The Rule Of Nine Part 30
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They tell us they will make a report and conduct an investigation.
Before they could even get started, a call comes in on their radio that a large multiengine jet has gone down out over the ocean following a near collision with another plane.
I look at Herman. "There goes our only lead to Liquida."
"Look at it this way," says Joselyn. "At least Thorn's dead. And that bomb is gone."
"There was no bomb," says one of the cops. "According to the tower, the pilot admitted there were drugs on board."
"If you say so," says Joselyn.
A half hour of driving, and an hour of paperwork, filling out and signing reports at the police station in Ponce, and we finally make it back to the Hotel Melia. The steady flow of adrenaline has left us exhausted, strung out, and depressed.
We put everything we saw in the police report, though the cops virtually dismissed any thought of a bomb. They told us that the Coast Guard would search the waters until dark and go back out in the morning, but that hope of finding anything was slim. The plane had gone down over the Puerto Rico Trench, one of the deepest areas of ocean in the world.
Joselyn, Herman, and I sit around in the bar downstairs having drinks, trying to figure out what to do next. It was a stone wall. With no leads, there was nothing left.
"I'm gonna have to call Sarah and tell her," I say.
"Tell her what?" says Herman.
"I don't know."
"You think it's safe to bring her home?" he says.
"No."
"Then what are you going to do?" says Joselyn.
"I don't know."
"Well, I know what I have to do," says Herman. "I'm not sleeping over at the Belgica after what's happened today. Is that extra room still open upstairs?"
"Yeah," I tell him.
"I gotta go over and pick up my stuff," he says.
"I'm going to head up and take a shower," says Joselyn.
I give her the room key. "Guess I'll go with Herman to pick up his bags."
"Where are you sleeping tonight?" she says.
"I don't know, any ideas?" I ask.
"See you upstairs," she says.
"Bless you," says Herman.
She laughs and heads the other way.
Herman finishes his drink and we head for the car.
From years of experience Thorn had learned that in his line of work, you never did anything without a backup plan. And if you were smart, you had more than one.
After the near midair collision Thorn took the plane up to twenty thousand feet and flew due west until he was about thirty miles out over the ocean. He turned on the radio and called in a mayday. He reported damage from the near collision and acknowledged that there were drugs on board. He told the air-traffic controllers he was having engine trouble and reported a hydraulic leak.
A couple of minutes later Thorn nosed the plane into a steep dive, but not before lowering his flaps and dropping his wheels to slow his speed. At a thousand feet he turned off the transponder and leveled off. With his speed still reduced and watching his fuel, Thorn lowered the ramp at the back.
The bomb was bolted in place. The rollers that released it from its cradle wouldn't move unless the safety bolts were pulled and the two metal straps holding the bomb in place were removed.
The drag on the plane from the s.h.i.+fting weight and the air resistance from the lowered ramp were considerable. Thorn put the plane into a mild turn, dipping the port wing and adjusting the throttles to give the plane enough power to keep it in the air. Thorn checked the altimeter.
He turned the flight controls over to Ahmed and told him to maintain alt.i.tude at five hundred feet and to hold the turn.
Over the horizon and under the radar, the controllers in the tower at Mercedita would a.s.sume that the plane went into the water.
"Okay?" He looked at Ahmed, who glanced at him nervously and nodded as he gripped the controls.
Thorn watched him for a few seconds until he was satisfied, then he and the other pilot went to the back of the plane. They gathered all of the brown paper masking panels from the paint job and tossed them out through the open airstairs in the back. The empty paint drums followed. Thorn was careful not to allow any of them to strike the area near the tail of the bomb where the snap-out fins deployed.
Finally he grabbed the two fuel cans and poured enough diesel fuel out the back end of the plane to leave a sheen on the surface of the water below. Then he tossed the two empty fuel drums out. He took one last look to make sure everything was floating nicely on the surface of the sea down below. "Good!"
Then he went back up to the flight deck and closed the airstairs, bringing up the ramp. Thorn lifted the wheels, brought up the flaps, and took over the controls again. Checking his fuel, he goosed the throttles and brought the plane onto a heading due south.
He hopped the waves, hugging the water for more than eighty miles, and didn't turn on the transponder. He did turn on the radio and listened while the tower at Mercedita called in the Coast Guard and launched a search and rescue for the downed plane.
Thorn stayed under the radar and didn't pop up again, not even when he reached his destination. It was the small island of Vieques, off the southern tip of Puerto Rico. There was a fair-size general aviation airport on the eastern side of the island. From there Thorn could take one of the twin-engine commuter flights to San Juan and catch a direct flight to D.C. in the morning. But at the moment that wasn't where he was headed.
On the western side, near a beautiful cove, the azure waters and white sand beaches concealed a deadly secret. The island was badly polluted. For fifty years the western side of Vieques had been a bombing range for the U.S. Navy. Tons of high-explosive ordnance had been dropped all over the island, and heavy metals, including mercury and lead, now contaminated large parts of it.
The people who lived there were territorial subjects. They lacked the wealth and political influence to launch the kind of "not in my backyard" movements that had shut down most of the military bombing ranges on the U.S. mainland. It wasn't until the base closure commissions began shutting down military facilities across the country that a coalition of environmentalists and islanders finally waged a successful battle to oust the navy. The old bombing range was turned over to the Department of the Interior, while bureaucrats argued over who was going to clean up the mess.
Meanwhile, the buildings at what had been the navy's old Camp Garcia lay abandoned. All that remained was a five-thousand-foot runway and a small unmanned weather station. It was the perfect location for stas.h.i.+ng the plane.
