Thursday morning Brad drove into Norfolk to make the rounds of boat stores and marine chandleries. He returned after lunch time with his truck bed loaded with coils of thick nylon dock and anchor lines, cardboard boxes full of assorted cruising gear, and a pair of giant deep cycle batteries that could easily power a golf cart through 36 holes. His tires crunched down the oyster shell driveway past the empty farmhouse and outbuildings of his seldom-seen absentee landlord, and as he neared the river he saw that he had visitors. A dusty black Chevy Suburban and a burgundy Crown Victoria were parked in his turn-around circle under the oak tree. Both vehicles had opaquely tinted windows and sprouted numerous small antennas.
Brad pulled off to the side of the drive to allow them room to leave and stepped out of his pickup. The four doors of the Suburban opened at once and four men got out, white men wearing sport coats and ties in the Indian Summer heat. Another pair of similarly attired men got out of the Crown Vic. There were only two reasons Brad could think of why anyone would wear a jacket and tie and long pants in the almost ninety degree weather: because it was departmental policy, and to conceal firearms. Brad was wearing his standard khaki shorts, polo shirt and boat shoes. He stood by his truck, and they fanned out as they walked toward him. He noticed that all their jackets were hanging open, presumably for fast access to their hidden pistols. Half of them were wearing dark sunglasses, the very image of the bad-ass detective.
“Bradley Thomas Fallon?” asked the oldest man, the only one over fifty judging by his lined face.
“Who’s asking?” Brad had a watery feeling in his gut but tried to give no sign of his unease.
“FBI. I’m Special Agent James Gibson. We’d like to talk to you.” Gibson held out his credentials briefly for Fallon to see: a gold badge and a laminated ID in their own leather wallet. One of the younger agents walked behind and around Brad. He had an unseen device on his belt that resembled a cell phone; if Brad Fallon had been carrying a firearm it would have begun vibrating. It didn’t, so he nodded an “okay” to his superior.
“Mr. Fallon, why don’t we sit in our truck and get out of the heat while we talk?” asked the oldest agent.
“I’m fine out here thank you.”
“Please Mr. Fallon, we’ll only take a few minutes of your time, and then we’ll be on our way.”
Brad looked around him at the six agents. One of them, a tall man with weight lifter’s shoulders straining against his jacket said, “Don’t be an asshole Fallon. If we were arresting you today, you’d already be handcuffed. So do everybody a favor, and let’s have a short talk in the air conditioned truck. Please.” He smiled bemusedly at Brad and they locked eyes. He had blue eyes like Brad, brush-cut blond hair, and a neck like one of the oak tree’s branches.
He gave up and walked with them to their Suburban; its motor was idling noisily. He briefly wondered if he was going to be hauled away as soon as the door was closed behind him, but he didn’t see any alternative. He warily climbed into the backseat of the Suburban like a rabbit visiting a python’s cage. Gibson sat in the front passenger seat, the burly blond sat in the back seat next to him.
The third bench seat had been removed. The back half of the truck was full of aluminum and plastic lockers and boxes, weapons cases, body armor, communications gear, and other police and military items. The two agents settled in, closed the doors, and turned in their seats to face their “person of interest.”
Special Agent Gibson surprised him with his first question. “Well Mr. Fallon, how much longer until you sail off into the sunset?”
Brad tried not to express any astonishment at their knowledge. Perhaps Gibson was simply making an educated guess, trying to spook him. After all, there was 44 foot mastless sailboat tied up at the dock. “It depends on how many problems I have getting the boat ready.”
“Well you should be able to go rather far on $68,000, I’d say. And I understand that the Adalaska Corporation has a very generous transportation policy, so you can always fly back to the oil fields if your account gets thin. Really, it’s a remarkable achievement for a young man hardly thirty years old. But I’m guessing your parents in Florida would prefer that you finish college, instead of sailing off around the world.”
Brad took a deep, slow breath, feeling flushed in the face, and said, “Okay guys, I’m impressed. You know all about me. What do you want?”
The muscular agent next to Brad said, “Maybe it’s your assault weapons. Maybe it’s the AR-15 rifle you bought at; let me see here, A&A Sporting Goods in Missoula
Montana in 1996. Maybe it’s the Mini-14 you bought in Jacksonville
Florida in 1995. You’ve heard about the new law, haven’t you?”
