martedì 30 giugno 2015
Chapters 5 and 6 of the thriller "D.C. Undercover"
Chapter 5
Michael Bardi collected his shoes, jacket and belt from the tray on
the metal detector’s conveyor belt. He waited for the second tray
with his computer, wallet and cell phone. He had already undergone
full body scanning. With all the terrorists wanting to blow up
airplanes and willing to shove explosives into body cavities scanning
was the only way to try and stop them.
He had to wait for the woman ahead of him to pass through
with an enormous cat. She was asked to remove the cat from his
traveling cage. The cat did not want to stay put in her arms, so
by the time the two of them had gone through scanning the woman
was dripping blood from cat scratches. “That’s what you get
for wanting a pet to love and make you feel less lonely,” Michael
thought.
He started walking towards the train for the terminals. Dulles
Airport had finally completed its multi-year project to get rid of
the variable height bus shuttles that used to transport passengers
to their airlines. The train stopped and Bardi and dozens of others
dragging carry-on luggage got on. At the gate for United flight 966
for Rome, he got on line to join the other red carpet first and business
class passengers.
Once on board he located his aisle seat, Michael devoted all his
attention to reading some documents he took from a compartment
in his computer’s carrying case. His Bose headphones blocked 90
percent of the engine take off noise. He selected the classical music
channel from the ones provided by the airline. In little more than
eight hours he would be landing in Rome at Leonardo da Vinci
airport.
The Boeing 777 reached cruising height and headed North East
to begin its transatlantic flight. While checking to see if it would
bother the person behind him, Michael Bardi pushed back his seat’s
shoulder rest. In so doing, he exchanged appreciative glances with
an attractive brunette with very long legs and a very mini skirt.
Michael smiled and repressed a sigh. He no longer felt like reading.
He started reminiscing salient events from his life. His father
had died in a car accident while driving through the Stelvio Pass.
He might have been speeding. Dad liked to go fast and had some
training in high speed driving. Michael had been told of his father’s
death while he was in his last year of high school and about to graduate
from a boarding school in Saint Morritz. His mother, in tears,
had called him with the news. Michael, however, had always felt a
twinge of doubt regarding the depth of her despair.
His parents’ marriage had been in trouble for some time. One
reason was his father’s work that involved frequent travel around
the world installing equipment in developing nations. Another reason
was the fact that his mother, an American from Los Angeles
who had moved to Italy, was a beautiful woman desperate to keep
up the youthful looks that provoked waves of desire in the male
members of the Milan tennis clubs where she spent most of her
time. Less than one year after his father’s death, she had remarried
an old flame. Her new husband was the heir of a large fortune that
was being dissipated at a fast rate.
Mom… no, that was not the right word. Mother, yes, as in biological
mother. He had spent nine months in her belly. But his
childhood had been a succession of nannies who reared him, wiped
his tantrum tears, and tried to fill the void left by a mother consumed
with going to parties, art shows, concerts, ski trips, tennis
competitions and so forth.
After graduating from high school with straight A grades, it was off
to college at the London School of Economics, a brilliant academic
record, and multiple love stories with this or that girl in constant adoration
of him. Brilliant results also in various sports, especially in
individual sports such as tennis and the martial arts: a judo black belt
and a third Dan in full contact karate.
He was six foot tall and had wavy blond hair. While studying
music in Switzerland he had fallen in love with classical guitar. But
when asked to perform at parties he would insist, with false humility,
“I don’t have the right repertoire.” So his friends would turn to
someone else with lesser skills.
After London he was offered an interesting job in Montreal with
a defense sector company. He had meanwhile, to pass the time,
learned Arabic as another language to add to those he had used
in Switzerland: Italian, English, French, German and a bit of Spanish.
He felt fortunate that his musical talent was of great assistance
in his learning of foreign languages. In addition to his Italian and
Swiss passports, thanks to his job he now also had a Canadian one.
One evening, while at a pub with a girlfriend, a man in a dark
suite had approached him. Asking him to pass along the peanut
bowl, he had slipped him his business card. Then he left, after taking
a sip of his beer.
Michael told his girlfriend that the beer was beginning to have
an effect and he had to go take a leak. Her shameless reply was,
“Make sure you treat it well.” In the men’s room, to the chorus of
men peeing and farting, Michael took care of business and had a
peak at the business card. There was only an address, a date and a
time.
The airplane had encountered heavy turbulence and everyone had
to remain seated and belted in. Food service was suspended and
the flight attendants had taken their seats while trying to mask their
apprehension. Michael wondered why the pilot had chosen not to
deviate. Twenty minutes later the plane stopped bouncing and everything
went back to normal to the passengers’ great relief.
