“What career would that be?”
“As a thief. Robbing art museums.”
There was a sudden, freezing silence.
“Not the bigger museums, of course. The small private ones, generally, with less sophisticated intrusion-detection systems and lower-profile artwork.”
“I think you need to up your medication,” Gideon said in a low voice. “I’m no art thief. I don’t have even the slightest criminal record.”
“Which shows just how good you were. Such skills can be very valuable. Of course, you dropped this profession when a new and overriding interest came into your life. And with that we get to the second reason. You see, we followed with great interest your deft little operation against General Chamblee S. Tucker.”
Gideon tried to recover from this second surprise. He mustered up his most puzzled look. “Operation? Tucker went nuts and attacked me and one of his employees in his house.”
“So everyone thinks. I know better. I know that you spent the last ten years improving yourself, finishing college and getting your doctorate at MIT, all the while looking for a way to bring Tucker down and vindicate your father. I know how you managed to ‘liberate’ that top-secret document from the Directorate of Information Management, and how you used it to get at Tucker. He was a powerful man, and he had protected himself well. You showed enormous and varied skills setting up that operation, and then great self-possession in the aftermath of the shooting. You spun the business just right. Nobody doubted for a moment your narrative, even as you vindicated your father.”
Gideon felt sick. So this was what it was all about: blackmail. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Come, come. Your secret is safe with me regardless. We ourselves were looking for the best way to bring Tucker down. For a special client of ours, naturally. You saved us the trouble. And that’s how you came to our attention.”
Gideon could think of nothing to say.
“Earlier you asked me: why you? The fact is, we know everything about you, Dr. Crew. And not just your burglary skills or run-in with General Tucker. We know about your difficult childhood. About your work at Los Alamos. About your proclivity for gourmet cooking. Your fondness for Hawaiian shirts and cashmere sweaters. Your taste in jazz. Your weakness for alcohol. And — when under the influence — women. The only thing we haven’t been able to learn is how you lost the top joint of your right ring finger.” He raised the brow of his good eye quizzically.
Gideon flushed with anger, took a few deep breaths, and got himself under control.
“If you won’t answer that, perhaps you’ll answer something else: did you plan to turn Dajkovic from the beginning?”
Again Gideon said nothing. It was unbelievable, incredible.
“You have my word whatever you say will stay within these walls. We are, as you might imagine, rather good at keeping secrets.”
Gideon hesitated. The truth was, Glinn had him by the short hairs. But he sensed, behind the hard, blank façade, that the man was truthful. “All right,” he finally said. “The whole thing was planned from beginning to end. I set up the ambush knowing Tucker wouldn’t come himself—the man was a coward. I’d studied his company and the people who worked for him. I figured he’d send Dajkovic, who was fundamentally a decent guy. I knew I could catch him and hoped I could turn him. It worked. We finished the…operation together.”
Glinn nodded. “As I thought. A masterpiece of social engineering on many levels. But you made one mistake. What was it?”
“I forgot to check his boot for that damn knife.”
Finally Glinn smiled, and for the first time his face seemed to be almost human. “Excellent. But the operation ended rather messily. Dajkovic got shot. How did that happen?”
“Tucker was no dummy. He realized Dajkovic was lying.”
“How?”
“Dajkovic failed to share a drink with him. We think that’s what tipped Tucker off.”
“Then that was Dajkovic’s mistake, not yours. I proved my point. You made only one mistake in that whole operation. I’ve never seen anything quite like what you did. You’re definitely the man for this job.”
“I had ten years to figure out how to take down Tucker. You’re giving me four hours for this one.”
“This is a far simpler problem.”
“And if I fail?”
“You won’t fail.”
A silence. “Another thing: what are you going to do with this Chinese weapon? I’m not going to do anything to harm my country.”
“The United States of America is, in fact, my client.”
“Come on, they’d be using the FBI for a job like this — not hiring a firm like yours, no matter how specialized.”
Glinn reached into his pocket and removed a card. He laid it on the table and pushed it toward Gideon with his finger.
He peered at the card, emblazoned with a government logo. “The Director of National Intelligence?”
“I would be dismayed if you believed anything I’m telling you. You can check it out for yourself. Call the Department of Homeland Security and ask to speak to this gentleman. He’ll confirm that we’re a DHS subcontractor doing legitimate and patriotic work for our country.”
“I’d never get through to a guy like that.”
“Use my name and you’ll be put through directly.”
Gideon did not pick up the card. He gazed at Glinn, and a silence built in the office. A hundred thousand dollars. The money was nice but this job looked fraught with difficulties. Danger. And Glinn’s confidence in him was sadly misplaced.
He shook his head. “Mr. Glinn, until a month ago my entire life was on hold. I had something I had to do. All my energy went into that one thing. Now I’m free. I’ve got a lot of catching up to do. I want to make friends, settle down, find someone, get married, have kids. I want to teach my son how to cast a dry fly. I’ve got all the time in the world now. This job of yours — well, it sounds dangerous as hell to me. I’ve taken enough risks for one lifetime. You understand? I’m not interested in your assignment.”
An even longer silence enveloped the room.
“Is that final?” Glinn asked.
“Yes.”
Glinn glanced at Garza and gave him a short nod. Garza reached into his briefcase, removed a file, and laid it on the table. It was a medical file, labeled with a red tab. Glinn opened it up to reveal a stack of X-rays, CT scans, and dense lab reports.
“What’s this?” said Gideon. “Whose X-rays are those?”
“Yours,” said Glinn, sorrowfully.
14
With a feeling of trepidation, Gideon reached over and took the file. The names had been cut out of the X-rays and scans, blacked out in the reports.
“What the hell is this? Where did you get these?”
“They came from the hospital where you were treated for your knife wound.”
“What’s this supposed to mean?”
“In the course of diagnosing and treating your injury, the usual tests were done: X-rays, MRIs, and blood work. Since you were suffering from a concussion, among other things, some of this work focused on your head. And the doctors made what is known as an incidental finding. They diagnosed you with an arteriovenous malformation — specifically, a condition known as a ‘vein of Galen aneurysmal malformation.’”
“What the hell’s that?”
“It’s an abnormal tangle of arteries and veins in the brain involving the great cerebral vein of Galen. It’s usually congenital, and usually asymptomatic until the age of twenty or so. And then it, ah, makes its presence known.”