Phil Carson stabbed his cigarette into the truck’s ashtray. He considered flicking the butt out the open window, but today, at least for now, he was scrupulously obeying every law. He’d had to remove a pile of coins from the ashtray to use it for his first cigarette butt, which he had taken from the first pack he had bought in more than a decade. He was parked as close as he could get to the pay telephone, which was bolted to the brick wall on the side of a stand-alone Quick N’ Go store in Suffolk. After making several phone calls, he had gone into the store to get an Icee-Slush and some beef jerky, and found himself asking the cashier for a pack of Marlboros as if someone else was in command of his voice.
He had the truck radio turned off while he listened for the phone to ring; he checked his watch compulsively as the minutes dragged past. Since Ranya’s desperate call for help, he had been using a series of pay phones as he drove across Tidewater. To his thinking, his own cell phone was suddenly less than trustworthy for general use of a conspiratorial nature, and he wanted to keep it clear for Ranya’s next emergency call. He thought, how long should I wait here? How much do I need the help that this particular call could bring? This was an important call, but time was fleeting and there was so much to do. He lit another cigarette.
The smoke flowed all the way through him, not only into his lungs but down to his fingers and toes, calming him somewhat. He had smoked for most of his adult life, and many of his wartime memories were tinged in the remembered aroma of cigarette tobacco. Of course, he had never smoked when stealth was required, but between patrols and after some fire-fights he had smoked with great appreciation. Now, decades later, on an afternoon when he was unexpectedly planning one more combat patrol, he found himself enjoying the strong Virginia tobacco once again.
Just as they had in Vietnam, long-term health considerations faded into utter meaninglessness on a day when he had been loading bullets into magazines and preparing weapons to shoot at men who were undoubtedly well-trained and well-armed. While pushing the slick copper and brass cartridges into their magazines, he had somehow felt the spectral presence of phantom soldiers, so real that it took an effort of his will not to look over his shoulders for them. Some, he thought, were still living and many, he knew, were long dead, but in his mind’s eye they were once again happy-go-lucky twenty-year-olds in jungle fatigues. An hour later, waiting in his pickup truck outside the Quick N’ Go, the mere lighting of a cigarette was sufficient to trigger another rush of Asian memories, and faces he had not seen in decades floated up through his consciousness.
The phone outside the store trilled urgently. Carson was out of the truck and had the black receiver to his ear before the end of the second ring.
****
Brad awakened slowly, lying on his back next to the ocean. The midday sun above him burned against his eyes, and he blinked weakly. He must have been pulled from the water; lifeguards and other bystanders seemed to be trying to revive him. Their faces above him slid in and out of focus, sometimes blocking the glare of the sun, then moving aside so that he was again hit with its direct rays. He grew weak once again and his eyes fluttered closed. Hollow voices swelled and faded like the waves rolling under the dock beneath his back.
“…a little too much…”
“…not now, tomorrow…no marks…”
“…pulse hit two-hundred, did you see…”
Brad’s random half-thoughts came trickling back together to form an awareness of his situation, and an urgent voice whispered to him from some alert corner of his subconscious that he should not wake up completely, not yet. He understood now that the men standing over him were not lifeguards or paramedics, that he was not lying on a dock by the ocean, and the blinding light above him was not the sun.
“We have to go do Swarovski tonight. Get what you can out of Fallon, but for God’s sake don’t kill him, and don’t mark him up too much. Put some rags or something under the ropes; he can’t be found with marks like that for God’s sake! Use your head.”
Brad began to remember where he was. He slowly eased his hands away from his sides and felt the ropes that tied him down to the door. Even in his semi-conscious state he knew that there was nothing to be gained by revealing to his tormentors that he was coming back around, and was, therefore, ready for more water on his face and electric shocks on his body.
“The information is secondary, all right? No marks, and don’t kill him. Got it?”
“Got it.”
“I’ll send Garfield down to relieve you by then. We’ll be back after Swarovski. Then we’ll finish up with these two, but they gotta look good.”
“Okay, I got it, don’t worry.”
