Gordon Kent - The Spoils of War

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An exhilarating tale of modern espionage and adventure featuring US Navy intelligence officer Alan Craik.In Tel Aviv, Commander Alan Craik, a US Navy veteran agrees to check out the death of a former Navy enlisted employee. He plans to be out the door and on to his real work in half an hour. But the task quickly turns dangerous, and what should have been a routine investigation becomes something very ugly.Nominal American allies in Israel withhold or alter information; nominal colleagues at home set up their own operation to satisfy the political needs of Washington; a wife betrays her husband and deceit and distrust prove to be the only common denominator.When Mike Dukas, a dogged, cynical special agent of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service joins the investigation, it leads them all from Tel Aviv to Gaza and the Greek island of Lesvos to Jerry Piat, a renegade CIA officer.With agents of Mossad and the Palestinian Authority always close behind them, Alan Craik demands the answers to some far-reaching questions. What are the rules in modern conflict? Where is honour? And what is the cost of telling the truth?

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Alan left before it could get any worse. Because he no longer knew what to believe, except that too much of it had resonated.

That day, a Palestinian gunman killed six people in Israel and wounded a score of others. The crowd beat him and the police killed him. The Martyrs Brigade took credit for the attack.

That evening, the Craiks left Tel Aviv for Bahrain.

8

Cyprus

For the first two days on Cyprus, Rashid didn’t even look for Saida. He spent the Sabbaths of three religions living from phone to phone. His new friends, Zahirah and Ali, had moved him briskly around the island, passing him from one Palestinian business to another. He learned a routine and some basic habits of caution. And each day, at times he had memorized back in the concrete building in Gaza, he used a cell phone or a pay phone to call certain numbers where his new friends waited to help him. If he used a cell phone, he discarded it after the call. If he used a pay phone, he could never use that one again.

Sometimes, it was very exciting. Other times, it was like living with his mother.

In Famagusta, he found a tourist shop with novels in English. He bought a book called A Perfect Spy from the money he had taken from Salem’s coat, which he kept carefully separated from the money given to him by Ali for “operational expenses.”

The English in the novel was difficult, but the story was excellent. It passed the time between movements.

On Sunday, Zahirah directed him to the ferry docks at Kyrenia.

“Your friend has purchased a ticket on a ferry to Athens,” Zahirah said. She sounded very pleased. “You will go to the ferry, purchase a similar ticket, and follow her. Call us once you have located her.”

He arrived early in the evening and watched the passengers go on board, and he never saw her. When the ferry was less than an hour from sailing, he called another number for instructions. This time Ali directed him to board the ferry. He seemed sure that Saida would be on it. And he taxed Rashid with an unnecessary communication.

“Locate her,” his new friend said. “Don’t approach her and don’t let her identify you. Don’t call every time you are nervous. Call when you have something to report.”

Rashid did as he was told.

Washington

Standing in front of his mirror, Ray Spinner had thought he looked terrific in his new red-white-and-blue suspenders. Saturday seemed just the day to wear them—only the real gunners there on Saturday—but when he got to work he had a spasm of insecurity and didn’t dare take his jacket off. Five minutes later, he went to the men’s room and removed the suspenders and put them in a pocket, where they made an unsightly bulge. Plus his pants wouldn’t stay up.

Back in his cubicle, there was a message from McKinnon: See me. Spinner slipped the suspenders into a desk drawer and headed out at speed. It occurred to him—momentary flash of anger—that but for McKinnon, he’d be wearing the suspenders and wouldn’t have to hold his pants up with one hand.

McKinnon was standing behind his desk reading a book. He was wearing brown suspenders and looking both professorial and powerful, as if he might have been one of those Oxbridge types who were also MI5 in the days of Burgess and MacLean. “Hmmm?” he said without looking up.

“You wanted to see me.”

McKinnon read a few more words and looked up over his glasses and apparently recognized Spinner. “What’s new in Israel?” he said.

“It’s cryptology. The dead man was a Navy cryptologist; it looks like he gave up what he knew to his Palestinian buddies and Mossad got hold of it.”

“What’s your evidence?”

“Message traffic is heavy. It all says cryptology.”

“Are you sure?”

Spinner hesitated. “Of course I’m not sure!” he said. He was shocked that he let his own annoyance show.

“That’s a start. I’m not sure, either. When the hounds start chasing their tails, I tend to be a little skeptical. I think maybe something else is in play.” He smiled one of those meaningless smiles that lift only the corners of the mouth. “Off you go.”

Spinner blurted out, “Do you know something I don’t?”

McKinnon was back in his book. “I certainly hope so.” He waved Spinner away.

Back in his cubicle, Spinner frowned at the carpet-covered wall for some minutes and thought that he really shouldn’t take it anymore. McKinnon was a supercilious shit. On the other hand, he liked and needed the job.

He had gone to a Barnes and Noble and bought Leo Strauss’s The City and Man because it was the thinnest Strauss book on the shelf. He had been dipping into it. It was heavy going for a man whose idea of a book was a thriller. He had almost self-destructed on a paragraph that went on for two pages. He was put off by sentences like “For Aristotle political inequality is ultimately justified by the natural inequality among men,” because he had been raised on “All men are created equal,” but he assumed that no matter what sentences like these meant, Strauss would pull a democratic rabbit out of his philosophical hat. He didn’t want to face the possibility that neither Strauss, Aristotle, nor Plato was in fact democratic.

Naples

By Saturday, Dukas had Salem Qatib’s bio and knew that he had studied classics and archaeology at the University of Michigan but hadn’t taken a degree. Dukas tried to get the university on the phone, but on weekends academics are resting their brains. He made notes on what else he knew about Qatib: emigrated to the US with his parents at fourteen; his father returned to Palestine when Salem was seventeen and the parents later divorced; Salem did his Navy stint then and followed it with his college work, remaining a reservist. Then he’d gone off to Palestine himself and had kept a fairly clean record, except for whatever Mossad knew about him and was now not giving up—their current stance was “Who, me? Never heard of him!” The CIA had Qatib’s name but was saying that other than his being a Palestinian and having attended an anti-settlement rally in Gaza, they weren’t interested in him.

“Well, somebody was interested in him,” Dukas said to Triffler.

“Or Al Craik’s police lady is wrong about the Mossad involvement.”

“You think Al was kidnapped by four guys who just happened to be in the neighborhood?”

“Stranger things have happened.” Triffler checked his watch. “We have a meeting downtown in half an hour.”

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