by Joseph Lewis
The three assault teams had planned their penetrations and tactics based upon the recon provided by eyes and ears on the ground, as well as information given to them by Rodemaker. No one deemed Rodemaker’s intel very reliable because of the pattern of lies and deception earlier that evening. Even the carrot of a ‘deal’ in ‘exchange for cooperation’ didn’t make anyone believe Rodemaker. Still, any information was better than no information.
* * *
Fitzpatrick ambled two blocks to a dark alley, took off his green army jacket and his scruffy gray wig, walked back to the street and climbed into his tan Ford Taurus and drove five blocks to a small all-night diner. He studied his rearview and side mirrors as he did so. In the parking lot, he sat quietly watching for passing cars or anyone following him and when satisfied that there was no one or nothing out of the ordinary, got out of his car locking it behind him and went in.
He took a few steps in and waited until his eyes adjusted, then spied Jamie and Pete and a young skinny kid with short blond hair, a pointy nose and Harry Potter-like wire rims. He slid into the booth next to Jamie.
“Hey Fitz,” Jamie said as he shook his hand. “You remember Pete?”
Fitz said, “Nice seeing you again,” and shook his hand.
“This is Skip Dahlke,” Pete said. “He’s going to run forensics for us, videotape if need be, and be an extra gun. You and he will take the alley entrance, the one with the garage door, while I enter from the front after Jamie gives the all clear.”
“I’ve not seen anyone leave that didn’t go in. I sent the pictures to Chet with my phone, but it’s almost dead. I’m charging it.”
“How many guards do you think?” Jamie asked.
Fitz shook his head, taking a sip of the hot, black coffee Jamie had ordered for him.
“No way to tell. Could be three . . . could be five . . . could be fifteen. No way to know until we’re inside.”
They stared at each other and drank their coffee in silence.
* * *
Similar conversations took place in Kansas City and in Long Beach, with similar answers. It turned out that Kansas City might be the easiest to take. There were only four rooms, one for each of the boys, and two others on either end of the four that served as bookends for the guards. One had two men in it, while the other had one. The office manager would have to be taken, since he had to know what was taking place in his motel. In Long Beach, the situation was very similar to Chicago. There was no way to know how many guards were on the inside.
It was decided that one person from each team would have to pose as a paying customer. In Chicago, it would be Jamie. In Long Beach, it would be Pat O’Connor. In Kansas City, it would be Tom Albrecht, minus his chew. That would be a first.
The three teams readied themselves a block away from their targets. They were silent and grim-faced, but determined. They knew the stakes were high, and they knew that the odds were stacked against them. It wouldn’t be easy, but somehow, some way, they had to save those kids.
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
Summer, Chet and O’Brien arrived at the Sheraton at 4:37 AM, CST. O’Brien and Chet stayed in the background while Summer went to the front desk. She asked the young female desk clerk named Bethany for the night manager.
A tall, skinny man in his early thirties wearing a green blazer with a white button-down shirt and green tie came to the front desk and asked, “How can I help you?”
Summer displayed colored pictures of three men, printed earlier that morning at the Waukesha Police station.
“Can you tell me if these three men are here at the hotel?”
“I’m sorry . . . I can’t give out that kind of information because we have to respect the privacy of . . .”
Summer took her FBI credentials out of her pocket and said, “Now, can you tell me if these three men are here at the hotel?”
The manager mumbled and then took hold of the three pictures, played a bit with his computer console and nodded, “Yes, well, two of them, I do believe, they’ve arrived. They checked in separately.” He separated one of the photos and tapped it with his index finger. “Not this man. Would you like me to ring them?”
“No. I don’t want them to know I asked about them.” Then Summer asked, “Do I make myself clear?”
“Yes, Ma’am, very clear.”
“Good. Because if one or all of them find out I’ve asked about them, you’ll be arrested for obstruction, and the hotel will suffer needless embarrassment. Do I make myself clear?”
“Absolutely, Ma’am.”
Summer and Chet went into the restaurant to get some coffee and to wait. O’Brien grabbed a free USA Today and sat in a comfortable chair in the lobby facing the bank of elevators. Chet set Summer up with a small, rather innocuous looking tube that resembled a pen that was in reality, a very powerful microphone. Hooked wirelessly to his computer, he could record virtually any conversation that took place in the restaurant. No one but Summer, Chet and one waiter were in the restaurant at that hour, however it would fill up quickly with patrons for the breakfast buffet.
The waiter asked what he and Summer would like, and Summer ordered coffee for both of them and one to go for O’Brien. The waiter nodded and disappeared through a doorway in the back.
Chet called Morgan to let them know they had arrived and that he’d be hacking into the hotel security cameras to monitor several areas at once using split screen.
“I’ll be waiting,” he said with a yawn.
“Thanks. I owe you.”
“I already told you, I want these perverts as bad as you do, so you don’t owe me anything.”
He clicked off and Chet nodded at Summer.
“We’re set.”
* * *
Jamie pushed the buzzer just as Rodemaker told him to. Fitz, in the guise of a homeless wino, who had watched pervert after pervert push that same buzzer earlier that night and early morning confirmed that this was the procedure.
