24 Declassified: Head Shot 2d-10

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24 Declassified: Head Shot 2d-10 Page 11

by David S. Jacobs

Jack said, “I’m going to try to not think about it at all.”

  Taggart said, “Not a bad idea. See you around.”

  Jack nodded to him. Anne Armstrong was already in the car, waiting for him. She looked pleased. She said, “I just finished talking with Central. Good news for a change.”

  Jack said, “What’ve you got?”

  “A lead, maybe. They’ve turned up somebody who’s seen the blue bus.”

  8. THE FOLLOWING TAKES PLACE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 10 A.M. AND 11 A.M. MOUNTAIN DAYLIGHT TIME

  Dixon Cutoff, Colorado

  Cletus Skeets said, “Is there going to be any reward money in this?” He pronounced it “ree-ward.” He was of medium height, reedy, with muddy eyes, a three- day beard, and a prominent Adam’s apple.

  Anne Armstrong said, “It’s possible, Mr. Skeets.”

  Skeets indicated Ernie Sandoval. “Because that’s what he told Mabel. That there was a reward.”

  Ernie Sandoval, a CTU/DENV investigative agent in his mid-thirties, was short, chunky, moon- faced, with close-cropped dark hair, dark brown eyes, and a thick mustache. He’d been doing some good old-fashioned legwork all morning, canvassing stops along some of the back roads in the Red Notch area. He’d found a possible lead at the Pup Tent, a greasy spoon diner located on the Dixon Cutoff, a pass between Mount Nagaii and Mount Zebulon that was used by local drivers and long- haul truckers.

  Jack Bauer, Armstrong, Sandoval, and Skeets were standing in the parking lot of the Pup Tent, a roadside eatery on the north side of the east-west running Dixon Cutoff. The diner was a white wooden- frame building that looked like what it was, an overgrown hot dog stand. A hand- painted marquee on the roof depicted a cartoonish hot dog in a ten-gallon hat and cowboy boots firing off a pair of six-guns. The legend beneath it read: “Ask about our famous foot-long Texas Wieners!”

  The structure sat in the middle of an elongated gravel parking lot, extra-sized to accommodate big-rig trucks whose drivers wanted to grab a bite on this side of the mountains. There were no big rigs in the lot now, just Armstrong’s Mercedes, the Toyota pickup that Sandoval had been making his rounds in, and a couple of cars belonging to diner patrons and personnel.

  Sandoval had warm brown eyes and an engaging smile. He said, “That’s not entirely accurate, Mr. Skeets. What I told your employer was that we are prepared to pay a modest sum in the event that the information you supply helps us to locate the people we’re looking for.”

  Skeets said, “That’s a reward, ain’t it?”

  “Call it what you like. The information has to be verified and significantly useful in discovering the whereabouts of the persons of interest. In other words, if your tip pays off, we pay off.”

  Skeets licked his lips. “How much?”

  “That depends on how useful the information is. We won’t be able to assess that until it’s been properly evaluated and followed up on.”

  “A couple of thousand bucks?”

  “A couple of hundred bucks, maybe.” Sandoval was starting to get irritated. “We’re not exactly buying the plans for an atomic bomb here, we’re just trying to find some missing persons.”

  Skeets got a shifty look in his eyes. “Well, I don’t know about that. I had to come down here on my time off. I work nights and I ain’t had my proper sleep. Could throw off my recollection, that is if I did see anything at all.”

  Jack, impatient, decided to play bad cop to Sandoval’s good cop. He said, “Maybe a stretch in jail will improve your memory.”

  Skeets tried to tough it out. “You got no call to arrest me. I ain’t done nothing. I got my rights!”

  “You’re a possible material witness who’s impeding a Federal investigation. That’s grounds for holding you in custody for forty-eight hours. For starters.”

  Skeets’s eyes bulged and his Adam’s apple bobbed. “Now hold on a danged minute— ”

  Jack had an inspiration. “Maybe you know a state cop named Miller Fisk?”

  “Who don’t? Everybody around here knows him. They ought to, he throws his weight around enough. He’s a real mean SOB.”

  “A session with Fisk might help you get your mind right. Why don’t we give him a call and tell him to come on down?”

