The Thin Black Line

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The Thin Black Line Page 3

by Simon Gervais


  “I’m here now,” said Zima.

  “At the airport?”

  “That’s correct, Sergeant. I’m watching you as we speak.”

  Mike twitched in surprise. He hadn’t made her. He closely examined his surroundings but to no avail.

  “I can’t see you, Zima. Where are you?”

  “You just looked at me, but you didn’t see me,” answered Zima, clearly enjoying herself.

  Mike took another careful look. He was about to surrender when he noticed a flight attendant seated by herself next to the duty-free shop. She smiled at him.

  “Clever,” Mike said over the phone.

  “Thank you, Sergeant.”

  “Were you briefed on the situation?”

  “Yes. What can I do to help?”

  “My partner will be boarding first—” started Mike before the gate’s PA system interrupted him.

  “Welcome to Air Canada Flight 7662, soon to be departing Ottawa for Washington. We will now preboard passengers traveling with young children, or any other passengers that may require more time or assistance. We invite our executive-class passengers to board at their leisure…”

  “Oh, shit,” muttered Mike.

  “What’s going on?” asked Zima.

  “I think I know where some of our suspects are,” Mike said and hung up.

  Mike punched in Robichaud’s number.

  “What’s up?” answered Robichaud.

  “Is it possible that some of our friends have business-class tickets?”

  Robichaud let out a breath. “Damn, you’re right. And, if that’s the case, they might be sitting in Air Canada’s executive lounge right now, sipping coffee and waiting for the last possible moment to board.”

  “Okay. Board the plane as planned. I’ll go check the lounge. Call Zima to task her with monitoring the gate area and the terminal hall,” Mike said.

  “Sounds good. I’ll send you and Zima a text message if I see one of them board,” said Robichaud.

  “Roger that,” Mike replied already on the move.

  The Maple Leaf Lounge was still a good three-minute walk from the gate, and Mike was doing his best to get there with enough time to visually check the lounge and make it back to the gate in time for departure.

  ―

  Mike entered the executive lounge and showed his business-class ticket to the Air Canada employee at the reception desk. With a nod from the agent, he stepped into the lounge and scanned the area.

  Twenty people were scattered at tables throughout, enjoying the buffet breakfast that had been laid out on the bar. Sleek computers lined the back wall, and a fireplace with cozy sofas and armchairs occupied the center of the space.

  Mike could not locate the faces of Hassan or Fadl. On the other hand, he noted four Arabic males sitting in the farthermost corner of the lounge. One of them, completely bald, was talking into a cell phone.

  When the call was finished, Mike saw them all stand up at the same time. He confirmed that none was Hassan or Fadl. They are getting ready to leave, thought Mike. He hung back, seeing no point in getting too close now. He would follow them at a distance and see if they were going to board the flight to Washington.

  Mike exited the lounge ahead of the group and stopped at a nearby book kiosk, pretending to study the cover of a paperback. Soon the four men passed in front of him. He started following them once they were about thirty feet past his position.

  Were they looking at someone in particular? Would any of them make a subtle gesture that would mean something to someone watching for it? Was anyone else watching them? These were all questions that Mike asked himself while they walked toward Gate 17.

  Grabbing his Blackberry from his jacket pocket, Mike hit autodial.

  “Yes?” answered Robichaud promptly.

  “I’m following four possible matches. They were sitting together in the lounge.”

  “Copy that. Fadl and Hassan just boarded the plane separately. They each stowed a medium-size carry-on in their overhead compartments. They’re doing everything they can not to look at each other, but I’m definitely picking up a weird feeling. I don’t like this at all.”

  “Do you want to call it in, Paul?”

  “Let’s advise the captain to have the passengers rescreened. And I want it done by Canada customs this time, not by those rent-a-cops who usually man the lanes. I wouldn’t trust half of them to find a rocket launcher on my grandma.”

