The Sea Witch

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The Sea Witch Page 11

by Stephen Coonts


  The crime was consummated.

  We had just stolen a forty-million-dollar V-22 Osprey, snatched it right out of Uncle Sugar’s rather loose grasp, not to mention a half-million dollars’ worth of other miscellaneous military equipment that was carefully stowed in the back of the plane.

  Now for the getaway.

  In seconds Julie began tilting the engines down to transition to forward flight. The concrete runway slid under us, faster and faster as the Osprey accelerated. She snapped up the wheels, used the stick to raise the nose of the plane. The airspeed indicator read over 140 knots as the end of the runway disappeared into the darkness below and the night swallowed us.

  * * *

  Two weeks before that evening, Julie Giraud drove into my filling station in Van Nuys. I didn’t know her then, of course. I was sitting in the office reading the morning paper. I glanced out, saw her pull up to the pump in a new white sedan. She got out of the car and used a credit card at the pump, so I went back to the paper.

  I had only owned that gasoline station for about a week, but I had already figured out why the previous owner sold it so cheap: The mechanic was a doper and the guy running the register was a thief. I was contemplating various ways of solving those two problems when the woman with the white sedan finished pumping her gas and came walking toward the office.

  She was a bit over medium height, maybe thirty years old, a hard-body wearing a nice outfit that must have set her back a few bills. She looked vaguely familiar, but this close to Hollywood, you often see people you think you ought to know.

  She came straight over to where I had the little chair tilted back against the wall and asked, “Charlie Dean?”

  “Yeah.”

  “I’m Julie Giraud. Do you remember me?”

  It took me a few seconds. I put the paper down and got up from the chair.

  “It’s been a lot of years,” I said.

  “Fifteen, I think. I was just a teenager.”

  “Colonel Giraud’s eldest daughter. I remember. Do you have a sister a year or two younger?”

  “Rachael. She’s a dental tech, married with two kids.”

  “I sorta lost track of your father, I guess. How is he?”

  “Dead.”

  “Well, I’m sorry.”

  I couldn’t think of anything else to say. Her dad had been my commanding officer at the antiterrorism school, but that was years ago. I went on to other assignments, and finally retired five years ago with thirty years in. I hadn’t seen or thought of the Girauds in years.

  “I remember Dad remarking several times that you were the best Marine in the corps.”

  That comment got the attention of the guy behind the register. His name was Candy. He had a few tattoos on his arms and a half dozen rings dangling from various portions of his facial anatomy. He looked at me now with renewed interest.

  I tried to concentrate on Julie Giraud. She was actually a good-looking woman, with her father’s square chin and good cheekbones. She wasn’t wearing makeup: She didn’t need any.

  “I remember him telling us that you were a sniper in Vietnam, and the best Marine in the corps.”

  Candy’s eyebrows went up toward his hairline when he heard that.

  “I’m flattered that you remember me, Ms. Giraud, but I’m a small-business owner now. I left the Marines five years ago.” I gestured widely. “This grand establishment belongs to me and the hundreds of thousands of stockholders in the Bank of America. All of us thank you for stopping by today and giving us your business.”

  She nodded, turned toward the door, then hesitated. “I wonder if we might have lunch together, Mr. Dean.”

  Why not? “Okay. Across the street at the Burger King, in about an hour?” That was agreeable with her. She got in her car and drove away.

  Amazing how people from the past pop back into your life when you least expect it.

  I tilted the chair back, lifted my paper, and sat there wondering what in hell Julie Giraud could possibly want to talk about with me. Candy went back to his copy of Rolling Stone. In a few minutes two people came in and paid cash for their gas. With the paper hiding my face, I could look into a mirror I had mounted on the ceiling and watch Candy handle the money. I put the mirror up there three days ago, but if he noticed, he had forgotten it by now.

  As the second customer left, Candy pocketed something. I didn’t know if he shortchanged the customer or just helped himself to a bill from the till. The tally and the tape hadn’t been jibing and Candy had a what-are-you-gonna-do-about-it-old-man attitude.

