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Burying the Past Page 8


  The way he blanched when he turned away from the body on the ground suggested the wound was gruesome enough that they didn’t need to check too closely.

  The rest of the agents, stood up from their defensive positions and started edging towards the suspect's car. While they all stopped pointing their weapons, Taylor noticed no one holstered them yet. At least they got that part right.

  A woman yelled from somewhere on the sidewalk, blocked by the cars parked along the side of the street. Taylor noticed several of those cars also had shattered windows and bullet holes in them, although it would take crime scene techs to know if that was from the suspect or one of the officers. He could see the other officer in the stopping patrol car talking into his radio, most likely calling for medical.

  Taylor ignored the rest of the officers as they started securing the scene and approached the suspect. When he was within a few feet, he could see what the local had seen. The hole where an eye used to be, did suggest the suspect was down for good.

  “Don’t touch the body,” Whitaker said behind him.

  “I remember,” he said.

  On their first investigation together, she’d flipped out on him when he’d touched the body of a dead woman to search for clues before the medical examiner had looked her over. Of course, he’d been intending on searching this suspect pockets right before she said that, but he wasn’t planning on admitting that any time soon.

  He started to step around the body towards the car when Whitaker grabbed his elbow. He looked back, annoyed when he saw the gloves she was holding out to him. He rolled his eyes and took the gloves. This would go faster if he could just do what he needed to do without all the crime scene rules, but he knew he and the FBI had different goals. He was just here to stop Qasim, they were here to put together a prosecutable case. Taylor didn’t think there was much of a chance this would end anyway, but with Qasim’s body sitting in someone’s morgue, so evidentiary procedure didn’t seem to have a lot of points.

  Not that he could say that out loud without sending Whitaker into a tizzy.

  He leaned in the open driver's door and started looking through stuff in the center console. He saw the passenger door open up and Crawford leaning down into that side of the car.

  “You’re guys shoot a civilian?” Taylor asked offhandedly while going through some papers he found in the center console.

  “Probably one of the locals, but we’ll find out once the scene is done being processed. She was just winged, but an ambulance should be here for her shortly.”

  To his surprise, it didn’t sound like Crawford was particularly bothered by what happened. He sounded matter of fact as he started going through the glove compartment.

  “I would have thought your guys knew better than to set up overlapping fields of fire.”

  “Trust me, if these guys were on my team, I’d have them shipped out to our Fairbanks offices by the end of the day. This is what happens when you have to rely on smaller local offices.”

  Taylor popped the open trunk lever and said, “What you guys aren’t all ...”

  “Holy shit,” a voice came from the back of the car, interrupting him.

  Both Taylor and Crawford stood up and went around to the rear of the car where one of the local cops was standing, looking into the trunk with a weird expression on his face. Clearing the back corner, Taylor could easily see what the guy was shocked by. Inside were several layers of brownish bricks clearly labeled C-4.

  Taylor had seen enough of the stuff over the years, with its little warnings and labels to know it was the real deal.

  Crawford whistled and said, “No kidding. You guys are lucky no one hit the trunk.”

  Taylor glanced at the open trunk lid, with lighting showing through several prominent holes and shook his head. “It’s pretty hard to accidentally set this stuff off. I’ve seen one catch fire and not go off. What’s lucky is he was clearly transporting it and hadn’t rigged it with a detonator. If he had, he could have easily taken out most of the guys doing the shooting.”

  “Uhh,” the local cop said, wide-eyed, looking at the stacks of plastic explosive.

  He’d been one of the closest people to the car, and had it been set off, he’d almost certainly been blown to pieces.

  Taylor slapped him on the shoulder and said, “Maybe go buy a lottery ticket.”

  The man gulped, and backed away from the car, heading for the ambulance that just pulled up. More locals had also shown up, and cops were starting to swarm the area, pushing back the lookie-loos who’d started gathering around.

  “What’s not lucky is our lead went dead with this guy,” Taylor said, putting his hands on hips.

  “He’s connected to someone. Like you said, he was transporting this stuff. If he was the one using it, why would he risk hauling around a trunk full of military grade explosives?”

  “Good point. Now we just have to figure out who he was so we can find his friends.”

  Taylor nodded in agreement and started to try and plan their next step when one of the agents who’d picked them up called for Crawford’s attention. The man was bent over the driver's body looking at the screen on a small, boxy device in his hands.

  “His prints are on file.”

  “Damn, that’s handy,” one of the locals who’d been looking into the trunk said as he looked around and realized what the agent had done.

  “Yeah, saves time having to print him and send it to the office to have someone run it through AFIS. The range is limited, since it has to connect to the laptop in the car, but it does come in handy,” Crawford said.

  “I’d imagine.”

