After the Rain (33 page)

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Authors: Chuck Logan

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BOOK: After the Rain
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At some point
the lull of the tires on the road had tired out the monsters in her mind and put her to sleep. Upon waking, she had a perfectly normal thought. When Kit was an infant and they couldn’t get her down, Broker would tuck her in her car seat and set the seat on the clothes dryer. The steady motor chug would ease her to sleep.

Kit.

She pressed down on her elbows, brought up her head, and glared straight ahead. First they’d keep it from her. But someday she’d learn how her mom had died; drugged, smothered, violated.

Can’t go out this way. Got to make it a fight.

She heard: “Partly cloudy to sunny. Temperature eighty-three. The prevailing wind direction is steady, seven to eight miles per hour out of the northwest.”

He was listening to the weather report, every chance he could, on an all-news station. She looked around. Couldn’t see much through the one clear window: treetops, a patch of blue sky. The steady thrum of the wheels on pavement changed, slowed; he was turning in somewhere. More trees rushed by the window. The Roadtrek stopped. He turned off the motor.

Then Dale pulled the curtain to the side and Nina could see out the windshield: treetops, a lot of power lines all ganged together. Closer in, she saw him take pills from two prescription bottles propped up on the dashboard. Pop them in his mouth. Swallow. Wash them down with Coke.

He was humming as he stripped off his work shirt and jeans. But then he took new clothes from a shopping bag and tore off the labels. Watching her from the corner of his eye, he pulled on comfortable baggy jeans and a blue golf shirt that set off his heavy white arms, throat, and face.

The driver’s seat swiveled, and now he spun it around and sat down, facing her. “Now, about the bomb,” he said.

The word
bomb
cut through the routine terror. She blinked herself alert as he rummaged around on the passenger seat, plucked up a four-by-eight-inch color photo, and leaned far forward, extending his arm so she could see it. She strained up, squinted. It was some big boxy yellow tractor with a shovel bucket on the front. Like you see on construction sites.

“I sold this used 644C to Irv Fuller. He thinks he took me on the deal. But, trust me, he’s the one who’s in for a surprise.” Dale smiled slowly. “That’s what I do. I surprise people.”

Nina shook her head. Sensed movement. Someone else coming.

“Dale and I have some business to attend to,” said George Khari, as he climbed over the passenger seat, stood in the compartment, and nodded curtly.

“Last night…” Nina said.

George shrugged, waffled a hand in the air. “Fake left, go right, heh?” He was unshaven, haggard, still wearing the same soiled shirt and shorts. He smiled uneasily at Nina, spreadeagled on the bed. Perhaps she saw a hint of disapproval in his brown eyes. Even disgust. If true, it was the last item on his agenda.

Nina tried to focus on him and got an impression of tremendous tension, but also excitement. The guy was practically throwing
sparks as he held up a manila envelope and said to Dale, “Trade you.”

Dale handed over the single photo and took the envelope. His thick fingers shook as he opened the flap and pulled out a stack of prints. An almost sweet smile spread over his face.

“Just a peek,” George said softly as he held up a set of car keys. Dale nodded, lovingly set the envelope aside, and took the keys. “Now, make the call,” George said, again in the soft but firm tone.

“Right.” Dale found the cell phone on the dashboard, consulted a slip of paper, punched in the numbers. A moment later he connected. “Hey, Irv. It’s Dale. Yeah. I’m here…About ten minutes out. You gonna come down to the gate and meet me?…Sure. Great. See ya.”

George exhaled, his eyelids fluttered, and he raised his hand to the medal attached to a chain around his neck, fondling it, almost sensually. “Just like that,” he said under his breath.

Dale gripped the keys in his hand, took a deep breath, and said, “I’ll be back.”

George clapped him on the shoulder. “Just relax, act natural. It’ll go fine.”

Dale nodded, spun the seat around, pushed open the door, and exited the camper. George, leaning over the steering wheel, watched through the windshield. Nina heard a car start and then drive away. When the sound of the engine faded, George collapsed into the driver’s seat and placed his hand on his chest.

“My God, it’s going to work.”

 

Nina waited a few moments, until George calmed down. Then she asked, “What’s going to work?”

George studied her, then said, “I don’t know that I want to talk to you.”

