“There’s a point to this,” he scrawled.
“What point?”
“Something else is happening. We are being held out of the way.”
She nodded, and then thought about Train going to Cherry Hill. She reminded the admiral of this fact.
“Going to find Jack?” He traced the question, his eyes alarmed.
“Yes.”
“To arrest him?”
“No. To bring him back. Train feels Jack is in danger.”
Sherman got up then and began to pace around the table.
She watched him while he considered the possibilities. Then she saw an idea come over his face. He pointed up at the ceiling and mimed that there was somebody listening hard somewhere, Then he started talking to the ceiling.
“Damn it, I’m getting tired of this,” he announced.
“Don’t these people realize that von Rensel is out there right now? That he’s probably going to shoot Jack as soon as he finds him?” His voice startled her as much as what he had just said. But he was motioning for her to play along.
Quick, what to say? she thought.. “You’re right, Admiral. He’s out of control,” she said.
He was nodding vigorously. “If they’d let us out of here, maybe we could stop that. But they’re probably too dumb to do that. I hope it’s not too late.”
“Von Rensel’s more than just out of control,” Sherman said, looking up again at the ceiling and the presumed microphone. “He’s going to’go public when he’s finished with Jack. Some people in this building are going to be pretty embarrassed if he does. He’s much too close to those Fairfax cops. You know NIS. They’ll just screw it up.”
They went on like this for a few minutes, then subsided into silence.
Twenty minutes later, the door was being unlocked and the Marine captain was back.
“Apologize for the long delay, Admiral, Commander.
We’ve had some trouble verifying your identity. Saturday. and all that.
But you are free to go now, sir. Commander, next time don’t let the admiral here go busting through security doors. Use the regular entrances, okay, ma’am? And you need to get that ID card problem squared away.”
Karen just stared at him, but he maintained an entirely sincere expression in the face of her obvious disbelief. She was half-expecting Sherman to go through a “how dare you” routine, but he was touching her elbow. “Let’s go,” he said urgently.
The admiral was in a hurry. Suddenly so was she. They needed to get down to Aquia. But more than that, they needed to get to a car phone. A single Marine was detailed to escort them back out of the building, since it was illegal for them to be in the Pentagon without ID cards.
Out in the parking lot, Karen called Hiroshi from the Mercedes while Sherman stood by her door.
“Hiroshi, this is Commander Lawrence. Is Train back?”
“Not back yet. No calls.”
“And he’s in my Explorer?”
“Yes, your car.”
She thanked him, hung up, and looked at her watch. A little after four.
There were only about thirty cars left in South Parking. The sun was starting to set behind the Arlington Annex buildings overlooking the national cemetery.
The dark band of an approaching weather front lurked in the west.
“Nothing?” Sherman was asking.
“Not a word. No calls. He should have been back by now.
“He take your car?”
I”Yes.’ I
“Call your car phone. See if he’s there.”
Why didn’t I think of that? she fumed, and punched in the number for the Explorer.
One ring, two rings, a pickup, and then the voice: Hello, Commander.
She almost dropped the phone when she heard his voice again. She mouthed the name Galantz at Sherman, her throat too dry to speak. Sherman reached for the phone.
“What do you want, Galantz?” he shouted into the phone.
Your dripping bloody spine on my kitchen table, the voice said. If you had one.
“Where’s Jack?-” Sherman said, his voice not quite so forceful. Karen felt an icy fist grip her insides. If Galantz was in her car, then where the hell was Train?
Jack’s with me. Want to see young Jack, do you, Aqmiral?
“Let him go, Galantz.”
Let him go? He’s here of his own free will. Although that might change, of course.
“Let him go, Galantz. You’ve done enough damage.”
Nowhere near enough damage. But I will. You want Jack?
You come to where von Rensel went. Tonight. Come alone.
No helper bees. Let’s say about nine. That suit your busy calendar? We can finish this tonight. Just you and me. But remember, come alone. Or we just keep playing.