  Crawford turned and headed towards the SUV they’d come in. Taylor hadn’t dealt with this before, but once Whitaker started to follow Taylor figured he should join too. Crawford was just sliding into the passenger seat of the vehicle and swiveling the screen around when Taylor caught up.

  “Name’s Saeed Antar. Yemeni citizen on a student visa issued last year.”

  Crawford paused to type in some commands and started tabbing through various windows, which Taylor was just too far away to really make out.

  “The address he has listed with the DMV is shared with four other men, who all happen to be on student visas outta the Middle East. Another guy from Yemen, two from Sudan and one from Egypt. Looks like they were all issued their visa last year too.”

  “A kid with a trunk full of explosives rooming with four other students, all on visas issued around the same time. Looks like we found your cell,” Whitaker said, looking at Taylor.

  “One of them at least.”

  “Huh?”

  “Like I said before, from the kind of people he seems to be working with, I’d bet Qasim is drafting off of other groups. No one he trained would be driving with a trunk packed with explosives. They’d move it in small batches so if they lost one load, they would still be able to carry out their plan.”

  “He could still be working for Qasim,” Crawford offered.

  “Maybe, but it doesn’t feel right.”

  “Will know more once we take his friends and question them,” Whitaker said.

  “True. We can’t very well leave a bunch of guys trying to move cars full of explosives on the street.”

  “It’s ‘we’ now is it?” Crawford said.

  Taylor looked up suddenly and noticed a smile on Crawford’s lips. That caught Taylor a little by surprise. Other than Whitaker and Trevor Robels, he’d had a fairly adversarial relationship with most law enforcement officers. Something about a freelancer rubbed them the wrong way.

  “Sure. We’re all on the same side, right? I figure we’re a team ... even if you are kind of an asshole.”

  Whitaker whipped around to look at him, her mouth slightly opened, and then paused as Crawford chuckled. She didn’t say anything, but Taylor knew her well enough that he could tell from the way her eyes crinkled ever so slightly that she was thinking unkind thoughts about his gender. Law enforcement was a man’s
world still, so she’d had to deal with the certain testosterone-fueled mentality, but Taylor knew she found it ever perplexing.

  “Ok, so we’ll,” he said, emphasizing the word with a half-smile at Taylor, “leave a couple of the guys from the local Bureau office here to bring the car back and finish up with the scene. It will take them at least the rest of the day to go over everything. While they’re doing that, I’ll put in a request for the local’s SWAT team. Once they’re set up, and it shouldn’t be long considering they’re involved in the car stop, we’ll take this kid's apartment and hopefully get his friends. Let's try to take one alive though. It’ll be easier trying to get info from interrogation than waiting for the lab monkeys to find something for us.”

  “Shouldn’t we call it in and get a Bureau quick response team instead? They’re better trained for dealing with this than any local ESU.”

  “I don’t want to wait. They might be expecting Saeed to come strolling in the door any minute, and this stop wasn’t exactly quiet. There’s already news vans out there. No way we can keep this from hitting the news, and with this many locals, details like the trunk full of explosives are gonna leak. The last thing we want is for his friends to spook. Not if there’s more where that came from.”

  The last statement was punctuated by a gesture back at the car holding the stacks of explosives.

  “He’s right,” Taylor said. “If we go now, we still have the element of surprise.”

  “I checked out the department on the way here,” Crawford added. “Their ESU team did counter-terrorism training last year at Quantico. They’re not a QRT, but they’ll do.”

  Whitaker made a face again. Her dislike of breaking protocol bordered on the pathological, but she didn’t say anything else. Taylor liked to think he was having an effect on her, but she was stubborn enough that if he ever pointed it out, she’d boomerang back the other way out of spite.

  “Fine,” was all she said.

  They piled into the SUV and headed out, followed by a second vehicle containing more agents from the local field office, leaving behind a few men to keep civilians out and watch over the crime scene techs. Some of the local cops also followed their small convoy a few miles down the street to Saeed’s apartment.

  Up to this point in Taylor’s short investigative life, he’d more or less worked alone or at least, on the fringes of law enforcement agencies, so he wasn’t sure what ‘proper’ handling of crimes scenes entailed. He couldn’t help but wonder how much this pushed their resources, but it seemed like a whole lot of people were involved in this. Now they were expected to sneak up on an apartment with four cars tearing down the street, and apparently, a SWAT van headed to the same spot from somewhere else.

  If it were up to Taylor, he and Whitaker would have taken the apartment themselves and left everyone else behind. He was confident he could have gotten the jump on them and managed to keep at least one around for interrogation. Taylor’d seen enough bloated operations that went south in the military, when someone high enough up got involved and decided the solution to any problem was more hands.

  To their credit, they all stopped several blocks away from the apartment and got the radio to coordinate how the takedown would happen. After a few minutes, Crawford put the radio down and turned to everyone else in the car.