Brad drifted away again. Now he was lying on his back on a raft. Somehow he had drifted through the surf zone to the calmer sea beyond the waves, but the noontime sun was still burning through his closed eyelids.
****
Dusk spread evenly across Tidewater under a leaden sky; the sun scarcely hinted its setting direction through the thick overcast. Ranya had found a hiding place in a disused tobacco drying shed on the edge of the tree line, where she could observe the eastern gate of the base. Her Yamaha was in the shed with her; after the close passage of their helicopter she was taking no chances on being spotted from above.
The rusted tin roof of the shed seemed tight enough, so if it rained at least she would not be left soaking wet once again. The air was still fairly warm, but with the end of daylight she knew the serious cold would soon come. The walls of the drying shed were built of weathered horizontal wood slats with space between them for air flow, and the breeze passed through unhindered. She was sitting on a grimy tobacco sorting table with her knees drawn up to her chest, watching the gate, when she heard the airplane engine again.
The sound of the engine grew steadily louder, she slid off the table and looked between the slats to the west and saw the small plane flying towards her below the cloud ceiling. It descended almost to treetop level, but before it reached her field, it pulled up and banked sharply over the chain link fence, turned to the north, and made a tight circle above the hangars. It was a long sleek single-engine plane with retracted landing gear, wings mounted low on the fuselage and a high tail in the shape of a capital letter T. It had some kind of round pod fixed under its otherwise smooth belly, probably a surveillance package, she thought.
After circling the southern part of the base, it lowered its wheels, leveled out flying toward the north, and dropped from her sight. She thought it must be their own airplane; she had heard one taking off earlier. It was probably out taking pictures of their next target. This could be a good sign, if it indicated that the group was still active, and might be sending its gunmen out tonight. She felt guilty, because while this was good for her, it was certainly not going to be good for their next victims…
The shed smelled of wet dirt, mold, rat droppings and old tobacco. In the fading light, Ranya examined the maps and sketches she had drawn in pencil on the backs of the pages of a girly-picture calendar from 1977, before she was born. Phil Carson had asked her for maps, and the calendar was the only paper she could find to draw upon. She had found it on a shelf beneath the sorting table; it was partially chewed by rats or mice. Skimpily-clad smiling girly models, spilling out of too-tight halter tops and short-shorts, held up air filters, fan belts and other very un-sexy truck and tractor parts.
The backs of the calendar pages were blank, and on one she had drawn a map of the hangar area, and on another the entire base with all of the roads and trails around it. She also drew a map showing her infiltration route, and a sketch of what the hangar area had looked like as seen from her previous hiding place across the tarmac. All of the maps and sketches were marked with estimated sizes and distances, with each structure labeled, and the compass directions indicated.
It was almost six and the light would not last much longer because of the heavy cloud cover. Phil had promised that he would call as soon as he was ready; she replayed their conversation over and over in her head, trying to extract every crumb of meaning. If he didn’t call back very soon, she would have to decide if she was going to continue waiting, or leave the shed to go to her father’s arms cache and get the carbine.
The cache was twenty miles away on the other side of the Great Dismal Swamp, and it would take her at least an hour and a half to get there, find it again in the dark, and return. If she broke the short-barreled collapsible-stock AR-15 down into its two component parts, she could just fit it into her daypack for carrying on the motorcycle. She would have to take her chances with any FIST checkpoints.
Once she left her observation post in the shed, she wouldn’t be able to know if the killer squads had left the base or not. She would have to assume they were all still there on the base, all around Brad. Even if she infiltrated from the south this time, from behind the hangars, it was unlikely that she would be able to slip in, find Brad and escape without firing a shot. If she had to shoot her way in or out, their prospects would be nearly hopeless. But she had put Brad into the horrible position he was now in, and she would not abandon him. She could not live with herself afterwards if she did that.