Sherman swallowed as the phone hissed at him. He handed the phone back through her window.
“He’s offering to trade Jack for me, from the sounds of it. Wants me to come to wherever von Rensel was going this afternoon. Says we can finish this tonight.”
“Damn!” she exclaimed. “We’ve got to tell Mcnair. We need-“
“No. I have to go alone.”
“That’s crazy, Admiral. I’m sorry, but you’re no match for this guy.”
“Don’t you see, Karen, this is never going to end until I face him? And Jack.” Sherman looked away for a moment, and she suddenly had the impression that he-no longer cared what happened to himself. “Did he say anything more about Train?” she asked.
“No. So we’d better get down to Aquia.”
It was nearly 5:30 when they arrived in their separate cars.
An obviously worried Hiroshi met them in front of the house.
“No calls?” Karen asked as soon as she got out.
“One call. From a Mr. Mcnair.”
“Mcnair!” exclaimed . Sherman, joining them next to Karen’s car. Hiroshi turned to face him.
“It was for you, Sherman-sama. He said don’t go.
“That’s it?” Karen asked, frowning. Then she looked at Sherman. “But how in the world-“
“The phones,” Sherman said, kicking gravel at a tire.
They must have all the goddamn phones covered. Here and the cars, too.
Was that the entire message’, Hiroshi?”
“No. He said he was sorry about Jack. But Galantz was more important.” herman’s face paled in the evening light, as if Hiroshi slapped his face. “Sorry about Jack? Sorry about Jack!
What the hell is that supposed to mean?”
Karen took him by the arm and steered him away from the cars. Hiroshi waited patiently behind them. “Mcnair is the police,” she said. “He knows that Jack has been helping Galantz commit murder. He’s obviously willing to sacrifice Jack to get the mastermind here, Galantz. But what he doesn’t know is that Train may be up there.”
Sherman shook his head. “He should know if he can listen to all these damned phones. How did you find out Train went wherever he went?”
“I called Hiroshi from OP-03’s office. Oh, right. If they’ve got devices on the phones here, he would know.”
She stopped for a moment. “And you’re sure Galantz didn’t mention anything more about Train?”
“Nope. Nothing other. than to say that I should come to where von Rensel went. Where is that, Karen?” Karen felt her heart sink
“A place called Slade Hill,” she replied. “It’s near the river. Did he imply he had Train, as … Well?”
“No. Just that one oblique reference.”
It was Karen’s turn to think hard. But then an odd thought struck her: Could Mcnair have been behind their three-hour detention in the Pentagon? Mcnair working through those two admirals? If he knew that Train had gone to Cherry Hill before they were detained, might he have arranged their detention? But how would he have found that out? Easy, the phone call she made from OP-03’s office, when Hiroshi had told her where Train had gone. And then, when he overheard Galantz tell Sherman to come to Cherry Hi
ll, he had left this new message. Which meant the police were finally moving against Galantz.
“What?” Shermafi was asking.
Karen shook her head. “An off-the-wall theory,” she replied. “But I think the cops are about to make their move’ ‘ ‘ Sherman sighed in exasperation. “At this moment, Karen, theories don’t interest me. I want my son out of there. I have to talk to him. I have to know if he really was part of this, or if he was just a dupe. Look, the rest of my world is in pieces. I’ve got to know this. Do you understand? I can’t just sit here.”
“I do understand,” she said. “But if Mcnair has a police operation under way, and we go up there, we could screw that up. Run into a SWAT team up there.”
“Mcnair wants Galantz. I think he’s made it personal.
Jack’s just excess baggage to him. Well, Jack is blood personal for me.
I’ve got to get face-to-face with him, just once. “
Karen was wavering. If Jackwere to be killed, either by Galantz or by a SWAT team, Galantz would have succeeded in destroying everything of value to Sherman: his lover, his mentor, his career, and now his only son.
