Power Down (41 page)

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Authors: Ben Coes

Tags: #Thriller, #Suspense, #Mystery

BOOK: Power Down
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“Well?” said Fortuna. “You get the next five?”

“Yes.”

“And how close are they getting?”

“Close enough. The mole hunt’s official now. I’m being watched. There’s only one move that makes sense, for both of us. Alex, let me run. Be smart about this. If they capture me, I will trade you for my life. It’s that simple.”

“What ever happened to loyalty?”


Loyalty?
Have you ever been waterboarded, Alex? Loyalty is the first thing to go.”

“Listen to me well,” said Fortuna. “I am not telling you this again: you will not get another penny until this is over. And if you run, I will find you. And I will kill you. And then I will kill your wife. You stay until we finish the job, starting with the death of Dewey Andreas. Are we clear?”

Buck struggled to control his temper, reminding himself that—money
aside—Fortuna posed as much of a danger to him as he did to Fortuna. They were at a standoff, at least for the moment. And he needed the rest of the money.

“I know where he is,” he said at last.

A predatory silence inhabited the other end of the line.

“Where?”

“He’s in Cuba. Havana.”

“Can you take him out?

“In Cuba? No. Anywhere else, maybe. But I’m limited there. At least on this kind of time frame. Besides, I have someone else to take care of.”

“Who?”

“The person who suspects I’m the mole. She also happens to be running the mole hunt.”

Fortuna remained silent for a moment. “Havana,” he said, thinking aloud. “Do you have a location?”

“The Parque Central Hotel. That’s where he made the call from.”

“All right. I’ll clean up your mess.”


My
mess?” asked Buck. But before he could continue, the line had gone dead.

Fortuna left his office and took a cab uptown.

At home he went to the kitchen. Karim poured him a cup of coffee as Fortuna told him what he’d learned.

“Call the airport,” said Fortuna. “I’m going to do this myself.”

“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” said Karim.

“I don’t care what you think,” said Fortuna. “Who else can we send?”

“Mahmoud.”

“And jeopardize Notre Dame?”

“Notre Dame is ready,” said Karim. “The detonator is set.”

“The sketch of Mahmoud that the police made with Marks is everywhere. Plus Mahmoud’s injured. We can’t send him.”

“Actually, sending him out of the U.S. may be the best for all of us,” said Karim. “And he’s our toughest.”

Fortuna gave him a look.

Karim shook his head. “No, Alex. It can’t be you. You’re too important here. Besides . . .” Karim paused.

“Speak,” Fortuna said. “What’s on your mind?”

“It doesn’t matter.”

“Goddamn it, say it!”

“We hunt Andreas as if he’s the devil himself,” said Karim, shaking his head. “I ask myself, why? If he poses such a threat, then we should set off the rest of the bombs—the ones that are ready—and be done with it. Not risk all on the pursuit of one individual. We’re losing sight of the big picture.”

Fortuna grabbed a mug and pulled the carafe from the coffeemaker, pouring himself a cup.

“We’ve made billions,” said Karim. “We have the resources to go on forever. Long Beach was a fantastic success. We have more than twenty cells ready to be set off. Let’s set them off, then get the hell out of here.”

Fortuna laughed heartily, but his eyes showed no humor. “With no trading positions established? I’ve just begun reallocating money from the energy project. What do you know about this? Nothing! Do you realize how difficult it is to move a billion dollars, much less ten, twenty? We’ve worked for more than five years now; I’ve worked my whole life for this. To attack now without the trading positions in place would be pointless.”

“I thought the point was to harm American economic infrastructure. That’s why we were sent here. It’s why you were brought up here. ‘Silence, anonymity’; isn’t that what your father wrote? We’ve done our harm, and we can do more, right now. Fifteen or twenty more bombs will
devastate
America. Why do we need to make money from it? You’ll be in a league with Bin Laden after this.”

