John J Nance - The Last Hostage

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John J Nance - The Last Hostage Page 14

by The Last Hostage(lit)


  "EVERYONE STAY IN A BRACE POSITION! REPEAT, STAY IN A BRACE POSITION!"

  She could feel the terror in the passenger cabin mirroring her own panic, but there was nothing else to do. She could also see Elvira Gates waving her right arm frantically from her seat in coach as the leader of the fear-of-flying group leaned into the aisle,.still trying to maintain a semibrace position.

  "What, Mrs. Gates?" Annette shouted.

  "Now? Stay down now?"

  Annette nodded as she pressed the microphone button again.

  "Yes. Now?

  The thought of breaking into the cockpit and clubbing Ken Wolfe resurfaced every few minutes, but having no pilot to fly and land the plane would doom them for certain. They were utterly dependent on their captor now for life, with no clue as to what he was trying to accomplish.

  FBI "Command Post," Salt Lake City International Airport. 12:45 A.M.

  Kat pressed the receiver to her ear and closed her eyes.

  "Ken, even if you're planning to end it, give me enough time for you to explain what you want. What has this Bostich done? How did he lie? Do you hold him responsible for losing a child of yours? If you end it now or cut off communications, no one will ever know what you wanted."

  The voice came back too low, the words spaced too evenly, as if he had disengaged.

  "The man you must arrest is Bradley Lumin. He murders little girls.

  He takes them like an animal, keeps them, rapes them, does horrible things to them, then kills them. He takes pictures of them, too, pictures he puts on computers, and probably the Internet. And he's about to strike again if you don't stop him. No one will listen to me. I've begged for nearly two years, but no one listens. Meanwhile, he's killed twice more. I've begged and pleaded, but no one would listen, and the little girls keep dying."

  Frank's voice in her ear again. "Kat! He's three miles to impact?

  Sheer panic was crawling up and down her back with claws. Only her words stood between the passengers and the ridgeline.

  "Ken, damn you, LISTEN TO ME! Turn that aircraft back to the west long enough to tell me the basics. Don't end this before we at least know what's happened and what to do about it."

  "It's all in the record. Talk to Connecticut State Police Detective Roger Matson. He's telling the truth about Bostich. Bostich lied.

  Bostich covered up."

  "Ken, pull up! You're a professional pilot, not a murderer. This is not an appropriate legacy for whomever you've lost."

  He said little girls. The murderer kills little girls, and he lost a child.

  "It was your daughter, wasn't it? How would she want to remember her father? As a mass murderer? Is that what you want?"

  Frank's voice again. "One mile. He's five hundred feet below the ridge." Frank was pressing a phone to his ear, and relaying the word from Salt Lake Departure.

  "Ken, what was she like? Your daughter. WE DON'T KNOW WHAT SHE WAS LIKE. WHAT WAS HER NAME? WAS SHE PRETTY?"

  Aboard AirBridge Flight 90. 12:47 A.M.

  The sight of rapidly moving real estate in a side window caught Annette's full attention. She moved past the wide-eyed woman in seat 1C and crouched down to look forward out the window at a rapidly approaching ridge that was above them and ninety degrees to the airplane's flight path. They were rushing straight toward it!

  Bostich was muttering into his phone, asking for someone and demanding connection in a shaky voice.

  There would be no time. There was no way anyone below could help influence their fate now. They were too close.

  A strange calm fell over her as she sat in the window seat next to the woman in 1C and looked through the glass at the onrushing ridge.

  The woman looked up at the same moment, her right hand finding Annette's hand and squeezing hard. Annette squeezed back, fully ex- peering to leave life in her company.

  FBI "Command Post," Salt Lake City International Airport. 12:49 A.M.

  Kat felt herself go limp at the sound of the cell phone being turned off in the cockpit of Flight 90. She looked over at Frank with a frantic, feral expression, pleading for word that what they all expected hadn't occurred.

  Frank Bothell's face had drained of all color. She saw him nod slightly and lower the receiver as he took a stunned, ragged breath.

  "Departure says... the target has merged... with the ridge...

  and disappeared."

  "Oh, God!" Kat's voice echoed off the walls of the chief's office as her fist clamped against her mouth.

  FBI "Command Post," Salt Lake City International Airport. 12:50 A.M.

  Kat stood in shock for nearly a minute with her mind screaming at her:

  A father who was willing to end his career and his freedom to prosecute his daughter's murderer would never be able to resist answering those last questions, no matter how intense his pain!

  Kat moved to the desk in a haze and punched up the same line Frank had used for Departure Control. She could hear the controller coordinating with an inbound United Airlines 757, asking him to overfly the same ridge. She turned to Frank and the others in the room and cleared her throat, aware that her voice was shaky.

  "Gentlemen," Kat began, "we've just been conned. He hasn't crashed, and this isn't the end. It's just the beginning of what's going to be a bizarre and, probably, lengthy game of cat and mouse. And he's the cat."

