chapter 5
Washington, D.C
6:55 a.m.
THE MAJORITY OF the United States Secret Service's five thousand plus agents were assigned to field offices around the country and focused their attention on catching counterfeiters.
But the better known role of the agency was that of protecting politicians and, more specifically, the president of the United States.
The Secret Service's presidential detail carried a roster of approximately two hundred special agents at any given time, and their positions were arguably the most competitive and sought-after jobs in all of law enforcement.
Secret Service agent Ellen Morton was one of the lucky few. Morton walked through the Executive Mansion and stopped at the detail's down room located on the ground floor of the White House. The tiny cramped room was officially designated Staircase; the name derived from the room's location, which was underneath the stairs that led to the First Family's private residence on the second and third floors of the mansion.
Morton poked her head through the open doorway.
"Morning, Ted. How'd the night go?"
The agent leaned back and clasped his hands behind his head. With a yawn he gave his one word answer, "Quiet."
In order to give the First Family a certain amount of privacy, the Secret Service did not venture up to the second and third floors of the mansion unless called. They instead relied on a series of pressure pads installed in various areas beneath the carpet to track the president's whereabouts on the floors above. "Is he up?" asked Morton.
"Yep. The steward phoned down and said he's putting on a suit."
On most mornings President Hayes went straight over to the West Wing at seven, but there were times, usually after he had been traveling, when he liked to work out in his private gym on the third floor and then walk over to the office at around eight. The agents on the detail usually had no idea what to expect until the Navy steward called down to tell them the president was wearing either workout clothes or a suit.
The security panel on the wall of Staircase beeped and a red light blinked, announcing that the president's elevator was moving.
Morton nodded to the other agent and raised her hand mike to her mouth.
"Horsepower, from Morton. Woody, on his way down." Horsepower was the designation for the presidential detail's command post located under the Oval Office.
The presidential detail's chief concern and focus was the president, while the actual security of the White House compound was handled by the Secret Service's Uniformed Division.
There was a second command post located on the fifth floor of the Executive Office Building, across the street from the White House, that coordinated and monitored the two group's activities. It was called the Joint Operations Center, or JOC, and was built in the wake of an unauthorized attempted landing on the South Lawn by a single-engine airplane in 1994. JOC monitored the movements of both the uniformed officers and the special agents.
The doors to the elevator opened, and President Hayes emerged wearing a dark suit, white shirt, and paisley tie. The president looked at the familiar face before him and said, "Good morning, Ellen."
"Good morning, sir." Morton moved out ahead of the president, walking down the long hall that led to the Palm Room. As shift leader, or whip, of the day detail, it was her responsibility to coordinate the movement of the president from the mansion to the West Wing. They entered the Palm Room, and Morton spoke into her hand mike.
"Horsepower, from Morton. Woody is approaching the Colonnade." As Morton reached the double glass doors, she nodded to the agent on the other side and watched him move out ahead. Morton held the door for President Hayes, and then the two of them stepped out onto the field stone walkway of the Colonnade.
The president stopped and took in the bright spring morning.
Feeling the warm morning sun on his face for the first time in weeks, he closed his eyes and smiled. After a long moment, he drew in a deep breath. Then opening his eyes, he looked out at the mist-covered grass of the South Lawn. Ellen Morton stood silently behind him, her hands clasped in front of her. Without turning. President Hayes said,
"Beautiful morning, isn't it?"
"Yes, it is, sir." Morton grinned to herself. She was still not used to Hayes's private persona. With all of the security and pomp and circumstance, it was easy to forget that he was a real person - a husband, a father, and a grandfather.
"It makes me wish I was on the golf course." Hayes shook his head.
"Well, it's off to the daily grind." With that he started down the stone walkway. Morton followed a step behind as they headed past Jefferson's pillars. When they reached the doors that led to the West Wing by the White House pressroom, they took a left, continuing past the French doors of the Cabinet Room and then around to the right. As they rounded the corner, Morton looked ahead at the agent by the Oval Office. He was getting ready to insert a key into the door. Over her earpiece Morton heard the agent say, "Horsepower, from Cowley. Authorized break on the Oval Colonnade door. "The agent then stuck the key in the door and opened it, holding it for the president and Morton. The president took a final look at the blooming flowers in the Rose Garden as he walked, and then greeted the agent holding the door.
