Dance with the Dragon
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Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Epigraph
The Beginning
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Part One: Ten Days Later
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Part Two: The Next Day
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-One
Chapter Fifty-Two
Chapter Fifty-Three
Chapter Fifty-Four
Chapter Fifty-Five
Chapter Fifty-Six
Chapter Fifty-Seven
Chapter Fifty-Eight
Chapter Fifty-Nine
Chapter Sixty
Part Three: The Next Day
Chapter Sixty-One
Chapter Sixty-Two
Chapter Sixty-Three
Chapter Sixty-Four
Chapter Sixty-Five
Chapter Sixty-Six
Chapter Sixty-Seven
Chapter Sixty-Eight
Chapter Sixty-Nine
Chapter Seventy
Chapter Seventy-One
Chapter Seventy-Two
Chapter Seventy-Three
Chapter Seventy-Four
Chapter Seventy-Five
Chapter Seventy-Six
Chapter Seventy-Seven
Chapter Seventy-Eight
Chapter Seventy-Nine
Chapter Eighty
Chapter Eighty-One
Chapter Eighty-Two
Chapter Eighty-Three
Chapter Eighty-Four
Chapter Eighty-Five
Chapter Eighty-Six
Chapter Eighty-Seven
Chapter Eighty-Eight
Writing as David Hagberg
Copyright
This book is for Lorrel.
… we must pass through solitude and difficulty, isolation and silence, in order to reach forth to the enchanted place where we can dance our clumsy dance and sing our sorrowful song—but in this dance or in this song there are fulfilled the most ancient rites of our conscience in the awareness of being human and of believing in a common destiny.
PABLO NERUDA
TOWARD THE SPLENDID CITY
THE BEGINNING
ONE
CHIHUAHUA STATE
The foothills of northern Mexico’s Sierra Madre were bathed in the cold silver light of a full October moon as Louis Updegraf stopped a moment behind a stand of pine trees to catch his breath. Somehow everything had gone horribly wrong over the past two weeks, and this evening he was running for his life because of what he’d learned. The job was no longer a game.
At thirty-three he was a tall man, well built, with a dark complexion and a large Gallic nose. Not so long ago, someone he thought was a friend had told him that he could be Gerard Depardieu’s twin bother. He’d thought the French actor was good, but not very handsome. But that was the story of his life; there was always something not quite right.
He had come west, just below the crests of the hills, and he figured by now he was at least three miles from the compound. The city of Chihuahua was spread out below in the valley, and as he took out his 9 mm Beretta 92F and ejected the magazine to check the pistol’s load for the third time, an Aeromexico 727 took off from CUU Airport in the distance and headed southeast toward Mexico City. He was supposed to be on that flight, he reflected bitterly. From here it was a long walk. But if he could get into town he could call for help, though how he would explain his presence up here he hadn’t figured out.
First things first. He had to stay alive long enough to reach a telephone.
He stepped out from the shelter of the trees and continued west, angling down into the valley where he thought he could intercept the highway to Cuauhtémoc. From there it might be possible to get a ride into Chihuahua, provided the Doll’s people didn’t catch up with him.
In high school in Madison, Wisconsin, he had been an all-star quarterback on the football team, and he had gone to UW to study political science on a four-year football scholarship. In his senior year he had taken the school to the Rose Bowl, and in the eleven years since then he’d not let himself get out of shape. It was one thing in his life that he was proud of, one thing that no one could take away from him.
He was dressed lightly, in blue jeans, T-shirt, and windbreaker, sneakers on his feet, and although the mountain air was chilly at this hour he was sweating by the time he reached the power lines two hundred meters southwest. The high-voltage lines came down to the city in a broad swath cut through the trees.
Once again Updegraf halted up in the shelter of the forest. It was possible that no one was coming for him. But it was equally possible not only that they were somewhere behind him, but that they may have doubled around and gotten ahead of him. It was possible that Roaz’s shooters were right now waiting in the woods across the fifty-meter grassy lane that was lit up like day.
He nervously switched the safety catch to the off position, and then on again. It would be just his rotten luck to stumble on a rock and shoot himself. Save the opposition the trouble.
Cocking an ear, he held his breath to listen for something, a snatch of conversation, a rustling branch, a dislodged rock tumbling down the hill. But except for the sounds of a hunting bird in the distance, perhaps a hawk or a screech howl, and the light breeze in the treetops, the hillside was silent.
