Read Joshua`s Hammer Online

Authors: David Hagberg

Joshua`s Hammer (38 page)

"Shit," McGarvey said under his breath. It couldn't have been worse news. He thought about calling Adkins, but they'd have their hands full over there, and there was nothing he could say or do now that would make any difference. He needed more information, and he needed to be there.

He closed his eyes and willed the airplane to fly faster.

Andrews Air Force Base

McGarvey awoke around 6:30 a.m. with the morning sun blasting in the windows as they turned on final approach to Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington. For the first few moments he was disoriented, wondering where the hell he was, but then he remembered and his hand went to the tender spot on the side of his head.

Dinner had been fine, but the drinks, especially the wine, had left him with a dull headache and a gummy mouth on top of his other ills.

He sat up and peered out the window. The countryside looked neat and clean, organized and modern compared to Afghanistan. For a little while he allowed himself the luxury of enjoying the moment, something he was rarely able to do. He was always working out scenarios for himself and everyone around him. Very often they were of the worst possible kind. At the fringes of his thoughts now was the question about bin Laden and men of his ilk--the terrorists of the world. Why did they hate us so badly that they wanted to tear all this down while at the same time beating at the gates to get in? It made no sense. But he was being naive, which was especially odd for a man of his experience, and even dangerous for a man in his position. He'd never found an answer to what he considered was a very basic question. Jealousy, he'd always thought, was too easy an answer. It was possibly something that he would never know.

"Good morning," Arnette said, and McGarvey turned to him.

"Hi."

"Are you feeling any better?"

McGarvey managed to smile. "I'll live, but I don't know if that's such a great idea. How about you?"

Arnette shook his head. "Oh, I never sleep on airplanes," he said. "But I usually get a lot of reading done." He held up a paperback novel.

The flight attendant came back with a glass of orange juice and a couple of pills. "Tylenol Extra Strength," he said, handing them to McGarvey. "You had a rough night, I figured these might help."

"Thanks," McGarvey said. He took the pills and drank the juice. He'd spent a lot of bad nights, but just lately they had piled up.

"Check your belt please, sir, we'll be on the ground in a couple of minutes."

"Yeah." McGarvey thought about the work he was facing, and the probability that they would fail. "Tell the pilot good flight."

"Yes, sir," the attendant said, and he went forward to his jump seat.

McGarvey turned back to Arnette. "You might as well ride out to Langley with me."

"Thanks, but Dave Whittaker said he'd be sending somebody for me, and they're taking you out to Bethesda, the docs want to check you out."

"I've had enough hospital for this week," McGarvey grumbled and he looked outside as they came in for a landing. There would be plenty of time for hospitals later. For the moment he had a war to fight, a war that he wasn't at all sure they could win given the rules they had to fight by.

The Gulfstream taxied past the terminal and parked in an empty hangar. McGarvey got up as the door was opened and the stairs lowered. Several armed air force cops surrounded the airplane even before the engines had spooled completely down. Dick Yemm was waiting with McGarvey's limousine. It was a beautiful warm morning but muggy after the Afghani desert and mountains. McGarvey shook hands with Arnette while Yemm opened the limo's rear passenger door.

"Are you sure I can't give you a lift?" McGarvey asked.

"No, sir, my ride'll be along shortly," Arnette said. "You know, maybe you should consider leaving the field work to the kids next time."

"That's a thought," McGarvey said. "Thanks for your help."

"Hey, no sweat. It's why they pay me the big bucks."

McGarvey walked over to the limo and shook hands with his driver bodyguard "Welcome home, boss," Yemm said.

"It's good to be back, Dick. Let's see how fast you can get me over to Langley."

Yemm hesitated for a moment. "We're supposed to take you over to Bethesda ASAP."

"Later," McGarvey said tersely. He ducked down to climb in the back seat and saw Elizabeth sitting in the corner, a big smile on her face.

"Hi, Daddy," she said in a small voice, her excitement and concern for him barely suppressed.

He was stopped for just a moment. "Hi, Liz," he said. He got the rest of the way in and grunted with pain. Elizabeth reached out a hand to help him.

"Daddy, what's the matter?"

