Andrew Kaplan - Scorpion Deception

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“You’re an important man. They’re there to protect you.”

“No, they’re there to watch me-and that means watch us. Call General Vahidi. Tell him to make them go away.”

“I’m not sure he can do that,” she had said, and he could hear the fear in her voice. It wasn’t the VEVAK she was afraid of. But she was afraid of someone. Of course, that could be said of almost everyone in Iran. There were two Irans, Vahidi had said. On the surface it was a normal modern society, but underneath you could feel the fear. It permeated everything, like the smog.

“If he can’t, I’ll go away. That means Glenco-Deladier and Rosoboronexport go away. Iran will have to deal with the Americans without us,” he said sharply, and hung up. He took a sip of hot sweet tea and for the first time began to eat with a relish. He was hungry.

After that, the rest of the day had been a blur. Renting the SUV, having his suit cleaned and pressed while he waited and getting new clothes, including ski clothes, at the Tandis Center shopping mall, all glass and gleaming brass and indoor palm trees. Later, a meeting with senior missile engineers in General Vahidi’s Revolutionary Guards AFAGIR missile command offices. They went over SS-27 specifications. Fortunately, Rabinowich had prepared his materials well. Authentic documents with Russian RVSN and Rosoboronexport letterheads and watermarks, plus a summary of facts he had memorized on the flight in from Dubai.

General Vahidi came in during the meeting and pulled him aside into a small private office off the conference room. Through the window he could see the dense traffic below; the nearby buildings vaguely indistinct in the hazy yellow-brown smog.

“You went back to the hotel early this morning, but left without ever going to your room,” Vahidi said. “For a person new to Tehran, you do get around, Westermann agha .”

So Vahidi knew. Were they his men in the Peugeot and at the hotel or was he just that well informed? Scorpion wondered.

“I don’t like all these people watching me,” he said. “It makes me nervous. This isn’t how I do business, General. Who were they?”

“What you are really asking is, are they VEVAK?”

“Are they?”

Vahidi looked at him, an eyebrow raised.

“Something new: a direct question. I’ll answer with one of my own. Are you a spy, Westermann agha ?”

“If I were, would I tell you? You’ve checked my credentials. You know who I am-and you know where I spent last night,” he said.

“A beautiful woman, Zahra,” Vahidi said. “But you shouldn’t go wandering around Tehran on your own. Not on the eve of a war. Or any other time, come to that.” He stepped closer to Scorpion. “Did you find what you were looking for?” Meaning information on Ghanbari.

“She wouldn’t tell me. She passed out. I fell asleep, then left.” Scorpion shrugged. “Ask her yourself.” He assumed she had already reported all of that to Vahidi.

“They weren’t VEVAK,” Vahidi said. “The men at the hotel.”

VEVAK was bad; not VEVAK was even worse, Scorpion thought. At least VEVAK was answerable to the government. In the Iranian Revolutionary Guards structure, secret units like Asaib al-Haq and Kta’eb Hezbollah were answerable only to themselves.

“Who are they?”

“I don’t know. But if I were you, Westermann agha, honored guest though you are, I would be very careful.” He motioned Scorpion closer. “It hasn’t been made public yet, but there’s been another incident in the Gulf,” he whispered. “One of our patrol planes, a MiG-29, was shot down by an American F/A-18 off a carrier. The Expediency Council is holding a secret meeting right now. If we’re going to do this deal, we don’t have much time.”

“You sound like you’d like to avoid this war.”

“Only an idiot would take on the Americans head upon head. There’s an old Persian saying: ‘If fortune turns against you, even jelly breaks your tooth.’ ” He looked sharply at Scorpion. “Where is the Kremlin in all this?”

“I wouldn’t know. We Swiss are neutrals. Boring businessmen. Nothing more.”

Khob , my friend. I don’t believe you, but khob ,” Vahidi said, nodding. Okay. “But I would conclude my business quickly if I were you. It’s funny,” glancing out the window at the traffic in Fatimi Square. “It’s March, almost Nowruz, our Persian New Year. This is supposed to be a good time for us; a funny time.”

“Well, it’s a funny world,” Scorpion said.

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

Dizin Ski Resort,

Shemshak, Iran

It was getting dark. The sunset formed a rim of golden light along the tops of the snow-covered peaks. The air was cold and thin. The resort’s ski lifts were at 3,600 meters, higher than any ski resort in Europe, and he zipped up his ski jacket against the chill. The road grew steeper and full of curves and he had to follow the truck ruts in the snow to get through. Ahead were the lights of Shemshak village, a cluster of houses and a few buildings six or seven stories high. Like Dizin, Shemshak was a ski resort, and from the road he could see the chair lifts going up the mountain; one of them was still going. He was tempted to stop and get some tea and a bite to eat, but something pushed him on.

Ghanbari or the other person, Sadeghi? Which one was the Gardener? And why had they risked war with the United States to attack the embassy? In a sense, the answer might have been staring them in the face all along, he thought. The CIA files. What if the attackers didn’t get lucky grabbing the CIA files? What if the files had been the object of the attack all along?

If so, what in the files were they after? What was so important that it was worth risking a war?

He left the town behind and headed farther up the winding mountain road, his headlights shining against the white snow. He turned the heater up; it was getting colder. Stopping in the middle of the road, he checked his iPad. The tracking software showed Zahra had stopped moving. She had gotten to her destination. He put the RAV4 in gear and moved on.

Coming around a curve, he saw the lights of the ski resort, the hotel at the base of the slope outlined by lights on the ski lifts. There were a number of chairlifts and several gondolas that could be seen from the road, but none of them were moving. There were only a few cars parked in the snow by the hotel. One of them was Zahra’s Mercedes.

Two rows of wooden cabins, more than a dozen of them, stretched up the slope behind the hotel. The cabins had pitched roofs, vaguely suggesting ultra-utilitarian Alpine chalets. Only two of them had lights on, one in the middle and the last cabin at the end of the row. The last cabin would be where she was meeting Ghanbari, he thought, parking the Toyota around the side of the hotel, next to another SUV.

He checked the windows of the hotel and the other structures before getting out of the Toyota but could see no one watching. It was a shame he didn’t have his night vision goggles, he thought, but bringing them through Iranian customs would have been a dead give-away. The Iranians were all over him as it was. He took out the ZOAF pistol, attached the sound suppressor, put it in his ski jacket pocket and got out of the SUV. The night was cloudy. He couldn’t see the stars. A cold wind filled with tiny snow particles blew down from the peak. He walked through the snow behind the first cabin, then higher up and across the slope behind the cabins so he could approach the last cabin from the rear.

It was harder going through the deeper snow on the slope. He was leaving deep footprint tracks. Hopefully, no one would spot them till morning. The middle cabin had lights on downstairs but not upstairs, where presumably the bedroom was. Maybe they were at the hotel restaurant having dinner, or maybe downstairs watching TV. As he crunched through the snow above the last cabin, he spotted two sets of footprints in the snow leading to the front of the cabin. First Zahra, then Ghanbari, he thought, taking the pistol out of his pocket.

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