“That’s beside the point, Mr. McBride. This isn’t Nicaragua, or the former Soviet Union, and you aren’t a CIA operations officer anymore. You’re a civilian now, governed by the laws of our land. The Constitution isn’t just a piece of paper, it’s a fundamental building block of who we are as a society. It defines us.”
The man’s a politician, Nathan thought. Of course he is, he has to be, it goes with theterritory. Forcing himself to relax his grip on the phone, he continued. “Frank Ortega’s wife said something to me, and I agreed with it. She told me life is never as simple as a book of rules.”
“Diane is fine woman and I don’t disagree with her from a philosophical perspective. But what you’re talking about is a very slippery slope. One digression could be regarded as a mistake, two is a pattern. I want containment at this point. Involving you further has considerable risks. Can you imagine the fallout if this ever leaked? The FBI can’t afford that kind of coverage from the media. We’re already under the microscope with the presidential-powers issue of wiretapping suspected Al Qaeda operatives.”
“Based on everything you know about my past, I’m asking you to trust me, to trust my judgment. I’m not indiscriminate.”
“For what it’s worth, I do trust you, but I can’t agree to what you’re asking. I cannot, and will not, sanction your continued involvement. Don’t get me wrong, I’m grateful for your help to this point, but that’s as far as it goes. You’re a smart man, you know why I’ve taken this position.” There as a pause on the other end. “Hold the line, Mr. McBride.”
He looked at Harv. “What’s going on out there?”
“Something big. I just saw another fire truck speed through an intersection followed by two police cruisers.”
Lansing came back on the line. “I’ve got to go, Mr. McBride. We’ve got an emergency situation.”
“What’s happening?”
“There’s been a bombing at our Sacramento field office.” The line went dead.
The sonic boom. Oh please, dear Lord, no. Not the missing Semtex. Holly! A horrible image flashed through his mind. Was she dead? Worse than dead? He imagined her burned, broken, and bleeding. He grabbed the note with Holly’s phone number from the nightstand and dialed. It was ringing. More than once. That gave him hope she hadn’t been there.
Come on. Come on. Answer. Answer the phone!
The line connected and a man’s voice spoke. “Hello?”
Nathan used an alias. “This is Special Agent Robertson from DC. I’m calling for Special Agent in Charge Holly Simpson.” Nathan heard the whine of a siren in the background.
“We didn’t know her identity. She’s unconscious. We’re en route to Sutter’s emergency room.”
“What’s her condition?”
“Critical. She’s got multiple fractures to her legs, one compound. She’s got second- and third- degree burns. Probably bleeding internally. Both her shoulders are separated. We’ve got her stabilized, but her head trauma is our biggest concern. Who is this again?”
Nathan ended the call. He turned toward Harv. “She’s being taken to Sutter’s emergency room in critical condition.”
“I’m sorry, Nathan.”
“Can you handle our guys when they arrive from San Diego? Get them set up?”
“Yeah, no problem.”
“Will you call the bell desk and make sure there’s a cab ready at the curb?”
“No problem.”
“I’m sorry to dump this on you, Harv.”
“I got you covered. Go.”
* * *
Special Agent Bruce Henning’s expression turned dark as Nathan strode into Sutter’s emergency room. The man was no longer immaculate, far from it. He looked like he’d been dragged by rope down a dirt road.
“What the hell are you doing here, McBride. All of this is your fault!”
“Where’s Holly?”
Henning didn’t answer.
Nathan took step toward him. “Where is she?”
“Upstairs in ICU. Hey, where’re you going?”
“I don’t have time for you, Henning.”
“You can’t go up there.”
“Watch me.” He approached a nurse who was running toward the ER doors.
“Where’s ICU?” Nathan asked.
“Third floor.” The nurse pushed through the dual swinging doors. Nathan had a brief look inside. Doctors. Nurses. Blood.
“Damn it, McBride. Wait.”
“You coming, Special Agent Henning?”
The fed stepped into the elevator. “You’ve got a lot of nerve barging in here like this.”
“Save your resentment for someone who gives a shit.”
“I should arrest your sorry ass.”
Nathan squared with him. “You’re welcome to try.”
At the third floor, the elevator chimed and the doors opened to a horrific scene. Directly ahead the nurse’s station was abandoned. Several dozen gurneys containing the wounded lined the perimeter of the room. The floor was tracked and smudged with blood. What was normally a quiet place had been transformed into battlefield triage unit. Physicians, paramedics, and nurses were hovering over the injured, and from the look of things, many of them critically. It was plainly evident there weren’t enough doctors and nurses to deal with the situation. The moans of pain sounded forlorn and eerie. A uniformed officer stationed just inside the room looked ashen, his expression grim. He stepped toward Nathan and Henning, but when the FBI man flashed his badge, the officer turned away.
On the far side of the room, a doctor leaning over a wounded woman looked over his shoulder and yelled, “I need help over here.”
No one came. Clearly, no one was free.
Nathan sprinted over. “What do you need?” He looked at the woman’s arm where a twelve-inch gash had laid it open, exposing muscle and tendons. The skin surrounding the wound was charred and blistered. Blood was pooling on the sheets of the gurney.
“Who are you?” In his mid-fifties and balding, the doctor wore protective goggles over rimless eyeglasses. Nathan towered over him by a good twelve inches.
“I’ve got field-medic training, tell me what you need.”
“Throw on some gloves. Behind you on the counter. Nurse’s station.”
Nathan ran over and grabbed a pair of light-green latex gloves from the box and pulled them on.
“When I pull the bicep aside, I need you to clamp the brachial artery as close to the tear as you can. The tear’s just above the radial and ulnar branch. I’m pinching it closed right now with my fingers.” The doctor looked at the mobile table containing instruments. “Shit, use the hemostats, they’re all I got. You’ll need to sponge the blood first. Ready?”
“Yes,” Nathan said.
With his free hand, the doctor reached into the woman’s arm just above the elbow, grabbed a handful of muscle, and pulled it aside. “Sponge,” he said.
Aware of Henning’s presence behind him, Nathan pressed the sponges into the opening, and watched the blood soak into them. He knew he had mere seconds to get the artery clamped before more blood would overflow the sponges and fill the cavity. “I see it,” he said, opening the hemostats. He inserted the tool into the wound and applied the needle-like pliers just above the tear in the artery.
“Not too tight,” the doctor said. “One click.”
“One click,” Nathan repeated. He pinched the hemostats to its first locking setting.
The doctor released the artery from his thumb-and-forefinger grip. “Good job.”
Nathan removed the sponges without being told and set them on the table.
The doctor let the muscle slide back into place, which overlaid the pinching end of the hemostats. He removed the tourniquet. “That artery will have to be repaired where it’s clamped. Crushing it with hemostats makes it susceptible to clotting at the crush point, but it’s the lesser of two evils. It’s better to damage the artery and repair it later, than to lose the arm.”
“How long can you leave it that way?” Nathan asked.
“Not very long. Ischemic time for muscle is two hours max. We have to add the tourniquet time to the clamp time so she’ll need a vascular surgeon within ninety minutes at the outset. Problem is, she’s tied up downstairs in the ER. We need to repeat this procedure for the other end of the tear to prevent back bleeding from collateral artery pressure. You ready?”