Chris raised shocked eyes from the piece of paper in his hand to
the face of the man standing on the other side of his desk.
Nathan stared steadily back at him.
“I don’t understand,” said Chris. “Aren’t
you happy here?”
“I’m very happy here,” replied Nathan.
Chris tried to read something into Nathan’s tone of voice but
the healer betrayed nothing.
“Ezra! What’s he done now?” demanded Chris.
“No Chris,” replied Nathan shaking his head. “It’s
nothing like that. Ezra hasn’t done anything. This is a career
move, a step up. I can learn a lot from Ivan Pennell.”
“Pennell’s a good man,” agreed Chris as he looked
down at the transfer request. He pushed his hand through his hair.
In all the scenarios he’d ever thought of, where he could lose
a man, choosing to leave had never been one of them.
“Why didn’t Pennell contact me for a reference?”
Chris scowled at Nathan.
“Ahm, our … reputation is … well known. In the
interview Pennell said that he wasn’t going to waste your time
or his with a reference.”
Chris’ scowl deepened at Nathan’s reply. He looked at
the transfer again. How appropriate that the reputation that had made
his Team notorious also let this situation sneak up on him. Pennell,
like himself, could handle the rogues, the misfits, and refit the
round holes for the square pegs. Hell, Ivan was probably salivating
at the chance to get one of Larabee’s own on his team.
Looking back at Nathan again he asked, “Is there anything I
can do or say to change your mind Nathan?”
“No, Chris. I just have to look to my future, that’s
all,” replied Nathan. “I’ve done a lot of hard thinking
to come to this decision. It wasn’t an easy one to make.”
At least that part was honest.
Chris watched Nathan steadily for a long moment. He couldn’t
help but wonder if something else was going on here.
Nathan returned Chris’ gaze without hesitation, he knew that
if he flinched, Chris would suspect something. “It isn’t
required but I was hoping you’d sign my transfer.”
Dropping his eyes to the transfer, Chris pursed his lips together
as he set the paper down on his desk and leaned over and signed it.
He then straightened up and handed it back to Nathan, smiled, well,
sort of, and offered him his hand. “Congratulations, Nathan.
Pennell’s getting a helluvan agent.”
Nathan smiled and shook hands with Chris, “Thanks Chris, I
appreciate it.”
Chris’ couldn’t be sure… was that a flicker of
regret in Nathan’s eyes?
“We might as well get the rest of this out of the way right
now,” said Chris. “Is everyone out there?”
“Yeah, at least they were when I came in here.” replied
Nathan. Just as he had expected, Chris rarely put off the dirty work.
“Let’s get this over with then.”
Chris followed Nathan out of his office into the bullpen.
Chris waited just outside his office doorway while Nathan made his
way back to his own desk.
Buck had just let a wadded-up paper basketball shot go. It hit its
intended target point blank, JD’s forehead. The kid had been
typing furiously away, oblivious of what was going on around him.
The paper ball bounced harmlessly off JD and onto his keyboard. JD
looked up. The annoyance written all over his face disappeared the
second he noticed Chris standing in the doorway to his office.
Buck’s laughter died as he noticed JD’s expression change.
He turned around to see what JD was looking at. There was something
about Chris’ stance that had him thinking this wasn’t
going to be good.
Vin and Ezra were, once again, arguing over the dividing line between
their two desks. Ezra arguing that Vin’s “unsightly, chaotic
mismanagement of information” was, again, “encroaching
upon”, as Vin phrased it, “Ezra’s emotionally unhealthy
world of perfect orderliness.” Everyone knew better than to
suggest that they simply rearrange their desks so that they were no
longer sat butting up against one another.
Buck reached over and gave Vin a poke. Vin turned and Buck motioned
with his head in Chris’ direction. Vin swung around in his chair
to see the boss standing there and immediately sensed that something
was wrong.
Ezra, who had been standing and reaching across his desk to shove
Vin’s papers and files back over the 'dividing line', sat down
slowly. His talent for reading body language was telling him all was
not well.
Josiah arrived back from the kitchenette with a fresh cup of coffee.
He stopped in his tracks when he noticed everyone looking at Chris,
everyone but Nathan. Nathan, oddly enough he thought, was
staring down at his desk.
