"A Maiden's Grave" - читать интересную книгу автора (Deaver Jeffery)10:35 A.M.As always, an element of circus. Arthur Potter stood beside the FBI resident agency's best car, a Ford Taurus, and surveyed the scene. Police cars drawn into a circle like pioneers' wagons, press minivans, the reporters holding their chunky cameras like rocket launchers. There were fire trucks everywhere (Waco was on everyone's mind). Three more government-issue sedans arrived in caravan, bringing the total FBI count to eleven. Half the men were in navy-blue tactical outfits, the rest in their pseudo Brooks Brothers. The military jet bearing Potter, reserved for civilian government transport, had touched down in Wichita twenty minutes before and he'd transferred to a helicopter for the eighty-mile flight northwest to the tiny town of Crow Ridge. Kansas was just as flat as he'd expected, though the chopper's route took them along a wide river surrounded by trees, and much of the ground here was hilly. This, the pilot told him, was where the mid-high-grass and short-grass prairies met. To the west had been buffalo country. He pointed toward a dot that was Larned, where a hundred years ago a herd of four million had been sighted. The pilot reported this fact with unmistakable pride. They'd sped over huge farms, one- and two-thousand-acre spreads. July seemed early for harvest but hundreds of red and green-and-yellow combines were shaving the countryside of the wheat crop. Now, standing in the chill wind beneath a dense overcast sky, Potter was struck by the relentless bleakness of this place, which he would have traded in an instant to be back amid the Windy City tenements he'd left not long before. A hundred yards away was a red brick industrial building, like a castle, probably a hundred years old. In front of it sat a small school bus and a battered gray car. "What's the building?" Potter asked Henderson, special agent in charge of the FBI's Wichita resident agency. "An old slaughterhouse," the SAC responded. "They'd drive herds from western Kansas and Texas up here, slaughter 'em, then barge the carcasses down to Wichita." The wind slapped them hard, a one-two punch. Potter wasn't expecting it and stepped back to keep his balance. "They've lent us that, the state boys." The large, handsome man was nodding at a van that resembled a UPS delivery truck, painted olive drab. It was on a rise overlooking the plant. "For a command post." They walked toward it. "Too much of a target," Potter objected. Even an amateur sportsman could easily make the hundred-yard rifle shot. "No," Henderson explained. "It's armored. Windows're an inch thick." "That a fact?" With another fast look at the grim slaughterhouse he pulled open the door of the command post and stepped inside. The darkened van was spacious. Lit with the glow from faint yellow overhead lights, video monitors, and LED indicators. Potter shook the hand of a young state trooper, who'd stood to attention before the agent was all the way inside. "Your name?" "Derek Elb, sir. Sergeant." The red-haired trooper, in a perfectly pressed uniform, explained that he was a mobile command post technician. He knew SAC Henderson and had volunteered to remain here and help if he could. Potter looked helplessly over the elaborate panels and screens and banks of switches and thanked him earnestly. In the center of the van was a large desk, surrounded by four chairs. Potter sat in one while Derek, like a salesman, enthusiastically pointed out the surveillance and communications features. "We also have a small arms locker." "Let's hope we won't be needing it," said Arthur Potter, who in thirty years as a federal agent had never fired his pistol in the line of duty. "You can receive satellite transmissions?" "Yessir, we have a dish. Any analog, digitized or microwaved signal." Potter wrote a series of numbers on a card and handed it to Derek. "Call that number, ask for Jim Kwo. Tell him you're calling for me and give him that code right there." "There?" "That one. Tell him we want a SatSurv scan fed into -" he waved his hand at the bank of monitors – "one of those. He'll coordinate the tech stuff with you. All that loses me, frankly. Give him the longitude and latitude of the slaughterhouse." "Yessir," Derek said, jotting notes excitedly. In seventh heaven, techie that he was. "What is that, exactly? SatSurv?" "The CIA's satellite surveillance system. It'll give us a visual and infrared scan of the grounds." "Hey, I heard about that. Potter bent down and trained his Leica field glasses through the thick windows. He studied the slaughterhouse. A skull of a building. Stark against the sun-bleached