  He closed the till and glanced at me with a look that could only be amusement.

  I folded the paper, put it down, got out of the chair, and went over to the counter.

  “So you was in the Marines, huh?”

  “Yeah.”

  He grinned confidently. “Wouldn’t have figured that.”

  I reached, grabbed a ring dangling from his eyebrow, and ripped it out.

  Candy screamed. Blood flowed from the eyebrow. He recoiled against the register with a look of horror on his face.

  “The money, kid. Put it on the counter.”

  He glanced at the blood on his hand, then pressed his hand against his eyebrow trying to stanch the flow.

  “You bastard! I don’t know what you—”

  Reaching across the counter, I got a handful of hair with my left hand and the ring in his nose with my right. “You want to lose all these, one by one?”

  He dug in his pocket, pulled out a wadded bill and threw it on the counter.

  “You’re fired, kid. Get off the property and never come back.”

  He came around the counter, trying to stay away from me, one hand on his bleeding eyebrow. He stopped in the door. “I’ll get you for this, you son of a bitch.”

  “You think that through, kid. Better men than you have died trying. If you just gotta do it, though, you know where to find me.”

  He scurried over to his twenty-five-year-old junker Pontiac. He ground and ground with the starter. Just when I thought he would have to give up, the motor belched a cloud of blue smoke.

  I got on the phone to a friend of mine, also a retired Marine. His name was Bill Wiley, and he worked full time as a police dispatcher. He agreed to come over that evening to help me out for a few hours at the station.

  It seemed to me that I might as well solve all my problems in one day, so I went into the garage to see the mechanic, a long-haired Mexican named Juan.

  “I think you’ve got an expensive habit, Juan. To pay for it you’ve been charging customers for work you didn’t do, new parts you didn’t install, then splitting the money with Candy. He hit the road. You can work honest from now on or leave, your choice.”

  “You can’t prove shit.”

  He was that kind of guy, stupid as dirt. “I don’t have to prove anything,” I told him. “You’re fired.”

  He didn’t argue; he just went. I finished fixing the flat he had been working on, waited on customers until noon, then locked the place up and walked across the street to the Burger King.

  * * *

  Of course I was curious. It seemed doubtful that Julie Giraud wanted to spend an hour of her life reminiscing about the good old days at Quantico with a retired enlisted man who once served under her father, certainly not one twenty-five years older than she was.

  So what did she want?

  “You are not an easy man to find, Mr. Dean.”

  I shrugged. I’m not trying to lose myself in the madding crowd, but I’m not advertising either.

  “My parents died twelve years ago,” she said, her eyes on my face.

  “Both of them?” I hadn’t heard. “Sorry to hear that,” I said.

  “They were on an Air France flight to Paris that blew up over Niger. A bomb.”

  “Twelve years ago.”

  “Dad had been retired for just a year. He and Mom were traveling, seeing the world, falling in love with each other all over again. They were on their
way to Paris from South America when the plane blew up, killing everyone aboard.”

  I lost my appetite for hamburger. I put it down and sipped some coffee.

  She continued, telling me her life story. She spent a few more years in high school, went to the Air Force Academy, was stationed in Europe flying V-22 Ospreys, was back in the States just now on leave.

  When she wound down, I asked, as gently as I could, why she looked me up.

  She opened her purse, took out a newspaper clipping, offered it to me. “Last year a French court tried the men who killed my parents. They are Libyans. Moammar Gadhafi refused to extradite them from Libya, so the French tried them in absentia, convicted them, sentenced them to life in prison.”

  I remembered reading about the trial. The clipping merely refreshed my memory. One hundred forty people died when that Air France flight exploded; the debris was scattered over fifty square miles of desert.