"Good morning. Pat."
"Good morning, sir."
President Hayes walked into the Oval Office first and Morton second. The president continued straight ahead, passing his desk and then going through the short hallway that led to his private study, bathroom, and dining room. Morton turned to the right and opened the door that led to the secretary's office. She closed it behind her and said into her mike,
"Horsepower, from Morton. Woody is in the Oval."
On the other side of the Oval Office, in the main hallway, two Secret Service agents from the presidential detail relieved two uniformed officers and took up posts outside the door to the president's dining room and the main door to the Oval Office.
Inside the president's private dining room, Hayes took off his suit coat and handed it to a small Filipino man dressed in a white waistcoat and black pants.
"Good morning, Carl."
"Good morning, Mr. President," answered the Navy steward.
Carl closed the door and took the president's jacket, hanging it on an antique wooden valet in the corner.
A circular oak table for four occupied the center of the room. Hayes sat at the seat closest to the Oval Office and pulled in his chair. Folded and laid out in front of him were copies of The Washington Post, The Washington Times, The New York Times, and USA Today. The same four papers were laid out in the same order every day, Monday through Friday.
The president began perusing the headlines.
The steward approached and placed a cup of black coffee next to the copy of the Times. "What would you like for breakfast this morning, Mr.
President?" Without looking up. President Hayes reached out for the cup of coffee.
"How about a half a grapefruit to start with, please."
The steward nodded and retreated into the pantry while the president began reading an article in the Post. Before the grapefruit was served, there was a knock on the door. The Navy steward opened it and greeted the two visitors. Bill Schwartz, the president's national security adviser, entered the room with Dr. Irene Kennedy from the CIA.
The lanky national security adviser greeted the president's steward.
"Good morning, Carl."
"Good morning, Mr. Schwartz. What would you like to drink?"
"My usual please."
"And for the lady?"
"Just a cup of regular, please," replied Kennedy.
Schwartz maneuvered his thin frame across the room and sat in the spot directly across from Hayes. Kennedy placed her briefcase on the floor and sat immediately to the presidents right. The president looked up at his national security adviser and asked, "How was your trip?" Schwartz had just returned from Brussels, where he had attended three days of meetings on the further expansion of NATO.
Schwartz removed his small silver-rimmed glasses and began to clean the lenses with his tie.
"It was slow, boring, and painful."
"It always is with NATO." President Hayes took a sip of coffee and placed the mug back on the table.
"The only organization that's worse is the UN."
"That is true." Schwartz nodded his head slowly and watched Carl place a mug of coffee in front of Kennedy and then himself. Next, the steward gave the president his halved grapefruit and put the other half in front of Schwartz, saying, "Eat this.
I'm going to get you some pancakes too, and see if we can put some meat on your bones." The steward then winked at the president. Carl had worked in the White House for more than twenty years and was an expert at ribbing even the most powerful of Washington insiders.
With his hands clasped in front of his waist, Carl bent forward and, in a much more friendly tone than the one he had used with the national security adviser, asked, "May I get you anything to eat, miss?"
"No, thank you. I'm fine." Kennedy wrapped her hands around the warm coffee mug.
The steward turned to President Hayes. "If you need anything more, please ring."
"I will. Thank you, Carl. "The president watched the steward leave and then leaned back. Looking to Kennedy, he said, "I got your message last night. I'm glad to hear everything went well."
"Yes. So far so good." Kennedy brought her coffee up to her lips and took a small sip.
"Bill, how much do you know about last night's activities?" asked the president.
Schwartz dumped a teaspoon of sugar onto his moist grapefruit and said,
"Irene filled me in on the basics when I got in last night."
"What time was that?"
"Just after midnight" The president looked to Kennedy.
"Have we discovered anything yet?"
"Our man and Harut left Saudi Arabia around two this morning. They are supposed to touch down at Ramstein Air Force Base in Germany" - Kennedy looked at her watch and did the calculation - "in about thirty minutes.
There they will be met by a team of specialists who will board the plane and start to interrogate Harut while airborne for Andrews."
The president thought about asking her what she meant by the term "specialists," but decided he was better off not knowing.
"When can we expect some answers?"