grass, like dried blood on yellow bone. That was the assessment of Arthur Potter English lit major. Then, in an instant, he was Arthur Potter the Federal Bureau of Investigation's senior hostage negotiator and assistant director of the Bureau's Special Operations and Research Unit, whose quick eyes noted relevant details: thick brick wall, small windows, the location of the power lines, the absence of telephone lines, the cleared land around the building, and stands of trees, clusters of grass, and hills that might provide cover for snipers – both friend and foe. The rear of the slaughterhouse backed right onto the river. The river, Potter mused. Can we use it somehow? Can The roof was studded with parapets, a medieval castle. There was a tall, thin smokestack and a bulky elevator hut that would make a helicopter landing difficult, at least in this choppy wind. Still, a copter could hover and a dozen tactical officers could rappel onto the building with little difficulty. He could make out no skylights. The long-defunct Webber amp; Stoltz Processing Company, Inc., he decided, resembled nothing so much as a crematorium. "Pete, you have a bullhorn?" "Sure." Henderson stepped outside and, crouching, jogged to his car to get it. "Say, you wouldn't have a bathroom here, would you?" Potter asked Derek. " 'Deed we do, sir," said Derek, immensely proud of Kansas technology. The trooper pointed to a small door. Potter stepped inside and put on an armor vest beneath his dress shirt, which he then replaced. He knotted his tie carefully and pulled on his navy-blue sports coat once again. He noted that there was very little slack on the draw strap of the Second Chance vest but in his present state of mind his weight had virtually ceased to trouble him. Stepping outside into the cool afternoon, he took the black megaphone from Henderson and, crouching, hurried through a winding path between hills and squad cars, telling the troopers, eager and young most of them, to holster their pistols and stay under cover. When he was about sixty yards from the slaughterhouse he lay on a hilltop and peered at it through the Leica glasses. There was no motion from inside. No lights in the windows. Nothing. He noted that the glass was missing from the front-facing windows but he didn't know if the men inside had knocked it out for better aim or if local schoolboys had been practicing with rocks and.22s. He turned on the bullhorn and, reminding himself not to shout and thus distort the message, said, "This is Arthur Potter. I'm with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. I'd like to talk to you men in there. I'm having a cellular telephone brought up. I'll be getting it to you in about ten or fifteen minutes. We are not planning an assault. You're in no danger. I repeat: We are not planning an assault." He expected no response and received none. In a crouch he hurriedback to the van and asked Henderson, "Who's in charge locally? I want to talk to them." "Him, there." Crouching beside a tree was a tall, sandy-haired man in a pale blue suit. His posture was perfect. "Who is he?" Potter asked, polishing his glasses on his lapel. "Charles Budd. State police captain. He's got investigative and tactical experience. No negotiating. Spit-shined record." "How long on the force?" To Potter, Budd looked young and callow. You expected to see him ambling over the linoleum in the Sears appliance department to shyly pitch an extended warranty. "Eight years. Flew upstream fast to get the ribbons." Potter called, "Captain?" The man turned his blue eyes to Potter and walked behind the van. They shook firm hands and made introductions. "Hey, Peter," Budd said. "Charlie." To Potter he said, "So you're the big gun from Washington, that right? Pleasure to meet you, sir. Real honor." Potter smiled. "Okay, sir, near as I can tell, here's the situation." He pointed to the slaughterhouse. "There's been movement in those two windows there. A glint, maybe a gun barrel. Or a scope. I'm not sure. Then they -" "We'll get to that, Captain Budd." "Oh, hey, call me Charlie, why don't you?" "Okay, Charlie. How many people you have here?" "Thirty-seven troopers, five local deputies. Plus Pete's boys. Yours, I mean." Potter recorded this in a small black notebook. "Any of your men or women have hostage experience?" "The troopers? A few of them probably've been involved in your typical bank robbery or convenience store situations. The local cops, I'm sure they never have. Most of the work round here's DWI and farm workers playing mumbledypeg on each other Saturday night." "What's the chain of command?" "I'm supervisor. I've got four commanders – three lieutenants and one sergeant waiting for rank – overseeing those thirty-seven, pretty evenly split. Two squads of ten, one nine, one eight. You're writing all this down, huh?" Potter smiled again. "Where are they deployed?" Like the civil war general Budd would one day resemble he pointed out the clusters of troopers in the field. "Weapons? Yours, I mean." "We issue Glocks here, sir, "Night scopes?" He chuckled. "Not round here." "Who's in charge of the local men?" "That'd be the sheriff of Crow Ridge. Dean Stillwell. He's over yonder." He pointed to a lanky, mop-haired man, whose head was down as he talked to one of his deputies. Another car pulled up and braked to a quick stop. Potter was greatly pleased to see who was behind the wheel. Short Henry LeBow climbed from the car and immediately pulled on a rumpled tweed businessman's hat; his bald crown had offered a glistening target more than once during the two hundred hostage negotiations he and Potter had worked together. LeBow trudged forward, a pudgy, shy man, and the one hostage-incident intelligence officer Potter would rather work with than anyone else in the world. LeBow listed under the weight of two huge shoulder bags. The men shook hands warmly and Potter introduced him to Henderson and Budd. "Look what we have here, Henry. An Airstream trailer to call our very own." "My. And a river to catch fish in. What is that?" "The river? The Arkansas," Budd said, with the emphasis on the second syllable. "Takes me back to my youth," LeBow offered. At Potter's request Henderson returned to his car to radio the FBI resident agency in Wichita and find out when Tobe Geller and Angie Scapello would arrive. Potter, LeBow, and Budd climbed into the van. LeBow shook Derek's hand then opened his satchels, extracting two laptop computers. He turned them on, plugged them into a wall socket, and then connected a small laser printer. "Dedicated line?" LeBow asked Derek. "Right there." LeBow plugged in and no sooner had he gotten all his equipment on line than the printer started to groan. "Goodies already?" Potter asked. LeBow read the incoming fax, saying, "Prison department profiles, probation reports, yellow sheets and indictments. Very preliminary, Arthur. Very The door opened and Peter Henderson entered. He announced that Tobe Geller would be here momentarily and Angie Scapello would be arriving within the hour. Tobe had been flown in via Air Force F-16 from Boston, where he'd been teaching a course in computer-programming profiling as a way to establish the identity of criminal hackers. He should arrive any minute. Angie was taking a Marine DomTran jet from Quantico. "Angie?" LeBow said. "I'm pleased about that. Very pleased." Agent Scapello resembled Geena Davis and had huge, brown eyes that no amount of failing to wear makeup could make less seductive. Still, LeBow's excitement had nothing to do with her appearance and everything to do with her specialty – hostage psychology. En route to the barricade Angie would stop at the Laurent Clerc School and gather as much information about the hostages as she could. If Potter knew her at all he guessed she was already on the horn to the school, writing up profiles of the girls. LeBow taped a large sheet of blank paper on the wall above the desk and hung a black marker by a string from it. The sheet was divided in half. The left was headed "Promises," the right, "Deceptions." On it LeBow would record everything Potter offered to Handy and every lie he told the man. This was standard procedure in hostage negotiations. The use of the crib sheet could be explained best by Mark Twain, who'd said that a man needs a good memory to be an effective liar. Surprised, Budd asked, "You really going to lie to him?" LeBow smiled. "But what exactly is a lie, Charlie?" Potter asked. "The truth's a pretty slippery thing. Are any words ever one hundred percent honest?" He tore pages from his notebook and handed them to LeBow, who took the small sheets, along with the faxes that were spewing from the printer, and began typing on the keyboard of the computer that was labeled "Profiles," the word written long ago on a piece of now dirty masking tape. The label on the second computer read "Chronology." The latter screen contained only two entries: The backlit liquid-crystal screens poured eerie blue light onto the man's round face; he looked like an Arthur Rackham rendering of the man in the moon. Charlie Budd gazed at the man's fingers, flying invisibly over the keys. "Lookit that. He's worn off half the letters." LeBow grumbled to Potter, "Saw the building. Lousy situation. Too well shielded for SatSurv and not