The other four agents got into their van. The driver, Agent Bridges, lowered his window and followed the men in the Zodiac with his eyes before locking them on O’Brien. He said, “You guys made a hellava find over there. Nice bit of police work; we’ll take it from here.”
“How about if we follow you to the bank? You might need more back-up.”
The agent glanced at Nick, looked at O’Brien, and shook his head. “Thanks, but no thanks. Orders from the top.”
“I need to be there for the transfer,” O’Brien said. “Their hostage is my employee. More than that, he’s the son of my close friend.”
“I understand. Take it up with Gates. We’re the messengers and right now, the delivery wagon. Why don’t you guys get some sleep?” He put the van in reverse, turned around, and headed south down highway A1A.
The blue van passed by Marineland, which was closed and dark except for a few security lights catching the acrobatics of bats. The FBI agents continued south through Washington Oaks and drove the highway hugging the beach, the moon reflecting off the breakers. Agent Bridges pushed the van to seventy-five miles-per-hour. He glanced up in his rearview mirror. Blue lights. “Shit!” he said.
“What’s wrong?” an agent in the back seat asked.
“We’ve got the locals pulling us over for speeding.”
“Probably one of the Barney Fifes looking to make his quota.”
“It’s the end of the month,” said the agent sitting on the front passenger side. “These guys have to make the town’s budget.”
“Yeah, but not on our time,” said Agent Bridges. He pulled over, lowered his window and waited. In the side mirror, he watched as the state trooper got out of the car, the strobe of blue lights crossing A1A and fading against the dark sea, the sound of the waves breaking over sand illuminated by the moon.
The trooper stepped to the window. “Sir, is there a reason you’re speeding?”
Agent Bridges said, “We’re FBI heading into Daytona in an emergency status.” He handed his ID to the trooper. The agent in the passenger side noticed something in his side-view mirror. He sat up, lowering his window. The trooper holding Agent Bridges’ ID, handed it back and said, “We’d be happy, sir, to offer an escort under blue light.”
“No thanks,” Agent Bridges said, placing his ID back in his pocket. He never made it. A nine millimeter bullet entered his right temple and exploded blood and brain matter on the agent in the passenger side. The side panel doors jerked open. The two agents in the back seat hit with 12-gauge buckshot to their chests. The agent in the front passenger seat had just cleared his gun when a bullet entered his neck, shattering the spinal column. He was still alive as his door was opened, strong hands pulling him out, dragging him to a canal. He was thrown down an embankment, the water covering his face, the flash of blue lights fading to black as he sank in the dark water.
CHAPTER SIXTY-TWO
Eric Hunter stood at the end of the Sunglow Pier on Daytona Beach and watched the pink glow of a newborn sun yawning over the Atlantic. It was 5:45.a.m. He thought about the phone call he was going to make. They wanted him to wait until the sun was up: 6:15 a.m. Make the call from the beach. Wear a red shirt, they’d instructed. No hat. No sunglasses. Come alone. Hunter watched an auburn sky in the east slip into a burgundy scarf wrapped above an indigo sea. A pelican sailed low across the water, flapping its wings only when it had reached the breakers.
Hunter walked down the old wooden pier behind a lone fisherman with a four-day growth of salt and pepper whiskers. The man stopped and threaded a shrimp on a hook. A cigarette dangled from his lips. To concentrate on what he was doing, he cocked his head and closed one eyelid to keep out the smoke. He cast the line, propped a foot on the rail, and opened the lid on a steaming cup of black coffee. He sipped and nodded as Hunter passed.
Two people sat in Crabby Joe’s Restaurant, a restaurant built on the pier, about one hundred feet from the entrance. Hunter could smell the eggs, grits, fried whiting and fresh coffee. He walked through the open-air restaurant and over* to the steps leading from the beginning of the pier to the beach directly below it. The sun broke over the ocean, bathing the beach in a hue of copper off the water. As Hunter walked across the dunes, he knew a Volusia County beach webcam would pick up his image. The camera, mounted atop a concrete utility pole, fed a live picture of Daytona Beach to the Internet. Beachgoers and surfers logged on to check weather and surf.
Hunter knew one man watching was not a surfer. He was a killer, and he would be watching Hunter’s every move. When he got in the area that he thought was about the center of the image picked up by the camera, he took out his cell phone and sat on the sand. Then he waited for the phone to ring.
Mohammed Sharif watched Hunter on the computer screen twenty miles away. He sat in the posh hotel room with Rashid Aamed and Abdul-Hakim, each man on the opposite side of the computer screen. Sharif said, “He appears to be alone, at least from this angle. No one else on that part of the beach except an old man walking.”
“I still do not trust him.” Aamed said. “He has not proven himself enough.”
“He’s an American. He can never prove himself,” said Sharif, “which means you can never trust him. You can only use the infidel for Allah’s wishes. We extract information once more, he comes to collect the money, and you cut his throat.”
Aamed smiled. “Inshallad. It would be an honor.”
Sharif dialed his cell phone. “It appears to be a nice morning on the beach.”
Hunter said into his cell, “It’s a beautiful day on the world’s most famous beach.”
Sharif’s lips curled into a smile, his marble-black eyes watching the live picture of Eric Hunter. He asked, “What can you tell me?”
“The remaining material was found and then captured by someone.”
“Who?”
“I thought you might have that information.”
“Why would I know this?”
“Because you’re a buyer”
“How do you know whoever stole the HEU is a seller?”
“Because these people believe they own the uranium-think they bought it once and they can sell it.”
“How did the thieves accomplish this?”
“Somehow they knew we’d found the HEU, and their men were disguised as state police. They killed four of our agents and two state troopers.”
“How did the men who stole the HEU know your men had found more of it?”
“I thought you might have a suggestion.”
“What do you mean?”
“Someone, one of our people, must have tipped them off.”
“Perhaps you have another mole … one besides yourself. Americans, there is no badge of honor among thieves.”
Hunter glanced toward the camera mounted on the pole. “You need the HEU. I need information. If you are working with someone else, fuck off.”
“If I was employing one of your agents, why would I tell you?”
“Because you’d want me to kill him. He’d be a double agent. And that means he’s smarter than us and a hell of a lot smarter than you, because he’s managed to fool whoever stole the HEU and you.”
Sharif was silent a long moment. Then he leaned closer to the computer screen. “How do I know what you tell me is true?”
“It will be all over the news. When four FBI agents are killed, it’s big news.”
“How many canisters total?”
“Ten. Two from the sub and eight taken from a remote area on the beach.”
“That is all of the cargo on the submarine when it left Kiel, Germany, correct?”
“Yes. Look, Mohammed, these men are holding a kid.”
“There is no guarantee that the sellers will contact us, and if they do, there is no assurance I will be the highest bidder.”
“Maybe you can bid as an option, or you can simply take it. Regardless, I want a guarantee the kid isn’t harmed.”