Blackout
Page 34
A cold chill of reality reverberated up and down her spine. She had briefed Robert and the others to stay seated and arranged for the crew to close the main door after all other passengers had left, but was that enough? Judy said she would leave it closed until Kat could call and verify the names of the agents meeting them.
Even so, Jordan James’s warnings were ricocheting around her mind, mocking her decision to trust Jake’s assurances. They’re there, as Jake promised. But what if Jordan is right?
They were rolling past the North Satellite now, adjacent to the main terminal and decelerating smoothly. The tower controller directed the captain to turn off the runway at the very end, adding a postscript Kat almost missed.
“… and your company operations need you to contact them immediately.”
The copilot toggled in the company frequency and called in.
“Roger, Seven-thirty-two,” operations replied. “Change in plans. Due to … a request from U.S. Customs and the FBI, we need to park you briefly at the South Satellite, Gate S-ten. Keep everyone on board. When the powers that be are finished doing whatever it is they’re there to do, we’ll have a tug tow you to N-eight.”
Kat could feel her heart rate accelerating as the captain turned around in his seat to look at her. “Kat, it looks like your people are taking extraordinary precautions for you. We never park at the South Satellite on domestic flights.”
He guided the DC-10 through a left turn off the runway as Kat sat in stunned silence behind him, thinking as fast as she could. There were police and unmarked cars at the north gate. Suddenly they change us to the south terminal. Why?
Jordan’s words came back to her: “Whoever these people are, they’ll find a way to divert, contain, distract, or otherwise neutralize whomever Jake sends. We do not know who is trustworthy.”
The DC-10 was on the taxiway moving northbound, with less than a quarter mile separating them from the South Satellite terminal.
Kat leaned over Holt’s right shoulder. “Captain, please listen to me. I believe my people and I are being set up. I saw the police cars at the north gate. This diversion has to mean the people we don’t want to meet are waiting at the south.”
He turned. “No problem. We’ll just taxi to the north gate and ignore them.”
“No!” Kat said. “That … that could put everyone aboard in jeopardy. No. Stop just ahead here, then go toward the south gate.”
“What are you planning?” he asked.
“We’re … going out your right rear door on the escape slide.”
The captain thought for a minute and nodded. “Okay. I’ll stop where that maneuver can’t be seen from the terminal, then have Judy pull the pins after you’re off. We’ll just let the slide blow off, but I’m going to need your corroboration within a week, because my company’s going to want to fire me for throwing a slide out.”
“I will. I promise.”
“What do we tell them at the gate?” Holt asked.
“That you have no idea what they’re talking about. You saw nothing. Buy me some time. One of those groups will not be legitimate FBI agents. If you say you’re going to check their names with FBI headquarters and they leave, you’ll know.”
“You got it. Go. Call me on the interphone before you open the door.”
Kat patted his shoulder and thanked him as she turned and left the cockpit. She tried not to look panicked as she collected the others. Steve grabbed her suitcase from the overhead compartment without being asked and hurried after her toward the back of the DC-10.
The aircraft was moving too slowly, and the ground controller had noticed. “Seven-thirty-two, Seattle Ground. You have a problem, Sir?”
“Negative, Ground. Just a passenger out of his seat too soon. We need to hold here until we coax him back in.”
Kat had briefed Judy on the way to the rear of the aircraft as they tried to avoid the startled looks of the other passengers. Judy pulled a curtain separating the last row from the entryway and placed her hand on the door lever as Kat phoned the cockpit.
“Captain? We’re ready,” Kat reported.
“Okay,” Holt told her on the interphone. “We’re depressurized and stopped. Do it. Be careful going down that slide, and Godspeed.”
Kat breathed a thank-you as she hung up, and Judy opened the door, letting the large emergency escape slide fall from its housing and start inflating.
“Stand by!” Judy said. “When I give the word, jump and sit, and run when you hit the bottom.”
“Jump, then sit?” Dallas asked. “Are you sure that’s the right sequence?”
