Authors: David Hagberg
He shook his head. "I don't think the Americans will attack us so soon. They take time to think about actions like that. Talk them over with their military commanders, and maybe some key Congressmen. When your man gets word to McGarvey he can make a telephone call to the CIA to let them know he has not been harmed." Bin Laden spread his hands and smiled. "You see, there is no problem."
"Are you willing to bet your life on it, Osama?" Bahmad asked.
Bin Laden nodded without hesitation. "Yes, I am," he said. "Insha'Allah."
CIA Headquarters DCI Roland Murphy put down his White House phone and looked up as the connecting door from the deputy director of Operations office opened, not at all surprised to see Otto Rencke standing there, his wild red hair flying everywhere. It was coming up on 6:00 p.m. "I haven't heard anything new, but you already know that."
"Oh, boy, I think they're getting set to make a big mistake," Rencke gushed. "They've got some of the right reasons, but the wrong int erp They're not looking close enough, ya know."
"By they, I take it you mean the White House," Murphy said. He'd seen Rencke in one of his "moods" before, but nothing quite like this.
"The National Security Council. They're on their way over there right now. You gotta stop them, General."
"I just got the call myself, Otto. We're going to have a teleconference in ten minutes, and the President's going to want my best recommendation."
"I want seventy-two hours," Rencke said.
Murphy shook his head. "I don't think they'd give me twelve. Mac is off the air, and unless you have something for me, we have to assume that he's dead and the chip has been destroyed. You've seen the data."
"All right, forty-eight hours then. At least long enough for Mac to get back to Kabul. Someplace where he can call us."
"If he died four hours ago, they'll be getting set to move out of there. The President wants to hit the bastards right now. Show them that we can move fast when we want to."
"You don't understand, General, Mac is still alive." Rencke was deeply distressed. Murphy didn't know what Otto was going to do, but when geniuses suddenly started getting excited and raising their voices, you listened.
"You have ten minutes to convince me."
Rencke came around the desk, and Murphy moved aside so that he could get to the computer. Otto brought up an action file that moved in slow motion. Along the bottom of the screen was a time-elapsed bar starting forty-eight hours ago. Displayed on the screen was a detailed map of the section of Afghanistan northwest of Charikar. It was constantly shifting to keep a small red icon that was moving through the mountains centered, and the time bar filled in.
"Okay, they take him from the Inter-Continental, and they head north past the airport, where they stop once--" Rencke looked up. "Probably a military patrol. But no problemo, they're bin Laden's boys. Around Bagram they stop for awhile."
"Another checkpoint," Murphy suggested.
"They switched cars," Rencke said. "After they made the second stop, Mac's transmitter moves about five meters to the west, but at a direct ninety-degree angle to the line it was moving in."
"I don't understand."
"When a car makes a turn, even a sharp turn like at an intersection, there's a radius of curve. Cars just don't turn on a dime like people do."
"You're saying that they stopped the car, Mac got out and walked over to another car, which took off in the opposite direction twenty minutes later."
"Right. And now you know what I'm looking for here. The anomalies that tell us something," Rencke said. "They head north after that, past the air base, and then northwest, but very slowly now. They're off the highway and probably off even dirt roads. They're in the mountains."
"Then he goes on foot," Murphy said.
Rencke used the mouse to speed up the sequence until about eight hours ago. With a few keystrokes he brought up a topographic overlay so that they were seeing elevations as well as the simple north-south orientation.
"This is bin Laden's camp," Rencke said. "We've had one satellite pass to confirm that there're a lot more people down there than you'd expect to see in a nomad camp." Rencke looked up. "Anyway, the only reason nomads go up into the high mountains in summer is for grazing land." He grinned like a kid. "But they screwed up this time."
"What do you mean?"
"No goats," Rencke said. "Lots of people, a couple of big animals, maybe camels, a couple of horses, but no goats."
The analysts over at the NRO had missed that one, but then Otto wasn't working for them. "All right. In the next couple of hours Mac's signal disappears once, reappears less than an hour later, then disappears for good. What's your take on that sequence?"
