“Anyway, we decided to do a little more genealogy, and guess what we found?” Jaffe nodded his head and Harper activated both of the monitors. “Ra’na is quite a lovely village.”
As the monitors glowed to life, one showed the battered, mud-brick exterior of a large village house, while the other showed a family of women and children huddled in one of the rooms inside. Several men in black fatigues with dark balaclavas covering their faces held them at gunpoint.
Sayed Jamal instantly stiffened in his chair. It was exactly the reaction Jaffe had been hoping for. “I guess I don’t need to ask whose house we’re looking at.”
Mohammed knew that he was looking at his nephew’s home and family, but he remained completely impassive.
“Take a good look at them,” said Jaffe, as he held up his cell phone. “The men in that house work for me. They obey my orders, and unless you start cooperating, things are going to get very unpleasant for your nephew’s family. Now tell me about the nuclear material.”
Jaffe counted quietly to three and asked the question in a different way. “We already know where the material was stolen from a top secret European facility. We also have a pretty good handle on when it was stolen. What we don’t know is who’s planning on selling it to you and how you planned to use it. Tell me what I want to know, and I’ll have my men leave that house right now.”
When Mohammed refused to answer, Jaffe raised the cell phone to his ear and said, “Start with the oldest daughter.”
Immediately, there was a frenzy of activity on the monitor as the order was relayed and one of the gunmen pulled a screaming young woman away from her family and dragged her out of the room. The family members wailed and the image shook as the camera was removed from its tripod and rushed down the hallway. It caught up with the gunman in what appeared to be a bathroom. A large copper tub was filled with water and the gunman was holding the woman’s head underneath.
Sayed Jamal cursed his captors in Arabic as tears began to stream down his face. Jaffe, though, paid no attention to him. His eyes were locked on Mohammed bin Mohammed.
Jamal quickly realized what was going on and turned to his uncle, begging him to tell the Americans whatever they wanted to know. Mohammed yelled at him to shut up.
Brad Harper didn’t give a damn if it was insubordination or not-he couldn’t allow this to go on any longer. Approaching Jaffe, the powerfully built marine said, “That’s it. We’re not doing this. You’re going to have to find another way.”
Without taking his eyes off Mohammed, Jaffe drew his pistol and pointed it at Harper’s head, stopping the marine in his tracks. “Every member of this family will die, slowly and painfully, unless you tell me what I want to know,” said Jaffe, his eyes boring into Mohammed’s. “Who is selling the nuclear material?”
When the man still refused to answer, Jaffe spoke into his cell phone again. “Kill her.”
The command was relayed to the gunman on the monitor, who drew his sidearm, placed it over the edge of the tub, and fired two shots.
Jamal was hysterical with rage and screamed first at the Americans and then at his uncle for having killed his daughter.
Mohammed looked at him and told him to shut up.
Jaffe didn’t bother asking about the nuclear material now. Instead he spoke into his cell phone, and once the camera had returned to the room where the family was corralled, he said to Mohammed, “Why don’t you pick the next one?”
Thirty-One
Harvath had just hung up with Kevin McCauliff when Herrington walked into Dr. Hardy’s office with his crew and said, “Everyone’s in.”
Harvath looked Morgan, Cates, and Hastings over-sizing them up, as it were, trying to divine whether they’d be up to what he might call on them to do.
Bits and pieces of the things Bob had told him about them in his e-mails floated to the forefront of Harvath’s mind. Cates, who had relocated to New York from Oklahoma, was the son of evangelical parents. Though he himself was not particularly religious, he saw the war on terror exactly as his enemy did, as an out-and-out crusade. The physical stresses of the job had bought him a ticket out of active duty when both his knees blew on an assignment in the south of Afghanistan.
Morgan, the youngest team member, had been raised by a single mother. He’d been in big trouble with drugs and street gangs and had joined the Marine Corps as his ticket out and a way to see the world beyond New York. Though a head wound left him unfit for duty, many doctors, including Hardy, questioned if he wasn’t already just a bit off-a bit too reckless with his own life long before that fateful day in Iraq.
Finally there was Tracy Hastings-the Naval EOD tech. She was the daughter of a wealthy New York family; her parents had seriously disagreed with her decision to join the armed forces, but the attack on the USS Cole had helped her make up her mind, and the headstrong young woman wouldn’t be dissuaded. She hadn’t joined the Navy in spite of her affluent upbringing, she had joined because of it. She thought that if anyone had an obligation to serve their country, it was people who had profited so handsomely by it.
Tracy used a little makeup to cover the facial scars left by an IED disposal gone bad, but the damage was still visible. From what Herrington had told Harvath, her injuries had been quite severe, but the surgeons had done a remarkable job-right down to matching the particularly pale blue color for her artificial eye.
Harvath could tell by looking at each of the people standing there that they were a tightly knit group. That was good. The question was, could they function both as individuals and as a cohesive unit under the stress of combat? And just as important, would they accept him, an outsider, as both one of their own and as their leader?
As Hardy went to check on some of his other patients, they had the office to themselves. Harvath asked Herrington to close the door. Once it was shut, he said, “I am going to be completely honest with all of you. You’re not my first choice for something like this, and you’re not even my last choice. But the situation being what it is, you are my only choice.”
“Fuck you too,” said Morgan.
Herrington held up his hand and said, “Let him finish.”
Harvath waited a beat and then said, “State, local, and federal resources are completely, and I mean completely, tied up with search-and-rescue efforts. Air traffic over and maritime traffic around Manhattan has been suspended due to sniper and RPG fire. What helicopter and boat traffic there is, is working off the opposite sides of both the Hudson and East rivers. Somebody doesn’t want any reinforcements making it to Manhattan. That means that we will have no support for this assignment whatsoever. Your participation will be in an unofficial, unrecognized, and most definitely unsanctioned capacity.”
“Meaning what?” asked Cates.
“It means you’re not federal employees and you are not being recognized as active duty soldiers-in essence, your disabled status hasn’t changed.”
“I guess it’s lucky for you then that even though they took our jobs, we all got to keep our training,” replied Cates.
Harvath liked that answer. Continuing, he said, “We’re dealing with an extremely well organized enemy of indeterminate size and resources who is presumably still operating somewhere in Manhattan.”
“You mean they’re not done yet?” responded Paul Morgan.
Harvath shook his head. “I don’t know. That’s why I wanted to be completely straight with you. In short, we have very little idea of what we’re up against. This could turn out to be nothing, but I’ve got a feeling it might be an extremely dangerous assignment. Anybody have any other questions?”