THIRTEEN

Travis Clay, Willis Coffee, Willie Varner, and I sat in the work area behind the lock shop display room drinking beer and watching television. The front door was locked.

Barry Soetoro was on the tube breathing fire and damnation. Beside him stood General Martin L. Wynette, USA, looking every inch a soldier, with enough ribbons on his chest to decorate the Light Brigade. I had heard that Wynette had actually never heard a shot fired in anger, except for some outgoing artillery barrages fired several miles away, yet he looked fierce and determined, ready to chew nails. I thought it was his square jaw and steely eyes that created that impression, which had taken him far.

Apparently Willie the Wire was also impressed by the general, because he remarked, “He oughta be in movies. Central Casting must have sent him over to the White House.”

Soetoro was reading from a teleprompter, as usual. I wondered who wrote his stuff: “… are going to crush the rebellion in Texas. The traitors who survive will be tried for treason. I appeal again to the sane people in Texas to put a stop to the foolishness of the legislature and the governor. They are the ones who will suffer, who will pay for the stupidity of their state officials. The price will be high…”

He went on, telling about the Texas press release reporting the execution of Major Nasruli, the convicted Fort Hood jihadist. To hear Soetoro tell it, the execution was a personal insult to him. “True, Major Nasruli was awaiting execution, but the timing and manner of that execution, if I allowed it to go forward at all, was at my discretion. Many and diverse interests were at stake, including our relationship with many Muslim nations, and my judgment on this matter was rendered a nullity by a Texas National Guard officer who violated federal law…”

He talked some more about the heavy burdens of the presidency, then got back to the sins of Texas. “I have ordered General Wynette to prepare a military response to Texas’ blatantly illegal and violent act of secession. We will use the entire might of the federal government to stamp it out, to crush it. We owe the loyal citizens of the nation nothing less. One hundred fifty years ago Texas and other states tore this Union apart in a futile attempt to defend indefensible slavery. Now Texas is tearing this Union apart in order to defend an indefensible, reactionary vision of America that the rest of the country rejects. I can assure you that as president of the United States and commander in chief of the armed forces, I will do my duty as Abraham Lincoln did his, I will not let this stand. I will preserve the Union.”

Wynette nodded several times during this rant, almost as if he were whispering amens.

Soetoro took no questions from the gathered reporters, but stepped aside to give Wynette the podium. “You may have heard rumors,” Wynette said, “that the commanding generals of a few of the United States military installations in Texas surrendered today. Actually, the facilities were delivered to the enemy by treachery. We are investigating. I promise you that the Benedict Arnolds responsible will be court-martialed for treason. If they are found guilty and given the sentence that the law prescribes for that crime, they will be executed. You may have also heard that some of our soldiers and airmen have joined the enemy’s ranks to fight against United States forces. I cannot comment on the truth of that rumor, but I will state that any American soldier, sailor, airman, or Marine who does indeed join the enemy’s ranks will be charged with desertion. I remind any member of the American military listening to this broadcast to remember where their loyalty lies.

“We will soon begin military operations against the rebels in Texas. We cannot be responsible for the loss of innocent lives; that responsibility rests with those who have rebelled against the lawful government of the United States and taken up arms against it.”

Wynette ducked questions too. He followed Soetoro and Vice President Rhodes back into the bowels of the White House.

“Lots of treachery down in Texas,” I remarked.

The network went back to showing footage of the rioting in Baltimore.

“Those scenes were shot at the riot last year,” Travis said. “I’ve seen those shots a dozen times. The TV people get around the censor by showing old footage.”

I went over and snapped off the television. I would have used the remote but Willie had laid it somewhere, lost it I suppose.

“They’re going to start killing people,” Willis Coffee said bitterly. “He isn’t even going to negotiate.”

“I doubt if Texas would negotiate with him,” I remarked. “If you were them, would you negotiate with that megalomaniac?”

“No,” Willis admitted.

“I think those folks down in Texas are going to need a lot more killing than Barry Soetoro thinks they will,” Travis said softly. “It’s that Alamo thing. They get it with their mother’s milk. Texas, Texas, Texas, like it’s the promised land that God gave them.”

“Maybe he did,” Willie the Wire muttered. “For sho’, he didn’t give us anythin’ to brag about here in Washington. I wouldn’t risk a fingernail for the whole damn district.”

