Line of Control o-8

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Line of Control o-8 Page 12

by Tom Clancy


  What was significant to Rodgers was that the radio function was activated by signals sent from the Indonesian military outpost in Baukau. The signals were sent after calls had indicated that one individual or another was going to be in a strategic location.

  Rodgers could not help but wonder if the home phone had somehow signaled the field phone to detonate the secondary blasts. The timing was too uncomfortably close to be coincidence. And the continuation of the signal at such regular intervals suggested that the terrorists were being tracked.

  Hell, it did more than suggest that, Rodgers told himself. And the more he thought about it, the more he began to realize that they might have a very nasty developing situation on their hands. The Pentagon's elite think tank, with the innocuous name of the Department of Theoretical Effects, called this process "computing with vaporware." Rodgers had always been good at that, back when the Pentagon still called it "domino thinking."

  He had to talk to Herbert about this.

  Rodgers called over to Ishi Honda. The communications man was lying on the tarmac with the TAC-SAT beside him. He came running over with the secure phone. Rodgers thanked him then squatted on the field beside the oblong unit and phoned Bob Herbert. He used the earphones so he could hear over the roar of landing and departing jets.

  Herbert picked up at once.

  "Bob, it's Mike Rodgers," the general said.

  "Glad to hear from you. Are you at Al?" Herbert asked.

  "Just landed," Rodgers said. "Listen, Bob. I've been thinking about this latest data you sent me. I've got a feeling that the Srinagar bombers have been tagged, maybe by someone on the inside."

  "I've got that same feeling," Herbert admitted. "Especially since we've been able to place the calls from field to home before that. They originated at a farm in Kargil. We notified the SFF. They sent over a local constable to check the place out. The farmer refused to say anything and they could not find his granddaughter. Ron and the SFF guy are going over first thing in the morning, see if they can't get more out of him."

  "None of this smells right," Rodgers said.

  "No, it doesn't," Herbert said. "And there's something else. The farmer's daughter and son-in-law were resistance fighters who died fighting the Pakistani invasion."

  "So the farmer certainly had a reason to be part of a conspiracy against the Free Kashmir Militia," Rodgers said.

  "In theory, yes," Herbert said. "What we're looking at now is whether there is a conspiracy and whether it could have involved the district police station that was home for the cell phone. Matt Stoll's gotten into their personnel files and my team is looking at the backgrounds of each officer. We want to see if any of them have connections with antiterrorist groups."

  "You realize, Bob, that if you find a link between the police and the Pakistani cell, we may have an unprecedented international incident on our hands," Rodgers said.

  "I don't follow," Herbert replied. "Just because they might have known about the attack and decided not to prevent it—"

  "I think it may have been more than that," Rodgers said. "There were three separate attacks. Only one of them conformed to the established m.o. of the Free Kashmir Militia, the bombing of the police station."

  "Wait a minute," Herbert said. "That's a big leap. You're saying the police could have planned this action themselves? That the Indians attacked their own temples—"

  "To coincide with the FKM attack, yes," Rodgers said.

  "But an operation like that would have to involve more than just the police in Kashmir," Herbert pointed out. "Especially if they're tracking and going to attempt to capture the cell, which is apparently the case."

  "I know," Rodgers replied. "Isn't it possible they do have help? From a group that is a little more involved than usual?"

  "The SFF," Herbert said.

  "Why not? That could be the reason they wanted the bazaar sealed and the Black Cats kept out," Rodgers said.

  Herbert thought for a moment. "It's possible," he agreed. "But it's also possible we're getting ahead of ourselves."

  "Better than being behind," Rodgers pointed out.

  "Touche," Herbert said. "Look. Let's see what Ron Friday and his partner turn up in the morning. I'll bring Paul up to date and let you know when we have anything else."

  "Sure," Rodgers said. "But while we're getting ahead of ourselves let's go one step further."

  "All right," Herbert said tentatively.