"It's hard to tell. Sometimes the information is extracted easily, but the drugs don't always work the same way on everyone. There are certain precautions we need to take to make sure he isn't lying." Kennedy paused. Stansfield had told her from day one to always be on the cautious side. Especially when dealing with politicians. She looked to NSA Schwartz and then back at President Hayes. "We need to be thorough."
Hayes stacked the newspapers, one on top of another, off to the side.
"Are we talking hours or days?"
"We will start getting information out of him within minutes.
Depending on what he knows and what kind of health he's in, we should have some answers within an hour. But let me caution you that it will take weeks to fully interrogate and debrief him."
"But our priority here is to find out if, when, and where they are planning this attack in Washington."
"Yes." Kennedy nodded.
Hayes looked to Schwartz, whose job it was to coordinate the efforts of all the intelligence agencies.
"I want this to receive top priority, and I want a full briefing on the interrogation."
Kennedy nodded.
"Yes, Mr. President."
Washington, D.C.
TWO MILES EAST of the White House a green-and-white truck backed up to the entrance of a dilapidated warehouse and stopped. Plastered in large white letters across the green side of the cargo area were the words "White Knight Linen Service." Two men in blue coveralls came out of the warehouse and hefted the rusting garage door up, its casters screeching as metal scraped on metal. The driver put the truck in reverse, and the two men guided the boxy vehicle through the narrow door with hand signals. When all of the truck was inside, the door was closed.
A hazy light filtered through the dirty windows near the roof of the building. Four men approached the rear of the truck, and a ramp was secured to the fender. The men began to unload the truck's canvas laundry baskets and boxes of fresh linen. After about five minutes the vehicle's cargo area was empty.
From an elevated glass office a man in green fatigues appeared. His closely trimmed beard grew from the top of his cheekbones down into his collar, and his hands and forearms were covered with thick black hair.
In contrast to the rest of his body, the top of his head was bald - a shiny bronze oasis of smooth skin bordered by a horseshoe of black hair.
Although short in stature, Muammar Bengazi was obviously strong.
Gripping the metal railing with his thick fingers, Bengazi watched his men work. They had come too far to make any mistakes now. Everything had to be done perfectly from this point forward. They had been given a summary from their benefactor that detailed the exact layout of the building.
Bengazi was told the report had been compiled by the KGB some twenty years earlier. More recently, one of his men had got inside the building and given them a more up-to-date summary.
Bengazi whistled, and his men looked up. From his perch, he pointed to three objects sitting under canvas tarps located in the far corner of the warehouse. He watched his men walk over and yank the tarps back.
Underneath sat three Kawasaki all-terrain vehicles painted in a drab tan-and-green camouflage pattern. The small vehicles were used by hunters for their maneuverability and power. Around the back of each vehicle a U-shaped cargo rack was attached. The cargo racks were stacked with metal trunks that were already secured by black bungee cords.
One by one the men started the ATVs. The musty smell of the warehouse was soon replaced with that of gas and oil. A small trailer, also loaded with metal boxes, was hooked to one of the ATVs and backed up the ramp and into the truck. The other two ATVs followed and were backed in tightly.
Bengazi walked down the metal stairs from the office to the floor of the warehouse. He was surprisingly light on his feet for a man of such girth. He approached a bright yellow forklift, climbed into the driver's seat, and started the engine.
After the vehicle warmed up, Bengazi backed it carefully up the ramp and into the back of the truck. The forklift was missing its two metal forks that were normally positioned in front.
When Bengazi had the heavy piece of machinery exactly where he wanted it, he turned it off and climbed down. He jumped from the tailgate and moved off to the side. For the next five minutes he watched his men reload enough of the truck's original cargo to conceal the forklift and ATVs. He walked from one side of the tailgate to the other, attempting to peer around and over the boxes and baskets. Satisfied with the job, he nodded to his men and checked his watch. They were on schedule.
Ramstein Air Force Base, Germany THERE WAS A slight jolt followed by a hydraulic whine. Mitch Rapp was yanked from his deep sleep and jerked forward in his seat, simultaneously reaching for his Beretta and looking to his left. He breathed a sigh of relief, and slowly his hand released the grip of his gun. Harut was still there, hands and feet cuffed, with a black hood over his head, lying strapped to the leather couch of the Learjet. His turban and robe had been replaced with a green flight suit.