The very effeminate steward assigned to his section came up
to Michael and asked him for his choice from the menu. Michael
wasn’t very hungry and picked the baked grouper. When it was
the turn of the very mini-skirted girl behind him, she picked the
fillet. “How would you like your meat?” asked the steward. “Deep
inside!” she replied in a high-pitched tone to ensure Michael would
hear. “I’d better pretend not to notice or she might decide to come
sit next to me,” thought Michael. When the steward returned to
take back the meal tray he somehow managed to rub against Michael.
“This really is my day,” Michael said to himself.
He said the same thing in Montreal when he went to 305 Rue
de la Commune. After he rang the doorbell, the front door creaked
open. Michael Bardi found himself in the courtyard of an old grain
warehouse turned into condominium.
“Welcome, Mr. Bardi. Please come in,” said the giant young
blond man. His hair was shaved like a GI’s. His powerful shoulders
were encased in a dark suit. He wore the same shiny black
shoes as the soldiers guarding the Tomb of the Unknown Solder at
Arlington National Cemetery. His dazzling white smile showed all
thirty-two teeth.
Michael was in an apartment converted into an office. Behind
an Ikea desk was another 40- or-so-year-old giant. His face had the
deep wrinkles and dark tan of someone who has spent most of his
life in the desert, the tropics or the Caribbean.
“Thank you, Mr. Bardi, for accepting our slightly irregular invitation.
I am Col. Bradford of the US Navy Seals. We have been
following you up for a few years and have taken note of your academic,
professional and athletic prowess.”
And so Michael had become part of the prestigious corps founded
in 1962 and tasked with special operations such as reconnaissance
and non-conventional anti-terrorism and anti-guerilla fighting
by land and by sea. The Seals could do whatever they wanted
wherever they wanted to further the secret interests of the U.S.
After intense training in Coronado, CA and then in Little Creek,
VA, Michael began participating in foreign operations. Had he taken
part in the discovery of Osama Bin Laden’s hideout and his killing?
It was a secret.
At 8:00 a.m. of the next day United flight 966 was preparing to
land, all flaps extended, in Rome. It was raining and the tarmac was
full of puddles when it touched ground. Michael Bardi was traveling
only with his carry on and computer. If he needed anything he
could buy it wherever he was, as nowadays everything was available
worldwide.
The business class passengers prepared to disembark. As he
was exiting the plane, Michael felt a hand caress his ass and hips
and then slip a card with a phone number into the pocket of his
jacket. The brunette was truly relentless.
Chapter 6
Michael Bardi decided to use his Italian passport to avoid the long
line of Non-European Union citizens going through passport control.
The policewoman gave it a bored glance over and handed it
back with great effort.
Michael didn’t have to collect any luggage as he had everything
with him, so he headed for the elevators. He got off at the second
floor and proceeded down the hallway covered with a worn-out
rubber flooring pockmarked with water puddles. Rome’s airport
was disgusting compared to other major ones – the new New Delhi,
for example, and even Singapore.
Michael finally reached the tunnel leading to the car rental
agencies. He waited in line at Hertz and then went to the 4th floor
parking lot. He had been assigned a new Ford Fiesta, a popular car
in Europe. He got in the car and adjusted the mirrors and the seat to
accommodate his height, which was not that of a typical Italian. He
then drove down the ramp and out of the parking garage.
On his way to the highway for Rome, some officers from Italy’s
Finance Guard pulled him over and demanded to see his driver’s
license and registration. Michael showed his international license
and found the registration in the car’s glove compartment. The
guards wanted to see what was in the car’s trunk. Michael got out
of the car and retrieved and opened his carry on. His Navy Seal
insignia badge was on top. “But these are the Seals! Do you belong
to them?” asked one of the guards with great interest. “I did until
a little while ago,” answered Michael. The guard was visibly impressed
and called over a colleague to look. Then they straightened
up and saluted.
Michael continued on towards Rome. He merged into the Rome
Beltway where the speed limit was 90 kilometers per hour. But no
one followed the rules. Michael decided to drive Italian style according
to the old saying that, “When in Rome, do as the Romans
do.”
He took the Cassia Veientana-Viterbo exit onto the so-called
Cassia Bis. When he saw the sign for Formello-Olgiata, Michael
turned off. After 3 kilometers he came to the Olgiata northern gate.
“Reason for your visit?” asked one of the security men. “Ribot Restaurant”
he replied. The guard handed him a card with directions
and said, “Follow road B. You can’t go wrong.”
The Olgiata district extended for almost 1,500 acres to the North
East of Rome. It was part of the territory that in ancient times belonged
to the Etruscan city of Veio. The Orsini family castle was
nearby. In the 1960s Olgiata had been in the headlines with stories
about the Dormello Olgiata racehorse farm. The most famous steed
was named Ribot and he had won many international prizes. After
he was put out to stud, the stables were converted into luxury
apartments.
