them drank; however, Sutsoff’s glass held wine from a different bottle.
As each of the men swallowed his wine, Sutsoff smiled.
“Now, if you’ll allow me to say good evening, I’d like to head back to my hotel. I have an early flight.”
Sutsoff had started down the corridor but was halted by the sound of footfalls of several people approaching. It appeared to be an entourage. Jehaimi was among them, walking beside a large man in a white suit. “Doctor,” Jehaimi said, “allow me to introduce Shokri Kusa, senior science advisor to the colonel, he flew up from Tripoli.”
“I was in Surt, actually.” Kusa’s bored eyes fell on her. “Jehaimi speaks highly of you.” Sutsoff had been promised privacy. She shot Jehaimi a look of betrayal as Kusa continued. “I’ve been on the phone to the colonel telling him about your research. He’d like to meet you and invites you to be his dinner guest in Surt tomorrow.”
Sutsoff stretched her neck to see something behind Kusa, beyond his entourage. Her attention was drawn to a man in his late twenties wearing a wrinkled navy suit. He had his eyes fixed on them from far across the hall, watching as Stinson and the others exited the meeting room to join them. The man in the suit aimed something at them, then hurried off.
“Sorry, that man there—” Sutsoff said “—he took our picture!” Kusa, Jehaimi and Stinson looked to where she was pointing. “The young man in the blue suit heading down the hall! Ibrahim, do you see him?”
Jehaimi shouted something to two university security guards among the entourage who spoke into their walkie-talkies.
“Drake,” Sutsoff said into his ear, “do something!”
“I’m on it. We’ve got our people here.” Stinson fished into his pocket for his cell phone. “Clay? Yes, did you see that? White male, late twenties, dark blue suit. He was headed to the west doors.”
“Excuse me, everyone, but I must leave,” Sutsoff said. “I have an early flight in the morning. Ibrahim, thank you. Mr. Kusa, please pass my regrets to the colonel. I have to decline the honor. I have pressing matters I must take care of. Ibrahim, can you show me another exit and have my driver meet me there now?”
“By all means. I don’t know how this happened.”
Sutsoff leaned to Stinson’s ear.
“Find that fucker and deal with him, Drake.”
35
Benghazi, Libya
Adam Corley knew he was being followed.
Voices echoed behind him as he headed down an empty hall and into an elevator, relieved he was alone.
Six floors to the lobby and the exit—he had to work fast.
He turned on his camera to check the images he’d captured of Drake Stinson, ex-CIA, and Dr. Auden, the scientist, along with other players.
Jesus, it was true. This was huge.
The information Corley’s group had received from their friends in Rio de Janeiro and the Bahamas was dead on. It was another critical piece that brought them closer to putting this file together.
He had to alert headquarters.
He stopped the elevator on the third floor, stepped into an empty classroom and pressed his director’s cell phone number, praying that the call would work. After several moments of static, the line crackled and his call was answered in London.
“Pritchett.”
“Oliver, it’s Corley in Benghazi.”
“How did it go?”
“Fantastic.” Corley heard the distant slam of doors, voices. “I don’t have much time. I’ll back things up the usual way.”
“Can you give me a quick summary?”
“Our Brazilian links are definitely tied to other tentacles of the trafficking ring. Our university source here passed me tons of new data out of Tanzania, the U.S., everywhere. It’s incredible. I’ve got too much to send you now. I’ll go through it and send you my report when I get to Rabat.”
Corley heard voices getting nearer and hurried his call.
“Oliver, children are being stolen around the world, but there’s a rumor that it’s all linked to—”
Corley stopped.
“I have to go. I’ll start writing my report on the plane. I’ll probably need a new cell phone and camera after this.”
“Good work, Adam, be careful.”
Corley dropped the phone, ground it to pieces, scooped them up and returned to the hall and elevator.
Voices called to him but he got back on the elevator, quickly dropping the fragments of his cell phone down the shaft through the small gap in the floor. As the car descended to the main lobby he double-checked his digital camera then adjusted his tie.
The doors opened to several grim-faced men in suits. One of the men had a small scar on his cheek and confronted