Abuse of Power - Michael Savage [140]
“Christ,” he said. “The twin towers. The Golden Gate Bridge.”
* * *
They took off in a caravan, Jack riding shotgun with Forsyth, his two agents in back—the ones Jack had hurt, and who didn’t look like they forgave him. A police cruiser and a Secret Service car followed, their sirens screaming. Forsyth was on the radio shouting for support—fire department, bomb squad, SFPD, sky patrol—as he wound along Lincoln Boulevard, crossing the double yellow line to bypass cars, moving at speeds that sometimes threatened to send them off the road, down the steep cliff to the dark waters below. They raced through the old Presidio army base, past Pershing and Stillwell roads. Named for military commanders who knew how to defeat the enemy, not placate the media and foreign lobbyists.
“If you’re wrong, Hatfield, I’ve just kissed my career good-bye.”
“I’ve never been more sure of anything in my life,” Jack told him. “Isn’t this what we both signed on for? Uncovering truth and upholding liberty?”
Forsyth clearly wasn’t comfortable being in the same vehicle as Jack, let alone in the same philosophical arena. But he didn’t argue the point.
A trip that would normally take ten minutes was cut down to five, and soon they were looping under the roadway and then around onto the bridge itself, more police cruisers joining in behind them.
The Golden Gate Bridge is one of the longest suspension bridges in the world, boasting two five-hundred-foot-high suspension towers, the first of which—the south tower—now loomed in front of them, its orange-red majesty lit up against the night sky.
Behind them the cruisers began to slow, moving in a serpentine formation to keep more civilian cars from rolling onto the bridge. Then Forsyth cut his siren and brought the SUV to a halt, the other vehicles in the caravan pulling up next to them. They all jumped out, Forsyth pointing a pair of Bushnell Night Vision field glasses toward the top beam of the south tower, which spanned the width of the bridge. He squinted against the magnified brilliance of the lights on top of the bridge.
“Holy shit,” he said. “There are two people up there and one of them is a woman.”
“What?” Jack reached for the field glasses.
Forsyth handed them over. His heart slamming hard, Jack aimed them toward the top beam.
It was Sara.
He was torn with emotion. She was up there and she was alive, standing 746 feet above the bay, against the protective railing. Hassan Haddad was holding her by the bare upper arms. They were both standing spread-eagled against the wind gusts, their position precarious at best.
Jack knew that this was Swain’s last little “up yours,” and it had nothing to do with holding Sara hostage or waiting for Jack to arrive before hurling her to her death. In fact, Jack no longer had any doubts about the game plan. He was convinced that what he saw strapped to Sara’s back was the device Haddad had procured from Chilikov in Bulgaria.
It was a backpack nuke.
40
It was quite possibly the most beautiful sight Haddad had ever seen.
The only sound he could hear was the wind, and he felt as if he were only a step away from Janna—from Paradise—where he would soon have a home. Where he would feel no pain, suffer no sickness, experience no sadness. Where Allah would look after him and he would find true peace in his arms.
The peace he couldn’t find in this life.
Here he stood at the very top of the infidel world, on a narrow catwalk, pressed against the rail, looking down at the bowing suspension cables of the bridge, following their lines all the way down through the darkness to the road where the cars looked no bigger than beetles, moving silently between the white dotted lines.
He saw the ineffectual police cars with their flashing lights, but they were far too late to stop him now.
The wind was strong but he did not feel cold. Allah was insulating him from its sting. And in a few moments he would feel nothing but the embrace of death followed by his feet on the pathway to the Garden.
The woman was trembling, however.