Chris cleared his throat. “I have an announcement to make.
Nathan has been offered a job in Kansas City … and he has decided
to take it.”
In the years to come Nathan would remember this as one of the longest
moments in his life. No one moved. No one spoke. Five of his six brothers
just sat staring at him in stunned disbelief.
Buck was the first to recover enough to speak. “You’re
joking?”
“No, Buck I’m not,” replied Nathan, looking Buck
squarely in the eye. He knew he had to pass this test. They had to
believe that this was what he really wanted … and it was, in
a way.
“What job?” he asked, confusion written all over his
face.
“The second-in-command on Ivan Pennell’s team in KC,”
replied Nathan. “It’s a promotion,” he added lamely.
“Pennell’s one of the best,” conceded Buck.
“I thought we were the best.” There was a belligerent
edge to the sharpshooter’s normally soft voice.
“A job? You’re leaving for a stupid job?”
JD almost shouted in utter disbelief. “What about us?”
I thought we were fam…”
“JD!” Chris cut the kid off sharply.
JD sent an angry glance in Chris’ direction and then stood
suddenly, sending his chair scooting backwards on its wheels. He strode
quickly out of the office and broke into a run once outside the door.
No one chased after him. He would need time to cool off before anyone
could talk to him.
“When?” asked Josiah.
“Uhm, what?” asked Nathan blankly as he turned to face
Josiah. He had been taken aback by JD’s outburst and subsequent
sudden departure and had been staring at the door JD had just left
by. JD’s running steps down the corridor towards the stairwell
still echoed in his ears.
“When do you start?” repeated Josiah.
“Ahh three weeks, I’ve given Chris two weeks notice and
then I have a week to tie up loose ends here and move back to KC.”
“Why?” came the quiet drawl from the Texan.
“Like I said, it’s a promotion.”
Bullshit! What’s the real reason?
“Hey Nate, congratulations,” said Buck, he smiled as
he got up out of his chair and went over to the healer and held out
his hand “S I C. An opportunity like that doesn’t come
along everyday.”
“Thanks Buck,” said Nathan shaking Buck’s hand.
“Don’t worry about the kid, I’ll talk to him, he’ll
come around.”
“Sure Buck.”
“I guess ya gotta do what ya gotta do, Nathan.” The look
in Vin’s eyes didn’t match his words of pseudo-encouragement.
“Yeah Vin, I do,” replied Nathan with more conviction
than he felt just now.
“Mr. Jackson, does this have anything to do with our personal
differences?” Ezra almost blurted the words out. It was a rare
public display of self-doubt for Ezra but with Chris’ announcement
he was suddenly seized with the fear that he was in some way responsible
for Nathan’s decision to leave.
“No, Ezra, it is not because of you.” Replied Nathan
impatiently and with a little more annoyance than he had intended.
“Contrary to what you may think Ezra, my world does not revolve
around you,” he said irritably. The feeling that he’d
just pissed on everyone’s day was getting to him. But then again,
he just had, hadn’t he?
Ezra’s eyes narrowed slightly at the rebuke as he instantly
fell back into his usual mode of formal behaviour. “Then you
have my sincerest congratulations sir, I doubt Special Agent Pennell
realizes how truly fortunate he is in procuring your services.”
A little shamefaced Nathan apologized, “Sorry Ezra, and thanks.”
Josiah walked over to Nathan and slapped him on the back. “I
hate to see you go brother but if it’s what you want, you have
my blessing.”
“Thanks Josiah,” said Nathan couldn’t help but
feel a little relieved. Leave it to Josiah to make you feel better
about something that feels like a mistake.
Chris watched the exchanges between Nathan and the rest of the men.
Something in his gut was telling him things weren’t right here,
but what?
“You know what we need to do boys?” said Buck, attempting
to be cheerful. “We need to throw Nathan a send off party. Whattaya
say, at the Saloon, a week from Friday? I’ll talk to Inez about
laying on something special.”
“Guess so,” mumbled Vin.
“It sounds like fun, Buck,” said Josiah trying to be
encouraging.
“That is the usual procedure in these circumstances,”
agreed Ezra soberly.
