Red Right Hand (22 page)

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Authors: Chris Holm

BOOK: Red Right Hand
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W
HEN A BLEATING
horn pierced the quiet, Hendricks went, by instinct, for his gun. Then he realized the sound was coming from his burner phone. Cameron—ever the technological smartass—must have set his ringer to the James Bond theme when she was mucking with it on the plane. He hadn't heard it before because the phone had been silenced. Now the brassy music echoed shrilly through the cavernous space. He couldn't help but think that Lester would've approved.

He and Segreti were holed up in a warehouse at the water's edge. It was used to clean and store boats. The interior reeked of mildew and toluene. Water lapped against the nearby pilings. Amber light spilled through the filthy windows from the streetlights outside.

All around them were yachts of various sizes, shrink-wrapped in white plastic and propped up with rusted stands that looked like camera tripods. The warehouse doors—front, back, and enormous overhead garage-style—were sealed with police tape (which parted easily when sliced with an X-Acto knife and cut so cleanly that when the door was closed, it still appeared unbroken from a distance), and an official notice stuck to each declared the building cleared. The cops had searched it and moved on, which made it the perfect place to hide.

They never would've made it out of the Presidio if it hadn't been for the fog, which only grew denser as the night wore on. Though the neighborhood surrounding the Broussard house was soon crawling with patrols, and the park's perimeter was on high alert, no one could see more than ten feet in any direction. The toughest challenge in eluding them was not wrapping the Jaguar around a tree.

They ditched the car soon after, in a parking lot beside the Palace of Fine Arts. Then they hoofed it downslope to the marina. A lone uniformed cop walked its grounds. Slipping by him had been a breeze.

One of the larger yachts had an inflatable dinghy strapped to its stern. Hendricks and Segreti wrestled it into the water, and Hendricks rowed it into the bay, taking them as far as his arms could manage. Once they were a ways from shore, he let the motor do the work, wincing as it rumbled noisily to life.

Hendricks had been trying to contact Cameron ever since. Phone. Text. The e-mail account they'd set up for her in case she was forced to ditch her phone. But the calls went unanswered, the texts and e-mails unread. His failed attempts hung like ellipses, like a circuit waiting to be completed.

He answered the phone “Cameron?”

“Who the hell is Cameron?” was the reply.

Shit. Thompson.

“No one. Don't worry about it. Why the hell are you calling me?”

“Are you fucking kidding me? Your handiwork at the Presidio is all over CNN.”

“I have no idea what you're talking about,” he lied—immediate, automatic.

“Cut the bullshit. I've seen pictures. You were there.”

Pictures? How?
And then it clicked. “Son of a bitch,” Hendricks muttered, as much to himself as Thompson. “The Bellum operatives were wearing body cameras, weren't they?”

“Yeah. Which means you can add the death of Lois Broussard, conspiracy to commit an act of terror, and a handful of federal assault charges to your résumé. The Bellum men are expected to pull through, in case you're wondering.”

“I wasn't. If I'd wanted to kill them, they'd be dead.”

“Like the Broussard woman?”

“I didn't kill Lois—Yancey did.”

“That's a fucking relief. Oh, wait—no, it's not, because now my boss, my…” Thompson's voice hitched with emotion. She gathered herself and tried again. “Now O'Brien knows we've been in touch. Knows I sent you. My career is ruined. I might wind up in jail.”

“You're not going to wind up in jail. In fact, they'll probably throw you a goddamn parade once you bring Segreti in from the cold and he clears this whole mess up.”

There was a long pause, and when Thompson next spoke, her tone was tinged with hope. “You're telling me you have him, and he's willing to testify?”

“He's got some demands, but yeah.”

“What kind of demands?”

“For one, he'll talk only to you—and he wants you to personally oversee the details of his protection.”

“Me? Why?”

“He remembers you a bit. Thought you seemed like a straight shooter.”

“I doubt it. When we met, I was just a green kid in over my head.”

