Abuse of Power

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Abuse of Power Page 33

by Michael Savage


  —nothing happened.

  39

  Everything seemed to be moving in slow motion.

  Jack felt his heart thumping in his ears, as the crowd continued to rush for the doors, most of them unaware of what had just transpired. Jack himself wasn’t quite sure as he joined Forsyth and his men and a handful of Secret Service agents as they pushed through the thinning crowd to the bomber.

  Sirens blew in the distance and Jack knew that half the city’s law enforcement and emergency services were already speeding in their direction.

  One of the agents shouted, “Stay back! This thing could still blow.”

  The agent crouched over the dead man. He ran his fingers over the C4-laden vest with the confidence of a man who knew exactly what he was doing. Then an odd, almost comically quizzical look crossed his face.

  “What the hell?” he said, then looked up at the others. “This thing is a fake. It’s a goddamn fake.”

  Forsyth pushed toward him, Jack right behind him.

  “What are you talking about?” Forsyth asked.

  “These detonators aren’t even wired. This thing was never meant to go off.”

  “Are you sure?” Jack asked.

  “Positive,” he said.

  They all looked at one another, trying to comprehend this new information, when suddenly, without warning, the LED counter beeped loudly and the words PRAISE ALLAH scrolled across it in bright red letters.

  They all fell back, waited for something, then looked at one another in complete surprise.

  “What is this, Hatfield?” Forsyth demanded. “Some kind of sick goddamn joke?”

  “What are you talking about? This isn’t me. I didn’t have anything to do with it!”

  Jack was still trying to process the moment because it made absolutely no sense. No sense at all.

  “You were the one screaming about a bomb, and now we’ve got a dead man wearing a goddamn joke. The way I see it, this is all on you.”

  Jack’s head was spinning. The emergency sirens were drawing closer, their shrill whine swirling through his brain like an invading army.

  “Don’t be an idiot,” Jack said. “Do you think I’d set a man up to be killed to make a joke?”

  Forsyth didn’t answer. His boss was on the radio and the agent was trying to talk to him as the Secret Service moved in to take charge of the dead man.

  Jack backed away slowly, sinking in confusion. Why would Soren and Zuabi and Swain and Hassan Haddad go to all this trouble, all this planning, just to have it end like this? Jack thought about everything he’d been through, the threats, the torture, the deaths—Copeland in that Dumpster, al-Fida dead in that bathtub, Sara being dragged away by an MI6 thug—all because of some sick joke whose symbolism escaped him?

  No.

  Soren and his extremist friends wouldn’t have avoided the bash if they knew how this was going to play out. Besides, the way they were talking they were after something else, a major statement. One that would chill the world, send it scurrying in terror, so that they could seize power from men whom they considered weak and rule by fear and intimidation. No matter how you parsed it, what had happened here simply made no sense.

  Unless—

  The sirens continued to wail as a tidal wave of thoughts rolled through Jack’s mind, things remembered from the last few days—

  Al-Fida’s promise to Sara: “The infidels will soon see destruction that will make 9/11 seem like child’s play—”

  Copeland babbling on the phone: “Gotta get out of here … Gotta look after the twins.…”

  The word twins in one of those e-mails. Still bothering him, its meaning still undeciphered.

  Lawrence Soren smugly telling Jack about regime change and puppets and power.

  Why? Soren didn’t care about this President. He had no need to assassinate the man. One resident of the White House was the same as the next as far as he was concerned, merely there to be controlled and manipulated by whoever managed to grab power.

  And then Jack remembered the papers Copeland had left in that package on his boat. The Department of Defense papers that spoke of a clandestine transport of a tanker full of experimental solid rocket fuel.

  Operation Roadshow?

  As the sirens continued to grow closer, it suddenly struck Jack that this wasn’t just some sick joke. It was far, far more than that.

  Forsyth had finished with his call, the room had pretty much emptied, and a fresh set of suits grabbed hold of him.

