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“My team is going to want answers out of him, too,” said Wise, referring to Carlton, Harvath, and their client, the Federal Reserve. “I don’t think it’s an accident that our paths have crossed.”

McGee chuckled as he turned away from the window. “It’s lucky for you that they did. If we hadn’t shown up, Samuel would be picking his teeth with your bones right about now.”

“For which I am eternally grateful. Now, how are we going to handle Cushing?”

“That’s where the banking records come in,” said Ryan as she walked over to the couch with her envelope and sat down. “I don’t know what it was like when you were there, but the CIA is terrible when it comes to funding their people in the field. They’re always months in arrears and it can really screw things up. You learn early on that robbing Peter to pay Paul is the only way to keep your sources funded. Some intel people have been forced into fronting their own personal money just to make sure things get paid on time and they don’t lose assets.”

“So?”

“So, this thinking gets pretty ingrained. Once you have a steady flow of funds, particularly if it comes through a front organization, there’s this kind of fuck the Agency mentality that surfaces. You never stick your hand in your own pocket again. In fact, you may even start putting your hand in the Agency’s pocket.

“Cushing was very strict about stealing. It wasn’t allowed. Setting up hotel and airline mileage accounts, though, was considered an acceptable perk. The idea being that throughout the year, they could build up enough points with which to take personal trips in their off time.”

“Assuming they travel under their real names.”

Ryan smiled. “They do. And not only that, but two of Cushing’s team, Vaccaro and Stark, checked into their hotel here in Boston using their Hands for Peace corporate credit cards.”

“What about Cushing himself?”

“He’s there, too. Trust me. He’s just more compulsive about covering his trail.”

“You were talking about eating the elephant one bite at a time. I assume that means you want to start with Vaccaro and Stark, then?”

“Yup,” she said, holding up the envelope. “And you’re going to help.”

CHAPTER 61

The Renaissance Boston Waterfront Hotel was exactly the hotel Ryan would have expected her old team to pick. They always chose Marriott properties when they traveled, and one of their requirements was that the hotel have its own workout facility. If the property was just off a major thoroughfare that connected directly with the airport, that was another plus. Finally, if a city offered a higher-end experience like a Renaissance property, and it didn’t chafe their NGO cover status too badly, Cushing and company usually opted for it. Some things never changed. Never changing, no matter how skilled you might be, was a bad trait in the espionage game.

With its large, aquatic-themed lobby, the Renaissance provided lots of good places from which to see, while not being seen. Ryan had already checked the bar, the restaurant, the hotel Starbucks, and the fitness center without any luck. It was now time to try their rooms.

Picking up a house phone, she gave Vaccaro’s full name and asked to be connected to his room. There was no answer. She then asked to be connected to Stark. He answered on the second ring.

“Good evening, Mr. Stark,” Ryan said. “This is Julie with guest services. An envelope was just dropped off for you. Would you like me to send it up, or should we hold it downstairs?”

Before Stark could answer, she added, “And I see here in my files that we made a mistake when you checked in. You’re one of our most valued Marriott Rewards customers and should have received a much more significant welcome gift. I apologize for that. Can I have both brought up to your room for you?”

Stark agreed, Ryan thanked him, and after hanging up the phone she flashed McGee the peace sign.

Walking toward the bell stand, McGee cornered an older bellman standing nearby and asked to borrow a pen. He wrote Stark’s name across the front of the envelope and, producing a fifty-dollar bill, said, “I need to get this to my colleague’s room ASAP. He’s on a big conference call, so please don’t knock, just slide it under, okay?”

“The last name is Stark?” the bellman asked.

“That’s right,” McGee replied, and quickly changed the subject. “I’m already late for dinner with a new client. Where can I get a cab? Right out front here?”

The man nodded and was pointing toward the front doors, but McGee had already walked away. The bellman stepped behind the stand, checked his computer for the room number he needed, and then told his colleague he was going to make a delivery.

With the envelope in hand, he strode over to the elevators, and after holding the doors open and waiting for a group to step out, he stepped in. The doors had almost shut when he heard a woman ask for the elevator to be held and a man’s hand reached in to stop the doors from closing all the way.

The doors slid back to reveal a man who looked like Santa Claus carrying a gray duffle bag and a very attractive woman in her mid-thirties with a black rolling suitcase. “What floor do you need?” the bellman asked Ryan.

“Nine, please,” said Wise.

The bellman looked at him as if to say I was asking the lady first, when Ryan responded, “Seven, please.”

The bellman, who had already punched seven for his delivery, smiled back at Ryan and then pushed the button for the ninth floor. “All set.”

The man made polite hotel chitchat on the ride up and wished them both a nice stay as the doors opened on the seventh floor and he stood back to allow Ryan to exit first. As she did, she removed a cell phone Wise had given her and rolled her eyes.

“It wouldn’t be a business trip for Mom if I didn’t get called six times before I got to the room,” she said.

The bellman smiled and left her standing at the elevator bank, chastising a pair of imaginary children.

She had already marked the location of the nearest stairwell in case the bellman forgot his instructions and knocked on Stark’s door and she needed to beat a hasty retreat.

The bellman, though, did as he had been told. Ryan marked the location of the room and began walking in the other direction. Knowing how abundantly helpful bellmen can be, or any man for that reason when presented with an attractive woman, she kept up the intensity of her conversation in order to keep him from offering to help her find her room and get situated.

The combination of body language and tone did the trick. The bellman returned to the elevators. Once she had heard the doors close and was sure that he had gone, she radioed McGee and Wise and told them which stairwell to meet her in.

 • • •

“Now for the fun part,” Wise said as he fished the can of aerosolized pepper spray from his bag.

McGee looked at it. The label said Guardian Protective Devices, and attached to the nozzle was a narrow piece of flexible, clear plastic tubing about eighteen inches long. “You’re like Felix the Cat with that bag. You got that bicycle I wanted for Christmas all those years ago, too?”

“This is going to be better than Christmas. Just watch.”

“We’re not going to get a flashover with that stuff, are we? I don’t want to light this guy Stark up like a Christmas tree unless we absolutely have to.”

Wise shook his head. “This is the best stuff the military has ever fielded. Burns like a mother, but it’s not flammable.”

“Whose idea was the hose? Yours?”

“It was actually their idea. Believe it or not, the inspiration was hotels. Some asshole bangs on your door at three in the morning, you slip the hose under the door, spray this into the hallway, and suddenly it’s filled with pepper mist and a very inhospitable place to be. We, though, are going to do the opposite.”