24 Declassified: Operation Hell Gate 2d-1 Read online




  24 Declassified: Operation Hell Gate

  ( 24 Declassified - 1 )

  Marc A. Cerasini

  Within twenty-four hours a nightmare will be unleashed that could cause the death of untold millions and devastate a great nation. It's a plot being carried out by the unlikeliest of allies. A powerful mole within the deepest reaches of U.S. Intelligence has secretly conscripted the very criminals he's been charged with investigating — former IRA terrorists, Latino and Asian gang members, Middle Eastern assassins and others — creating one of the most insidious terrorist networks law enforcement has yet to take down.

  One man stands between the destroyers and the death tide: Jack Bauer, lone wolf operative for America's brand-new elite Counter Terrorist Unit. But he's three thousand miles from the CTU command center without backup in a strange city, New York. He's been artfully set up and is being hunted by the FBI for the murder of two of its agents. And time's almost up…

  Marc A. Cerasini

  24 Declassified: Operation Hell Gate

  This novel is dedicated to the men and women on the front lines, at home and abroad, who fight the war against terror every day.

  People who spent their lives in bureaucracies were typically afraid of breaking rules. That was a sure way to get fired, and it cowed people to think of tossing their careers away. But…James Greer had given him all the guidance he needed: Do what you think is right.

  — Tom Clancy. Clear and Present Danger

  Let us therefore animate and encourage each other, and show the whole world that a Freeman, contending for liberty on his own ground, is superior to any slavish mercenary on earth.

  — George Washington. General Orders, Headquarters, New York, July 2, 1776

  Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result.

  — Sir Winston Churchill. The Malakand Field Force

  After the 1993 World Trade Center attack, a division of the Central Intelligence Agency established a domestic unit tasked with protecting America from the threat of terrorism. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the Counter Terrorist Unit established field offices in several American cities. From it inception, CTU faced hostility and skepticism from other Federal law enforcement agencies. Despite bureaucratic resistance, within a few years CTU had become a major force. After the war against terror began, a number of early CTU missions were declassified. The following is one of them…

  PROLOGUE

  A necessary evil.

  That’s the way Jack Bauer rationalized the debriefing. The mission was over, the field work ended, the split-second, life-and-death decisions made. Now the bureaucratic mind needed its cushion of explanations, its round of second-guessing. The fact that it was Richard Walsh conducting the after-action interview made it significantly more bearable.

  Where the typical middle manager was mired in keystrokes, speakerphones, and PDF attachments, hobbled by continual rounds of mind-numbing review meetings, Walsh was ex — Army Special Forces and a former field agent who’d bellied up to a desk but never lost his edge. Governed not by cover-your-ass double-talk but conviction and ethics, he was the sort of rare good man who made Jack feel his efforts were worthy.

  “Take a seat, Special Agent Bauer.”

  Walsh had flown in this morning from D.C. He sat behind the conference table next to a portable tape recorder and two microphones. The square block of monitors in the center of the table were black, which meant that all surveillance and recording equipment in this room had been deactivated. What Jack was about to say was sensitive enough to be deemed highly classified. Walsh and his superiors wanted sole control of any recordings — and, ideally, any interpretations of said recordings.

  Jack entered the briefing room and closed the door. Immediately the outer office sounds of computers, phones, voices, fax machines, and footsteps were muted by the soundproof grates on the walls and ceiling. Jack sat at the opposite side of the table from Walsh, but he didn’t lean back. He didn’t relax.

  Walsh slid one of the mikes across to him, then opened a blue plastic folder and rested his arms on the table. Tall and powerfully built, he wore a gray suit that seemed snug at the shoulders, the red striped silk tie knotted too tightly under a prominent Adam’s apple. Walsh’s manner was remote, calm and professional, his walrus mustache a throwback to ghosts of law enforcers past.

