28
“HIS NAME IS Jackson,” Webster said.
“How long has he been in there?” Milosevic
asked.
“Nearly a year,” Webster said.
Eleven o’clock in the morning, Thursday July third,
inside Peterson. The section head at Quantico was faxing material
over from Andrews down the Air Force’s own secure fax network as
fast as the machines could handle it. Milosevic and Brogan were
pulling it off the machines and passing it to Webster and McGrath
for analysis. On the other side of the table, General Johnson and
his aide were scanning a map of the northwest corner of
Montana.
“You got people undercover in all these groups?”
Johnson asked.
Webster shook his head and smiled.
“Not all of them,” he said. “Too many groups, not
enough people. I think we just got lucky.”
“I didn’t know we had people in this one,” Brogan
said.
Webster was still smiling.
“Lots of things lots of people don’t know,” he
said. “Safer that way, right?”
“So what is this Jackson guy saying?” Brogan
asked.
“Does he mention Holly?” Johnson asked.
“Does he mention what the hell this is all about?”
Milosevic asked.
Webster blew out his cheeks and waved his hand at
the stack of curling fax paper. McGrath was busy sifting through
it. He was separating the papers into two piles. One pile for
routine stuff, the other pile for important intelligence. The
routine pile was bigger. The important intelligence was
sketchy.
“Analysis, Mack?” Webster said.
McGrath shrugged.
“Up to a point, pretty much normal,” he said.
Johnson stared at him.
“Normal?” he said.
Webster nodded.
“This is normal,” he said. “We got these militia
groups all over the country, which is why we can’t cover them all.
Too damn many. Our last count was way over four hundred groups, all
fifty states. Most of them are just amateur wackos, but some of
them we consider pretty serious antigovernment terrorists.”
“This bunch?” Johnson asked.
McGrath looked at him.
“This bunch is totally serious,” he said. “One
hundred people, hidden out in the forest. Very well armed, very
well organized, very self-contained. Very well funded, too. Jackson
has reported mail fraud, phony bank drafts, a little low-grade
counterfeiting. Probably armed robbery as well. The feeling is they
stole twenty million bucks in bearer bonds, armored car heist up in
the north of California. And, of course, they’re selling videos and
books and manuals to the rest of the wackos, mail order. Big boom
industry right now. And naturally they decline to pay income tax or
license their vehicles or anything else that might cost them
anything.”
“Effectively, they control Yorke County,” Webster
said.
“How is that possible?” Johnson asked.
“Because nobody else does,” Webster said. “You ever
been up there? I haven’t. Jackson says the whole place is
abandoned. Everything pulled out, a long time ago. He says there’s
just a couple dozen citizens still around, spread out over miles of
empty territory, bankrupt ranchers, leftover miners, old folk. No
effective county government. Borken just eased his way in and took
it over.”
“He’s calling it an experiment,” McGrath said. “A
prototype for a brand-new nation.”
Johnson nodded, blankly.
“But what about Holly?” he said.
Webster stacked the paper and laid his hand on
it.
“He doesn’t mention her,” he said. “His last call
was Monday, the day she was grabbed up. They were building a
prison. We have to assume it was for her.”
“This guy calls in?” Brogan said. “By radio?”
Webster nodded.
“He’s got a transmitter concealed in the forest,”
he said. “He wanders off when he can, calls in. That’s why it’s all
so erratic. He’s been averaging one call a week. He’s pretty
inexperienced and he’s been told to be cautious. We assume he’s
under surveillance. Brave new world up there, that’s for damn
sure.”
“Can we call him?” Milosevic asked.
“You’re kidding,” Webster said. “We just sit and
wait.”
“Who does he report to?” Brogan asked.
“Resident Agent at Butte,” Webster said.
“So what do we do?” Johnson asked.
Webster shrugged. The room went quiet.
“Right now, nothing,” he said. “We need a
position.”
The room stayed quiet and Webster just looked hard
at Johnson. It was a look between one government man and another
and it said: you know how it is. Johnson stared back for a long
time, expressionless. Then his head moved through a fractional nod.
Just enough to say: for the moment, I know how it is.
Johnson’s aide coughed into the silence.
“We’ve got missiles north of Yorke,” he said.
“They’re moving south right now, on their way back here. Twenty
grunts, a hundred Stingers, five trucks. They’ll be heading
straight through Yorke, anytime now. Can we use them?”
Brogan shook his head.
“Against the law,” he said. “Military can’t
participate in law enforcement.”
Webster ignored him and glanced at Johnson and
waited. They were his men, and Holly was his daughter. The answer
was better coming straight from him. There was a silence, and then
Johnson shook his head.
“No,” he said. “We need time to plan.”
The aide spread his hands wide.
“We can plan,” he said. “We’ve got radio contact,
ground-to-ground. We should go for it, General.”
“Against the law,” Brogan said again.
Johnson made no reply. He was thinking hard.
McGrath riffled through the pile of papers and pulled the sheet
about the dynamite packing Holly’s prison walls. He held it
facedown on the shiny table. But Johnson shook his head
again.
“No,” he said again. “Twenty men against a hundred?
They’re not frontline troops. They’re not infantry. And their
Stingers won’t help us. I assume these terrorists don’t have an air
force, right? No, we wait. Bring the missile unit right back here,
fastest. No engagement.”
The aide shrugged and McGrath slipped the dynamite
report back into the pile. Webster looked around and slapped both
palms lightly on the tabletop.
“I’m going back to D.C.,” he said. “Got to get a
position.”
Johnson shrugged his shoulders. He knew nothing
could start without a trip back to D.C. to get a position. Webster
turned to McGrath.
“You three move up to Butte,” he said. “Get settled
in the office there. If this guy Jackson calls, put him on maximum
alert.”
“We can chopper you up there,” the aide said.
“And we need surveillance,” Webster said. “Can you
get the Air Force to put some camera planes over Yorke?”
Johnson nodded.
“They’ll be there,” he said. “Twenty-four hours a
day. We’ll give you a live video feed into Butte. A rat farts,
you’ll see it.”
“No intervention,” Webster said. “Not yet.”