We were batting things around when someone knocked on the front door of the lock shop. Willie went to see who it was, and came back with Sarah Houston. She looked particularly delicious that evening in her going-to-work outfit, a nice, knee-length dress with a belt that emphasized her figure. She was shod in a set of black pumps and had her purse over her shoulder.

I introduced her to Willis and Travis. She looked us over and said, “All the usual suspects.”

“Want a beer?” Willie asked, ol’ Mr. Hospitality.

“No,” she said, and looked around for something to sit on. Willie took a box of junk off a chair and arranged it for her. She seated herself, arranged her legs in the required position for female television journalists, and tugged her dress down a millimeter. She placed her purse on the floor beside her. Royalty come to call on the peasants.

“So when are they going to move Jake Grafton?” I asked.

“I don’t know. I doubt that it will be any time soon. They are frying other fish. They have a long list of people to arrest and incarcerate. They are working on a list of people who have shot their mouths off on Facebook and other social media.”

“So there is no hurry,” Travis remarked.

“I wouldn’t say that,” she said. “The White House classified net is full of e-mails about this right-wing conspiracy, and Jake Grafton is near the head of the list. They’re manufacturing evidence, trying to decide the best way to spin it for the public. They’re going to try a dozen or so people to justify Soetoro’s decision to invoke martial law.”

“What about terrorism? All those jihadists Soetoro let in?”

“The FBI is having some difficulty finding a sufficient number. They have their hands on a lot of Soetoro’s domestic enemies, and Grafton, so…”

None of us had anything to say to that. If they got Grafton into a federal prison, not just a concentration camp, there was no way we could get him out without an army.

She let that soak into our beetle brains, and then said, “A snatch on the highway isn’t going to work. That was Tommy’s idea, I think.”

I nodded.

“You were also talking about a diversion, Tommy, and I decided the best one was probably to kill the power grid in the northeastern United States.”

Willis Coffee’s eyes bulged. Travis whistled. I wasn’t surprised, knowing as I did how Sarah’s mind worked. This was a woman who arranged for a gang of Russian ex-sailors to steal an American attack submarine a few years ago. When Sarah Houston set out to do something, she didn’t believe in half measures.

“Holy damn,” Willie the Wire said.

“So how in the world are we going to do that?” Willis Coffee demanded.

“We don’t have any explosives, and we can’t easily lay hands on any,” Travis Clay pointed out. “Even if we had a truckload, we can’t run around the countryside blowing up a hundred substations.”

“Maybe drop a hair dryer in the bathtub,” Willie the Wire suggested.

Sarah Houston went on as if she hadn’t heard them. “The power grid is stretched to the max in August in the Northeast. It operates at one hundred percent of capacity much of the time running air conditioners and the like. The power companies use computer programs to automatically feed power around problem spots to prevent taking down the net. Computers are cheaper than new power-generation plants. They have hardened that computer system somewhat over the last few years in response to the perceived terrorist threat, but it is still vulnerable. I can put some code into the programs that will make the system default into the problems, not away from them, and that will quickly overload the system and take it down. All over the Northeast. From Cleveland to Maine and down to Cincinnati and Richmond.”

We sat in silence digesting that. Finally Willis asked the obvious question. “How are we going to create problems?”

“We are going to have to knock out some key transformers and sub stations. I have compiled a short list of the most critical ones.”

He was a sucker. “So how are we going to do that?”

“With explosives,” Sarah said matter-of-factly. “Shouldn’t take a whole lot, but it will take some. As you may know, most of the federal agencies are stockpiling ammunition at warehouses in secret locations to use against the right-wing conspiracy, or if the locals get rowdy. Also in those warehouses are modest stocks of C-4 and enough tear gas to gas everyone east of the Mississippi. I made a list of the four closest warehouses. One of them is in Leesburg, a huge facility FEMA leased from Walmart.”

“So you want us to start by breaking into a warehouse?”

“If you want to give Barry Soetoro a crisis to worry about besides chasing you and Jake Grafton, you are going to have to make it something that really gets his attention.”

“Texas might be enough,” Travis Clay opined.

“You think?”

“Uh, no.”

Willis Coffee said, “Maybe killing the power grid is overkill. Modern cities can’t work without electricity. Windows won’t open, water pumps won’t work, commodes won’t flush, elevators won’t work, lights won’t work, medical equipment won’t work, refrigerators won’t work, microwaves won’t work. Depending on how long the power stays off, some people could starve or die of heat exhaustion or dehydration.”