“Yeah, well, I also might've vouched for you. Said you were trustworthy. That you'd keep him safe.”

“Okay,” she said, “what else?”

Hendricks hesitated. “Wherever you stash him, it has to be near a hospital with a decent oncology department.”

“You mean…”

“He's sick.”

“How sick?”

“Hard to say. Last time he saw a doc was seven years ago. She told him he was in remission but that it could return at any time. He's pretty sure it's returned.”

“Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck. You know how hard it is to make a case on the videotaped testimony of a criminal?”

“No. My methods are a little more direct.”

“Your methods are illegal.”

“So's jaywalking. That doesn't mean it's not the fastest route. Consider his illness motivation to make your case in a timely fashion.”

“Anything else?”

“Yeah.” Hendricks filled her in on the rest of Segreti's demands. “So what do you say? Can you make that happen?”

“I—I think so.”

“You think so?”

“Well, I'm not exactly in the Bureau's good graces right this second, but I'll try.”

“Okay,” Hendricks said.

“Okay as in he'll do it?”

“Okay as in I'll talk to him and see what he has to say.”

“Thanks,” she said. “Stay safe out there. And try not to shoot anyone else.”

“I'll do my best,” he said.

He hung up. Segreti, beside him, asked, “So how'd it go?”

“About as well as could be expected.”

“You okay? You ain't looking too good.”

“I'll be fine,” Hendricks said—although in truth, he was pretty sure his wound was infected. He felt achy and feverish. His skin was slick with sweat and radiated heat. He crossed his arms to quell his shivering. “Right now, I'm more worried about keeping you alive long enough to deliver you to Thompson.”

“Thanks, but I'll tell you, I'd trade places with Lois in a heartbeat if I could.”

“Were, uh, you two…”

Segreti looked aghast. “No! Nothing like that. Not that I
wouldn't
have…it's just…when I found her, she was in a bad way. Her husband was on the bridge when the tugboat hit.”

“Jesus.”

“Yeah. We met by accident. I thought I was busting into an empty house. Turns out, I interrupted her while she was trying to off herself. She thought maybe I was meant to, that God had sent me to save her life. I don't usually go in for that kind of thinking, but I really wanted to believe her. She was a nice lady. A good person. The world was better with her in it, and I figured that if I'd played a part in keeping her here, maybe my life wasn't so worthless after all.”

“Is that why you walked in seven years ago? You were trying to square your accounts?”

“Yeah. No. I don't know. I mean, my doc first diagnosed me eight years ago. Put me through surgery, chemo, radiation. It was hell, but when I came out the other side, I thought I'd beat this thing. So it's not like I thought I had to prepare my soul for the great beyond or anything. It was more that I felt like I'd been given a second chance. Like the cancer was a shot across the bow. After, I was changed. And the business changed too. I found I didn't have the stomach for it anymore.”

Hendricks nodded. He could relate. The moment that had changed him was a brush with mortality as well. Not his own, but a young soldier's whose throat he'd slit, a man scarcely more than a boy who'd died, terrified, in his arms, his blood flowing between Hendricks's fingers.

He shuddered. Pushed the memory away. Blamed the goose bumps on his fever. “What do you mean, the business changed?”

“Look, I'm not one to make excuses for what I've done. I was a criminal. A murderer. And I enjoyed it. Not the killing, you understand. That was just the cost of doing business. Every made guy on the planet knows going in they're playing for keeps. Knows if they're not sharp enough, careful enough, good enough, they'll get got. But the lifestyle…the lifestyle's fucking glorious. And we did enough good, I could get to sleep at night.”

Hendricks was incredulous. “You did good?”

“Damn
right
we did. The fact is, much as the white hats wanna pretend like organized crime is a scourge on society, we serve a fucking purpose. Some places, the family—or gang, or whatever—is all a community's got. We clean up neighborhoods the police won't touch. Make it safe to walk the streets.”

“Yeah, you're fucking saints.”

