The music at the club began to swell and intrude on their conversation. The late night crowd of short dresses, skinny bodies and teased hair all
flirting with rich and plush foreign nationals was supplanting the once-intimate atmosphere from the dinner crowd. River eyed the crowd and noticed
one alluring brunette giggling over a drink with her friend as her eyes darted shyly his way. River weighed the idea of staying on after sending his
friend to his hotel and meeting her.
“Maybe. Or maybe someone, one of his abductors, is just toying with you.”
Hugh now let all pretense of calm aside and looked manic. “Please, River. I need your help, your connections. I need you to find my son. Alive,
bring him home. If not…”
A tear, then two, then three, streamed from his eyes. Hugh placed his thumb and middle finger against the corners of his eyes and squeezed, fighting
to stave off the emotions.
“If not, you want me to exact justice.”
Hugh let out an anguished, almost animalistic cry, just for one brief moment. The man gritted his teeth, and then slowly his face returned to a
natural, if not hauntingly neutral, composure. His friend withdrew an envelope from his plaid sports coat and slid it across the table to River.
“I’m asking this more as a favor than anything else. I certainly can’t afford much, especially on an Army pension. But I’ve given you
everything I have.”
River took the envelope and slipped it in his pocket. No sense leaving anything on the table that would attract any more attention. The Czech
Republic certainly had become one of the most Westernized, most successful, of all the former Soviet satellites. But River knew that didn’t mean
there could be one or two innocuous people there very interested in what a retired Army general and an American ex-pat with questionable ties to
various intelligence circles were meeting about. Particularly with one of the party doing his best not to make an emotional scene.
“We’ll talk later about compensation.” River now sat back and engaged in his business mode. “I’m going to need any names you can give me,
Hugh. Coworkers, superiors, friends, lovers. I’ll dig as much as I can, Hugh, but you understand that a detective I ain’t.”
“I know. But you know how to get information, how to find information. I mean, Jesus Christ, the CIA came to you to find out what was going on
behind the scenes during the partisan war in Iraq.”
River, held up his hand, silently commanding his friend to keep his voice down. Hugh looked almost as if he’d been slapped, scarred and ashamed.
“I’ll help you, Hugh. More out of friendship,” he said. “But understand, I’ll be digging into your son’s life, top to bottom. I find in
situations like this, the victim’s own life is as shadowy as the people who’ve abducted him. I’m just warning you, you may not like what I
find.”
Hugh appeared deflated, an abstract of the stern commanding figure Gen. Cross was during the Second Gulf War. The transformation disturbed a part of
River that was used to constancy and dependability. But then again, this was the general’s only son, a boy he remembered him doting upon for as
long as he and Hugh were friends.
“I don’t care. Just find him.”
River glanced back down to the phone and studied those last enigmatic text messages again. AIASP.

