[Rogue Warrior 18] Curse of the Infidel (41 page)

Read [Rogue Warrior 18] Curse of the Infidel Online

Authors: Richard Marcinko

Tags: #rt

BOOK: [Rogue Warrior 18] Curse of the Infidel
13.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“How many people live here?” asked Junior.

“Big, huh?” White Rasta opened one of the kitchen drawers, where the communal records were kept in a three-section notebook. He plopped it onto the least-stained portion of the counter and began flipping through it.

“Mind if I use the bathroom?” asked Junior, who wanted a pretext to search the place.

“Just bring it back when you’re done.” White Rasta giggled as if this was the funniest thing anyone had ever said since the debut of
Saturday Night Live.

Junior went down the hall, peeked into the bathroom—it reminded him of an Indian slum, though not as tidy—then proceeded through the house, taking stock. All three of the bedrooms were upstairs, and all were conveniently if temporarily unoccupied. He found a notebook with a name in the first: Habib. In the second, some court papers demanded Robert MacLeroy to appear for a traffic summons. In the last, which the sweet scent identified as White Rasta’s, an exam in organic chemistry was headed by the name “Terrence Jonlable.”

He’d scored a 98. Maybe the herb does help the brain function.

“I got the address,” said White Rasta when Junior returned. “Where’d you go?”

“I was looking for a bathroom that was on the clean side.”

“I usually go off the back porch.” White Rasta handed Junior a brown paper bag with Jones’s address on it.

“Did you say your name was Terry?” asked Junior, taking the paper.

“Terrence.”

“Oh yeah, I’m sorry. So you guys all go to school?”

“Yup.”

“You’re in like, organic chem, right?” Junior asked.

“Yeah. Crazy, far-out class, huh? Some of those tests are bummers. I only got a ninety-eight on the last one. I’m thinking I might have to study.”

“What’s your major?”

“Pre-med. You’re familiar. Yeah. You’re in organic?”

“No, no. I’m just looking for Jones and the money he owes me.”

“That’s his address.”

“He welched on my deposit,” said Junior. “He owes two months. And I need the cash, you know?”

“What a prick.”

“What a prick.” Junior sized him up. “Do you have a credit card?”

“Credit card?” White Rasta rolled his eyes so far back in his head Junior thought he’d collapse. “I’m capitalistic system, dude.”

“No credit card?”

“No way, man. Besides, you get one of those cards, you gotta watch for fraud and stuff. All sorts of illegal activity goin’ on there.”

“Yeah. I’d be careful if I were you.” Junior glanced around. “You live with a couple of other guys?”

“Two, yeah. Far-out dudes. Habs and Bobby. Bobby is like super into his bike. And his girl, like, they’re always together and I expect them home soon. But, uh—”

“We had the same deal,” said Junior. “Three guys. Except I was the only one who put up the deposit money. Now I’m screwed.”

“Bummer.”

Junior poked a bit, asking White Rasta about his roommates, trying to get more information on who they were. But his interviewee’s vacant stare held him off. Finally White Rasta asked if he wanted to “imbibe.”

“Gotta pass,” said Junior, holding up the paper bag with Jones’s address. “Say, when do your roommates come home?”

“Huh? Like, why?”

“I was thinking maybe if we all went over together—you know, if I had a little muscle with me.”

“Dude, you’re buff. Bobby and Habs—they couldn’t scare a fly.”

“Strength in numbers?”

“I heard about that. Hey listen, I gotta do some homework for Abstract,
44
like field automorphisms, man. You sure you don’t want some weed?”

“No thanks.”

Back outside, Junior considered his options. Not being a member of the U.S. government, he’d concluded that his most likely suspect was Habib, or “Habs,” as White Rasta called him. But he couldn’t rule the other roommates out, nor even any of the neighbors, if they had Wi-Fi. Pretending to have a phone call, he paused near the front stoop and took out his iPhone. Firing up the connection panel, he found that the apartment did in fact have Wi-Fi (TeamRoom was its handle; the girls on the third floor apparently preferring the more prosaic though equally appropriate LadiesNet). The router was using WPA2-PSK encryption—decent, though far from impenetrable.

