The Witness (6 page)

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Authors: Josh McDowell

BOOK: The Witness
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“You are interrupting my day off,” Lemieux replied.

“I am very sorry, monsieur, but it could not be helped. I’m afraid I have some very bad news.”

“And I thought hearing from you was bad enough,” Lemieux groaned.

Goddard bit his tongue. “I regret to inform you that Monsieur Ramsey has been murdered.”

There was silence at the other end of the line.

“Rafeeq Ramsey?” Lemieux asked at last.

“I’m afraid so, sir,” Goddard confirmed and then briefly explained the circumstances of the death, so far as he knew them.

“Any suspects?” Lemieux asked.

“Not yet,” Goddard said. “But we’ve just begun our investigation, and I thought you might be able to help us on that front.”

“Any witnesses?” Lemieux asked.

“We’re still canvassing the area for them, but there is one man, Marwan Accad,” Goddard said. “He’s the CEO of an executive security company. He was with Ramsey at the time of the shooting. Ramsey may have been trying to hire him. We’re hoping Ramsey may have told him something that will shed light on who killed him and why.”

“What do you mean you’re
hoping
?” Lemieux wanted to know. “Haven’t you asked him yet?”

“Well, no,” Goddard said, “not exactly.”

“Fine,” Lemieux said with disgust, “I will ask him myself. I’m heading to the airport now. Have someone meet me at the helipad in twenty minutes.”

“Twenty minutes?” Goddard asked, caught off guard. “Aren’t you in Paris?”

“No, I’m in Nice.”

Lemieux said it as if Goddard should have known. And he probably should have. Why hadn’t DuVall warned him? She knew Goddard hated surprises.

“Well, Monsieur Lemieux, I will certainly have one of my men meet you and bring you up to the Ramsey flat. But I’m afraid I won’t be able to put you in front of Marwan Accad quite yet.”

“Why not?” Lemieux demanded.

“Accad seems to have disappeared.”

“Disappeared?”

Goddard took a deep breath. It was the last thing he wanted to admit, and to Lemieux of all people. “Yes, I’m afraid so. He slipped away in all the chaos, the commotion. But we’ve sealed off the city. We’ll find him soon and bring him in for questioning. He may be the best witness we have. Indeed, he may be our only witness.”

“No, Monsieur Goddard,” Lemieux shot back. “That, I am afraid, is where you are wrong. Marwan Accad is no witness. He has just become my prime suspect.”

“Suspect?” Goddard asked. “We don’t know anything about him yet—who he really is, why he was here, nothing.”

“Then find out,” Lemieux insisted. “Issue a warrant for Accad’s arrest and alert the authorities from Milan to Marseille. I don’t want this guy getting away. Or I promise you, Monsieur Goddard, heads will roll, starting with yours.”

13

It began to rain. Marwan turned on the windshield wipers and prayed, to a God he didn’t believe in, that he wouldn’t suddenly go sliding off the highway.
And why should I believe in you,
he thought angrily.
What have you given me other than loneliness and pain? And now this! When I was trying to help a man who had just lost his daughter and whose wife was missing? This is what you give me?

The cell phone rang, shattering the silence and rattling his nerves.

“Hello?”

“Marwan, it’s Ramy. Are you there yet?”

“No, not yet.”

Marwan checked his watch and his map, and the knot in his stomach tightened. It was almost seven thirty, and he was only now approaching the outskirts of Marseille.

“Ramy, I don’t think I can make it.”

“You have to,” Ramy insisted. “You don’t have a choice. I can get you out of North Africa. But I can’t get you out of a French prison. How much farther?”

“Five kilometers, maybe ten, but look at the time.”

“I know, I know,” Ramy said. “But look, we have to go over some things before you get to the airport.”

“Like what?”

“Your phone, for starters. You said it was originally the taxi driver’s.”

“Correct.”

“But you called through our scrambler system in Prague, right?”

“Of course.”

“Then the cops probably can’t trace it back to me. But they’re going to try, so you can’t keep it, and you can’t use it again. As soon as you hang up with me, you need to ditch it immediately. You got it?”

“I got it.”

“When you get to Casa, buy a satellite phone,” Ramy continued. “Use cash. And don’t skimp. Get a good one. Something nobody can trace or tap.”

“Right.”

“But only use it to call me. No one else.”

“Right, no one else.”

