Part IV
Chapter 35
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After consultations with the colonel and, presumably, whoever he was speaking to in Washington, D.C., the team's first target was agreed upon...and the "green light" given to 'set up' the target. Actually taking out the target would be authorized only after the target was acquired.
The first target, William Crawford, was a recently - and a medically - retired patrolman from Oakland, and he had been identified as the man who tried to take out Callahan in the firefight near Hayward Executive Airport. His right hand had been shattered during that exchange of fire, and the injury had taken care of his active duty career; in the immediate aftermath, he had assumed a leadership role in the local vigilante group, coordinating the group's recent efforts to attack by helicopter assault. As members of the group had no military experience the effort had rapidly fallen apart. Furthermore, the three-man team that had penetrated the house and very nearly killed Delgetti had been identified as on-duty officers from two East Bay agencies, and these three were a part of Crawford's group, or cell.
Crawford's house was located on a hillside near Hayward Executive, and the downed DC-3 had impacted houses not far from Crawford's. When the FBI determined that Crawford had given the Go signal to take out the aircraft, the federal government had signed off on the operation. Still, the overall plan of action was to take out all members of the four known East Bay cells, and this totaled 23 men, not including Crawford.
"How do we do this without calling attention to our involvement?" Callahan had wanted to know, and even over the encrypted circuit, he could tell that Goodman didn't care if the team's involvement was discovered or not. He and Bullitt had looked knowingly at each other when they heard that inflection point, and Callahan assumed Goodman's intent was deliberate.
"We're either expendable or the feds will disavow our actions," Frank said after the call concluded, "put it down to rival factions fighting it out for supremacy."
"I can't believe Goodman would hang us out to dry."
"Well, Harry, I suggest you do."
Callahan shook his head. "Think this through, Frank. If you think that's a real possibility, then these kinds of actions simply aren't right. Got that; simple as that. And if they ain't right, why the hell do we want to be involved?"
Bullitt shook his head.
"Let me remind you, Frank; you said the gloves are coming off. I may be guessing here, but I kind of think this is exactly what you had in mind."
"I just can't help feeling that we're being played. And...if we hit one of their guys they'll turn right around and kill one of ours..."
"Frank...they damn near killed ten people up at the safe house..."
"Okay, so we take out an equal number. We send 'em a message."
"Ya know...that feels more and more like the Old West, like frontier justice. What did you say they call this sort of stuff?"
"Extrajudicial executions."
"Yeah. Still, any action like this would be state-sanctioned, right?"
"Yeah," Bullitt said. "At least I think so."
"Well then, all we really need to do is record these communications with the colonel."
Frank sighed, then crossed his arms over his chest: "I already have."
Callahan did a double-take: "You what? You have all of the material where executions have been mentioned, or ordered?"
Bullitt nodded his head. "Actually, one of the Israeli kids helped me set it up."
Callahan brightened. "So, Goodman has to know, right?"
"I would assume so, yeah. Still, I made copies of them, and have the copies in three different locations."
Harry shook his head, wrung his hands. "These guys took out a U.S. senator, Frank. I doubt the feds will disavow us."
Bullitt shrugged. "Sometimes it kind of feels like we've been put out here for a reason. That this assignment has fallen to us, to you and me, like we're supposed to do it. Even if we're sacrificed, I guess to me it feels kind of like we're being sacrificed for some kind of greater good."
"I'm not going to be sacrificed, Frank. Not for anyone. We take out these characters and then we either retire - or fuckin' get back to work."
"I hope they let us, Harry."
"Well, I don't know who 'they' are, but I'll tell you what - I'm not going to sit around worrying about it."
Frank looked at his hands for a moment, then shook his head. "You know, I've had to put people down before, but not like this. This feels premeditated to me, Harry. And it doesn't feel right."
"Don't think that it's not, Frank. It is premeditated murder, just like when Stacy planned to get herself into the clinic in Davos, and then murdered my wife. And you know what, for some reason I don't think she's lost any sleep over that."
Bullitt nodded his head. "So. You and me. We track this Crawford guy down. We set him up. We call it in, and then we take the shot."
"Yeah?"
"Which one of us, Harry? Who takes the shot?"
"I don't know. Wanna flip for it?"
Bullitt shook his head. "I don't want this on you, man. You're carrying around enough shit already...you don't need this."