Junior took a short walk around the block, checking to see how many other Wi-Fi connections were nearby. He stopped counting at fifty; half had no security at all. The fact that there were so many open connections in the area indirectly reinforced Junior’s belief that he was on the right track. Since it was so much easier to use a different connection, he reasoned, anyone who wanted to throw an investigator off would use one of those. The operator probably didn’t realize he could be tracked so easily, or believed that the method they were using to communicate was so arcane that no one would ever figure it out, let alone trace it.

Ducking into a basement entrance to a three-story walk-up just barely in eyesight of the house, Junior considered his options. He’d pretty much ruled out White Rasta as a suspect; though clearly highly intelligent, he just didn’t have the destroy-the-world vibe Junior thought he was looking for. So that meant buttonholing the other occupants—or better, stealing their laptops.

Junior was trying to decide how he might do that when he saw a skinny, dark-complexioned man walking down the street, a backpack slung over one shoulder.

Habib?

The man jogged up the steps into the house and was gone before Junior could get close. He walked past the house, continuing down the block toward the corner. Just as he turned it, he saw a man and a woman, both in their early twenties, approaching. The man was pushing a bicycle.

Junior decided to take a chance that this was the other roommate. He waited until they were a little closer, then stopped and did a double-take.

“Hey, Bobby, right?” he said to the man.

“Huh?”

“Bobby MacLeroy, right? Weren’t you in my orientation? And at that party, uh—”

“I don’t remember, man.” MacLeroy curled his arm around his girlfriend’s.

“No prob. How’s it goin’? You livin’ with uh, Conner? In the dorms, right?”

“I live down the street.”

“Oh yeah, yeah, with that dude, uh—Terrence? Always smokin’ pot? Right? But he’s genius smart.”

“You know Terrence?”

“Everybody in pre-med knows Terrence. He’s getting perfect grades in Organic. He’s a legend. You guys got the place by yourselves?”

“Transfer student’s with us. Who are you again?”

“Matty. Remember?”

“Uh, vaguely. Kind of a blur, you know?”

“Believe me, I know.” Junior focused on the girl for the first time. She had red, curly hair, and if she stepped on a scale, wouldn’t have tipped it past ninety pounds, fully dressed. Which she was, in enough layers of sweaters and shirts to keep an Eskimo warm.

“We gotta get goin’,” said MacLeroy.

“Maybe we’ll party some time,” said Junior.

“Uh, yeah, sure.” MacLeroy sounded about as convincing as a lifelong Republican swearing his willingness to vote for Obama in the next election.

Junior went swiftly to the end of the block, then leaned back to make sure the pair were in fact going to the house. They were. And just as he was about to go back to his hiding spot, he saw Habib come trotting down the steps, backpack on his shoulder.

Junior waited until Habib was at the end of the block, then started following, making sure to leave roughly a block and a half of gap between them. He closed the distance as they neared the college campus, expecting that Habib would go into one of the buildings there. But instead, he walked a zigzag path across H Street toward Union Station. Junior worried that Habib would take an Amtrak, which required a pre-purchased ticket. But Habib headed for the Metro entrance.

Junior didn’t have a card. The line at the machines was just long enough for him lose Habib, and after getting his card he had to guess which way he was headed. He guessed toward the Capitol area, then had to bolt to the platform as the train pulled in. But by the time he reached it, the doors had closed. He pounded but it was too late; the train jerked forward, out of the station.

Cursing, he turned around, trying to decide what to do. As he did, he spotted someone at the far end of the opposite platform, moving down to the very edge of the station where the tracks entered the tunnel.

The man had a backpack, but from this distance and with his back turned, Junior couldn’t be sure that it was Habib. The man reached the end of the platform, glanced quickly over his shoulder, then hopped down and began walking along the tracks.

Junior decided to follow.

(IV)

Back aboard the
Bon Voyage,
six men joined the other two on the bridge. We were shepherded into a large chart room immediately aft of the command area. While there were charts on one side of the large table that filled the center of the space, the captain primarily used this area to brief his officers. His quarters were through a door on the aft bulkhead; next to the door sat a console with a com set and a computer setup. Two of our guards trashed the gear, then went inside the captain’s cabin and broke up the equipment there. They hunted inside the captain’s desk and chests, retrieving and breaking open a strongbox that contained a pistol and some cash. They took the gun, left the money.