  "Striker is going in to Pakistan to look for nukes," Rodgers said. "What if we don't find very many or even none at all? Suppose the Indian government authorized the Srinagar attack just to rouse their population and pick a fight. A fight Pakistan cannot possibly win."

  "You think they'll respond with a nuclear strike?" Herbert said.

  "Why not?" Rodgers asked.

  "The world wouldn't stand for it!" Herbert replied.

  "What would the world do?" Rodgers asked. "Go to war against India? Fire missiles on New Delhi? Would they impose sanctions? What kind? To what end? And what would happen when hundreds of thousands of Indians started to starve and die? Bob, we're not talking about Iraq or North Korea. We're talking about one billion people with the fourth largest military in the world. Nearly a billion Hindus who are afraid of becoming the victims of a Muslim holy war."

  "Mike, no nation on earth is going to condone a nuclear strike against Pakistan," Herbert said. "Period."

  "The question is not condoning," Rodgers said. "The question is how do you respond if it happens. What would we do alone?"

  "Alone?"

  "More or less," Rodgers said. "I'm betting Moscow and Beijing wouldn't complain too loud, for starters. India nuking Pakistan leaves Moscow free to slam whichever republics they want with a limited nuclear strike. No more long wars in Afghanistan or Chechnya. And China probably wouldn't bitch too loud because it gives them a precedent to move on Taiwan."

  "They wouldn't," Herbert said. "It's insane."

  "No, it's survival," Rodgers said. "Israel's got a nuclear strike plan ready in case of a united Arab attack. And they'd use it, you know that. What if India has the same kind of plan? And with the same very powerful justification, I might add. Religious persecution."

  Herbert said nothing.

  "Bob, all I'm saying is that it's like the house that Jack built," Rodgers said. "One little thing leads to another and then another. Maybe it's not those things, but it's nothing good."

  "No, it is nothing good," Herbert agreed. "I still think we're overreacting but I'll get back to you as soon as we know anything. Meantime, I have just one suggestion."

  "What's that?" Rodgers asked.

  "Make sure you sleep on the flight to India," Herbert said. "One way or another you're going to need it."

  NINETEEN

  Kargil, Kashmir

  Thursday, 6:45 A.M.

  Ron Friday was annoyed that the call did not come from Hank Lewis. It came from Captain Nazir. To Friday, that meant on this leg of the mission Friday was reporting to New Delhi and not to Washington. That suggested the Black Cats would be watching him closely. Perhaps the Indian government did not want him talking to the NSA or anyone else about whatever they might find here. At least, not before they went on the mission.

  They were to go to a chicken farm in the foothills of Kargil. Apparently, an intelligence officer at Op-Center found a possible link between that location and the bazaar bombing. Op-Center did not tell Hank Lewis or their Black Cat liaisons why they thought the farm might be significant or what they believed that significance to be. All they said was that the situation in the bazaar was "atypical" and that the terrorists had to be taken alive. To Friday that translated as, "We aren't sure the terrorists did this and we need to talk to them."

  The pair flew to the farm in a fast, highly maneuverable Kamov Ka-25 helicopter. Captain Nazir was at the controls. The compact sky-blue chopper was one of more than two dozen Ka-25s India bought from Russia when the Soviet Union collapsed and the military began cutting costs
. Friday was not surprised to be riding in a military bird. A black National Security Guard chopper would stand out. But the skies here were full of Indian military traffic. Ironically, taking an air force craft was the best way to be invisible on Pakistani radar.

  The men flew north at approximately two hundred feet, following the increasingly jagged and sloping terrain. Though their unusually low passage caused some agitation among sheep and horses, and curses from their owners, Nazir explained over the headset that it was necessary. The air currents here were difficult to manage, especially early in the morning. As the sun rose the lower layers of air became heated. They mixed violently with the icy air flowing down from the mountains and created a particularly hazardous navigation zone between five hundred and two thousand feet up. It troubled Friday that a single Pakistani operative with a shoulder-mounted rocket launcher could take out the Ka-25 with no problem. He hoped that whatever information Op-Center had received was not what the intelligence community called a "TM," a "tactical mislead," a lie precipitated by the desire to slow down pursuit by smoking out and eliminating the pursuers.