“Yeah?” was the response from the other end.
“Um . . . I have money and would like to spend it,” Jamie said, not sure what else to say.
Silence. It seemed like a long time, and Jamie thought about giving up and walking away and rejoin the others to come up with a different plan.
“It’s fucking early,” the voice said.
“I wanted . . . you know . . . before I went to work.”
“Third floor. Meet you there.”
Jamie resisted the urge to give a thumbs up to the others because he knew about the camera above the door, as well as the camera in the alley. Fitz had begun ambling down the alley, listing and leaning against the far wall just as he had done all morning. He even called out to Jamie asking for money as he had done with all of the other perverts entering and exiting the building. Jamie, playing along, obligingly flipped him off without turning around.
Pete waited impatiently around the corner for Jamie to let him know all was clear. Dahlke had circled the back of the building keeping his distance from Fitz until Fitz let him know when to come forward.
“Guys, stay sharp,” Pete said. “Jamie’s in.”
“Born ready,” Fitz said, pumping a shell into the chamber beneath the green army jacket.
“Almost there,” Dahlke said breathlessly.
This wasn’t what he had in mind after graduating in Forensic Science. In fact, he had never fired a weapon in his life, unless you count suction-cup darts from a toy pistol or bullets from a Nerf gun. And now he was armed with an assault rifle with several extra clips of ammo and a .45mm Magnum. To say he was nervous was an understatement. Yet, he felt that he needed to be there. He knew the importance of being there. He just didn’t want to let anyone down, or worse, get himself or anyone else hurt or killed.
Perhaps reading his mind, Pete said, “Take it easy, Skip. You’ll be fine. Just listen to what’s going on, watch everyone and everything around you, and do what Fitz tells you to do.”
“Yeah,” was all the respons
e Pete received.
Jamie took the stairs silently, smoothly but not too swiftly. He lingered at the door to the second floor, tempted to take a peek, but resisted the urge, spotting the camera on the landing heading up to the third floor. He moved up the steps, took a deep breath and stood outside the door on the landing.
* * *
Chet had moved to the outer lobby after receiving the two coffees. He and O’Brien sat at different ends away from each other. Chet was known by at least two of them, so he had to blend into the woodwork and remain as close to invisible as possible. No one knew O’Brien, so he could hide in plain sight.
Chet had screens open to him on his laptop, which allowed him to monitor the action in the hotel. He’d have to rely on cell calls to get updates from the three locations and relay info to and from them.
Morgan had his ears tuned to what was being said on the three IPhones. Currently, the IPhones were silent. But if Morgan didn’t know what was happening in the three different cities, he could at least imagine, and perhaps it was the imagination that had him sitting on the edge of his seat waiting for updates from Chet on what was taking place.
Both Summer and O’Brien were wired for picture and sound. It was Chet’s job to monitor and record. Hoping that the three targets would meet and eat before heading to the building in Chicago, Summer sent a text to one of the IPhones letting the person on the other end know that he was in Chicago and would wait for him in the hotel restaurant. There wasn’t a response yet, but when the phone was turned on, it would let the person know a message was waiting to be opened.
Every now and then, Summer would ask O’Brien if he had seen anything. He held the newspaper and pretended to read it, but couldn’t tell you anything about any of the articles other than a headline or two.
Cop work was often sitting, waiting and writing reports. The glamorous stuff you see on TV was fiction. Seldom, if ever, were cops pulling triggers or dodging bullets. So, the three of them waited impatiently, worrying about the three teams trying to free the kids.
* * *
Tommy Albrecht went to the motel office, pushed it open, looked over his shoulder, and then shut the door quietly behind him. There were cobwebs in the corner near the window and dead flies lying on the window sill. Dusty tan curtains hung limply from a bent curtain rod. A window air conditioner ran but didn’t produce much cool air. A small, skinny, sweaty man in a button down dirty blue shirt, open to reveal a wife-beater t-shirt stood behind the counter.
“Um . . .” Albrecht said.
“You need a room?” the skinny man said with a smirk.
“Well . . . yeah . . . I guess,” he answered uncertainly.
“How about the special?”
Albrecht didn’t answer right away because he wasn’t sure exactly what to say.
So after a bit, he simply said, “Um . . . yeah.”
The small man just looked at him, not moving, not saying anything.
So Albrecht asked, “Can I have a choice?”
“Just a minute,” the man answered with a sly grin.
He reached down and using a key, opened a drawer and took out a thin notebook. He opened it to reveal pictures of four boys, each nude.
“Look through this and you can pick out the one you want. Each kid is available at the moment.”
“How much?”
“Depends on how long you want one. The prices are at the bottom of each picture, and there’s a price sheet on the back page.”
Albrecht browsed through the notebook, sickened at the pictures he saw. In none of the pictures was the boy smiling. Each boy looked scared, maybe angry.
“I think I’ll take Cory Rowell for an hour,” Albrecht said, sickened at the thought.
“Good choice,” the manager said with a smile. “That’s $300.”
