“May I see that, Mr. President?” Clemens McCarthy asked.
The President handed him the letter.
“Try to keep it from going under the desk, McCarthy,” the President said, and then turned his attention to Schmidt. “I’m waiting.”
“A boy, Mr. President. A boy, twelve years old, Latino, handed it to one of the FBI agents. He said that a man gave him five dollars and told him to hand that—it was in an envelope addressed ‘To the FBI’—to him. I mean, he indicated to whom the boy was to hand the envelope.”
“And that man? Do we know who he is? Is it too much to hope that he was detained for questioning?”
“By the time they started looking for him, Mr. President,” Schmidt said, “the man had gone.”
“A regular James Bond, huh?” the President said with a snort, and then asked, “Do either of you have any idea what’s going on here?”
“I don’t understand the question, Mr. President,” Crenshaw said.
“That doesn’t surprise me at all,” the President said.
“Schmidt and I were discussing how to deal with the exchange when you called.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“We were thinking of sending FBI agents—instead of Marshals—on the helicopter for the exchange.”
“Jesus H. Christ!” the President exploded. “Let me tell you what would happen if you sent FBI agents on that helicopter. They would land at that airport and be greeted by, say, a dozen Mexicans, all armed to the teeth, who would relieve them of this fucking Mexican murderer and then wave bye-bye. They would not get Colonel Ferris, who is probably five hundred miles from Ciudad Juárez. I know what they think of your intelligence, but I’m surprised they think I’m also that stupid.”
Neither Crenshaw nor Schmidt replied.
“What we are going to do, gentlemen, is go along with President Martinez, that ungrateful sonofabitch. He wants Abrego turned over to this Mexican cop—what’s his name, McCarthy . . . ?”
“Pena, Mr. President,” McCarthy furnished. “Juan Carlos Pena, chief of the Policía Federal for Oaxaca State.”
“. . . for interrogation, which means to be turned loose,” the President picked up. “So we’re going to do just that. We’re going to take this goddamn murderer to the Oaxaca State Prison and exchange him for Ferris. He’ll be taken there, gentlemen, not by U.S. Marshals, not by the FBI, but by as many of those super Green Berets—what do they call them, McCarthy?”
“The Delta Force, Mr. President?” McCarthy asked, his confusion evident in his voice.
“No, goddammit! I said super Green Berets.”
“Gray Fox, Mr. President?” Attorney General Crenshaw asked, and his confusion was equally evident in his voice.
“Right,” the President said. “Gray Fox. As many of those Gray Fox people that’ll fit on three Black Hawks. They’ll either get Ferris back when they get there or they’ll bring the goddamn Mexican back and throw him in his Florence cell. I don’t think a goddamn Mexican cop is going to want to get in a fight with twenty, twenty-five Gray Fox guys. Get General McNab on the phone.”
“General McNab is in Afghanistan, Mr. President,” McCarthy said.
“Then get his deputy, that Irishman, what’s his name? McCool? Something like that.”
“O’Toole, Mr. President. Major General Terrence O’Toole,” McCarthy said.
“Well, get Major General Terrence O’Toole on the phone and tell him to get up here. And while you’re at it, get Naylor and Beiderman in here, too. I’ll teach that bastard Martinez he can’t fuck with Joshua Ezekiel Clendennen.”
[FOUR]
Office of the Director
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia
1110 20 April 2007