“I think I might have heard something about it.”
“Uh huh. So do you still have the rifles? They’ll get you ten years hard time after next Tuesday.”
“I sold both rifles years ago. Two-two-three isn’t my caliber.”
“Is that so? Can you prove it?”
From the front seat Agent Gibson said, “Settle down gentlemen. We’re not interested in your old rifles, bought or sold. Not until next week anyway. We’re only interested in some friends of yours.” Gibson opened a cream colored folder and handed several grainy black and white photos to Brad. Brad could see that several of the pictures had been taken inside the hardware store in Highpoint. There was a picture of the store owner Cecil Towers, along with two of the men who had been part of the conversation at the counter, and a few others.
“Of course I know him; he’s the manager of Dixie Hardware. The old man with the beard I’ve seen around, the other man I only saw once at the store. Am I supposed to know them?”
“Don’t play stupid Fallon,” Gibson replied. “We know you’re a bright guy. I’ll lay our cards on the table. We need to know everything about Shifflett’s friends and acquaintances, and we need to know it ASAP. We need to know the extent of militia activity in southeast Virginia, and if any of Shifflett’s old militia buddies helped him at the stadium. We need to know if they’re planning any more actions, and we need to know about it like right now.”
Brad was stunned by their questions. “How the hell would I know? I’ve been here less than two months! The only way I know anybody around here is running into them in a store.”
The crew-cut agent said, “So you’ve never been shooting with any of them?”
“Of course not! I don’t even know them.”
“I see,” continued the agent. “Fallon, have you ever been to the Mineral Springs Rifle Range down by the Carolina border?”
Actually this blond agent did not carry FBI credentials, because he was the Assistant Special-Agent-In-Charge (or ASIC) of the Norfolk Virginia Field Office of the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives, formerly the BATF, and still commonly called that or simply the ATF. Since the massacre he had been temporarily attached to the newly formed MD-Rifle Task Force, which fell under the Joint Domestic Terrorism Task Force, answering to the Department of Homeland Security. The federal “alphabet agencies” were playing Scrabble as they responded to changing terrorist threats. Supervisory Special Agent Gibson had come down from Washington with additional agents to augment the Joint Task Force in the Tidewater Virginia area as they ran down Shifflett’s militia connections.
The muscular blond ATF agent knew that Brad Fallon had been to Mineral Springs because he had reviewed videotapes showing Fallon there two weeks earlier, participating in a monthly rifle shooting competition that drew serious shooters from several states. ATF agents routinely trolled the parking lots of gun shows and shooting ranges covertly taping license plates and people’s faces. The tag numbers were crunched by computers, revealing the regional and national patterns behind the ebb and flow of militia and so-called “patriot” groups and their hangers-on. The faces were scanned into digital biometric databases and matched with vehicles, addresses, and many of the weapons these individuals had purchased.
It was a well-established fact that extreme right wing gun nuts and militia kooks were devoted attendees of gun shows and rifle shooting ranges. Fallon’s Ford truck had indeed been filmed at Mineral Springs, along with those of several members of a group called the Black Water Rod and Gun Club. This was a group that Jimmy Shifflett had once belonged to. This was a group which the local ATF Field Office suspected of being a cover for a clandestine militia organization based in Tidewater Virginia.
“Sure, I’ve been there twice. Once to sight in rifles, and once to shoot in a match.”
“What kind of rifles Mr. Fallon?” asked Gibson. “There are rifles… and there are rifles.”
“I thought you already knew, Agent Gibson. I thought you knew everything about me. Don’t you already have it written down?”
“Don’t be a smartass Brad, don’t go getting an attitude. We’re not in a joking mood. After the Stadium Massacre, a lot of things changed, a lot of things. The American people have had it with you gun nuts, so you’d better buy a clue and get with the program while you can! Special Agent Hammet has already started an investigation into the disposition of your assault rifles, and that’s just for starters. We can freeze your bank accounts, or we can invalidate your passport with one phone call, do you understand me? We’re not playing for match sticks here! We’ve only got to say the magic word ‘terrorism’ and you’ll be put into a whole other category, and you won’t know what hit you! We’ll drop you into a cage with the other terrorists, and you’ll never even see a lawyer!”