Rapp rubbed his eyes and looked out the small window on his right, quickly realizing that the bump that had awakened him was the landing gear locking into position. They were almost level with the German countryside. A second later they cleared the trees, and the concrete runway was beneath them.
The green fields were replaced by a rank of gray hangars and planes.
First a row of large C-130s, then several flights of. F-16s, and then finally they touched down. Rapp continued to rub his eyes with clenched fists. He felt almost as if he had been drugged. The past three nights had been marked by a total of six hours of sleep. Rapp checked his watch and estimated that he had been out for almost four hours. It was a good start, but he wouldn't mind getting a couple more hours of shut-eye as they crossed the Atlantic. There was no telling how quickly he would have to go out in the field again.
The plane taxied off the main runway and came to a stop next to a fuel truck and a blue van with blacked out windows.
Rapp unbuckled his seat belt and got up. His appearance had changed since leaving Bandar Abbas. The unkempt black-and gray beard was gone, replaced by a cleanly shaven face. With the beard gone, a scar was now visible on Rapp's left cheek. It was narrow, less than an eighth of an inch, and it started by his ear and ran straight down to his jaw - the pink scar tissue offset by his bronze skin. The doctors at Johns Hopkins had done a good job minimizing the knife mark. At first it was almost half an inch wide, but after the plastic surgeons were done, there was only a thin line. This scar, more than any of his others, was a daily reminder to Rapp that what he was doing was very real and very dangerous. A streak of gray could still be found in his long, thick hair, but most of it had been washed out during the fifteen-minute shower he took after the helicopters had landed in Saudi Arabia. Rapp had shared a quick Miller Lite with Harris and his men and then headed for the showers to wash a week's worth of dirt and grime from his body.
He stood under the hot water and scrubbed every inch of his filthy skin three times. When he had finished washing the dirt and smell away, he stood under the hot water for another five minutes and savored a second Miller Lite.
By the time he was clean and dressed, the Learjet was ready. Rapp went back into the room where Harris and his marauders were already into their second case of beer and found Harut changed into a green flight suit, medicated, and lying on a cot in the corner. Congratulations were exchanged once again, and then Rapp threw Harut over his shoulder and headed for the flight line.
Now on the ground in Germany, Rapp looked down at Harut and yawned. Rapp would have just as soon put a bullet in Harut's head back in Iran, but if it meant finding out where Aziz was, the young American was willing to do almost anything.
Rapp walked to the front of the jet with his head tilted to the side.
When he reached the door, he grabbed the handle and twisted it clockwise. There was a slight hiss as the pressurized air escaped. Rapp let the door out and eased it toward the ground. Despite the overcast morning sky, he still had to shield his eyes from the light. His lean biceps bulged under the fabric of the black polo shirt he was wearing, and a brown leather shoulder holster held his Beretta securely to his side.
The door of the blue van opened, and a woman stepped onto the tarmac.
Two men followed her. It wasn't often that Rapp felt uneasy, but as he watched Dr. Jane Hornig walk toward him, he found himself suddenly wishing he were elsewhere.
Hornig, in her mid-forties, scurried toward the jet with one hand clutching the lapels of her blue blazer and the other holding her metallic briefcase. As Rapp watched her approach, he couldn't help but think of the scene from The Wizard of. Oz when the mean neighbor, who turns out to be the Wicked Witch of the West, shows up on her bike to take Toto away.
The music was even playing in the back of his mind.
Rapp was convinced that Hornig's face had seen neither sun nor makeup in over a decade. She had the classic demeanor of a scientist, disheveled and low-maintenance. Clothes and appearance didn't matter to Hornig; only her work did. Standing just a touch over five feet tall, she still wore her hair in a bun and dressed as if she had never found her way out of the sixties. On the one occasion that Lt. Commander Harris had met Dr. Hornig, he had, in his typical smart-ass way, dubbed her Dr.
Strangelove, after the hilariously abused character played by Peter Sellers in the 1964 Cold War spoof.
Hornig, for all other eerie qualities, was far more than just a psychologist. She also had advanced degrees in both biochemistry and neurology and was considered the foremost expert in America on the history and evolution of human torture.
She had an interesting business relationship with the CIA.