enough windows for infrared or mikes. The wind's a problem too." As in most barricades the bulk of information here would have to come from traditional sources – released or escaped hostages and the troopers who took food and drinks to the HTs and stole a glance inside. LeBow tapped computer buttons and created a small window on the chronology computer. Two digital stopwatches appeared. One was headed "Elapsed"; the other, "Deadline." LeBow set the elapsed time clock to two hours, ten minutes and pushed a button. It began moving. He glanced at Potter with a raised eyebrow. "I know, Henry." If you don't contact the hostage taker soon after the taking they get nervous and begin to wonder if you're planning an assault. The negotiator added, "We'll give Tobe a few minutes then have the briefing." He looked out over the fields behind them, the tall pale blanket of grass waving in the chill breeze. A half-mile away the combines moved in gentle, symmetrical patterns, cropping the wheat fields like a new recruit's scalp. Potter examined a map of the area. "All these roads sealed off?" "Yessir," Budd said. "And they're the only way in." "Set up a rear staging area there, Charlie." He pointed to the bend in the road a mile south of the slaughterhouse. "I want a press tent set up near there. Out of sight of the barricade. Do you have a press officer?" "Nup," Budd said. "I usually give statements 'bout incidents around here if somebody's got to. Suppose I'll have to here." "No. I want you with me. Delegate it. Find a low-ranking officer." Henderson interrupted. "This is a federal operation, Arthur. I think I should make any statements." "No, I want somebody state and without much rank. That way we'll keep the press in the tent, waiting. They'll be expecting somebody with the answers to show up. And they'll be less likely to go poking around where they shouldn't." "Well, I don't exactly know who'd be good at it," Budd said uncertainly, looking out the window, as if a trooper resembling Dan Rather might just wander past. "They won't have to be good," Potter muttered. "All they have to do is say that I'll make a statement later. Period. Nothing else. Pick somebody who's not afraid to say 'No comment.' " "They won't like that. The press boys and gals. I mean, there's a fender-bender over on Route 14 and reporters here're all over the scene. Something like this, I'll bet they'll be coming in from Kansas City even." SAC Henderson, who'd served a stint in the District, laughed. "Charlie -" Potter controlled his own smile – "CNN and ABC networks are already here. So's the "No kidding. Brokaw, too, you think? Man, I'd like to meet him." "And set up a press-free perimeter one mile around the slaughterhouse, both sides of the river." " "Put five or six officers in four-by-fours and start cruising. You find any reporter in that zone – anybody with a camera – you arrest them and confiscate the camera." "Arrest a reporter? We can't do that. Can we? I mean, look at 'em all out there now. Look at 'em." "Really, Arthur," Henderson began, "we don't want to do that, do we? Remember Waco." Potter smiled blandly at the SAC. He was thinking of a hundred other matters, sorting, calculating. "And no press choppers. Pete, could you get a couple Hueys down here from McConnell in Wichita? Set up a no-fly zone for a three-mile radius." "Are you serious, Arthur?" LeBow said, "Time's awasting. Inside for two hours, seventeen." Potter said to Budd, "Oh, and we need a block of rooms at the nearest hotel. What'd that be?" "Days Inn. It's up the road four miles. In Crow Ridge. Downtown, as much as they've got a downtown. How many?" "Ten." "Okay. What's the rooms for?" "The parents of the hostages. Get a priest and a doctor over there too." "Maybe they should be closer. If we need them to talk to their kids, or -" "No, they shouldn't be. And station four or five troopers there. The families are not to be disturbed by reporters. I want anybody harassing them -" "Arrested," Budd muttered. "Oh, brother." "What's the matter, Trooper?" LeBow asked brightly. "Well, sir, the Kansas state song is 'Home on the Range.' " "Is that a fact?" Henderson asked. "And?" "I know reporters, and you're gonna be hearing some pretty discouraging words 'fore this thing's over." Potter laughed. Then he pointed to the fields. "Look there, Charlie – those troopers're all exposed. I LeBow typed and read the screen. He said, "All indictments have involved at least one firearms count. He's shot four individuals, killed two of them. Fort Dix, M-16 training, he consistently shot low nineties on the range. No record of sidearm scores." "There you have it," Potter told