  For a long moment, Walsh silently scanned the files with sharp blue eyes that, in Jack’s experience, missed nothing. Though he was in his late forties, the man’s face appeared older. Creased by age and anxiety, it remained characteristically expressionless under sandy-brown hair sprinkled with gray. Superficially, Walsh had the innocuous look and manner of a government bureaucrat, college professor, or youth counselor more than an operative in America’s newest antiterrorist organization. But the reality was Richard Walsh had been all of those things — and the closest thing to a mentor Jack had ever known.

  Walsh had been the one to bring Jack into intelligence work in the first place: first through a thirdparty invitation to join the Army’s elite Delta Force, later as a recruit in this newly created and still controversial Counter Terrorist Unit. Jack had long suspected CTU owed its existence to Richard Walsh’s vision, though the origins of the organization, a domestic unit within a division of the Central Intelligence Agency, were highly classified.

  There were those at CTU who thought Jack Bauer even physically resembled Walsh — minus the arched eyebrows, bushy mustache, and thirteen extra years of hard-earned experience. The similarities were there. Both had the same sandy-blond hair and unsettling gazes. On the other hand, Richard Walsh lacked Jack Bauer’s outlaw tattoos — a few gained in undercover work; most part of Jack’s personal roadmap. And Bauer lacked Walsh’s practical patience and easy diplomacy.

  Though not conspicuously charismatic, Walsh exerted a stalwart moral authority that manifested powerful sway in D.C., where his opinions and expertise were respected on both sides of the political aisle. Walsh was no political animal, but he’d spent enough time inside academia and the Beltway to develop dexterity in greasing the bureaucratic wheels when necessary.

  Jack, by contrast, had never read a business book in his life or lay awake at night contemplating personal techniques for managing up. Yet he’d developed a solid reputation as an effective, galvanizing leader who employed the kind of under-fire problem solving that defined a Special Forces officer. Some of Walsh’s higher-ups at Division, however, worried that he was a loose cannon — and this latest mission hadn’t dissuaded them from that notion.

  “Let’s go,” said Walsh without preamble. He activated the tape recorder. “Special Agent Richard Walsh, Administrative Director, CTU, Los Angeles, debriefing Jack Bauer, Special Agent in Charge of CTU, Los Angeles.”

  Jack leaned forward, spoke clearly into the microphone. “On June 3, CTU’s Los Angeles office received an anonymous tip through a phone call to our public phone line. The caller, a male, warned us of what he believed was an imminent plot to shoot down a cargo plane as it approached Los Angeles International Airport.

  “This phone call, a recording and transcript of which is attached to File 1189 in Kernel 19A of CTU’s intelligence database, was both detailed and specific, citing the time, date, and location of the attack. I immediately issued an alert—”

  “Almeida stated there was a thirty-minute lag between the call and the alert in his debriefing.”

  “Ryan Chappelle ordered Jamey Farrell to put a recording of the call through a voice stress analyzer in an attempt to determine the veracity of the caller.”

  “The result of the analysis?”

  “Inconclusive at the time. I dete
rmined on my own authority that the threat was credible enough and I took appropriate action. A Counter Terrorist Unit Special Assault Team was dispatched to LAX under my command. It appeared we arrived just in time to prevent a potential disaster. ”

  The white airport maintenance van swerved off the pavement, onto the scrub grass that lined the black asphalt. The service road ran parallel to the busy East Imperial Highway, less than half a mile away. Dust billowed behind their vehicle and hung in the arid, Southern California air.

  In the passenger seat, Jack Bauer tensed. The brown cloud was large enough to give away their presence to the terrorists, but nothing could be done about that now. If the tipster was correct, time had already run out.

  “I see another maintenance van near runway seven,” said Jack. “Vehicle identification tag 1178 Charlie-Victor.”

  Behind the wheel, Tony Almeida squinted against the yellow glare of the morning sun. Tony was Jack’s junior by seven years. Latino, originally from Chicago, he was a single ex-Marine with advanced degrees in computer science. Average height, muscular build, black hair worn short, and a soul patch beneath his lower lip. On paper Almeida looked good — Scout-Sniper School and Surveillance and Target Acquisition Platoon School. But Jack hadn’t seen the man in the field enough to trust him completely.