Fortuna drank the last sip from his coffee cup, then suddenly hurled it in Karim’s face, striking him squarely above the right eye, shattering the cup into pieces and causing Karim to fall back, holding his head as blood began to trickle from the gash.

“You compare me to Bin Laden? That mouse who hides in the mountains and fucks goats because he’s too scared to stand up and fight? You compare me to a dirty Saudi whose only goal is the taking of innocent
lives when I’ve stabbed a blade into the heart of the guilty, into the soul of the infidel? Do you even understand what it is we do, what we’ve done, what we’re going to do, you stupid fuck?”

Fortuna stepped toward Karim, who held his hand over his badly bleeding right eye. Fortuna struck him hard across the skull, sending him flying to the floor.

“You think we’ve won because we blew up a fucking dock? An oil rig? A dam? Because we made money? You quote my father? The man who abandoned me when I was five years old? Oh, yes, he had so many ideas, didn’t he? They all had their ideas, didn’t they?”

Fortuna kicked him hard in the ribs, two, three, four times, each kick more vicious than the last. He finally stopped and stood over him.

“I was the one who was torn from his bed as a child. I was the one who lost his family because of these great ideas and words you now quote. Now you want to walk away because it’s too dangerous? Because we might get caught? We might
die
?”

Fortuna walked to the counter and lifted the carafe. He poured himself another cup of coffee, then walked to Karim. He stood over him and began pouring hot coffee on the unconscious man’s head and back. After a few seconds, Karim moved and screamed as hot coffee burned his neck and back.

“Get up,” said Fortuna. “Before I kill you.”

Slowly, he turned over onto his side and looked up at Fortuna.


Get up,
” said Fortuna. “Go to South Bend. Get Mahmoud. But he can’t go alone. You need to send in two men.”

Karim nodded from the floor, tried to stanch the blood flowing from above his eye.

“You’ll need to bring weapons. Mahmoud will not have time to prepare.”

“I know. I’ll make all the arrangements.”

Mahmoud pushed the wheeled bucket down the empty hallway. He used the mop, which was stuck into the top, to push the yellow bucket past the bank of elevators. He opened a large green door and went inside. Inside
the large maintenance facility, a line of lockers was empty except for a lone black man, who was buttoning his dark green uniform.

“Hey, Mahmoud.”

“C. J.”

“How’s it going?”

“You know. Not bad.”

Mahmoud stood at six feet four inches, broad-shouldered, muscled, and tan. He limped slightly as he walked, though his physical strength still emanated from his powerful frame as he walked. His arms were thick with muscles. A red and green tattoo of a snake covered his right biceps. Mahmoud’s neck was wrapped in a bandage. He had told his coworkers, those who asked, that he’d fallen off his mountain bike on a gravel road, hence the neck wound, his limp, and the broken nose.

In truth, he felt lucky to be alive. His battered body now showed the side effects of his vicious battle with Marks, a battle he’d barely won. The fact that Marks had somehow survived the battle, after he’d left him for dead, made Mahmoud more ornery than usual.

Mahmoud wheeled the bucket to a large utility sink in the corner, lifted it up and emptied the bucket, then wrung out the mop. Above the sink, a clock on the wall read two forty-five.

He finished putting the mop and bucket away. He walked to a small, windowless office behind the line of lockers. He knocked on the office door.

“Yeah, Mahmoud,” said the man who was seated at a desk, Mahmoud’s boss, John Garvey, the head of maintenance for Notre Dame’s Stadium.

“Thank you for seeing me, Mr. Garvey.”

“For the thousandth time, call me John.”

“Sorry, yes, John. I need to ask a favor.”

“What is it?”

“My uncle died,” said Mahmoud.

“I’m sorry to hear that.”

“I’d like to ask if I can leave early today. I need to take a day or two off.”

“How early?”

“Right now.”

“Now?” asked Garvey, pausing. “I don’t see why not. How much time off do you need?”

“I don’t know. Perhaps tomorrow. Perhaps I return day after tomorrow.”

Garvey typed a few strokes into his computer. “You haven’t taken vacation in more than a year.”