  “Listen to me, Forsyth,” Jack said as they tried to walk him out. “You’ve got to listen to me carefully.”

  “We’ve heard enough from you. Get him out—”

  “Think, goddamn it. If I had anything to do with this, why would I have warned you there was a bomb in the building?”

  “How the hell should I know? You miss the attention? You’re out of your friggin’ mind.”

  “No,” Jack said. “No. This is just a footnote to what’s really going on.”

  “Get him out of my sight.”

  Forsyth’s men started to drag him away but Jack struggled against them. “You hear those sirens?” he said. “That’s half the city’s emergency personnel headed in our direction because they think the President’s in danger. But don’t you get it? This is a goddamn decoy.”

  “For what?” Forsyth called after him.

  “I’ve spent the last week trying to track these people down—been to Europe and back trying to figure out what the hell they’re up to. This all goes back to the bombing downtown. Agent Forsyth, do you seriously think that was the work of a bunch of disgruntled yahoos?”

  Jack saw a shift in Forsyth’s eyes. The same shift he’d seen when he’d confronted him at that press conference. Forsyth knew that was all a cover story. He knew the whole setup wasn’t kosher.

  “Come on,” Jack said. “If you know anything about me at all, you know I’m a goddamn patriot. I’d never do anything to harm this country. I’m telling you the truth.”

  Forsyth mulled that over for a moment and Jack thought he saw another subtle shift in his expression. He gestured for the men to release Jack. They stepped away but stayed close.

  “Okay, let’s pretend for a minute I believe you,” Forsyth said. “What do you think the real target is?”

  “I figure they’re looking to make a major statement here. I think they’re going after San Francisco’s twin towers.”

  “What?”

  “I’ve been too damn busy following the trail they laid out, thinking they’d converge. But they don’t. This was designed to keep us distracted.”

  “A decoy?”

  “Yeah. There’s a top soldier for the Hand of Allah named Hassan Haddad who’s been running point on this whole operation. Smart son of a bitch. I’m guessing he was also in those tunnels tonight, and if you follow them to their farthest point, where do you think they lead?”

  Forsyth thought about this for a long moment. And all at once he seemed to get it.

  “Christ,” he said. “The twin towers. The Golden Gate Bridge.”

  * * *

  They took off in a caravan, Jack riding shotgun with Forsyth, his two agents in back—the ones Jack had hurt, and who didn’t look like they forgave him. A police cruiser and a Secret Service car followed, their sirens screaming. Forsyth was on the radio shouting for support—fire department, bomb squad, SFPD, sky patrol—as he wound along Lincoln Boulevard, crossing the double yellow line to bypass cars, moving at speeds that sometimes threatened to send them off the road, down the steep cliff to the dark waters below. They raced through the old Presidio army base, past Pershing and Stillwell roads. Named for military commanders who knew how to defeat the enemy, not placate the media and foreign lobbyists.

  “If you’re wrong, Hatfield, I’ve just kissed my career good-bye.”

  “I’ve never been more sure of anything in my life,” Jack told him. “Isn’t this what we both signed on for? Uncovering truth and upholding liberty?” />
  Forsyth clearly wasn’t comfortable being in the same vehicle as Jack, let alone in the same philosophical arena. But he didn’t argue the point.

  A trip that would normally take ten minutes was cut down to five, and soon they were looping under the roadway and then around onto the bridge itself, more police cruisers joining in behind them.

  The Golden Gate Bridge is one of the longest suspension bridges in the world, boasting two five-hundred-foot-high suspension towers, the first of which—the south tower—now loomed in front of them, its orange-red majesty lit up against the night sky.

  Behind them the cruisers began to slow, moving in a serpentine formation to keep more civilian cars from rolling onto the bridge. Then Forsyth cut his siren and brought the SUV to a halt, the other vehicles in the caravan pulling up next to them. They all jumped out, Forsyth pointing a pair of Bushnell Night Vision field glasses toward the top beam of the south tower, which spanned the width of the bridge. He squinted against the magnified brilliance of the lights on top of the bridge.

