Wormhole (The Rho Agenda #3)(80)
Pulling up another control panel, Heather activated fire alarms on the ground floor and first two sublevels, initiating their water sprinkler systems. The sprinkler layout didn’t include the rooms with critical electronic and computing systems, those having halon gas fire suppression systems similar to that of the master control center.
The concussion from the stairwell detonation vibrated the camera display, completely knocking out the top camera in the main stairwell.
Her fingers flying across the keyboard, she found the personnel data files, opening the profiles of the five most senior officials assigned to the facility. As she’d hoped, one of them was a woman. It took her less than two seconds to memorize the file.
Glancing at the desk-mounted microphone, Heather pursed her lips in frustration. Useless. That system was hardwired to the loudspeakers in the prison section, sublevels three and four, and couldn’t be rerouted. She had no intention of letting the security team get down to the third sublevel.
“Shit!”
Heather shifted her attention to the laptop to the right of the station at which she currently sat. Not perfect, but it would have to do.
Moving into the adjacent chair, Heather bypassed the login and began shifting control of the public address system that covered the ground floor, the stairwells, and the laboratories and offices on sublevels one and two. It took her exactly thirty-eight seconds.
“Heather, you there?” Mark’s thoughts nudged her mind.
“Give me a minute.”
Heather ran a quick check, adjusting the laptop microphone calibration. Then she went live.
“Attention all security elements! This is Rebecca Fairing. Badge number Xray Kilo Niner Five Seven Zulu. Return immediately to the main floor and prepare to repel external attack. I say again. Return immediately to the main floor and prepare to repel external attack. Fairing out.”
As she watched the ground-floor monitor outside the main stairwell, another twenty seconds passed with no indication the stairwell team had heard the message. Then two of the black-clad team emerged into the main hallway, covering left and right as the rest of the team spilled back out of the stairwell and raced down the hallway toward the building entrance.
“OK, Mark. Bring her down the first corridor on your left, then take the second right. I’m in the first room on the left.”
“Shouldn’t you meet us at the stairwell?”
“We’re not taking the stairwell, and I have a couple of things to finish up before we abandon ship.”
“On my way.”
Just then the ground shuddered with three more explosions, much closer than the first two. As the vibrations faded away, a fresh smile tweaked the corners of Heather’s lips.
“Jack. I’d like to kiss you long and hard. Right here and now.”
Jack tore open the packaging around the prepaid cell phone and dialed the 404 area code number.
“Thank you for calling HLN, a CNN network. If you are calling with a breaking news tip, please press one...”
Jack pressed one, then pressed one again to speak to the news tip team. When a real person answered, Jack flipped the remaining three switches to ARM, pressing the DETONATE buttons in rapid sequence as the lights turned green. Just over three miles away, the sound of the explosions began propagating outward, beginning the seventeen-second trip to his hotel room.
“Be silent, infidel. My name is Fariq Abdullah Muhammad. At this very moment, Allah has launched an attack on your National Security Agency at Fort Meade, Maryland, where our brothers are being held in a secret US prison. If you listen closely you may hear the explosions as I speak.”
On cue the shock waves arrived, rattling the windows and shaking pictures on the wall.
“It has begun. Allahu Akbar.”
Without waiting for a response, he hung up the phone, placed it on a white hand towel on the floor, and crushed it beneath his heel. Rolling the pieces inside the towel, Jack placed it beside his laptop in the soft leather valise, and added the remote detonator. Then, strapping on his shoulder holster and knife, he took one last sip of coffee, lifted the valise, and strolled out into the night.
“Excuse me, Mr. President. I’m sorry to wake you, but we have a serious situation.” The telephone did little to soften James Nobles’ gravelly voice.
President Jackson looked at the telephone, glanced over at Leticia’s sleeping body, which only moments before had been spooned up against his, and sighed. God, he missed those peaceful nights with his wife, the ones before he got his wish and was made president.
“OK, James. Give me the bad news.”
It was always bad news, at least at this time of night. Nobody ever woke the president of the United States at one a.m. to say, “Good news, Mr. President. Nothing bad has happened so far today.”
“There’s been an attack at Fort Meade.”
“The NSA.”
“Yes, Mr. President.”
Sudden depression threatened to cloud his mind, but the president forced himself to get out of bed.
“Damn it. Get the National Security Council rounded up. I’ll be down in five minutes.”
“I’m on it.”
“Oh, James. Get General Wilson on the line.”
“Already working on it, Mr. President.”
By the time President Jackson walked into the White House Situation Room, three members of the national security staff were already waiting for him: Cory Mayfield, James Nobles, and his chief of staff, Carol Owens.