Callahan shook his head as he reached into a pocket, pulling out a quarter. "I appreciate that, Amigo, but no way. You call it..." he said, flipping the coin...
"Heads," Bullitt said - pensively.
Callahan caught the coin and took a look. "How appropriate," Harry sighed as he slipped the coin back into his pocket. "Let's go."
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Crawford had gone underground after the botched Safe House aerial ambush, but Captain Briggs had called in sick three days in a row - and on the third day either the Israelis or some spook at the NSA managed to pull a trace. Briggs was holed up at a casino-hotel just outside South Lake Tahoe - which made tracing outgoing calls difficult...but not impossible. It would just take more time, the heard over and over again.
So, after several days and with no new leads on Crawford, Bullitt made the call: "Let's get back to work."
"What?" Carl Stanton said. "Dell isn't even out of the hospital yet, Frank!"
"Yeah, well, we've got work to do. And we have evasion plans. And I don't want anyone to think they've scared us off..."
But Callahan was already back on the job, finding out all he could about security arrangement for Threlkis' daughter's wedding and reception, still planned for next weekend at the Mark Hopkins. And he'd picked up all the paperwork Records could dig up on Jennifer Spencer, too.
She was a nut job alright, Callahan thought after he read through the application for a White Warrant. Raped, obsessed with the idea of vengeance, the girl seemed to be a serial killer in the making, and he'd walked by her apartment a couple of times the past couple of days, hoping to catch a glimpse of her. Kind of funny, too, because she lived about three blocks from his place.
Still, he really was more focused on the Threlkis reception, and Bullitt's plan made perfect sense. Punch all the old farts buttons, provoke a hasty reaction and see what kind of response he generate from Escobar.
Clever, but dangerous.
And he didn't bother driving too much now, so he kept to cable cars and buses, occasionally a taxi, as he did his legwork.
He visited the cop who had sworn out the White Warrant, talked to him, got his impressions...
"She's a fucking time bomb, Inspector. And when she goes off, man...it's gonna be a big body count."
"What else did you find out about her?"
"She's got a sister somewhere, but I couldn't locate her. And she had a membership at one of those gun clubs...you know...where you can take classes for a concealed permit, practice at their range, that kind of stuff."
"Really? Know where that's located?"
"Not offhand, but I bet I have it in my notes..."
"Think you could take a look around, let me know what you find out?"
"Sure, you bet..."
"How long have you been out of academy?"
"Me? Oh, almost five years."
"What are your plans?"
"Plans? Oh, I don't know. I kind of wanted to try for detective, but who doesn't...ya know?"
Callahan nodded. "So, I got your last name - Collins, right? What's your first name?"
"Steven. What do you need that for, Inspector?"
"Would you like to come down some weekend and ride with one of us, see if you like it?"
"No kidding? Sure...I mean...Hell-yes!"
Still nodding, Callahan continued: "Do you think Spencer would recognize you?"
"Yessir," Collins said. "We got into it real good, a real knock-down-drag-out kind of thing. Took three of us to get her under control, too. She bites and has vicious fingernails," he said, rolling up his sleeve and showing off several lacerations on his left arm that had required stitches to close. "The only thing that kept her from doing hard time was the mental evaluation. Reactive schizophrenia, the shrink called it."
"So, you think she's dangerous?"
"She's a chameleon, Inspector. She blends in. My guess is she kind of lives in hiding, and she probably moves around a lot."
"Paranoid?"
"Big time."
"But...is she dangerous?"
"She had a little Beretta in her purse, Inspector. But she had a permit, ya know?"
"For concealed carry? Wonder how she got that...?"
Collins shrugged. "The system is pretty fucked up, sir."
Callahan nodded. "Yup, sure is. Well, I'll be in touch."
When he made it back to his apartment that night he pulled out Spencer's paperwork and looked at her mug shot again: the black and white polaroid was still attached to the arrest report and he studied it for a long time, wanting to commit ket features to memory. Her skin was pale, the word ghostly came to mind, and her eyes must have been light blue, or maybe light gray, yet the arrest report only showed 'blue.' She was about five-six, one hundred pounds, and had no tattoos or surgical scars. Beyond that, there was little about her appearance that suggested 'dangerous mental patient'...but there rarely was until you could put the person in better context.