Judy nodded. “We do it all the time.”
Dallas looked genuinely startled. “Passengers leave like this all the time?”
Judy smiled and shook her head. “Only in training. Now GO!”
Steve went first, followed by Graham and Dan, who was helped to the edge and guided by Judy. Robert followed, but Dallas stood to one side of the open door virtually immobile, her eyes following the others.
“DAMN, that’s a long way down!” Dallas said.
“We don’t have time to debate it, Dallas,” Kat told her.
“Honey, you guys go on, and I’ll just hide in the rest room till spring.”
“No.”
“I don’t want to go down that slide, Kat! Gravity and I don’t get along.”
“It’s simple,” Judy offered.
“Then you go in my place. A little dark makeup, you could pass for me. I could stay here and serve the drinks and pamper the pilots.”
“DALLAS!” Kat snapped, taking her by the shoulders. “NOW!” She half kicked Dallas out the door, listening to a war whoop as Dallas’s rear landed on the slide about a quarter of the way down. She slid off the bottom to the waiting arms of Steve and Robert as Kat turned to Judy. “He said to release it after we’re gone.”
“I will. Go. The bags come next. Good luck.”
Kat’s trip down the slide was fast. She stumbled at the bottom and righted herself, then turned around in time to see Steve’s backpack, Robert’s computer case, and her roll-on bag coming down behind her, followed by the large emergency slide fluttering away as Judy jettisoned it, waved, and closed the door.
“Okay, Kemosabe,” Dallas yelled in Kat’s ear, trying to be heard over the noise and jet blast of the engines as she brushed herself off. “What do we do now?”
Kat had seen the makeshift private aircraft facility at the south end of the field before. They had bailed out next to it, unobserved in the darkness.
“This way!” she said, running toward the trailer that doubled as an office, past two Learjets, a Cessna Citation, a King Air, and a Gulfstream, all of them parked on the small corporate ramp bordering the large Alaska Airlines maintenance complex.
With Robert running in step beside her, she glanced back, satisfied that all of them were keeping up. She slowed her own pace to keep everyone close.
“Hurry! Come on!”
Kat slowed to a walk as she climbed the steps to avoid bursting through the door of the office, where two men were working on a computer behind the counter.
Both of them jumped from their chairs. “Hi! We … didn’t miss an arrival out there, did we?” one of them asked.
Kat smiled and shook her head. “No, we’re from the Gulfstream. You fellows have a way to get us to the terminal?”
“Sure,” the older man said. “Right out back. Come on.”
Robert was giving her a quizzical look as they all followed the man through the doors to a van with the facility’s name printed in bold letters on its side.
“What are you doing, Kat?” he half whispered. “I thought we were trying to avoid the terminal.” She put a finger to her lips and motioned him inside the van, bringing up the rear and closing the door.
The driver dropped them off inside the airport’s parking structure adjacent to the terminal, and Kat handed him a twenty-dollar bill as they got out.
“Hey, not necessary!” he told h
er.
She leaned over and lowered her voice. “No, but it’s both a thank-you and silence money. You didn’t see us, and neither did your coworker.”
He smiled and put the van in gear. “You got it, Ma’am, and Jerry’s going off duty as soon as I get back.”
With Steve and Dallas bringing up the rear, Kat quickly guided the little group to the northern-most parking elevator. They rode it down to the first floor, and she briefed them urgently before the door slid open.
“Okay. Walk to the right, all the way to the end of that driveway where it rejoins the main drive. Wait there and be ready to jump in when I get there.”
“What are you doing? Renting a car?” Robert asked.
“Sort of,” she said, smiling. “We broke up a ring of car thieves doing exactly what I’m about to do. So don’t ask, and don’t hesitate when I reach you.”
Kat found the appropriate part of the rental car return drive, positioning herself well away from where the other rental car company employees were standing. There would only be minutes left before the men waiting for them at the South Satellite realized they’d been outfoxed. With Jake’s team converging as well, they had one chance to escape before even the airport exits might be closed.