"Look at the overlay," Rencke said. He sped up the sequence. The icon moved down into the valley, and then back up the hill on the other side where it disappeared. "Bin Laden's den of iniquity. He invites Mac in for a bite to eat and a chat. But something happens in there, and Mac's signal suddenly reappears." Rencke looked up again. "Too soon, too soon, General, don't ya get it?"
"They weren't in there for very long."
"Exactamundo. Bin Laden tells us he's got a nuclear weapon and he wants to parley. But they only chat for a few minutes? Wrong answer, recruit. Something went haywire in there, and you just gotta ask yourself what that might be, ya know."
Rencke hit another couple of keys and the screen was suddenly split, the new half showing a pair of squiggly lines moving left to right, traces on an oscilloscope. "Okay, this is a recording of Mac's uplink with our satellite. The top line is before he went into bin Laden's cave, and the bottom line is when he came out."
Murphy studied them. "Are they different?" he asked. "Because if they are I don't see it. They look the same to me."
"Did to me too, at first," Rencke admitted. "So I put both signals through a spectrum analyzer." He brought up a new display with two sets of signals running left to right. This time it was clear that the bottom signal was slightly different from the top one. It looked as if the spikes had shifted a tiny amount to the right.
"It's a phase shift, actually. But the guys downstairs are big time for sure that this wasn't caused by low battery strength, or a component's tolerance variation in the chip. This was an induced shift." Rencke grinned like a kid at Christmas. "I told them to try a metal detector, like we use downstairs at the front door, on one of the test chips." He brought up a third trace, which exactly matched the one directly above it. They were identical. "Bingo," Rencke said. "They got wise to something, ran a metal detector over Mac, and found it."
Murphy looked at the screen in amazement. Rencke wasn't afraid of taking an idea and running with it wherever it might go, unlike just about all of official Washington. He didn't give a damn about his job, his only concern was for McGarvey's safety. Murphy looked away from the monitor. "All you're telling me is why they killed him, Otto. I'm sorry--"
"Another wrong answer, recruit. That's two in a row." Rencke restored the map with its overlay and started the time bar again. "Okay, he moves out of the cave and down the hill into a hut." Before Murphy could ask how he knew it was a hut, Otto pulled up a second overlay on the map. This one was a screened down image taken of the camp by one of the satellites. The position of the icon exactly matched a small building. "That picture was taken later, but the positions match up," Rencke said. "A few minutes later the signal disappears for good."
"So they took him inside a building and killed him," Murphy said.
"No, sir. An earlier picture shows a man in a white gown entering the building. A doctor. That's a medical hut. They took Mac in there to remove the chip. Then they destroyed it. Don't you see? Mac is still alive."
Murphy let out a pent-up breath. "Is that it, Otto?"
Rencke realized that he had not made a good case, and his expression dropped. "General, I know he's alive. I can feel it in my gut."
"I understand. But that doesn't alter the fact that we're dealing with a madman who apparently wants to play games with us over a nuclear weapon. A man who is responsible for the deaths of hundreds, maybe thousands of people including Alien Trumble and his wife and children."
"Give him a chance--"
"I'll present this to the President, but he's not going to buy it, Otto. He'll want more."
"But we need time, General. Goddamnit, we have to give Mac more time before we go charging in."
"Is there any way that you can get through to him on his satellite phone?"
Rencke shook his head. "I tried, but he's still got it switched to the simplex mode--send only. He's in a position where he can't call out, and he doesn't want an incoming."
"Or he's dead," Murphy suggested softly.
"He's not," Rencke snapped. He looked desperately over at the White House phone that connected directly with the President. "I could pull down the entire White House communications center so that the order couldn't go out."
Murphy said nothing, though he suspected that Rencke was probably not exaggerating.
"I could even get into the fleet's command and control system so that they couldn't so much as fart let alone launch a cruise missile."
"I imagine you could."
"I could shut down this entire town, and it'd be easier than you can possibly imagine."
"I'm sure of that too, Otto," Murphy said tiredly. "I'll try to buy us as much time as I can. But I don't think he'll listen to me unless you come up with something more convincing. There's just too much at stake."