Budd. "Tell them to keep their heads A light flashed toward them. Potter blinked and saw, in the distance, a combine had just turned on its lights. It was early of course but the overcast was oppressive. He gazed at the line of trees to the right and left of the slaughterhouse. "One other thing, Charlie – I want you to leave the snipers in position but give them orders not to shoot unless the HTs make a break." "HTs – that's the hostage takers, right?" "Even if they have a clear shot. Those troopers you were telling me about, with the rifles, are they SWAT?" "No," he said, "just damn fine shots. Even the girl. She started practicing on squirrels when she was -" "And I want them and everybody else to unchamber their weapons. Everybody." "What?" "Loaded but not chambered." "Oh, I don't know 'bout that, sir." Potter turned to him with an inquiring look. "I just mean," Budd said quickly, "not the snipers too?" "You can pull the bolt of an M-16 and shoot in under one second." "Not and steady a scope you can't. An HT could get off three shots in a second." The initials sat awkwardly in his mouth, as if he were trying raw oysters for the first time. He's so eager and talented and correct, Potter mused. What a day this is going to be. "The takers aren't going to come out and shoot a hostage in front of us before we can react. If it comes to that, the whole thing'll turn into a firefight anyway." "But -" "Unchambered," Potter said firmly. "Appreciate it, Charlie." Budd nodded reluctantly and reiterated his assignment: "Okay, I'm gonna send somebody down to give a statement to the press – or not to give a statement to the press, I should say. I'll round up reporters and push 'em back a mile or so, I'll get us a block of rooms, and tell everybody to keep their heads down. And deliver your message about not loading and locking." "Good." "Brother." Budd ducked out of the van. Potter watched him crouching and running down to a cluster of troopers. They listened, laughed, and then started herding the reporters out of the area. In five minutes the captain returned to the command van. "That's done. Those reporters're about as unhappy as I thought they'd be. I told ' em a Feebie'd ordered it. You don't mind me calling you that, I hope." There was an edge to his voice. "You can call me whatever you like, Charlie. Now, I want a field hospital set up here." "Medevac?" "No, not evacuation. Trauma-team medics and triage specialists. Just out of clear range of the slaughterhouse. No more than sixty seconds away. Prepped for everything from third-degree burns to gunshot wounds to pepper spray. Full operating suites." "Yessir. But, you know, there's a big hospital not but fifteen miles from here." "That may be, but I don't want the HTs to even hear the sound of a medevac chopper. Same reason I want the press copters and our Hueys out of earshot." "Why?" "Because I don't want to remind them of something they might not think of themselves. And even if they do ask for a chopper I want the option to tell them that it's too windy to fly one in." "Will do." "Then come back here with your commanders. Sheriff Stillwell too. I'm going to hold a briefing." Just then the door opened and a tanned, handsome young man with black curly hair bounded inside. Before he greeted anyone he looked at the control panels and muttered, "Excellent." "Tobe, welcome." Tobe Geller said to Potter, " Boston girls are beautiful and they all have pointy tits, Arthur. This better be important." Potter shook his hand, noting that the dot of earring hole was particular prominent today. He recalled that Tobe had explained the earring to his superiors in the Bureau by saying he'd done undercover work as a cop. He never had; he simply liked earrings and had quite a collection of them. The MIT graduate and adjunct professor of computer science at American University and Georgetown shook everyone's hand. He then looked down at LeBow's laptops, sneered, and muttered something about their being antiquated. Then he dropped into the chair of the communications control panel. He and Derek introduced themselves and were immediately submerged in a world of shielded analog signals, subnets, packet driver NDIS shims, digital tripartite scrambling, and oscillation detection systems in multiple landline chains. "Just about to brief, Tobe," Potter told him and sent Budd to run his errands. To LeBow he said, "Let me see what you've got so far." LeBow turned the profile computer to Potter. The intelligence officer said. "We don't have much time." But Potter continued to read, lost in the glowing type of the blue screen. |
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