“Aquarius,” I said. “I’ve seen that name before, on your computer.”
“Aquarius,” Op Nine said, “is François Merryweather, the director of OIPEP.”
“That does it,” I said. I grabbed the 3XD out of Op Nine’s hand and jammed it under Mike’s chin.
“Mike!” I yelled. “You’ve got to the count of three!”
“Alfred,” Op Nine said. “If you do this, we may never solve this riddle.”
“You don’t remember,” I shot back. My voice was shaking pretty badly and tears stung in my eyes. “You don’t know everything he’s done. Not just to me, Op Nine—Samuel . . .” It felt weird, calling him Samuel after knowing him for so long as Op Nine. “But to everyone.”
“Killing him will not change that,” he answered.
“I don’t care about changing it,” I said. “I care about making him pay.”
“How he pays is not your decision.”
“Don’t bring up God or heaven to me, Nine. Don’t even go near there. I never saw much evidence of him before all this happened and I sure as hell haven’t seen any since it all happened.”
“Put down the weapon, Alfred,” Op Nine said.
“Not till I’ve put him away.”
Mike gave a loud moan and his eyelids fluttered. I poked his Adam’s apple with the muzzle of the gun.
“Wake up, Mike!”
He moaned again. I brought my face close to his.
“It’s over, Mike. We need the Seal and we need it now.”
“Bi . . .” he whispered. “Bi . . .”
“Bye?” Mr. Needlemier said.
“ ‘By’ what, Mike?” I asked. “What is it by?”
“Bite me,” he gasped.
“No thanks,” I said. “I think I’ll just shoot you.”
“Tell him we have her,” Op Nine said.
I looked at him. Who did we have?
“Tell him we have his mother.”
“You’re bluffing,” Mike said. “There’s no way.”
“Michael,” Op Nine said softly, coming to stand beside me so Mike could see him. “Michael, you know me. You know what I am. You know Section Nine.”
Mike’s eyes had gone wide.
“I don’t believe you,” Mike said.
“I shall tell her that. I’ll explain you didn’t believe us.”
“Shut up,” Mike shouted. “Just shut your pie-hole, Padre. I’m not giving up the Vessel.”
“The Great Seal has been lost,” Op Nine said. “What use is the Vessel to you now?”
“Well, for one thing, it’s the only thing that’s keeping Al here from blowing my head off.”
Op Nine smiled grimly. “Tell us, Mike, or I will give the order.”
He held out his hand toward me. I got it immediately, and handed him his cell phone.
“Well, Padre, I love my mom, don’t get me wrong, but I always thought my life might have turned out just a wee bit different if it hadn’t been for her. You know how it is, Al—we got no choice when it comes to parents, and some of them are woefully underqualified.”
“This is Nine,” Op Nine said into the cell phone. “I am authorizing Execution Code Delta-Alpha-Tango. Repeat: authorizing Execution Code Delta-Alpha-Tango.”
“Lemme talk to her,” Mike said.
Op Nine was pretending to listen to the nonexistent person on the other end of the line.
“Yes. Advise her that the Hyena refuses to cooperate.”
“Tell her self-preservation trumps familial loyalty!” Mike shouted. Then he said, “ ‘Hyena’? That’s my target name?”
“Very good,” Op Nine said into the phone. “Yes. Execute Delta-Alpha-Tango immediately.”
“Wait!” Mike yelped. “Okay! Stay the code!”
“Stay,” Op Nine said. The hand holding the phone dropped to his side. “Where is the Vessel, Mike?”
Mike took a deep shuddering breath. “I’m lying on it.”
I groaned. We hadn’t moved him to search. I grabbed him by the shoulder and rolled him off the couch. He hit the floor with a “whoomf!” I yanked off the cushions and threw them across the room. There was a cavity right in the center covered by a hinged door. I pulled the door open and brought out the Vessel. A lot lighter than I thought it would be, it was very plain, no fancy designs or markings of any kind, made of brass or bronze, I guess, the metal hammered very thin.
Op Nine flipped the cell phone closed and slipped it into his pocket. Then he turned to me and held out his hand.
“I said it was hope that separated us from them,” he said to me gently. “But so does mercy, Alfred.”
“Okay,” I said. “But some things are unforgivable too.”
I handed him the 3XD.
“There,” Op Nine said in that same gentle voice. “You see, Alfred? He is here. You’ve just provided us with the evidence.”
50
“What now?” Mr. Needlemier asked.
“Now some answers,” Op Nine said. He pulled Mike from the floor and plopped him down on the sofa. “What is Operation Utopia?”
Mike started to smile, but the look in Op Nine’s eyes killed it.
“A very noble cause that a very stupid kid ruined,” he said after a pause.
“The Charter is explicit in regards to—”
“Oh, don’t quote the Charter to me, Padre,” Mike said. “This is bigger than the Charter.”
“Your termination was a hoax, wasn’t it?”
Mike looked away. Op Nine didn’t seem to care.
“What was the director’s intent, Michael?”
“In a word? World peace. Oops. That’s two words.”
“The director went outside the Charter, did he not? He arranged your phony termination, the extraction of the Great Seals from our Vaults . . . He wanted you to free the outcasts in order to—what?”
“You’re the SPA. Isn’t it as plain as the boils on Al’s face?”
“Blackmail? The director would use the fallen to enforce world peace?”
“It’s beautiful, doncha think?” Mike said. “Once we made our little demonstration in the desert, who’s gonna have the guts to challenge the Company’s new world order? No more petty dictators or rogue states mucking around with peace and security. Somebody breaks the rules, we break the Seal. Perfect. Or at least it was on paper. Of course, we never considered the Kropp factor.” He looked at me. “One day I’m gonna kill you, Al, swear to God.”