  “Holy shit,” he said. “There are two people up there and one of them is a woman.”

  “What?” Jack reached for the field glasses.

  Forsyth handed them over. His heart slamming hard, Jack aimed them toward the top beam.

  It was Sara.

  He was torn with emotion. She was up there and she was alive, standing 746 feet above the bay, against the protective railing. Hassan Haddad was holding her by the bare upper arms. They were both standing spread-eagled against the wind gusts, their position precarious at best.

  Jack knew that this was Swain’s last little “up yours,” and it had nothing to do with holding Sara hostage or waiting for Jack to arrive before hurling her to her death. In fact, Jack no longer had any doubts about the game plan. He was convinced that what he saw strapped to Sara’s back was the device Haddad had procured from Chilikov in Bulgaria.

  It was a backpack nuke.

  40

  It was quite possibly the most beautiful sight Haddad had ever seen.

  The only sound he could hear was the wind, and he felt as if he were only a step away from Janna—from Paradise—where he would soon have a home. Where he would feel no pain, suffer no sickness, experience no sadness. Where Allah would look after him and he would find true peace in his arms.

  The peace he couldn’t find in this life.

  Here he stood at the very top of the infidel world, on a narrow catwalk, pressed against the rail, looking down at the bowing suspension cables of the bridge, following their lines all the way down through the darkness to the road where the cars looked no bigger than beetles, moving silently between the white dotted lines.

  He saw the ineffectual police cars with their flashing lights, but they were far too late to stop him now.

  The wind was strong but he did not feel cold. Allah was insulating him from its sting. And in a few moments he would feel nothing but the embrace of death followed by his feet on the pathway to the Garden.

  The woman was trembling, however. As he gripped her arm, her flesh felt icy.

  She was disavowing the inevitable. She could not accept the fact that she was about to die.

  When he had first seen her in the back of Swain’s van, her hands tied, her mouth gagged, he was surprised. He had long suspected that she was exploiting al-Fida, but he had not known the depth of her betrayal to her faith and to her people. He had not known that she was in league with the Turk and the Gypsy whore, and many others who fought to destroy the Hand of Allah.

  Swain had told him many things about this woman, and Haddad at first felt anger. He wanted to use his hands on her as he had on the whorish blonde when she was no longer of any use to him.

  But soon his anger gave way to pity. Pity that one of their own had lost her way, had forsaken her faith in Allah and his word.

  So he had agreed to do as Swain had asked. To martyr her in the Lord’s name, just as he was about to martyr himself.

  “You don’t have to do this,” she said suddenly. She was yelling so he could hear her above the sound of the wind.

  He tore his gaze from the view and looked at her. He remembered thinking that she was beautiful, but the ugliness in her soul clouded that beauty now.

  “I do as Allah commands,” he said.

  “Allah would never command such a thing. You are about to take the lives of innocent people. Women. Children. Countless Muslims.”

  “These people are not innocent. They live their lives in ignorance of their god. They elect leaders who kill our Muslim brothers and sisters.”

  “And how are they any different from the men who control you?”

  He scowled at her. “I answer only to Allah.”

  “And Imam Zuabi.”

  “Zuabi is a great leader. The Lord sometimes speaks through him. He has counseled me since I was a child.”

  “And what about Swain? Does the Lord speak through him as well? He and the people he works for are no different than those you wish to—”

  “Be silent!” Haddad snapped.

  Haddad no longer wished to listen to this woman. She had been subverted by Western ways and she was trying to trick him, to keep him from doing what he had come to do here at the top of the world.

  He turned from her, returning his gaze to the road below, using a pair of field glasses to look toward the north side of the bridge now, waiting for his signal that the time was near. That the moment was upon them.

  And then he saw it, little more than a crawling bug in the distance.

  The tanker truck was rolling onto the bridge.

  * * *

  Jack’s gut was on fire.

  He needed to get to Sara. If they were all going to die, he wanted to die with her.

