He didn’t know what kind of explosive was in the back of the U-HAUL, but he assumed the worst. Whatever it was, it caused the rear of the fifteen-foot truck to sag to the ground. In one hand he clutched a folded envelope with instructions and directions scribbled on it, and in the other, he held a cell phone.
He put the envelope to the side and grabbed a nearby layout of the FBI building, studying it. If the news reports were right, D.C. was swarming with police and military. How would he have any chance of getting close to the building in the first place? It was an impossible mission. Nonetheless, Manuel didn’t have a choice.
It wasn’t his battle. He wasn’t in control of the situation. The bomb had a timer. That’s what he had been told. And it was timed to detonate at precisely 11:11 A.M. He looked at his watch. It was 11:01.
His cell phone buzzed. Sweat dripped from his forehead, and he wiped it from his eyes. He picked up the phone on the second buzz.
“Yes?”
The Arabic voice on the other end had a hint of a British accent.
“Have you reached your destination yet?”
“I—I’m trying. They have the area blocked off. It’s much harder than you think.”
“You have ten minutes. So you’d better hurry.”
“They’ll stop me before I can even get to the building. Someone must have tipped them off.”
“No more excuses. Your wife and children are depending on you.”
Manuel teared up. His voice shook. “Please. Whatever happens to me, just let them go. They are not to blame for any of this.”
“If you carry out the task successfully, no harm will come to Victoria and your three girls.”
Manuel squinted and clenched his fist, practically crying into the phone. “Please…please, just let them go. I promise to carry out the task.”
“Your word means nothing to us. Results are what we’re after. And once you do what you’re supposed to do, we’ll no longer have an issue.”
Manuel breathed heavily into the phone, nearly sobbing.
“Better hurry. If you do plan on seeing your family again, you’re going to want to get as far away from that truck as possible.”
The man hung up, leaving Manuel sobbing into the phone. He felt desperate and lost. He cursed himself for getting involved. If only he had done nothing to begin with.
Months before Manuel found himself in a U-HAUL packed with explosives, he had been sitting at home with his wife, Victoria, and three young daughters.
A group of men moved in next door. Watching TV, Manuel got up from the couch and looked out the living room window to see an old moving van parked in the driveway across the street. Five or so men carried boxes into the house. Manuel wanted to give them the benefit of the doubt. He didn’t want to be suspicious, as they were clearly Middle Eastern, but he had heard how important it was to be vigilant ever since 9/11.
The next week, he watched them come and go, picking up and dropping off boxes. There were other men as well—all Arabs. He figured them to be Muslim, as they often wore white skullcaps, or taqiyahs. Again, Manuel tried to ignore them. They were probably just a group of bachelors and nothing more. Manuel remembered the days of living with friends when he got out of high school. The party house, as he fondly referred to it.
“Maybe you should just talk to them,” his wife told him one afternoon.
“I think I will,” Manuel said. But he never did.
A couple weeks later, his six-year-old daughter, Maria, told him that one of the men from across the street yelled at her for playing in the street.
No big deal, he thought. People yell at kids sometimes.
Though the thought of some stranger yelling at his kids angered him. Then his sixteen-year-old, Lynn, told him something that troubled him more.
“They asked me how old I was and said that I would make a good wife,” she told him.
“What?” Manuel said, turning around from his workbench in the garage.
“That’s what he told me,” she said, shaken.
“Well, that’s that.” Manuel tossed a rag on the floor and marched over to the house across the street, ready to confront the men. It didn’t matter who had said it; he was going to give them a piece of his mind.
It was a sunny, breezy Saturday afternoon, but the closer he got to the three-bedroom home with the patchy yard, the more dread he felt inside. There were several cars in the driveway and one parked in the street. Manuel pushed onward, made it to the front door, and knocked. He heard voices from inside suddenly stop, and a man answered—thirty-something with a trim beard and thick eyebrows. He looked surprised to see Manuel, as if he’d been expecting someone else.
“Yes?” he asked with a slight British accent.
Manuel’s heart raced. The man seemed polite, and Manuel wondered how long things would stay amicable once they got down to business.
“My name is Manuel Rivera. I live across the street.”
The man extended his hand. “I’m Jabar. Nice to meet you.”
“A pleasure,” Manuel said, shaking his hand.
You sell-out, get to the point, he told himself.
“How can I help you, Manuel?” Jabar asked.
Manuel glanced past Jabar’s shoulder and saw what looked like pressure cookers lined up on a table in the dining room. There looked to be close to ten or fifteen people inside, quietly speaking to each other in a language he could only describe as Arabic.
“I don’t want to take up too much of your time,” Manuel began. “But my daughters told me that one or more of your roommates here said some things to them, like, personal questions. I would appreciate them not speaking to my daughters. Period.”
Manuel felt better getting it off his chest. He waited for a response as Jabar’s smile dropped and his brows arched downward as if he were in deep thought.
“I see,” he said, scratching his beard.
“With all due respect,” Manuel added.
“My brother, Raheem, told me about that. He meant no harm. He was just trying to pay your daughter a compliment.”
“I understand, but it is inappropriate, so no more,” Manuel said.