Phil Carson will call, she thought. I’ll stay and wait for him to call. She didn’t want to use her prepaid cell phone this close to their base, because she didn’t know what kind of capability they had to scan and locate nearby cell calls. The forest of antennas on top of their long motor home had warned her to be disciplined and not use the prepaid cell phone unnecessarily. She climbed back on the table, wrapped her arms around her knees again, and tried to stay warm by thinking about sailing and swimming with Brad on Guajira, but when she pictured his face, she could only think about what might be happening to him, a half mile away in the buildings next to the hangars…
****
Phil Carson parked down the street from the Last Chance Saloon in the Township of Great Bridge, ten miles north of the old Navy landing field. He had been using his local knowledge to travel from Suffolk into Chesapeake County entirely on secondary roads. He was avoiding the highways and major surface streets, because the tool carrier behind the cab of his pickup truck was loaded with enough prohibited weaponry to send him to prison for life. They were hidden beneath an ample covering of power tools and work clothes, but he realized that any serious search would discover them.
The Last Chance was a place that he was familiar with. It was an enduring local landmark that was always popular with the riders of American motorcycles, but he had only rarely been there in the past couple of years since he had mostly stopped drinking. He was wearing boots, black denim jeans and a black leather riding jacket, so that he would not stand out among the patrons. His leather jacket was patch-free. He rode with no organized club, and he had never believed in advertising his life history on his outerwear.
A dozen Harleys and a few Triumphs were parked on the street outside the “Wild West” style wooden double-doors. He walked through the dimly-lit bar area, passed the high-backed booths, the pool tables and the kitchen storage area and continued all the way to the back door. Steppenwolf’s “Born to be Wild” was playing on the jukebox. Carson wondered how many copies of the record had been worn out and replaced in this bar over the last three decades. It must have been a considerable number, before finally being replaced by a CD and then a computer chip. Nobody paid the least bit of attention to his passage; it was a place where people minded their own damn business unless they were provoked, and direct eye contact between strangers was not advisable.
He cracked open the back door and peered up and down the wide concrete alley. The white SUV which his old friend had described was parked on the other side and down a little bit, along the back wall behind a supermarket. The driver’s window was open; his friend was sitting alone, hunched low behind the wheel. There were no other occupied vehicles in sight; no vans, no bums or derelicts keeping watch. He backtracked through the bar, and then drove his green Chevy truck around to the alley and slowly passed the SUV. The men nodded to each other, and Carson parked behind him, back bumper almost to back bumper. They both got out and shook hands between the vehicles. His friend was wearing jeans and a dark blue rain shell with the hood pulled up, even though it was only beginning to drizzle lightly.
Across from them, the back door to the bar was kicked open and both men flinched and cut their eyes toward the noise, but it was only a bartender carrying out a blue plastic recycling bin. The sound of a Creedence Clearwater Revival song followed him through the open door. The bartender walked out into the alley and casually heaved a load of empty beer bottles into the bar’s trash dumpster, where they landed with a clatter of breaking glass.
“Bad Moon Rising,” said Jasper Mosby, relaxing a bit after their alarm. “That song always brings back memories. Somebody in my platoon had that record; we always played it when we were loading up. Every time I hear it, I still think about getting ready for a patrol. That song used to help us get psyched up, make us feel dangerous. You know, it’s funny, the things you remember.”
“I know what you mean,” said Carson. “Some songs put me right back in country every time I hear them.” He laughed. “You know, we might just be in for nasty weather, but there’s no moon rising tonight. It’s only a crescent moon, and it’s setting at 9 o’clock, I checked. I couldn’t ask for better conditions; with the clouds it’s going to be as dark as a coal mine, and nice and quiet with the rain.”
The two men locked gazes, saw their creased faces and receding gray hairlines, and they both thought, do I look that ancient?
The off-duty Suffolk police lieutenant said, “Now look at us, two old bastards sneaking around in an alley behind a bar.”
“Well Jasper, we sure won’t be able to say we weren’t old enough to know better.”
It was Mosby’s turn to laugh. “Yeah Phil, there’s no fool like an old fool. Well, anyway, let me show you what I’ve got.” He popped the doors open on the back of his white Expedition. Inside were two suitcase-sized black nylon gear bags and a very full green canvas parachute bag.