“I ain't claiming we are. We took our piece. We got rich. We lived the life. But the family I came up through had rules: No dope, no girls, and no tolerance for anyone who moved 'em on our territory. Did we charge local businesses protection? You're goddamn right we did. But you wanna know something? We fucking
earned
that money. In twenty years, there was maybe five holdups in my neighborhood. Probably twice as many rapes and muggings. Know how many the cops solved? Not a goddamn one. But thanks to me and mine, every one a them fuckers paid.”

“So what happened? How'd you get from there to talking to the FBI?”

“Used to be, our business was about community. We provided what the cops and straight businesses wouldn't, or couldn't. But then we got greedy. We formed ourselves a council. Stopped thinking like a bunch of family businesses and started thinking like a global fucking corporation. Stopped taking care of our own. We'd deal in anything that paid. It began in the seventies, with dope. Smack, coke, and crack. Then came guns—to gangbangers, militants, whack-job cult leaders, whoever had the cash. Ain't like we asked 'em their intentions. Then came girls. Most of 'em unwilling. Brought into the country and kept like fucking pets, only we don't force-feed our pets junk to keep 'em docile. Next thing you know, our communities are rotting from the inside, but we don't care, because we've never been richer. And then the Council decided to aim higher.”

“Meaning what?”

“Meaning some Council members realized we could lower our overhead if we took the operation international. Next thing I knew, we were buying off lawmakers and bureaucrats in Sarajevo, Amsterdam, Johannesburg. Making deals with fucking warlords to trade girls for guns. Watching the evening news and seeing the weapons we'd sold turned on the poor and helpless. I couldn't stomach it. Then I got sick—which was a blessing, in a way, because it removed me from the day-to-day. But the young punk who covered for me while I was undergoing treatment had designs to make his new position permanent, and he had some shady partner he said could take us legit and make us rich beyond our wildest dreams—if we made the partner chairman, that is.”

“Who?”

“Hell if I know. But he must've had enough clout that the Council thought he could deliver, because next thing I know, I'm on a one-way ticket to the desert. I barely escaped with my life, and when I did, I went straight to the fucking Feds. You know how that turned out.”

“Yeah. What I
don't
know is how you survived the blast at the safe house.”

“Somebody with a cleaner conscience than mine might say it was divine providence. I think it was dumb fucking luck. I was in the basement when the bomb went off—doing laundry, if you can believe it. Half the house came down around me, but somehow, I walked away.”

“But I understand they found your DNA.”

“When the Feds heard I'd been sick, they brought in a doctor on the quiet to check me out. He drew some samples and packed 'em up to send 'em to the lab. They were sitting on the counter when the bomb went off. Seemed like a goddamn gift to me when I found out. I thought about hunting down the bastards who tried to kill me. I thought about making them pay. Then I figured, fuck it—maybe being dead's the best thing that ever happened to me. Maybe it means I can start fresh. Live out whatever days I've got left in peace. I'd always said that when I retired, I was gonna move to San Francisco—so that's exactly what I did.”

Hendricks was envious of Segreti's fresh start. He wished he could have allowed himself to walk away. But then, Segreti hadn't gotten as far away as he'd thought. “What was your role with the Council, exactly?”

“There ain't really a name for what I did, but I used to say I was the Devil's Red Right Hand. I made sure the Council's word became deed.”

“So if, for example, the Council were to hire a hitter to take care of a problem…”

“I'd be the guy to hire him, yeah.”

“The guy who pushed you out—what was his name?” Hendricks asked casually, but Segreti was too smart to fall for it.

“I'll tell you what. First you deliver me safely to this Agent Thompson. Then I'll give you his name.”

“Deal,” Hendricks said. “Just do me a favor and don't go dying in the meantime.”

C
AMERON CAME TO
in a dingy room no more than four feet across. A bare lightbulb was screwed into the fixture above her. The floor on which she sat sloped toward a drain at its center. The wall they'd left her propped against was water-stained and smelled of cleaning products. A utility sink jutted from the wall.

A janitor's closet, she realized.

