen.”
“Graham Winston is intending to run for prime minister.”
“You said that. I did not.”
Knox sets down the paper. “I’m not a political consultant.” Hard-to-get is the only play with Dulwich. It’s time to negotiate.
Knox downs the rest of the coffee. It’s like swallowing a six-volt battery. “I’ve got Tommy to think of. The Turkish mob is not going to like being exposed. Just ask your low-level bureaucrat.”
“Winston will pay four times the last job.”
The number 200,000 swims in Knox’s head. It’s a lot of thimble cymbals.
Knox signals the waiter and orders another shot of espresso, wanting to ramp it up to twelve volts. Dulwich does the same. The curious woman stands up to leave. Knox senses a missed opportunity. “I’ll need Grace.”
“Done.”
“Resources.”
“It’s Graham Winston, Knox.”
“A reliable contact in the police department would help.” He wants the young girl recovered safely. All the girls recovered safely. He resents that Dulwich knows this about him.
“Know just the guy. Name of Joshua Brower. We go way back.”
“I’ve got to believe that someone in power is looking the other way on this thing. Right? So the police piece is a tricky one.”
“Brower’s trustworthy. I’m with you.”
“You wouldn’t be leaving something out?”
“That’s not in anybody’s best interest.”
“Listen, we both know, given the choice of losing me or Grace, Brian Primer’s going to protect Grace.”
Dulwich is silent.
Knox decides not to push. He suspects Grace Chu’s star has risen within Rutherford Risk. First and foremost a forensic accountant, she has recently proven herself a quick study of computer hacking and, because of her former training with the Chinese Army, is no slouch in field ops. Knox knows he’s not in the same category––he offers Primer and Dulwich his cover of a legitimate international exporter and a growing passion for stomping the ugliest bugs that crawl out of the dark.
There’s sand in Knox’s teeth. Or maybe it’s coffee grounds. He can’t afford to get himself hurt or killed with Tommy’s ongoing medical care unfunded. The money being offered would help him to eventually cover his brother’s long-term home care. He bridles at the thought of an institution.
He’s pissed as he accepts the job.
In another life, Grace would’ve been a witch doctor. A digital witch doctor. She balances between several worlds: her father’s traditionalist Chinese versus the reality that is Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu and the other major cities joining the Western world; a love life that has lost its way; a woman in an overwhelmingly male-dominated world of private security; numbers on a page versus numbers in the cloud.
As her fingers hit the keypad, all that changes: she’s transported into a digital realm that both absorbs her and fascinates her. She is in control, despite the vodka. Her eyes stray over to Mr. Smear-n-Off—the digital gates open before her like she’s marching on Troy. She’s through three barriers and onto the corporate network, marching with her army of education, training and experience and pushing her horse through with its belly full of surprises.