  The two men reached the farmhouse without incident. Before landing, Captain Nazir had buzzed the small barn and then the wood-and-stone farmhouse. An old farmer came out to see what was happening. He seemed surprised as he shielded his eyes to look up at the chopper. Nazir came in lower until he was just above the rooftop.

  "What do you think?" Nazir asked. "Is the farmer alone?"

  "Most likely," Friday replied. Hostages who had been kept a short while tended to be highly agitated, even panicked. They wanted to get to someone who could protect them. Even if there were other hostages at risk, including close family members, self-preservation was their first, irrepressible instinct. Hostages who had been held a long while were usually just the opposite. They had already bonded with their captors and were very standoffish, frequently antagonistic. The man below them was neither.

  Nazir hovered a moment longer and then set down on a nearby field. After the noisy forty-minute flight it was good to hear nothing but the wind. The cool breeze also felt good as they made their way to the farm. Nazir wore a.38 in a holster on his hip. Friday carried a derringer in the right pocket of his windbreaker and a switchblade in the left. The.22 gun did not pack much punch but he could palm it if necessary and easily use it to blind an assailant.

  The farmer waited for the men to arrive. Friday made Apu Kumar out to be about sixty-five. He was a small, slope-shouldered man with slits for eyes. His features seemed to have a trace of Mongolian ancestry. That was not uncommon along the Himalayas. Nomads from many Asian races had roamed this region for tens of thousands of years, making it one of the world's truest melting pots. One of the sad ironies of the conflict here was the fact that so many of the combatants had the same blood.

  The men stopped a few feet from the farmer. The farmer's dark, suspicious eyes looked them up and down. Beyond the house was the barn. The chickens were still squawking from the flyover.

  "Good morning," Nazir said.

  The farmer nodded deeply, once.

  "Are you Apu Kumar?" Nazir asked.

  The farmer nodded again. This time the nod was a little less self-assured and his eyes shifted from Nazir to Friday.

  "Does anyone else live here?" Nazir inquired.

  "My granddaughter," the farmer replied.

  "Anyone else?"

  Kumar shook his head.

  "Is your granddaughter here now?" Nazir asked.

  The farmer shook his head. He shifted a little now. His expression suggested fear for his safety but now his body language said he was also tense, anxious. He was hiding something. Possibly about his granddaughter.

  "Where is she?" Nazir pressed.

  "Out," Apu replied. "She runs errands."

  "I see. Do you mind if we look around?" Nazir asked.

  "May I ask what you are looking for?" the farmer asked.

  "I don't know," Nazir admitted.

  "Well, go ahead," Apu said. "But be careful of my chickens. You've already frightened them once with your machine." He made a disdainful gesture toward the helicopter.

  Nazir nodded and turned. Friday hesitated.

  "What's wrong?" Nazir asked the American.

  Friday continued to look at the farmer. "Your granddaughter is one of them, isn't she?"

  Apu did not move. He did not say, "My granddaughter is one of who?" He said nothing. That told Friday a lot.

  Friday approached the farmer. Apu started backing away. Friday held up his hands, knuckles out. The derringer was in his right palm where the farmer could not see it. Friday watched both the farmer and the farmhouse door and window behind him. He could not be absolutely certain no was one inside or that Apu would not try to get a gun or ax or some other weapon just inside.

  "Mr. Kumar, everything is all right," Friday said slowly, softly. "I'm not going to do anything to you. Nothing at all."

  Apu slowed then stopped. Friday stopped as well.

  "Good," Friday said. He lowered his hands and put them back in his pockets. The derringer was pointed at Apu. "I want to ask you a question but it's an important one. All right?"

  Apu nodded once.

  "I need to know if you do not want to talk to us because you and your granddaughter support the terrorists or because they are holding her hostage," Friday said to him.

  Apu hesitated.

