and briefed him about the dead contractors. I wondered again about copies of the video. “But okay, we’ll make it fifty. If you can be there tomorrow.”
I wondered what this was about. If he was willing to pay fifty thousand U.S. just to get me to show up, it was something special. Meaning, almost certainly, something dangerous.
“Tomorrow’s impossible,” I said. “The day after I can do. For the fifty.” The truth was, it didn’t matter that much to me one way or the other. I just don’t like to be rushed. Time pressure is what you do to someone when you’re trying to get him to react without pausing to think.
“All right,” he said, “the day after. You can reach me at this number. I’ll be in the center of the city, but we can meet anywhere you want.”
I paused before responding. Why did I want to do this? The money? The advantages of dealing with whatever it was head-on rather than waiting? Some dark, subversive part of me, sick of my civilian pretensions, grabbing on to a way back in—the killer inside me, the Iceman, demanding his due?
“I’ll call you,” I said, and clicked off.
No doubt his emphasis on flexibility was intended to mollify my security concerns. He’d already chosen the city and had tried to choose the day; if his demands got much more specific than that, he knew it would make me jumpy.
The next call was to Tomohisa “Tom” Kanezaki, an ethnic Japanese American I’d first encountered when he was a green case officer with the CIA’s Tokyo Station. I didn’t trust him, exactly, but we’d traded enough favors for me not to view him as an active threat, and to know he could be counted on to do what he said he would. We’d lost touch about a year earlier, when I was living in Paris with Delilah, thinking I was happy. The last time we’d spoken, he was on a rotation at Langley and hating it.
He picked up with a characteristically noncommittal Yes. In Japan it had usually been Hai. Either way, it felt oddly good to hear his voice.
“Still living the good life at company headquarters?” I said.
There was a pause, and I could picture him smiling. I wondered if he was still wearing the wire-rimmed spectacles. Probably. They made him look bookish, as he once genuinely had been. These days, they’d conceal the street smarts he’d developed, and he was astute enough to know the value in that. No aru taka wa, tsume o kakusu, as the Japanese saying goes. The hawk with talent hides its talons.
“I wouldn’t call it particularly good,” he said. “What are you…is everything okay?”
“I have a small favor to ask—very small.”
Kanezaki could always be counted on to ask for a favor in return. Some of his return favors were pretty damn big, so it paid to establish that what I was asking for was trivial.
“You want to do this with Skype?” he said. “If you don’t think my mobile is secure enough.”
This was both a concession to my security paranoia and a way to build the favor up with some indices of importance. “No,” I said. “It’s not that kind of thing. I just want the skinny on a JSOC colonel named Scott Horton. People call him Hort. You know of him?”
There was a pause, and I wondered if Kanezaki was considering whether I was going to kill Horton. It was the way he was used to thinking of me. But he’d know if that were the case I wouldn’t have asked him.
“Yeah, I know of him. But his position is—”
“Classified, I know. I know what his position is. I want to know about the man. Any reason he wouldn’t have my best interests at heart?”
“That’s hard to say. The kind of thing you do tends to create enemies.”
“Used to do.”
He laughed. “And yet, here you are.”
I ignored it. “He wants to meet me.”
“You think it’s a setup?”
“I always think it’s a setup. Sometimes it even is.”
“Well, all I can tell you is, he’s got a lot of weight behind him. In the last administration, JSOC was reporting directly to
F. Paul Wilson, Alan M. Clark
John Warren, Libby Warren