  “Six men, and they are still in Libya.” Julie gestured at the newspaper clipping, which was lying beside my food tray. “One of the men is Gadhafi’s brother-in-law, another is a key figure in Libyan intelligence, two are in the Libyan diplomatic service.” She gripped the little table between us and leaned forward. “They blew up that airliner on Gadhafi’s order to express the dictator’s displeasure with French foreign policy at the time. It was raw political terrorism, Mr. Dean, by a nation without the guts or wit to wage war. They just murder civilians.”

  I folded the clipping, then handed it back.

  “Ms. Giraud, I’m sorry that your parents are dead. I’m sorry about all those people who died on that airliner. I’m sorry the men who murdered them are beyond the reach of the law. I’m sorry the French government hasn’t got the guts or wit to clean out the vermin in Tripoli. But what has this got to do with me?”

  “I want you to help me kill those men,” she whispered, her voice as hard as a bayonet blade.

  TWO

  I grew up in a little town in southwestern Missouri. Dad was a welder and Mom waited tables in a diner, and both of them had trouble with the bottle. The afternoon of the day I graduated from high school I joined the Marines to get the hell out.

  Sure, I killed my share of gomers in Vietnam. By then I thought life was a fairly good idea and wanted more of it. If I had to zap gomers to keep getting older, that was all right by me. It helped that I had a natural talent with a rifle. I was a medium-smart, whang-leather kid who never complained and did what I was told, so I eventually ended up in Force Recon. It took me a while to fit in; once I did, I was in no hurry to leave. Recon was the place where the Marine Corps kept its really tough men. The way I figured it, those guys were my life insurance.

  That’s the way it worked out. The guys in Recon kept each other alive. And we killed gomers.

  All that was long ago and far away from Julie Giraud. She was the daughter of a Marine colonel, sure, a grad of the Air Force Academy, and she looked like she ran five miles or so every day, but none of that made her tough. Sitting across the table looking at her, I couldn’t figure out if she was a fighter or a get-even, courthouse-stairs back-shooter. A lot of people like the abstract idea of revenge, of getting even, but they aren’t willing to suffer much for the privilege. Sitting in Burger King watching Julie Giraud, listening to her tell me how she wanted to kill the men who had killed her parents, I tried to decide just how much steel was in her backbone.

  Her dad had been a career officer with his share of Vietnam chest cabbage. When they were young a lot of the gung ho officers thought they were bulletproof and let it all hang out. When they eventually realized they were as mortal as everyone else and started sending sergeants to lead the patrols, they already had enough medals to decorate a Panamanian dictator. Whether Julie Giraud’s dad was like that, I never knew.

  A really tough man knows he is mortal, knows the dangers involved to the tenth decimal place, and goes ahead anyway. He is careful, committed, and absolutely ruthless.

  After she dropped the bomb at lunch, I thought about these things for a while. Up to that point I had no idea why she had gone to the trouble of looking me up; the thought that she might want my help getting even with somebody never once zipped across the synapses. I took my time thinking things over before I said, “What’s the rest of it?”

  “It’s a little complicated.”

  “Maybe you’d better lay it out.”

  “Outside, in my car.”

  “No. Outside on the sidewalk.”

  We threw the remnants of our lunch in the trash and went outside.

  Julie Giraud looked me in the eye and explained, “These men are instruments of the Libyan government—”

  “I got that point earlier.”

  “—seventeen days from now, on the twenty-third of this month, they are going to meet with members of three Middle East terrorist organizations and a representative of Saddam Hussein’s government. They hope to develop a joint plan that Saddam will finance to attack targets throughout western Europe and the Middle East.”

  “Did you get a press release on this or what?”

  “I have a friend, a fellow Air Force Academy graduate, who is now with the CIA.”

  “He just casually tells you this stuff?”

  “She. She told me about the conference. And there is nothing casual about it. She knows what these people have cost me.”

  “Say you win the lottery and off a few of these guys, what’s she gonna tell the internal investigators when they come around?”

  Julie Giraud shook her head. “We’re covered, believe me.”

  “I don’t, but you’re the one trying to make a sale, not me.”