“Karen? Train’s probably up there, too.” He took her arm. “I can’t do this by myself,” he said. “You’ve been there. You know the ground. And you’ve got something of value up there, too, Karen. Either Galantz has him, too, or he’s been hurt. The cops will treat him as another cop.
They’ll try to recover him. But Mcnair is focused on Galantz, and sometimes cops get hurt.”
That did it “Hiroshi,”.she called. The old man walked over, his eyes alert. “We need some weapons.”
Train rose toward consciousness, aware now that he had been chemically silenced but not able to remember why, or where. He opened his eyes slowly, seeing nothing but a purplish halo in the darkness. He tried to rub his eyes, only to discover that his arms were constricted. Then he realized that his hands were taped back-to-back, and his wrists felt like they had been taped together and then fastened by more tape to his belt buckle. His ankles were also taped together.
His whole body was constricted, enveloped in something that had him wrapped loosely from head to toe. Only his face was exposed. He smelled rubber, and immediately he recognized the shape of the thing that held him. And he remembered where he had been when he saw it.
He turned his head, but then his face slid under the the bag left open for him to breathe, the rough edges of a zipper scratching his cheek. He didn’t do that again. The darkness was complete. He had a vague sense of being underground.
Okay. Karen managed to get through this. So can you.
Breathe. Regain sensory control.
But then a wave of torpor insinuated itself as a last vestige of the chemical washed across his forebrain, sinuous molecules urging sleep, a resumption of the comforting nothin ness that took away the fear of being cocooned like this.
No. Fight that. You know who did this. He has plans. He doesn’t want you. But he’ll use you to bring Sherman in.
You have to be ready when he comes back. Breathe. Exhale the poisons.
Reinvigorate the bloodstream with fresh oxygen.
After a few minutes, the deep breathing began to work, and he felt the insidious chemical recede. Then he tried the tape bonds on his arms and feet. Tight, unyielding. But he knew about tape. The secret to tape was steady pressure.
Tape was plastic fabric. Hard to break with brute force without first tearing it, but ultimately, it was stretchable. This was an exercise in isometrics. Put on steady pressure, then relax. It was difficult with his hands being back-to-back, but the sword exercises had built unusual strength in his forearms. Push out, like trying to do the breaststroke.
Relax. “Men do it again. Keep doing it. Push out. Relax. Get one hand free, then the other, and then get out of the bag. But first the tape.
Push. Breathe. Relax. Push.
Hiroshi drove them in Sherman’s car. It was fully dark by the time they reached and went past the entrance to Slade Hill Road. Sherman had Karen’s .45; she carried a Browning .380 semiautomatic, which Hiroshi had produced from the gun locker. She sat up front with Hiroshi, with the admiral perched on the edge of the backseat like a kid trying to see everything out the windows. “That’s the entrance to the road that goes up to the trailer,” she announced quietly as they drove past the familiar trash piles in the ditch. They had talked about how best to approach the trailer on the way over. They decided to go past the entrance, turn around, and get out somewhere above the Slade Hill Road entrance, on the premise that it would be easier to walk downhill to the trailer than climb up to it in the darkness. She had told Sherman about the POS tmaster’s snake stories. Hiroshi drove back up the hill until Karen signaled for him to stop abreast of what looked like an abandoned trailer pad. “We should be about a quarter mile above the entrance to Jack’s road,” she said.
“Okay, then it’s show time,” the admiral announced, hefting the big Colt. They each ‘ had a flashlight, whose lenses the admiral had darkened by using a red felt-tipped pen. Hiroshi’s instructions were to drive back down to the entrance to Slade Hill Road and park the car facing out on the road. Karen and the admiral got out, closing the car doors as quietly as they could. Hiroshi drove off, with one further instruction: to call Mcnair thirty minutes after he had parked to tell him that they were on the hill.