  "Mr. Kumar, people were killed yesterday when a bomb exploded in Srinagar," Captain Nazir said. "Police officers, pilgrims on the way to Pahalgam, and worshipers in a temple. Did your granddaughter have a hand in that or did she not?"

  "No!" Apu half-shouted, half-wept. "We do not support them. They forced her to go with them! They left yesterday. I was told to be silent or they said they would kill her. How is she? How is my granddaughter?"

  "We don't know," Nazir told him. "But we want to find her and help her. Have they been back here since the explosion?" Nazir asked.

  "No," Apu said. "One man stayed behind when the others left. He called and claimed responsibility for an attack. I heard him. But then he left suddenly at around five o'clock."

  "Suddenly?" Nazir asked.

  "He seemed very upset after talking to someone else on the telephone," Apu told him.

  "As if something had gone wrong?" Friday asked. That would certainly confirm what Op-Center was thinking.

  "I don't know," Apu said. "He was usually very calm. I even heard him make jokes sometimes. But not then. Maybe something did happen."

  "If you came to Srinagar with us, would you be able to tell us what these people look like?" Nazir asked.

  Apu nodded.

  Friday touched Nazir's arm. "We may not have time for that," the NSA operative said. Whatever is happening seems to be happening very quickly. "Mr. Kumar, were your visitors Pakistani?"

  "Yes."

  "How many of them were there and how long did they stay with you?" Friday asked.

  "There were five and they stayed for five months," Apu told him.

  "Did you hear any of their names?" Nazir asked.

  "Yes," Apu said. "I heard 'Sharab' but no last names."

  "Did they ever leave you alone?" Friday asked.

  "Only in our bedroom," Apu told him. "One of them was always on guard outside."

  "Did they ever mistreat you?" Friday asked.

  Apu shook his head. He was like a prizefighter who kept getting peppered with jabs. But that was how interrogations needed to be conducted. Once the target opened up the interrogator had to keep him open. Friday looked over at the stone barn.

  "Who took care of your chickens?" Friday asked.

  "I did in the morning and Nanda — that's my granddaughter — she took care of them in the late afternoon," Apu replied.

  "The Pakistanis were with you then?" Nazir said.

  "Yes."

  "How did your eggs get to market?" Friday asked.

  "The Pakistanis took them," Apu replied.

  That would explain
how the terrorists had cased their target in Srinagar without being noticed. But it did not explain the field phone signal that came from here.

  "Do you or your granddaughter own a cellular telephone, Mr. Kumar?" Friday asked.

  Apu shook his head.

  "What did she do in her free time?" Friday pressed.

  "She read and she wrote poetry."

  "Did she always write poetry?" Friday asked.

  Apu said she did not. Friday sensed that he was on to something.

  "Do you have any of the poetry?" Friday asked.

  "In the room," Apu told him. "She used to recite it to herself while she worked."

  Friday was definitely on to something. He and Captain Nazir exchanged glances. They asked to see the poems.

  Apu took them inside. Friday was alert as they walked into the two-bedroom house. There was no one inside or anywhere to hide. There was hardly any furniture, just a few chairs and a table. The place smelled of ash and musk. The ash was from the wood-burning stove on which they also did their cooking. The musk, Friday suspected, was from their guests.

  Apu led them to the bedroom. He took a stack of papers from the drawer in the nightstand. He handed them to Captain Nazir. The poems were short and written in pencil. They were about everything from flowers to clouds to rain. Nazir read the earliest.

  It rained five days and flowers grew. And they stayed fresh and new. In my cart I kept a few To sell to all of you.

  "Not very profound," Nazir said.

  Friday did not comment. He was not so sure of that.

  The captain flipped through the others. The structure seemed to be the same in all of the poems, a "Mary Had a Little Lamb" cadence.

  "Go back to the first," Friday said.

  Nazir flipped back to the top sheet.

  "Mr. Kumar, you said Nanda recited these poems while she worked?" Friday asked.

  "Yes."

  "Is she a political activist?"

 

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