Arctic Fire

Home > Other > Arctic Fire > Page 20
Arctic Fire Page 20

by Stephen W. Frey


  United States military planes ran reconnaissance missions to monitor the progress of LNG ships headed for her shores. And, the leader realized ruefully, those planes would probably be on high alert after the US had intercepted the Olympian, which it somehow must have done. So if those planes sighted the Pegasus headed in the wrong direction, she would be boarded or blown up before she could get close enough to annihilate the Virginia Beach-Norfolk metro area.

  But the man in the United States who they’d been working with claimed he had that covered. He claimed he was giving naval operations in Norfolk wrong information so the Pegasus could get close enough to complete her mission. So those planes wouldn’t be looking for an LNG tanker heading for the mid-Atlantic and wouldn’t have her coordinates. So they could literally drive the ship’s bow right up onto the sandy beach, blow her up, and incinerate half a million people.

  Maybe more.

  CHAPTER 29

  “THANKS FOR buying me this coat back in Baltimore.” Karen pulled the heavy down jacket tightly around her slim body. “It’s freezing out here.”

  “Yeah, it said eleven degrees in the car back at the gas station.”

  “And it’s only December. How do people stand it here?”

  Jack glanced over at Karen through his crystallizing exhalation. Her black hair was cascading down onto her shoulders in shimmering waves, she’d done her makeup just right, and she was wearing a cool pair of wraparound sunglasses. She looked more like a movie star who should have been walking down the streets of Vail, Colorado, with an entourage than an ex-cop stuck in the frozen northland with a crazy bond trader. But she wasn’t complaining.

  Despite being thrown together so intimately so quickly and coming from such different backgrounds, he and Karen were getting along great. They’d driven over a thousand miles since yesterday morning, but the time had gone quickly for both of them. She’d told him that very directly as they’d crossed into Illinois last night. And he’d agreed immediately. They’d laughed and joked, and in no time, it seemed, they were driving past downtown Minneapolis at midnight.

  It had taken them another couple of hours to get up here to Bemidji, where they checked into a quiet, picturesque motel on the outskirts of town just after two a.m. Once again, Jack persuaded the man behind the desk not to take a credit card imprint. Once again, he and Karen stayed in the same room because she wanted to save him money. Once again, there were two beds in the room.

  “Welcome to northern Minnesota,” Jack said as he glanced around. “If you don’t like cold and snow, you probably shouldn’t stay long. And you definitely shouldn’t live here.”

  The early morning sun was streaming down onto the snow-covered Upper Midwest through a cloudless blue sky. Despite the sunshine, it was brutally cold. Cold but eerily beautiful, and a place Troy probably would have loved, Jack figured.

  “The guy behind the front desk at the motel was telling me that some years they grill out on Memorial Day in their coats and ski hats. On Labor Day too,” he added.

  “But I bet he said the summers are really nice.”

  Jack looked over at her in surprise. “He did say that, exactly that.”

  “All two weeks of them,” she said grimly as she shivered.

  She was exaggerating, he knew, but she probably wasn’t that far off. “And I bet with all the lakes and ponds around here, the mosquitoes are terrible.”

  “The mosquito’s the state bird, Jack. Didn’t you know that?”

  He chuckled softly. She was quick with those funny comments, and she had more jokes ready to go than most Wall Street traders—which was impressive. She was smart too—really smart, he was coming to find. They’d had a few intense discussions about certain highly charged areas of the world, and she’d actually changed his mind on a few things, which was also impressive. He couldn’t remember the last time anyone had changed his mind about an important world issue.

  “You sure you know where this box is?” he asked, nodding toward the Bankses’ cabin.

  The cabin was built in a small clearing not far from the shore of a large lake. The pine tree cover around the lake was dense, and anyone in the cabin would have had a difficult time seeing them even though they weren’t far away. There were no cars in the small circular driveway in front of the cabin, and Jack didn’t see any footprints in the three inches of snow covering the yard around the house. It didn’t look like they were going to run into anyone when they went inside, but he was still worried.