That’s when I got into the conversation. “Barry Soetoro has torn up the Constitution. He’s going to try a dozen innocent men for a crime he’s invented. He’s declared war on America. Texas has taken up the gauntlet. Now we must decide if we are willing to fight for America and let the chips fall where they may, or whether we would rather just pull our heads down, tuck our tails between our legs, and let Soetoro and Martin Wynette kill anyone they want. They are going to whack Texas hard. They are going to whack Jake Grafton. And believe me, given half a chance they’ll whack us.”

They sat staring at each other.

“I was listening to the president on the radio while I drove down here,” Sarah Houston said. “I would rather crawl into a hole out of the line of fire, but the fact is we have reached the point in America when it is time to choose a side.”

“Jeez,” Travis said softly. “So we have to burgle a government warehouse, blow up some power substations, and then break into Camp Dawson and snatch Grafton from under the noses of God knows how many troops and feds. You and your little projects, Tommy.”

“Yep,” I said heartily. “Gotta choose sides and smell armpits, guys. What say we all go to dinner and think this over before the power goes out. I’m buying.”

Willie Varner nearly broke his leg hopping off his stool.

We went to a white-tablecloth restaurant, even though the only one of our group dressed for it was Sarah. She led the way inside and favored the maître d’ with a smile, so we were seated in a corner.

“Sorta like the last supper,” Willie opined, then asked the waiter, “What’s the most expensive Scotch you have on your shelf?”

It was something I’d never heard of.

“I’ll take a double of that, neat,” my lock shop partner told the waiter, and smiled at me. Sarah ordered a bottle of eighty-four-dollar wine, and my two covert warriors ordered draft beers. I ordered a bourbon on the rocks.

All of us had the sense not to even whisper about our planned operation to spring Grafton, or any of the other mayhem we had planned. We talked about riots and politics and whether Texas could win.

After they had sipped their drinks and studied the menu, Willie ordered the most expensive steak, and Willis Coffee and Travis Clay did the same. I shrugged and ordered one too. Sarah took her time and ordered a piece of bare salmon with some lemon wedges and a small salad.

The bill was going to be a whopper, but I wasn’t worried. I planned to use my CIA credit card to pay for it. I figured it would be a week or so until the clerks at Langley got around to turning the card off, and anyway, they could just deduct the amount from my severance pay, which I doubted I would ever get.

I was so tense the liquor hit my stomach hard. I began to feel the glow down there instantly. I sat back in my chair, smiled vacuously, and tried to relax. Some of us were almost certainly going to be dead soon. I wondered if one of them would be me.

When Willie Varner’s steak came, it was still bloody. Travis pointed to it and said, “A good vet could have saved that cow.”

“Thank God he didn’t,” Willie said, and stuffed a piece in his mouth.

* * *

The copilot woke JR somewhere over west Texas. “General, ATC is off the air. No one on any of their freqs or on El Paso Approach.”

“Can you get into the civilian field?”

“We’re in solid goo. If the ILS is on the air, no problem. If we have to shoot a GPS approach, we may have to go below minimums, we think.”

“Get me on the ground. However you have to do it.”

“Yes, sir.” The copilot went back to the cockpit.

After another twenty minutes, the plane was maneuvering, answering the controls and responding to throttle input. They came out of the clouds perhaps three hundred feet above the ground, JR estimated.

“Good job,” he told the pilots as he was getting out of the plane.

They saluted.

The ramp of the El Paso Fixed Base Operator’s executive terminal was packed with planes, most of them jets or turboprops, yet the terminal was almost empty. The place reeked of luxury, with leather-covered sofas, ornate glass coffee tables, big flat-screen televisions, and subdued lighting — perfect for important business executives or people who wanted to think they were important. JR approached the woman standing at the desk, the only human in sight, a cute twenty-something brunette wearing stiletto heels and a little black dress that ended well above her knees.

“What’s happening?”

“The airspace is closed to civilian traffic, General. These planes are stranded.”

“I need a car.”

“All our courtesy and rental cars are gone, sir. The passengers and crews of the planes outside took every one.”

“Do you have a mechanic’s van?”

“Yes, but—”

“I’ll take it. Send for whoever has the keys.”

“General—”

“Now.”

He wanted to see his old civilian contractor boss Pete Taylor and then look up the local National Guard commander, Wiley Fehrenbach, who was probably at the National Guard armory.

