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Together the two of them rode the elevator up to the fourth-floor conference room. On the way up Mary Pat said, “I like the new place.” She tried a smile, but Gerry had known Mary Pat and her husband, Ed, for years, and he could tell she was just going through the motions of small talk.

He made it easy on her. “Thanks very much. We were lucky to get the place. A private military contractor gave it up, and we moved in. It was stocked for our needs, we basically just switched out the locks and plugged in our computers.”

She nodded politely.

Gerry said, “I’m very sorry about Colin Hazelton. You knew him well, did you?”

Mary Pat nodded again, but made no reply.

A minute later they entered the conference room. The five men sitting at the table stood and came forward. John Clark, Domingo Chavez, Dominic Caruso, Sam Driscoll, and Jack Ryan, Jr., all shook hands with the DNI before sitting back down.

Mary Pat was here this morning because The Campus had been sent to Vietnam on her personal request. As DNI, Mary Pat had every intelligence asset in the U.S. government at her disposal, but she had reached out to Gerry Hendley and his team for help in the matter of Colin Hazelton because she wanted to keep the inquiry sensitive and below official channels.

Needless to say, she now felt that decision to have been a grave error.

John Clark began the meeting by running through everything that had happened between the time the Campus team arrived in Ho Chi Minh City and the moment their Gulfstream took off over the Gulf of Thailand with the body of Colin Hazelton hidden behind an access panel. He had the other members of the unit give their own perspective on specific events. Mary Pat sat quietly throughout the presentations, but she looked nearly overcome with emotion when Domingo relayed finding the wounded Hazelton in the street and his attempts to save him.

Ding had never seen Mary Pat like this, and he quickly toned down the level of detail in an attempt to spare her some discomfort.

Mary Pat seemed skeptical when she heard that Colin had written the letters DPRK in his last note, and she asked to look at the paper herself. Clark handed it over, and she had as much trouble deciphering the letters as the others.

When everyone was finished with the after-action report, Mary Pat took a moment to collect her thoughts. She said, “I could have stopped this before it got out of hand. I didn’t know the stakes,” she said. “Had I known… Christ. I thought this was just a corporate intelligence issue. Shady, maybe. Crooked at worst. But not this.”

Clark replied softly, “I wouldn’t be surprised if Hazelton thought it was just a corporate intelligence issue as well. His threat posture didn’t indicate he thought for a second he was in any physical danger.”

Mary Pat then said, “I feel I know the answer, but I have to rule it out so I will ask anyway. Any chance at all this was just random street crime?”

Jack Junior took this one. “None. I was the one watching when he was confronted. These guys were skilled, they locked on to Hazelton and trailed him for blocks. I don’t know why he was targeted or killed, but I do know there wasn’t anything random to it.”

Foley seemed satisfied by the answer, though she was still visibly upset.

Gerry said, “Now, Mary Pat, it should come as no surprise we have questions for you. Why did you have us tail Hazelton? I assumed you suspected him of being involved in something illegal?”

She took a sip of water. “Colin, Ed, and I came up in CIA together. He’d been a pilot in the Air Force who’d moved into intelligence. He was a natural case officer. One of the good ones. After leaving the field, he worked for Ed for years on the seventh floor of the Agency, and became a trusted confidant to us both.

“When I moved out of CIA and began running the National Counterterrorism Center, I wanted to move Colin over with me. As always, a special personal security review was run on him, just a formality because he’d been in CIA for thirty years already. But the review turned up some problems.”

“Problems?” Gerry asked.

“Money problems. Colin had made some questionable investments. He put all of his savings in places where he thought the money would earn an especially high rate of return. High-risk Third World locations that others wouldn’t touch. Colin felt like he knew the region.”

“What happened?”

Mary Pat’s chest heaved. “The Arab Spring. Tunisia flipped, Libya tanked, Egypt went one way, then the other, and then in another direction.”

Ryan whistled. “Damn. Hazelton invested in North Africa?”

Mary Pat shrugged. “He’d made some good bets in the past. He grew overconfident in his ability to foresee events. And that proved his undoing. He borrowed some money, thinking he could earn it back. He lost that as well.

“When we found out about the investments they were still going strong. Nevertheless, we couldn’t take him at NCTC, there was too much potential for compromise with all that money offshore. Then CIA found he had failed to report some of his accounts. He said it was just a screwup on his part, and I believe him. Colin was a good pilot and a first-rate intelligence officer, and he was a good executive from a big-picture standpoint, but he could be a bit disorganized when it came to paperwork. At that point in his CIA career he was no longer clandestine, he was a Seventh Floor administrator. Personally I thought he should have been allowed to retire. But the new head of CIA, Jay Canfield, is a by-the-book guy, so he drummed Hazelton out a year before eligibility for his pension. Shortly after that was the coup in Egypt. Colin lost everything. He was out of work and desperate. Ed and I tried to help him on a personal level, but he was too proud. He wouldn’t return our calls.

“I’d gotten a tip from another old colleague that he’d started working for Duke Sharps in New York. I knew Duke before he left FBI’s Counterintelligence Division. Since he’s gone private sector he’s only become an unscrupulous opportunist.”

John Clark said, “That man is scum of the earth.”

Ding agreed with a nod, but the younger Campus operators all exchanged looks of surprise.

Mary Pat also agreed. “Sharps Global Intelligence Partners employs hundreds of ex-spies, soldiers, and police detectives all over the planet, and Duke has his fingerprints on most every shady event happening anywhere. Still, there’s one thing Duke has more of than morally questionable ex-spooks, and that’s lawyers. His operation has stayed up and running even though the Justice Department has tried to shut him down.”

Gerry Hendley said, “When you found out Hazelton worked for Sharps, what did you do?”

“At first I was just disappointed, but not terribly concerned. Some of Sharps’s clients skirt the law, sure, but he also works with aboveboard corporate accounts on completely benign investigative issues. I didn’t believe for an instant that Colin would do anything against the U.S. Still, I put some resources into him, flagged his passport to ping if he went abroad, just in case. Then, the other day, he flew to Prague. I wanted him followed there, but he left the Czech Republic before we got anyone in place, and went to Vietnam. Our assets there were deployed on another matter, and I didn’t want to alert the local authorities. So I called you, Gerry, and asked for help. John, you and your men tailed him in Ho Chi Minh City. I had no idea he was in any danger. I just wanted to know if he was involved in something illegal.”

Gerry could see that Mary Pat felt a sense of responsibility for what happened to Hazelton.