"I'm still a little stiff from climbing mountains," McGarvey said, masking his pain and sudden dizziness. "Thanks for coming out to pick me up. How's your mother?"

"Happy that you were coming back in one piece," Elizabeth said looking at him critically to make sure that he was really all right. "I told her to stay home this morning because you'd have to be debriefed. She understood, but she'd like you to call her as soon as you get a chance."

Yemm got behind the wheel. "How about it, boss, Bethesda or Langley?"

"My office, Dick."

"They wanted to check you out first," Elizabeth said.

"The office," McGarvey repeated to his driver, and as they headed out, he turned his attention back to his daughter. "Okay, sweetheart, what's the story? We have a problem, it's written all over your face."

"Bin Laden survived," Elizabeth said, girding herself. She'd always hated being the bearer of bad news. Her father's major fault, in her estimation, was wanting to protect everybody around him no matter what the cost was to his relationship with them, even leaving them. Her biggest problem, by contrast, was wanting to make everybody around her happy while still trying to somehow juggle her fierce independence into the mix. It couldn't always work that way, and as a child she lied a lot; varnished the truth, as her father would say. But now in the real world in which people could and did get hurt without the absolute truth, that was no longer possible.

"Tom Arnette told me on the way over. He must have left the camp by now. Do we have any idea where he went?"

"He's probably gone to ground in Khartoum, but we're not sure yet. Otto's working with Louise Horn over at NRO." She smiled a little. "They're quite a team."

"Bin Laden's going to come after us and we're going to have to be ready for him."

They passed through the main gate, the air force policeman snapping them a crisp salute, and then got on the Capital Beltway, the morning rush hour traffic horrendous.

"Was it bad over there?" Elizabeth asked.

"We could have had a deal," McGarvey said heavily. "I think that he's dying of cancer, and he wanted to make sure that his family would be taken care of." He shrugged. "But he does know how to run a war, and his people are behind him one hundred percent."

"I went to school in Switzerland with his daughter, Sarah. What did you think of her?"

"She's a bright girl--" McGarvey stopped suddenly, realizing that she was trying to tell him something. "What?"

"The NRO got some really good high-angle frames of the camp during the raid and a few minutes on either side of it. We figured that Sarah left the camp about the same time as you did, and maybe she helped escort you part of the way back."

"Did she get caught in the attack?"

Elizabeth's lips compressed, and she nodded. "She was killed." She reached for her father's hand and squeezed it. "I saw the file photo we have of her and remembered her from that school outside of Bern. She's younger than me,

and she was only there for a year, but I still remember her because of the bodyguards." Liz looked away. "Now she's dead."

"What's our confidence level on this?"

"Very high," Elizabeth said. "We got some very good enhanced images of bin Laden with his daughter's body in his arms."

"Christ," McGarvey said shaking his head. "There'll be no reasoning with him now." "It wasn't your fault," Elizabeth said. "Maybe he'd still listen to you if you could reach him."

McGarvey looked at his daughter with a sudden overwhelming love and fear. He'd gotten inside bin Laden's skin for a few minutes up there in his mountain cave. Or at least he thought he had. But just now, just at this moment, looking at his daughter, he was sure that he really understood bin Laden. Understood a father's anguish.

"If his people had killed you I wouldn't listen to him," McGarvey said softly. "He's coming after us now with everything he has. And it's going to hurt."

Fanaticism is a monster that could tear a society apart, Voltaire wrote two hundred fifty years ago, and it was just as true now as it had been then. "The fanatic is under the influence of a madness which is constantly goading him on."

A daughter's death at the hands of the infidels was the ultimate goad.

CIA Headquarters

McGarvey walked into his office a few minutes before eight. His daughter accompanied him. Now that he was back and he had found out about Sarah's death, he had an unreasoning fear for Elizabeth's safety even here in the building. His secretary wasn't here yet, and he had a full plate so he could justify keeping her by his side, even though her job was in Rencke's section.

He took off the blue jacket the air force had loaned him, tossed it on the couch and went to his desk, which was loaded with memos, telephone messages and mail.

"Get your mother on the phone, would you?" McGarvey asked his daughter. "And then have Otto come up."

