Sad. Diane was one of our own, Sean. She was a nice person and well liked. Nearly twenty years of good and honorable service."
"You know what I'm implying."
"Yes . . . we considered it. Of course we did. But we weren't married to any particular theories."
"Tell me about your other theories."
"Andrews had worked other things, been involved in other sensitive operations. The monsters that haunt us often have long shadows."
As she had from the start of this thing, Phyllis was parsing and limiting information. Had I known about Diane Andrews in the beginning, I would've understood we were dealing with two connected murders, I would've approached the investigation differently, I would've flipped over different rocks, and maybe I would've found Bian lurking beneath one. But Phyllis had put secrecy above effectiveness, and institutional ass-covering over truth. When you get your priorities wrong, you get bad results, and a pissed-off subordinate.
I couldn't resist. "Speaking of long, guess who her boyfriend was?"
Her not having observed Daniels's one memorable anatomical feature, this clue sailed by her.
"Here's another hint," I told her. "She and her lover are now forever together. In heaven--maybe that other place."
This clue struck home, because she promptly said, "There was zero indication of that. Mating habits are always probed during polygraphs. Cliff Daniels never came up."
Interesting phrasing. But during my plane ride, I had given some thought to this mystery, and I asked, "Her murder, did it happen before or after you initiated your leak investigation?"
"It was . . . the exact dates, I can't remember . . . but I think, nearly coincident. Why?"
"I'll lay you even money the affair occurred after her last polygraph session, and that she didn't live long enough for another one. Check it out."
"Who told you about this affair?"
"Does it matter?"
"Sean, stop acting paranoid."
"Stop? I should've been this way from the beginning."
She took a moment to clear her throat, or to turn off the recording machine. "Please come in, Sean. Now. We all want the same thing."
But that wasn't exactly true. What Phyllis and her boss wanted was to get the Agency off the blameline for the lousy prewar intelligence, with enough ammunition to screw the Pentagon, and enough clout to remain first among beltway equals at a time when Congress was considering a new national intelligence apparatus that might knock their beloved Agency down a few pegs. At least, that was what they wanted at first.
But once she and her boss learned the scale and breadth of this thing, their appetites swelled. And why not? Handled properly, the President and his political people, who for four years had treated the Agency like a bureaucratic pi-ata, would be made to see the error of their ways. In exchange for four more years, the President would have to do a little penance, his people would have to kiss a lot of Langley butt, and in return, the Director would keep a special file locked in his office safe, labeled "For Emergency Use Only."
Or alternatively, this President was already so high on Langley's shit list that a contract extension was out of the question--and his competitor would be awakened in the dead of the night by a dark man in a trench coat and handed a packet of interesting information, and Phyllis and the new President would share a victory waltz at his inauguration ball.
Either way, the Agency couldn't lose. Perfect. What could go wrong?
Bian Tran could go wrong. Neither Phyllis nor her boss had factored her into the equation. They missed what people in Washington usually miss: the human factor.
With that thought in mind, I told her, "If you and I wanted the same thing, we wouldn't be where we are." You can't slam down a cellular, so I settled for punching off with my middle finger.
Now I had another important piece I needed to consider. After Mark's death, Bian had returned from Iraq, mad with pain, grief, and guilt; not emotionally mad, not metaphysically mad--literally mad. And as it so often goes, pain bred anger, fury begat revenge, and revenge meant murder.
But where to start? That was Bian's question.
Kemp Chester had said that everybody in the G2 exploitation cell assumed that compromised intelligence--however it had occurred-- had caused the death of Mark Kemble. Chester also described Bian as a hunter by both training and natural instinct. For her, finding the betrayer would be child's play because, unlike the jihadis in Iraq, her prey had not a clue they were prey.
So, Diane Andrews. That was