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The Big Thaw - Donald Harstad [102]

By Root 1151 0
some cops for about a week or so, and had been preparing to “take measures to throw them off the trail” when the cops had broken into the house. He was certain they were cops, because they’d told him they were.

I thought that was pretty sad.

Cletus said that Gabriel had killed one, then tried to question the other. The second brother tried denying that they were cops, even though they’d originally said that they were. Since the young man was adamant about it, after a few minutes of questioning, he’d killed him, too. It had been “necessary.” His cover was being blown.

Of course there had been no information. Neither of the poor damned Colson brothers could possibly know shit about what Gabriel wanted. Talk about terror. Especially for the second one to go. I tried to make that very clear to Cletus, but he was so worried about himself I don’t think it took.

The computers were engaged in what was called “distributed computing,” a network of over 100 machines, each working on a small portion of a project. But he didn’t know of what kind. Where was Gabriel now? He didn’t know, but he was sure that he was around. The banks were scheduled to go down soon, and he knew that Gabriel wasn’t going to be put off this time around. The cause needed money.

We made Cletus disappear this way: We called for an ambulance to come to the Sheriff’s Department. When they arrived, we told them that we needed a special favor. Volont and I accompanied Cletus and his attorney in the ambulance to the hospital. Volont had called for a chopper. It arrived, and we made all the right fuss to have Cletus look as if he were on his way to a major trauma center. Put him onboard in a stretcher and everything. Four FBI agents were in the chopper. Volont insisted that Gunston accompany him. Insisted by way of placing him in protective custody. No kidding. I never thought they could really do that.

As Volont said, it kept both of them out of the way for a good seventy-two hours.

He told me that the Huey took them to Waterloo, where they would be held at a National Guard facility.

We spent the rest of the evening trying to figure out how to prevent the bank robberies.

I enjoyed eating dinner in Lamar’s office. Cheeseburgers delivered by Maitland PD and Judy. Being the only person in the room on a low-fat diet, to me they tasted fantastic. Somehow, I’d become convinced that, if I ate that stuff under these circumstances, it just didn’t count. You know. Like when the waiter delivers the wrong thing to your table, and you get stuck with lots of gravy … I think I burned off most of the fat calories with frustration, anyway. We had real problems.

Let me just say that the bank jobs fall into two possible categories. First, there are robberies, which by definition would have to occur while there were people in the bank. Second, burglaries, which would occur when the banks were not occupied. The second was the least dangerous for all concerned, but the first was a hell of a lot more likely to get you into the safe. It would very likely be open during business hours. Open meant daylight. Closed meant night.

My point, and the one that stuck the whole operation together from our end, was just what Volont had always preached. Gabriel wasn’t a “criminal” type, he was a soldier. There was a very big difference in approach.

I said as much.

“What?” asked Art, in rare humor. “Are we talking air strikes here, or what?” He was happier than hell to have the double murder solved. Knowing him, I figured he was only giving us half his attention, with the other half trying to figure out how he could claim credit for the entire case.

I think the most difficult thing to do as a cop is to predict what robbery or burglary target will be hit, how the suspect will do it, and when. I’ve worked on Task Forces where some of the best cops around were trying, and just couldn’t get it to add up.

I shared one with the group. I told about the time that eleven counties and the state were trying to bust a group that was breaking into implement dealers at night, stealing tools, chain saws,

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