The Pied Piper (17 page)

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Authors: Ridley Pearson

BOOK: The Pied Piper
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If the drug lab existed and they busted it, they would have probable cause to turn the house upside down and shake. If something fell out pertinent to the Pied Piper then it would later be admissible in court. The Shotzes' baby sitter had mentioned an exterminator, as had Sherry Daech. The connection was enough to get a judge behind a warrant.

It was the first place Boldt started.

Busting a drug lab was second in risk only to defusing a known bomb. The “cookers” were typically heavily armed and sitting on a powder keg of volatile chemicals. The raid had to be sanctioned by Narcotics for warrants. Boldt processed it accordingly and got lucky: Narcotics had been after the roving lab for weeks. With the word of a reliable snitch behind it, authorization came down quickly. Behind it was the full force of Special Operations, and its elite Emergency Response Team—with an abundance of firepower and expertise.

By 11:45 P.M. all necessary warrants had been walked through the system and the first of three neighboring families was quietly evacuated from its home adjacent to the suspected lab. Under instruction by telephone, the parents and their child simply drove out of their garage and were met downtown by a woman from City Services who housed them in the Westin. At 12:20 A.M., as the second of three surveillance units was established and the second home evacuated, a special listening device was sequestered onto one of four basement windows (all of which had been painted black from the inside), and it was established that the structure was empty. Working on a combination of collected information, the third surveillance unit was in place by 12:50, believed to be ahead of the arrival of the cookers.

Combat units followed.

The street cleaner that had broken down across from the target structure was receiving mechanical assistance from three undercover Narco detectives.

The commercial Dumpster left on the street in front of the evacuated neighbor's house contained two ERT sharpshooters. With slits cut by acetylene torch, the Dumpster was one of SPD's cheapest and most easily disguised fortresses and had been dubbed the Trojan Horse.

One street to the south of the target residence was parked a tractor trailer—an Allied moving van—containing eight Special Ops officers, a six-foot battering ram and enough armament to start and finish a small war.

In the evacuated homes to either side, four ERT officers, all medal-winning sharpshooters, sat behind darkened windows at the ready, communications devices hissing in their ears.

Mulwright, his field dispatcher and a lieutenant of Narcotics manned the department's Mobile Command Vehicle, a confiscated steam-cleaning van, parked with a view of the vacant house.

Boldt technically was not involved, even though he had helped plan the operation. He waited impatiently in his car along with SID's Bernie Lofgrin, a handheld radio listening in on a Special Ops frequency.

There was no idle chatter.

Amet Amali Ustad, squad leader of Mulwright's Special Ops unit, waited inside the Allied moving van along with seven ERT officers. Egyptian and Indian by heritage, his parents had moved as children to the Northwest following World War II and had met in Seattle in the Eisenhower era. A fierce fighter tagged the Warrior by his fellow officers, Ustad was darkly handsome with unexpected green eyes. He wore a tight-fitting charcoal gray uniform that distinguished itself from ERT's all-black. Across the back of every Special Ops field agent the word POLICE was printed in bold yellow letters. Amet Ustad looked over his men, worried only for Devon Long, whose personal problems with an invalid mother made him more of a burden than an asset to the team. Ustad made it his business to hear about any problems with his officers; he had consulted Lou Boldt's Intelligence unit more than once about rumors concerning members of his elite team.

The radio traffic delivered no surprises. Three separate surveillance teams tracked any and all movement surrounding the target while six unmarked patrol cars worked the surrounding blocks alert for the arrival of the meth lab cookers.

“Stay loose,” Ustad said, addressing Devon Long, worried about him. More than any other, his squad—“the ramrods”—worked with precision timing, striking a target with a fierce intensity and heavy firepower. There was no room for a straggler, no room for error.

The regular radio reporting of the various units rolled through predictably. There were good raids and bad raids, and Ustad expected the current one to fall in the latter category because it had been conceived hastily by a group of desk jockeys in desperate need of “warm ink”—favorable publicity to feed the media monster. He knew all the warning signs, multiple command being at the top. A woman captain and an admitted drunk were running this one. Ustad needed little more than this to fuel his concern. “Stay alert, people,” he told his troops. “I think we've got a live fish.” He pressed the earpiece farther into his ear and listened.

In proper order, each unit responded, Ustad taking his turn. His elite unit looked up at him as he spoke into the small microphone positioned by a flexible boom in front of his lips.

Besides the various shooters in the Trojan Horse and adjacent buildings, ERT had a six-man unit in a black panel van two blocks away, ready to strike within one minute of a summons. Ustad knew the ERT leader unit well and respected him. Together, their squads would constitute the advance strike. Ustad to the rear, the ERT boys at the front door. If all went well, a swarm of Narcotics officers would follow and actually lead the hit behind the protection of the two squads. The choreography and timing were rehearsed regularly in a police-confiscated warehouse on the south end of Boeing Field, inside of which stage sets of house and apartment interiors had been constructed. Amet Ustad was a believer in such mock exercises, and his team was so well trained that they were the advance unit of Washington State's elite Quick Response Police Squad. QueRPS, consisting of various units from a variety of state and city law enforcement agencies, traveled to crisis scenes—terrorism, hostage or armored drug raids—and put out the fire.