Langley provided her with guinea pigs for her experimental drugs and techniques, and in return she gave them what they wanted - information pulled from the deepest recesses of the human brain. This often included details that the subjects would not be able to remember on their own.
Rapp had watched Hornig and her henchmen work on one occasion, and after about ten minutes, he decided he could wait for the Memorex version when they were done.
As Hornig approached the foot of the stairs, she looked up and said,
"Hello, Mr. Kruse." Very few people at Langley knew Rapp's real name. To them he was Mr. Kruse, a case officer who specialized in the Middle East. People in the intelligence business knew not to ask too many personal questions when dealing with field personnel.
Indiscretion usually guaranteed an official reprimand from one's superior.
Rapp greeted the doctor and stepped back, allowing her room to enter.
Hornig looked to the rear of the plane. "How is he doing?"
"Fine. I gave him the exact doses you prescribed."
"Good." The doctor set a silver ballistic briefcase on the nearest seat and turned to the door.
"These are my assistants, Sam and Pat."
Rapp looked at the two men and nodded. Both were carrying two larger silver ballistic briefcases.
"There is a bedroom at the rear of the plane." Rapp pointed.
"It's probably the best place to get set up."
Hornig agreed, and she and her two assistants continued single file toward the rear of the jet.
Rapp watched them move Harut into the bedroom and decided it would be a good time to get some fresh air. As he stepped down onto the tarmac, he felt the rare urge to smoke a cigarette. It was a nasty little habit he had picked up while working undercover, and from time to time he still found himself craving one. He looked to his left, where an airman was busy refueling the plane. Rapp almost made the stupid mistake of asking the man for a cigarette, but he saw the flammable insignia on the side of the green truck. Rapp stood awkwardly next to the plane and looked to his left and then right. The low gray skies and rows of sterile military hangars gave the morning a depressing and dirty feeling.
Rapp sensed the oncoming downturn in his emotions and fought it. There was the tinge of self-pity, triggered by either the dreary surroundings or the arrival of Hornig, or probably both. These little mood swings had become more and more frequent over the last year. Rapp thought he knew what was causing them. When you spent as much time alone with your thoughts as he did, self-diagnosis became as normal as eating.
He was nowhere near the pain and anguish that he had suffered almost a decade earlier. This wasn't like that; it was different.
This was more like a warning that if he didn't do something, he would be stuck on a certain path for the rest of his life. A barren path marked by loneliness.
Before leaving on the most recent mission, he had talked to Kennedy about it. His parents were both gone, and although he still had friends outside of work and a brother in New York with whom he was very close, it wasn't as if he could pick up the phone and talk about his day at the office.
He could talk about his computer-consulting business all he wanted, but Langley was off limits. Officially, Rapp didn't even work for the CIA.
He was what they liked to refer to in the business as a private contractor. Rapp lived a life completely separate from the Agency. With the help of Langley, he ran a computer-consulting business on the side that just happened to do a fair amount of international business, which of course gave him the cover to travel. His only passion in life, outside of work, was competing in the annual Ironman competition in Hawaii - an event that the former all-American lacrosse player from Syracuse University had actually won once.
During these dark, brooding moments, Rapp had wondered how screwed-up his life was or, worse, how screwed-up it might get. He would continually ask himself if it was normal to want with such determination to kill another human being.
He knew this was the crux of his problem and had once joked with Kennedy by saying, "Most people have lists of things they want to do before they get to a certain age, like go skydiving, travel to China, have a kid ..
. not me. At the top of my list of things to do before I turn forty is kill Fara Harut and Rafique Aziz. How healthy do you think that is?"
Laughing and making jokes were all part of therapy for Rapp; without humor, he would never make it. In his job he needed to stay loose or, like a watch wound too tight, he would explode. Rapp had studied it from every angle, and he believed that his position was both moral and just.
The problem, however, lay in the fact that Rapp knew the hunt was destroying him. He was increasingly losing touch with that segment of society that was labeled normal. His friends from college were all married and having children, and for him there wasn't the hope of either on the horizon. He knew that to have a normal life he would have to finish what he had set out to do. He could not have a family and continue to work for the CIA. The two would not mix.
Rapp thought back to how nice his life had been just ten years earlier and to the weird twist of fate that had led him to this point in life, to this dreary military base in Germany.
