Hard Target (17 page)

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Authors: Alan Jacobson

BOOK: Hard Target
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“First,” DeSantos said, “I’d verify that little assumption before calling it a fact. But fine, don’t ignore it. Look into it. I just don’t think there’s anything there.”

“Rusch is pro-gun control because of what happened to his sister. Killed by an illegal thirty-eight special. Robbery attempt—”

DeSantos held up a hand, then stopped walking. “She wasn’t killed by a gun, Uzi. She was killed by the asshole who pulled the trigger.”

“That’s a classic NFA argument.”

“Look, boychick. All I’m saying is that if a guy takes a hammer to his best friend, we don’t talk about banning hammers. We prosecute the guy who swung it.”

“And all I’m saying is that Rusch is not NFA’s best friend.” He waited to read DeSantos’s blank face. When DeSantos didn’t react, Uzi continued. “Motive. They had a reason to eliminate him.”

“Now you’re way out in left field.”

“No, go with me on this.” Uzi thought for a second, allowing the theory to form. “Let’s say the NFA was concerned about Rusch’s gun-control agenda. The only way to prevent a disaster—from their point of view—is to get rid of him. They find an ally in ARM and launch their plan.”

“Too much of a leap for me. This isn’t a goddamn spy movie, Uzi. And this isn’t the Middle East. Don’t forget we work for the US government. Like it or not— and I usually don’t— there are legal and political checks and balances. There needs to be proof of a connection, a solid case. Not some hare-brained theory about the NFA and right-wing militias plotting to kill the next president of the United States.”

“This from the guy who’s been on more black ops than the government will admit to? You know what’s out there, what’s possible. Even with 9/11, America’s only gotten a taste of the twisted minds these terrorists have. You and I... We’ve seen it up close.” Uzi paused, looked away. “And personal.”

DeSantos’s moment of pause told Uzi that his partner agreed with him.

“Still,” DeSantos finally said, “we don’t have enough to go on.”

Uzi chomped on the gum, his thoughts churning in unison. “So we need to dig some more. Find those connections.”

“No,” DeSantos said, poking at Uzi’s leather jacket with an index finger. “You need to find those connections. I’ve got some other things I’m looking into.”

Uzi started to object when his smartphone began ringing. He listened for a second, then caught DeSantos’s eyes with his own. “Let’s go,” he said, jogging toward his Tahoe.

“What’s going on?”

Uzi chirped his remote and the doors unlocked. “Tell you on the way.”

UZI PUT HIS MAGNETIC LIGHT on the roof and drove like an Israeli, zipping through traffic and arriving at the National Military Medical Center in under fifteen minutes. He had been told that Glendon Rusch remembered something about the explosion and thought it might help their investigation.

As they approached, the fifteen-story tower of Building One rose like the guardian of the hospital complex, appearing like it did on any other dreary Maryland day.

Uzi turned his credentials wallet inside out and slipped the end into his coat’s breast pocket so his Bureau ID was visible. Because of his olive complexion, slight accent and casual dress, he did not want to be profiled incorrectly by the military police. On high alert with heightened tensions, the scene could get ugly very fast.

They cleared security and hurried through the lobby—but before they could make it to the elevators, the ground shook. In the next split second, Uzi wasn’t sure what he felt first—the concussive force against his chest, the rumble of the floor, or the sensation of being weightless and flying backward through the air.

The ear-shattering burst thumped his tympanic membrane like a punch to the nose: numbness at first, followed by the sequelae of pain and muffled hearing.

He gathered himself up from the floor, fine soot and shit coating his tongue and face—and looked around for his partner. “Santa,” he shouted. He thought he shouted it—the strain on his throat felt like it—though he was not sure. “Santa!”

He got to his feet and saw DeSantos a few yards to his left, slowly getting up.

“You okay?”

DeSantos staggered, then caught himself. “I’ve just been knocked into a wall by a fucking bomb. No, I’m not okay. You?”

“I’m in one piece and I can kinda sort hear. All things considered, I feel great.”

The wall behind them was partially missing, smoky daylight filtering through. Off in the distance, multiple car alarms wailed, followed seconds later by sirens. They stumbled through the rubble and emerged in the parking lot, where chunks of displaced asphalt littered the road. Piles of pulverized tempered glass covered the ground as if a dump truck had spilled a load of sparkling diamonds.