  Skeets held up both hands palms-out in a gesture of surrender. “You don’t have to do that! It’s all coming back to me now.”

  “Okay — give.”

  Skeets said, “I’ll tell you what I told Pedro.”

  “Who’s he?”

  “The dishwasher on the night shift. We was both working on Wednesday night. Thursday morning, actually. Mabel, she goes home at midnight, so there’s just me and Pedro holding down the fort. I do the cooking and he does the cleaning and we get by. Don’t get many customers between midnight and dawn, ’cept for some long- haul truckers and night owls with a load on who want to get something in their bellies to help them sober up. So the two of us is plenty.

  “Anyhow, pretty late in the shift, it was dead quiet so I went out for a smoke. Mabel used to be a heavy smoker but she quit and now she don’t allow no smoking inside nohow. Not the customers or nobody. She knows if anybody’s been smoking in the diner when she ain’t there, she’s got a nose on her. I tried it once or twice and sure enough, as soon as she comes in, first thing at six o’clock in the morning, she wrinkles up her nose and sniffs around and says, ‘Cletus, you been smoking.’ She told me off but good both times and after you’ve been told off by Mabel, you’ve been told. So when I want a smoke I go outside, which is what I done that night.”

  Jack said, “What time was that, Mr. Skeets?”

  “Well, I went out a couple of times, but the time we’re talking about was four-thirty in the ay emm. I remember that ’cause I looked at the clock and said to myself, Just another hour and a half to go and I’m out of here. I went outside and sat down on the front stairs and lit up.

  “No sooner do I fire up a smoke than I seen a pair of headlights coming. There ain’t much traffic at that hour and I said, Dang, don’t that beat all? Soon as I take a break, a customer rolls along. Figured it was a customer because there ain’t hardly no traffic at all at that hour.”

  “Which direction was the vehicle coming from, Mr. Skeets?”

  “East, from the east. Only it wasn’t no vehicle, it was a bunch of them. A regular convoy. A pickup truck, a couple of cars, and a bus, all riding together in a line. They didn’t stop, neither, but kept right on going.”

  “They went west?”

  Skeets nodded. “Yep. West, toward the pass. I wouldn’t have thought nothing much about it, ’cept for the bus.”

  “Why is that?”

  “It was a school bus. Just struck me funny somehow. I mean, here it is the middle of summer. Ain’t no school in session. Summer school, maybe, but they don’t need no bus for that and even if they did, they don’t run at four-thirty in the morning. Ain’t even no schools around here, for that matter. Sure ain’t none west of the pass. So I said to myself, What-all do they need a school bus for in July?”

  Skeets went on, “Another thing that struck me about it was the color. It was a funny color. Every school bus I ever seen was yellow. Not this one, though.”

  “What color was it?”

  “Blue. It was blue. The diner’s all lit up at night so truckers can see it from a long way off and they’ll have plenty of time to slow down their rigs and pull in. So I could see the bus nice and clear and sure enough, it was blue.”

  “Did you notice anything else unusual about it?”

  “Nope.”

  “Were there any people inside it?”

  Skeets shrugged. “Danged if I know. It was dark— the bus, I mean. I couldn’t see inside it.”

  “What happened then?”

  “It drove by, along with the rest of the convoy.

  They was heading west, toward the pass. That’s all I know. I finished my smoke and went inside. I told Pedro what I saw. It’s funny to see a school bus in summer, a blue one at that. Sho
ot, you can’t get these no-account kids today to go to school even when it’s in session. They’d rather be going off skylarking and cutting up capers… I went back to work and didn’t think no more about it. Not till today, when I got roused out of a sound sleep by a phone call from Mabel telling me to get my butt down here to talk to you folks. Which I have now done.”

  Sandoval said, “And we appreciate it, Mr. Skeets.”

  “Any chance you could show that appreciation with some folding green?”

  “If your information proves to be instrumental in locating the missing persons, there may be some financial remuneration forthcoming.”

  “I don’t suppose you could let me have a couple of twenties now, just on account, say?” Sandoval shook his head. “It doesn’t work that way, Mr. Skeets. Sorry.” Skeets looked glum but resigned. “Reckon I got to trust you folks then.”