  “I count two men inside,” Almeida said quietly, “both wearing maintenance uniforms.”

  Jack was also clad in airport maintenance overalls. His black combat chukkas, however, were standard-issue military. As he continued to catalog the flat featureless landscape through binoculars — gray concrete runways, black asphalt service roads, brown grass— Bauer’s headset crackled.

  “1178 Charlie-Victor is an authorized repair,” Agent Costigan announced from the van’s cargo bay.

  “Roger that,” Jack replied.

  Gina Costigan waited for Bauer to relay more information. She was in her late twenties and, like Jack, married with one daughter. Former LAPD Special Weapons and Tactics, she’d been recruited by Walsh as well. She was presently squeezed into the windowless space in the back of the van with four large men. She could see nothing. Like her, all were clad in bulky assault gear— black Kevlar helmets and body armor harnesses, response belts, holsters, weapons, and chukkas. But unlike the men, Gina, her face pinched with tension and beaded with perspiration, balanced a laptop computer on her knees. Beneath her straight brown bangs, her green eyes never left the monitor screen. Across its flat surface were displayed the international airport’s daily maintenance schedule and flight manifests, including arrival times and departures — even scheduled deliveries by outside vendors. The data scrolled in an array of display boxes. Gina’s quick glance scanned each in turn, evaluating every fragment of information.

  “I’ve got another vehicle, two o’clock, near the concrete power shed,” said Jack, increasing the magnification on the binoculars. “It’s a black Ford Explorer with a valid LAX security sticker on the inside front window.” Jack carefully read out the license plate number, already certain they’d located their target.

  When she replied, Agent Costigan could not hide the excitement in her voice. “That vehicle was reported stolen from a driveway on Essex Street in Palmdale two nights ago.”

  Jack dropped the binoculars onto the seat next to him, drew the SigSauer P228 from its shoulder holster under the airport coveralls. He checked the magazine and chambered an extra bullet, bringing the ammo capacity to the maximum thirteen rounds. Then he spoke into the headset.

  “Tactical Team Two, are you with us? Over.”

  From somewhere behind them, a voice responded. “With you, Team One.”

  “I want you to move in now. Follow our coordinates. What is your estimated time of arrival?”

  “EST less than two minutes, sir.”

  Jack cursed. “Too long.”

  “If we brought a parade with us, we would have attracted attention,” Tony reminded him.

  Agent Chet Blackburn, the assault team leader, stuck his helmeted head into the cab. “Maybe we should have used an assault chopper.”

  Jack glanced at Blackburn, looked away. “We couldn’t risk bringing a chopper into the airport. Too much air traffic.”

  “I see three men on the ground. There’s another inside the vehicle.” Tony’s voice was flat, but his hands were putting the steering wheel in a choke hold.

  “Get this van as close as you can without letting them know we’re coming,” said Jack.

  “Too late,” said Tony. “One guy definitely sees us.”

  Tony slowed the truck. “Listen, Jack. All they’re really seeing is a maintenance van coming their way. But trucks like this are all over the airport. Why don’t we just roll past the target, circle around, and come up behind them using the power shed for cover. Otherwise we’re sure to end up in a firefight.”

  Jack visualized the maneuver, nodded. “Okay. We’ll try it.”

  Gina Costigan’s voice crackled in Jack’s headset once again. “Special Agent Bauer?”

  “Yes.”

  “We have an aircraft approaching runway seven from the southwest. It’s National Express Cargo Flight 111 out of Austin, Texas. General manifest. Crew of three. It’s less than two minutes away, sir. ”

  Bauer digested the information as the van steadily approached the suspects. For a long time, no one around the black Explorer moved, though at least one of the occupants was monitoring them. Finally, one of the men turned his back on the maintenance van, went down on one knee, and pointed an unfamiliar object at the sky. Even from a distance, the device appeared ominous — two black tubes on a metal handle. The device must have been unwieldy; the man rested it on his shoulder to steady it.