Albrecht counted out three one hundred dollar bills, and as he did so, the manager went to a corner and selected a key from the many that hung there.
While the man was busy getting the key, Albrecht said, “Got it?”
Evidently, the manager didn’t hear Albrecht’s question, because he said, “Here’s the key. You have one hour from now. It’ll be $75 for every five minutes you’re late, so you want to make sure you get back here on time.”
Desotel came into the lobby and shut the door behind him. Seeing Desotel, the manager quickly closed the notebook and dropped it into the drawer behind the counter in the event Desotel wasn’t looking for the special.
“Can I help you?” the manager asked Desotel.
“Not really, you fuck. You’re under arrest.”
The manager backed away from the counter, but Desotel hopped over it with ease and threw the man into the wall knocking him down. While he Mirandized him, he pulled plastic ties from the pocket of his light-weight jacket and used them like handcuffs, binding the man’s hands behind his back and then used them on his feet. The man complained they were too tight, so Desotel obliged him by taping his mouth shut, dragged him to a back room by the back of the dirty blue shirt and shut the door, and gave him the warning that if there was any noise, he’d make up an excuse to shoot him. The man knew he wasn’t kidding. Desotel knew he wasn’t kidding either.
The key Albrecht held had a red oblong tag that gave the name of the motel and the room number, which was 110. That meant the room was the second last in the group of four, which put it in the middle of the rooms, two away from the room holding the guards. Desotel handed him the keys for each of the other rooms holding the boys, as well as the keys for the rooms holding the guards. Albrecht walked out of the office, while Ronnie Desotel took the manager’s place behind the counter, posing as the manager.
As Albrecht neared the group of four rooms, he said quietly into his shirt collar, “So far, so good. No perverts but me. I have the keys. Meet me half-way, and I’ll give them to you. Wait until I enter and shut the door. Earl, take the first room, and Paul, take the sixth, but wait until Nathan and I secure the kids. Nathan, take the second and third rooms. I’ll secure the fourth and fifth.”
As he put the key into the door lock, Albrecht added, “Good luck guys. Everybody goes home safe.”
* * *
Jamie stood just inside the third floor doorway in a kind of outer lobby with nothing in it except a computer on a wooden table. He presumed the voice on the other end of the call box belonged to the fat man with long, greasy black hair and a three or four day old beard leaning against the door. He wore a dark green t-shirt that seemed two sizes too small, revealing a fat roll falling over the belt of his jeans. Six pounds of sausage in a two pound casing, Jamie thought. The man’s body odor assaulted Jamie about as much as the pictures on the computer console.
Jamie viewed the pictures of eleven boys, but none of whom were of Stephen Bailey or Mike Erickson, the boys taken the evening before. Disheartened, Jamie started over again.
“What type you lookin’ for?” the fat man asked.
“Um . . . I don’t know,” Jamie answered.
“Blond, black- or brown-haired?”
“Brown, I guess.”
The fat man tapped the computer screen and pictures of all the blond- and black-haired boys disappeared, showing only five boys, each with brown hair.
The fat man pointed to one of the boys and said, “Try this one. Athletic. Aggressive.”
Jamie almost gagged at the man’s breath. He looked at the photo and saw a tough, strong boy, eyes shouting hatred and defiance. His name was Brett.
“Yeah . . . Him.”
The fat man nodded.
“Be $500 for an hour.”
Jamie counted out five one hundred dollar bills and handed them to the fat man, who recounted them again and then stuffed them into his back pocket. He pulled out a set of keys and opened up the door for them.
He led them into a darkened hallway with chipped and dirty industrial green linoleum. On the right side was a small room with glass windows. From the little Jamie saw as they walked past, it held what looked
like video equipment, about a dozen, dozen and a half small surveillance television screens, and a phone.
On the left side were metal doors, one after the other like you might find in a prison hallway, but without the bars. Just past the glass-windowed room were more rooms just like the ones on the opposite side of the hallway. Each of the doors opened inward.
The fat man stopped at the third door down on the left side, inserted his key and opened it. Jamie took one last look at either end of the hallway. No one was there. No sounds were heard. He bent down quickly and pulled out a gun clipped to his ankle and shoved it into the man’s neck just behind his ear.
“Inside and get on the floor. Don’t make any noise, or I’ll blow your fuckin’ head off. Move . . . now!”
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
Tommy Albrecht and Nathan Kaupert timed it so that they had entered their respective target room each at the same time. The first problem they encountered was that each boy had one arm handcuffed to an old fashioned metal bed frame.
“Earl . . . Paul, do either of you have a handcuff key?” Albrecht asked in a whisper.
“Ahh, fuck!” Desotel said. “You shittin’ me?”
“I don’t,” Coffey whispered.
“Neither do I,” Gates said quietly.
Albrecht went over to the bed and looked at Cory Rowell, half-hiding under a filthy sheet.
“I’m with the FBI. We’re going to get you outta here, but I’m gonna need your help.” He paused and then whispered, “Okay?”
Rowell nodded once.
“How much slack do these have?”
Albrecht gently lifted the boy’s arm and followed the chain to the bed frame. Not much room to maneuver.