Jabar looked down and nodded. “Very well. My apologies.”
“It’s quite all right, thank you,” Manuel said. They shook hands and parted, and that was the last he thought he would have to deal with the situation. But it didn’t take long for things to escalate.
A week later, Manuel walked into the kitchen after getting home from work at the warehouse where he was a lead supervisor. He noticed Lynn sulking at the table while his wife was at the stove cooking. Neither of them seemed particularly happy.
“What’s wrong?” Manuel asked. He didn’t even think he really wanted to know.
His wife turned to him, frowning. A single string of dark-red hair hung in her face. “One of the men from across the street talked to Lynn again.”
“What?” Manuel said, placing his mini-lunch cooler on the counter. He looked at Lynn as she sat at the table with her arms crossed and eyes cast downward. “The same boy? What did he say?”
“He said that he wants me to go back to Libya with him and make me his bride. He said that he won’t take no for an answer.”
“Libya?” Manuel belted out.
“His name is Raheem.” She put her face in her hands. “He’s thirty-five years old. Dad, what am I supposed to do?”
Manuel rushed over to her and placed his hands on her shoulders. “Nothing, dear. Don’t worry about this man. I will take care of everything.”
“What are you going to do?” Victoria asked, stirring a pot of noodles. Steam rushed up from the boiling water and drifted to the ceiling.
“Something I should have done from the beginning,” Manuel said, walking to his room.
Once inside, he closed the door and sat on the bed to gather his thoughts. The men had disobeyed his wishes. It was something he couldn’t ignore. In the closet he had a Ruger .22. Was he a vigilante all of a sudden?
He looked at his cell phone sitting on the nightstand, then back to the closet. He felt angry and violated. There was nothing innocent about the man’s comments anymore.
He’d thought at first that Raheem might have been closer to his daughter’s age, but thirty-five? That was unacceptable. He took a deep breath and grabbed the cell phone without further hesitation. He decided to make an anonymous call—something that wouldn’t make it obvious that it was him. When the sheriff’s office receptionist answered, Manuel said he wanted to report suspicious activity in the house across the street.
The room was pitch black when Manuel heard a crash at the door. He thought it was a dream. He sat up and looked at his wife, who was sleeping next to him with her back turned. Panic seized his heart. Maybe it was just a bad dream. He remained frozen, his ears on overdrive, listening for any sounds. He heard footsteps and talking. It was surreal. Under the slit at the bottom of the door, he saw lights. It was hard to comprehend what was going on, given his daze, but it become obvious that people were in his home. Once the thought crossed his mind, he looked to his nightstand, where he had earlier placed the Ruger .22, like some ominous premonition.
How foolish, he thought, to not have it at my side.
The second he came to his senses and lunged toward his nightstand, someone kicked the bedroom door open, flashing a light in his face.
“Freeze, police!” a male voice shouted.
Manuel instinctively put his hands up in the air as the light remained in his face, blinding him. His wife jerked awake, and rose from the bed, dazed.
“Let me see those hands!” the voice said.
Manuel put his hands in the air as high they would go, to the point that his arms were shaking.
“What’s going on?” Victoria asked in a tired voice.
Suddenly the light in their faces began to flash on and off with laughter following. Then the room went black and Manuel could see several dark figures standing over their bed.
Someone at the door flipped the light switch, revealing Jabar from across the street and three other men right in Manuel’s room, grinning in hostile satisfaction. Dressed in black from head to toe, Jabar had a pistol in hand while his men brandished baseball bats. Manuel couldn’t make sense of anything. He still hoped he was dreaming. The screams of his children quickly snapped him out of such hope, and he finally sprang into action.
“What are you doing in my house?” he demanded.
Victoria assessed the situation and let out a hoarse scream. One of Jabar’s men took a step forward and told her to “shut up.” She covered her mouth and held onto Manuel tightly. Half her dark-red hair, parted in the middle, hung down her back on one side, while the other half covered Manuel’s face.
“Rise and shine, neighbor,” Jabar said with a smile.
“Get out of here!” Manuel shouted. “Have you lost your mind?” He felt angry, tired, and confused. True fear hadn’t settled in yet. He still wanted to believe that he had some control of the situation.
“Time for us to have a little talk,” Jabar said, flicking his flashlight on and off in the couple’s faces.
Once they were both out of bed, Jabar led them out into the hall at gunpoint as his friends continued to turn the room upside down, pulling out drawers and emptying them, opening the closet door and tossing clothes on the floor.
The terrified couple was prodded into the living room, where they found their three young girls cowering on the couch with pistols aimed at their heads. The guns were held by five other men they hadn’t seen before. Jabar ordered Victoria onto the couch with her daughters and told Manuel to sit separate from his family on the recliner. Once seated, the men with the guns backed off and began to search through the house as Jabar explained to the traumatized family exactly what was going on.
“Manuel. Look at me,” he said.
Manuel felt rage building inside of him. He was ready to kill every intruder in his house, in spite of the consequences. After seeing guns pointed at his children’s heads, he shook with vengeance. Jabar adopted a calm, conciliatory tone, which he wrapped around his threatening words.