  “Troy’s letter was very specific,” she answered. “It’s in the closet of the downstairs bedroom.”

  They’d left the rental car at a gas station out on the main road, then hiked to here along the quarter-mile driveway. They’d stayed inside the tree line the entire time to keep out of sight. It had taken a lot longer to get here than if they’d driven, but there was no way for a vehicle to get in or out other than the driveway. Jack didn’t want to get trapped back here in case someone followed them in, and he wanted to approach the cabin as quietly as possible—in case it was being watched, or someone was inside.

  “When did you get that letter from Troy?” he asked.

  “Like a month ago, I think.”

  “Why would he put the box here?”

  “He and Charlie hung out here. They had a pretty intense life, and this was a great place for them to get away to.” She pointed through the trees at the glittering surface of the lake, which still hadn’t frozen because it was too early in the season. “Charlie told me they fished a lot.”

  Jack didn’t agree with everything Troy had been involved with, but he could still respect and appreciate most of what his brother had done to protect the nation. And he could certainly understand the need to get away from that intense life every once in a while. This would have been a great place to do it—despite the cold and the mosquitoes.

  “He probably figured nobody from Red Cell Seven would ever think of looking here for anything now,” she said. “Charlie’s been gone a year. Why would anybody from RCS come here? I think it was a great place for Troy to hide something.”

  Jack glanced over at her. They hadn’t talked about Charlie in a while, and he was glad to see no tears came to her eyes at another mention of his death. “All right, let’s go. But keep your eyes peeled.”

  He had a bad feeling about this.

  Speed Trap glanced up from his bowl of fish soup when he heard a pair of heavy footsteps trudging down the hallway outside the galley. They’d left Dutch Harbor two hours ago for a cod run on the Bering Sea to get bait for the opilio crab season, which was about to start. The engine hum coming from below was loud as the Arctic Fire churned up and down through seven-foot waves. He hadn’t heard the footsteps coming toward him until they were close.

  He knew something was wrong when he saw Sage’s expression. “What’s up?” he asked as his uncle sat down across the table. Grant had stayed behind in the doorway—which was the only way out. “What’s the matter?”

  “What happened the night we threw Troy Jensen overboard?” Sage asked directly.

  “What do you mean?” Speed Trap asked innocently.

  Sage clenched and unclenched his jaw several times. “You know what I mean,” he finally said, doing his best to keep his anger in check. “Did you throw a raft off the back of the ship to that guy?”

  “No.”

  “He saved your life,” Grant called out from the doorway. “You felt like you owed him. That’s what you told me.”

  “Yeah, so?”

  “Did you throw him a raft?” Sage demanded again. “Tell me the goddamned truth. It was dark. I wouldn’t have seen it.” He hesitated. “Did you?”

  “No,” Speed Trap shot back defiantly. He couldn’t tell them the truth. If he did, they’d really take it out on him. If he kept denying it, they couldn’t throw him overboard. Not with a clear conscience, anyway. “I didn’t.”

  As Sage rose from the chair across the crumb-strewn table, he pulled a pistol from his coat pocket
and pointed it at Speed Trap. “Get up,” he ordered. “We’re going out on deck.”

  “What the—”

  “Grant,” Sage called over his shoulder, “get your brother moving.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Jack watched as Karen removed a stack of neatly folded towels from the bottom shelf of the cedar closet and placed them on the floor. Then she reached for the back of the shelf and picked up a black box the size of a thick hardcover book.

  “Bingo,” she whispered excitedly. “This must be it.”

  As Jack took a step toward her there was a loud banging on the front door. He froze as it quickly grew louder.

  “Open up!” someone yelled. “Open up now!”

  Jack hustled to the bedroom window and pulled the curtain back slightly. He couldn’t see the front door from here, but he could see a police cruiser parked in the driveway. “We’ve gotta get out of here, Karen.” They couldn’t afford the time it would undoubtedly take to straighten this situation out with the cop. “Let’s go!”

  Carlson checked the number on his personal cell phone. It was Rex Stein calling. This wasn’t the phone Stein was supposed to use in case of emergencies.