Apart from Cameron, it was empty. No mops, no tools, no cleaning products—nothing she could use as a weapon. Not that she was in any shape to fight. Her head pounded. Her limbs ached. Her thoughts were slippery, and she had difficulty holding on to them.

She rattled the door. Locked. She banged on it awhile and shouted herself hoarse, but no one came.

An hour or so later, the door opened. The hallway's fluorescent light was an assault. A wild-eyed man in filthy clothes and cowboy boots stood just outside, conferring with the head of hospital security. The latter's nose was packed with cotton, and when he looked at her, his features warped with rage.

“She's all yours, Mr. Yancey—but be warned, she's scrappier than she looks. “

They yanked her to her feet and zip-tied her hands behind her back. Then Yancey dragged her out a service entrance, identifying himself as law enforcement to everyone they passed so they'd ignore her cries for help.

As they crossed the lot to Yancey's rental car, the fog enveloped them. Cameron managed to writhe free of his grasp when he took a hand off her to open the back door, but Yancey grabbed her by the collar and punched her in the face. His ring split her cheek open like an overripe tomato. She crumpled, dazed, to the concrete. He kicked her until she blacked out, and possibly a while longer.

When she came to, she was lying across the backseat with what seemed to be a pair of dress socks in her mouth, her feet now zip-tied too. Her arms burned from lack of blood flow. Her ribs ached with every breath. Her face was so swollen that she could barely open her left eye, and it was sticky from drying blood.

The cabin of the rented Cadillac was thick with cigarette smoke. Pavement clattered by beneath. Yancey was on the phone.

“…about fucking time we caught a break. Hold position until I arrive—I want to be there when you go in.” A pause. “No, I'll call the boss myself and let him know.”

They jounced over a set of train tracks and Cameron was momentarily airborne. Her cheek slammed into the armrest on her way down. The pain was excruciating. Her eyes watered. Her vision went spotty. She cried out involuntarily, but it was stifled by the gag in her mouth.

Sometime later—five minutes? an hour?—the Caddy rocked to a halt. Yancey put a hand on the passenger-seat headrest, turned around, and favored her with a manic smile. His cheeks were flushed. His eyes were wide. “Sit tight, darlin'. Daddy's got some work to do. But don't you worry, he'll be back soon enough. And then you and me are gonna make your buddy pay.”

He engaged the backseat child locks and climbed out of the car.

As soon as she was reasonably sure he was out of sight, Cameron began to move.

  

“What's the sitrep?” Yancey asked, out of breath from having trotted across the parking lot. He'd left his rental car around the corner of a nearby building because he couldn't risk the girl making noise and compromising the mission—or seeing something that she shouldn't.

“Heat signatures indicate two people inside,” the man who'd called him—Osborne—said, “which is consistent with our intel.”

“Armed?”

“Hard to say. It looks to me like they're asleep. Near as we can tell, they have no idea we're here.”

The imam, it turned out, had been telling the truth; he'd had nothing to do with the bombing or the men who perpetrated it. But then, Yancey'd already known that, just as he'd known the men in question
did,
in fact, attend that mosque while they were in town. Eventually, though, with enough cajoling, that imam coughed up a list of names—almost literally, in fact, along with a pint or so of malt liquor and the contents of his stomach—of congregants who might be sympathetic to those espousing extremist views. Bellum dispatched a team to each, and they repeated the process. Eventually, one interview bore fruit. Yielded an address. The man who gave it to them had—along with his family—been taken into Bellum custody until Yancey's people could determine whether his information was legitimate.

The address was of a shuttered body shop in South San Francisco. Bellum's source said it was where the remaining members of the True Islamic Caliphate were hiding out and planning their next attack.

It's no wonder the business didn't last, Yancey thought now—the place sat in a desolate stretch of self-storage facilities, warehouses, and old factories, train tracks slicing up the parcels of land at odd angles.

That was good.

It meant fewer witnesses.

“Are your men in position?” Yancey asked.

