Authors: Chris Jordan
“What about the tunnel Shane mentioned?”
“Yeah, well, that’s part of the bad news, I’m afraid. We finally located the entrance, but somebody rolled an explosive device into the lower part of the tunnel—we’re thinking modified RPGs—and blew it up. Collapsed at least a hundred yards of the tunnel, which is just your basic six-foot diameter fiberglass conduit, and not capable
of withstanding any sort of explosion. We can dig it out, but it will take time. Days, not hours.”
Maggie looks sick, and not from the helicopter ride. “They blew the tunnel? Who, exactly, do you know? Which faction?”
“All I know, it was probably somebody with the security service. We found a van nearby with traces of the explosive.”
“Eva’s people,” Maggie says.
“Is that good or bad?”
“It’s all bad,” Maggie says. “But Eva is worse. She isn’t just keeping us from getting in. She’s keeping them from getting out.”
The Suburban slows to a stop. The women step out into the frigid air and look up to the massive structures built into the mountain.
“It’s so quiet,” Maggie marvels. “I hadn’t expected that.”
Monica glances down at her much shorter companion. She’s about to make a comment, then thinks better of it.
Quiet as the grave,
she almost said.
Evangeline decides she’s waited long enough. She’d been delaying until Vash got back—he’d been fussing like an anxious schoolboy, very unlike him—but she simply can’t wait any longer. He’ll miss the big moment, but that’s just too bad. Weems has been assembling his Sixes, those who were already in residence at the Bunker, just as she has gathered her own people, ostensibly so they can cut a deal and get on with the sad business of mourning the Profit. What would the One True Voice
think of all this Sturm and Drang, she wonders. What would Arthur do?
Easy answer, as far as Evangeline is concerned. Whatever the situation, when given a choice, Arthur always selected for the survival of the organization. Even if it meant that not every individual member would survive. As a scientist he understood the importance of culling, of cutting away the deadwood, and had structured the Rulers accordingly. Many drones at the lowest level, feeding the hive, and only a select few at the top, to reap the benefit.
What’s going to happen is, Weems and his followers have decided to join Arthur in the afterlife. At least, that’s what his latest blog entry says, courtesy of Evangeline. Best thing: when the Feds bring in their forensics experts, and they will, they’ll discover that the fatal command originated on Wendy’s personal computer, as if he, not Evangeline, pushed the fatal button.
A shame, really, how grief made poor, ugly little Wendy delusional. But totally believable. Pure genius.
Eva decides to make one last attempt to raise Vash on the intercom. No response. Odd, she assumed he wanted to share in the moment, but then it occurs to her that lover boy would rather not be in the room when she presses the button. He prefers to operate from the shadows, maintaining plausible deniability. Which, come to think, isn’t a bad thing in this case because if worst ever came to worst, he can’t be called as an eyewitness to the event.
An event, not a crime. Crime is for those at the lower levels.
The screens show that all is ready. Weems and his Sixes—a small group of the wealthiest, longest-serving
Rulers—have gathered in his conference room in the Bunker. The sound quality is terrible—all booming echoes and static—but it’s not necessary to know what they’re saying. They’ll be discussing her offer, coming up with counteroffers. The visuals tell her all she needs to know: they all look so somber that it really isn’t that much of a leap to conclude that a final solution might be on the agenda.
Eva has her finger over the screen, about to make the one little touch that will turn the Bunker into a death zone, when the most extraordinary thing happens. Wendy actually leaps out his chair, exclaiming something.
Does he know?
And then, a miracle. The completion of perfection. Because three more people enter the conference room. Three people and a child. The big man Vash identified as the former FBI agent, Shane, accompanied by—who is that?—is it Irene Delancey? Yes! Why it looks like someone has blacked her eyes, or is that her makeup running? And then, the icing on the cake, that little pest Haley Corbin comes into view, hugging Arthur’s grandson to her side.
Eva is stunned. Vash delivered! He found a way to get all of her enemies into the Bunker, where the sad event will take place. This is way better than having to make the woman and the boy disappear somehow later. They’ll be among the victims blamed on Wendy. Too bad about the boy—she had such high hopes, but he hadn’t worked out, and sometimes you just have to acknowledge a mistake and move on.
She has to pause for a moment and wipe away the tears. Tears not of grief, but of joy. This has to be a sign from
Arthur himself, his way of letting her know that she’s made the right choice.
“Bless you, Arthur,” she says.