  “Hello.”

  “Hi, it’s me.”

  “I know who it is. What’s going on?”

  “I have that information you wanted.”

  Carlson nodded. Good for Stein. He’d followed up quickly on the request. “OK.”

  “Is it all right if I use names on this phone?”

  Carlson nodded again. Good for Stein for asking that. He was showing respect for the man, Red Cell Seven, and the situation. Too bad it wasn’t going to make a damn bit of difference as far as David Dorn’s life went. He and Maddux were meeting later today to make final preparations for the assassination.

  “It’s all right to use names,” Carlson said.

  “OK, well, the person who called the president to ask about Troy Jensen was Troy’s father, Bill.”

  Carlson was glad he hadn’t been with Stein when he’d gotten this answer. He would have given away his surprise and disappointment with the shocked expression that had flashed across his face. The way he had with the same troubled expression the other day in the Oval Office.

  “Are you sure?” Carlson asked calmly.

  “Absolutely. One of the operators checked the incoming calls for me, and we traced the number to Bill Jensen. The call came in right before you and he met the other day.”

  “That doesn’t necessarily mean—”

  “And one of my direct reports confirmed that it was Bill Jensen who asked about Troy. President Dorn mentioned it to him.”

  Carlson wanted to ask another question, but Stein would quickly pick up on the obvious and might try to turn this situation to his advantage. That was politics and that was Washington, and while Stein was way out of his league in the intel world, he was a master at making hay in the marbled halls of downtown Washington.

  “Did Mr. Jensen speak to the president?” Even in the silence coming from the other end of the phone, Carlson could hear Stein sensing an opportunity. “Do you know?”

  “Yes, he did.”

  Carlson hated being in such a weak position. Thank God he rarely was. “Did you ask President Dorn about the specifics of their conversation?”

  “I haven’t had a chance to. I’ll do that as soon as I can.”

  Bullshit. They’d probably spoken at length about the call. “That’s all right,” Carlson said quickly. “It doesn’t matter.”

  “Troy is one of yours?” Stein wanted to know. “Is that right?”

  “I hope you were being sincere during our visit yesterday,” Carlson said, ignoring the question with another question and a stern warning tone.

  “Uh, yes, I was. Of course I was.”

  “Good.” That quickly he’d turned the tables back on Stein. “I’d hate to think otherwise.” He paused for a moment. “Goodbye, Rex.”

  Carlson stared into space as he closed the cell phone and ended the call. He knew that Bill Jensen and President Dorn spoke at least once a month about the economy because, after all, Bill ran the biggest bank in the country and he was a great resource for the president to have on that subject. But Bill always alerted his old friend and RCS partner Roger Carlson that he was calling Dorn. He hadn’t this time, though. This time Bill had violated their pact.

  Carlson’s eyes narrowed. Could Bill Jensen be putting his family in front of the country?

  Jack slipped halfway through the back doorway—just as the officer moved around the corner of the cabin to the right.

  “Go back,” Jack whispered over his shoulder to Karen. He was pretty sure the guy hadn’t seen him. “Now.”

  They retreated into the house, closed the door—the top half of which was a nine-pane window—and flattened themselves against either side of the kitchen wall beside the door.

  “Open up in there,” the officer called as he moved to the door. “I see your footprints in the snow coming across the yard. And I don’t see any footprints coming back out. I know you’re in there. Open up now. Give yourself up. My weapon is out and ready to fire.”

  Jack closed his eyes tightly. This was the last damn thing they needed right now.

  “Jeeeeesus!” Speed Trap screamed as the Arctic Fire burst through the crest of a big wave. Salty spray went flying as the ship plunged toward the next trough. “Don’t do this to me, Grant. Pleeeease!”

  Grant was holding Speed Trap upside down by the ankles over the port side of the ship near where Troy had pulled him back aboard by that sliver of a yellow harness. The ship was plowing through the rough seas, and Speed Trap was absolutely terrified—almost as terrified as he’d been that day Troy had pulled him back aboard.