“Yes, sir. We've got teams stationed at all three entrances, and snipers on the adjacent roofs. All we're waiting on is your go-ahead.”

“You've got it,” Yancey replied.

Osborne gave the order. His men breached all three entrances at once. For a moment all was chaos. Shouting. Screaming. Frenzied action. Yancey hung back and braced for gunfire—but there wasn't any. It was over in seconds, the men inside subdued without a shot.

“Clear?” Yancey called from just outside the door.

“Clear!”

He dropped his cigarette. Ground it out beneath his boot. Picked up the butt and slipped it into his pocket before he entered.

Two Arab men were hog-tied on their stomachs in the middle of the floor, their backs arched, ankles in the air. Gags stretched across their mouths. Both were young, skinny, and hollow-eyed. One was quiet, still. The other sobbed. Surrounded by armed men in riot gear, they looked more frightened than frightening. That was always the way, Yancey thought. In the end, every monster he'd ever met was just a man, full of hopes and fears and weaknesses of mind and flesh. But that didn't mean they weren't also monsters.

Flashlights swept across the darkened space as Yancey's men searched the building. It smelled of sweat and motor oil. Three sleeping bags lay beside the bound men, two open and mussed, one rolled neatly, its nylon straps clipped and yanked so tight that its ends flared out. A camp stove and a couple pots sat nearby. Empty cans were scattered all around—SpaghettiOs, fruit cocktail, Coca-Cola. Funny to think of terrorists eating like four-year-olds. Yancey wondered if any of the food qualified as halal. Maybe their God didn't care. Maybe bombing the bridge earned them their virgins no matter what they ate.

“Sir!” one of the men called. Who, Yancey didn't know. Bellum's matte-black ballistic masks rendered them indistinguishable from one another.

“What is it, son?”

“Come look at this.”

The man panned his flashlight across a digital camcorder on a tripod and the filthy sheet that it was pointed at, which hung from the wall, a makeshift backdrop. Beside the sheet was a workbench. Yancey wandered over and inspected it. On it were two combat knives. Three handguns. A Kalashnikov. A MAC-10. Assorted maps, blueprints, and bomb schematics. A cling-wrapped brick of plastic explosive the dusky orange of Wisconsin cheddar. And two partially assembled suicide vests festooned with braids of multicolored wire and studded with ball bearings.

Yancey poked at the vests. Examined the schematics in detail. Hefted the MAC-10, testing its weight. He ejected the magazine, peeked inside, and reinserted it with a click. Then he trotted over to where the terrorists lay and crouched beside them so he could see their faces.

“Evenin', gentlemen,” he said. “Long time, no see.”

One of the men stared at Yancey, hatred glimmering in his eyes. The other's eyes were shut tight. Tears streamed down his cheeks.

“Jesus, Waheeb. I never pegged you for being such a whiny little bitch. You should take a lesson from al-Nasr here and man up. You're embarrassing yourself.”

Al-Nasr attempted to reply, but the gag prevented it. Yancey watched him with amusement for a moment, and then removed it.

“Do not speak to Waheeb this way,” he said, his English heavily accented. “He is ten times the man you will ever be.”

“If you say so,” Yancey said. “Since you two are still alive, I'm guessing Bakr must've been the one piloting the boat. Does that mean he drew the short straw or the long? I can never tell if you people are serious about dying for your God or if you're all just beating your chests and secretly hoping one of your buddies will volunteer.”

“Bakr was a hero,” al-Nasr said. “He died with honor. We should all be so fortunate.”

“You think? Because I think he was a fucking coward who killed a bunch of innocent people for no reason. A worthless piece of human trash too dumb to realize he'd been misled for his whole miserable life. I bet he died with shit-stained trousers.”

“I would not expect you to understand his sacrifice.”

“Let me tell you what I understand. I understand that Bellum brought you here to train you to better fight Assad, and in return you promised us intel and freedom to operate within your territory. I understand you disappeared from the safe house we set up for you right around the time a massive cache of Semtex went missing from our training facility. I understand a member of the local mosque we recommended told you that this place was vacant and suggested you could hole up here without attracting attention. What I
don't
understand is why you decided to dick us over or where you got the boat and bomb schematics, because they sure as shit didn't come from us.”