A subcompact car entered the car-return area, and she let it pass, along with a midsize car behind it. A minivan turned in with a couple and three kids, and Kat stepped forward, checking a clipboard she’d taken from an unattended counter.
“Hi! And you folks would be the …”
“Rogers,” the man volunteered.
She looked at the clipboard and smiled. “Yeah. The Rogers clan. You guys are the last customers I’ve got today before I can go home. Okay! We’ve got a new program for families, to get you into the terminal with less stress by getting you on this north elevator. You have your contract?”
The man nodded as he put the minivan in park and unstrapped his seat belt.
Robert squinted to see who was inside the dark-green minivan that slowed to a halt beside them. The door swung open, revealing Kat frantically motioning them inside. In five minutes they were speeding onto the northbound lanes of Interstate 5.
Dallas Nielson leaned forward from the middle of the bench seat in the second row and shook her head. “Honey,” she said to Kat, “I’ve been on some scary adventures in my time, but that slide ride takes the cake. In fact, I could’ve sworn someone shoved me out the door back there.”
“No!” Kat said, feigning shock. “Really?”
“Yeah, really. I was thinking of complaining to the FBI, but what the heck.”
Kat grimaced. “Probably just some pushy teenager.”
“Hey!” Steve said from directly behind her.
Dallas patted Steve on the right knee as she craned her neck to look at Kat. “All seriousness aside, Kat,” Dallas said.
Kat glanced at Dallas. “What?”
“Sorry. Old radio term we’d throw out when we got bored.”
“You were a DJ?”
“Broadcast engineer, actually. In New York. But I DJ’d, too. But then I won six million in the lottery and retired.”
“The lottery. Really?” Kat asked.
“Yep. Really. But now I have a question for you, Jane Bond.”
“And that would be?” Kat asked, shaking her head.
“Having survived a major plane crash,” Dallas began, ticking off the points on the fingers of her left hand, “watched Graham’s wife fall to her death and my friend Britta being blown to bits, been rescued under fire in a helicopter flown by someone who didn’t know how to fly one, escaped from a commie country in a stolen business jet with a criminal for a pilot, fled from a team of FBI agents who weren’t, and sneaked onto a flight that threw us off in the middle of the night somewhere short of the gate in Seattle, could I please ask when the hell this ride is going to be over? I mean, enough is enough, okay?”
“Did I forget to mention,” Kat said, chuckling and holding the palm of her right hand out parallel to the floor, “that you have to be this tall to go on this ride?”
“So that’s the problem!” Dallas snorted.
“I think what Dallas is trying to say,” Robert began, but Dallas turned and glared at him in mock indignation. “Hey, my man! Dallas can say what Dallas was going to say, okay?”
“Yup. Sorry,” Robert replied.
“I should think so!” Dallas sat for a few seconds, then turned back to Robert. “What was I going to say?”
The comic relief broke them all up, all except Graham, who sat silently, staring out the window.
“Oh, yeah. I remember,” Dallas went on. “You appear to be heading someplace, Kat. Would you please tell us where?”
“A cash machine first, then an all-night grocery store,” Kat said.
Dallas looked at Robert and nodded with an exaggerated thumbs-up sign as if affirming a great new idea. “Right. Then what do we do? Buy a quart of milk?”
“In part, yes. We’re going to buy enough groceries for a week. Food, milk, coffee, paper products, personal items. Everything. Then we go to the upper end of a fifty-mile-long inaccessible lake on the other side of the Cascade Mountains where there are virtually no telephones, no traffic, and no assassins, and we hole up there while I try to figure out exactly whom we can trust, and who, on the other hand, is trying to kill us … not to mention shoot down airliners.”
Kat turned to the others. “I … can’t force you to go, but Graham, Steve, Dallas—you’re all in grave danger if you try to go home or call anyone.”
Steve shrugged his shoulders. “My mom will already have freaked.”
Dallas nodded, but Graham Tash spoke for the first time in hours. “I’m … in no hurry, Kat.”