She presses the button, releasing the gas. Fentanyl, a favorite from Vash’s old killing grounds. The lethal effects of high doses of Fentanyl had first been established by Russian security forces, who had used it against Chechen terrorists holding hostages in a Moscow theater. Indeed, it was so lethal that almost everyone died, hostages included. It had been particularly effective against the children.
To fall asleep and never wake up. Is that so bad?
12. This Is The End, My Friend
Maggie keeps shuffling between the heated, idling Suburban—your tax dollars at work—and the frigid cold of the Colorado morning. If she wasn’t so worried she’d be able to appreciate the stunning beauty of the setting. The clear air, the awesome majesty of the high country, the illusion that you can see forever. But at the moment the mountains and the altitude are the enemy, making it difficult to execute the mission. Helicopters have been coming and going from the roof of the Pinnacle, which turns out not to be booby-trapped, as Shane had warned in his brief call. Thank God for small favors. There haven’t been many. The blueprints that came through from the sat phone have been helpful, but even so, no one anticipated the difficulty of breaching what turns out to be a modern fortress.
Under typical circumstances, the Hostage Rescue Team would have been inside minutes after arriving on-site. As
it is, a couple of hours have passed. An eternity, given the volatile circumstances.
Maggie’s hoping for the best—Randall Shane has been surviving on guts and luck for years, why should these run out now?—but she’s got a bad feeling. This is about as far from a typical hostage scenario as you can get, complicated by a cult leader in close alliance with an individual, Kavashi, who has been getting away with cold-blooded murder for years, and who has ways of making his victims vanish, never to be seen again.
Pacing the area as A.D. Bevins confers with the rescue team by two-way, Maggie concentrates on walking without a limp. No cane today, the latest flare-up of her RA having subsided, and she had wanted to demonstrate her physical well-being to Shane, if only because he’d looked so stricken when she came off the plane in Denver leaning on her cane.
She’s hoping against hope that Randall Shane’s luck will hold, but what gnaws at her is the unspeakable fear that when the rescue team finally does get inside, Shane and the mother and child he’s trying to save will be gone without a trace. Torn from the world.
She hates that it might all end here, in this way. And then she admonishes herself not to give up. This is Randall Shane. He can’t die, not like this, not with a child’s life at stake. Buck up. Think positive.
At precisely that moment Monica Bevins comes striding up, clutching her two-way. Her face is ashen, her eyes desolate.
“Oh, Maggie,” she says, choking up.
“Tell me.”
“They finally broke through into the Pinnacle. The entire structure has been flooded with some sort of lethal gas. They’re all dead, Mags. Everyone inside is dead.”
So that’s it, Maggie thinks, that’s how it ends. Strange, but when she’d envisioned such tragedies in the past, she had always imagined that when the moment came she would collapse or faint, and yet here she is, standing on her own not-so-sturdy legs.
Maybe this is what shock is, standing in one place, unable to speak, when you should be running around and screaming your head off.
Slowly, she becomes aware of a humming sound. Is that in her head? No? Has the wind come up? Instinctively she looks around, expecting to see some evidence of a storm approaching—that seems fitting: a violent electrical storm—and then she sees it.
“Monica, look.”
High overhead, the tram cable is turning. A tram car comes into view, slowly descending from the Bunker. Without a word, Assistant Director Monica Bevins takes off in a sprint, heading for the lower terminal.
Maybe a hundred yards uphill, at a steep incline. No way can Maggie run that distance without blowing out her hips. But she can walk fast, and she doesn’t falter, and when the tram finally arrives at the terminal, she’s there waiting with Monica. Her hands clasped over her heart to keep it from leaping out of her chest.
“We don’t know who it is,” Monica warns, drawing her Glock 23, holding it at the ready position.
“Sure we do,” says Maggie. “Are you kidding?”
But when the car shudders to a stop and the door slides
open, the man who emerges is Wendall Weems, recognizable from his photographs as perhaps the homeliest individual Maggie has ever laid eyes on. Except for his eyes, which are startling in their intensity. He spots Monica with her weapon at the ready and says, “Thank you, but that won’t be necessary. If you wish to arrest me, I shall go willingly.”
Monica lowers her gun. “Good. You’ll be taken into custody. Please turn around.”
“Kidnapping the boy wasn’t my idea.”
“We’ll let the lawyers sort it out, shall we?” Monica says, pulling out her handcuffs.
As she clicks the cuffs on his wrists, Weems looks around and says, “I wonder, has anyone seen Mr. Kavashi? The security chief? I expected him to be here. He was supposed to meet me outside, at the terminal.”
Monica looks startled. “I’m confused. We thought he was your enemy.”