  Sandoval reached for his wallet. Skeets’s eyes brightened for an instant, only to dim again when Sandoval took out a card and handed it to him. Sandoval said, “If you should think of anything else in connection with the sighting, you can reach me at that number any time of the day or night.”

  Skeets dropped the card into the left breast pocket of his T-shirt. He assumed a conspiratorial manner and said, “Hey, who’s missing anyhow? You can trust me to keep my mouth shut.”

  Sandoval said, “We’re not authorized to release that information at this time.”

  Skeets nodded, not surprised. “You done? I can go?”

  “Yes, sir. Thank you for your cooperation.”

  “Reckon I’ll go inside. Mabel can’t begrudge me a cup of coffee, after getting me out of bed on my time off to come down here. She will, though.”

  Skeets started toward the diner, halting after a few paces. He turned and looked at Jack, said, “You won’t say nothing to Fisk about me calling him a mean SOB? I’d hate to get on his bad side. Not that he’s got a good one.

  “Er, forget that I said that, too,” he added.

  Jack said, “You can rely on our discretion, Mr. Skeets. Just like I’m sure we can rely on you not to discuss this conversation with anyone else.”

  Skeets said, “I’m a closed book. I won’t crack to nobody about nothing.”

  “Fine.”

  Skeets took a few more steps, paused, looked over his shoulder. “If there is any reward…”

  “We know where to find you.”

  “I won’t have to split it with Mabel and Pedro, will I? After all, I done the seeing, not them.”

  Sandoval said, “We’ll be in touch.”

  Skeets crossed to the diner, entered it, the front screen door banging shut behind him. Jack said, “There goes a public-spirited citizen.”

  Sandoval said, “You forgot something, Jack.”

  “What?”

  Sandoval indicated the sign on the roof. “You didn’t ask about their famous Texas wieners.”

  “Yeah, I missed that one.”

  “I didn’t. I had one while I was waiting for you and Anne.”

  “How was it?”

  Sandoval held his stomach with both hands, looking slightly bilious. “Don’t ask.”

  Anne Armstrong said, “Never mind about that. What do you make of Skeets’s story?”

  Jack said, “He knew about the blue bus without being told. The Zealots’ disappearance has been withheld from the media so he didn’t pick it up there.”

  Sandoval said, “I doubt friend Skeets knows the difference between the Zealots and a basketball team.”

  Jack said, “The time of the sighting works, too.”

  Sandoval said, “It’s also significant that he didn’t come to us. If he were a walk-in I’d be suspicious that he was a plant because the public doesn’t know CTU is looking for the Zealots. No, he told Pedro the dishwasher, who told Mabel, who told me when I came in two hours ago. I was canvassing the area, asking around if anybody’d seen anything unusual early on Thursday morning. She volunteered the information, and when I expressed interest she phoned Skeets and told him to come on down.”

  He added, “Skeets was right about that, too. When Mabel tells you to do something, you get told.”

  Jack looked westward, where a ribbon of road stretched across the flat before disappearing in a gap between Mount Nagaii and Mount Zebulon. “Where does that pass lead?”

  Sandoval said, “Straight through to the western slopes of the mountains.”

  Anne Armstrong, thoughtful, said, “Shadow Valley is in the pass.”

  Sandoval said, “That’s right!”

  Jack looked from one to the other. They both looked intrigued. He said, “What’s Shadow Valley?”

  Armstrong said, “A canyon complete with its own ghost town, Silvertop. There used to be a big silver mine there before the lode played out. It’s been abandoned for years — decades.”

  Jack said, “You can hide a lot of things in an old mine.”

  9. THE FOLLOWING TAKES PLACE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 11 A.M. AND 12 P.M. MOUNTAIN DAYLIGHT TIME

  Shadow Valley, Colorado

  Shadow Valley is a canyon that cuts deep into the foothills of the southern slopes of Mount Zebulon. The canyon’s main trunk runs north-south, with numerous side canyons branching off to the east and west.

  A Toyota pickup truck and an Explorer SUV turned right off Dixon Cutoff, entering the canyon. The pickup held Anne Armstrong and Jack Bauer; the SUV held four well-armed members of a CTU/ DENV tactical squad.

