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Story: End of Days
“Because I can’t guarantee initiation. It’s just a link I thought you should be aware of.”
Garrett thought a moment, then said, “That won’t work. We’ve had several single points of failure on this mission, one that Raph and Leo ran into. One that caught Donatello. I need you to execute.”
“You’re saying you want me to blow myself up?”
“No. I’m saying you need to ensure the explosives go off. I don’t care how you do it, but when you leave the charges, they need to be counting down. I don’t care if it’s a Wile E. Coyote thing, with a burning fuse taped to a black ball, we can’t afford another point of failure.”
He heard nothing but breathing. He said, “You can do that, right?”
“Yes, sir. I can do that. I’m on the way right now. You’re coming back to Tel Aviv?”
Garrett saw the end of the highway, the Rosh Hanikra Grotto lookout ahead of him. He said, “Yes. I’m about forty minutes out. I’ll call when I arrive.”
He parked the SUV in the lot, looked at the ticket counter for the cable cars going down, and thought about his options. Which was to say, he had very few. After the attempted vehicle interdiction, he was sure he was on every intelligence radar on the planet, not the least with one of the most effective on earth—the Mossad—and if he used his credit card to buy a ticket on the cable car, it would register. He might get his reconnaissance, but the police would coalesce on this location.
And he couldn’t execute his plan without a reconnaissance. He wasn’t sure it would even work, and if it was a dead end, he’d need to be able to escape.
He leaned his head back, closed his eyes, and prayed to the God who wanted this to occur, searching for an answer as to what he shoulddo. He saw the dead women he’d killed, taunting him, and he snapped his eyes open. Was God talking to him?
And God spoke.
A child pounded on his door, her mother behind her. He rolled down the window and said, “Yes?”
She heard his accent and said, “You’re an American?”
“Yes. Yes, I am.”
Clearly rehearsed for this eventuality, having seen many American tourists, she said, “I’m like the Girl Scouts here in Israel, and I’m selling cookies. If you buy six boxes, you get a free ticket for the cable car to the Grotto.”
He smiled and said, “I’ll take twelve boxes, and only one ticket.”
I continued up Highway Four, saying, “What are we doing now? We’re chasing a ghost. He could be anywhere in this country.”
Getting antsy in the passenger seat, Shoshana said, “I should have done this with Aaron. He’d find the man.”
Which sort of hurt. I said, “We talked about this before we left. With a split team, we needed an Israeli on each one. It’s why you’re with me and Jennifer is with Aaron. And if you want to push it, I wish Jennifer was with me right now.”
She glared at me and I said, “Hey, I didn’t start this. You did.”
She said, “He’s trying to cross the border. He’s going to Lebanon, where his men would have been if we hadn’t killed them.”
I said, “If he was trying to get out of the country, he’d have traveled to Jordan, or Eilat for crossing into Egypt. Going to Lebanon makes no sense.”
She said, “Lebanon has diplomatic relations with the Knights of Malta. He’s going to use that.”
I said, “So do Egypt and Jordan. For that matter, Israel doesn’t,but there’s a Knights consulate in the West Bank that gives them the same rights as any other diplomat. He could be going to any of them.”
Miffed at my logic, she said, “He’s going to Lebanon. The grid we received was outside of Acre, on the road to the north. If he was going to Jordan, he’d have headed east, and he could have done that when he left Megiddo. Same for the West Bank. Megiddo is right next to it, but it has too many security checkpoints, and if he was trying to cross into Egypt, he’d have gone south, not north.”
I couldn’t really argue with that logic. I said, “So we’ll just chase him down on this road? It ends at the border?”
“Yes, but we need to get Aaron moving. We won’t have time to stop what he has planned.”
“I agree, but where?”
“Jerusalem. They’re going to target Jerusalem.”
Continuing down the road at a high rate of speed, I said, “You know something I don’t?”
Garrett thought a moment, then said, “That won’t work. We’ve had several single points of failure on this mission, one that Raph and Leo ran into. One that caught Donatello. I need you to execute.”
“You’re saying you want me to blow myself up?”
“No. I’m saying you need to ensure the explosives go off. I don’t care how you do it, but when you leave the charges, they need to be counting down. I don’t care if it’s a Wile E. Coyote thing, with a burning fuse taped to a black ball, we can’t afford another point of failure.”
He heard nothing but breathing. He said, “You can do that, right?”
“Yes, sir. I can do that. I’m on the way right now. You’re coming back to Tel Aviv?”
Garrett saw the end of the highway, the Rosh Hanikra Grotto lookout ahead of him. He said, “Yes. I’m about forty minutes out. I’ll call when I arrive.”
He parked the SUV in the lot, looked at the ticket counter for the cable cars going down, and thought about his options. Which was to say, he had very few. After the attempted vehicle interdiction, he was sure he was on every intelligence radar on the planet, not the least with one of the most effective on earth—the Mossad—and if he used his credit card to buy a ticket on the cable car, it would register. He might get his reconnaissance, but the police would coalesce on this location.
And he couldn’t execute his plan without a reconnaissance. He wasn’t sure it would even work, and if it was a dead end, he’d need to be able to escape.
He leaned his head back, closed his eyes, and prayed to the God who wanted this to occur, searching for an answer as to what he shoulddo. He saw the dead women he’d killed, taunting him, and he snapped his eyes open. Was God talking to him?
And God spoke.
A child pounded on his door, her mother behind her. He rolled down the window and said, “Yes?”
She heard his accent and said, “You’re an American?”
“Yes. Yes, I am.”
Clearly rehearsed for this eventuality, having seen many American tourists, she said, “I’m like the Girl Scouts here in Israel, and I’m selling cookies. If you buy six boxes, you get a free ticket for the cable car to the Grotto.”
He smiled and said, “I’ll take twelve boxes, and only one ticket.”
I continued up Highway Four, saying, “What are we doing now? We’re chasing a ghost. He could be anywhere in this country.”
Getting antsy in the passenger seat, Shoshana said, “I should have done this with Aaron. He’d find the man.”
Which sort of hurt. I said, “We talked about this before we left. With a split team, we needed an Israeli on each one. It’s why you’re with me and Jennifer is with Aaron. And if you want to push it, I wish Jennifer was with me right now.”
She glared at me and I said, “Hey, I didn’t start this. You did.”
She said, “He’s trying to cross the border. He’s going to Lebanon, where his men would have been if we hadn’t killed them.”
I said, “If he was trying to get out of the country, he’d have traveled to Jordan, or Eilat for crossing into Egypt. Going to Lebanon makes no sense.”
She said, “Lebanon has diplomatic relations with the Knights of Malta. He’s going to use that.”
I said, “So do Egypt and Jordan. For that matter, Israel doesn’t,but there’s a Knights consulate in the West Bank that gives them the same rights as any other diplomat. He could be going to any of them.”
Miffed at my logic, she said, “He’s going to Lebanon. The grid we received was outside of Acre, on the road to the north. If he was going to Jordan, he’d have headed east, and he could have done that when he left Megiddo. Same for the West Bank. Megiddo is right next to it, but it has too many security checkpoints, and if he was trying to cross into Egypt, he’d have gone south, not north.”
I couldn’t really argue with that logic. I said, “So we’ll just chase him down on this road? It ends at the border?”
“Yes, but we need to get Aaron moving. We won’t have time to stop what he has planned.”
“I agree, but where?”
“Jerusalem. They’re going to target Jerusalem.”
Continuing down the road at a high rate of speed, I said, “You know something I don’t?”
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