SURVEILLANCE
2: We've got Joy.

SURVEILLANCE
3: Tally-ho. I count four going in through the back door.

SURVEILLANCE
2: Roger that count.

OPERATIONS:
We've got four birds, people. Vehicle's tag number does not check as the owner of the house. We've got a green light from the top.

SURVEILLANCE
3: Door is shut. They're inside.

OPERATIONS:
This is it, people. Let's look alive and end up that way. Okay? Allied, it's your lead.

USTAD:
Copy that. Our lead.

Ustad looked to each of his rangers—his nickname for them—and silently made contact. Each of his boys nodded in return. They knew the drill. They had heard the words “our lead,” and understood it was time. Training had its rewards. Devon Long's eyes were dead, void of the fear his squad leader wanted to see there. If a person didn't find some form of terror in the prospect of ramming down a door and charging into a darkened house filled with bad guys, then Ustad didn't want him along. Ustad told him softly, “Long, you're doorman here.”

The rest of the squad glanced at the man, knowing it meant he was being left behind, and obviously curious as to why. Long, for all his personal problems, was one of Ustad's two or three natural leaders.

“Yes, sir, Squad Leader,” Long returned in a hushed voice in true spirit and form, although Ustad saw something else entirely in his eyes, something he didn't like.

Ustad told his team, “We go on three. I want this done smart. We've got a lot of firepower out there so watch what the hell you're doing, verify targets and don't shoot any yellow letters. We've got four birds in the roost,” he said, lifting his right hand and holding up four fingers. “Four!” he repeated. “Give it back.”

“FOUR in the roost, sir, Squad Leader!” the squad whispered in unison.

“On the count of?”

“THREE, sir, Squad Leader!”

“Radio check,” he demanded.

Each of his men counted down into their headsets.

“Ram up,” he ordered.

Four of the men took hold of the heavy device termed “the big dick” by his squad. It was a steel battering ram with rubber-padded handles on the side and a wedgelike tip carrying four one-foot stripes of luminescent paint that sharpened to its point like an arrow. It was scuffed and scarred from its many operations, both practice and real-life. The four men on the handles had the weight and size to deliver the big dick with the force of a small truck. Ustad's squad was anything but dainty.

Officer Devon Long moved past Ustad to the back of the trailer to take care of the trailer's large door.

Ustad turned around, away from his other men, and switched off his mike at his belt. “You okay, son?” he asked Long.

“Roger that, sir,” the boy answered in a hushed voice.

“Stay alert,” Ustad ordered.

“Yes, sir.”

Ustad switched on his radio and contacted operations. Blood pulsed loudly in his ears as his remaining men came up off the steel bench behind him. He counted down in rehearsed rhythm, “One … two … three …”

Long threw the two halves of the trailer's reinforced doors open and the squad disembarked as silently as a snake. Ustad took the lead, followed by the big dick and then the remaining two rangers. Ustad turned sharply left, having memorized the route: straight down the driveway into an overgrown backyard, up the steps and right through that door. No turns, no tricks. Surveillance reported his squad's actions, the only other sound the uniform rhythmic crunching of gravel beneath his team's feet. Halfway there and closing, he lifted the shotgun he carried, silently reminding himself he had five rounds to use before abandoning it for his side-arm. He mentally rehearsed his every footstep as he gained on the house ahead of him. Seconds to go.

He knew that the Trojan Horse and the snipers were prepared to provide cover, to defend them if needed. One of his rangers would let ERT in through the front door, Narcotics to follow his own ERT unit. He brushed his thumb against the protective vest just to assure himself he had remembered to wear it. Drug labs were the absolute worst. If the small weapons fire didn't take you out, the fire would.

He bounded silently to the platform of the back porch, his crew coming to a halt below. He hand-signaled their surveillance technician forward. The man snaked a thin tube of fiber-optic wire beneath the crack in the door, viewed a small monitor strapped to his chest, withdrew the wire and pronounced a thumbs-up to his squad leader.

Ustad signaled the two trailing rangers to break formation. Armed with a bolt cutter, they would attempt an incursion through the locked storm cellar on the building's south side, but only in the event of weapons fire.

So far, so good. The back of the house was empty. The intelligence was proving sound. The lab was believed to be in the basement.

From that moment out, Ustad feared a shooting gallery. The key element missing was the floor plan. They had no idea of it, other than a generalized opinion that similar structures of a similar era accessed the basement from a door in or near the kitchen. That was the door they'd be looking for.

Ustad waved the big dick up the stairs. Leaving the device to two men, the two others readied their weapons. He held his five fingers out straight and folded them in, thumb first, one by one until his hand became a fist. As he began his count, the ram swung back once, forward once, back again and then blew the door, frame, hinges and all, right to the kitchen floor. The team flooded into the kitchen. Within seconds, Officer Randy Deschutes signaled that he had found the basement door.

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