Brad couldn’t make words form; his mouth had gone bone dry.
“We know things about you that you can’t imagine. We know you shot 294 out of a perfect three hundred with your Swedish Mauser over iron sights at Mineral Springs, and took second place against folks who shoot competition every weekend of their lives. We have the entire roster of shooters; we know their scores, where they live, most of the guns they own, how much ammunition they bought last year.
“We know that after two good semesters in college you suddenly quit and enlisted in the Navy to try to make it into the SEALs, but you washed out on some sort of oxygen test in a pressure chamber. So you served the rest of your enlistment as a machinist’s mate and got out. I’ve got your DD 214 discharge paper right here in this file. Then you went up to Alaska to make a ton of money, and now here you are on the verge of sailing away on your own boat.
“Well if you want to get that boat finished and sail away, you need to do your patriotic duty and help us out. I can’t put it any more clearly than that. Now if you’ll excuse me I have other places to go today.” Gibson climbed down from the Suburban, leaving Brad alone with the younger agent, who except for his northeastern accent reminded him of a Russian boxer, with his blond flat top, pale blue eyes and broken nose. Gibson got into the burgundy Crown Vic, which departed immediately. The remaining agents had climbed aboard Guajira in their black-soled street shoes, shed their jackets, and made themselves comfortable in the cockpit under the shade of the oak.
****
The blond Special Agent had recruited and run dozens of confidential informants during his twelve years with the ATF. Frequently his CI’s were parolees eager to avoid a return trip to prison, which they knew could easily be arranged if they failed to cooperate. But from Hammet’s point of view even non-felons typically had ‘hooks’ attached to them: a struggling business which could not endure a microscopic federal regulatory ‘rectal exam’, a critically needed job and paycheck which could not be lost, or young children and pretty wives which could not be left behind while Daddy went off to prison. Among the federal law enforcement agencies, the ATF had always been known for ruthlessly manufacturing federal cases out of thin air where necessary, usually in order to create a needed informant as part of an ongoing investigation. The 20,000 plus federal and state gun laws on the books, which were often vaguely written or even contradictory, made gun owners and especially licensed gun dealers an easy target for extra-legal arm twisting.
In Fallon’s case his ‘hook’ was his eagerness to finish his boat and get away sailing, after years of working steadily toward that goal. Once he accepted that his bank accounts and his passport could be frozen at their whim, Fallon would come aboard, the veteran ATF agent was certain of it.
“So what’s it like sailing across an ocean on something like that? You could never get me on one. Fishing on the bay is all the ocean I can handle.” This was just an ice breaker; he knew that Fallon was still somewhat in shock.
Brad was slightly disarmed by the innocent question. “It’s not for everybody. But it beats the nine-to-five and a house in the suburbs, at least for me.”
“Oh give me the suburbs any day. I just wish I could cut back to nine to five! Okay Fallon, here’s the deal: you want to go sailing, and we want you to help us for a little while. If you help us, I’m sure that we’ll find that no investigation is needed into your assault rifles. We’ll give you a clean bill of health, forget we ever heard of you, and you’ll be on your merry way. If you try to move your money offshore before that, you’ll find that it’s been blocked. Screw with us, and you’ll find out what it’s like to live in a six by nine cage. That’s just the facts of life Brad, those are the ground rules.
“Now what we want you to do is get close to the folks on this list. You’re a big deal shooter and hunter, so they’ll trust you. All of these guys belong to the Black Water Rod and Gun Club, which is a cover for a secret anti-government militia group. There’s no formal membership roster, no dues, and the members come and go, but these men here seem to be the core.
“The club was formed right here in Suffolk in the 80’s, but it really grew in the mid 90’s. That was the same time that most of the open militias were fading away or moving underground after Oklahoma City. Most of the members of this ‘club’ are ex-military, most of them own and shoot assault rifles, most of them have four wheel drive trucks and a lot of them have boats. We want to know what connection they had to Shifflett and the Stadium Massacre, and if they have plans to commit any more terrorist acts in the future.