“No reason to be angry. We’re not going to hurt your family as long as you listen to me.”
Manuel looked to his three girls—six, ten, and sixteen. They looked shaken and afraid, holding each other, looking vulnerable in their simple T-shirts and pajama pants. Victoria leaned over, and with an arm around all three children, whispered assurances that everything was going to be all right.
Manuel felt helpless. His helplessness then turned to rage, but there was nothing he could do about it. Somehow he knew. Something clicked. The phone call had been mistake. Everything that was happening was his fault. He would try to reason with the men. Convince them that his family was not worth the risk.
“I did it, okay?” Manuel said, flat out. ”I called the police on you. If that’s what this is about, take it out on me and let my family go.”
“Oh, I know it was you,” Jabar said, pacing the room. “I knew it the second Raheem let them into our home.” He leaned closer to Manuel, pressing the pistol against his face, as Victoria and the children cried out. “I can’t say I was surprised.”
Manuel stared at Jabar, his face burning with rage as he tried to stay calm. “Just tell me what you want!”
Jabar seemed amused. “It’s not what I want, Manuel. It’s what the Islamic State needs you to do.”
***
Manuel held the cell phone in his sweaty hand with orders from Jabar to proceed. It was hard for him to even conceive doing something so wrong. Manuel oftentimes considered himself to be a “good man,” in the sense that he had never harmed anyone. Now all of that was about to change, and it was driving him crazy.
In the distance, from the vacant parking lot he could see part of the J. Edgar Hoover Building surrounded by police cars and armed guards. Two helicopters circled the area, hovering by.
News of the port attacks consumed every station on the radio. Nationally, the death toll had exceeded three thousand. Sarin gas had been deployed against the Port of Long Beach, California. Nuclear fallout had been detected from nearly every other port explosion, which resulted in the mass evacuation of surrounding areas. Manuel had no doubt that the horror unleashed that morning was directly related to the men currently holding his family hostage.
“Yes, but why the ports, Dr. Coogen?” a reporter asked on the radio program Manuel was listening to.
The expert answered, “These terrorists obviously wish to exploit our greatest vulnerabilities. Ports are vital to trade and transportation.”
“And do you agree, like some others have suggested, that there are more attacks to come?”
“I certainly hope not. But they are clearly organized and could have far greater things planned.”
“And do we know just yet who is responsible for these attacks? I mean, has any group claimed direct responsibility?”
“Not yet, which is baffling to say the least,” Dr. Coogen said.
“There have been reports in Washington of sensitive networks compromised by a massive hack, which seems to have been perpetrated by ISIS. Do cyberattacks make this a battle with two fronts now?”
“I believe that to be the case, yes,” Dr. Coogen said.
Manuel looked around again with a renewed sense of hope. It had occurred to him that other options were available. He could go to the police and tell them everything—that the FBI building was indeed in danger. There was no reason he had to go through with any of it. There was still a chance to change everything for the better. Jabar had told Manuel they would be watching him, but Manuel wasn’t entirely convinced they were. He could alert the authorities and ask them to save his family before it was too late. Manuel held out his phone and typed in 9-1-1. Before he could press send, however, a text message popped up on the screen.
Quit stalling Manuel. Your family is counting on you.
Manuel lowered the phone and looked around frantically. He didn’t see
anyone else in the parking lot. He opened the squeaky U-HAUL door and stepped outside, phone in hand. The sounds of helicopters filled the air. He had begun to pace around the truck when he received another text.
What are you doing outside of the truck? You don’t have time to fool around.
Manuel read the text a few times in sheer disbelief. He lowered the phone and whipped his head around, looking in all directions. There was a Laundromat next to the parking lot, and several high-rise buildings on the other side. Trees surrounded the lot as well, where anyone could be hiding. However, finding whoever was watching him was futile with what little time he had left. Manuel quickly got back in the truck and slammed the door. All the hope that had grown in him for just a moment disappeared. It was 11:07. He typed a text to the unnamed number in his phone demanding to know what he was transporting. Manuel had grown desperate, stalling by any means necessary. He immediately received a response.
What do you think? A bomb. 2,000 pounds of gas-enhanced urea nitrate.
Another text immediately followed.
Three minutes. If you don’t leave now, you’re not going to make it.
Manuel threw his phone to the other side of the truck in anger. The cover case split open as the phone fell to the floor. He clutched the steering wheel and screamed in frustration. He looked at his watch. It was 11:08. He turned the key to the ignition as tears fell from his eyes. He ran his hands through his tousled, graying hair. A Catholic, he made the sign of the cross on his chest with one finger and put the truck into drive. His foot hovered over the gas pedal. There had to be another way. He could drive the truck into the river. But there wasn’t a river in view.
“Please don’t make me do this!” he cried out. “You sick bastards!”
11:09. He floored the truck, screeching out of the parking lot. The truck jolted out into the street, bouncing up and down. Full speed ahead, he went over the median, hitting it hard, and flew into the next lane. The truck swerved as he grappled for control. He ran through an intersection just as the light turned red and burned down the road, heading directly toward the gathering of police vehicles blocking the way.
End Days Super Boxset Page 13