"No one ever said life would be easy," his father used to say. Rapp laughed at the thought of his father telling him to "Suck it up," as he had done countless times throughout Rapp's youth. It had gotten to the point where Rapp's father would say the three short words with a smile on his face. The short phrase had grown from words of criticism into words of encouragement.
The roar of a jet sounded in the distance, and Rapp stepped away from the plane to search it out. Looking down the long runway, he saw a lone F-16 racing in the opposite direction, its single engine on afterburner, glowing bright orange. The agile jet lifted into the air, above the mirage of dancing runway heat, and instantly retracted its landing gear.
As the plane climbed, Rapp watched it gain speed. He followed it for a minute or more until it was a speck in the expansive gray morning sky. A second jet pulled onto the runway and screamed into the air, chasing after the first.
Rapp gazed at the second jet and knew he was a possessed man. He would pursue Rafique Aziz wherever he went, even if it led to his own destruction. The trick would be to catch Aziz before he himself reached the point of no return, and Rapp could sense that point nearing, hovering just over the horizon.
Rapp watched the airman detach the fuel hose and climb into the truck.
As the tanker pulled away from the Learjet, the plane's twin engines began turning. Rapp took one last look at the dreary scenery and climbed into the jet. As he pulled the door up and secured it, he smiled and whispered to himself his father's words of encouragement.
Transfer of Power
Vince Flynn's books
- Executive Power
- Consent To Kill
- American Assassin
- Act of Treason
- The Last Man
- Kill Shot
- Extreme Measures
- Memorial Day
- Protect And Defend
- Pursuit of Honor
- Separation of Power
- Term Limits
- The Third Option
- A Dangerous Fortune
- Betrayed: A Rosato & DiNunzio Novel (Rosato & Associates Book 13)
- Eye of the Needle
- Faithful Place
- Gone Girl
- Personal (Jack Reacher 19)
- The Long Way Home
- Top Secret Twenty-One: A Stephanie Plum Novel
- Whiteout
- World Without End
- The Cuckoo's Calling
- Gray Mountain: A Novel
- The Monogram Murders
- Mr. Mercedes
- The Likeness
- I Am Half-Sick Of Shadows
- A Red Herring Without Mustard: A Flavia de Luce Novel
- The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches
- The Curious Case of the Copper Corpse
- Speaking From Among The Bones
- The Beautiful Mystery
- Faithful Place
- The Secret Place
- In the Woods
- Broken Harbour
- A Trick of the Light
- How the Light Gets In
- The Brutal Telling
- The Murder Stone
- Still Life (Three Pines Mysteries)
- The Hangman
- Bury Your Dead
- Dead Cold
- The Silkworm
- THE CRUELLEST MONTH
- Top Secret Twenty-One: A Stephanie Plum Novel
- Veronica Mars
- Bullseye: Willl Robie / Camel Club Short Story
- Mean Streak
- Missing You
- THE DEATH FACTORY
- The Gods of Guilt (Mickey Haller 5)
- The Hit
- The Innocent
- The Target
- The Weight of Blood
- Silence for the Dead
- The Reapers
- The Whisperers
- The Wrath of Angels
- The Unquiet
- The Killing Kind
- The White Road
- Monster Hunter International
- The Wolf in Winter
- Every Dead Thing
- The Burning Soul
- Darkness Under the Sun (Novella)
- THE FACE
- The Girl With All the Gifts
- The Lovers
- Vampire Chronicles 7: Merrick
- Come Alive
- LYING SEASON (BOOK #4 IN THE EXPERIMENT IN TERROR SERIES)
- Ashes to Ashes (Experiment in Terror #8)
- Dust to Dust
- Old Blood - A Novella (Experiment in Terror #5.5)
- The Dex-Files
- And With Madness Comes the Light (Experiment in Terror #6.5)
- Into the Hollow (Experiment in Terror #6)
- On Demon Wings
- Darkhouse (Experiment in Terror #1)
- The Benson (Experiment in Terror #2.5)
- Dead Sky Morning
- The Getaway God
- Red Fox
- Where They Found Her
- All the Rage
- Marrow
- The Bone Tree: A Novel
- Penn Cage 04 - Natchez Burning
- Twisted
- House of Echoes
- Do Not Disturb
- The Girl in 6E
- Your Next Breath
- Gathering Prey