The Flight Attendant



After being advised of the nature of the interview, McCAULEY provided the following information.


McCAULEY acknowledged seeing his sister-in-law CASSANDRA BOWDEN on Saturday afternoon and evening, August 4, in New York City, and insisted that her behavior was “mostly” normal. She went with his family to the Bronx Zoo and then to a restaurant in lower Manhattan. He noticed that she was checking her phone more than most adults would throughout the day and during dinner, and “definitely seemed nervous about something.”


He said he cannot recall ever seeing her without his wife ROSEMARY BOWDEN-McCAULEY present. He said the two of them have never e-mailed or spoken on the phone.


He stated firmly that he has never shared any classified information with BOWDEN, and BOWDEN has never asked him for any. He said that while they have discussed life in the military very generally and his background as an engineer, they always talked more about her job than his. He denied ever giving her papers, data, diagrams, flash drives, or e-mails that had anything to do with the disposal of chemical weapons or the remaining U.S. stockpile; he insisted that he never shared any information on sarin, VX, or any chemical weapons not yet destroyed in the U.S. arsenal.


He said he never took work home; he said there was no way that his wife ROSEMARY could have shared any information with her sister or provided CASSANDRA BOWDEN with classified intelligence, because he didn’t tell her anything.


He said he was shocked that his sister-in-law might have killed ALEX SOKOLOV, though he acknowledged that she has a drinking problem. He volunteered that he does not believe she is a Russian spy.





35




But Buckley didn’t shoot.

Instead, almost as if it were happening to someone else, as if it were an out-of-body experience, Cassie saw him dragging her by her arms further into the hotel room and away from the door. Her dress had rolled up near her hips and she felt the rug burning her thighs. Intellectually she welcomed the discomfort: it suggested that feeling and mobility were returning. When they reached the bed, he let her go, dropping her unceremoniously onto the floor beside it as if she were a canoe dragged from the beach, and then sat down on the edge of the mattress and pointed the Beretta down at her chest.

“Yell for help and I’ll kill you,” he said.

Cassie tried to shake her head. She was indeed able to move it. “I won’t,” she murmured, her voice still mushy and hoarse. She tried to focus anywhere but on the tip of the long silencer at the end of the pistol.

“Tell me about Elena.”

“Elena?”

Instantly he switched the gun to his other hand, grabbing it by the barrel, and rapped her hard on the shin with the grip. She closed her eyes and cried out reflexively against the pain, and when she opened them he was already aiming the weapon at her once more. She collected herself and whimpered, “I don’t know who that is.”

“The woman who came to Alex Sokolov’s suite in Dubai.”

“Miranda?”

He rolled his eyes. “Miranda,” he repeated.

“We had a drink. The vodka she brought. Then she left.”

He pounded her other shin with the gun, but either because she was expecting it or had just experienced precisely this agony, this time she merely grunted through her tears.

“What were you doing with her?”

“I told you, drinking! That’s all!”

“Did she recruit you?”

“Recruit me?”

“Cassie, let me be clear: the only chance you have of walking out of this hotel room alive is if you give me the names. You knew Elena, obviously. Who else is embedded?”

“Embedded? I don’t know what you mean, I don’t understand any of this,” she told him. She was crying now and didn’t care. “Recruits? Embedded? I’m not a spy! I’m nothing. You know me. You know what I am. I’m just…”

“Why didn’t she kill you?”

“I don’t know! I’m telling you, I don’t know anything,” she whimpered.

He stared at her and seemed to think about this. Then: “I almost believe you. Almost.”

“Because I’m telling you the truth.”

“Tell me about your brother-in-law.”

“He’s in the army,” she mumbled. “He’s a major. He’s stationed at Blue Grass.”

“What else?”

“There is no what else.”

He stood up, his feet on either side of her body, and aimed the Beretta straight down at her. “You are fast running out of time, Cassie. Why were you with Sokolov in Dubai?”

“We met on the plane, that’s all there was to it,” she mewled. “Please don’t kill me.”

“Why was he interested in you?”

Why was any man interested in her? she wanted to ask in return. The answer was simple: because she was a drunk and she was easy. And while a small part of her understood the rightness of sarcasm and self-loathing when she appraised her life, there was a gun pointed at her. And so she replied simply, “He wanted a good time. I guess I did, too.”

From the corner of her vision she saw that Enrico had moved his head. She didn’t dare turn her gaze on him because she didn’t want to draw Buckley’s attention to the young bartender, but Cassie noticed that one of his eyes was open. “He was just a guy on the plane,” she went on, hoping to hold Buckley’s interest. “Someone to drink with in Dubai. I didn’t think I’d ever see him again.” She didn’t know if there was any way in the world that Enrico could creep over to him without drawing his attention, but the idea gave her hope.

“Did he mention the name of anyone else he was seeing in Dubai?”

“No. I mean, I knew he had a meeting, but I assumed it had something to do with his hedge fund.”

“Did he mention anyone else who worked at the airline?”

“No, he didn’t.” She tried to watch Enrico with soft eyes: eyes that focused on nothing but took in everything. Her friend Paula had grown up with a horse, and it was how she was taught to ride: to see her surroundings without turning her head and thus confusing the animal beneath her by moving her body. Enrico had managed to inch a little closer to the bed from his spot outside the bathroom. Any moment, she supposed, he was going to dive at Buckley. When he did—if she could move quickly, which she was unsure if she could—she would try and help. She would attack too. Years ago she’d taken a voluntary self-defense course the airline had offered. She’d never needed to use anything she’d learned (or, alas, she’d been too drunk to realize that she should be defending herself), and she tried to recall what the instructors had taught in the class. There was something about pulling your assailant into you when he had his hands on you. Elbowing his head. Poking or punching his abdomen. She could do that. She would do anything to force the man by the bed to deal with multiple attacks.

“I’m about to go through your suitcase and your kit. I am going to empty everything onto the floor. Sensation should be returning about now. Do not get up off the floor, and do not try and stop me. Are we clear?”

She nodded.

But then Buckley swung his arm as if swatting someone with the back of his hand—he’d seen Enrico—and calmly pulled the trigger of Uncle Piero’s Beretta.





36




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