“We don’t need to go through it all here Jasper; I know what to do with it. I’ll get it back to you tomorrow.”
“Yeah, um, well…here’s the thing, Phil. Most of this stuff is marked up with serial numbers. It’s almost all inventory controlled. If anything goes missing, well, I’ll be screwed and that’s the truth.”
“Listen, Jasper, I really appreciate what you’re doing, we…”
“That’s not it, Phil. That’s not it at all. Since you called, I’ve been thinking about everything… You’re welcome to use this stuff, but… on one condition. Only if I come with it. I mean, if I don’t get it all back, I might as well not come back either. I talked it over with Liddy, and she’s for it, all the way. No matter what. And even more important than that, I’m just not going to let you and Ranya go in there by yourselves.” Mosby looked down at his feet.
Carson knew that Jasper Mosby stood to lose all of his pension and benefits if he went on tonight’s rescue mission and it turned out badly, even if he wasn’t killed, wounded, or arrested outright. It was a hell of a risk for a man at retirement age.
“And one more thing, Phil, and it’s non-negotiable. I didn’t come alone. Some of the gear…well, I had to borrow it from our SWAT team, and I had to do a little song and dance for it. Anyway, I wound up getting us another volunteer. His name’s Frank.” Mosby slightly raised his hand in a signal. “I knew you’d spook if you saw two of us, so I had him wait around the corner. You’ve just got to believe me on this, but Frank’s somebody I’d trust my life to.”
A solidly-built thirtyish man of average height, with dark hair and a moustache, appeared down the alley and walked briskly toward them. Carson stared in disbelief, and quickly looked over his shoulder the other way down the alley for any more surprises. How had he missed spotting this guy before the meeting? Was this all a set up? No, no way. Jasper wouldn’t do it. No way in hell. But if he had missed this guy, what else was he missing? Was he still sharp enough? Had he been out of the game too long? Were his observational senses and instincts no longer up to the challenges he would be facing?
The guy was wearing black BDU-style fatigue pants and only a black t-shirt even in the cool drizzle. The shoulders and biceps of a body builder strained against the fabric, the hallmark of every serious SWAT cop. Just before they shook hands, Carson noted that he wore no wedding band.
“Phil, I’m glad to meet you. My name’s Frank Santander, I’m a Sergeant with the Suffolk PD, and I’m a member of our special response team.” Santander locked his gaze directly onto Carson’s eyes while they gripped each others hands.
“Lieutenant Mosby said that we should just go by first names tonight, but…I’m sorry, Jasper, but that’s just not my style. When he came to me for some gear this afternoon, I made him tell me what he wanted it for. You see, we’ve had some long talks, Jasper and me, about what’s been going on lately. We think about the same way on it, and well, anyway, here I am.
“You know, sir, my family’s all from Colombia, and most of my relatives are still down there. But I’ve been here since I was a kid, and I’m just plain American all the way. Look, I know I’m not in the league with you two, I mean, I heard some stories about you, Mr. Carson, at the VFW… Anyhow, after the Army, I joined the Suffolk Police, because I really care about people. I want to help them, protect them. I know that sounds corny, but I swear to God it’s the truth. Am I making any sense?
“Anyway, here’s what it is, here’s why I’m here; I just can’t stand watching America turning into a big Colombia. I’ve been there, I’ve spent time down there, and what’s been going on lately, it ain’t right, it just ain’t American.
“When Jasper, I mean Lieutenant Mosby, when he told me what you found going on down in Chesapeake, and how it’s the same gang that did the arsons and killed the Edmonds family and everything, well, I mean, connect the dots, right? It all connects right straight back to the Stadium Massacre, doesn’t it? I mean, I never bought the Shifflett story, not for a minute. When he said what you were planning, and how he was going with you, well, I told him I was coming too, or no gear. And so here I am.”
Carson was choked up, but swallowed the lump in his throat. Leaders couldn’t show that kind of human frailty. He was grateful for the light rain falling on his face. “You know who’s there? You know what we’ll be up against?”