“Jesus,” DeSantos said as they walked, leaning against one another for support.

“What do you want to bet the target was Rusch?”

“Better he’s the target than the victim.”

A physician in a white lab coat came rushing toward them. “You two okay?”

Uzi waved him off. “Fine. Shaken, not stirred.”

DeSantos play-slapped his shoulder. “Shaken, not stirred? If I didn’t know you better, I’d think the explosion caused some brain damage.”

Uzi smirked. “Let’s go check on Rusch.”

SLOWLY, AS THEIR BALANCE WAS still lacking, they took the stairs—which were littered with concrete fragments and glass shards. The fire door was twisted, but they were able to pry it open enough to squeeze through.

As they headed down the hall, Uzi’s phone rang. “Phone works.”

“That’s a good sign,” DeSantos said.

“Except that it’s my boss. That’s
not
a good sign.” He brought the handset to his ear.

“Uzi,” Shepard said, “get over to the military hospital, get over there right now.”

Uzi thumbed the volume switch and maxed it out. “Let me guess. There’s been another explosion.”

“You already know?” Shepard asked. “Who called you?”

“DeSantos and I were onsite. Pretty fucking intense. Almost took us out— Too close for my taste. We’re on our way to Rusch’s room.”

“A team will be there in five minutes. Keep me posted.”

“DeSantos and I are fine, by the way. Thanks for asking.” Uzi disconnected the call and shoved the Nokia into his pocket.

The two Secret Service agents guarding the door pulled their handguns as Uzi and DeSantos approached. “Get down. Get down now!”

Uzi glanced at his credentials case—but it was no longer attached to his jacket. “We’re on the job,” Uzi said, raising his hands above his head. “FBI. JTTF. SSA Uziel and DeSantos, DOD.”
I hope these guys know their government acronyms.

“Creds?” the agent said, voice strong and urgent. Still amped up.

“Musta been knocked off during the explosion.”

“Got mine,” DeSantos said. He held up his right hand and said, “Gonna reach into my jacket pocket. Slowly, okay?” He pulled it out and tossed it to the man’s feet.

The agent examined it a moment, then pressed an index finger to his ear and read the information to the guy on the radio. A long moment later, he waved them through.

They took folded paper gowns and masks from an adjacent stainless steel cart, put them on, and pushed through the door.

Glendon Rusch was lying in bed, a phone pressed against his ear. “Yes, Mr. President. Thank you for the call. I appreciate that. I will.”

The agent by his side took the handset and hung it up.

Rusch turned his head toward Uzi and DeSantos.

“Hector DeSantos. DOD.” He started to extend a hand, then withdrew it, no doubt realizing that Rusch’s upper limbs were completely bandaged.

“Are you okay?” Uzi asked.

“I’m not sure how to answer that.”

Uzi had forgotten how raspy Rusch’s voice was. Between that and his muffled hearing, he had to concentrate to make out what the man was saying.

“If you mean the explosion, I’m fine. My window’s bulletproof glass. Woke me from a nightmare is all. Any casualties?”

“Don’t know yet, sir. We came to check on you first.”

“I’ve got several agents who are glued to my side. I don’t need another two on my case.”

Actually, you’ve got about five hundred on your case.
“You asked to see me. Something you remembered about the helicopter.”

“Remembered?” Rusch asked. “What on earth are you talking about? I already told you everything I know.”

Uzi pulled his phone and checked the call history. It appeared to be a Bureau number, from the Washington Field Office.

“I’m sorry we bothered you,” Uzi said. He gave DeSantos a jerk of his head and they left Rusch’s room.

“WHAT THE HELL was that about?” DeSantos asked.

“First thoughts... We were lured here.”

“Yeah, no shit. You think this—this attack was about us?”

After dumping their gowns and masks, Uzi led the way back down the littered staircase to the ground floor, all the while working it through his head. “I still think Rusch was the target—but whoever’s behind this wanted us to either witness it firsthand, or—”

“They figured they could take out three for the price of one.”

Uzi found his creds amongst the dusty rubble in the lobby, then force-yawned a couple of times. “I think my hearing’s coming back.”

“We were lucky. Close enough to have a blast but not too close to have gotten blasted into a million pieces.”

“If it was about us,” Uzi said, “who’d have motive? Only one I can think of.”

