The Cutout

Free The Cutout by Francine Mathews Page A

Book: The Cutout by Francine Mathews Read Free Book Online
Authors: Francine Mathews
her the DO report. “We don’t know diddly about this guy, Mad Dog. He’s untested. What if he’s one of Eric’s recruits?”
    He was closer to penetrating 30 April than ever before.
    “I wouldn’t be surprised if he was,” she replied.
    “Then think about that. The source would be tainted, wouldn’t he?”
    “Tainted,” she repeated. “Because he knew Eric?”
    “For Christ’s sake, Carrie! As of this morning Eric’s whole career is suspect. We don’t know when he betrayed us or how completely. We don’t know what’s true and what’s crap. Every report, every recruitment— they’re compromised. And that goes for everybody Eric ever handled.”
    “We could find out who recruited this one,” she shot back, tapping the TD. “The Hungarian desk could tell us.”
    “If I called in some favors, maybe. But I’m not sure that’d be a good idea.”
    “The TD is barely six months old,” she argued. “This source is still out there, Cud—still on our payroll.”
    “And you think he could lead us to Eric and, by extension, Payne. Forget it. It’s a nonstarter. Don’t let Eric screw you again, Carrie, just because you want to believe.”
    There was a short and painful silence.
    “I think you ought to see something,” Cuddy said.He walked out of the office. After a second, she followed.
    He led her to a computer terminal that Scottie kept reserved for one use only—the terrorism database, DESIST.
    It was the pride of the CTC, a compilation of over a thousand terrorist groups and organizations. Raw data—phone numbers, bank accounts, airline manifests, business cards—could be fed into the computer and analyzed for patterns too slight and seemingly random to attract attention. When DESIST went to work, the most amazing connections between utter strangers appeared as if by magic. DESIST could tell you when one man in Belgrade carried the address of another in Zurich, or whose phone number rang in which safe house. It could match passports to false pictures, bring up a myriad of aliases, connect the dots between terrorist groups that the world believed to be enemies: members of the IRA who were friendly with Hizballah; bankers who laundered money for both the Kurdish PKK and the Algerian Jihad. An entire world of uneasy relationships existed in the DESIST data banks, a labyrinth of obligations and mortal mistrust.
    “Sit down,” Cuddy said, “and plug in Eric’s alias.”
    “Which one?” she asked.
    He raised an eyebrow. “I only knew one.”
    “In Budapest, he was using ‘Michael O’Shaughnessy.’”
    “Try it.”
    “But you know there are no Americans listed in this database,” she protested. “It’s illegal for the CIA to track U.S. citizens.”
    Cuddy shrugged. “Does a dead man have citizenship? Try it, Mad Dog.”
    She typed in the name. The computer thought about it for a split second. And then it spat out two words, Mahmoud Sharif , and a phone number. She wrote down the number and plugged it into the database. Nothing. She glanced at Cuddy.
    “Try just ‘Sharif.’”
    Obediently, she ran the name through the system. An extensive file reeled out. “‘Hizballah bomb maker,’” she read, “‘legally resident in Berlin.’”
    “Sharif is believed responsible for that series of bombs the BKA found last March,” Cuddy told her. The BKA—the Bundeskriminalamt—was the German equivalent of the FBI. “He’d wired them into electronics—television sets, stereo components, laptop computers—and stored them in an abandoned apartment in Frankfurt.”
    “I remember that,” Caroline said. The BKA had confiscated seven of the bombs safely; an eighth had exploded in the act of being defused. Two men had died. “Why didn’t he go down for it?”
    “Sympathetic judge. Circumstantial evidence.”
    “I see.”
    “German Intelligence is convinced Sharif made twelve bombs. So where are the other four?”
    “Underneath the Brandenburg?”
    Cuddy shrugged. “Ask Sharif,

Similar Books

Losing Faith

Scotty Cade

The Midnight Hour

Neil Davies

The Willard

LeAnne Burnett Morse

Green Ace

Stuart Palmer

Noble Destiny

Katie MacAlister

Daniel

Henning Mankell