Long Road to Mercy (Atlee Pine, #1)(72)
“I’m not sure that anyone ‘runs’ this place. It’s far more democratic, some might say chaotic, than hierarchical.” He smiled at his remark.
“And yet they brought us in to see you.”
“Well, I have been here longer than most. And it seems that many of the administrative duties fall into my lap. I don’t mind.” He settled farther back in his chair.
“I saw some of the TED talks the Society did,” said Blum. “Very interesting stuff.”
“Thank you,” replied Fabrikant.
Pine interjected, “Any idea where Ben might be?”
“Why would you think I would know that?”
“Doesn’t he work here?”
“No one really works here. We volunteer our time and skills.”
“And what sort of work do you do here?”
“We analyze. We read. We discuss. We talk. We listen. We travel. We write papers. We give lectures. We’re advocates on the policy front. We lobby those in power on important issues.” He motioned to Blum. “And we give TED Talks, which provide us with a global platform. I think our latest cumulative view count is north of a billion on various social media sites. Truly remarkable. What would we do without social media?”
“Well, it certainly has its pros and cons,” noted Pine.
Fabrikant leaned back in his chair and studied them for a few moments. “So how can I help you?”
“What can you tell us about Ben Priest?”
“Ben is a friend. A first-rate mind. Traveled the world. Very interesting person.”
“Okay, but what does he do?”
“He does many things. He worked in government for a time.”
“What part of government?”
“The State Department, I believe.”
“Isn’t that what everyone says when they don’t want to tell you what they really do?”
“You take me out of my depth there,” said Fabrikant.
“Okay, we understand that Priest helps people who need it. And that he was helping someone specifically at the moment.”
“Who?”
“I don’t have a name, but I have a picture.”
Pine showed him the digital sketch on her phone. She watched him closely for any hint that Fabrikant recognized the person.
“Can’t say that I know him,” said Fabrikant tersely.
Either he was an exceptional poker player, or he genuinely did not know the man, concluded Pine.
“Were you aware of anything that Priest was working on recently?”
“Not really, no.”
Pine looked around. “This is quite a place.”
“I think it’s a bit gaudy, actually. It used to be a robber baron’s mansion. He wasn’t from here, but he built it when he realized having a place close to the people in government he was bribing was smart.”
“Some things never change,” noted Blum.
Fabrikant nodded his head. “So I believe.”
Pine said, “All this talking and traveling and analyzing. It must cost a lot.”
“As I mentioned, our members work without compensation. We pay for their travel and other related expenses of course, but no salaries.”
“But you still have some form of funding,” persisted Pine.
“We have benefactors.”
“And who are they?”
“They are private. And will remain so. Are you concerned about Ben’s safety?”
“Probably.”
“That is unfortunate.”
“It certainly is for him.” She studied him. “May I be blunt?”
“I thought you were being blunt.”
“I haven’t reached my personal DefCon One yet.”
Fabrikant spread his hands. “Please.”
“I have come to understand that there may be international implications with this case.”
“Such as?”
“Look, I’m going to take a chance that you actually are a society for good and tell you something that ordinarily I wouldn’t at this stage, because, frankly, I don’t know you. But I sense I’m running out of time and I have to get some traction on this sucker.”
“I’m listening.”
“I’m talking about a clusterfuck of epic proportion that will strike right at the heart of this country and perhaps destroy it.”
Fabrikant’s amused look faded. “I hope that is your DefCon One. I would not like to think there is another level to be reached.” He paused. “What exactly are you talking about?”
Pine glanced at Blum and said, “Maybe a coup directed at our government.”
Fabrikant’s jaw dropped slightly. “A coup? This is America, not some banana republic.”
“This country began with a revolution.”
“Yes, well, that was a long time ago.”
“So history never repeats itself?”
“Actually, it does, all the time.”
“Okay, then.”
“You’re serious about this?”
“People who know about these things are serious about it.”
“You mean like Ben Priest and Simon Russell?”
“And perhaps the Chinese are involved as well.”