The bridge crew gathered at one side of the table and began to whisper among themselves, but before long the man who had shot the captain reappeared with two other hijackers and grabbed the second mate, who’d come up on the bridge just before it was stormed. Wearing what looked like typical crewmen’s clothes, the men made no attempt to hide their faces—a very bad sign, I thought.

Scarface came in. He must have recognized me, but didn’t bother to acknowledge me. He spoke in clipped, quick English, saying that we were to keep quiet and not cause trouble, or we would face the same fate as the captain.

He left us and began barking orders at the others, who hopped around to different stations on the bridge. They’d been among us the whole time, a few as passengers, others as crewmen. It wasn’t hard to get low-level jobs on the ship, given the industry’s penchant for low-wage, bottom-rung workers.

“You’ll never get a ransom,” sputtered the helmsman.

Scarface smirked. Somehow I’m always lucky enough to find myself among scumbags with a sense of twisted humor.

As soon as the hijackers left with the mate, the crew began discussing the situation among themselves in Swedish, debating whether a distress signal had been sent from somewhere else in the ship. The captain’s death had shocked them; a few were close to tears, their lips and hands occasionally trembling. I went to the window and watched the men now occupying the bridge. They worked almost as smoothly as the regular crew had, looking over the various instruments and controls and making only slight adjustments.

“What are you looking at, old-timer?” asked the helmsman, coming over. I could barely understand what he was saying through his accent.

“I was watching them. They know what they’re doing.” I pointed. “Are they changing course?”

“Oh yes. You can see that we have moved a few degrees north.” He pointed at the large screen. “Soon, the company will attempt to contact them. Every move that is made, it is radioed back. Some deviation is always allowed, but this will be more than enough to have questions raised.”

I figured that they would have answers ready, enough to hold the company off for a while at least. Instead of mentioning this, I asked if he could guess where we might be headed.

The helmsman shook his head. “Too many places to say.”

I went over to the charts and rolled them out, trying to solve the puzzle for myself. When the others saw what I was doing, they came over and looked on. The helmsman took more of an interest, and studied the chart more intently. Finally he leaned over and traced a course with his finger.

“On this heading,” he said, “we will go to Maryland.”

“Norfolk?” asked another of the crew.

The helmsman answered in Swedish. I could give the answer myself—if the ship stayed its course, it would go right up the Chesapeake Bay. If alerted, the navy could intercept it. But what would happen then? If the hijackers started killing people aboard, would the navy try and retake the ship?

It would be the right thing to do, but who would have the guts to make that call? I didn’t see the president—or any politician—giving the order, at least not until things were clearly desperate. And stopping the ship without gunfire would not be an easy matter, if the hijackers knew what they were doing.

The second mate returned about an hour after he left. His thin face had grown longer and more bleached.

“They’ve planted explosives all over,” he said, using English. “They must have smuggled them in with the cargo.”

“Where are the passengers?” I asked.

The question surprised not only him but the others. They didn’t think an old man should be worried about anything but himself.

“They are locked in their cabins,” said the mate. “With no food—I don’t know what the hijackers are thinking.”

The
Bon Voyage
was neither the largest nor most popular cruise ship on the seven seas; I’d estimate that about half of the cabins were vacant. Still, there were several hundred passengers aboard. The crew would add another hundred or so, depending on how many were actually hijackers. That was a lot of people to keep under control, even if a good number were senior citizens.

Actually, senior citizens might be even harder to control. Take the one wandering to the bridge from below, mumbling to himself. One of the hijackers jumped up abruptly, grabbing his submachine gun and pointing at the intruder. The old man’s waxed handlebar moustache twitched, then drooped as he backed against the window of the chart room.

I went to the door and grabbed hold of him, pulling him toward us.

“It’s OK, it’s OK,” I said. The poor old man was slobbering, drool running off his chin. “He’s just demented. Probably Alzheimer’s.”

The crewman with the gun barked at me, but I ignored him, throwing the door closed and helping the man to a seat. He mumbled something at his shoes, then raised his gaze in my direction.

Other books

Violins of Hope by James A. Grymes
Swan Song by Tracey
Waiting for Joe by Sandra Birdsell
True Vision by Joyce Lamb
The Love Market by Mason, Carol
Demigods and Monsters by Rick Riordan
Lab Notes: a novel by Nelson, Gerrie