“That’s it. Now here’s where you come in. Most Friday nights some of them have what passes for a meeting in the back room at Lester’s Diner in Highpoint. They eat dinner and drink a lot of coffee, and then they pile into their trucks and go off into the swamps to shoot some damn animals or something. We want you to meet them at Lester’s and buddy up to them. We just want you to get an invitation to do whatever the hell it is they do. They’ve seen you around town for a while; they’ve seen you at the range, so it won’t be a problem. We know how these groups operate. Any shooting or fishing or hunting that comes along, you want to go, tag along. That’s it. Easy stuff. Then you call and tell me about it. Any questions?”
****
Brad had too many questions to count, but settled for, “What’s your name? Who do you work for?”
“Yeah right! You can just call me George, and I work for your government. Any more questions?”
Brad was studying George’s face, committing the small blue eyes and sprinkling of old acne scars and bent nose to his memory. He thought he had heard his last name but could not remember it. “H” something. If he ever met “George” on equal footing in the future, free of coercion and official blackmail, he wanted to deal with him personally. Threatening his freedom and his boat was threatening the very core of Brad’s existence.
“No, no questions.”
“So that’s it then, we’ll be in touch. Use this cell phone to contact us at any time. Just hit star twenty nine, and a duty officer will contact Gibson or me. Identify yourself as Bradley Fallon, and one of us will call you back. The phone has unlimited minutes on Uncle Sam’s dime, so feel free to use it for any calls you want to make in the fifty states. Remember star twenty nine gets us 24/7, but don’t call at night unless it can’t wait, like if you hear of any plans for violence. Okay? You can get out now, we’ll be in touch.
“And remember Brad: if you screw with us in any way, we’ll screw you for good. We’re not messing around: domestic terrorism is serious business, just like the Muslim kind.”
Brad opened the door and stepped down with the cell phone and a large manila mailing envelope containing the names, addresses, brief biographical sketches and photos of the gun club members. The other agents who were relaxing on Brad’s boat climbed off onto the dock and smirked at him as they passed, then they got into the Suburban and it went crunching back out the oyster shell driveway. He watched it until it was gone from sight, and he continued to stare after it until he could no longer hear its tires on the oyster shells.
“Shit…shit…shit…” thought Brad, climbing aboard his boat. Guajira’s companionway hatch padlock had been cut and was laying in the cockpit well. They were very up front about invading his private property; they didn’t even bother to toss the broken lock overboard. He looked below; he could see that his boat had been searched. Nothing looked broken and there was no obvious malicious damage; no slit cushions, no broken locker doors, so at least they hadn’t been in a foul mood. Just a friendly warrantless search to demonstrate their disregard for the Constitution, and their complete power over him. The only weapons he had on the boat were standard bolt action rifles, not covered by the new law, and his Smith and Wesson .44 magnum. The rifles were still safe in their hidden locker, but Brad could tell they had been removed and handled and then replaced. Brad figured that if they meant for him to infiltrate a gun club, they knew he’d need his guns.
He climbed back into the cockpit and lay on his back staring up through the oak branches at the sky, as beams of sunlight flickered through the shifting leaves. They really have me by the balls, he thought. He knew that he could not ignore their demands. Randy Weaver had tried that approach with a BATF blackmail operation and refused to turn informant, and in the end the feds killed his son and his wife for his defiance. They shot his young son in the back, and they shot his wife through the head while she was holding a baby in her kitchen. The new federal police had somewhere crossed the line and become a super mafia. When they offered you a deal, you couldn’t refuse.
After 9-11 the feds permitted themselves to go after foreigners in the U.S.A. without regard for normal due process, all in the name of fighting the “War on Terror.” Now the War on Terror, with its special rules and constitutional exemptions, was being widened to include American citizens under “domestic terrorism.” The cut padlock left flippantly as an insult on Guajira’s cockpit floor told Brad that much in clear language.
Now in the wake of the Stadium Massacre, Brad had no doubt that the feds would extend the same harsh war-time measures against any suspected “militia” terrorists, that they had taken against suspected Islamic terrorists, who had been rounded up and put into secret detention facilities without any trial. Ignoring the feds’ demands was not an option. As the famous phrase had put it, “You are either with us, or with the terrorists.”
Twenty miles up this river on a mastless sailboat Brad felt as helpless as a turtle flipped on its back: trapped and vulnerable.