“Why? Afraid you’ll get to know me and that’ll make it harder to kill me?”

Slowly George removed one of the Cuban Lanceros from his chest pocket and began peeling off the cellophane. “You’re some kind of Special Forces, huh?”


What’s
going to work, George?” her voice cracked, not from fear. She was parched.

George pursed his lips, thought about it, then put aside his cigar. He reached down, grabbed a bottle of springwater, unscrewed the top, leaned over, and held it to her lips. She drank, paused, and drank some more. The water shot through her like a current, waking up some parts, shoring up others. For a brief moment she was stuck on an odd point of captive etiquette: Should she thank him? The moment passed.

He returned the water bottle to the front seat, took out a plastic lighter, and lit the Cuban. After he puffed a few times he sat back and studied her again.

“Dale’s really something, huh? I think it’s a form of selective retardation, like autism; he’s got these big social holes in him.” George came forward. “Like, did he say anything about Joe?”

“The guy who killed my…partner?”

“Yeah. Dead himself now, too. It was on the radio. The cops shot him at the border.” George sighed and shook his head. “Joseph, always too ready with that gun. Didn’t work this time. But Dale doesn’t care. All he sees is what’s right in front of his nose. You know what? This whole country’s one big version of Dale. Business can’t see past the next quarter. The Army wears berets made in China. One big case of political autism. Blind to the rest of the world.”

“Are you Al Qaeda, George? Is this some kind of ‘raid on a path,’ like it says in the Koran?” Nina asked.

“You mean like Rashid, who couldn’t keep his mouth shut? Me? Shit, no. I don’t go in for any church. I sell booze as a front and basically I smuggle drugs. I send some money back to Lebanon. From
time to time I run people across the border. But it’s like this deal, strictly for money.”

“This deal?”

“You wanna know? Why not. It’ll pass the time. First thing, we got control of Dale.”

“How?”

“I found out he’s one sick fuck. He had this list of three people he wanted to knock off. Because they teased him in high school. So we agreed to help him—you know, like snatching the woman in Grand Forks. We threw you in extra—you’re a freebie. And in return, he agreed to help us.” George reached into the passenger seat, took the color prints from the envelope. “And we promised him a new life.”

George got up and held a Florida driver’s license just inches from her eyes. The name said William Charon. William Charon’s photo ID showed a much leaner man than Dale, with dark hair. With a shudder, Nina observed that William Charon looked a lot like Ace Shuster. Then George showed her the prints; front and side shots; some were head shots, others the whole body. But all were magically slimmed down.

“It’s all digital imaging. Adobe Photoshop, on the computer. Our people in Winnipeg whipped out the license. Drugs, guns, counterfeiting; it’s what we’re good at. This other stuff is legit, from a plastic surgeon in Coral Gables who’s gonna work on Dale.”

“A new identity,” Nina whispered

“Yeah, give him a pretty new face and a backpack full of Epipens. Turn him loose on the female population. Hell,” George laughed, “he’ll be the new Ted Bundy.”

Nina looked into George’s calm, calculating eyes.
Legit…like hell.
She figured Dale was a one-use asset. He had about an hour left to live.

George put the prints and license back in the envelope and returned to his seat. “Things really got rolling,” he said, “when Dale
explained the possibilities of
this
.” He reached down and picked up the picture of the yellow machine. “See those big-ass tires? That’s where we put most of it.”

“Put most of what?” Nina asked.

“The Semtex.”

“How much Semtex?”

“About four hundred pounds in each tire. Tucked a few hundred more pounds here and there. So we put in about a ton.”

“You need a power source and a method of detonating it.” Nina thought out loud.

“Pagers. Small enough to fit into the valve. We wired each blasting cap to a pager, with a cap booster. Then we deliberately overinflated the tires with foam and capped them up. That way, Irv Fuller would complain that the machine handles stiff, which gives Dale a reason to visit the job site and get in the loader. See?”

George grinned. He reached in his trouser pocket and took out a Globalstar Qualcomm GSP-1600. “I called the phone company and got a group pager number. Just one call and all the charges go at the same time.

