Part 30 (1/2)

”What takes you from the NYPD to here?”

Larry looked at us and replied, very slowly and very simply, ”They f.u.c.ked with my city. Now I'll f.u.c.k with theirs.”

Interesting perspective. Interesting guy.

He cupped his hand to an ear. ”What? Yeah, yeah . . . okay.”

He looked at me. ”Eric says you should get over there right away. I stay here, covering the block.”

A minute later, Bian and I were crossing the street, and then we were at the entrance to the warehouse. I stopped and stood with my back to the wall by one side of the door; Bian stood by the other side. I whispered to Bian, ”Weapons off safe.”

”Eric said--”

”Who cares?”

”Right.”

I said, ”Cover me.” She took a crouch, and I announced, ”Entering now.”

I went in, rolling on the ground, and then, coming to my knees, began scanning the ground floor through my goggles. I noted a lot of heavy machinery. This seemed to be a factory rather than a warehouse, and the nature of the equipment suggested the purpose of this building had once been tool die work. I also observed a line of thirty to forty large artillery sh.e.l.ls standing on their bases in neat, orderly rows. These were not an ingredient normally a.s.sociated with automobiles, unless they are being outfitted for one-way trips.

I continued my sweep. Supposedly this entire floor had been cleared by Eric's men and thus was hypothetically safe. But I'd known guys who walked into ”cleared” rooms and were carried out.

Aside from the heavy machinery, the artillery rounds, and a gory corpse with only half a head, I saw no living beings. I made my way to the base of the stairs and whispered to Bian, ”All clear.”

In two beats she was directly behind me and we went up the stairs, stepping lightly, with our weapons pointed up.

A voice at the top of the stairs challenged, ”You're Drummond, right?” I sensed that a weapon was pointed at me.

I had this weird impulse to scream ”Allahu Akbar,” which was not a good idea, and probably was not really funny anyway. I asked instead, ”Where's Eric?”

”Follow me.”

We took a left at the top of the stairs and ended up moving swiftly down a narrow, unlit hallway lined with four or five doors on each side. The doors were all open, and several were splintered, presumably the handiwork of the SWAT ram I had watched one man haul inside. At the end of the hallway was the final office, which we entered.

Inside, Eric was seated on the corner of a desk, swinging his legs back and forth, the picture of casual intensity. Two of his men stood behind him with Uzis directed at six Arab gentlemen who were lined up against the wall.

Judging by their states of dress or undress, the prisoners had been caught by surprise, probably asleep. One was completely naked, one wore underpants--boxers with little red roses, actually--and the other four wore trousers and T-s.h.i.+rts. None wore shoes, which was either a weird coincidence or, as I suspected, Eric's people had taken them away to discourage attempts at running away.

I removed my Arab headpiece and night-vision goggles, and withdrew the flashlight from my pocket.

Eric informed us, without apparent regret, ”Aside from the two exterior guards, we had to kill one. He made it to his weapon . . . and . . . well . . .” After a brief pause, he gave us a verbal fifty-cent tour, saying, ”They all had weapons in their rooms, if you're interested. So they may not look like it at the moment, but these are bad hombres. And maybe you didn't notice the artillery sh.e.l.ls downstairs. Also, we collected two laptop computers. I thought you might want us to hold on to them.”

”Good thinking.”

He pointed at the corner of the room, where I observed a corpse lying on his back, with both hands folded neatly across his chest. His two forefingers were contorted into a small cross. Somebody had a sense of humor.

I moved closer and then examined the corpse. There was a small hole in the center of his forehead, and blood was spreading outward from the back of his skull, creating a small pond. Eric informed me, ”He was rooming with that guy,” and pointed at an older man at the end of the line of living prisoners.

The dead man's eyes were frozen open with that look of somebody without a care in the world--at least, not this world. If this was Ali bin Pacha, we had a big problem.

Checking the next block, I asked Eric, ”You're sure n.o.body escaped out the other entrance?”

”This is all of them.”

