Unmanned (9780385351263)

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Unmanned (9780385351263) Page 3

by Fesperman, Dan


  “But what?”

  She slipped out her notebook. It reminded him of their earlier interview, years ago, and the memory almost overwhelmed him. He’d been gung-ho then, full of himself, ready for anything. Good husband, newly married to Carol, no kids yet to take their minds off each other. What was he now? Certainly none of those things. He looked away from the reporter and again glanced at the patch of sky in the kitchen window, seemingly benign. If people only knew.

  “I saw something.”

  “Just now?”

  “Back then, in my CO’s office. A file.”

  “About Fort1?”

  He nodded.

  “Was this during the break-in?”

  He turned abruptly.

  “You know about the fucking break-in?”

  “It was mentioned in some documents. What did you see?”

  He eyed her carefully, suspicious now.

  “You sure you’re not with them?”

  “Them?”

  “The Air Force. The powers that be. Everybody who fucked me over. This could be a security check, an excuse to haul me in.”

  “I’m a reporter, that’s all.”

  “For the Boston paper, right?”

  “The Globe, yes, but not anymore. They closed my bureau, so I took a buyout. I’m freelance now. We all are, so we’ve pooled our resources. We’ve got maybe three months before we start running out of money. We’re hoping this story will be our ticket.”

  “Fort1? Is he really that big of a deal?”

  “Maybe. We think he’s part of something larger. You said you saw a file?”

  “That’s right.”

  A pause, then nothing.

  Cole was again lost in thought. Something had just occurred to him—a possible means of escape from the trailer, from these surroundings that suddenly felt so desolate. There was a huge, empty landscape waiting beyond the closed door, endlessly patient, one that was swallowing him whole, cell by cell. Unless he took action to stop it, he would soon disappear. A set of dry bones in the sand, left to be scattered by birds and coyotes, then covered forever. At that moment a notion flitted across his brain that startled him as much as the hawk had a few moments ago: If this woman hadn’t come here today, or at all, would he ever have seen another living soul? He wasn’t sure of the answer, which told him all he needed to know about what to do next.

  “Well?” she prompted again.

  “I can help you. But I need to know more about what you’re doing, what you’re after.”

  Now it was her turn to pause. Cole couldn’t blame her. He probably didn’t look very reliable.

  “Hey,” he said, spreading his hands wide. “Who the hell would I tell, way out here? I don’t own a car, or even a cell phone. It’s a three-mile hike to the nearest pavement.”

  “Well, for starters, Fort1 is CIA.”

  “That much I figured.”

  “We think he’s gone off the reservation. Some kind of rogue operation.”

  “Over there, you mean?”

  “We’re not sure where he is anymore. The working theory is that he built a private network of his own clients on the government’s dime. For his own benefit, of course.”

  “Clients? Like who?”

  “Warlords and tribal chiefs, private security firms wanting a piece of the action. Anybody who’d pay him, including black hats of all kinds. Meaning that every operation he was involved with—Sandar Khosh, for one—is now suspect.”

  “Then why haven’t they shut him down? Brought him in?”

  “Maybe they have. At this point all we know for sure is that everybody who’s ever been officially involved with him, public or private, at home or abroad, has gone into cleanup mode, trying to erase all his little messes from the record. Which is why we have to move fast. Pick up as many pieces as we can before everything gets swept away.”

  “Like I said, I can help.”

  “Great.” She flipped a page in her notebook, pencil poised. “No rush. Take all the time you need. If you want, we can take you into town for supplies afterward.”

  “No. That’s not how it’s going to work.”

  “Okay. You tell me, then.”

  “Where are you based? You said there were three of you?”

  “Baltimore for now. Barb’s house. She’s the third one. She and Steve both worked for The Sun.”

  “Then I’m coming with you. I want to be a part of this.”

  “Whoa now.” Keira held up the notebook like a stop sign. “I can understand why you’d want to get out of here. Maybe we can help you. But you can’t be part of this the way we are. The three of us have the same goals, the same way of doing things.”