“Last thing we did was have the machine power-washed. Then we loaded it on a lowboy trailer. See, that’s the only thing they care about at customs on the Canadian border. They’re worried about bringing foreign agricultural soil into the States. Gave customs the paperwork and Dale just drove it right on through the port at Maida. Dale and Joe tweaked it some more in Langdon, and then had it delivered to Irv Fuller. We let Irv drive it to the target.”

“The target?” Nina said in a numb voice.

“Yeah, it’s a construction site. And the funny thing is, if it hadn’t been raining it would have blown already, three days ago. But work’s been held up because of the mud. So we had to wait till the rain stopped.”

“What site?”

George smiled and pointed his cigar out the window. “How
about the Prairie Island Nuclear Plant? It’s about two miles that way. Irv Fuller’s company won the bid to build a security wall around the reactors. Dale and Irv went to high school together. So…Dale sells machines. Irv buys them. That’s the connection that made Dale invaluable.”

Nina found herself in a new place: dread plus one. “But how do you get it inside?” she whispered.

George laughed. “It’s
already
inside. Just sitting there. The construction company brought it in on a trailer, with all their stuff. Their workers have to pass background checks. The guards look inside lunch boxes and underneath vehicles. But they ain’t taking tires apart on the machines that came to make the plant safer.

“Yeah, right now Dale is probably having Irv Fuller walk him through plant security—just another vendor visiting the site. The tricky part is, Dale has to move the machine next to the spent fuel pool.”

Nina listened, numb. Leaving dread plus one…

“Dale comes back, confirms the machine is in position, we drive off thirty, forty miles, and then I make a phone call. You got any idea what’s going to happen when a ton of Semtex hits that spent-fuel-pool wall from a range of about six feet?”

Nina strained against the cords in a spasm of inarticulate fury.
So that’s why they’re so wired into the weather reports. The wind direction. They have to get upwind of the explosion.

George waited for her tantrum to pass, then he smiled. “The people who built these plants are a little shortsighted. They never figured out what to do with all those fuel rods. So they just cram them into these pools. Dumb shits. Prairie Island’s got four, five feet of cinder-block wall. We got a ton of military-grade explosives. No contest.”

Spent, sweaty, filthy, with Ace Shuster’s dry, caked blood on her chest, Nina could only stare at him.

George narrowed his eyes and tossed his hands in the air. “Boom.
The pool ceases to exist. No more water. The zirconium cladding on the fuel assemblies—about fourteen hundred of them—reacts exothermically. That means they catch fire at about a thousand degrees Celius.”

George scratched his chin thoughtfully and pointed at her. “Even the Nuclear Regulatory Commission admits that that kinda fire can’t be put out. It would burn for days. We’re talking massive radiation exposures.”

George stood up, clenched his cigar between his teeth, and said, “So the short answer to what happens is—some people will die fast. On the Arabian Peninsula, we’ll watch a whole lot more of you die slowly on Al-Jazeera. Parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa will be
uninhabitable
for the next three hundred years. Impressive, no?”

Then he reached down into the passenger seat again. His hand came up holding one of those damn Epipens. And a roll of duct tape. “Time for your medicine, Nina,” he said.

She twisted away but he jabbed at her thigh. She caught a break because George wasn’t adept with the pen. Part of the dose dribbled on her skin. Then he tore off a gob of the tape, striped it across her mouth, and said softly, “Sweet dreams.”

Nina listened to George leave the camper, then she reared against her restraints, calculating how long she had before the drug took effect. She counted seconds, made it past fifty before the leading edge of the fluffy narcotic cloud bumbled into her blood.

Still, she kept straining. The bedstead jumped on the carpet. Once, twice. A clatter of wood on her right side caught her attention. Weaker now. Drifting. But she had to focus.

Sonofabitch! The dummies, they had too much faith in the drug. She fought for concentration.
Okay. When you strain up off the bed, the motion you feel is the sideboard riding up. No shit.
She visualized the bed’s construction, the way the pieces fit together.
If you can get your weight up off the bed and rip upward with your bound right hand while you’re in the air, maybe you
can yank the sideboard tongue out of the slot in the headboard. Then…

She blinked sweat, bubbles now. Streaming. Part of her started to float away. The rest of her was turning to cool, dreamy lead.
Fight. Think
…Woozy, she stared at the inane appliances in the room: the VCR, the camera, the tripod…
This is not how I intend to die—the drugged plaything for these creeps.

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