“ARM,” DeSantos said. “They either followed us here, or—”

“Made the phone call that brought us here.”

DeSantos shook his head. “I don’t know. What’s the number in your call history?”

“Someone from inside WFO. But caller IDs can be cloned if you know what you’re doing,” Uzi said as they stepped out into the parking lot.

The swirling red lights of emergency and law enforcement vehicles whipped across the remaining first-floor windows of Building 10. Uniformed workers rushed about, some gathering toolkits to begin documenting the scene, others already on hands and knees collecting evidence.

It was a sight Uzi was all too familiar with, having lived through the bloody, suicide-bomb-laden Palestinian uprisings in Israel. The scene brought back memories.

“You okay?” DeSantos asked. “You don’t look too good.”

“I’m fine.”

“You look all pale and clammy—”

“Really—I’m fine.”

They moved further into the carnage, taking care not to disturb the scene. Uzi knelt beside the first forensic technician they passed. “Any thoughts?”

The man glanced down at Uzi’s creds. “My experience with scenes like this, given the blast pattern, says a car bomb.”

A loud whistle came from an area closest to the building. “Over here.”

Uzi and DeSantos followed a contingent of agents to the area of interest. A twisted and hollowed-out black Hyundai sedan rested against the hospital’s façade.

Uzi contorted his torso to peer into the warped metal hulk. “This the source?”

“Looks like it,” the technician said. “But for the moment, that’s only a working theory. We’re just getting started here.”

“Anyone bite it?” DeSantos asked.

“Two on the first floor, I think. And someone in the lobby.”

Uzi gestured at the car. “Car bomb means you put the explosive where, trunk?”

The technician shrugged. “Could be multiple places, depending on what you want to accomplish. For this, trunk would be a good place to start.” They moved toward the back of the vehicle. He peered in and examined the damage to the surrounding metal, which sported sharp and angry flanges that curled outward. “If I had to guess, C-4. Packed right here, supplemented with some other type of explosive.” He swiveled, took in the immediate area. “Took out part of the street, some windows and part of the building, but...”

“But what?” Uzi asked.

“If their target was the vice president, either they didn’t know where he was, or they just plain used the wrong explosive.”

“Good point,” DeSantos said. “If they used AMFO— ammonium nitrate-fuel oil mixture— the ingredients are easy to get and it’d give them a large explosion capable of causing vertical damage to a building.”

“That’s what McVeigh used,” Uzi said.

“More importantly, C-4 is high order and does a good job of blowing things around. AMFO’s low order and brings things
down
.”

Uzi took another look at the extent of the damage. “So if Rusch was the target, they used the wrong tool for the job. Unless
we
were the job.”

“Could also be that this
was
related to Rusch and they used the C-4 because that’s what they had available and it’s what they’re familiar with. They may not be sophisticated bomb makers.”

“Or the people responsible are in big trouble because they didn’t get the job done the first time when they took down Marine Two.” The voice came from behind them.

Uzi turned. It was Leila.

“Leila. This is Hector DeSantos. Hector, Leila Harel.”

“Hector.” Leila tilted her head back. “You’re the wingman.”

“The— What?”

“Nothing,” Uzi said, shaking his head at Leila, fighting back a smile.

“I’ve gotta go check on...something,” DeSantos said, jerking a thumb over his shoulder. “Meet up with me at the car.”

Uzi settled his gaze on the bombed-out vehicle twenty feet away. “I had a good time last night.”

“Glad to hear it.”

Uzi faced her. “Did you?”

She let a thin smile spread her lips. “Yes.”

“Good.” Uzi squared his shoulders. “What are you doing for lunch?”

“Today?”

Uzi consulted his watch. “As in right now.”

Leila looked around, as if thinking of a reason to decline. “I just got here. I haven’t had time to evaluate the crime scene.”

“I can brief you over lunch.”

“How about we do dinner tomorrow night, and then I can stay here and look around, and I won’t feel like I’ve shirked my responsibilities.”

“I admire your work ethic. Dinner it is. Any place in particular?”

“There’s a Mediterranean place I know off Constitution in Fairfax. Amir’s. Not as fancy as that farmer’s place, but it’s my type of food.”

Uzi was so focused on the beauty of her face that he was hardly listening to what she was saying. “Okay. When and where?”

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