Michael followed the directions on the card and slowed down
at every speed bump. Behind him the impatient blond driver of a
Mercedes SUV kept flashing its lights and honking. When she finally
passed him, she gave him the finger as a welcome to Olgiata.
Michael arrived at the Ribot Restaurant, which in a previous life
had been one of the stables of the horseracing farm. But it was 11
a.m. and so the restaurant was still closed.
His 4G-cell phone rang. A nasal, almost falsetto voice instructed
him to go through the green gate next to the restaurant’s bar. Michael
found himself in a large garden with a stone drinking trough
in the center. Apartments belonging to the lucky few able to afford
them when the owners of the Dormello Olgiata property had put
them up for sale surrounded the garden.
A window in a building on his right opened and a hand gestured
to indicate he should take the stairs to a first floor apartment.
domenica 28 giugno 2015
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 of the thriller "D.C undercover"
Chapter 3
“Name?”
“Habib Fareh.”
“You’re not on the list. Which Lodge do you belong to?”
“The Grand Lodge of Lebanon. Here’s an affidavit by our Grand
Secretary and a certificate of good standing. You should have my
letter of introduction. They mailed it about 10 days ago.”
The two assistants were perplexed and exchanged worried
glances. Then one grabbed a white badge on which he wrote ‘Habib
Fareh. Grand Lodge of Lebanon’ and gave it to the visitor that was
observing the bust of General Albert Pike, who championed on behalf
of the Scottish Rite in America.
Habib Fareh stuck the nametag on his jacket, retraced his steps
down the hallway and entered the 500-seat auditorium, with its
Broadway-style main stage. He found a seat, squashed in between
two overweight Masons.
The ceremony taking place was in honor of Brotherhood Weekend,
an event of great international relevance. On the right hand side of
the auditorium Habib Fareh noticed the presence of delegates from
foreign Grand Lodges. Brotherhood Weekend had been established
a dozen years earlier as an offshoot of the Bilingual Lodges affiliated
with the Grand Lodge of Washington DC. These Lodges represented
a Freemason-diplomatic bridge between the capital of the
USA and the capitals of other nations. At the Brotherhood Weekend
ceremonies each participant recited the rituals in his own native
language. At times it might have echoed the Tower of Babel, but
for Washington Freemasons it validated the concept of Universal
Brotherhood that unites all members of the ancient institution.
Habib Fareh noticed that the Grand Officers of the Grand Lodge
of Washington DC were on the average 30 years old and that they
were all dressed in formal wear with tailcoats. Every Brother with
an official position, beginning with the Grand Master who wore a
top hat, had an earpiece connected to the control room in charge
of lighting and sound effects. A professional musician, who was a
Freemason, was playing the organ on the auditorium’s left. No one
who was “profane” was admitted to the ceremony. The ceremony
proceeded uneventfully thanks to the many rehearsals. Everyone
obviously knew his part by heart. When the ceremony ended, the
Brothers proceeded to the ballroom for a buffet luncheon.
Habib Fareh meanwhile had asked that the representative of
the Armenia Lodge and of the Iran Lodge in Exile be pointed out
to him. He found a way to sit near them at one of the tables. He
then started up a conversation, and introduced himself as the representative
of the Grand Lodge of Lebanon. There was immediate
interest: “The Grand Lodge of Lebanon? A while ago we had a big
problem when the Grand Lodge of Washington supported the creation
of a Lodge in Lebanon. It ended up creating a big problem
with another Grand Lodge… But you, where are you from and who
exactly do you represent?”
Habib Fareh smiled, “It’s obvious, with all due respect, that you
are not up to date on Freemasonry in Lebanon,” he replied very
calmly. “Excuse me for a moment, I need to go to the restroom.”
As he walked away the two Brothers, who agreed they felt uneasy
about the exchange, decided to discuss the matter with a former
Grand Master who had dealt with the controversy in Lebanon.
“Try and stop him,” he said in great alarm. “We need to figure
out who exactly this guy is.”
But Habib Fareh had disappeared.
Chapter 4
Brother Andrew was deaf mute, but not completely. He was good
at lip reading and could answer with guttural replies. Since childhood
he had been a patient of the Scottish Rite Center’s clinic for
hearing- and speech-impaired students. The Scottish Rite paid all
the expenses for the physicians as well as the patients and the family
members who assisted them. Every day in America, Freemasons
contribute millions of dollars to fund 23 clinics and hospitals nationwide
that take care of children up to the age of 18 with serious
orthopedic, spinal and burn injuries.
Andrew was the janitor at the Scottish Rite Center. His job was
to clean up after all events and ceremonies. He worked hard, but
had a few personal perks. After banquets he would take home
whatever food had not been touched. He also took left over bottles
of wine to drown the sorrows of his involuntary bachelorhood. He
liked women, but they avoided him because of his handicaps. And
sometimes he resold unopened bottles.
