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Black Friday (Maggie O'Dell)

Page 17

by Alex Kava


  There was still enough emotion to cause the blue eyes to go watery, again. He took an irritated swipe at them and continued, “I didn’t believe it could happen. Thought we’d never allow it again. But we Americans have short attention spans. We become complacent. Six years later, 9/11.”

  He sat back, sat forward, couldn’t get comfortable. Didn’t seem to know what to do with his hands.

  Maggie waited out his silence and his fidgeting.

  “We’ve become complacent again,” he told her. “This was meant to be a wake-up call. This administration keeps tearing down our policies on terror, weakening our security systems. They’re leaving us vulnerable for another attack. And mark my word, there will be another attack.” The anger was creeping back into his voice.

  “It’ll be some major sporting event or in one of our shopping centers or an airport. They’ve broken down the barriers we worked so hard to build. Closing down Gitmo. It’s crazy. Treating those monsters to three square meals while all they want to do is get back out there and slaughter innocent Americans.”

  “Thirty-two innocent Americans were killed today.” She couldn’t help it. She didn’t want to listen to his diatribe and let him believe her silence might excuse, condone or possibly understand it.

  “Dear God, thirty-two?” He covered his face with trembling hands. “That wasn’t supposed to happen,” he said through his fingers as they rubbed at his disbelief. “I swear to you, that wasn’t supposed to happen.”

  “What exactly was supposed to happen, Mr. Lee?”

  “A disruption. That’s all.” He shook his head and sat forward, hands wringing. “Our group…and it’s an influential group of high-level, upstanding individuals…”

  “Citizens for American Pride?”

  He let out a breath, something that sounded between a snort and a chuckle.

  “CAP? It’s a smokescreen, a distraction. That organization has nothing to do with this.”

  “Then I don’t understand, what group are you talking about?”

  “No one knows about us. We’ve managed to keep it secret for almost fifteen years. We’ve influenced business contracts—billions of dollars—making sure that American companies are awarded. We’ve manipulated government policy. Nothing different than what lobbyists do, only we have members who are…let’s just say, a bit closer to actually making government policy.”

  “Are you saying members of Congress are a part of this secret group?”

  He shrugged and she knew he was monitoring what he told her, perhaps deciding as he went along.

  “We’re not thugs,” he said. “That’s all I’m saying. Sometimes our methods may have seemed a bit unconventional. We did what we felt was necessary to influence, to persuade, to keep America on track. Yes, we pushed the envelope. But no innocent lives were lost. I promise you that.”

  Now he glanced around the room as if checking to see if it was, indeed, secure. “This was meant as a wake-up. The devices—electronic jamming devices—were supposed to be in those backpacks. They were designed specifically to disrupt computer and satellite feeds. I helped create them myself. It was supposed to be a virtual electronic blackout, appropriately timed to occur on what the retail world calls ‘Black Friday.’ A day of substantial profits would be turned upside down to show how easily a terrorist could walk in and do the same, maybe worse.”

  “You certainly proved the worse part.”

  Maggie bit down on her lower lip. Calm, steady, impassive—she could do this without injecting emotion. She kept from balling her hands into fists, willed her feet to stay planted when she wanted to pace.

  “You’re right. Someone certainly proved it. Someone with his own agenda. Those boys didn’t have anything to do with this.”

  “You know the boys involved?”

  “They were friends of my grandson. Chad, Tyler and Dixon got hoodwinked into carrying those backpacks. And Patrick—they shouldn’t even have his picture. He didn’t have anything to do with this. Patrick and Becca just went to the mall to be with Dixon.”

  “You know Patrick Murphy?”

  “Patrick and Becca celebrated Thanksgiving at my home yesterday, spent the last two nights with us. They go to University of New Haven with Dixon. Came from Connecticut all together. Drove two days. Good kids. Good, decent kids.”

  He was shaking his head and didn’t notice Maggie swallowing hard.

