60
DURHAM DRIVE
POTOMAC, MARYLAND
At just before three, under a blazing sun, Calibrisi’s black Lincoln Town Car pulled down a quiet road lined on both sides with white horse fence and palatial homes. The car came to a set of iron gates, which parted as his driver took him closer, then moved down a long pebble-stone driveway. The driveway led in a winding arc to a massive white house that looked like a palace.
“Jesus Christ,” said Calibrisi, reaching for the car door. “What a fucking eyesore.”
Calibrisi walked slowly up the driveway, then climbed marble steps to a pair of ten-foot-high doors. He rang the doorbell. When the doors opened, a young blond woman in a bright yellow tennis outfit was standing there.
“Mr. Calibrisi?” she asked, smiling.
“Yes.”
“Follow me. John’s in back. Would you like something to drink?”
“No, thank you.”
Calibrisi trailed the woman through an entrance hall and out to a stone terrace. Below was a tennis court, a swimming pool, and a rolling lawn that spread out to a white fence several hundred yards away.
John Barrows was seated in a teak chaise. He was wearing white tennis shorts and a striped polo shirt. Barrows’s hair was tousled. He had a blank expression on his face. He clutched a glass of lemonade.
“Hi, John,” said Calibrisi, taking a seat next to Barrows. “Sorry to interrupt your tennis match.”
Barrows was one of Washington, D.C.’s most powerful attorneys. Unlike most high-profile lawyers in town, he wasn’t well known, except to the select few who needed to know him.
When The Washington Post attempted to write a piece on him a few years before, Barrows succeeded in doing something even U.S. presidents had failed to do, namely, get the story killed. Barrows didn’t just have influence. He had power. His clients were the substructure that underlined most criminal activity in the United States. On the one hand, the U.S. government fought him, but at the highest levels, at times like this, they worked with him. They had to.
“What is it, Hector?” said Barrows.
“Before we start, I want you to send Alexei Malnikov a text.”
“Why?”
“Tell him to do a sweep of all cell phones, computers, and any other appliances that are connected to outside networks. He needs to sanitize. He’ll need a good IT person.”
Barrows reached for his cell phone.
“Was Langley penetrated?” Barrows asked as he typed.
“Yes,” said Calibrisi as Barrows typed a text. When Barrows was done, he looked up.
“The floor is yours, Mr. Director.”
“The conversation we’re about to have never happened,” said Calibrisi, staring at Barrows. “Dead man talk.”
Barrows nodded.
“Okay.”
“I want to cut a deal,” said Calibrisi.
“I’m listening.”
“Alexei pressured a Ukrainian general into selling him a nuclear bomb,” said Calibrisi.
“So you allege,” said Barrows.
“He admitted to it.”
Barrows nodded.
“I figured it was something more provocative than usual.”
“The bomb is on its way to the United States.”
For the first time, Barrows looked momentarily flummoxed.
“How?”
“Boat. A fishing trawler. It left Sevastopol three days ago.”
“So sink it,” said Barrows.
“Good idea,” said Calibrisi. “Why didn’t we think of that?”
Barrows grinned.
“There are four million registered commercial fishing vessels in the world,” added Calibrisi. “At least double that if you include unregistered boats.”
“How many fishing trawlers?”
“The size of the one the bomb left on? Approximately a million.”
“Alexei Malnikov is not a terrorist, Hector.”
“The man he gave it to is, however,” said Calibrisi.
“Who is he?”
“His name is Vargarin. He goes by the name Cloud. He’s a computer hacker.”
Barrows took a sip of lemonade. He stood up and walked to the balustrade that overlooked the tennis court and swimming pool.
“What do you need?”
“Alexei’s help.”
“You think my client knows where this guy is?” asked Barrows.
“Not necessarily,” said Calibrisi. “But he might be able to find him.”
“How do you figure that?”
“Let’s put it this way,” said Calibrisi. “If you asked me to go into the woods and find a truffle, I probably wouldn’t find it.”
Barrows laughed.
“I won’t tell Alexei you compared him to a pig,” said Barrows.
“There are air wars and there are ground wars,” said Calibrisi. “Right now, we need someone who knows the dark alleys of Russia.”
“Don’t you guys have manpower in Big Red?”
“Of course we do,” said Calibrisi. “But we need local access.”
“How big is the bomb?”
“Thirty kilotons.”
Barrows’s mouth fell open in astonishment. He looked ashen.
“If this bomb detonates, it will be a very dark day for this country,” Calibrisi continued. “We’re talking about the potential for more than a million deaths. We need Alexei’s help. We’re willing to pay a great deal of money for it.”
“You think money would move the dial with this guy?” scoffed Barrows. “If they included Alexei Malnikov on the Forbes 400, he’d be number six. He doesn’t care about another fifty million, hundred million, or whatever amount the U.S. government offers.”
“I can’t leave it to chance.”
Barrows leaned back in his chair.
“There’s only one thing Alexei cares about, and that’s his father,” said Barrows. “You want pay for performance, you need to deal with his dad.”
Barrows’s message was clear: Alexei Malnikov might help find Cloud in exchange for freeing his father from prison.
“A full presidential pardon,” added Barrows. “Nothing less.”
Calibrisi nodded slowly, deep in thought. This was the precise deal he knew he needed to cut with Barrows. But now that it was on the table, he felt sick to his stomach.
The low electric hum of a helicopter came from the distant sky.
“Fine,” said Calibrisi. “We’ll do it.”
“It’ll need to be in writing,” said Barrows. “From the attorney general.”
Calibrisi stood up as the sound of the chopper grew louder. Suddenly, a navy blue Sikorsky S-76C cut across the tree line, then hooked left and down toward Barrows’s backyard, descending with almost military intent.
“It cuts both ways, John,” said Calibrisi, his voice rising above the growing din.
“What does that mean?” Barrows shot back.
“We’ll do the deal. He helps us find Cloud, we stop the bomb, his dad goes free. But if we don’t stop it—”
“All the kid can do is try,” said Barrows, protesting. “It wouldn’t be fair for you to hold him responsible if this nutjob detonates a nuclear bomb on American soil.”
“He sourced it,” said Calibrisi, his anger rising for the first and only time during the conversation. “If that nuke goes off on U.S. soil, anyone with any connection to it better make damn sure his affairs are in order.”
“That sounds like a threat.”
Calibrisi watched as the chopper settled onto the lawn, just behind the tennis court. He paused, then stared angrily at Barrows.
“It is a threat. Alexei Malnikov helped create this problem.”
Calibrisi took a few steps toward the stairs that led to the backyard, then turned back to Barrows.
“You tell me, John, if this nuclear bomb goes off, and a million people die, do you think Alexei Malnikov deserves to live?”
61
MOSCOW
Malnikov’s crimson red Gulfstream 200 touched down at Moscow International Airport and taxied to the private aviation terminal, coming to a stop next to a waiting bright green Lamborghini Aventador 720-4. As Malnikov hustled down the stairs of the jet, the car’s right scissor door arose like a knife blade into the air. Malnikov climbed in the passenger seat, nodding with barely concealed anger at the driver. Before the door was even halfway down, the Lamborghini’s tires screeched high and the sports car ripped across the tarmac toward the airport exit.