“And Dan?” Kat continued.
“Whatever you think best,” he said firmly. “I’m single.”
Dallas raised her hand. “’Scuse me. One amenities question, please. Are we talking tents, sleeping bags, a Motel Six, or is there, perhaps, a four-star resort nearby?”
“My mother’s brother owns a cabin there,” Kat replied. “He’s never there this time of year, and I have access.”
“Kat,” Robert said. “Are you saying no phones, no sheriff, and no escape?”
Kat nodded. “Except for park rangers. It’s a National Recreation Area.”
“Are you sure we want to be that isolated?”
She negotiated a turn onto the freeway and looked over at him with a sigh. “Robert, I’m making this up as I go along, but the only person in D.C. I can trust my life to told me to find a hole and pull it in after us for a few days while he tries to sort out what’s going on. The best hiding place I know of is Stehekin, Washington.”
“Somehow,” Dallas said, “I get the impression you know this area.”
Kat nodded. “I love the Pacific Northwest, and the Seattle-Tacoma area. I’ve come here many times over the years.”
There was a small, insistent beeping from Kat’s purse, and she fumbled with her right hand to extract the pager while keeping her eyes on the road. She handed it to Robert, motioning for him to read the message out loud.
“It says, ‘Where are you? What happened in Seattle? By the way—NTSB pathology confirms destroyed/burned retina one SeaAir pilot.’”
“Good grief!” Kat muttered.
“What does that mean?” Dallas asked from the back.
Kat turned her head slightly. “It means that the same type of attack that hit you, Dan, and killed your captain, hit at least one of the pilots in the SeaAir crash near Cuba. And that confirms we’re dealing with serial terrorism.”
“Kat,” Robert continued, “he’s also ordering you to call ASAP.”
She shook her head. “That I cannot do.”
chapter 35
SEA-TAC INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, WASHINGTON
NOVEMBER 14—DAY THREE
1:30 A.M. LOCAL/0930 ZULU
The two FBI agents searching the main terminal below had moved on. On the second-story mezzanin
e, a slim, dark-haired, pock-faced man in his late thirties carefully peered around a column to make certain they hadn’t returned. Satisfied, he lifted his arm and spoke softly into a hidden microphone wired through his clothes to a transceiver clipped to his belt.
“Rolf, are you in the clear?”
The response came back in his tiny earpiece. “Yes. We’re both here. Where are you?”
“Stuck at the moment. Two feds are a floor below me, asking about us. I’ll come off this perch as soon as they’re gone. Have you called in yet?”
“You sure you want to hear that now?”
“I’m sure.”
“Well, our leader is not happy. In fact, I’d say our leader’s just shy of homicidally mad, although he’s always so controlled it’s hard to tell.”
The man leaned slightly over toward the balcony, checking the progress of the two genuine FBI agents who had fanned out in the airport after discovering the charade at the South Satellite. It had taken less than ten minutes for the FBI team waiting at the North Satellite to catch on, not enough time to thoroughly search the DC-10 a second time. Somehow the six had escaped, but it seemed impossible.
The man looked down each hallway, satisfying himself it was safe to venture out. He triggered the microphone again. “I knew he’d be furious, but did you tell him clearly what happened?”
“He called it a bad excuse. When are you coming out of there? We need to disappear fast.”
“Why? What are you seeing?”
“Nothing we can hide behind for long.”
“I’m coming out now and I’ll—” The man emerged and turned directly into the barrel of a cocked handgun.
“Freeze!” the gunman snapped. “FBI! You’re under arrest for—”
The bogus agent slammed a left fist into the belly of the genuine agent and rolled away from his extended gun as he grabbed it and diverted it upward. There was an “oof” and the sound of a body impacting the floor. The FBI agent scrambled to right himself, but the sound of four muffled pops put an end to the effort. The agent slumped to the floor in a growing pool of blood, his vision receding into a distant point as he lost consciousness, completely unaware of the presence of a cold metal barrel to his temple that would conduct the coup de grace.