  Mike chuckled. “Good idea. My little group is about a minute from the gate. All of them are wearing long coats, and they could be carrying weapons. I’ll call the Ottawa police’s airport division to provide some uniformed officers to back up the customs guys. I’ll let Zima know what’s going on as well.”

  “Understood,” Robichaud said. “I’ll talk to the captain. See you at the gate.”

  ―

  Mumbling that he had to go to the bathroom to the fat man seated next to him, Robichaud stood up and approached the flight attendant.

  “My name is Paul Robichaud,” he told her quietly. “I’m one of the air marshals aboard this fight, and I need to talk to the captain immediately.”

  “Oh, I…hmmm…okay. Just one moment please,” said the young blonde flight attendant, picking up the intra-plane phone.

  “Captain? It’s Nadine,” Robichaud heard the flight attendant say into the receiver. “I have an air marshal here who is requesting to speak to you. Ah, okay,” she said before turning to Robichaud. “The captain is on the line.”

  Robichaud took the receiver and smiled his thanks to the flight attendant. “Captain? I’m Paul Robichaud from the RCMP Aircraft Protection Unit,” he began, keeping his voice low. “I believe we may have a situation aboard this aircraft. I recommend that we rescreen every passenger aboard this flight.”

  “Is that really necessary? We’re already on a tight schedule, and the airline will have to pay a hefty fee for departing late.”

  “I feel it’s very necessary, Captain.”

  A sigh came over the line. “Okay, but I don’t want any mayhem aboard my aircraft.”

  “My suggestion to you, sir, is that you make an announcement saying that there is a mechanical failure with the ventilation system and that a maintenance crew will have to come onboard to fix it. Tell the passengers to remove all their luggage from the overhead bins.”

  “All right,” said the captain after a long pause. “I’ll contact flight control, then I’ll shut down the system. I hope you’re sure about this.” Then the line went dead.

  Robichaud noticed how tense his jaw was as he hung up the phone. For the first time in his life, he prayed he was wrong.

  ―

  As the four men approached the boarding gate, Mike realized they would probably be the last ones to board the airplane. With Zima already briefed by Robichaud, Mike had just completed the calls to Canada customs and the airport division of the Ottawa Police Services when he decided to close the gap. The four men had stopped at the gate and were now waiting to present their boarding passes and photo identification to the gate agent, who was presently on the phone.

  “Oh, I’m sorry, gentlemen. You’ll have to wait for a few moments before boarding,” Mike heard the gate attendant say as she hung up the phone. “It seems like everyone will be deplaning shortly due to a mechanical problem with the ventilation system onboard the aircraft.”

  “Do you know how long we’ll have to wait?” asked the bald man standing in front of the attendant.

  “I have absolutely no idea, sir. Please have a seat, gentlemen, and I apologize for the delay.”

  ―

  With his back facing the flight deck door, Paul Robichaud positioned himself to better watch Fadl and Hassan. He’d just started to engage Nadine, the young flight attendant, in a casual conversation about her favorite local restaurant when all the lights in
the cabin suddenly shut down and the whirring of the ventilation system stilled.

  There is my signal, thought Robichaud, watching the two terror suspects in his peripheral vision. They just looked at each other for the first time.

  “Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking,” came the commandant’s baritone voice over the intercom. “I’m sorry to inform you that we seem to have a problem with our ventilation system’s electricity supply. I just contacted a maintenance crew, and they advised me that they have to come onboard to fix it. Unfortunately, that means that all passengers will have to deplane with all their personal belongings, including luggage stored in the overhead compartments. The flight attendants will direct you in deplaning. I apologize for the delay, and we thank you for your patience and understanding.”

  Following the captain’s announcement, before anyone could even unbuckle his or her seat belt, Fadl stood up and pulled a micro Uzi submachine gun from the inside of his jacket. He aimed it toward the flight deck and started firing.

  Damn it! thought Robichaud as he dove for cover. At only 9.84 inches long, the micro Uzi was the smallest version of the Uzi submachine gun available. Due to its short length, it lacked a forward grip and, hence, accuracy. But the micro Uzi could fire more than twelve hundred rounds per minute, allowing Fadl to unload his twenty-round magazine in less than the second it took for Robichaud to reach his own gun.