Updegraf weighed his chances. Miguel Roaz and the people working for him were smart, but then they had been trained by Chinese intelligence, so they knew their jobs well. On top of that they were highly motivated. There was a lot of money involved. A fabulous amount of money. More than any of them could possibly grasp.<
br />
“Señor, please to put down your weapon,” someone called from across the clearing.
Updegraf’s heart lurched. He stepped back, and as he switched the safety catch off and started to raise his pistol, someone was right behind him, the muzzle of a gun pressed to the base of his skull.
“Don’t do anything foolish,” a man speaking English with a heavy Mexican accent warned.
Louis didn’t recognize the voice, but he could have been any one of the dozen security people from the compound. He didn’t know them all. But the fact that he and the other one were here meant that they knew he’d gone over the wall almost immediately after he’d tried to drive into town and been turned back.
“What do you want?” he asked.
“The camera. It wasn’t in your car, which means you must have it with you.”
“Then what?” Updegraf asked. There wasn’t a chance in hell they would let him leave here alive even if he gave them the digital camera that had been used to snap pictures of the guests, especially the new one whose presence had come as a total surprise. He had to survive to call this home.
The Mexican laughed softly. “Then you can either come back to the house for your car, or continue with your hike in the woods.”
Updegraf weighed his chances, which didn’t seem very good. The muzzle of a pistol was pressed firmly against the back of his skull. If he tried to duck or turn suddenly so that he could bring his own pistol to bear, he would most likely get a bullet in the head. But he had no other options. What he’d learned was too important.
“Okay, you win,” he said. He started to reach into his jacket pocket, but the Mexican jammed the pistol even harder.
“First drop your gun.”
Updegraf suddenly felt calm, the same way he had just before every key play in a football game. All he could do was his best. “You’re going to shoot me anyway—,” he said, and he suddenly turned away as he brought his pistol up over his left shoulder.
A thunderclap burst inside his head, and for an instant he saw a billion stars all cascading one over the other. The sight was the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen.
MEXICO CITY
CIA station chief Gilbert Perry parked his smoked silver Mercedes 500SL in his spot behind the U.S. embassy on Paseo de la Reforma a full hour before his customary time of nine in the morning, and took the ambassador’s elevator up to his suite of offices on the fourth floor. Tom Chauncy, his number two, had telephoned at six this morning telling him to get his ass to the embassy. Something so big was up that it could not be discussed on an open line.
“We goddamned well might have to shut down the entire operation until we get this shit straightened out!” Chauncy had shouted.
Perry, who’d prided himself on his cool demeanor under fire—he’d spent three months in Kabul and a full thirty days doing dirty duty at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib—was irritated. He damned well was going to have it out with Thomas. Gentlemen simply did not lose their heads in a crisis, and they certainly did not speak to a superior officer in such a peremptory fashion, no matter what the reason. A report of this incident would be placed in Chauncy’s personnel jacket.
At six three, with a slender build, penetrating blue eyes, a narrow angular face, and a thick head of hair parted down the middle that had turned gray when he was in his freshman year at Harvard, Perry was called “the Judge” by friends, a sobriquet he discouraged, but one that he secretly enjoyed.
His cover as special assistant for cultural affairs gave him the opportunity to mingle socially with President Ricardo Sabina and other high-ranking Mexican government officials, as well as with the upper echelons of the foreign diplomatic corps here. Symphonies, operas, ballets, fine restaurants, hunting lodges in the mountains, lavish fishing retreats along the Gulf and Pacific coasts, and a nearly endless stream of cocktail parties, receptions, and full dress balls, all were exactly his cup of tea. He’d confided to a friend in Washington that at thirty-eight he was young for this sort of duty, but being here was preparing him for the eventuality of becoming the deputy director of Central Intelligence. It was a position he felt he’d been born for.
When Perry got off the elevator, Chauncy appeared at the end of the corridor, at the door to the secure room that they used as a conference center. Other than the communications center in the basement, the conference room was the safest spot in the entire embassy. It was electronically and mechanically shielded from the outside world. Whatever was said or done there was perfectly immune to any means of surveillance.
Except for humint—human intelligence, Perry thought as he walked down the hall. “What’s all this fuss about?”
“Glad you’re here, finally,” Chauncy said. He stepped aside. “Inside.”
Perry followed him into the windowless room, the first glimmerings of doubt entering his mind. At forty-five Chauncy was too old, too overweight, and too much of a blue-collar man ever to rise higher in the CIA than he already was, but his was generally a steady hand in a situation. But this morning it was plain that the man was concerned, even frightened.
Chauncy closed the door and flipped the light switch that operated the door lock and activated the electronic countersurveillance equipment. “It’s about Louis,” he said.