  Jack, Armstrong, and Sandoval had earlier gone from the Pup Tent to the CTU mobile command post at Pike’s Ford, located at the foot of Sky Mount. Various bits of business had to be taken care of at the CP.

  Armstrong had changed clothes, shedding skirt and loafers for khaki pants and hiking shoes in preparation for probing the canyon ghost town. Jack had taken the opportunity to check his pistol, making sure that it worked properly. It had been out of his hands from the time he’d been busted in Random until it was returned to him at the Mountain Lake substation. It was basic tradecraft: he needed to make sure that it hadn’t been tampered with during the time it had been out of his possession. He didn’t think it had been but he wasn’t going to stake his life on an assumption by going back out in the field with a potentially defective weapon. He’d examined it before going to Sky Mount and everything had seemed to be in order, but he hadn’t been able to give it the acid test by firing off some rounds.

  He did so at Pike’s Ford at a crude but effective firing range that had been set up well away from the group of mobile home trailers that comprised the temporary command post. One of the pluses of this mountain locale was that there was plenty of empty land and no neighbors to kick about guns being discharged in the vicinity. The weapon fired effectively and accurately with the original ammunition that had been in the magazines, which had also been confiscated by the MRT during his arrest. He also fired off some rounds from the Pike’s Ford ammo, with equally positive results. He would have liked to break down the weapon and clean it but there wasn’t time for it now. He armed himself with a half-dozen magazines of fresh ammo and a couple of handfuls of loose rounds that he put in the side pockets of his jacket.

  He checked his cell phone for voice mail. A number of messages had been left for him by Ryan Chappelle, offering no new information but instead first requesting and then demanding updates and progress reports on the Sky Mount situation. Jack left them unanswered for the time being. He was covered; he was in the middle of an investigation and had no time to spare answering Chappelle’s queries. Chappelle could stew in his own juices for a while longer, while Jack prowled Shadow Valley to see what if anything could be found. Jack grinned to himself at the image of Chappelle on the boil waiting for a response back in L.A.

  He spent the time more productively by grabbing a few sandwiches from a vending machine in an area of one of the trailers that served as a galley. He heated them in a microwave and wolfed them down with a couple of cups of coffee. They tasted like cardboard, and the coffee was no prize
, either, but it felt good to have some food in his belly to restore his strength and energy.

  CTU/DENV head Orlando Garcia was off-site but was represented here by his assistant SAC, Dirk Vanaheim. Vanaheim conveyed Garcia’s directive that the searchers would be outfitted in protective gear and escorted by a four- person tac squad. This precautionary measure was a result of the attack last night at Red Notch.

  Ernie Sandoval had some inquiries he needed to follow up on so he remained behind at the CP. Jack, Armstrong, and the tac squad mounted up in their two vehicles and headed out. The Explorer was a regular battle wagon, with bulletproof glass, armor-plating, solid rubber tires, and a souped- up engine with big muscle to propel the machine at high speeds. The pickup truck was customized with some extras but wasn’t bulletproof. The Explorer took the lead, the pickup following. Armstrong drove, Jack riding in the cab’s passenger seat.

  Twenty minutes’ motoring put the two-vehicle convoy at the mouth of Shadow Valley canyon. The canyon’s floor of hard- packed dirt was crisscrossed with countless tire tracks. Anne Armstrong said, “Off-road enthusiasts use it for dirt biking and ATVs, and teens come out here to park and get drunk and generally party.”

  Jack said, “Might not hurt to see if any of the locals have been reported missing in the time from early Thursday morning to now. Someone might have seen something that somebody else didn’t want seen and been disappeared for it.”

  Armstrong radioed in to Central requesting information on that score. Central replied they’d look into it and get back to her.

  The canyon was seemingly unoccupied today with no other humans in sight. Arroyos, gullies, and gorges branched off to the east and west of the main trunk. A couple of miles deeper into the ravine brought the CTU team in view of a sugarloaf-shaped bluff on the western side of the passage. Its slope was honeycombed with vertical and horizontal trails and speckled with bits and pieces of old weathered wooden structures: here a half-collapsed platform supported by a framework of trestles and cross-braced timbers, there a section of diagonal sluice spillway leading to nowhere, and scattered throughout, the ruins of shacks and sheds.

 

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