  The first six of those twenty bullets hit the pretty blonde flight attendant in the back. A seventh entered Robichaud’s right shoulder, and the remaining thirteen lost themselves in the ceiling of the aircraft. As Robichaud was thrown back by the impact, he saw Hassan stand up and take the pin out of an M67 fragmentation hand grenade while Fadl inserted a fresh clip into his Uzi.

  The other passengers on the airplane began to scream and tried to take cover in any way possible. Unable to use his right arm, Robichaud used his left hand to cross-draw his pistol. But by the time he was ready to fire, Fadl was once again spraying the first-class cabin with 9mm Parabellum bullets. Robichaud, now on his knees using one of the front galley walls as partial concealment, was hit one more time in the chest as he fired his first shot. Consequently, his round went high, but his second shot, fired less than half a second later, hit its target between the eyes. Fadl collapsed on the elderly man cowering in the next seat.

  Coughing up blood, Robichaud saw that Hassan was about to throw his grenade into the rear of the plane. With a one-handed left grip, he fired two more rounds into the back of Hassan’s skull. In slow motion, Robichaud saw the grenade slip from the dead terrorist’s hand and fall in between two seats before rolling toward a crying mother and her young son.

  Fuck!

  Knowing he was fatally wounded, Robichaud willed himself to get up but couldn’t muster the force. The excruciating pain in his chest prevented him to yell a warning. Only a gurgle and a fresh spray of blood came out of his mouth. Using his good arm, he tried to alert the passengers of the impending disaster, but chaos and panic had overtaken them. Everybody was running toward the exit, oblivious to the grenade lying only a few meters away. With his eyes fixed on the grenade, Robichaud used all of his remaining strength to crawl toward it. But in doing so, he felt the passengers running over him, stomping him with their feet.

  Robichaud died from his wounds less than one second before the M67 exploded.

  CHAPTER 3

  Ottawa Via Rail Train Station

  Dr. Lisa Harrison Powell was cruising in her new Range Rover Sport through the Ottawa traffic. She checked her rearview mirror to find the reflection of her twenty-two-month-old daughter, Melissa, smiling at something out the window. She’s so sweet, this little one, thought Lisa.

  “Do you really have to drive that fast?” Celina Powell said from the front passenger seat.

  “I’m driving at the speed limit, Celina,” Lisa replied.

  “The speed limit is the maximum speed allowed in perfect conditions, my dear. It doesn’t mean that you have to always drive at the limit,” Celina countered. “Think about your child.”

  Lisa took a deep breath and slightly relaxed her foot from the accelerator. Since Mike’s mom had moved in with them a year ago, she was always careful not to be too confrontational with her mother-in-law. But it wasn’t easy.

  Not easy at all.

  She wasn’t angry at her husband for asking Celina to live with them. Truth be told, she thought it was nice of him to do so. But Celina had become a very opinioned lady who wasn’t shy at letting you know how she would have done things differently. Lisa knew her mother-in-law hadn’t always been like that. Her husband’s kidnapping had changed everything. Something had snapped in Celina’s head, and Lisa hoped she’d get better soon, because she was getting tired of being criticized day in and day out.

  She was aware that Mike was worried about his mother, too—especially today, the second anniversary of his father’s kidnapping. To be on the safe side, Mike had asked her to bring Celina along to pick up her parents at the train station. Her feeling was that her husband didn’t trust his mother to be alone on this day.

  “Don’t worry, honey. I’ll take good care of her,” she had said to him at breakfast.

