Janson turned right, glided through the pedestrian scrum, and appeared suddenly before Kingsman Helms, blocking his path with a pleasant smile.
âSorry Iâm late.â
Jessica Kincaid appeared just as suddenly from the other direction, a sweatshirt draped over her shoulders and a handbag under her arm. Her hair was slicked back from a sweaty workout as if she lived in the neighborhood and showered at home. Like other young women walking by in yoga pants, she could have left her kids with the nanny, or perhaps she was just waking up from a late-night restaurant shift. Janson saw that she was on edge, her eyes hyperactive, not loving his choice for the meet with its myriad walkways crowded with civilians and the dense pack of cars in the shadowy parking lots under the pier shed.
Janson took Helmsâs elbow. âLetâs walk.â
He steered him outdoors into the morning light. The pier thrust west two hundred meters into the Hudson River. There was a narrow walk between the two-story pier shed and the slip. The parking-garage doors were open to the breeze. The slip was filled with charter yachts and dinner boats moored alongside. Kincaid trailed, watching the cars and the boats.
âMy wifeâs family is pressuring the Italian government,â Helms said. âThey have influence.â
âTo do what?â
âEnlist the military. Whatâs your opinion of Italian Special Forces?â
âThey invented underwater commando tactics, back in the day. But theyâre not SEALs. Iâll say it again, pirates are either a US Navy job, or you pay the ransom.â
âItâs too late for ransom. They killed the yachtâs owner.â
Janson said, âWeâve learned that Mr. Adler was a hothead used to getting his own way. He made his pile taking huge risks trading currency. Hotheaded gamblers used to getting their way make fatal mistakes when they fall in with the wrong crowd.â He kept the âMad Maxâ Maxammed rumor to himself.
Helms shook his head impatiently, clearly uninterested in Adler beyond what his death augured for his wifeâs safety. âYou continue to fail to understand my point. I have seen you both in action. I know what Iâm asking for. The best.â
Janson raised his eyebrows and cast Kincaid a look as if he were asking, How do we get out of this? Kincaid was frowning at the dinner cruise boat Bateaux Celestial, where busboys and waiters setting tables for lunch could be seen only murkily through a smoked glass canopy.
âYouâre not qualified to judge the best,â Janson said bluntly. âBut if youâre hell-bent on going the private-enterprise route instead of using your considerable clout to engage the Navy, why not hire the president of your Global Security Division?â
âDoug Case? Heâs in a wheelchair.â
Janson stopped walking. He held on to Helmsâs arm, which stopped him abruptly. âYou say youâve seen us in action, Kingsman. You have no idea what youâve seen. I have seen Doug Case in action. And I am qualified to judge the best. Even in a wheelchair Doug can outfight and outsmart any pirate on the Indian Ocean. And heâs got the contacts in East Africa, where ASC is exploring for oil, are you not?â
âDamned straight we are. The East African rift is one of the last great oil and natural-gas deposits on the planet.â
Janson shot an unreadable glance in Kincaidâs direction. ââRiftâ is the operative word,â he said, and quoted from the Catspaw reports he had commissioned to prep for meeting Helms.
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