On his drive to Taylor’s house, a helicopter flew past. It was an Apache scooting along at perhaps two hundred feet.

He knocked on the door of the house, which was a modest rancher in a modest neighborhood, and Zoe Taylor answered it.

“Oh, JR. Come in.”

“No time. Is Pete here?”

“No. The army came for him this afternoon. Arrested him.”

“What for?”

“They had a list.”

“I see.” Lee Parker was following the Jade Helm plan, no doubt on orders from Washington. “Thank you, Zoe.”

“Can you talk to them, JR, get him out? People have been talking for over a year about these Jade Helm things, saying it looks as if Soetoro was planning martial law.” Tears leaked down her face. “I can’t believe this is really happening. It’s like a nightmare. Is this still the United States of America?”

“I understand,” JR said, and against his better judgment, he added, “I’ll do what I can, Zoe.”

Tears burst forth and she closed the door.

JR got back in the van and headed for the armory.

* * *

The armory was a hive of activity. Bulldozers, generators, trucks, and construction equipment were swarmed by soldiers painting the Texas flag on every flat surface they could find. Plainly, these Texans were willing to fight, but they didn’t have a lot of stuff to fight with: this was an engineering battalion. JR parked his mechanic’s van in a handicapped spot and went inside.

Wiley Fehrenbach was delighted to see him. He wrung JR’s hand and touched the stars on his camos. The pistol belt didn’t escape his notice. He was wearing one too.

“I’m in command of the Texas Guard now, Wiley.”

“Thank God.”

“I need to know what’s happening in town and at the base. Everything you know.”

“When the news came out about the declaration, the town went wild. They’ve had it with the federal government. Martial law really ticked them off, then the gun thing. This morning civilian patrols started rounding up illegals and pushing them to the border crossings. The ICE people there tried to stop them, but they were surrounded and disarmed and told to disappear. Civilians shut down the border crossings. Only Mexican nationals can cross going south. All the trucks waiting to cross are lined up — someone said the line is two miles long already.”

“Okay.”

“Our people came here as fast as they could this morning. I issued weapons, and it’s a good thing I did. Some colonel and ten army troopers with weapons showed up at ten this morning and wanted to secure all the weapons and send everyone home. I refused, and since they were outnumbered twenty to one, they climbed into their car and left. They’ll be back, and it’s going to be bloody. My troops won’t surrender. Right now, though, I think the army is out arresting civilians. They want all those Republic of Texas people who have been shouting for independence for years. They’ve arrested all of them they could find, plus newspaper people, the television and radio people, the sheriff, anyone who is anybody. It’s all rumors, but everyone heard something and they’re buzzing. Looks like they’ve opened the Jade Helm playbook and are going down the checklist.”

“Where are they taking the prisoners?”

“They have some railroad cars equipped with shackles on base. The army got them ready during the last Jade Helm exercise.” JR already knew about the railcars with shackles, which had been hot news and stoked the rumors about martial law being planned. “No one knows for certain,” Wiley Fehrenbach said, “but probably there.”

“Are you sure your troops will fight?”

“’I talked to them this morning. Told anyone that couldn’t in good conscience fight for Texas to turn in his weapons and leave. Less than ten percent did. We’re Texans and that’s that.”

“What’s the situation out at Fort Bliss?”

“It’s on lockdown. Only U.S. Army soldiers admitted. I’ve had people out watching the gates, and as near as we can figure, a lot of the soldiers living in town haven’t gone in. Maybe a hundred went in since we started watching, all told. You know there are maybe ten thousand soldiers living in town, so that’s good.”

“Yes,” JR agreed.

“Parker ordered the television and radio stations shut down this morning, and all the phones and the internet are off. Electricity and water are still on, but who knows for how long.”

“You need to get some troopers out to the water plant as soon as possible.”

“Already sent a squad.”

“Good man.”

“It looks as if Parker has troopers patrolling the fences around the main part of the base, but you know how big Bliss is. I doubt anyone is out on the fence in the boonies. I don’t know what Parker has planned, but no one has been back to get our weapons, so maybe he has some loyalty troubles. A lot of soldiers may have refused to fire on fellow Americans.”

JR Hays rubbed his head and tried to concentrate upon the problem. As he looked out the window, he realized the day was almost gone. It was twilight outside, under a gloomy sky. He heard another helicopter shoot overhead. With night-vision goggles, they could see everything that moved on the streets below.

