“I want to be clear. You’re suggesting we terminate both of them on the helicopter pad? Is that right?”

“A bullet in the head. Both at the same time. It has to be instantaneous and you can’t miss. They have to die before they realize something’s happened, so it has to be a clean head shot,” Scorpion said.

“Who the hell is this guy?” the suit asked, glaring at the camera. “Have you ever heard of the United States Constitution? The presumption of innocence? If the media and the ACLU get hold of this, they’ll crucify us. We can’t just kill them!”

“Not even terrorists in the act?” Rabinowich chimed in.

“We don’t know that! You said yourself,” the suit turned to Anderson, “she doesn’t fit the profile.”

“Don’t you get it? Tens of millions of people could die,” Rabinowich said. “There’s no vaccine for this thing. No antibiotic or other medication in the world that’ll stop it. Once she starts spraying, we’ve got a helluva bigger problem than the ACLU. We have no choice.”

“You’re assuming they’re terrorists,” the suit replied, “or even if they are, that they’ve got this spray. That’s all it is, an assumption. What if you got the wrong people? What if she’s going backpacking with her boyfriend? You’re basing this all on two words in a single phone intercept.”

“In my business, that’s usually all we have,” Scorpion said.

“If you’re wrong, it could be a career killer. You realize that, don’t you?” The suit turned to Anderson. “You could be indicted. You need to kick this upstairs.”

“Careers versus the lives of millions of Americans including your wives and kids,” Rabinowich put in. “That’s not a hard decision.”

Anderson looked at the monitors. “They’ll want deniability, upstairs,” he said. “That’s what they pay me for. The buck stops here.” He looked directly at the TV camera. “Scorpion, are you sure about this-what is it-something about the constellation Orion in Arabic?”

“I’ve chased this guy across the Middle East and Europe. With all due respect, you have no idea who you are dealing with,” Scorpion replied.

Anderson looked at Forrester on his monitor. “Who are your best snipers?”

“Sadlock. Him and Pesco. For the record, both were SEAL snipers,” Forrester added, glaring at Scorpion’s blurred image on the monitor. “We’ll have my HRT squad close for backup.”

“Get ’em in position at the heliport,” Anderson said. “Tell them to make sure it’s a head kill shot.”

Forrester held up his hand, listening to his earpiece.

“The Kabir woman. She just got off the train at Grand Central.”

“Don’t lose her,” Anderson said.

“Switching to Grand Central security feed,” Forrester said.

They waited long seconds till one of the monitors showed crowds of people hurrying in all directions past a subway security camera.

“There she is,” someone said, and Scorpion saw the woman with the backpack nearly submerged in a sea of people moving toward the subway stairs, before she moved out of the camera’s range. A few minutes later Forrester reported that she had exited the station and was out on the street. One of Forrester’s technicians put it on a live feed.

“She just got into a yellow cab. Heading west on Forty-second,” the FBI tail on the scene said.

“Air, you got her?” Forrester asked.

“We got her,” a voice said, nearly drowned out by the sound of a helicopter rotor. On another monitor, they were able to watch the taxi from the helicopter camera as it made its way through traffic back toward the East Side and down the FDR Drive. As the taxi approached the Brooklyn Bridge, Forrester told Air to peel off so as not to spook the woman. One of Forrester’s men tapped his shoulder and said something.

“Sniper teams are in position,” Forrester said. “They have their orders. As soon as they see her on the helipad, they take out her and the pilot.” Forrester and his men were no longer on the monitor, although they were still on audio. Scorpion assumed he and his men were moving into position.

“What about the bomb and the spray afterward?” Anderson asked.

“We’re in the basement of a building on South Street. We’ll be on the scene with the robot within forty-five seconds. Anything else?”

“Yeah, don’t screw it up,” Anderson growled.

“The pilot, Khan, has boarded the helicopter,” a technician said, and another monitor showed the Prestige helicopter on the pad, the sun glittering on the East River behind it. The helicopter’s rotor began to turn.

“She’s out of the taxi. Still wearing the backpack,” a voice said as everyone tensed and leaned toward the TV monitors. The seconds seemed to creep by slowly. Scorpion and Moretti looked at each other.

Suddenly she was in view, a young woman with a head scarf walking toward the helicopter. The pilot looked like he was leaning over to say something to her. Do it now! Scorpion thought. What are they waiting for?

She was almost at the helicopter when suddenly she collapsed, the downdraft from the helicopter’s rotor blowing her head scarf across her face. Forrester and his men ran out onto the helicopter pad, their Kriss Super V carbines at the ready, gear bouncing on their hips. One of them pulled the lifeless body of the pilot, part of his head torn away and bloody, out of the helicopter. Another peeled the backpack off the woman and carried it gingerly away from the helicopter, its rotor slowing down and stopping.

Moretti turned to Scorpion, his face grim.

“He’s going to destroy Rome, isn’t he?” Moretti asked.

“He’s smart and absolutely committed. We’ll only have a few seconds to stop him,” Scorpion said. He thought about the two dead women in Campo dei Fiori, the beat-up Englishwoman, Alicia, the bus driver at the Coliseum. And now the dead helicopter pilot and the Bangladeshi woman. Hassani didn’t mind how many people died. Maybe he even liked it.

“You’ll be there tomorrow?” Moretti asked.

Scorpion nodded.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

Palazzo delle Finanze, Rome, Italy

The delegates to the European Union Conference began arriving at ten in the morning. Flags hung from the window balconies of the Palazzo delle Finanze and the sounds of a military band could be heard from the building’s interior courtyard as the limousines rolled up. It was already hot, and the sun-bleached sky promised even greater heat later in the day. The polizia had banned traffic in the area and set up barricades on streets leading to the palazzo from every direction.

Scorpion, using a pair of binoculars, watched undercover agents checking out the demonstrators at the barriers. DIA sharpshooters were on the roof of the palazzo and two Italian military helicopters circled overhead. He was positioned on an elevated stand occupied by cameramen from various European TV networks inside the barricades near the entrance on Via 20 Settembre. If he was right-he admitted to himself it was a hell of a big if-the Palestinian and his crew would be coming toward that entrance from Via Quintino Sella. It was the most logical route, and if challenged at the polizia barrier at the Via Flavia intersection, they could still break through and detonate close to ground zero.

Earlier that morning, around six, he’d introduced himself to the DIA sharpshooters on the roof, one a former Delta and the other three ex-Navy SEALs. They shared a few war stories about EOD explosives training at the “Point” in North Carolina, in particular about a certain well-endowed female bartender named Melissa in Elizabeth City known to one and all, and they gave him a red armband to wear on his left arm as a way to make sure, as they put it, that if they shot him, he’d know they’d meant to.

Through the binoculars, he could see the crowds at the barriers, numbering in the thousands, many carrying signs with the now-famous photograph of la donna inglese, blood streaming down her face, and screaming “Fascism!” and “Israeli Nazis!” The Palestinian would not be among them, Scorpion knew. But they were his catalyst; he had risked everything to join them, because without them, his plan wouldn’t have worked. Scorpion had referred to it last night on his cell phone conversation with Rabinowich, making the call from the Metro station not far from the bottom of the Spanish Steps, chancing the voice call because they had run out of time.

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