Rencke gave Murphy a bleak look. "Tell them not to miss. Because if they do, and bin Laden survives, he'll come after us with a vengeance," Murphy nodded. "Don't say anything to his wife or daughter, okay?"
"Yeah," Otto replied glumly. "Whatta bummer."
CVN TO Carl Vinson The eastern horizon over the Arabian Sea was starting to show the first hints of a cloudless dawn when the battle group commander, Admiral Steph Earle, the Duke of Earl, put down the telephone on the bridge. He'd had a five-minute conversation with the President of the United States. There was absolutely no doubt in his mind about the mission.
He turned to the Carl Vinson's skipper, Captain Robert Twinning. "Final Justice is a go, Captain. You're free to launch on your command."
"Aye, aye, Admiral," Twinning said. He reached for the growler phone.
"Give 'em hell, Bob," Earle said.
Twinning looked up and grinned. "That bastard'll never know what hit him."
CHAPTER TWELVE
In the Afghan Mountains They reached the first stopping point at the pool above the waterfall just as dawn reached the upper peaks. Hash and Farid, who had taken the lead, had talked in soft tones during the all night trek, but Mohammed in the rear had not uttered a single word. McGarvey had watched for an opening, but it was useless. In order to get to his phone he would have to kill all three of them. But he had needed their help to get this far. Looking around now at the somewhat familiar surroundings he was sure for the first time that he could find his way back to the Rover, and then down to Kabul from here.
They had stopped a couple of times to eat some nan and drink cold tea, but they'd been anxious to get down from the snow and cold in the high passes, so they hadn't lingered long.
They had made good progress, and providing that the chip was still working, McGarvey figured they might even make it into Kabul before the twenty-four hours were up. He'd been counting on that up until now, because there was no other choice. Nothing would give him more satisfaction than going head-to-head with Mohammed, but he didn't want to hurt the other two. There was no reason for it. Despite the operation and his lack of sleep he felt surprisingly good, and with the morning sun his spirits were somehow buoyed up. It might be possible after all to avert the worst disaster the U.S. ever had to face.
"We'll rest here for one hour," Hash said, and Farid nodded his approval.
"Sounds good to me," McGarvey agreed.
Mohammed laid down his pack and went down to the river to fill the canteens as Hash and Farid gathered some wood and started a small campfire. They worked together with a quiet efficiency at something they had done many many times before. Wherever bin Laden had recruited them from they were truly Afghani mountain men now; a fiercely proud, self-sufficient people whose strength seemed nearly boundless. They were as comfortable here as an American teenager would be at a mall back home. The cultural gap was almost beyond bridging. Yet, sitting on a rock and smoking a cigarette as he watched them work, he was struck again by the contradictions Sarah was facing, which somehow made her seem fragile. She was as tough as a woman in this culture had to be, and yet there was a tender side to her that was painful to observe. He'd seen it in her eyes when he was telling her about food and fashions in the West, and especially about his own daughter, Elizabeth. And in the way her father had so peremptorily dismissed her at the cave entrance after her ordeal. No love there, or at least no outward signs of it, and her eyes had dropped in disappointment and resignation. If it had been Liz in the same situation, McGarvey knew that he would have given her a hug, told her that she had done a terrific job, and would have taken Mohammed apart piece by piece.
Another line from Voltaire came to him: He who is merely just is severe. Was that part of bin Laden's ethic up here in the mountains? Was he looking so hard for a Muslim justice that he couldn't allow himself the tender emotions of a father?
For a time he had considered the idea that the incident at the upper pool had been staged. But he decided against it. The look of self-righteous anger on Mohammed's face, and Sarah's fear and shame had been genuine. No acting there. Mohammed had been trying to rape her. So why the hell hadn't bin Laden done something about it? The cultural gap was vast, but goddammit, being a father was the same everywhere, wasn't it?
"How are you feeling now, mista Hash asked. The climb down to the valley wouldn't be easy, but after that it'd get better. McGarvey had thought about that last climb all the way back from the camp. The wound in his side ached, and his left shoulder continued to give him trouble, but his legs were still fine. Fencing did that for him.