Wiley Fehrenbach read his thoughts. “Supposed to get some thunderstorms in here soon. How soon, I don’t know. Maybe that will ground the choppers. I didn’t think it wise to deploy my people until they were grounded or had left.”

“I have four helos coming in from Fort Hood. They’re supposed to land at the civilian airfield. Send some armed troops to meet them. Do you have some handheld radios? Our pilots will need them.” The truth was, he thought wryly, he should have thought of that before they left Fort Hood. Maybe he was too tired, or maybe he wasn’t thinking clearly.

“Sure.” They discussed frequencies and JR made notes. A female sergeant appeared, and he handed her a note that contained a freq, told her about the helos, and sent her off with five enlisted soldiers carrying M4s and four radios with fully charged batteries.

After they left, JR said, “Wiley, our long-term objective is to take that base. We need all the military equipment they have and all the people who will fight for Texas.” He tried to visualize General Lee Parker’s situation. A lot of his soldiers had stayed home. The base, with base housing running right up to the perimeter fence, was basically indefensible. If Parker had any sense, he would arrange his tanks and loyal troopers into a strong defensive position where the tanks could cover each other and his artillery could provide support. Parker’s helicopters were already patrolling, searching for threats.

Parker must be very worried, JR thought, wondering if his troops would fight. No doubt he was sending messages as quickly as he could dictate them to Washington, requesting instructions. These messages would go out over the army communications net, which was radio. JR doubted that Parker would do anything without orders from Washington. Then he would move slowly, carefully.

He and Wiley Fehrenbach discussed the situation as night fell. JR didn’t want a battle, but he suspected he was going to get one before long. Eight hundred or so National Guardsmen in this armory were the only organized military unit in the area, so Washington would eventually tell Parker to take the armory. Parker outnumbered the guardsmen at least ten to one and had enough armor and artillery to invade Mexico and take Mexico City.

“Will U.S. soldiers fight Texans?” JR whispered to the gods, who didn’t answer back.

“Food?” Wiley asked.

JR hadn’t eaten since breakfast, which seemed like years ago. “Hell, yes.”

He was soon handed a paper plate with three hot dogs in buns smothered in chili, along with a plastic knife and spoon and a bottle of water. JR found he was ravenous.

He had just started on the first hot dog when the radio on the desk came to life. It was “Milestone One Six,” the senior army aviator, who was flying a Blackhawk — CWO-4 Erik Sabiston, Sabby to his friends.

“JR, we’re fueling at the FBO at El Paso International. Weather is turning to crap. We flew at a hundred feet to get in here.”

JR answered, “Fort Bliss has Apaches on patrol. Be careful, but I want you to do a recon over the base. I need to know what they’re up to. Can you do that?”

“Yes, sir. As soon as we finish fueling. Maybe fifteen minutes.”

“I’d like to know if there are any units from Bliss out on the street. Your primary mission, though, is to shoot up everything on the flight line at Fort Bliss. Here are the coordinates. Ready to copy?”

“Go.”

JR read them off, and Sabiston read them back. “We know the base,” he said. “Trained there many times.”

JR ended with an admonition. “Shoot and get out, Sabby. Hit them as hard as you can but don’t be a hero. We need to deny them the sky.”

“Yes, sir.”

JR attacked the food on his plate and said to Wiley Fehrenbach, “They’re going to come looking for you people sooner or later. You are going to have to abandon the armory. What do you have in the way of munitions?”

“Dynamite, of course. Locked in vaults out back. And a couple hundred AT4s. Maybe a dozen .30-caliber machine guns. Ammo and grenades.”

JR felt a bit better. AT4s were handheld, single-shot anti-tank weapons. They came with the rocket pre-installed and could not be reloaded, so they were discarded after use. They weighed about five and a half pounds each and fired a rocket with a 1.6 pound HEAT warhead, HEAT standing for high explosive anti-tank. The rocket was marginal against an Abrams, which had the finest tank armor in the world, unless the rocket took a tread off or was fired into the rear, where the armor was thinnest. It was better against Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicles and whatever other version of the armored personnel carrier 1st Armor had. It was hell on unarmored vehicles, such as trucks, or buildings.

JR said, “Get the explosives out of here. Ammo, weapons, radios, whatever you need, let’s get it gone as soon as possible.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Get some people with AT4s out to El Paso International. Sooner or later Parker will send a tank column to occupy it. Tonight it is our airport. Let’s get cracking.”

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