“I know.”

“You lose vacation time if you don’t use it.”

“I know. It’s just—”

“Go be with your family. See you Thursday. If you need to stay longer, go ahead.”

“Thank you.”

Forty-five minutes later, Mahmoud stood to the side of the Atlantic Aviation tarmac at South Bend Regional Airport. Next to him stood a wiry, tall man named Ebrahim, like Mahmoud a maintenance worker at Notre Dame Stadium.

Mahmoud stared at the dark black tar of the landing strip, waiting. It was a cold day out, but sunny, in the forties.

To the north, he saw the outlines of the jet. By the time it hit the end of the landing strip, he knew it was his flight. The Gulfstream 450 had a distinctive look, completely black. It glided down the tarmac. The sound of the jet’s thrusters being reversed was loud, but smooth. The door fell open to the ground and the two men walked across the tarmac and climbed aboard.

Mahmoud was first up the steps. He looked around the cabin. Karim sat on a leather seat in the back of the jet.

“Hello,” said Mahmoud as he took his place in the seat diagonally across from Karim. Ebrahim took the other seat. He remained silent.

“What happened to you?” asked Mahmoud, staring at the cut above Karim’s eye.

“Shut the fuck up,” said Karim. He stared out the window. After a minute, he turned and looked at Mahmoud, taking in his bruised nose, still swollen from its break, and the bandage wrapped like a handkerchief around his neck.

“Are you strong enough to do what we must do?”

“I’m alive.” Mahmoud stared down at Karim. “That’s all that matters.”

The Gulfstream took off and headed southeast toward Havana. Karim, Mahmoud, and Ebrahim stood up from their seats and sat on the ground, on their knees, facing the left side of the fuselage. They prayed for the next twenty minutes.

After they prayed, they sat in their seats.

“He’s in Havana,” said Karim when they had finished. “We know where he’s staying. You follow him, find him, kill him tonight. No mistakes.”

“Who is this American?”

“That you don’t need to know. He’s a threat. Like Marks, only much more so.”

“What do you want me to do with him?”

“He’s a tall, middle-aged American. He’ll stand out like a sore thumb. You find him, you kill him. Then back to South Bend.”

“That’s all? Just kill the American?”

“That’s all.”

“What does he look like?”

Karim placed a black-and-white photo of Dewey on the seat in front of Karim. “It’s from many years ago. He was in the military.”

“Branch?”

“Army. His name is Andreas. Dewey Andreas.”

Mahmoud held the photo in front of his face for more than a minute, studying Dewey’s face. “He doesn’t look very pleasant.”

“We understand he had a beard and long hair as recently as two days ago,” said Karim. “That may have changed. He doesn’t look as good as the photo. He’s older.”

Mahmoud continued to study the photo. He looked up at Karim and handed it back to him. “You told me Marks had a military background. That he was a U.S. Navy SEAL, that he might be difficult. You also said he was as old as a grandfather and limped around like a woman. Do you remember?”

“Yes.”

“Marks nearly killed me. And now that’s all you can tell me about this one?”

“We’re trying to find out more,” said Karim. “He was in the army, like I said.”

“Then you’re a fool, or a liar.”

“Don’t you speak—” Karim began.

“If I don’t,” Mahmoud cut in, “we may fail. If I’d been more respectful of Marks, I would’ve carried my UMP in with me. If this matters, you have to tell me everything you know. What branch of the Army?”

“Rangers. Then Delta.”

“Fuck,” said Mahmoud. He sat in silence. “I know Delta,” he said. “We studied them at Jaffna Camps. They’re a nasty bunch.”

“So are you.”

“How old is he?”

“Forty-two.”

“What happened in Colombia?”

“Nothing. That’s outside your cell.”

“Then put it
in
my cell.”

Karim shook his head, exasperated. The plane suddenly tipped its nose downward as a bell went off in the cabin, indicating that they were in an approach pattern to Jose Marti International Airport outside of Havana.

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