I next walked down the line of six prisoners, pausing briefly in front of each one, and as I did, I directed the beam of my flashlight at their faces. The reaction of freshly detained prisoners can be very revealing. Here we had six men who probably went to sleep feeling completely secure in a city populated by their fellow jihadists, and were rudely awakened by strange American men pointing guns in their faces.

What should follow are a few moments of disorientation, confusion, and fear. At least this is what you hope, because it is also axiomatic that, during this brief period, prisoners are most likely to talk, to divulge valuable information, or to do something incredibly desperate, and often stupid.

And indeed, four of the faces revealed exactly the range of emotions an optimist would hope for. Fright, anxiety, confusion, even hopelessness.

This was definitely not the case, however, with the second guy from the end, who was heavyset and muscular, about six foot two, with a broad face that glared back at me with an expression of anger and scorn. Hardy Harda.s.s. Also, there was a fanatical glow in his eyes, which is never a good sign. So here was one guy to keep an eye on.

The last man in the line was a little older than the others, who all looked to be in their early to mid-twenties. His face was long and thin, and I held the light on it for a long moment, and noted it was crisscrossed with scars, and that one of his eyeb.a.l.l.s was milky white. A fairly handsome man, though the scars and eyeball, in this light, looked eerie, and you knew he was no stranger to violence.

He was grinning at me the same way a pretty girl smiles at the cop who has just pulled her over for speeding, confident she is smarter, wilier, and should all else fail, has big enough b.o.o.bs to fix the problem. I studied his face, and he studied me back with a lurid nonchalance. Joe T. Cool, and here, I thought, was the guy to keep a close eye on.

But these were not trained soldiers, nor did they have a code of conduct for these situations, or even a modic.u.m of training regarding how to handle themselves. If we were lucky, this was bin Pacha and his bodyguards; with less luck, here were six suicide bombers who didn't give a rat's a.s.s whether they they lived or died; only whether lived or died; only whether we we lived or died. lived or died.

As I moved down the line, Bian was looking over my shoulder and also studying their faces. I had the sense she was processing their deportment and making snap a.s.sessments, which, in these situations, you have to do. To Eric, I said, ”You and your men take a break downstairs.”

He mentioned, ”You know we can't transport six prisoners out of here.”

”How many?”

”One.”

I regarded him a moment. ”Two,” he said. ”That's it.”

In any interrogation, it always helps to have a few prisoners to play off each other. Two was fine.

He pointed a finger at his watch. ”Ten minutes. I hope you have a magic key to find your guy.”

”And you're using up precious time.”

He said, ”Well . . . one other thing. They were searched. But you'd better keep a weapon on them, unless you'd rather we slap cuffs on them first.”

Bian shook her head. I wasn't sure why, nor did I particularly agree, but this wasn't the time or situation to argue. Prisoners look for weaknesses or division in their captors, and this was not the occasion to encourage silly misjudgments.

Besides, this interrogation was her gig, and as she had a.s.sured me several times, she had considerable experience with this. A little late, I realized that I had failed to ask whether those were successful experiences.

Anyway, the six prisoners were following our exchange with considerable care and attentiveness, their eyes moving between our faces as we exchanged words. Standard behavior.

I was sure that three questions were going through their minds at that moment: One, who are these mysterious people who arrived in the night costumed as they are, as Arabs, shoving guns in our faces? Two, why us? And three, since they aren't dressed in American military uniforms, what rules, if any, do they play by? One, who are these mysterious people who arrived in the night costumed as they are, as Arabs, shoving guns in our faces? Two, why us? And three, since they aren't dressed in American military uniforms, what rules, if any, do they play by?

Eric and his men stepped out of the room, and the door closed behind them. Bian turned to me, pointed at several candles, and ordered, ”Light those. Now.”

Her tone was authoritative, even harsh, though I knew it wasn't directed at me; she was now playacting for the audience against the wall.

And what you could see was how very surprised and displeased these men were to hear a woman's voice, and worse, that she appeared to have their collective b.a.l.l.s in her hands. They weren't used to what American males had to put up with.