  “Fine. Then I’m out. Nice talking to you.” He slid off the stool and stepped toward the door.

  “Wait.” He kept going, turning the doorknob while she talked. “Maybe there’s some kind of middle ground. But you can’t expect us to just take you on as a partner.”

  He stopped and pivoted smartly, a parade ground move that, thanks to the bourbon, started to come apart toward the end. He steadied himself and wet his lips to speak.

  “Why not? I know these ops firsthand. The procedures, the pecking order, the in-house politics. I’ve got names and contacts, and, like I said, stuff from the file.”

  “Just tell me, then. New sources are what we need most right now. Believe me, we’ll know what to do with them. You won’t.”

  He shook his head.

  “Only if you take me with you. A trial period, one week. If it doesn’t work out, then I’m history. I won’t even ask for bus fare back.”

  “You know, you’re acting kind of like I did when I wanted all that access at Aviano, just for writing that profile. Your people said no, and they were right. It was their business, their war. Well, this is ours, and you don’t know the first thing about the way we do our work.”

  “It’s my war, too. You know that or you wouldn’t be here. Thirteen people. Ever make a mistake that big?”

  She looked down at her feet.

  “Well?”

  “No. I haven’t.”

  “One week. That’s all I’m asking.”

  “It’s not my decision.”

  “Then ask your friends. I know names, ops, other guys who got burned the same way. Just think of me as one of those embedded correspondents, tagging along with a combat unit. I play by your rules and do as I’m told.”

  Cole was speaking with passion now, hands in motion. He felt more clear-headed than he had in ages, although he craved another sip of Jeremiah Weed.

  She stood.

  “I have to talk to Steve first. Give me five minutes.”

  “Not till I’ve packed a bag. I’m not letting you guys ditch me that easy. You sit tight till I’m ready.”

  He went to the bedroom and started throwing clothes into an Air Force duffel. The whole time he listened carefully for Keira’s footsteps, the slam of the door, the spin of car wheels in the dirt. But when he came out into the hall she was still on the couch, notebook in her lap, pencil in hand.

  He looked around at the mess. It was time to leave. Time to go to war against somebody other than himself. He hefted the duffel, his stomach fluttering just the way it used to at the beginning of a deployment.

  “Ready,” he said. “Lead the way.”

  CHAPTER FOUR

  STEVE THOUGHT IT WAS a bad idea from the moment Darwin Cole climbed into the backseat. The smell alone raised doubts. Body odor and bourbon, the trailer’s rank essence of stale food, kerosene, and warm vinyl.

  He looked over at Keira but she wouldn’t meet his gaze. She’d stated her case a few minutes earlier with the windows rolled up, while Cole stood outside, bag in hand, like a kid waiting for a ride to a sleepover.

  “You want to bring him with us?”

  “One week is all he’s asking. I think he means well.”

  “It’s not even our house. What’s Barb going to say?”

  Steve kept his hands on the wh
eel, ready at a moment’s notice to pop the locks, turn the key, and floor it out of there. Thank God the guy was no longer holding a shotgun.

  “I’ll handle Barb.”

  “That’ll be fun to watch. What makes you think he’s worth it?”

  “He’s connected in a way we’ll never be. The operational side. Failed missions, stuff Fort1 was doing on the ground.”

  “So I take it he doesn’t even know Fort1’s name?”

  “I think he’s seen his file.” Steve raised his eyebrows. “Or a file, anyway. Something the Air Force had.”

  “And?”

  “That’s what he’s holding back. That’s his ticket to Baltimore.”

  “Not worth it.”

  “How do you know? I’m not saying it’ll be easy, but my vote should count for something.”

  “Look at him.”

  “I know. He’s definitely still affected by what happened. He’s sort of …”

  “Disturbed? Deranged?”

  “No. I don’t think so.”

  “Well he’s a drunk, that’s for sure. Look at all the empties.”

  “Yeah, he may have a problem with that.”

  “Great. So you’ve invited a drunken, unstable fighter jock back to Baltimore with us.”