"Do you want some coffee, Dad?" Elizabeth asked, a secret smile on her lips.

"When you get a chance." McGarvey turned on his computer, and as it was coming on-line he called Adkins's office next door. "I'm back."

"You're supposed to be in the hospital."

"Thanks, I'm glad to be back too," McGarvey said with a chuckle. An outside line on his phone console began to blink, and Elizabeth motioned to him that it was her mother. "I want a meeting at eleven in the main auditorium with all our DO and DI department heads, the FBI's counterterrorism people, INS, State, the DoD, Defense Intelligence, the bomb people over at the aTF." Doug Brand-the new chief of Interpol--and anyone else you can think of."

"He's coming after us."

"No doubt about it, Dick," McGarvey said. "As soon as you set that up come on over, we have some work to do."

"Will do," Adkins said. "It is good to have you here, Mac, as long as you don't push yourself."

"Yeah, right," McGarvey said. He broke the connection, and before he picked up the outside line he asked Elizabeth to call Dave Whittaker up. Whittaker was the DO's Area Divisions chief in charge of all the foreign desks at Langley as well as all the Agency's bases and stations worldwide. He punched the button for the outside line. "Hi, Katy."

"Welcome home, darling," Kathleen said. "How are you?" Her voice was soft and wonderful. McGarvey couldn't help but smile.

"I'm a little battered and bruised, but it's nothing life threatening, so you can stop worrying about me." "I worry about you even when you're in my arms," Kathleen said. "Are you going to be able to get out of there sometime in the near future?"

"Tonight. And that's a promise."

"Shall I wait supper?"

"I might be late."

Now Kathleen laughed. "What's new," she said. "I'll start something around eight."

Rencke walked in, his red hair flying all over the place, his eyes red and puffy. It looked as if he hadn't slept in a week, but he was excited.

"Gotta go, Katy," McGarvey said. "Love ya."

"I know," Kathleen said, and McGarvey broke the connection. He'd never understood that response before, but now he did, and it felt great.

"Oh, wow, Mac, am I ever glad to see you," Rencke gushed. "Big time." He hopped from one foot to the other, as he did whenever he was happy.

"I'm glad to see you too, pal," McGarvey said. "But you look worse than I do. When's the last time you got any sleep?"

Rencke completely ignored the question. "We've wiped out bin Laden's daughter, and guess what? That makes nun one motivated dude."

"He's also very well informed," McGarvey said. He told Rencke about the meeting with bin Laden in the cave, including the fact they knew all about the GPS chip. "He could have an informer somewhere inside the NRO."

"Hackers," Rencke said dreamily. He was making connections. His eyes went to the computer on McGarvey's side desk. "The Taliban phoned Riyadh Ops and told them to send the C-130 an hour early or not at all," he said softly. "And when it was taxiing away from the terminal they came after it." Rencke focused on McGarvey. "Don't you see, Mac, they were expecting you, and they'd been asked to stop you. By bin Laden. He's into everything. He has connections everywhere because he's rich, ya know?"

"We have to stop them from getting into our system," McGarvey said.

"I'll work on it," Rencke replied absently. He came around behind McGarvey's desk and studied the menu displayed on the computer. "Have you logged in yet?"

"No."

"Well, if they're in the system there's no use letting them know that you've survived and that you're back to work." Rencke shut off the computer and went back to the front of desk where he stood like a schoolboy who has just done a tough problem on the blackboard. "It might give us a small advantage," he said.

"Good point," McGarvey agreed. "Has there been any word from bin Laden or his people about the raid?"

"Not so much as a peep," Elizabeth said. "I have a halfdozen search engines going on the Net, but we've come up empty-handed so far." Elizabeth looked perplexed. "But I don't get it, Dad. You'd think he would want to get the maximum mileage from his daughter's death. I mean guys like that usually take advantage of anything that comes their way. Something like the evil empire killing innocent women and children. Something. Anything."

"Would bin Laden know for certain that we knew his daughter had been killed?" McGarvey asked.

"He could know our satellite schedule," Rencke said. "But if we don't issue an apology, something he might expect us to do, there's no way for him to know for sure."

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