Phyllis smiled at me and said, "You handled that well."
"He's a dimwit."
"And don't you underestimate him," she replied sharply. "He won't be so easily dealt with if you don't have him by the balls." She added, "I'll do my best to watch your back, but you had better watch your own ass."
Either my coarse soldier talk was starting to rub off on Phyllis or she was taking it down a notch to make sure the message got through. I have that effect on people. Anyway, I already had figured out that my future dealings with Mr. Waterbury were likely to be stormy, perhaps hazardous.
There was something I did not understand, however. "What's going on here? What has Waterbury all worked up?"
"You don't know?"
Obviously not.
She said, "I've already told you that Daniels was career DIA. Here's what I didn't mention. In the run-up to the war, as you might've read in the newspapers, the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy decided it did not like, or perhaps trust, the intelligence the Agency was providing the White House. They therefore formed their own small intelligence cell to… in their words, to vet and decipher the intelligence on Iraq. This cell had a straight pipeline to the Secretary of Defense, and via him, to the White House."
"And Daniels was part of this cell?"
"Yes. A founding member." Phyllis continued, "Now the question Congress wants answered is who cooked up the evidence that led our nation to war on phony premises. Specifically, the Iraqi nuclear progress that turned out not to exist. The stockpiles of chemical weapons that have never been found. The terrorist connections that haven't materialized. The White House and the Pentagon have been madly leaking to the press and pointing their fingers at us. Clifford Daniels knew where the truth is buried. Follow his path and you shall learn that truth."
"And the truth shall set you free."
"Not this time." She stared off into the distance a moment, contemplating how much to tell, or not to tell me. She eventually said, "Bear this in mind also. Lord knows what Daniels has been involved in since the war started. With luck, it's possible you might uncover that as well."
"Would that be good luck or bad luck?"
"You'll know when you find it."
"Phyllis, this isn't doing it for me."
"Well, then ask anything you like."
"Are we talking espionage? Was Cliff Daniels betraying our country?"
When she made no reply, I said, "I need you to clarify this."
"I can't make it any clearer."
"Can't or won't?"
She smiled. When you ask a senior officer in the Army an impertinent question, you get a direct rebuke, like, "That's enough, Drummond," or the less ambiguous, "Have you ever seen the prison at Leavenworth? It sucks." Senior CIA officers are shrewder, more austere, polished. They tend to couch their responses nonverbally, like they know there's a hidden recorder in the room. So you get a frozen stare, or a slight knit of the eyebrows, or an icy smile. You need to listen with your eyes, because somewhere between the polite nod and the slight twitch of the left nostril, you've just had your balls cut off.
I moved on and asked, "If I find something, how am I supposed to handle it?"
"You'll know when you find it."
"That's not good enough. Are we talking damage to my career, or damage to my life?"
We looked at each other and I realized I was getting in way over my head. She informed me, "This man Daniels was involved with the Iraqis for nearly twenty years. He knew where a lot of bodies were buried, and I think you'll find his fingerprints on a lot of things that were hazardous for his health." She added ominously, "Don't let those things become hazardous for your health."
Suddenly, I could see why a lot of people would want Clifford Daniels dead, quietly buried, and long forgotten.
When I walked out of Phyllis's office, Waterbury was gone, and Bian Tran was standing alone, beside the water cooler, smiling.
CHAPTER SIX
We carried Daniels's briefcase to a small windowless side office whose occupant had been told to get lost so a pair of prodigies from the Agency's Office of Technical Support could perform a little on-the-spot forensics on Clifford's computer. Bian and I entered the office and made our introductions. They were named Will and John. They looked like Delbert and Elbert.
Will had thicker glasses than John, with wider black rims, and he had more pens and pencils in his pocket protector. Based on the geekiness factor, I handed the computer to Will, who immediately popped it open, flipped it on, and they both erupted in giggles.
Apparently thinking I cared, Will and John tried explaining their intentions-decoding Daniels's password, breaking through any fire-walls that were erected, then digging through the hard drive, where the really good stuff would be found.
From my experience, too much time on a computer alters your physical appearance, and your outlook. Will, for instance, was almost transparently pale, with a large, flat butt, a scary, myopic stare, and he seemed totally clueless about how to interact with people who aren't connected to a joystick. John was the type who seems to believe all of life's problems can be fixed or repaired with a thorough virus scan. I mean, they were probably good guys, and competent, too. A lot of nontechnical people become uncomfortable in the presence of computer geniuses, and I'm one of them. I felt ashamed of my small-mindedness.
Anyway, it was all very interesting. In fact, John was just winding up a comprehensive and, dare I say, spellbinding explanation about the protocols involved with firewalls when I pulled out my gun and plugged them both. Just kidding.
Actually, I wasn't armed, so I did the next best thing-I fled.
Even Bian, who had showed enough familiarity with the subject to ask them a few probing and intelligent-sounding questions, looked relieved to get out of there.
We stopped off at the coffee machine, filled a cup for me, a cup for her, and proceeded to my cramped office carrel, where we sat.
I mentioned, "Why did you ask questions? It only encourages them."
She smiled. "The expression on your face when I asked about code-mapping made it all worth it."
Obviously needing to change the subject, I mentioned, "Incidentally, I was very impressed with your boss. Does he ever pull his head out of his butt?"
"I could see you two hit it off. Is this the start of something beautiful and lasting?"
"Personally, I like the guy. I really do. I'm going to do my best to develop a warm and amicable relationship."
"Bullshit."
"Right. Who is he?"
"Former military. A retired MP colonel, in fact. Look, I know he's a little intense, somewhat rigid… but he's good at his job. Very deliberate, by-the-book."
"Like Adolf Eichmann."
"Good analogy. But, well…" She searched her mind for something nice to say and came up with, "At least there's never a mystery about where he's coming from."
"Okay. Where is he coming from on Clifford Daniels?"
"Who the hell knows?" She laughed.
"He knows." After a moment, I asked, "So, how should we approach this thing?"
Bian understood exactly what I was asking, and why. At the start of a murder investigation you usually have a corpse, if you're lucky, also a murder weapon, and you have to dig for the rest-things like motives, suspects, and, for good measure, sufficient evidence, eyewitnesses, and elements of proof to get the bad guy an appointment on the hot seat. Sometimes-very often, in fact-the killer is an idiot and leaves a mother lode of clues and leads that draw a straight line from victim to killer-such as fingerprints, sperm cells, DNA markers, witnesses, and, increasingly in this cinematic age, the deed might even be captured on videotape. Killers, at least most killers, really aren't that clever or deceitful.
This wasn't one of those cases. Here, I suspected, we had that rare criminal who operated on a higher plane-thus, where we began, and how we began, would determine how fast we went and how many dead ends we hit.