“Suffice to say, we have some very generous friends.”

“And here I thought
we
were your friends—but apparently you'd rather bite the hand that feeds you than free your homeland from oppression.”

“You think we owe you loyalty?” Al-Nasr's face showed disdain. “We owe you
nothing
. Allah will reward us for what we've done.”

“Yeah? Be sure to say hello to Him for me.” Yancey raised the MAC-10 and loosed a flurry of bullets into al-Nasr and Waheeb. He didn't ease off the trigger until the gun clicked empty and the two men were scarcely more than meat and gristle.

Bellum men came running but lowered their weapons when they realized there was no threat. Yancey's ears rang. The room stank of voided bowels and spent ammo.

Osborne, red-faced with fury, grabbed Yancey by the lapels. He had three inches and forty pounds of muscle on Yancey, easy. “What the fuck was that?” he asked.

Yancey dropped the MAC-10 and placed his hand on the wooden grip of his revolver. “Get your goddamn hands off me. Our orders were clear.”

“But if we'd had the chance to question these assholes, we might've discovered who helped them carry out the attack!”

“Sure, unless the Feds caught wind of the fact that we had suspects in custody and took them from us before they cracked. What do you think would happen if the world found out that Bellum brought these fucking towelheads into the country under false pretenses and gave them access to explosives? I'm guessing that scenario ends in prison sentences, and I'm not eager to play bitch for the same lowlifes I spent twenty years putting away.”

“When we brought them here, we had no way of knowing that they planned to double-cross us.”

“Listen to yourself. Do you really think that matters? The longer these two remained breathing, the greater the chance that Bellum's role in the attack, however inadvertent, would be exposed. If you'd just put them down when you came in, we wouldn't be having this conversation.”

“My men and I aren't trained to shoot people who don't pose a threat.”

“Well, then, I guess you should be thanking me for saving you the trouble.”

“You think I ought to
thank
you? I—”

Yancey held up a finger to silence him. His phone was humming in his pocket. He took it out and answered it. “Hello, Mr. Wentworth. Yes, it's done. Thank you, sir, but our tac team deserves most of the credit—they did good work.” He covered the mouthpiece of the phone and said to Osborne, “Anything you'd like to add, or are we good?”

Osborne fumed but said nothing.

Yancey terminated the call. Then he knelt, fished a handkerchief from his pocket, and used it to wipe his prints off the MAC-10.

“Comb this place from top to bottom,” he said. “Take the Semtex and anything else that could lead back to Bellum. Then send teams through the surrounding buildings to look for witnesses and cameras.”

“That could take all night.”

“Then it takes all night. We're on the one-yard line, son. Let's not fumble now because we forgot to dot our
i
's or cross our
t
's.”

“Yes, sir,” Osborne replied through gritted teeth.

“Good man.” Yancey clapped him on the shoulder condescendingly and headed for door, lighting a fresh cigarette as he stepped once more into the fog.

  

Cameron sat in the rancid muck that had leaked out of a rusty dumpster and tried to use the hole's jagged edge to saw through her zip-tie handcuffs. She couldn't see what she was doing because her hands were behind her back, but her wrists burned with every downstroke, and blood dripped freely from her fingers.

I'll be pissed if I survive this only to die of tetanus,
she thought.

Earlier, as soon as Yancey's footfalls had been swallowed by the fog and Cameron knew she was alone in the backseat of the Caddy, she had curled into a fetal position and tried to bring her hands around front by sliding them past her butt and pulling her legs through. But she was bound too tightly, the V made by her arms too narrow.

The exertion winded her. Yancey had stuffed a pair of balled-up dress socks in her mouth, and she could barely breathe through her nose because it was crusted with dried blood.
If I want to get out of here,
she thought,
I'm going to have to get rid of these goddamn socks.

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