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Authors: Roger Hayden,James Hunt

Sleeper Cell Super Boxset (69 page)

BOOK: Sleeper Cell Super Boxset
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“Husein?”

“Yes. I’ve already had a team raid the American’s house. His wife and son are nowhere to be found.” Ma’mun thought to himself for a moment, then looked up. “Of course, he doesn’t know that. We can always tell him that we have his family. How would he know any differently?”

“Ah. Brilliant,” Qadar said.

“If that doesn’t work, then we’ll use Husein.”

“You really think he cares about the boy?”

Ma’mun leaned forward with a satisfied expression. “Whether he does or not isn’t the point. We have to discover his weaknesses, exploit them.”

Qadar shifted in his chair, trying to consider the effects of Ma’mun’s plan. “I will only say that there’s a lot riding on this. I hope you’re right.”

“I’ve seen proud men reduced to blathering infants before my very eyes. I think I know what I’m doing.”

Suddenly cheers erupted throughout the room. Ma’mun and Qadar looked up. The news had proclaimed the attacks as perpetrated by ISIS, linked to their hacking of government networks.

“So much for speculation,” Qadar said.

It’s all just meaningless noise until we deliver our message.”

“Fair enough,” Qadar said.

“Go get the general. We have work to do.”

Qadar nodded and stood up from his seat. He looked around the warehouse floor, searching among the men—some dressed in black, others in desert combat fatigues. The general was talking, seated in a circle with several young men, not a day over twenty. He never missed an opportunity to reminisce about his past as a personal guard to Saddam Hussein.

Many of the ISIS fighters were too young to remember the dictator who had ruled Iraq for two decades. The general provided them a fascinating insight into what it was like working for the insatiable tyrant. They hung on his every word. When Qadar approached to tell him of their plan to use the American FBI agent to deliver the fatwa against their enemy, the general couldn’t have been more enthused. It was a done deal.

Ma’mun watched them from afar, feeling satisfied with everything they had accomplished thus far. Tomorrow was a new day, and it was best to leave the American public hanging. They would receive all the answers they needed soon enough.

 

 

***

Hours, it seemed, had passed. Craig had no idea what time it was or whether it was daytime or night outside. The darkness of the basement was disorienting. He wanted nothing more than to talk to Rachael. Fear told him he might never see her again. He yearned to hold her, to look into her eyes and kiss her. Through it all, he could still feel her, no matter how great the distance. He thought of Nick. Had he failed his son? What kind of world were they living in now?

He was supposed to have stopped the terrorists and prevented the attack. Patterson was still in the hospital, and the last FBI agents he had worked with were all dead. As doubt crept in, Craig fought against it. Now was not the time to feel hopeless or defeated. He had to fight back, if not for anything other than seeing his family again. A plan had begun to take shape. He looked at Husein, lying across the room. The boy was nodding off.   

“Husein, listen to me.”

He lifted his head. “What is it?”

“We have to get them to lower their guard. Trick them, much like your aunt tried to do with the FBI.”

“How on earth do you expect to pull that off?”

Craig took a breath, hoping what he was about to say sounded convincing, and began. “This is our story. We’re enemies. You hate me and I hate you. I’m distraught over the safety of my family. I’ve lost it. You, on the other hand, have seen the light. You don’t blame them for what they did to your aunt; you blame me. You have information to give them, things Malaka told you in confidence, and you insist on talking to Ma’mun alone.”

Husein was trying to follow his line of thinking. “Then what?”

“You earn Ma’mun’s trust, then kill him.”

Husein recoiled and shook his head. “I can’t do that.”

“Husein…”

“I can’t physically kill someone. I’ve never even been in a fight before.”

“You’ve survived so far,” Craig said. “You’re stronger than you think.”

“But such a thing will be impossible. If one thing goes wrong…”

“Then we die. If we do nothing, we die. Our options are limited here.”

Husein continued to shake his head in doubt with a conflicted, torn expression.

“Just get me loose and give me a weapon. I can do the rest.”

Husein leaned forward, astonished. “There’s over fifty men up there. How are you possibly going to fight them all? What if they don’t believe us?”