Weems shrugs his misshapen shoulders. “Until very recently. The last hour or two, actually. But he indicated to me that he wanted to change sides. I got the distinct impression he intended to betray Eva and cast his lot with us.”
When Monica informs him that Evangeline and her followers are dead, the victims of a toxic gas released into the Pinnacle, Weems’s face turns a whiter shade of pale. “So if Vash remained on the premises, he is among the victims?”
“It looks that way, yes.”
To Maggie’s eyes, he appears genuinely shaken by the news.
When Weems is finally clear, several frightened-looking individuals emerge from the tram, among them a
woman with raccoon eyes and a swollen nose who Maggie barely recognizes as Irene Delancey, the bond-trader-turned-schoolteacher-turned-kidnapper.
Then, ducking his head, Randall Shane steps out into the clear light of day.
“Hey, Mags.”
“You okay?”
“I’m good.”
He looks exhausted, but somehow happier than she’s seen him in years. Clutching his left hand is one of the most beautiful women Maggie has ever seen, scared but gorgeous, and somehow radiating strength, and attached to Shane’s big right hand, like he doesn’t intend ever to let go, is a ten-year-old boy with a big smile on his face.
They look like a family.
Five Months Later
T
hings don’t always work out the way you want them to. Nobody knows that better than me. You meet someone, fall in love, imagine you will be together forever and always. You tend to forget the ‘until death do we part’ part. And when it happens you’re sure, you’re absolutely certain, you will never love again.
Sometimes, if you’re lucky, you’re wrong.
That’s what I’m thinking as we drive back from Donnie Brewster’s Humble Mart Convenience Store with a pound of hot dogs, and a dozen buns, and Noah’s favorite pickle relish.
Plenty of mustard at home. Again, the kind Noah likes.
Okay, hot dogs may not be the healthiest food, and I know I shouldn’t be indulging his every whim, but it’s a warm summer evening and he’s a growing boy, and how much harm can a few tube steaks do?
Tube steaks. That’s what Jed used to call them.
In the backseat Noah has the window rolled down and the wind is fluffing his hair and he looks as blissfully
content as any kid who is about to stuff himself with delicious nitrates could look. He’s had an amazing recovery, all things considered. For the first couple of months he did share my bedroom, in his own little bed, and he insisted on a night-light. He was leery about going outside, didn’t want to see any of the kids from school. Indeed, he stayed home for all of the semester, with me acting as tutor and feeling, to put it delicately, challenged. I don’t know squat about prime numbers, which may have something to do with Noah’s recent decision to return to school in the fall. I’m hoping he still feels that way when September rolls around, but you never know. One day at a time.
As to the events in Colorado, they managed to prove that Bagrat Kavashi, the horrible man with the mustache, had perished in a scheme of his own devising when he rigged the poison gas for the Pinnacle instead of the Bunker. He thought he had the perfect way to lay all the blame on Evangeline, who would be conveniently dead via ‘suicide,’ but he failed to escape his own trap. I don’t think of myself as a vengeful type, but, really, the scum bucket deserved it.
Noah leans forward in the seat belt harness, taps me on the shoulder. Apparently unaware that I’ve been watching him in the mirror.
“Are you happy, Mom?”
He asks this regularly, checking in. And I always answer the same way. “Most of the time, sweetie. Nobody is happy all the time.”
He nods, satisfied, and resumes his look out the window, blinking into the wind.
It’s Noah who first spots the plume of smoke when we
come around the last corner to our modest-but-if-you-ask-me-perfect farmhouse.
“Mom, smoke!”
“I can see that, sweetie.”
And I can see Shane tending his new Weber grill, looking as serious as any man who ever prepared to burn a hot dog for a soon-to-be-eleven-year-old boy.
He insists on charcoal. No propane gas for Randall Shane.
I know, I know. He’s fourteen years older than me, and that can be a big deal if you let it, which we don’t. Also he’s far from rich, he doesn’t drive a cool car, and his work sometimes takes him far from home. For that matter there’s always a chance, however small, that he won’t come back, that he’ll die trying to save someone else’s little boy or little girl.
I know all that.
But I also know this: we live on borrowed time, all of us, and wasting a day of it—or a lonely night—is a crime. Besides, I love the big guy to pieces. It’s different from Jed, but just as intense. So get out of my face with this he’s-too-old-for-you stuff, I don’t want to hear it.
Sorry…you can take the girl out of New Jersey but…you know how it ends. Happily ever after, if I have anything to say about it.
And I do.