  Frank Bothell was staring at her in disbelief. "Kat, we'd better face it."

  She shook her head strenuously, hanging on to the logic she knew was right.

  "No, Frank. They're safe. He skimmed the ridge, flew over it. He's somewhere on the other side hugging the terrain, flying through valleys.

  It's too soon."

  "Kat, you don't know this guy. You can't be sure."

  "I'm sure."

  The voice of the United flight crew cut into their exchange.

  "Ah, Salt Lake Approach, United Twenty-Two-Fifteen. We're circling the area."

  The transmission dropped out for a few seconds, then returned.

  "Ah, it appears that... there's no crash down here we can see.

  There's no sign of fire, wreckage, impact, or anything else, and we don't hear any emergency locater beacons."

  "You're certain, United?"

  "Well, Approach, are you certain of the coordinates you gave us?"

  "Yes, sir. The Salt Lake V.O.R. zero-three-zero degree radial at precisely twenty-six miles."

  "Then we're certain, Approach. No one's crashed anything as large as a Boeing down there. We'd see it."

  Kat sat hard in the office chair, her heart racing, as Frank stood in stunned silence, staring at the wall.

  "Jeez, Bronsky. You were right. How on earth did you know?"

  "It didn't fit, Frank. Someone killed his daughter. He's hurting for her, not for himself. Crashing now would only ease his pain, not hers.

  That has to be the point."

  Kat had her forehead cupped in her right hand, her mind racing ahead. She had a second chance, but she had to move fast.

  Another wide-eyed FBI agent had entered the room with a steno notebook in hand, and Frank nodded to him immediately.

  "What, Jim?"

  "Our two agents in Colorado Springs just phoned in their report.

  The details are interesting and the airline's trying to hide it, but this captain has a long history of strange behavior since his daughter was murdered two years ago."

  "Is that a case anyone recalls?" Kat asked, her head still cupped in her hand.

  Jim nodded, then shrugged. "I don't know. I recall it, because it was so infuriating. It was a kidnap-murder near Stamford, Connecticut, and nearly eight months went by before they collared the bastard, a real sleazebag pedophile with a long record of molestation, child porn, the works."

  Frank was shaking his head. "What was the girl's full name?"

  "Melinda Wolfe," Jim replied. "They had this Lumin character cold, but virtually all the evidence came from a search of his home and his computer, and when the warrant
was thrown out, the case went with it."

  Kat looked at Frank. "I'll bet you anything that Mr. Bostich was somehow involved in issuing that warrant."

  Jim shook his head. "I doubt it. It was a state prosecution. There was no federal prosecution, or not yet, at least."

  Kat looked at both of them, then addressed Jim.

  "You said two years ago?"

  "I did. I checked the date. This is the second anniversary of her murder." "Bingo," Frank said under his breath.

  Kat intertwined her fingers as she sat in the chair, staring at the floor.

  "Frank, there are several corporate air terminals on the east side of the field. One's called Million Air. I forget the others. If we don't have a business jet standing by with FBI pilots, and I'm sure we don't, call the Million Air terminal and beg for help. See if we can commandeer or charter a business jet, one that can keep up with a seven-thirty-seven.

  I need to be off the ground within ten minutes."

  "Kat--" Frank began, a pained expression on his face.

  "Trust me, Frank. Don't argue. There isn't time. If I'm not airborne in ten minutes with the ability to talk to Wolfe directly by aircraft radio from above, we'll lose him yet. I can't do it from down here."

  There was no sound from Frank Bothell. He was in deep thought.

  She was wondering what more to say when he smiled suddenly.

  "Okay, Kat. Let's get one of the officers here to race you to the other side while I call. Keep your cell phone on."

  "Jim, call Approach, get me a stack of frequencies Wolfe might be monitoring."

  "Will do." Jim grabbed a phone as Frank pushed past him headed for the hallway. He hesitated in the doorway just long enough to turn back to her.

  "Take your weapon, Kat, and don't take any chances."

  Million Air Executive Terminal, Salt Lake City International Airport. 1:01 P.M.

  Captain Dane Bailey emerged from the plush passenger cabin of NorthLight Industries' thirty-nine-million-dollar Gulfstream IV and entered his hightech computerized cockpit as the copilot looked up from the right seat.

  "Are we into Plan B now, or what?" Jeff Jayson asked.

  Dane maneuvered himself into the captain's seat as he handed a fistful of maps to Jayson and nodded.

  "I've never seen the FBI commandeer a jet before, but," he in-clined his head toward the passenger cabin, "the boss says if they need help, we'll provide it."

  "So where are we going, Dane?"

  He shook his head and smiled. "There's an FBI agent racing over here right now. I guess he'll tell us. All I know is, this still concerns the AirBridge hijacking, and I've never seen the boss so disturbed about anything. He's trying to hide it, but this has him really upset."