  “He invited himself. I’m just asking you to take him on the first leg.”

  “You’re thinking we can ditch him in Vegas?”

  “If we have to. Once we get a better idea of what he knows. Or if, well …”

  “What?”

  “If he becomes a problem first.”

  “Wonderful. Maybe we can get the cops involved, or the U.S. Air Force. Where do we put him in the meantime?”

  “Our hotel room?”

  “Jesus, Keira.”

  “Just for a night.”

  “He could kill us in our sleep. I mean, look at him.”

  “Careful, he’s probably reading our lips.”

  “Like Hal in Space Odyssey.”

  They laughed uncomfortably and watched him for a second. Same pose as before, still holding his bag and looking up at the sky. He hadn’t moved an inch. Steve sighed loudly and finally took his hands off the steering wheel.

  “Okay, then. Let him in.” She reached for the door handle. “But promise me one thing.” She paused, waiting. “If we have to unplug him, you’re the one who does it. Deal?”

  Keira swallowed hard, then nodded.

  “Deal.”

  No one said much during the ride back to Vegas. Every time Steve stole a glance in the mirror, Cole was searching the sky out his window. Bat shit crazy, probably. Who wouldn’t be after eight months out here all by yourself? But maybe Cole would get sick of this before they did. They’d clean him up, buy him a meal, take him out on the Strip, and after a day or two of fresh sheets and hot food the novelty would wear off. He’d grow weary of their questions, their persistence. Or maybe he’d run out of information, make himself obsolete. He’d realize his mistake and they’d return him to the trailer, or to some friend’s house in the ’burbs. Surely somebody from his old circle of friends would take him in, wouldn’t they?

  Steve felt a stab of pity for the man. He’d been in need himself from time to time since making the decision to go it alone professionally. Self-sufficiency was a risky business nowadays, unless you had money to burn, and neither Cole nor he enjoyed that kind of advantage.

  It was only when Cole emerged from the hotel bathroom, showered and shaved, that Steve saw the potential for more complex problems than he’d first bargained for in this arrangement. The man he saw now was a craggier, more intense version of the one from the newspaper photo. He looked refreshed and reconnected, his movements crisp and athletic, the zeal coming off him like steam. It reminded him that Keira’s profile—blow job or not—had portrayed Cole as an intelligent and even thoughtful young man. A bit of a thrill seeker, too—a hotrodder and pole vaulter in high school, but with grades good enough for the Air Force Academy. The star of his class at pilot school. High marks from his officers. In action over Kosovo in ’99 he’d shot down a Yugoslav MiG, one of the few air-to-air kills by an American pilot since the Korean War. His quotes were long and contemplative, which also said something, unless Keira was the kind of reporter who dressed them up. Steve had heard stories but had never known for sure.

  Looking closer, Steve saw that the pilot’s pleading blue eyes, lively and eager back then, were now haunted and needful. Just the sort of face that Keira and Barb would want to nurture or, worse, would compete for. Or maybe Steve was feeling jealous, a little threatened, one repressed alpha male detecting the scent and hunger of another. Although if anyone had a right to feel proprietary about their current arrangement it was Steve, who’d put the group together three months earlier. He’d been working the Fort1 story for Esquire—on spec, but working it nonetheless—when he started coming across enough of Keira’s and Barb’s footprints to realize they were stalking the same quarry, albeit from different angles. So he’d called a summit.

  As luck would have it, both women had just been offered buyouts by newspapers desperate to slash payrolls. Steve knew all about the joys and limitations of a buyout. He had taken one from The Sun in an earlier round of cuts two years ago. That money was long gone, and carving out a living as a freelancer hadn’t been easy. Stories like this one were especially trying, because they took time to develop.

  They compared notes, grudgingly at first, and soon discovered that between them they already had the basis for a story that, with a little care and watering, might grow into something altogether more satisfying and lucrative. If they were lucky they might even land a book deal.

