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when he had come close. But thoughts of his wife and son had always pulled him back from the brink of doing something stupid.

      “Trudy, we work together,” he said firmly. “And I’m married.”

      She came even closer.

      “I’m not looking for a marriage, Luke,” she said softly, leaning in, inches away.

      She pushed herself against him now. His arms were at his sides. He felt the heat from her, and that old uncontrollable urge when she was near, the excitement, the energy… the lust. She reached up to lay her hands on his chest, and as soon as her palms touched his shirt, he knew he had to act now or give in to her completely.

      With one final act of supreme self-discipline, Luke stepped back and gently pushed her hands away.

      “I’m sorry, Trudy,” he said, his voice raspy. “I care about you. I really do. But this is not a good idea.”

      She frowned, but before she could say anything, a heavy fist banged against the wooden door.

      “Luke? You in there?” It was Newsam’s voice. “You should come out and look at this. Swann’s got something.”

      They stared at each other, Luke feeling guilty as hell as he thought of his wife, even though he hadn’t done anything. He peeled himself away before anything more could happen and couldn’t help wondering how this would affect their working together.

      He also, worst of all, couldn’t help but admit, deep down, that he didn’t want to leave the room.

* * *

      Swann sat a long table with his three video monitors arrayed in front of him. With his thinning hair and glasses, he reminded Luke of a NASA physicist at mission control. Luke stood behind him with Newsam and Trudy, the three of them hovering over Swann’s narrow shoulders.

      “This one is Ken Bryant’s checking account,” Swann said, moving his cursor around on the center screen. Luke absorbed the details: deposits, withdrawals, total balance, a date range from April 28th to May 27th.

      “How secure is this connection?” Luke said. He glanced around the room and out the door. The main room of the command center was just down the hall.

      “This?” Swann said. He shrugged. “It’s independent of the command center. I’m connected to our own tower and our own satellites. It’s encrypted by our guys. I suppose CIA or NSA could have somebody trying to break it, but why bother? We’re all on the same team, right? I wouldn’t worry about that. Instead, I would focus on this bank account. Notice anything funny?”

      “His balance is over $24,000,” Luke said.

      “Right,” Swann said. “A janitor has a pretty sizeable chunk of money in his checking account. Interesting. Now let’s go back a month. March 28th to April 27th. The balance goes as high as $37,000, and he starts spending it down. There are transfers here from an unnamed account, $5,000, then $4,000, then, oh well, forget the whole IRS reporting problem… give me $20,000.”

      “Okay,” Luke said.

      “Go back another month. Late February to late March. His beginning balance is $1,129. By the end of the month, it’s over $9,000. Go back another month, late January to late February, and his balance never reached $2,000 the whole time. From there, if you go back three years, you see that his balance rarely went above $1,500. Here was a guy living month to month, who suddenly started getting large wire transfers in March.”

      “Where are they coming from?”

      Swann smiled and raised a finger. “Now for the fun part. They’re coming from a small offshore bank specializing in anonymous numbered accounts. It’s called Royal Heritage Bank, and it’s based on Grand Cayman.”

      “Can you hack it?” Luke said. He glanced sidelong at Trudy’s disapproving look.

      “I don’t have to,” Swann said. “Royal Heritage is owned by a CIA asset named Grigor Svetlana. He’s a Ukrainian who used to be in the Red Army. He got himself in deep with the Russians twenty years ago, after some old Soviet weaponry disappeared and then turned up on the black markets in West Africa. I’m not talking about guns. I’m talking about anti-aircraft, anti-tank, plus some low-altitude cruise missiles. The Russians were ready to hang him upside down. With nowhere to turn, he turned to us. I have a friend at Langley, and the accounts at Royal Heritage Bank, far from being anonymous, are in fact an open book to the American intelligence community. Of course, this isn’t something most Royal Heritage customers are aware of.”

      “So you know who owned the account making the transfers.”

      “I do.”

      “Okay, Swann,” Luke said. “I understand. You’re very clever. Now get to the point.”

      Swann gestured at the computer screens. “Bryant himself owned the account that was making the transfers. That’s the account on my left monitor there. You can see it has about $209,000 in it right now. He was transferring a little bit here and there from the numbered account to his local checking account, probably for his own personal use. And if we scroll back a few months, you can see that Bryant’s offshore account was created on March 3rd by a $250,000 transfer from another Royal Heritage account, the one on the right monitor here.”

      Luke looked at the account on the right. There was more than forty-four million dollars in it.

      “Someone got a bargain hiring Bryant,” he said.

      “Exactly,” Swann said.

      “Who is it?”

      “It’s this man.” On the screen, a photo identification card appeared. It showed a middle-aged man with dark hair fading to white. “This is Ali Nassar. Fifty-seven years old. Iranian national. Born in Tehran to an influential and wealthy family. Studied at the London School of Economics, then Harvard Law School. Went home and got another law degree, this one from the University of Tehran. As a result, he can practice law in both the United States and Iran. He’s been involved in international trade negotiations for much of his career. He lives here in New York and is currently an Iranian diplomat to the United Nations. He has full diplomatic immunity.”

      Luke stroked his chin. He could feel the short stubble growing there. He was starting to get tired. “Let me get this straight. Nassar paid Ken Bryant, presumably for access to the hospital, as well as information about security measures and how to circumvent them.”

      “Presumably, yes.”

      “So he’s likely running a terrorist cell here in New York, he’s an accessory to the theft of hazardous materials and at least four murders, and he can’t be prosecuted under American law?”

      “It certainly appears that way.”

      “Okay. You’re in the account already, right? Let’s see where else he’s been sending money.”

      “It’ll take me a little while.”

      “That’s fine. I have an errand to run in the meantime.”

      Luke glanced at Ed Newsam. Newsam’s face was hard, his eyes flat and blank.

      “Say, Ed? You feel like taking a ride with me? Maybe we should go pay Mr. Ali Nassar a visit.”

      Newsam smiled, looking more like a scowl.

      “Sounds like fun.”

      Chapter 10

      6:20 a.m.

      Congressional Wellness Center – Washington, DC

      It was not easy to find.

      Jeremy Spencer stood in front of a set of locked gray steel doors in a sub-basement of the Rayburn House Office Building. The doors were tucked away in a corner of the underground parking lot. Few people knew this place existed. Even fewer knew where it was. He felt foolish, but he knocked on the door anyway.

      Someone buzzed him in. He pulled back the door, feeling that old familiar sense of uncertainty in his stomach. He knew that

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