  Emergency personnel were swarming onto the bridge behind them—a lot of sound and fury but not much else at this point. What could they do?

  Jack turned to Forsyth. “We’ve gotta get up there.”

  “And do what? We go rushing up there, he’ll pull the trigger and you can kiss this bridge and everything on it good-bye.”

  “He’s gonna pull that trigger anyway,” Jack told him. “And if that tanker truck I told you about is anywhere in the vicinity, it’ll be a lot more than this bridge that goes up. If it ignites, the smoke and ash will carry lethal doses of radiation across Northern California.”

  “The bridge authority is moving to close it down as we speak. As soon as the southbound traffic has cleared, it’ll be deserted.”

  “Great. That’s a terrific plan. We’ve still got a madman up there with a nuke.”

  “We don’t know that it’s a PTND,” Forsyth said.

  Jack shook his head ruefully. A Portable Tactical Nuclear Device. The FBI made everything seem so sterile—manageable because it had a classification.

  “Look, I’m sorry about before,” Forsyth said, “and I understand you’re upset about the girl. But we’ve got to wait for the negotiating team. If we can try to reason with the guy—”

  “Reason with him!” Jack shouted. “Do you know who this man is? The only way to reason with him is to put a bullet in his head.”

  “If it comes to that we will. We’ve got a chopper headed this way with a sniper on board.”

  They’re doing it by the book, Jack thought. That’s all these people know—and one day it would be their downfall.

  Probably today, in fact.

  But Jack wasn’t part of their team and he’d make his own rules, as he’d done since this damn thing started.

  What was it the Reb always said about Israeli negotiating tactics? “Every Jew a twenty-two—”

  Jack gestured to Forsyth. “Give me your gun.”

  “What?”

  Jack moved toward him. “Give me your damn gun!”

  “Back off, Hatfield, that’s not gonna—”

  Jack lunged, thrusting his hand inside Forsyth’s jacket and ripping the Glock from his holster. Forsyth grabbed him but Jack wrenched free with a furious
tug and ran, heading across three lanes of highway toward the pedestrian walkway.

  “Stop him!” Forsyth shouted as he took off after him, several of the others joining in the chase.

  “Shoot?” someone called back.

  “Negative!” Forsyth said with something that sounded like regret. “Just freakin’ stop him!” He started running, joined by four other agents.

  Jack leaped over the rail and hit the sidewalk, running for all he was worth, heading for the right flank of the tower. He heard shouts behind him but ignored them as he covered the last several yards to the base of the spire. Few people knew that there was a door built into the design, but Jack was one of those few and he reached for the handle, finding it locked.

  His pursuers were closing in fast.

  Stepping back, he raised the Glock and fired, shattering the latch and nearly clipping himself with the ricochet. He wrenched the door open and went inside.

  The interior of the tower reminded Jack of an old World War II submarine. A short, narrow corridor led to a small, rickety elevator with steel-mesh sides, looking like something you’d find in a mine shaft.

  Voices and footsteps were closing in from behind. Jack quickly shut himself inside the elevator as Forsyth reached the doorway. Jack looked back, saw a face full of desperation and fury.

  “Hatfield! You’re gonna blow this!”

  Maybe—but he hadn’t so far.

  He jammed the elevator into motion and the car began to rise, rattling its way toward the top of the tower.

  No, Jack and his team had carried the ball farther than he could have hoped, could ever have imagined. God—his God, a just God—wouldn’t let him fail. Not now.

  Jack refused to think about it. All he could think about was getting to Sara.

  The elevator came to a stop at the lower part of the tower beam. Jack threw the door open and stepped into a small vestibule, then over to a worn steel ladder that led up through a narrow hatch.

  Tucking the Glock in his waistband, he grabbed hold of a rung and started up, not quite sure what he’d do once he reached the top. He had no plan here. Was running purely on blind instinct, but if he didn’t do something, he knew that this bridge—and Sara—were doomed.

 

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