Part 21 (1/2)
Now I was all caught up. If these weren't their exact words, they had to be d.a.m.n close. Help us find the kid before he brings us all down, Dr. Wittmer ... including you.
”I don't care that I'm in the recordings,” said Wittmer. ”It was a mistake, and I can live with the consequences.”
”Actually, I don't care that you're in the recordings, either,” said Owen. ”All I care about is who put you there. That's what we need to know.”
Wittmer's eyes s.h.i.+fted between Owen and me for a few moments, the latest issue of Car and Driver and the rest of his mail pressed hard against his chest.
It was one thing for him not to rat us out. It was another for him to rat out whomever he was working for. There would need to be a reason. A d.a.m.n good one.
Wittmer looked up at the sky. We all did. The sun was beginning to set behind a ma.s.s of charcoal-colored clouds that seemed to have arrived out of nowhere. Much like Owen and me.
”I think we should go inside,” said the doctor. ”It looks like rain.”
CHAPTER 64.
IT WAS a home for a guy who basically wasn't home all that much. That, or he just didn't care.
Not to say it was messy. Rather, it was spa.r.s.e. In the few rooms we walked past before settling in the kitchen, the furnis.h.i.+ngs consisted of the bare minimum, or in the case of the empty dining room, even less.
I wasn't much for metaphors, but Claire always was. For her, this would've been a lay-up. Dr. Douglas Wittmer clearly had money, but to see where he lived-how he lived-was to see a man defined by what he didn't have. There were things missing in his life.
”You want coffee?” he asked, pointing to the Keurig machine on the counter near the stove.
Owen and I both declined. We were anxious enough as it was.
The three of us headed over to a small cherrywood table in the corner underneath a small clock, the kind you'd more likely see hanging in an office or waiting room. After we all sat down, Wittmer immediately stood up to remove his blue blazer, hanging it on the back of his chair. He wasn't stalling, but he wasn't exactly rus.h.i.+ng, either.
Finally, after sitting down again, he took a deep breath and began.
”I was targeted,” he said, his tone straight as a ruler. To his credit, there wasn't a hint of his trying to make an excuse for himself. He was stating the facts, or really just one fact. ”They knew my wife was on Flight Ninety-Three.”
Owen and I both dropped our heads a bit. It spoke volumes about the events of 9/11 that a particular flight number could be so ingrained in the collective memory of a nation.
”I'm sorry,” said Owen.
”Yes,” I said. ”I'm sorry.”
”The thing is,” Wittmer continued, ”grief and anger can help you rationalize almost any behavior in the name of revenge. I know that's what he was banking on with me.”
It was so clear what we were witnessing. This was a man who needed to explain himself. Bare his soul a little, if not a lot. I was sure that Owen, even at his relatively young age, was thinking the same thing.
Perhaps it was that same youth, though, that had Owen wis.h.i.+ng the doctor would explain things just a tad bit faster. Fittingly, the only sound in the kitchen other than us was the measured tick ... tick ... tick of the wall clock above us.
”He?” Owen asked impatiently. In other words, Please, for the love of Pete, start naming names. ...
”I don't know if he's the only ringmaster, but it's certainly his circus,” said Wittmer. He drew another deep breath. ”Frank Karcher is the one who first approached me.”
I didn't recognize the name, nor, apparently, was I supposed to, given the way Wittmer was looking directly at Owen. And given the way Owen was nodding back at him, I guess it made sense. ”The kid” absolutely recognized the name.
”Frank Karcher is the National Clandestine Service chief of the CIA,” said Owen, turning to me. ”Basically, we're talking the kind of guy who likes to kick puppies.”
”So human torture wasn't much of a leap,” I said.
It was a quip, completely off the cuff. Still, the second the words left my mouth, I regretted them. I didn't know Karcher, but I did know that Wittmer was sitting right in front of me. He was also on the recordings. At best, the doctor was an accomplice. At worst? That was between him and his G.o.d.
And that was the point. Owen and I were there in his kitchen to get information, not to pa.s.s judgment on him. And I just had. A bit unfairly, no less. I wasn't the one who'd lost his wife on 9/11.
”I apologize,” I said to Wittmer. ”I didn't mean to-”
”That's all right,” he said. He drew another deep breath. ”At the beginning, I knew exactly what I was doing and why. Those recordings you have? As bad as they may look to a whole lot of people, there are just as many people these days-the Machiavellians in our so-called war on terror-who would believe the end justifies the means.”
”I'm confused, then,” I said. ”What changed? Why would you be talking to us?”
Wittmer leaned in, pressing his palms down on that cherrywood table with what might as well have been the weight of the world. ”Because those recordings you have don't tell the whole story,” he said. ”But mine do.”
CHAPTER 65.
WITTMER PUSHED back his chair and disappeared from the kitchen, returning about a half minute later with an old Dell laptop. While he was gone, Owen and I didn't utter a single word to each other. Really, what was there to say? The doctor had basically just promised to blow our minds. The only thing to do was shut up and wait for it.
Another half minute pa.s.sed while Wittmer's laptop booted up. Given the antic.i.p.ation, it felt like an eternity. Finally, he clicked on a file and pressed Play, angling the screen in front of us so we all had a good view. It was showtime.
”This is from the same black site outside of Warsaw during the same time period,” he explained.
Indeed, from the get-go everything about the recording looked familiar. The windowless room shot in black-and-white. The lone metal chair with a Middle Eastern man shackled to it, followed by the two men in suits who restrained him while he received the shot to his carotid artery.
Of course, the doctor wielding the syringe looked familiar as well. We were in his kitchen.
”What is your name?” asked the voice off camera.
Immediately, a second voice translated the question into Arabic, and as with Owen's recordings, the Arabic was translated back into English via subt.i.tles. Everything was the same.
Except, in this case, the prisoner's response.
”I speak English,” he said softly.
The two voices from behind the camera could be heard conversing, but even with the volume maxed out on Wittmer's laptop, we couldn't understand what they were saying. I a.s.sumed it was about the way they wanted to proceed, although you wouldn't know it given how the first voice repeated the question-”What is your name?”-as if he were some automated prompt.
”My name is Makin Pabalan,” answered the prisoner.