“Just keep your eyes open,” Scott said, uncharacteristically letting her joke fall to the ground.
Khadi ended the call, and it wasn’t until a full thirty seconds had passed from the time she had rung off that she heard the bootsteps—and then the screams began.
Thursday, September 15, 10:25 a.m. EDT
Washington, DC
If you have enough men and you move quickly enough, you can do just about anything you want, Majid Alavi thought as he ran through the south entrance of the National Cathedral. Adrenaline-fueled sweat dripped down his face, and he could feel his heart racing. Behind him were twenty-two other jihadi warriors divided into three teams. Saifullah also ran as a de facto member of his team, and Alavi hoped the old man could keep up.
Two vans full of armed men dressed all in black had obviously attracted attention when they pulled up to the curb on South Road. But they moved so fast, there was no time for anyone to react until they were well past. By now, he was sure, scores of 911 calls were being made. But they’ll be too late. This place is ours.
A couple of rent-a-cops had stood on either side of the vaulted entrance. A silenced shot from his weapon had taken out the right-side security guard, and one from the second on his team, Hassan Fadil, had dropped the guard on the left. From there it was a quick sprint up the remainder of the Pilgrim Steps and through the doors to the south seating area.
Alavi burst into the sanctuary and was immediately taken with the massive size of the building. Focus, he commanded himself. Gasps sounded all around him as he ran to the stage—his hard boots joining forty-four others in creating an unholy clatter on the tile floor.
Spotting his target, he leaped onto the platform, took the pastor or priest or whatever he was by the head, and pressed his assault weapon to the man’s temple.
“Nobody move!” he yelled, leaning into the lapel mic that the man was wearing. Black spread through the sanctuary like ink from a leaky pen as his men rushed down the aisles.
This is the critical time, he thought. If we can just get into position, we’ve got them. But if some hero fires on us, it’s going to be a bloodbath.
“I swear, if I see one gun drawn, this one’s getting a bullet in his head and the rest of these men are going to start firing!” His eyes scanned the audience down the long nave. Screaming had started, and people were beginning to panic. Come on, just a few more seconds.
“Why are you doing this?” asked the pastor, whose breath reeked of coffee poorly disguised by mint.
Alavi answered by pushing the barrel of his rifle harder against the man’s head, eliciting a strange half grunt, half squeak.
Three men from his team had run to the north seating and taken up position there. Two more stood just below him with their weapons trained on Senator Bill Evert and Speaker of the House Cristy Johnston. Next to him on his right was Fadil—his rifle searching the congregation. And two steps behind him, he hoped, was Saifullah, but he didn’t want to turn around to check.
Ubaida Saliba’s team was now in position. The nave was divided into four seating sections—two in the front and two in the rear. Each quarter had two warriors facing it, one on the inside aisle, one on the outside. All had their weapons tucked tight and ready to fire.
This place is huge, Alavi thought, the first moments of doubt beginning to creep in. The schematics and pictures had shown the place to be big, but he was learning just how impossible it was to truly experience the vastness of the space without stepping into it. There’s no way we can control every eventuality within this scenario.
A movement by a man in the second row caught his attention. His right hand had shifted toward the inside of his jacket.
“Second row aisle!” he yelled to Fadil, but his team lieutenant was already on his way, apparently having seen the movement himself.
“You don’t have to do this,” the pastor said.
“Shut up,” Alavi hissed, moving his hand from the man’s forehead to the top of his head. He grabbed a handful of hair and yanked back. The pastor’s body stiffened.
“Give me your gun!” Fadil screamed, his rifle pointing at the man’s face.
“What gun?” the man protested, raising his hands.
“Give me your gun, now!”
“What gun? I don’t—”
The man’s words were cut short by a round from Fadil’s weapon. Blood and gore burst from the back of his head. A lady in the row behind also dropped from the bullet that had passed through and hit her in the chest. The bloodied gentleman sitting next to the dead man, whom Alavi recognized as Senator Clayson Andrews, jumped sideways onto his wife, who began screaming uncontrollably. More screams erupted all around, and Alavi could feel a shift in the tension. Got to get control of this, or it’s going to snap!