Perry’s stomach did a slow, sour roll. “What about him?” he asked, careful to keep his voice level.
“He’s dead. Took a bullet to the side of his head.”
“Good Lord,” Perry said softly, and he sat down at the long conference table. “Where?” he asked.
“I said a bullet to the side of his head.”
Perry looked up. “No, I mean where was he found? Who found him? I hope to God it wasn’t Janet.” Janet was Updegraf’s wife. She and Louis had a trendy apartment in the city’s La Condesa neighborhood. She was a cow who stupidly trusted everything her husband told her, but nobody deserved to find her husband lying in a pool of blood.
“It wasn’t Janet. Someone from the Red Cross up in Chihuahua called the switchboard a couple hours ago, said they needed to talk to someone in security. It was about a dead American whose body had been dumped in front of the hospital’s emergency-room entrance. So the locator called me.”
“Good heavens,” Perry cried. “What was he doing all the way up there?”
“I haven’t a clue,” Chauncy admitted. “I was hoping that you might know something.”
Perry felt as if he was going to be sick at his stomach. “Are we absolutely positive that it was Louis?”
“It gets worse, Gil,” Chauncy said. “The people at the hospital found his ID. They didn’t know what to do with it, so they turned it over to the Red Cross along with his other belongings.”
“What do you mean, his ID?”
“Just that,” Chauncy said. “His CIA identification card.”
CIA officers in the field never carried anything that could link them to the Company. It just wasn’t done. “That’s not possible,” Perry said.
“They gave a good description.”
Perry closed his eyes for a moment to give himself time to think. The entire CIA operation in Mexico could easily unravel over this incident. If that happened it would be the chief of station who took the fall.
“I want you to get up there right now and put a lid on it,” Perry said. “This hits the media and we’re dead. In the meantime I’ll do what I can here to put out any fires that might develop.”
“What about Louis’s body?” Chauncy asked.
“I don’t care,” Perry said, but then he changed his mind. “No, get it out of Mexico. Fly it up to the Air Force hospital in San Antonio and have it autopsied.” He shook his head. “Tell them that Louis did not commit suicide. He was murdered, and I want the proof.”
TWO
U.S. EMBASSY
MEXICO CITY
It was nearly noon, local, which put it about one in Washington, before Perry was able to call his boss, Deputy Director of Operations Howard McCann, at the Building. He’d sent a ve
ry brief classified cable around nine, after Chauncy finally left for Chihuahua, reporting only that a CIA officer was dead, presumed assassinated. In Perry’s estimation the DDO was not only a consummate professional, but also enough of a gentleman to allow his local station chiefs to handle their own shops without interference from headquarters.
McCann’s not bothering him all morning had given Perry a few hours to make a couple of phone calls, and to figure out what his next moves would have to be. Most, though not all, CIA officers operating under cover legends out of the embassy did so with the tacit approval of Mexico’s intelligence apparatus, the Centro de Investigación y Seguridad Nacional. So long as the CIA was not spying on Mexicans, but only on the intelligence operations run from the embassies of other governments, nothing was said at the official level. But every station chief’s first job on arriving in Mexico City was to make his contacts within the CISN. Perry’s was Colonel Luis Salinas, in charge of counterterrorism operations. So long as Perry kept him informed, the colonel would not press the matter, and would do what he could to keep it out of the media.
“This is a bad business, when FSOs are murdered on Mexican soil,” Salinas said. “Do you think it was guerrillas? The EPR?” The EPR was the Popular Revolutionary Army, formed in 1996. The organization wanted Mexico for Mexicans, which meant all foreigners were to leave or be killed.
“It’s possible, but we’re just not sure yet,” Perry said. “When I find out something I’ll call you.”
“Yes, please do, my old friend. And if there is anything else I can do to help, let me know. I have some friends in Chihuahua.”
“Thank you,” Perry said. “I might have to cancel the reception and concert this weekend.”
“Duty calls, I understand,” Colonel Salinas said. “Good luck.”
Perry’s secretary buzzed him. “Mr. McCann is on the secure line.”
“I’ve got it,” Perry said. He picked up the red handset, and a powerful quantum effects encryption algorithm automatically kicked in, lending an odd tone to human voices. “Good afternoon, sir,” Perry said.
“What the hell is going on down there?” McCann shouted.
Normally McCann ran the DO with a steady, if sometimes overly cautious hand, and Perry had never heard the man raise his voice. This now came as something of a surprise. “One of my people was probably shot to death up in Chihuahua last night. That’s in the mountains about one hundred fifty miles south of the Texas border.”