Jedediah Jones was one of the few people left in Storm’s life who knew he had once been a down-on-his-luck private investigator, a decorated Marine Corps veteran turned ham-and-egg dick who actually did spend his share of time in just such bushes — if he was lucky enough to even
It was Jones who’d trained Storm, established him as a CIA contractor, and eventually turned him into what he was today: one of the CIA’s go-to fixers, an outsider who could do what needed to be done without some of the legal encumbrances that sometimes weighed down the agency’s agents. Jones’s career had thrived with many of Storm’s successes.
“I’m sorry, sir,” Storm said, playing along. “I know you’re hurt by what your lover is doing. But I don’t take pictures of goats.”
“Very funny, Storm,” Jones said. “But joke time is over. I’ve got something with your name on it.”
“Forget it. I told you after Venice that I was taking a long vacation. And I mean to take it. Sister Rose and I are going to Saint-Tropez.”
Storm winked at the nun.
“Save it. This is bigger than your vacation.”
“My life was so much better when I was dead,” Storm said wistfully. He was only half-kidding. For four years, Storm had been considered killed in action. There were even witnesses who swore they saw him die. They never knew that the big, messy exit wound that had appeared in the back of his head was really just high-tech CIA fakery, or that the entire legend of Storm’s death had been orchestrated — then perpetuated — by Jones, who had his own devious reasons for needing the world to think Storm was gone. Storm had spent those four years fishing in Montana, snorkeling in the Caymans, hiking in the Appalachians, donning disguises so he could join his father at Orioles games, and generally having a grand time of things.
“Yeah, well, you had your fun,” Jones said. “Your country needs you, Storm.”
“And why is that?”
“Because a high-profile Swiss banker was killed in Zurich yesterday,” Jones said, then hit Storm with the hammer: “There are pictures of the killer on their way to us. He’s been described as having an eye patch. And the banker was missing six fingernails.”
Storm reflexively stiffened. That killer — with that M.O. — could only mean one thing: Gregor Volkov was back.
“But he’s dead,” Storm growled.
“Yeah, well, so were you.”
“Who is he working for this time?”
“We’re not a hundred percent sure,” Jones said. “But my people have picked up some talk on the street that a Chinese agent may be involved.”
“Okay. I’ll take my briefing now if you’re ready.”
“No, not over the phone,” Jones said. “We need you to come back to the cubby for that.”
The cubby was Jones’s tongue-in-cheek name for the small fiefdom he had carved out of the National Clandestine Service.
“I’ll be on the next plane,” Storm said.
“Great. I’ll have a car meet you at the airport. Just let me know what flight you’ll be on.”
“No way,” Storm said. “You know that’s not the way I operate.”
Storm could practically hear Jones rubbing his buzz-cut head. “I wish you could be a little more transparent with me, Storm.”
“Forget it,” Storm said, then repeated the mantra he had delivered many times before: “Transparency gets you killed.”
CHAPTER 4
Soaring high above lower Manhattan, Marlowe Tower was a ninety-two-story monument to American economic might, a glistening glass menagerie that housed some of the country’s fiercest financial animals. In New York’s hypercompetitive commercial real estate market, merely the name — Marlowe Tower — had come to represent status, to the point where neighboring properties bolstered their reputations by describing themselves as “Near Marlowe.”
Marlowe Tower was a place where wealthy capitalists went to grow their already large stake in the world. After parking their expensive imported cars at nearby garages, they entered at street level through the air lock created by the polished brass revolving doors, wearing their hand-crafted leather shoes and custom-tailored silk suits, each determined to make his fortune, whether it was his first, his second, or some subsequent iteration thereof.
G. Whitely Cracker V joined them in their battle each day. But to say he was merely one of them did not do him justice. The fact was, he was the best of them. His Maserati (or Lexus, or Jaguar, or whatever he chose to drive that day) was just a little faster. His shoes were just a little finer. His suits fit just a little better.