A quick look to his left showed him that most of Adnan Bazzi’s team was in place. Each one of them had been carrying two large duffels that were now piled stage left. Four men were working with the bags, and two were controlling the south seating area. He had to trust that the other two were clearing out stray people from the choir area behind him.
“Got it!” Fadil called out, lifting the large-caliber pistol he had pulled from the dead man.
“Check his waist and ankles, too,” Alavi ordered, knowing that professional security, which that man clearly appeared to be, rarely carried only one weapon.
Dropping his own weapon to his side, he pulled out a combat knife. Panic sprang to the pastor’s eyes, as Alavi spun him so that he could face him. He brought the knife down, slicing open the man’s long, ornate robe. Sheathing his knife, he quickly saw what he wanted. He unclipped the lapel mic from the robe and pulled the transmitter box from the belt that was holding up the pastor’s khaki shorts, then pushed the pastor off the stage.
The man stumbled down the three steps and fell headlong across the tiles. Regaining his feet, he hurried to the widow of the chaplain, who seemed to be having some sort of breathing fit and had slipped down onto the kneeling bench.
A scream louder than the others cut through the din. Looking up from the mic he was clipping onto himself, Alavi saw that another muffled shot had been fired halfway back on the right.
“Silence!” Alavi commanded. When the quiet was slow in coming, he fired three shots from his unsilenced pistol into the air. “Silence!” An uneasy hush quickly fell on the congregation.
He had a clear view of them now. Men and women, young and old. All dressed in their finest—some to show respect, others just so they could be seen looking good.
There were a handful of children scattered around, and they were Alavi’s only regret. But Allah has placed them here for a reason. They too must be considered means to accomplish our end.
In many faces, he could see people who were rightfully terrified, some even fainting. But in some eyes, he could see anger and even purpose. These were the ones that had to be neutralized immediately.
“I want all guns out now!” Alavi demanded. “You have seen that we are not afraid to use our weapons! All guns now!”
Nobody moved. An unspoken battle of wills had taken hold. Alavi knew that the last thing these well-trained security professionals and government law enforcement agents wanted to do was to give up their weapons.
He eyed a man in the front row. Don’t recognize him as a senator or congressman—probably just family. He’ll do. He pointed his pistol at him and fired. The man crumpled and fell to the ground.
A scream came from the man’s wife, so Alavi shot her, too.
“When I give an order, if it is not obeyed immediately, one person dies. If I find a gun on anyone—and you all will be searched—you will watch ten people die, then you too will die. If anyone hurts one of my men, you will watch twenty people die, then you too will die. I trust I have made myself clear.
“I want all guns out now! And trust me, if you try anything heroic, many, many people will die!”
Each of the four members of Bazzi’s team who had been unloading the duf
fels now lifted a bag to his shoulder and began circulating through the sanctuary. Alavi watched as gun after gun was handed butt-first to his men, who deposited them into the duffels.
A hand fell softly on Alavi’s shoulder, causing him to start.
“No more killing for now,” a calm voice said quietly in his ear.
“Yes, Saifullah.”
“If you can help it.”
“Yes, Saifullah.
“Hurry, please,” Alavi called out to Bazzi’s men. The only sounds now in the vast sanctuary were the sounds of boots on tile, the metallic chink of guns dropping on each other, the occasional whispered curse by those handing over their weapons, and the low, audible bed of muffled sobs.
But as he watched and listened, a new sound crept into the eerily silent cathedral—sirens. He knew that it wouldn’t be long now until law enforcement tapped into the cameras mounted throughout the enormous sanctuary. When that happened, he wanted to already have everyone sorted into smaller, more containable groups. Right now, his men were simply too spread out for safety.