“Marwan, I’m not kidding,” Ramy said. “You’re tired. You’re fighting off shock. You’re not yourself tonight. You’ve got to be extra careful. You can’t afford to make a single mistake. And until we figure this thing out, you need to get low, stay low. No friends. No old hangouts. Nothing familiar.”

“That should be easy,” Marwan lied. “I don’t know anyone in Morocco.”

“Good,” Ramy said. “Keep it that way.”

Marwan knew Ramy had never liked Kadeen al-Wadhi, and with good reason. When they were all kids, Kadeen, Marwan’s best friend, seemed to feel an obligation to make the younger boy miserable. Sometimes, when things got out of hand, Marwan would step in. But mostly he just stood by and laughed as Ramy cried or tried to fight back.

Age had changed everything. Kadeen moved away and found religion, and Ramy moved into that best friend position in Marwan’s life. Still, because of that history, although Marwan kept in regular contact with Kadeen, he never mentioned him to his younger brother. Those were wounds that he knew might never heal.

“Now look,” Ramy continued, “one thing seems certain. Your instincts about Claudette Ramsey were right on the money. She’s alive. She’s in São Paulo. She’s making wire transfers. Which means she’s probably behind this whole thing. That’s the good news—we know that much already.”

“And the bad news?” Marwan asked as the rain began to fall harder over Marseille and the throbbing in his shoulder worsened by the minute.

“She and whoever she’s working with know you’re onto them.”

“But that still doesn’t make sense,” Marwan said. “I’m the only person who could have known, plus my sources in Zurich and São Paulo.”

“Might they have double-crossed you?”

“I don’t see how,” Marwan said. “I’ve known those guys for fifteen years, at least.”

“What if the phone in Ramsey’s place was bugged?” Ramy asked.

“The one in Monte Carlo?”

“No, the one in Paris,” Ramy said.

“It’s possible,” Marwan said. “But by whom? The security company?”

“Or the police,” Ramy said. “Didn’t you say he suspected someone in French intelligence was after him?”

“Yeah.”

“Well?”

Marwan considered that for a moment. Perhaps Ramy was right.

“What did you say when you called Ramsey the other day?” his brother asked. “Did you tell him about the photo? Did you mention São Paulo?”

“No, no, of course not,” Marwan said. “I just said I had urgent news that couldn’t wait. I told him I needed to see him in person, but not in Paris.”

“Did you suggest Monte Carlo?”

“No, he did.”

“And he gave you all the details of where and when to meet over the phone right then?”

“Right.”

“Then that’s got to be it,” Ramy said. “That phone was bugged.”

“Whoever was listening in didn’t have to know what I had,” Marwan realized aloud. “They just knew I had something big, and whatever it was, it couldn’t be good for them. Claudette and her people must have panicked. They must have decided to shut down the whole operation.”

“Exactly,” Ramy said. “Which meant not only taking out Ramsey, but taking out you, as well.”

“Then they have to know I’m still alive,” Marwan said, “that all their attacks in Monte Carlo failed.”

“Which means they’ve got to be scared,” Ramy added. “They won’t give up until they find you and kill you.”

“Then we’d better find them before they find us.”

“How?” Ramy asked.

“First, put a team on the next plane to São Paulo,” Marwan said. “We need to find Claudette before she runs. If we find her, she’ll lead us to the others.”

“I’m on it,” Ramy said.

“Second, find out who’s doing the investigation back in Monte Carlo. Find out if he’s in on this thing or if he’s somebody we can trust.”

“Got it. What else?”

“Who do you know in Paris?”

“I’ve got a good friend in French intelligence,” Ramy said. “I met him when you sent me to open the Paris office, before you moved up there. He’s pretty high up. Knows everybody. And he owes me a favor.”

“Good, see if he’s heard anything,” Marwan ordered. “But be careful, Ramy. We still don’t know exactly what we’re up against.”

“Don’t worry. My friend will be discreet.”

“He’d better be,” Marwan said.

The rain was coming down still harder, and the temperature was dropping quickly. But he saw a sign for the airport. It was just ahead.

“I’d better go,” he said. “I’m almost there.”

“Good,” Ramy said. “Stay safe, and call me in three days.”

“Three days,” Marwan confirmed, then said, “Ramy?”

“Yes, Marwan?”

“Thanks.”

“What are little brothers for?”

