"I think maybe it has something to do with the vibrations, some kind of energy thing..."
"Okay, it doesn't matter. Who the hell knows, right?"
"I sure don't."
"Okay, whatever," Bullitt began, "I think it's your turn now. You think of something..."
Harry began playing and Bullitt instantly recognized a very familiar melody. "That's Rhapsody in Blue, right?" he said aloud.
"Yup, that's right. Lay your hand flat on the piano so you can feel..."
But by that point Bullitt was mesmerized by the appearance of a silver sphere hanging in the room, hovering just inches above the piano, and he saw the entire room within a kind of shimmering fisheye reflection, but then the sphere started to grow...
"Uh, Harry...?"
"I know, I know...just go with it, Frank."
It felt like the sphere was coming closer and closer, then it seemed to vibrate intensely for a second - before it popped - and in the next moment he saw the distortion had inverted and he was looking at the inside of a room through what looked like a fisheye lens...
...only it wasn't the same room he was sitting in...
...he was in some sort of concert hall...
...and a long-faced man was playing the piano, other musicians were still warming up, then came a long pause, the room in total silence...
...and then a clarinetist began playing the opening notes...
"Listen here, to the glissando," Callahan said, his voice full of wonder.
"What are we seeing, Frank?"
"Gershwin and Ferde GrofΓ© at final rehearsals for Rhapsody...it was a really famous moment..."
Bullitt stood and broke the connection. "Harry, I hate to say this, but we've got to focus on, well, you know...Stacy..."
Harry drifted back, but Frank immediately noticed that something was very wrong with Callahan. He was 'spaced-out' and drenched in sweat, his skin was pale - his face white as a sheet - and his hands were trembling...
"Harry, man, you alright?"
Callahan shook his head. "I don't know, Frank."
"Has this happened the other two times you did this?"
Callahan nodded. "Not this bad, though. I think it's getting worse each time I try it."
"I feel it too, just a little. What do you think would happen if I tried it?"
"Tried what?"
"If I played something. You could show me how, right?"
"I don't know. We can try..." Frank sat and Callahan stood, but he kept close to the keyboard. "Put these fingers here," he said, using his right hand on the keys to show Frank. "And your left fingers here. Now, just press them."
Frank pressed them gently, too gently for effective hammer strikes.
"More like this," Callahan said, demonstrating by hitting the keys located up an octave.
"Got it." Bullitt hit the keys, this time striking a perfect chord.
"Okay, just close your eyes and hit it, keep your fingers on the keys and when one chord is finished I'm going to move your fingers a little, make a new chord, and once that's done hit it again."
"Cool. I'm ready."
"Okay, think of Stacy and hit it."
Frank hit the first chord then Harry rearranged his fingers. A second chord followed, then a third, and a fourth...
"I got nothing, Harry. Nada!"
"Okay, I was afraid of that, but at least we know two things we didn't know before."
"Which is?"
"We can't see forward in time - only back, and I may be the only effective conduit to reach these places."
Bullitt looked at Callahan again. "Man, your face is still white as a ghost, Harry. Sit down, let me get you something to drink..."
Callahan turned and immediately dropped to the floor; Bullitt jumped over and knelt beside him, felt for a pulse but could barely find one.
"This ain't good," he said to the room. "Not good at all..."
It took a minute but Callahan's eyes fluttered once, then opened, then he looked around the room. "What happened?"
"You passed out, Amigo."
"The room started spinning, then it was like I was standing in a room full of stars..."
"Hypoxia, man. Could you be, like, dehydrated?"
"Yeah, maybe so. Can't remember the last time I had a glass of water."
"Harry? You got to take better care of yourself..."
"Coming from someone who just ate four tons of pancakes, I find that kind of funny."
Frank seemed to drift off for a moment, too, then he spoke: "I'm not sure you should do this again, Harry. Not if it's going to hit you like this."
Callahan nodded. "Maybe, but you're right about one thing. We've got to find out what we can about Stacy, while there's still time..."
________________________________
Didi Goodman had been rocked by Sara Callahan's murder; perhaps more than anyone other than Harry. When Stacy Bennett arrived, her 'legend' was still intact and she, like everyone else on the team, never suspected Stacy might be working for any other group. Yet one thing had troubled her about the whole affair, ever since Sara's body was discovered and the escape helicopter was halfway to Venice. Someone, either working at the clinic or planted in the village, knew enough about the clinic's routine to know the best time to carry out both the hit, and the escape. This person had to understand local weather conditions, not to mention helicopter operations and limitations. They probably had a VHF radio installed at their location, one with an antenna tall enough to facilitate medium-range communications. And, more than likely, they had remained in Davos after the event to maintain the integrity of their cover.