  Lisa had met her husband thirteen years ago while they were both serving in the armed forces. At the time, Mike was a young but promising officer attached to the Infantry School in Gagetown, New Brunswick, and Lisa a newly graduated aerospace engineer posted to Canadian Forces headquarters in Ottawa. She had been sent on temporary duty to Gagetown to replace a colleague on leave. A friend living on base introduced her to Mike, and the two of them had clicked right away. Lisa had admired Mike’s intensity. He seemed so passionate about everything he did, including taking care of her. They became inseparable for the rest of Lisa’s stay until it was time for her to return to Ottawa. Surprising herself, and maybe feeling a bit adventurous, she canceled her flight home to spend a romantic getaway weekend in Halifax. The fact that they barely left the hotel room during those forty-eight hours still made them laugh.

  Lisa shook her head as she remembered the years that followed. As much as she had liked building planes and piloting them, she had a change of heart, professionally that is. At the time, the military was offering its officers career changes. So at the same time Mike was sent to Afghanistan as a platoon leader with the newly formed Canadian Special Operations Regiment, or CSOR, she started medical school. She had always felt that helping save people’s lives was more in line with who she really was. After being selected to attend medical school, the Canadian Armed Forces had sent her away to study at the renowned Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland. She never looked back. She studied hard and achieved top marks. Even though she was extremely busy with school and the interminable rounds at the hospital, the absence of Mike by her side was weighing on her more than ever. It was not so much the distance that was concerning Lisa, but that Mike’s numerous missions abroad were considered high risk. At first, the worries were present but bearable. But one evening, Lisa received a phone call from Mike’s commanding officer in Afghanistan. He informed her that Mike was unaccounted for. She learned only two days later that he had returned safely—he had lost any way of communicating during his disappearance. From that moment on, she started to have panic attacks and anxiety.

  After her graduation from USU, she was posted to the Canadian Forces Health Services Center at Montfort Hospital in Ottawa. Her dedication and exceptional work ethics saw her in no time promoted to the rank of major and transferred to Toronto as the commanding officer of the local Health Services Center. Luckily, with Mike back from Afghanistan, her panic and anxiety attacks somewhat subsided.

  At first, she refused to talk about her problems with Mike. But the day she finally did, after a severe anxiety attack that had forced her to park on the highway’s emergency lane, Mike had been very supportive and apologetic. Less than a year l
ater, Mike had quit the army and was sworn in as a RCMP officer assigned to Toronto. From then on, life had been much more enjoyable.

  Reflecting on these tough times, when she and Mike were far apart, Lisa realized that these hurdles had actually made their love grow stronger until they were finally reunited for good and got married on a beautiful summer afternoon in Ottawa.

  “What’s wrong, Lisa? Why are you crying?” Celina asked.

  “What? Am I?” Lisa brought her hand up to her face and felt the moisture of a tear on her cheek. “I was just remembering how Mike and I met…and thinking of our wedding day.”

  “Oh, I sure remember that perfect day! Ray and I never expected anything less grandiose from you two,” Celina said, her voice breaking with emotion at the mention of her husband.

  “I’m sorry,” Lisa said, reaching for a Kleenex. But Celina was quicker and handed one to her.

  “Here, honey. Take this one,” she said. “And I think I’ll get one, too.”

  “Thanks.” Lisa looked at the older woman. Celina’s tears were flowing freely, sabotaging her makeup. She placed a comforting hand on her mother-in-law’s arm. Celina squeezed Lisa’s hand with her own.

  “And just the thought that Ray never met his granddaughter Melissa,” Celina said, sobbing. “And Chloe, he’ll never see Chloe either.”

  Lisa didn’t know what to say. She knew how in love her in-laws had been. Just by thinking for a second that Mike would have been the one kidnaped, she felt the excruciating pain Celina must be feeling.

  She looked down at her stomach. She was eight-and-a-half-months pregnant with their second child, another baby girl, whom they planned to name Chloe. Tonight, Mike was supposed to let her know if he’d be able to take a few months off work to stay with their newborn. He had already taken a two-month paternity leave to stay at home with her and Melissa two years ago. Lisa recalled how proud her husband had looked when he first held his baby girl in his arms in the delivery room. Lisa had experienced firsthand how sweet a person Mike could be. He had been so gentle and tender with their newborn that she had decided on the spot that everything would be all right as long as they were together.

 

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