“We have to make them believe. Starting now.”

Craig took a deep breath and looked at Husein with searing anger and then shouted. “You worthless piece of trash!”

Husein looked confused.

“I’m going to kill you!” Craig shouted again. Husein’s expression seemed to change. Craig shifted his position and struggled to get up on his knees.

“You’re a coward!” Husein yelled, with him now.

“Louder…” Craig whispered.

`              “I said you’re a coward!” 

              “If I wasn’t tied up right now, I’d come over there and beat the life out of you!” Craig shouted.

              “I’d like to see you try!”

              Craig moved on his knees along the cement floor, yelling at Husein along the way. “I’m gonna rip you a new asshole!”

The upstairs door suddenly opened. The general started to rush down the stairs with three armed men close behind him, dressed in desert combat fatigues, vests, and scarves—ready for war.

“What the hell is going on down here?” he shouted, his accent thick and heavy.

Craig moved toward Husein on his knees, shouting obscenities, just as the men stormed down the stairs.

“You killed my aunt! It was you!”

“I wouldn’t even be here if it wasn’t for you and that bitch!”

Husein felt genuine anger at Craig’s words and did not have to extend himself much to play along. “Go to hell, you American scum!”

“You wanna say that to my face?” Craig shouted, moving in.

At the bottom of the stairs, the general crossed his arms and shook his head. “All right, break those two up.”

His men moved forward and began to kick Craig away from Husein. Their boots came down on him hard and fast, knocking him to the ground. Next thing he knew, two arms were around his own, dragging him to the other side of the room.

“Get that American pig away from me!” Husein shouted.

The general towered over him and raised a hand. “That’s enough. What has gotten into you, little one?”

The general looked old enough to be his grandfather.

“I don’t want to be in a room with him any longer,” he said.

The general ran his hand over his face and sighed. “We don’t have time for this nonsense. Both of you need to calm down, or I will do it for you.”

“My wife!” Craig cried out as the men dropped him on the ground on the other side of the room. “What have they done to my wife?”

“What is he talking about?” one of the men asked.

“Ma’mun sent a team to get the American’s family.”

Craig looked up with a distraught expression. “Did they take them?”

The general hesitated. “Uh. Yes…”

Craig lowered his head. “This can’t be happening. Please don’t hurt them.”

“No harm will come to them as long as you do exactly what we say.”

“Don’t trust the American,” Husein said. “He’s a liar and a fool. He was just telling me how he’s going to try to escape and kill you all. He threatened to kill me.”

“That’s enough out of you,” the general said. “I know enough about Mr. FBI, thank you. Real slippery, this one.”

The militants looked at Craig in confusion. They had been told of a proudly defiant man who would resist their every demand. The sad lump before them wallowing in tears was not at all the man they had expected to deal with.

“I need to talk to Ma’mun,” Husein said.

The general turned to him with a raised brow. “What did you say?”

“I said I need to talk to Ma’mun. Now.” His tone was forceful and full of conviction.

The general took a step forward, raised a boot in the air, and pushed down on Husein’s chest. “You are to make no demands of us. Who the hell do you think you are? You are our prisoner. Nothing more.” He pulled out a long knife sheathed on his belt and held it in front of Husein’s face. “I could cut your eyes out right now, and no one would object. Be careful who you shout demands to.”

Husein tried to look unafraid even as his heart beat rapidly. “I have information my aunt told me in confidence. About spies in ISIS. She had a list. I still remember their names.”

The general tilted his head back and laughed. “Why should we believe anything that you say? An hour ago you refused to join our cause. In a very vulgar way, if I can recall.”

“I don’t know what I want,” Husein said. “But I know that I don’t want to die.”

The general smiled as if realizing Husein’s motivation. “Ah. I see. You hope that this
information
will spare your life.”   

“Yes,” Husein said.

“And you hope that we’ll be so grateful for the information that we’ll take you back in with open arms.”

“No.”

“No?” the general said, perplexed.

“I don’t want to join you. But I don’t want to die. The information for my life. That is what I want.”