  Patrick had been telling the truth. He didn’t have anything to do with the bombing. She shouldn’t have been so hard on him, should have trusted him instead of asking him to trust her. Now she was sitting with the man who Patrick had spent Thanksgiving with and he seemed to know more about her brother’s character than she did. Suddenly her stomach did a flip as she realized something.

  “Was Patrick with Dixon when he was taken?”

  “No, neither was Becca.”

  The relief was hard to contain but Henry Lee didn’t seem to notice as he stared at his hands again.

  “Dixon said he left the backpack with them. Are Patrick and Becca alive?”

  Maggie saw the realization in his eyes. He hadn’t thought of it until now, that Dixon’s friends may have been killed in the blast.

  “Patrick is alive. I don’t know about Becca.”

  Henry Lee shook his head. “Dixon was here at the hospital with me,” he told her. “I was so relieved that he was safe. Then those bastards took him from here. That’s how I know they must be watching.”

  He stopped, took a couple of deep breaths to steer himself away from the anger. “Dixon was worried about his friends. He borrowed my smartphone. He was talking to them.” He paused and squinted, looking for the right term. “Texting them, making sure they were okay. That’s how those bastards are making me keep in touch, controlling how I keep in touch. With my own goddamn phone.”

  “Who exactly are they, Mr. Lee? Who is it that has your grandson, who switched bombs with jamming devices?”

  “The one in charge calls himself the Project Manager.” He looked away. Took several more deep breaths as if steeling himself for what came next. “And he’s getting ready to make another attack on Sunday.”

  CHAPTER

  55

  Just Patrick’s luck. Looked like security guard Frank used this laundry room as his break room.

  Patrick climbed into and folded himself inside one of the large commercial dryers, barely clicking the door shut before the giant sauntered in. He pressed himself against the metal drum, hoping anything that showed through the round window would only look like a pile of clothes waiting to be sorted. He could see just a sliver of Frank and what looked like a three-day supply of vending machine snacks. The security guard sat down at one of the tables, popped a can of soda, ripped open a bag of chips and propped up a paperback novel.

  Great. A nice, long break.

  Patrick tried to ignore the cramp in his legs. One leg twisted up under the other. He’d better get used to it. Frank was settling in. The dryer next door rattled and vibrated with the towels and his clothes, thumping his own high-tops against the back of Patrick’s head. He might get away with some movement. The sound would get lost in the hum of the other dryer, but he couldn’t chance setting his own creaking or whining.

  Then he remembered his cell phone. He hadn’t shut it off. He hoped Becca wouldn’t choose now to call him. Or Maggie.

  It reminded him that Becca hadn’t called him. He couldn’t call her. He didn’t have Dixon’s phone number. But she had his number. Why hadn’t she called? Now that she was safe with Dixon, why wasn’t she at least checking to make sure he was okay? When she escaped from the triage area had she intended to escape from him, too?

  The thumping already gave him a headache. He chanced another peek. Frank had barely made a dent in his junk food stash.

  Patrick’s leg cramped, and he gritted his teeth against the pain. He leaned back, tried to stretch. The metal drum groaned and he froze. He braced himself and tried to listen over the vibration of the next-do
or dryer. No footsteps. He didn’t see a chunk of blue uniform. Maybe the groan had sounded louder inside than outside.

  This was crazy. All through high school and college he worked hard, kept to himself, tried to do the right thing, stayed out of trouble. Didn’t date, didn’t do drugs, didn’t binge drink, didn’t go looking for a fight. Or at least he didn’t make a habit out of any one of those things. It’d been hard enough taking care of himself. Paying for college. Making enough extra money to eat, buy gas for his car and pay the rent. How the hell did he end up with his picture plastered all over the network and cable news? How did he end up alone, on the run? In a fucking dryer?