“I know. Pros. A professional death squad. Secret police, like in Colombia or Brazil. People who burn families to death, just to make a point.”
“Frank, you understand that they’re probably some kind of sworn federal law enforcement agents? I really doubt that they’re civilians. Can you…deal with that?”
“Can I shoot a cop, you mean? A ‘brother officer’? Mr. Carson, these aren’t cops anymore, these are death-squad killers. They’re just Nazis, like the Gestapo, and they shame and dishonor every honest cop in America. Hell yes, I can shoot them, if I have to. No question. But the primary mission tonight is a rescue operation, and collecting video evidence, right?”
“That’s exactly right.”
“Well, let’s go do it then.”
Carson shook his hand again. “Welcome aboard, Frank Santander. But some of the people you’re going to meet tonight can’t use their real names. Let me do all the introductions, and only use the names I use. Is that cool?”
“That’s cool, I understand. It’s better security. But I wanted you to know who I am, right up front. That’s just the way I am.”
“Okay then, let’s roll.” Phil Carson knew that taking Mosby along was a huge risk, and bringing the stranger even more so. From his previous life, his life after the Army, after Vietnam, he knew all too well that the unexpected strap-hanger was often a Judas, sent to betray. But he had already come too far, and aborting the mission out of a desire for self preservation was simply not an option. Not with Ranya waiting for him, not with Ranya going in alone if he didn’t show up. He would just have to accept the risk that he was being set up. After all, it was a night for taking chances; it was a night for not holding anything back.
****
On his return flight to Washington, Malvone’s borrowed helicopter crossed the Potomac just to the east of the Dahlgren Naval Proving Grounds, where the miles-wide river tended north, and then made a giant dog-leg turn back to the southwest. This was where the high Governor Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge crossed the Potomac, carrying Route 301 from Virginia into Maryland. With the Wilson Bridge on the DC beltway severed, the 301 bridge was carrying double its normal traffic. There was no other bridge over the mighty Potomac River between Washington and the Chesapeake Bay.
For the return flight, Malvone chose to ride in the empty right front seat; the helicopter only had one set of controls. From their altitude of 2,000 feet, just below the cloud ceiling, the bridge looked like an elaborate Erector Set model, with toy 18 wheelers laboring up one steep slope and sliding down the other. The toll plaza on the Maryland side was now doubling as an enormous “FIST” checkpoint, almost like an international border crossing, and traffic was backed up the bridge toward the Virginia side.
Malvone immediately felt more comfortable on the Maryland side of the river. Compared to the anachronistic gun-toting Virginians, Marylanders were by comparison a much tamer breed. Decades of progressive Democratic Party rule had long since seen all firearms registered, and whenever possible, taken away from ordinary citizens. After the “Beltway Sniper” case in 2002, Maryland had cracked down even harder on gun owners, and after the Stadium Massacre the semi-automatic rifle turn-in had proceeded smoothly, since all of these weapons had already been thoroughly catalogued by the State Police.
Malvone’s pilot was flying by the “3-R” method: roads, rails and rivers, and once they were over Maryland, he tracked to the north above Route 301 at an air speed of 120 miles per hour. Before taking off, Malvone had asked the pilot to make a slight detour on their way back to Washington, and the pilot had marked his air map with the new mid-point destination and plotted a waypoint on the GPS navigation system.
The now operational (and soon to be expanding) Special Training Unit needed its own headquarters and base, away from Washington and away from Quantico. “Mr. Emerson,” his White House-provided black-budget and proprietary front company expert, had come up with a short list of potential sites, and among them, the West Waldorf Industrial Park seemed to Malvone to be the most promising. Its location was excellent, twenty road miles south of DC, and twenty-five miles north of Virginia across the 301 bridge. Best of all, it was only ten miles from Malvone’s own home on Tanaccaway Creek.
Even though the site was just twenty air miles east of Quantico, Virginia across the Potomac, it was sixty long, slow road miles away via Fredericksburg Virginia over the Route 301 bridge. This would effectively divorce the STU from close federal law enforcement control, another of Malvone’s goals. With the Wilson Bridge cut, the FBI at Quantico found itself on the “wrong” side of the river, forced to battle their way into Washington on the jammed alternate routes, while the STU Team leaders would be able to pop in and out from the Maryland side at will.