  Jayson nodded. "It must, to prompt the vice chairman of AirBridge's board to chase the company's 737 across Utah rather than fly to Air- Bridge headquarters. I couldn't believe how fast he got here from his office."

  Bailey shrugged. "Hey, ours is not to reason why. The man's got about thirty million invested in that airline. He's got a right to worry."

  Aboard AirBridge Flight 90. 12:50 A.M.

  Annette had expected to die as the 737 approached the ridge and suddenly pitched up. Instead, the ridge flashed beneath them and the 737 pitched over as Ken Wolfe dove down the far slope and began maneuvering along a mountain valley, hugging the trees and the terrain which were passing in an incredible blur.

  "What's happening?" the woman sitting next to her asked in a small voice. Annette realized with some embarrassment she'd been squeezing the woman's hand, and she let go as decorously as possible. "What's your name?" Annette replied.

  "Louise. Louise Richardson."

  "Stay calm, Louise. I have no idea what's going on, but I don't think he means to kill us. I think he's trying to scare us."

  "It's working!" Louise said.

  The sound of the PA. clicking on seemed ominous.. They had no ally on the other end of the microphone, only an enemy now.

  "Listen up, people. Stay down, stay put. According to our captor, we've got more than one criminal aboard today. He says in first class there's a piece of walking excrement named Rudy Bostich who thinks he's going to be the next Attorney General of the United States. Mr. Bostich is a liar and a cheat and an unconvicted felon, and our captor requires Mr. Bostich's presence on the flight deck. He says we'll tell you more later.

  Annette, escort Mr. Bostich to the cockpit door. If he won't come voluntarily, tell him our guest says he will detonate the bomb."

  Annette leaned forward and looked across at Rudy Bostich, whose face was a study in pure panic. The cell phone had been open in his hand, and it dropped unnoticed to the floor as he looked back at Annette with pleading eyes, swallowing hard.

  Annette got to her feet and headed instead for the forward door area to pull the interphone from its hooks and punch the cockpit call button.

  "What the hell is it, Annette?" Ken snapped. "Weren't the instructions clear enough?"

  "What do you want, Ken? You planning on killing him in the cockpit while trying to fly?"

  "I considered it," Ken shot back, "but he's got to live to face charges. Does that make you feel better?"

  She closed her eyes and metered her breathing before replying.

  "When are you going to drop this pretense, Ken? People already suspect.

  Your voice is too angry, too hateful."

  "Bullshit. Stop stalling, Annette. Get that worm by the collar and get him up here."

  "Do it yourself, Ken!" she snapped.

  Immediately, the 737 began a roll to the right and a sharp pull.

  "Want to change your mind, Annette? Or do you want me to fly us into the hills? I don't get him up here, I have nothing to live for anyway."

  "Okay, OKAY? she stammered. "I'll bring him up."

  The roll reversed itself.

  She replaced the handset and moved back into the first class cabin, feeling like an unwilling executioner.

  "Rudy..." she said quietly, irritated by the cornered look on his face. Wasn't he supposed to be a big, brave prosecutor? She could use a little show of bravery from him right now, not the pitiful, cringing image of a cornered animal she saw before her.

  "What... what does he want?" Rudy stammered.

  She shrugged. "I don't know, but he did say he wasn't planning to hurt you."

  "I can't bring his daughter back!"

  "It was a daughter? What happened to her?"

  His right hand waved aimlessly at the ceiling. "I-it's a long story.

  Someone killed his daughter and... and the police ruined the case, and he blames me for not filing federal charges."

  "Rudy, I don't know anything about it, but if he wants something you can promise, for God's sake, promise it!"

  He sat motionless, his eyes darting from her to the cockpit area and back until Annette decided she'd had enough.

  "Okay. Come on. On your feet."

  "You can't do this! Aren't you supposed to protect your passengers?"

  he asked in a strained whine.

  She felt herself grimace at that. Was she walking a passenger to his death to save the rest, or just complying with what she couldn't change?

  If they were going to survive, maybe Rudy Bostich could figure out what to say that Ken wanted to hear. She wasn't an executioner. This was the logical thing to do.

  "Come on. It's up to you to talk him down."

  "Up to me?"

  "He says you're the cause of this, Rudy. That means only you can rectify this. You've got to try."

  "And if I refuse?"

  Annette looked him in the eye and tried to answer the same question for herself. If he refused, would she look for some burly passenger to help her push him, kicking and screaming, into the cockpit? Or would she just wait for Ken to get mad enough to really fly them into a mountain?

  "Rudy? Now. Let's go. I can't reason with him. Maybe you can." "I... can't."

  She leaned down to speak directly in his ear.


  "Rudy, you're supposed to be a leader. We need you to lead and show some confidence. You're acting like a coward."

  The words stung him as she'd hoped, and slowly he got to his feet and moved into the aisle beside her. She pointed toward the cockpit and he moved with a leaden gait to the door. She knocked three times and heard the electronic lock release click, and saw the door swing open.

 

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