  “That’s a weapon,” said Jack. “Some new kind of surface-to-air missile. Looks like they’re locking onto a target.”

  Tony sounded doubtful. “You sure?”

  “We don’t have time to be sure. We have to move now. Hit it.”

  Tony smashed the gas pedal, the van shot forward, and Jack was jolted back in his seat by the abrupt acceleration.

  “Lock and load,” bellowed Agent Blackburn inside the rocking cargo bay.

  Gina Costigan slammed the lid of her laptop, drew the Heckler and Koch UMP out of her Velcro back strap. She slid a twenty-five-round magazine into the state-of-the-art submachine gun, switched the fire selector to semi-automatic, and lowered the visor on her helmet.

  Ahead, the man remained on his knees beside the black Explorer, seemingly oblivious to their approach. On his shoulder, the device was still pointed at the cloudless sky, where the silhouette of an aircraft had appeared. Suddenly one of the other men pointed toward the maintenance van and drew a weapon.

  “Artillery! Get down!” Bauer warned.

  The first shot blew out the windshield and roared through the cargo bay. It punched an exit hole in the rear door large enough to shake it off its hinges. Daylight flooded the cargo area as the steel door broke free.

  Outside, the shooter aimed the.357 again — this time at Jack Bauer. Almeida swerved the vehicle onto a concrete access plate. When the front wheel struck, the van bounced high enough for the second shot to slam into the engine block instead of the cab. The van began to bellow steam and smoke as the engine locked. Forward momentum carried the stalled vehicle closer to the suspects, who were all scrambling for cover by now. Another shot blasted through the already-shattered window and into the cargo area. This time Jack heard a meaty thwack, a cry of surprise. Someone had been hit.

  Finally the white van rolled to a halt, not fifteen yards from the Ford Explorer.

  “Out! Move!” Jack shouted. He popped his own door and rolled into brown desert grass. Engulfed by a cloud of dust, he could barely see the black Explorer. From the shouts and sounds in his headset, Jack knew Blackburn and the rest of the tactical team had burst out of the side and rear doors of the crippled van and laid down suppressing fire.

  Finally an opening appeared in the brown haze. Jack spied one
of the suspects racing toward the concrete power shed. The other two had dived into the black Explorer with the third man. One was obviously wounded, the other clutched the unfamiliar shoulder-mounted weapon.

  “Don’t let them leave the area!” Jack cried.

  Then he was on his feet. P228 in hand, he pursued the lone runner toward the power shed. A few yards away from the concrete block structure, a wave of hot gases washed over him, followed in a microsecond by an earsplitting roar. Jack was blown off his feet as the Explorer detonated in an orange fireball. The three occupants were engulfed. Completely immolated.

  Clothing scorched, ears ringing, Jack stumbled to his feet and lunged forward. He slammed his back against the power shed’s metal door — still hot from the blast. Fearing an ambush, he glanced to either side of the square hut, weapon clutched in both hands. Finally Jack dropped to the hard ground and rolled to the rear of the shed.

  The man was right where Jack thought he’d be. “Freeze! Put your hands up.”

  He was maybe twenty-five. Thin torso but muscular arms. He wore black jeans and a leather vest, his oily hair long, a prominent gold front tooth. He was on his knees, one boot removed and clutched in his hand. He appeared ready to smash an object on the ground. He grunted something, but Jack’s ears were still vibrating and he couldn’t make out the words.

  “I said freeze.”

  The man stared at Jack, then raised the boot. Jack lowered his weapon, crossed the space between them with a leap. He slammed against the man, using his shoulder to bring him down. The boot flew off into the scrub grass. The man struggled to rise, but calmed considerably when Jack placed the muzzle of the P228 against his temple.

  “Move and I will kill you.”

  Vaguely, through the ocean’s roar in his ears, Jack heard pounding footsteps. Two of Agent Blackburn’s men appeared on either side of the power shed. Intimidating in full body armor and helmets, they trained their weapons at the suspect, who threw up his hands.