Elisa explained what she knew, telling her how Jake had pretty much taken out an entire terrorist cell by himself. Sara seemed impressed. He could hear every word and a wave of embarrassment swept through his body.
Jake turned and handed them each a ticket he’d bought with cash for Siracusa. “What kind of stories are you telling, Elisa?”
“Never mind. Just girl talk,” Elisa assured him.
Moving to a set of chairs against a glass wall, Sara said, “I’m going to upload these images to my tablet and send them to myself by e-mail. I have a pretty good signal here. The tablet will give me a better view of the text from the tomb.”
He wandered around and finally took up a spot with a view of the parking lot, leaning against a stanchion. It was starting to get hot already. Jake felt a slight touch of perspiration under each arm. He wished he could forget all about Kurdistan. And he had not completed that mission all by himself. Not even close. On a good day he was able to forget about those things he’d done in his past — in Germany, in Italy, in Bulgaria, in China, in Russia, and even in Kurdistan. But more than anything, he wished he could forget the image he had of his girlfriend Anna dying in his arms in Austria less than a year ago. Just the thought of that last incident in Austria brought a sharp pain to his synthetic left knee. A bullet had shattered his knee, but the death of Anna had shattered his heart.
When they finally got onto the train, they were able to find a quiet, empty compartment. Sara was still working on her tablet translating the Doric Greek to English on a real tablet of paper, scribbling often with her pencil and making changes.
Elisa sat in a chair next to Jake across the aisle from Sara. “What are you thinking?” she asked him.
Jake was wondering what Elisa’s organization had to do with Sara’s research, or the Greeks trying their best to get their hands on it. He was normally a straight shooter, not holding back unless the mission required him to do so. “I’m a bit confused by why your external security agency has an interest in Sara’s work. I think you know more than you’re telling us. In fact, you’re not telling us anything.”
The Italian woman seemed to be searching for words. Finally she said, “You’re right, Jake. But you have to understand, since you were part of your own Agency for so long. Secrets are the nature of the game.”
“Oh, I understand. But you need to understand that I’ll take my ball and go home if I don’t get some answers from you.”
Elisa smiled. “Is that an American baseball reference?”
“It’s a metaphoric reference to justice,” he explained. “Play by the rules, my rules, or don’t play at all.”
She let out a deep sigh, her eyes shifting about the small compartment. Elisa was obviously weighing her duty to her country with the facts on the ground — in this case, Jake’s willingness to continue. “The Greeks. We are investigating someone who has been collecting ancient artifacts and removing them from Italian soil. This has been a huge problem recently, and it is an affront to our national heritage.”
“Who is this someone?” Jake asked.
“A Greek billionaire named Petros Caras. Have you heard of him?”
“Afraid not. I guess we must travel in different circles. So this guy is buying up all kinds of Italian treasures. How long has your agency been investigating him?”
“Personally just a couple of months. But I understand he’s been gaining more scrutiny from Interpol and other agencies for other underworld connections and actions.”
“Like what?”
“Everything from selling arms to the Palestinians to supplying terrorist groups with safe passage on his fleet of ships. This is very serious.”
Jake could imagine so. “Commercial ships have always been a safe haven of those hiding from their government.” He looked out the window as they slowed down to enter the outskirts of Catania. They would have a few stops in the city before continuing on toward Siracusa. Finally this case was starting to make some sense. Now he would have to make contact with his old friends in the CIA to brief him on this Greek billionaire. That in itself would raise red flags. Enough so that if anything happened to him or Sara Halsey Jones, they would have a place to look for answers to their disappearance. Better than an insurance policy.
15
Toni Contardo paced back and forth in the office of her boss, Kurt Jenkins, the Director of Central Intelligence. She had risen up the ranks with Kurt, only he had always been at least one rung above her at all times. Now, she held the position of deputy director for special projects, a position which she had designed herself. She was a fixer. And her relationship with Jake Adams, such as it was now, continued to bring her great angst. The man seemed to have a penchant for finding trouble. Only he could take on a simple missing person case and end up getting shot at by the henchmen of an international billionaire under investigation for all kinds of bad deeds — too many to innumerate to Jake in a simple data feed by e-mail. Yet, she had sent him what he asked for just moments ago without question. But now she was having second thoughts, especially since her boss had somehow found out about her lapse in protocol.
Seconds later and Kurt Jenkins rushed into his office, a concerned look on his face, and he slumped into his leather chair behind his huge mahogany desk. He simply waved for her to sit in the chair across from his desk.
She waited for him to lay out his concerns, since she wasn’t really sure why he had summoned her.
“Your communication with Jake was flagged by our internal security,” Kurt said.
It wasn’t like she had hid her contact with Jake. “I would hope so,” she said. “He needed info on a Greek billionaire named Petros Caras. Was it a problem that I gave him the quick version?”
The director leaned back in his chair and tapped on the wooden arms nervously. “No. Not really. But there could be a problem with the Greek.”
“What kind of problem?” she asked.
“Our Agency has had a…relationship in the past with this man.”
“So. We also had a relationship with Saddam Hussein, Osama Bin Laden, and dozens of other terrorists and despots throughout history. Why is this Petros Caras any different?”
Kurt Jenkins closed his eyes and then let out a long breath of air.
“What the hell is going on?” she demanded.
He hesitated longer, in deep thought. “We made this man.”
“Made him?”
“Essentially. In the seventies Petros Caras was a minor businessman in Athens, working for us to obtain information on certain other interests in the country. This was way before either of us joined the Agency. Anyway, the more he helped us in that region, from Athens to Damascus, we made sure he got certain contracts for his business.”
She was dumbfounded. “So we basically turned a snitch into a billionaire.”
“Well, he was more than a snitch,” Kurt assured her. “He was an agent run by our people out of our Athens office. He quickly gained more prominence once he made contacts in Ankara, Damascus and Beirut.”
“So we let him supply guns to terrorists.”
“It’s not that simple,” Kurt said. “Yes, he did sell weapons, but he was also instrumental with inserting allies into these terrorist organizations, including those from The Mossad. So he has been our man in that region.”
“But?” There was always a big fat but with these cases, she knew.
“But, he’s recently been drawing a lot of criticism from our Israeli friends and now our Italian allies.”
“With the acquisition of the antiquities,” she reasoned.
“That and other things. We’re currently weighing his importance to our Agency.”
I would hope so, she thought. She was never a big fan of propping up potential psychopaths. It never ended well. “Can we tell Jake all of this? He has a right to know.”