  He closed his eyes and clenched his jaw against the thumping. It was exhausting having only yourself to depend on. He thought maybe Becca had felt the same way. He didn’t want to admit how disappointed he was that she left without a word to him, that she didn’t call or text. If he admitted that he was disappointed then he’d have to admit that she mattered. He had trusted that she was his friend. Didn’t friends look out for each other?

  Maggie said he needed to trust her.

  He remembered when she called and invited him to her home for Thanksgiving. She offered to pay for his flight or train ticket. Said he could spend the weekend if he wanted. She had a big house with a huge backyard. She was anxious to introduce him to her white Lab, Harvey. In the last two years since they’d discovered each other, Patrick could count on one hand the times they had seen or talked to each other. He didn’t know this woman who was trying to suddenly be his big sister.

  Then it occurred to him that she, at least, was trying. What had he done? Not much of anything.

  From what little he knew about Maggie, he realized she had worked hard to get where she was, working her way through college, earning a forensic fellowship at Quantico. And it sounded like her life hadn’t been much easier than his after their father died. She had only hinted about her mother’s alcoholism, but Patrick had worked in Champs long enough to recognize the difference between someone who chose to stay away from alcohol and someone who had to stay away.

  The first time he met Maggie she had come to Champs in the hope of seeing him when he was working. Only she had no idea what he looked like. He remembered watching this lady sitting by the bar as she glanced around like she was searching for someone. It was a college bar. She looked out of place. Not because she was older but because she was too classy for Champs. Then to make matters worse—to prove even further that she didn’t belong—she ordered a Diet Pepsi.

  The memory brought a smile just as the next-door dryer came to a sudden stop. No more vibration. No more thumping.

  Patrick stayed pressed against the drum, not daring to move. The quiet was worse than the thumping. He risked a glance, moving only his head and keeping the drum from groaning again. The table was empty. No snack food, no paperback novel.

  He craned his neck. No Frank. Was it possible he was gone?

  Patrick dared to eased himself up on his elbows, creaking the drum just enough so he could see the rest of the room. Empty. Finally he could get out. If only he could twist himself out of this pretzel.

  He pushed the door of the dryer. It didn’t open. He put his shoulder to it and began to shove his weight against it.

  The door didn’t budge.

  CHAPTER

  56

  Henry could tell the FBI agent didn’t like him. Despite the compassion she’d shown earlier with Hannah, it was obvious she was having a difficult time listening to his reason for any of this. He didn’t care. If he took into account what others thought of him he’d never have built the business empire he had today.

  This agent, this young woman looked half his age. What did she know about making decisions that would change the world? He didn’t give a crap whether or not she liked him. She could judge him all she wanted. The only thing he cared about now was that she helped him get Dixon back. Nothing else mattered.

  “Where is the next attack supposed to take place?” she asked.

  He could tell that her patience was wearing thin. She didn’t realize it but he had caught plenty in her eyes, read the brief flickers of emotion she thought she could conceal. Henry had hired and fired more people than this woman had probably met in her young life. He saw that she wasn’t just getting impatient, she was anxious, exhausted, cautious, suspicious. Not only did she not like him, she didn’t trust him.

  “I don’t know the exact location,” he told her. His hands no longer trembled. A good sign. He didn’t like not being in control.

  She raised an eyebrow. It was the first facial expression she had allowed.

  “Sunday is the second busiest travel day of the year,” he explained. “It’ll be an airport. But I honestly don’t know which one. We provided a list, but the choice was left to the Project Manager.”

  “Why an airport? I thought the jamming devices were designed to cause a commotion in the retail industry? Stall the computers? Play havoc with their profits.”

  “No, no you don’t understand.” He shook his head. He thought he had been clear. “This isn’t about money. This is about keeping America safe. Keep terrorists from striking us again. This administration has destroyed all the safeguards we worked so hard to put into effect. What better place and time to remind Americans than a mall on the busiest shopping day of the year. Likewise, an airport on the second busiest travel day, stalling travelers returning home.”