  “Tell me the truth, Speed Trap,” Captain Sage shouted down at him. “Tell me the goddamned truth!”

  “Let him in,” Karen whispered.

  “Are you crazy?”

  “Let him in,” she repeated. “We’ll talk to him.”

  “No way,” Jack whispered back, his anger at her boiling over quickly. He was shocked that she’d do this, and suddenly the suspicious side of his brain was getting the better of him. “I’m not getting arrested. We don’t have time for that. And you know that’s what’s going to happen if we—”

  “Open up!” the cop yelled from outside.

  “Do it,” she ordered quietly. “Open the door or I will.”

  “Karen, you’re going to ruin our chances of—”

  “Do it!” she hissed. “Now.”

  Jack stared into her burning eyes. She wasn’t backing down. That was clear. “All right, officer,” he called loudly. “I’m opening it now.” He stepped slowly in front of the door and pulled it back.

  “Move into the kitchen slowly,” the officer ordered as he aimed his revolver at Jack’s chest. “Move it,” he demanded, moving forward as Jack backpedaled. “Go on. But take your time.”

  As the officer moved past the door and into the kitchen, Karen darted out from the wall and slammed him on the back of the head with the revolver she’d whipped out of the back of her jeans. The officer tumbled limply to the tile floor as his gun crashed into the bottom of the stove.

  “Jesus Christ!” Jack shouted, his suspicions gone that quickly. Now he was nothing but impressed. “What the hell?”

  “Hey, we’ve gotta do what we’ve gotta do.” She knelt down beside the officer to see if he was OK. “I hit him just right. No blood, just a lump. He’s gonna wake up with a big headache, but other than that he’ll be fine.” She looked up at Jack. “He’s gonna wake up tied to that chair too,” she said, motioning at one of the big wooden chairs around the kitchen table.

  Jack shook his head and grinned as he stared down at her. “I…I can’t believe you just—”

  “Go find some rope,” she interrupted. “There’s probably some in the garage. Hurry up!”

  Maddux answered his cell phone before the second ring. “What?”

&n
bsp; “It’s me.”

  It was Captain Sage. “What do you have?”

  “Well, we went at the friend of mine pretty hard, and he denied helping out the ballast.”

  “Are you sure he’s telling the truth?” Something told Maddux that he needed to get to Alaska immediately. Captain Sage was a tough, tough man, but he might not have really put the screws to his nephew during an interrogation. “Absolutely sure?” He could already hear Sage struggling with his answer even though he hadn’t said anything. Maddux’s gut was telling him that Speed Trap had definitely floated Troy Jensen a raft from the back of the Arctic Fire that night on the Bering Sea. “I’m coming out there,” Maddux said decisively, not even giving Sage a chance to answer. “If you’re not in port now, get your ass back there within forty-eight hours.”

  “I owe you an apology,” Jack said. They’d been driving in silence as they headed south from Bemidji. They were only a few miles from making it back to Interstate 94 and continuing their journey westward. He was hoping to reach Montana by late tonight. His target was Missoula.

  “You thought I was going to ruin everything by trying to talk it out with that cop, didn’t you?” Karen asked as a grin tugged on the corners of her mouth. “You thought I was going to tell him how I used to be a cop and all, right? You thought I was going to try and negotiate our way out of it.”

  “Maybe,” Jack admitted as he eased off on the accelerator. He was doing ten miles over the posted limit. The last thing they needed right now was to get pulled over. “I sure as hell didn’t think you were gonna nail him in the back of the head with your pistol.”

  She laughed. “Well, I guess you better watch out, huh? Maybe you better keep your eye on me.” She opened her eyes wide and waved her fingers at him like she was putting a curse on him. “Woooo. Maybe I’m crazy.”

  He broke into a wide smile of his own as he watched her put her head back in the passenger seat and laugh even louder. He could feel himself falling for her. She loved life like no one he’d ever met. She wasn’t scared of anything. And that laugh of hers was so contagious.

  “I just hope that cop’s all right,” Karen said as her laughter faded. “I felt bad about that. The guy was just doing his job.”

 

‹ Prev