Beyond the University of Maryland’s college town of La Plata, Route 301 veered to the northeast, but the pilot continued straight on cross country, counting down the miles on his electronic GPS map display. Three minutes later they were over an empty office and industrial park, and Malvone circled his left index finger to indicate that the pilot should orbit. The pilot pushed his yoke into a right bank to give his government supergrade passenger the best view.
As they circled, Malvone mentally inventoried the ten acres of empty warehouses, offices, workshops, parking lots and multi-use buildings, which were all surrounded by a chain link fence. Beyond the fence, the place was bordered by fields of corn and asparagus and beans.
The industrial park had been finished two years earlier, but it had yet to welcome its first tenant. Final leasing plans had been halted in their tracks when government biologists from the nearby Mattawoman Natural Environment Area had made a dramatic discovery: the local Eastern Golden-backed Sand Gnats comprised a distinct and extremely rare species. They were immediately placed under federal protection as an endangered species. The federal biologists next made the rapid determination that industrial activity and lighting in the area would hinder the mating activity of the rare gnat, and project completion was halted by a court order. The private developers of the West Waldorf Industrial Park went to court, and then into bankruptcy.
Now, two years later, the new owners of the property were about to catch a break at last. Vital national security concerns would outweigh the value of the rare gnats, and Uncle Sam (suitably sheep-dipped as a private corporation) would be moving in as the sole tenant. The Special Training Unit was going to have its own home.
But even then Malvone knew that it was time for the STU to shed its original name. Washington bureaucrats he had never even met were tossing off the initials far too freely; it was only a matter of time before the existence of the STU would be mentioned in some magazine article or website. Perhaps the STU would next become the Special Projects Division, or the Firearms Research Group. It didn’t matter, as long as the title was suitably vague, and it had three initials.
And in a few months or a year, that new unit name would also be on the lips of bureaucrats and a few well-connected reporters, and then that name would also disappear down the bureaucratic memory-hole in turn. It was a truism in Washington that any elite covert unit really worth a damn rated a classified name, mission, and base. The West Waldorf Industrial Park could hold their rapidly expanding personnel, and all of their vehicles and equipment. It could handle helicopters, it could handle indoor firing ranges, it could handle anything. He indicated to the pilot that he was finished studying the park, and the helicopter continued on to the north.
****
By 7:30 PM it was fully dark, and light rain was falling silently on the fields and trees around the auxiliary landing field. The damp coldness was seeping into Ranya’s core. She alternated between sitting on the sorting table and stretching and exercising in place inside the shed to keep warm and alert, all the while watching the area around the chain link gate for even subtle signs of activity. She feared that if any of the killers left tonight, they might drive away without turning on their headlights, using the night vision goggles which she guessed that they had.
But when the federal convoy finally pulled up to the gate at 7:35 PM, there was no mistaking the multiple sets of headlights burning on the other side of the fence. The gate was pushed open, and the column rolled through it and passed Ranya only a hundred yards from her tobacco shed. She mused that if she had only had a belt-fed machine gun, she could have easily raked them with devastating fire in the open field as they approached the cut where the road passed through the tree line.
There were four large dark SUVs, presumably two were the same black Suburbans that she had seen at Boat America. The four SUVs were trailed by a full-sized van. Once they were gone, she punched Phil Carson’s number into her throwaway cell phone. If there were five or six men per vehicle, that could make twenty-five or thirty jackbooted thugs out for a night of arson and murder. Even if there were only three men per vehicle, the number of killers on the base would be reduced by fifteen.
Phil Carson picked up on the second ring. “Hello?”
“It’s me, they just left. Five big ones.”
“Okay, that’s great. Really great. We’re here. You know where the place is? You’re sure you can find it at night?”
“I’m sure.”
“All right, come on then.”
“Ten minutes.”
“Okay.”