Despite all the adrenaline pumping through his system, Alavi felt his stomach growl. The first day of Ramadan is always the hardest, he thought. Almighty Allah, accept my hunger as a sacrifice to you. Use me and my brothers this day to accomplish your will. Bring your truth and your law to this wicked land. Give us victory in your name.
Thursday, September 15, 10:25 a.m. EDT
Washington, DC
When the footsteps first began echoing off the arched ceiling, Khadi ducked behind one of the many pillars that ran the length of the nave. She reached into her purse, removed its contents, then scanned the back of the church and spotted what she was looking for.
Trying to keep the pillar between herself and the front of the church, she raced to the back wall. As she ran, she speed-dialed Scott.
“Nobody move!” she heard a voice say over the cathedral’s sound system.
Scott answered on the first ring.
“What’s—?”
“It’s starting. Multiple gunmen. Mute your phone; I’m going to try to keep the line open.”
Pulling some brochures forward, she slid the gun and then the phone into an information rack. She prayed that Gooey would be able to enhance the audio enough to make it useful.
The voice on the microphone said something else, but the screams had already started and it was impossible to make out his words. Taking a deep breath, she stepped back into the open. Immediately, one of the men in black spotted her. His assault weapon pointed straight at her. Khadi recognized it as an AK-103—Probably got it from the Venezuelans; they’re manufacturing those things down there now, and they’d be pleased as punch to help deal us a blow.
“Get over here and sit down!”
Khadi let out a scream, and pointed to herself.
“Yes you! Get over here now!”
Prissily, she scampered—still barefoot—to where the man indicated. Look helpless! Gotta buy time!
“Please don’t shoot me! Please don’t shoot me! I’ll do whatever you say! Just please don’t hurt me!”
Just then, a particularly desperate scream sounded from the front of the sanctuary. Khadi looked in time to see J.D. Little drop to the ground, the back of his head gone.
She swallowed back the raging NO!! that formed in her mouth and tried to transfer the emotion to a look of fear and desperation. Dropping into the chair the gunman indicated, she put her head in her hands and began to sob.
A tender arm went around Khadi’s shoulders, and the tense air was discordantly filled with the smell of lilac.
“There, there, dear. We’ll get through this,” a woman’s voice said through vocal chords that sounded like they’d been scuffed by many years of usage. “I can’t say I’ve been through worse, but the Good Lord’s always found a way to help me survive, no matter the situation.”
Khadi could feel the woman start when she whispered to her in a tone thickened by frustration and rage, “Is he gone?”
“What was that?”
“Is . . . he . . . gone?”
“He’s moved forward, if that’s what you’re asking. But he’s still nearby.”
Khadi looked up and saw that the gunman was no longer looking in her direction. She had just begun counting the enemy force, when that same terrorist got into an argument with a man about seven rows up from her. Without warning, the gunman raised his silenced rifle and shot the man. Complete chaos ensued as the man’s wife draped herself across her fallen husband, even as others instinctively pulled themselves away from the gore.
Three shots rang out from the front of the church, startling everybody to attention. In a moment of bizarre dissonance, Khadi realized that even with everything that had taken place over the last five minutes, those were the first unmuffled gunshots she had heard.
“Silence!” came the command from the man on the platform.
The screaming ceased, but the crying continued. It was a sound that wouldn’t leave the sanctuary for hours to come, Khadi knew. Eventually it would become no more than white noise, the basal hum from which all other sounds grew.
“Give me a pen,” Khadi whispered to the older woman next to her as she began counting again.
“Who are you?” The woman was now looking at Khadi with nearly as much fear as she seemed to have for the terrorists.
“I’m sorry to be curt. My name is Khadi Faroughi. I work with the counterterrorism division of Homeland Security.”
The man up front was saying something about collecting guns.