The general scratched his scruffy beard, trying to assess Husein’s angle. “You really don’t know what you want, do you?” He looked over at Craig and pointed. “What about him? Do you think we should spare his life as well?”

“I don’t give a damn about him. Because of him, my aunt is dead.”

“You blame him?” the general asked, surprised.

“Yes. With every ounce. Now please, let me speak to Ma’mun.”

“Tell you what,” the general said. “Tell me the names and I’ll see what we can do about this
arrangement
of yours.”

“I need to speak to him and only him. By telling you the information, I forfeit any collateral I have.”

“A negotiator, I see. Trust me, boy. You have no collateral.”

“Just get that piece of shit out of my face before I kill him myself!” Craig shouted.

In a flash, boots came down on him, kicking him in the ribs. Craig howled in pain and thrashed and scratched the ground like a dog.

The general looked back to Husein, the knife still gleaming in his hand. “I will tell Ma’mun of your request. Whatever he wants to do is up to him.”

He then shouted at his men to stop kicking Craig. “That’s enough. We don’t want him unconscious on camera.”

The men stopped, then lifted Craig to his knees and slammed him against the wall. The general walked over to Craig and thrust a sheet of paper bearing lengthy typed paragraphs in front of his face. Craig glanced at it and then stared up at him.

“What is that?”

“The words you will read if you want your family to live.”

Craig looked at the sheet through his good eye. They were words he could never imagine himself saying. He only hoped his plan would work before he was forced to do the unthinkable.

A Message to America

 

The show continued downstairs, and like a choreographer, the general instructed his crew where to stand, their spacing, and the direction in which their weapons should be pointing. Qadar had arrived to operate the camera, accompanied by a lighting technician, the same portly, bearded man Craig had punched in the face hours ago. His tattooed counterpart was nowhere to be seen. The man had a bandage over his nose and bruises under his eyes. He looked at Craig with a contemptuous smile.

“Yassif, make sure the lights are positioned correctly,” Qadar said, from his position behind the digital camcorder. The camcorder was to record their many takes and capture the best one for posterity. Everyone was getting into position: three masked fighters stood in front of a black ISIS flag, brandishing AK-47 rifles pointed in the air. The rope around Craig’s ankles had been cut, but his hands remained bound. They led him in front of the camera and put him on his knees, directly front and center of the three masked men. Craig sobbed the entire time, pleading with them not to do anything to his family.

“Please, just let them go. They’re innocent.”

“Stop your sniveling,” Qadar said, framing the shot from behind the camera.

The men in the room marveled at the supposedly “unbreakable” FBI agent Ma’mun had told them about. Watching Craig, the general turned to Yassif and spoke in Arabic.

Yassif laughed and then went stone-faced at the sight of Ma’mun walking down the stairs observing everything. He signaled to the general, who turned.

“Ah, Ma’mun! So glad you could finally make it,” the general said. “Everything is going according to schedule so far.”

Ma’mun walked forward, out of the shadows, and examined Craig with suspicion. He motioned to the general, walked toward him and leaned in to whisper in his ear. “I would like a quick word with our prisoner. Take a break.”

The general looked at his watch. “We have a time schedule here.”

Ma’mun lost patience. “And who do you think makes the schedule around here, you oaf?”

The general stared back, unblinking, then looked at his crew. “Ma’mun wants to have a word with this sniveling crybaby. Give him a minute.”

The men walked away from the set, went to the other side of the room, and exchanged glances. The three masked fighters all took their ski masks off and set their weapons down. The general remained in his same spot, biting his tongue as Ma’mun approached Craig.

Ma’mun stared down at the kneeling FBI agent before him, examining him carefully. Craig looked distraught, sleep deprived, and defeated.

“Husein is upstairs waiting,” Ma’mun said. “Says he has some information for me and wants to speak one on one. Do you know anything about this?”

“No,” Craig said. “I only heard him just mention it.”

“You two are enemies now? That’s strange.”

Craig maintained eye contact. “Words were said. He insulted me, and I insulted him.”

“You’re worse than children.”

BOOK: Sleeper Cell Super Boxset
10.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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