14

Marwan pulled into the airport parking lot. It was exactly 8:00. He found a deserted little section near the back and turned off the engine. Then he wiped the rental car clean of all fingerprints, grabbed the garment bag out of the backseat, and dumped the keys, the pistol, and the cell phone into various trash cans as he ran to make his flight.

By 8:12, he was inside the main terminal. Walking as quickly as he could without drawing attention, he found his rented locker. He unlocked it and he fished out a small stack of fake passports and a dozen credit cards, two per alias. He also grabbed a change of clothes, a pair of contact lenses that made his eyes look green rather than brown, a small backpack, and several stacks of euros in small denominations. He slammed the door shut and tossed the photo of Claudette Ramsey in a trash can before ducking into a nearby men’s room.

At 8:21, he stepped up to the Royal Air Maroc counter and paid for his ticket.

“You’d better hurry, Monsieur Cardell,” the blonde behind the counter said as she handed him his boarding card. “They are already boarding.”

Marwan bolted for security and passport control. There were still a few passengers ahead of him. But police and plainclothes agents were everywhere. It seemed the place was crawling with them. Marwan entered the queue and tried to act casual, but his heart was racing. He needed to get his mind off the prospect of imminent arrest and interrogation. He needed to find a way to calm down and become the alias he had just assumed.

He surreptitiously tried some breathing techniques, but to little avail. How would the APB list him—as a witness or as a man wanted for multiple homicides? Had every airport, seaport, train station, and hotel in France and Italy been alerted, or just those within a hundred kilometers or so of Monte Carlo? More to the point, had he slipped the noose, or was it being tightened around his neck even now?

He snuck a glance at himself in a window as he passed. The snakeskin boots added a good two inches to his height. Then, of course, there were the ripped blue jeans, the black T-shirt, the faded jean jacket with a huge Grateful Dead logo stitched on the back. These and the dark sunglasses and the backpack and the iPod blaring the Dead’s greatest hits made him look more like some American college kid hitchhiking through Europe than a bodyguard to former presidents and prime ministers. He barely recognized himself. And that, of course, was the point.

No fewer than eight French policemen were checking passports and faces and luggage and running the metal detectors. It felt as if every eye were on him. It had been a long time since he had bluffed his way through European security. Did he still know how? He vowed then and there that if he somehow made it through all this, he would spend a lot more time out of his office and in the field.

It was finally his turn. He tossed his backpack and the garment bag—the one he had stolen from the honeymooners in Monte Carlo—on the conveyor belt to be x-rayed. Then he handed over his fake American passport, his airline ticket, and his boarding pass.

The lead gendarme was a short bulldog of a man with a close haircut, a tight-fitting French border police uniform, and a severe look upon his face. He examined the documents closely. Too closely.

Marwan’s pulse quickened.

The man asked something in French.

“Huh?” Marwan asked, peeling off his iPod and looking thoroughly confused.

The man switched to English.

“Monsieur Cardell, where are you traveling tonight?”

“Heading to Casa, dude,” Marwan said in a nearly flawless Southern Californian accent. “Actually, Rabat, if I can find me some wheels.”

He was just glad he was not hooked up to a polygraph.

“Alone?” the man asked.

Marwan looked around himself, then faced the gendarme with a shrug and a smile. “Unfortunately.”

“Business or pleasure?”

“Pure pleasure, bro—at least I hope,” Marwan laughed, hoping to elicit a bit of warmth, something—anything—he could work with to get this guy to lighten up a bit and wave him through.

He got nothing. Instead, the man’s eyes bored more deeply into his.

“Are you carrying any weapons?”

“No,” he said, though he almost wished he were.

“Drugs?”

That one was easy. He had never used them in his life. But he had to stay in character.

“Not today,” he quipped with a wink.

The gendarme did not look amused.

“Are you traveling with more than ten thousand euros?”

Marwan did a quick calculation. As best he remembered, he had a little less than two thousand. He laughed again. “Dude, you’re kidding, right?”

He saw the man’s eyebrows rise.

“I had to sell my Harley to get over here,” Marwan continued. “Blew most of it already! Who knew France was so expensive?”

“Where are you staying in Rabat?”

Marwan paused for a moment. He didn’t recall ever being asked such questions upon
leaving
France. Were they onto him? Why not just grab him? His mouth went dry.

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