That evening Brother Andrew was angry. The Center’s Grand
Commander and General Secretary had told him to search for an
Arab, named Habib Fareh. Apparently he had gained entrance under
false pretenses and taken advantage of the naiveté of the young
guys in charge of registration.
“What kind of jerks do they put in charge? I get the shit jobs,
that pay shit and I’m treated like shit. I get kicked around because
of who I am and have to depend on their handouts.” These were the
thoughts going through Andrew’s mind as he swept the ballroom
floor and picked up empty bottles and litter. “Even among the Freemasons
there are a lot of pigs. Couldn’t someone teach them how to
behave and not just how to recite rituals?”
While the Center’s leadership had taken care not to alarm Brotherhood
Weekend participants, the disappearance of the young Lebanese
made them very uneasy. They kept searching for him, but quietly.
And they looked and looked everywhere for hours, but there
was no sign of the Arab. They looked in the administrative offices,
the meeting rooms, the small temple and its dressing room, the
former barbershop (with its lovely 1900s leather chairs), the main
temple on the second floor, the billiard hall, the ‘hall of lost steps’,
the restrooms, the ladies lounges and in the large kitchen with its
industrial size refrigerators and catering equipment to prepare
meals for hundreds.
They looked in the auditorium, in between the rows of seats,
and above all behind the stage among all the theatrical equipment
where it would have been easy to hide. They shined bright lights
in all the dark corners and recesses of the stage sets and curtains.
Nothing: there was no trace of the Lebanese intruder.
And so they concluded that, once he realized he was attracting
too much attention, the young Arab had sneaked out the same back
entrance door he had used to get in. There was no point asking the
guys hanging out by the door smoking if they had noticed anything.
A few vaguely remembered someone who smiled at them
when entering and having briefly wondered who he might be. The
two assistants at the registration desk and the delegates from the
Armenian and Iranian Lodges had a slightly better recollection and
had participated in the search. All in vain.
Brother Andrew continued sweeping and folding up the napkins
left on the banquet tables and scraping food off the plates into the
garbage bins. He felt tired, very tired. He had started work at 6 a.m.
and now it was midnight. He’d have to finish cleaning up the next
day. For now all he had left to do was to take out the trash and then
get in his ten-year- old Corolla and drive home to Damascus, MD. It
was a 45-minute trip, and there wouldn’t be any traffic at this time
of night. But he was so tired and he had to get up early. He’d be
lucky if he got four hours of sleep.
“Know what?” he thought, “Maybe I’ll just sleep here. I’ve done
it before.”
Andrew put away the broom, and passed through the small
temple on his way towards the barbershop. “One more place to
clean tomorrow. What a bitch.” When he got there he stripped
down to his underwear. Then he turned on one of the sink faucets
and let the water run. He was so thirsty, almost certainly because
he had eaten some of the spicy Peruvian leftovers while cleaning
up. He filled a paper cup with water and drank it with a big sigh of
relief. He drank some more to settle his stomach.
It had been a wise choice to stay over and not drive all the way
home just for a few hours rest. The Director General wouldn’t object.
“I certainly do not ask him to pay me overtime even for while
I’m sleeping in a barber chair.” The headrest was really comfortable.
“Those Freemasons in the 1920s treated themselves well. They
had a free barber. OK, maybe it was only for the ones going on
stage to act out Scottish Rite rituals, but it was still a free haircut.”
Andrew became thankful at the thought of all of the years he
had spent at the Center and the care he had received from the clinic.
After all, it almost felt like home. He pushed the seat back as far as
it could go and settled in contentedly.
The metal loop cut his throat. Air and blood squirted out from
Andrew’s trachea and arteries making a strange sound. It was not
his usual utterance.
When the body stopped withering in agony, the Arab used
a towel to wipe off his instrument of death. He had bought it for
a hefty sum from an antiquarian in Valencia. It dated back to the
1600s and had been used on countless throats.
Habib Fareh, or whatever his real name was, left the barbershop,
and went through the small temple and the kitchen. He then walked
down the hall and up a flight of stairs to the secretary’s office. The
door was locked, but he opened it easily with a skeleton key. Once
in the office, he turned on the computer and started retrieving files
confident he would not be disturbed, at least for a while. The dead
janitor, after deciding to spend what turned out to be his last night,
had not turned on the central alarm system connected to the local
police station.
Fareh called a number on his cell phone. As soon as he heard
the other side was on the line he said, “Done,” and hung up. From
a pocket he took out a silver cigarette case from which he removed
a joint. He proceeded to light it and took a few long drags before
turning back to the computer and the Center’s files. Feeling completely
relaxed, he smiled at his reflection in the computer’s monitor.
Everything had gone as planned, thanks to his professionalism.
When it came to international assassins, he was the best
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