  “Ok, here’s how it’s going to go. We’re going to go in fast. The local cruisers are going to peel off and set up a perimeter a block out in all directions. ESU is going to pull up front and go in hard. The apartment is actually a duplex, so it’s more of a house than an apartment complex. We’re going to take the close in perimeter. Danny, you and Fred, take the sides of the house, I’ll be out front. Whitaker, you and Taylor take the back of the house. Let ESU do their thing, and we’ll all go in once they call clear. Till then just watch for anyone trying to rabbit? Clear?”

  The last word was said in Taylor’s direction.

  “I’ve done takedowns before,” Taylor said.

  “In the military. We do things differently. Just stay outside and watch for anyone coming out.”

  “Sure,” Taylor said.

  He didn’t love being lectured, but Crawford was right. In the military, operations like this were handled with a focus on the pace of action, using extremity of violence to subdue a target quickly. While they didn’t go out of their way to cause problems, the army had more of a tolerance for collateral damage, including property damage, than law enforcement operating domestically.

  Crawford gave it another second to ensure Taylor understood him before lifting up the radio and giving the command to go. The SUV jumped to life, and they tore down the street, screeching to a halt in front of a small two-story house with two walk-up porches on either side of the front, each leading to a door. Similar houses flanked either side, leaving narrow paths between the houses. The SWAT van pulled up nearly simultaneously in front of them, disgorging men in brown bulletproof vests and helmets even as Taylor opened his door.

  He let Whitaker take the lead as they dashed down one of the alleys to the back of the house, weapons drawn. Whitaker signaled that he should stay at that corner of the house while she headed to the other corner, so they had the best chance to catch anyone coming out while not openly exposing themselves to possible fire from the windows at the back of the house.

  Taylor could hear shouts from the front of the house, and a large bang that he assumed was the front door being knocked in, followed by more shouting, although muffled this time since it came from inside the house itself.

  One of the top floor windows slid open, and a young Middle Eastern kid stuck the top half of his body out, starting to pull himself out of the window. Clearly one of Saeed’s roommates was trying to make a run for it. Taylor was just bringing his weapon up and opening his mouth to tell the kid to freeze when a gunshot rang out from inside the house, followed by a sudden sharp boom from inside the house, accompanied by the sound of breaking wood.

  The kid half out the window was ejected from it by the blast, sent arching through the air into the middle of the backyard, a cloud of debris following him out of the window. Taylor noticed that there wasn’t a bunch of fire and the house itself was still intact. He knew from his tours in the sandbox that there were several classifications of IEDs used, but for personally carried explosives, usually in the form of suicide vests, there were two main types.

  The first was one set to cause as much damage as possible, packed with explosives. This was the type that wiped out cafes and completely destroyed buses.

  The other wasn’t meant to be destructive as it was deadly. Lighter on explosives, it was heavily packed with shrapnel, which ended up being pretty much anything metallic the bomb maker could get his hands on, from children’s toys to scrap.

  This was clearly the second kind of IED. He knew it meant bad things for the ESU guys who’d gone in the house, but that was something they’d have to deal within a few minutes. First, they had a deal with the kid now lying on the ground in the middle of the backyard, writhing.

  Both he and Whitaker approached the kid, with her gun trained on him and Taylor keeping his pointed at the window in case anyone else decided to come out the same way. Unlikely considering the explosion, but it wasn’t something he was willing to risk.

  “Careful,” Taylor said as they reached the kid and he noticed Whitaker holstering her weapon.

  “He’s pretty messed up.”

  “Still could be dangerous.”

  “He got hit by whatever blew up in there. His legs are shredded.”

  “He’s lucky he decided to come head first out of the window. Had he gone feet first, he’d be dead right now.”

  “That drop couldn’t have done him any good either. He caught a lot of air.”

  “It’s not that high, and the ground isn’t very hard. Broke some bones at most.”

  “Help ...” the kid said weekly, his voice thick with pain.

  “It’s always ‘death to the infidels’ until they get hit
! Then they start begging for our help.”

  “Yeah, but he’s also alive and might have something for us, so we need to keep him that way.”

  She pulled out the portable radio she’d gotten from Crawford when they’d left the scene around Saeed’s car and called for an ambulance. Now that things had calmed down a bit, Taylor's brain focused in on something other than the immediate danger, and he listened to the panicked voices on the radio, some calling for backup and others trying to calm everyone down and make sense of the situation.

  A minute of back and forth and the dispatcher confirmed that EMS was on the way. They waited for another handful of minutes with the kid. Taylor really wanted to go around and see what had happened in the house, but Whitaker was right. The kid was alive and a sure source of intel, so, for the time being, he was their priority.