  “Did you know it would be Mall of America?”

  “Yes, of course. It’s the largest mall in America.”

  “Then why don’t you know which airport?”

  He nodded. She was smart. But she still didn’t quite understand.

  “The largest mall in America made sense, no question about it. But if we knew which airport, we might give it away or incriminate ourselves.”

  “You’re going to give me the list.” It wasn’t a question.

  He hesitated then reminded himself it didn’t matter. It was a small exchange for Dixon’s life.

  “Of course. I don’t have it memorized. I’ll need to e-mail it to you.”

  She pulled out her smartphone. “You’ll e-mail it to me before I leave.”

  Maybe he had done his own misjudging of her as well. She was sharp, quick…gutsy.

  “So tell me about this man who calls himself the Project Manager,” she prompted him.

  “I wasn’t the one who hired him,” he told her. “He was hired?”

  Another slip of emotion. He could see it, though subtle, it was there in her eyes. Surprise? No, Henry thought it was more a flicker of disgust.

  “None of us met him. He made certain we had no idea who he was, what he looked like, where he’d come from.”

  “Why did you believe you could trust him?” Henry shrugged. Good question.

  “He came to us highly recommended by someone we trusted.”

  “Are you telling me this man you hired to upset retail business and stall air travel, has his own agenda?”

  “Either he has his own agenda or he’s following orders from someone in our group. Someone who believes we need bombs rather than jamming devices to wake up America.” Somehow he couldn’t bring himself to tell her that the group he defended and vowed to protect had gone a step too far, ignoring his warnings, betraying years of integrity and honor in exchange for what? Power? Greed?

  “You realize I could take you in for questioning,” she told him. “I could make you tell us who that someone is.”

  “I know my rights, Agent O’Dell, and I employ some of the best attorneys in the country. I’d clam up and you’d have nothing. You need this information and I want my grandson back alive.”

  Her earlier sympathy had diminished.

  “If you want your grandson back you’ll need to tell me something. I don’t know if you’re aware of this but Chad Hendricks and Tyler Bennett are dead.”

  He winced, closed his eyes. He had suspected as much.

  “Their backpacks blew u
p while on their backs, detonated from outside the mall.” Her voice had gained an edge to it. “They were just walking around the mall, thinking they’d cause some commotion—according to you—by jamming a few computers, holding up some lines of shoppers, irritating those greedy retail owners. They had no idea they’d be blown into pieces.”

  His eyes met hers and he watched her carefully put away the anger, pretending the emotion was a tool of her interrogation practice.

  “It’s okay,” he said. “It doesn’t matter to me if you enjoy taking swipes at me.”

  That surprised her. He could see she wanted to cross her arms but stopped herself. She flexed the fingers of one hand, no doubt preventing them from balling up into a fist.

  “Think whatever you must about me,” he continued.

  “I deserve it. But my grandson doesn’t deserve to pay for any of my mistakes.”

  “Let’s get back to the Project Manager, Mr. Lee. There has to be some information you can give me about him.”

  “There is one thing. Though I don’t know if it means much. He referred to himself as John Doe #2. I was told he said it as if it were a resumé enhancer.”

  “I’m not sure I understand.”

  “My daughter was killed in the bombing in Oklahoma City. The Project Manager knew more about all of us than we knew about him. I figured it was some twisted reference to the alleged third terrorist. For my benefit, perhaps. Remember, they referred to him as John Doe #2? Maybe he said it because it was true.”

  “Are you suggesting the man you hired as the Project Manager is John Doe #2 from the Oklahoma City bombing?”

  Henry shrugged.

  “That he even existed was mere speculation, rumor at best.”

  Henry noticed that Agent O’Dell looked like she was already considering it, wondering if, indeed, John Doe #2 may have been real after all.

  “That’s all I know,” he said. “Did you want me to download that list for you?” He pointed to the smartphone in her hand.

 

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