  They decided to move in together to economize. From the beginning Steve had been the resident counselor and peacemaker, the soother of bruised egos, and from that perspective he sensed that Darwin Cole would be a risky ingredient to pour into their sometimes volatile mix.

  “Where’s Keira?” Cole asked, looking around the room. He was wrapped in a towel.

  “Down at the front desk, getting another room.”

  “You guys are sharing?” He scanned the two double beds as if trying to figure out which ones had been slept in the night before.

  “We were sharing, but not like you think. You’re my roomie now. For tonight, anyway.”

  “What are the sleeping arrangements in Baltimore?”

  Christ, this guy really believed he was in it for the long haul.

  “We’ll figure that out later. But it’s strictly platonic. You’re not joining some sort of hippie commune.”

  “That wasn’t what I meant.”

  Cole threw on a pair of jeans and was buttoning up a flannel shirt when the door opened with a click and in walked Keira.

  “They put me next door.” She looked at Cole and stopped short. “Wow. A new man.”

  Steve watched her carefully, then took charge.

  “It’s almost lunchtime,” he said. “Should we talk or eat?”

  Keira looked to Cole for his preference.

  “Whatever you two want. Some food might be good.”

  “Room service okay?” Steve asked. “That way we can get started while we wait.”

  “Oh, c’mon, Steve. He needs a real meal, a chance to stretch his legs.”

  Coddling him, although Steve had already been thinking the same thing. He smiled ruefully and looked at the pilot.

  “What do you say, then, Captain? Looks like you’re the boss on this one.”

  “Sure. Going out’s fine. Whatever you guys want.”

  Cole went to fetch a clean pair of socks from his duffel by the window. Then, just as he’d done in the car, he looked up at the sky, long and hard, as if he were searching for something. Steve couldn’t let it go a moment longer.

  “See anything?”

  “No. Doesn’t mean nothing’s there.”

  “What is it you’re looking for?” Keira frowned, but Steve kept going. “Not Predators, I hope.”

  “You’d be
surprised what they do with those things. What they look at.”

  “The ones flying out of Creech are just for training, right? The only real action is in the trailers, where they pilot the ones overseas.”

  “Even the training flights have to look at something.”

  “Nothing but mountains and desert out that way. Plus the old test range, farther west.”

  “The old nuke site, yeah. Bunch of A-bomb craters from the fifties and sixties. All the new stuff’s underground, but, still, they don’t like us poking around.”

  “Sounds like Area Fifty-One.”

  “Stop it, Steve.” Keira shook her head.

  “No, I want to hear. What do they look at, then?”

  “Some other time,” Cole said it abruptly, as if he’d realized how he was sounding. Or maybe he was trying to head off an argument. The silence afterward was strained until Keira changed the subject.

  “How’d you end up flying Predators? You volunteer?”

  “Nobody volunteers for Preds. Except those video gamers the Air Force is signing up.”

  “Video gamers? Really?”

  Cole shrugged.

  “Might as well, since they grew up with a joystick in their hands.”

  “So they shanghaied you?” Steve asked.

  Cole nodded.

  “Christmas weekend 2008. I’m still at Aviano. My CO calls me in, says, ‘Monkey, I got a shitty deal for you.’ ”

  “Monkey?”

  “My radio call sign. Monkey Man. ’Cause of my first name, the whole Darwin thing. He says, ‘There’s this new program out in Nevada threatening this entire unit, and you’re victim one.’ I asked if he meant that Xbox shit, the fucking drones. Yep, that was it.”

  “Bad, huh?”

  “You gotta realize, Vipers were the top of the food chain. Slide into the cockpit and you’re wired in straight to God, every system integrated. Tilt your helmet to aim a missile, that kind of thing. You can practically think a thought and make it happen …” His voice trailed off. “When you arrive at Creech they take you inside a GCS for a Predator and you want to throw up.”

  “GCS?”

  “Ground control station. Some geek’s idea of a cockpit. Video monitors stacked up like junked TVs in the window of a pawnshop. Shit piled on shit. The stick and rudder are an afterthought.”

 

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