Karen waited to get her eyes adjusted to the darkness.
The sky was overcast, with a low scud blowing down toward the river. She realized they would be walking across the face of Slade Hill rather than down any slope. She suggested they bear left, partially up the hill, so that they would come down on the trailer and traverse the dirt road rather than have to climb, any part of it.
Sherman nodded in the darkness. He pushed the light on his watch.
“Nineteen-thirty,” he said. “We’d better go.”
They set out into the woods, where immediately they found themselves enveloped in a tangle of vines and thick vegetation. Sherman led the way, and they both soon picked up sticks to use to push the brambles out of their faces. She hoped they were going in a straight line across the hill, but there was really no way to tell in the darkness. The ground was soft and rocky, with patches of ankle-deep mud in places. Karen tripped and fell at one point, and then realized she had lost the .380.
They spent five minutes searching for the gun in the weeds, and this time she put it into a zippered pocket of the windbreaker. The admiral paused periodically to listen, but the woods were silent, with only some night insects and the occasional rustle of small game getting out of their way. The night air was heavy and humid as the front approached, compressing the atmosphere.
After twenty minutes, they could see a single dim light below. and to their right, which Karen assumed was the bikers’ trailer. Something snapped a stick up ahead of them in a grove of trees. They froze and listened for a few minutes, but there was no other sound. Finally, the admiral motioned that they should go on. Karen checked that she still had the gun, and she was about four paces to his left when the snake let go, an alarmingly loud buzz that sounded as if it was coming from just in-front of her. She froze..
Sherman turned around in the darkness. “Where is it?” he whispered.
“Can you tell?”
“To my right. Can’t tell how close.”
The snake buzzed again as Sherman stepped closer to where Karen had assumed her one-legged stance. He probed the bushes where the noise was coming from, then stopped when he realized he didn’t know how close the snake was to Karen.
“I’ll try to distract it,” he said, probing very carefully now with his stick. “If I feel it hit my stick, I’ll sing out, and you jump backward, okay?”
The snake stopped buzzing, and Sherman froze. “Now what?” she said, her throat dry. Neither one of them was properly dressed for rattlesnake country. Sherman swore and then began tapping his stick on the ground.
Nothing happened. Karen felt her first real su
rge of fear. As long as it was buzzing, she knew about where the damned thing was.
Now, she could only imagine it slithering between her feet, or gathering to strike.
Sherman stopped the tapping. “In theory, they’re as scared of us as we are of them. Supposedly, they’ll escape if allowed to.” In theory, huh?” she said. Her leg was getting tired, and she hated not being able to move. She put all her weight onto her left leg and moved her own stick to the right in the damp grass, probing for the dark patch where the buzzing sound had started. There was no response. Then she described a circle in the grass within two feet of where she was standing, still with no response.
“Hell with it,” she said, putting her foot down gingerly.
“I think it’s gone.”
Sherman beat the bushes between them more aggressively with his stick.
“I think you’re right,” he said, and turned around to proceed. He took one step, and a loud buzzing erupted right in front of him. It was his turn to freeze.
“Damn it,” he said. “Now it’s right in front of me.”
“How close?” Karen asked, trying to see around him without moving.
“Close enough,” he said, his voice tight as the snake buzzed again. “I’m even afraid to move my stick. Circle around! Come in from ahead of me and distract the damned thing!”
Karen went sideways, probing carefully ahead with her stick, moving uphill of where the admiral was frozen in place. She stepped very carefully, not placing a foot until she had swept the ground ahead and to the side. She had heard the old tale about rattlers traveling in pairs. That sounded like a big snake. She had just about made it halfway around him, at a distance of about six feet, when another snake let go, this time in front of her. As Sherman swore out loud, she froze again, focusing her senses, trying to detect the snake’s position. It’s a goddamned minefield, she thought. Then her heart gave a leap when the tip of her stick hit something that did not I feel like a tuft of grass.
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