  She nodded, then continued: “Seventeen days from now the delegates to this little conference will fly to an airstrip near an old fortress in the Sahara. The fortress is near an oasis on an old caravan route in the middle of nowhere. Originally built by the ancient Egyptians, the fortress was used by Carthaginians and Romans to guard that caravan route. The Foreign Legion did extensive restoration and kept a small garrison there for years. During World War II the Germans and British even had a little firefight there.”

  I grunted. She was intense, committed. Fanatics scare me, and she was giving me those vibes now.

  “The fortress is on top of a rock ridge,” she explained. “The Arabs call it the Camel.”

  “Never heard of it,” I retorted. Of course there was no reason that I should have heard of the place — I was grasping at straws. I didn’t like anything about this tale.

  She was holding her purse loosely by the strap, so I grabbed it out of her hand. Her eyes narrowed; she thought about slapping me — actually shifted her weight to do it — then decided against it.

  There was a small, round, poured-concrete picnic table there beside the Burger King for mothers to sit at while watching their kids play on the gym equipment, so I sat down and dug her wallet out of the purse. It contained a couple hundred in bills, a Colorado driver’s license — she was twenty-eight years old — a military ID, three bank credit cards, an expired AAA membership, car insurance from USAA, a Sears credit card, and an ATM card in a paper envelope with her secret PIN number written on the envelope in ink.

  Also in the wallet was a small, bound address book containing handwritten names, addresses, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses. I flipped through the book, studying the names, then returned it to the wallet.

  Her purse contained the usual feminine hygiene and cosmetic items. At the bottom were four old dry cleaning receipts from the laundry on the German base where she was stationed and a small collection of loose keys. One safety pin, two buttons, a tiny rusty screwdriver, a pair of sunglasses with a cracked lens, five European coins, and two U.S. quarters. One of the receipts was eight months old.

  I put all this stuff back in her purse and passed it across the table.

  “Okay,” I said. “For the sake of argument, let’s assume you’re telling the truth — that there really is a terrorists’ conference sch
eduled at an old pile of Foreign Legion masonry in the middle of the goddamn Sahara seventeen days from now. What do you propose to do about it?”

  “I propose to steal a V-22 Osprey,” Julie Giraud said evenly, “fly there, plant enough C-4 to blow that old fort to kingdom come, then wait for the terrorists to arrive. When they are all sitting in there plotting who they are going to murder next, I’m going to push the button and send the whole lot of them straight to hell. Just like they did to my parents and everyone else on that French DC-10.”

  “You and who else?”

  The breeze was playing with her hair. “You and me,” she said. “The two of us.”

  I tried to keep a straight face. Across the street at my filling station people were standing beside their cars, waiting impatiently for me to get back and open up. That was paying business and I was sitting here listening to this shit. The thought that the CIA or FBI might be recording this conversation also crossed my mind.

  “You’re a nice kid, Julie. Thanks for dropping by. I’m sorry about your folks, but there is nothing on earth anyone can do for them. It’s time to lay them to rest. Fly high, meet a nice guy, fall in love, have some kids, give them the best that you have in you: Your parents would have wanted that for you. The fact is they’re gone and you can’t bring them back.”

  She brushed the hair back from her eyes. “If you’ll help me, Mr. Dean, I’ll pay you three million dollars.”

  I didn’t know what to say. Three million dollars rated serious consideration, but I couldn’t tell if she had what it takes to make it work.

  “I’ll think about it,” I said, and got up. “Tomorrow, we’ll have lunch again right here.”

  She showed some class then. “Okay,” she said, and nodded once. She didn’t argue or try to make the sale right then, and I appreciated that.

  * * *

  My buddy, Gunnery Sergeant Bill Wiley, left the filling station at ten that night; I had to stay until closing time at 2 A.M. About midnight an older four-door Chrysler cruised slowly past on the street, for the second or third time, and I realized the people inside were casing the joint.

 

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