The woman’s face lit up. “Khadi Faroughi? I thought I recognized you. I’ve seen you in Time magazine. You’re friends with that football player, Riley Cunningham, aren’t you? My name is Gladys Cook, and I’m—”
Another shot rang out, followed closely by one more.
“Oh my, that’s terrible—just terrible,” Gladys said.
“Again, I’m sorry to be so short, but I need a pen.” Twenty-four was the number she counted, although she couldn’t be sure whether there was anyone outside of her view.
Gladys began rummaging through her purse. “Don’t you worry about me, honey. You just do your job. And I’ll just sit here and pray—that’ll be my job.”
The man up front was threatening to kill a lot more people if his orders were not obeyed. Khadi began scanning the pillars until she found what she was looking for, no more than twenty feet from where she sat.
“I’ve got ballpoint or permanent,” Gladys whispered, holding a pen in each hand down below the sight lines of the gunmen.
“Thanks,” Khadi said, taking the ballpoint. “I’ll take some hand sanitizer, too, if you have it.”
In numbers large and thick enough to fill her entire palm, Khadi wrote 2 on her right hand and 4 on her left.
“Gladys, stop looking in your purse for a moment,” she said, taking her neighbor by her cold, bony hand. “I want you to tell me when they’re not looking. Can you do that?”
“Listen, honey, you’re talking to a member of the World War II WAC. Whatever you tell me to do, you can consider it done.”
“You’re wonderful,” Khadi said, giving the woman’s hand a quick squeeze, then releasing it.
As soon as she let go, Khadi began loudly sobbing again. She dropped her head and covered her ears with her hands. Gladys’s arm went around her shoulders once more.
Seconds later, Khadi heard the voice of the man who had ordered her to her place.
“Shut up! Tell her to shut up,” he said.
“Oh, go away,” Gladys said defiantly.
Did she seriously just tell the rifle-wielding terrorist to go away? Khadi marveled.
Again, Gladys spoke, “And you can point that thing somewhere else. Are you going to shoot a defenseless, ninety-year-old woman? What do you think your Allah-god would say about that? Now scoot and let the poor dear get it out of her system!”
A few moments passed, then Gladys whispered, “Okay, you’re clear. I think you hav
e about two minutes before the men collecting the guns get here.”
Still sobbing, Khadi opened her hands away from her ears and toward the surveillance camera she had spotted up on the pillar. She knew that the first thing Scott would do when he tapped into the feed would be to look for her. She wanted to reward that loyalty with some information. Hopefully, the sobbing fit would attract his attention, so he could see her message.
“He’s turning,” Gladys said.
Khadi clamped her hands back on her ears.
“Clear,” Gladys said again.
Khadi again opened her hands. She counted to fifteen, then lifted her head.
“I don’t have any hand sanitizer, but if you’re looking to clean the ink off your hands, I do have a bottle of water.”
“Perfect,” Khadi said, letting Gladys pour a little onto her palms. She began rubbing them together. “Did you really tell that guy to scoot?”
Gladys winked at her. “Don’t get on the wrong side of a tough old lady who’s got nothing to lose.”
Khadi checked her palms to confirm that the numbers were gone, then said, “You just be careful. I want to see both of us get out of here in one piece.”
“You just worry about saving yourself and all these other people. Let me worry about me.”
The men with the duffel bags were getting closer. After the threats the man up front had made, she prayed they wouldn’t find the gun she had hidden. Deep breaths—analyze the situation.
The men passed by, not giving her a second glance. When they reached the rear of the sanctuary, they jogged back up to the front and placed the bags on the stage behind the man with the microphone. As they did that, for the first time Khadi really took notice of an older man standing behind and off to the right of the main guy.
He’s got to be the one in charge. The one with the mic is the general, but that old man is the commander in chief.
“Now, I want all cell phone batteries,” said the general. “As the bags come by, I want cell phone in one hand and battery in the other. Again, same rules apply. If I find a cell phone battery not turned in, people will die.”
Inside Threat Page 17