But Brad Fallon had one slight edge which had not shown up on the FBI’s computer screens, one stealth weapon which did not show on their radar scope: he was something of a self-taught student of espionage, law enforcement and special warfare techniques. During his long months working on the ANWR, he had devoured literally hundreds of paperback novels, biographies and histories. During his stints in Alaska he worked twelve on, twelve off, seven days a week. Informal paperback libraries in the dormitories were well stocked with the works of LeCarre, Seymour, Ignatius and many others. There were also plentiful non-fiction works covering every dirty war and covert operation from Southeast Asia to Northern Ireland, and from Central America to the Middle East.
By analyzing and comparing the information in these books he had developed a strong instinct for determining what was critical fact, and what was hyperbolic nonsense. His informal education in special warfare and covert intelligence operations would not register on George’s biography sheet, an advantage which Brad hoped to use if he could.
Brad had not developed an affinity for reading about espionage and clandestine operations by accident. For years he had watched the federal government’s rising tide of well-meant tyrannical power, which always tightened one click of the handcuff ratchet at a time on American freedom, without ever reversing direction or loosening. First in the name of the “War on Drugs,” and then in the name of the “War on Terror,” the federal law enforcement agencies had carved out their own special rules of engagement. In the name of national security, these rules superseded and bypassed the Bill of Rights where ever it stood in the way.
For the sake of expediency, pleading dire emergency, exceptions and exemptions were granted to federal law enforcement agencies, but the “exceptions” then quickly became the accepted norms. Each new graduating class of agents came into the federal law enforcement world learning that they were somehow above the Bill of Rights, because their calling was higher, and their mission too important, to be hamstrung by strict adherence to outdated rules of legal conduct.
Brad could connect the dots into the future: he had studied the pattern in many nations where the secret police gradually became empowered to break the law with impunity, and for a long time he had seen the same trends at work in America. Years ago he had wanted to become a Navy SEAL, in order to learn the dark trades from the inside. That plan had been torpedoed in the hyperbaric dive chamber when the Navy doctors discovered he had no taste for pure oxygen at a simulated depth of sixty feet.
So Brad did the best he could by teaching himself, and so he used his off-duty time in Alaska reading everything he could find on spies, commandos, and terrorists. Now that he was planning to become a world traveling sailor, Brad considered a sophisticated understanding of how secret police agencies worked to be an important tool for avoiding the kinds of mistakes which could cause his boat to be seized, or himself to be tossed in a foreign jail. In most nations, and increasingly in America, it was becoming crucial to be able to discern where the actual lines of power ran, as opposed to the overt public lines. The public lines of authority were often public lies, just polite window dressing, and often a trap for the naïve and unwary.
He had expected to use his special knowledge to help him to navigate through the Byzantine channels of third world politics, to tell him when to shut up and pay the mordida bribe, and when to demand his rights; when to seek a local patron, and when to pull up anchor and flee in the night.
Brad understood very well that the world was increasingly becoming more complex and dangerous for the serious traveler. He just didn’t foresee that he would be trapped by secret police right here in America, before he could even cross his first ocean on Guajira!
One thing he knew for certain was that the standard retirement plan for a dirty war informant was a rural safe house torture session, followed by a bullet in the brain and being dumped in a roadside ditch. The Black Water Rod and Gun Club might or might not be a cover for a secret militia group, but if they were, he was dead certain they would immediately suspect him, the stranger, if he suddenly showed a desire to follow them on their outings.
In fact, his position would be so exposed and obvious that he felt fairly sure that there must already be a government informant in the club, and that he was intentionally being dangled as a cover for the existing spy. If bad things suddenly began to happen to members of the gun club, suspicion would immediately fall on Brad Fallon, leaving the real informer or informers undiscovered and unsuspected. Fallon thought that he would most likely be playing the role of the feds’ intentional sacrificial pawn, a common last role for a duped informant.
Brad was not going to pull a Randy Weaver and refuse the feds outright. He didn’t want to have his money seized or his boat sunk at the dock, or to wind up living in a six by nine cage. But neither would he become an informant. He had just over twenty-four hours to come up with an alternate plan.
He picked up his broken padlock and threw it far out into the river, where it made a soft thunking splash and disappeared.