All Thorn needed to buy two nights, two days, and a load of Jet A fuel from the airport on the other side of the island was a plausible story. The empty jet was under a lease arrangement, a replacement craft deadheading from Houston to San Juan to carry freight. The partially completed paint job would enhance the story, and they painted the logos on the side of the plane as they waited. The story would be that they had developed a serious engine problem and that Thorn had to set it down on the abandoned runway when he found it available on his charts. No one would be looking for him there. It would be at least a day or two, maybe longer, before they realized there was no real wreckage in the waters west of Mercedita. By then the plane would be gone, the mission completed.
Ten minutes before landing, just off the southern tip of Puerto Rico, Thorn checked his cell phone for a signal. When he got one he made one phone call, to the front desk at the Hotel Belgica.
FORTY-ONE.
The Belgica is one of those cozy boutique hotels you often find tucked away in the old world cities of Europe, only this one has a Latin flavor to it.
When I walk through the front door behind Herman, I see that the lobby is small, and at the moment there is no one at the front desk.
Herman and I go up to his room. It takes him five minutes to throw his dirty underwear in his bag and gather his shaving kit and other toiletries from the bathroom. He does one last check of the closet and looks around to make sure he hasn't left anything, and we head out.
As I turn toward the stairs, Herman is behind me.
"Hold on a second," he says.
I turn. "Did you forget something?"
He shakes his head, puts his finger to his lips in a sign of silence, and then points back behind us down the hallway. "That's Thorn's room," he whispers. The door is wide open and the light is on.
"You think maybe the cops?" I'm up close in his ear.
He shakes his head. Herman's not sure.
We move slowly down the hall toward the open door. When we get there we see some luggage a.s.sembled on the floor, a large black roller and a smaller one. The bed's been stripped, all the sheets and towels in a pile on the floor. The closet door is open and there is a light on in the bathroom but no sign of anyone inside.
Herman slowly steps into the room, looks one way and then the other. He doesn't see anyone. I step in behind him. He checks the closet. There are two s.h.i.+rts hanging inside.
While he's doing that, I check the luggage tags. They are only temporary, paper, the kind of tags you get from the airlines when you check your luggage. The name on them is Charles Johnston, 113 Calle Once, Havana, Cuba.
I look at the smaller case, reach down and start to unzip it.
"Excuse me! What do you think you are doing?"
The voice sends me out of my skin. I turn around and there's a guy standing in the bathroom door looking at me. "Who are you?" he says.
Herman steps out of the closet. The guy looks at him. "Oh, seor, it's you." The guy in the doorway seems relieved.
Herman says: "Ah, my friend. This is the young man I was telling you about." Herman looks at me and smiles. "Pablo, correct?"
"That's right," says the kid.
"This is the young man at the desk," says Herman. "Very enterprising fellow. This is one of my a.s.sociates. Pablo, meet Paul. Two Pablos, how about that?" he says.
I laugh and step away from the bag that I was about to rifle, so that I can shake his hand. Perhaps for a smile and a few dollars he'll let us search the bags.
"Were you able to deliver your papers to Seor Johnston?" asks Pablo.
"Sadly, no," says Herman.
"That's too bad, because I'm afraid he's checked out."
Herman starts to laugh as if the kid has made a joke about death.
"I take it you've talked to the police?" I say.
"No." The kid turns serious. "Why would I talk to the police?" It's obvious he doesn't know that Thorn is dead.
"You said he checked out," says Herman.
"S, about an hour ago."
Herman looks at me.
"He was here?" says Herman.
"No. No. He called to say that he couldn't make it back to the hotel. Tol' me to put all the charges on his credit card and have his bags forwarded to his new hotel."
"Where's that?" I say.
"Oh, well, I'm not sure I should say," he says.
"Did he say where he was when he called?" I ask.
The kid makes a face, like maybe yes, maybe no.
"Listen, you've been very helpful," says Herman. "Lemme show you how much we appreciate it." Herman steps in front of me, then turns his back to the kid and rubs his thumb and forefinger together-the international gesture for money-as I reach for my wallet.
I pull out four twenties. Herman reaches around my hand and plucks out two crisp one-hundred-dollar bills from my open bill-fold. Before I can say a word, he is over in front of Pablo, stuffing them in the kid's breast pocket.
"Oh, thank you, seor."
"It's nothing," says Herman. "After all, we're all in business to make a profit, and you are a very good businessman."
"Oh, yes, I wish to be one day."
"Oh, you already are," says Herman. "It's the information age. The most valuable commodity there is."
"Yes, of course," says the kid. "I dunno where he is. He called on his cell phone."
"When exactly?" I say.
"As I say, maybe an hour ago. Perhaps less."
"You're sure it was him?" says Herman.
"Oh, yeah. He thank me for putting the m.u.f.fins and fruit in the bag for him this morning. We're not supposed to open the continental breakfast until seven. But as you know, he left early. He tol' me to put all the room charges on his credit card and s.h.i.+p the bags to a hotel in Was.h.i.+ngton, D.C., overnight," he says. "I tol' him we can s.h.i.+p them air freight, express overnight, but it's expensive. Besides, they won't s.h.i.+p until tomorrow, and they don't deliver on Sunday, so he won't get it till Monday. He said he didn't care. To put it on his hotel tab, and to give myself a nice tip. He didn't say how much."
"I'm sure you'll figure it out," says Herman.
I am thinking that it probably won't matter, as Thorn no doubt stole the credit card from somebody else.
"I wonder if you could get the address for us, the hotel in Was.h.i.+ngton where the bags are going?" says Herman. "It would be a big help."
"It's downstairs. I'll go get it," he says. He takes two steps toward the door and stops. "Maybe I should take the bags down first."
"We'll watch them," says Herman.
The Rule Of Nine Part 30
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The Rule Of Nine Part 30 summary
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