Davos had a long history welcoming foreigners, and people from all around the world could come to and leave the area without arousing the least bit of suspicion. These people, among the wealthiest in the world, regularly built large, well-equipped residences all around the valley, and as a result the many businesses in town jealously guarded their relationships with these patrons. So, rather like the fabled 'numbered' bank accounts commonly opened at the largest Swiss banks, secrecy was assured, even when unusual installations might have raised eyebrows elsewhere.
VHF antennae, on the other hand, were hard to camouflage. While they could be hidden on an elaborate HF/UHF rig, such as might be found on the grounds of a serious Ham radio operator, VHF transmitter antennae looked different. If you knew what to look for, they could be easily identified, too. Given that there were few private helipads in the valley, very few people had reason to install this type of antenna, which further eased the task of finding and eliminating possible suspect facilities.
The first houses she found with such equipment were easily traced back to government entities. The United States maintained a small diplomatic compound in the village which, she knew, housed several CIA assets whose job it was to keep track of Soviet agents working in the area. They had a veritable antenna farm on their roof, too. The Soviet's house was similarly equipped; Japan's was too.
A house she identified as belonging to a Japanese industrialist was located, and she found this man's principle businesses included manufacturing all kinds of radio equipment, so this house was scratched from the list of possible suspect facilities. Another house, quite small by local standards, was built across the valley from the main ski area, and this house had a modest installation. She had difficulty finding out who owned the house too, which immediately increased her level of suspicion. It took a few days digging in the library and in the building permits office to locate even a sliver of information, and this indicated that a lawyer in Berne owned the house. Colonel Goodman set up surveillance on this firm and soon found that about a quarter of their income derived from unspecified business and legal consulting fees, and these fees were paid from an account that originated in Panama City. More research revealed that these Panamanian accounts were fed by banks in Medellin, Colombia.
The colonel then sent two teams back to Davos; one to monitor all COMMS into and out of the suspect house, and the other to break-in and plant monitoring devices within this home and around the grounds. Within a week Goodman's assets figured out that the Medellin Cartel was coordinating drug deliveries all over western Europe through this house and, as well, when 'wet work' was ordered by Escobar or his lieutenants, assassins were dispatched and their actions coordinated by the people stationed there.
Goodman then did something very uncharacteristic at this point; he ordered that the house be destroyed, and in such a way that maximum loss of personnel would be guaranteed. In fact, he wanted a display of force so large that it would send a crystal clear message to Escobar: we know who you are, what you're up to, and if you don't knock it off - you'll be next.
The nearest house was a hundred and thirty meters away, so ancillary damage would be limited to broken glass and, hopefully, little more than that. Teams were moved into place, equipment and explosives delivered. Personnel movements inside the house were recorded and tallied, patterns analyzed, and then...decisions made.
A few weeks later the Swiss night was split open when a blast, estimated to have been caused by a ton and a half of C4, rocked the valley. After the smoke cleared and as investigators moved-in to sift through the rubble, telltale signs emerged that drugs were being processed on site and reporters soon lost interest in the story. Images taken by a reporter in a helicopter revealed a blast crater fifty meters in diameter and ten meters deep, yet no one thought this unusual.
Yet in the aftermath, the volume of radiotelephone traffic in and around Medellin, Colombia, picked up dramatically. The colonel's radio intercept teams were in place and ready for the deluge, yet it turned out that no one was ready or even in a position to counter what Pablo Escobar had in mind.
_________________________________
"So, tell me what actions we have taken so far?" Pablo Escobar said to the group assembled in the large living room of his estancia's main house.
"We are sending coded messages to our partners indicating that we believe this action was undertaken by criminal elements in Italy," a former KGB officer said, looking directly at Escobar. "We know the Americans and Germans have intercepted these messages..."
"And how do we know this?" Escobar asked quietly, looking at the lone female in the room.
"Our listening station in Arlington, Virginia picked up calls between FBI headquarters and CIA Langley," Stacy Bennett said. "These messages repeated the Mafia connection we planted."
"So," Escobar continued, "they don't know that we know the Americans did this to us? Is that correct?"