“Not like this one though. This’ll be one they’ll
talk about for years. Nathan, I promise, it’ll be legendary.”
The words were enthusiastic, the voice was almost convincing but the
eyes held the truth. Buck wasn’t any happier about this than
anyone else was.
This is painful, thought Chris, time for a diversion.
“All right people, you can plan the party later. How’s
the prep work coming for the operation tomorrow?”
“Just about done Chris,” replied Josiah, realizing what
Chris was doing and recognizing the wisdom in it.
“Does JD have the communications van ready?”
“It’s good to go Chris,” replied Buck in JD’s
absence.
“Vin, how’s that updated layout of the premises working
out?”
“Good Chris, real good,” replied Vin, “Buck and
I have the logistical problems ironed out.”
“Ezra, Josiah, any concerns with your covers?”
“None other than this abhorrent tattoo,” confirmed Ezra,
“I will dearly appreciate finally getting it removed. Chris
had to smile to himself, the fake tattoo had been Ezra’s own
idea to enhance his cover.
“Good, then we meet here at 08:00 a.m. tomorrow morning to
run through the bust one last time.”
“Buck?”
“I’ll make sure JD is here and ready to rock and roll
Chris.”
“Thanks Buck.”

Nathan rode the elevator down to the parking garage alone. All of
the others had left for the day. He had worked late. He’d had
said it was because he wanted to start getting loose ends cleaned
up before he left. The fact was he didn’t want anyone to invite
him for a beer before going home, he wasn’t sure he could keep
up the façade any longer.
He walked over to his truck and got in. He leaned on the steering
wheel, resting his head on crossed forearms. God he was tired. Nine
days of this to go, eleven, if you count the weekend. Eighteen until
he left the city. Nine days in the office working close quarters with
them pretending he was happy about the promotion, happy about leaving.
He hadn’t counted on a farewell party - damn Buck anyway.
He sat up straight, put the keys in the ignition, started the truck
and sighed again, he still hadn’t figured out how he was going
to tell Rain.

“Chris, can’t you stop him,” exclaimed JD as he
paced back and forth in front of Chris’ desk the next morning.
“Can’t you order him to stay or block his transfer or
something until he comes to his senses?” The kid had that imploring,
puppy dog expression, that guys called “the look,” on
his face.
“Cut that out right now!” ordered Chris.
“Wha-at?” asked JD, as he held his hands out palms up,
as if he were innocent of what Chris was talking about.
It had Chris wondering if maybe he’d imagined the “the
look”.
“JD, I can’t, I don’t have that right. He’s
over 21 and free to make his own decisions.”
JD shot Chris a hurt expression.
“I didn’t mean anything by that,” apologized Chris.
“Look, JD, even if I could find a reason to hold him here, it
wouldn’t be right or fair. It would be what I want, what you
want. This is about what Nathan wants, right?”
“Yeah, I guess,” JD replied morosely.
“We’re his friends, right? And as such, we should support
his decision, wish him all the best and be here for him.”
“Be here for him?”
“Yeah, be here for him, JD. I don’t think this is any
easier for him than it is for us.”
“I guess you’re right about that. I just don’t
understand why.”
Neither do I, JD, thought Chris as he listened to his junior
agent.
“I don’t want him to leave.”
“I know. None of us do but…”
“But he’s our friend.” JD repeated Chris’
words in a monotone voice, “and we should respect his decision.”
“That’s right.”
JD shot an unhappy look back at Chris.
“Okay?” Chris asked him.
“I guess.”
“The meeting’s in ten minutes, I’ve got things
to do yet,” said Chris, hinting to JD that he wanted him to
leave his office. Chris then turned his attention to the work on his
desk pointedly ignoring his youngest agent.
After a moment JD levered himself out of the chair and slouched out
of the boss’ office.
Once the door clicked shut behind JD Chris looked up. He sat back
in his chair and rested his elbow on the arm of his chair as he thoughtfully
stroked his chin. He was going to have to have a talk with Buck. He
wasn’t entirely sure if the kid was playing with him or not.
Why was it again he’d stopped drinking?

JD was not happy. Chris had said pretty much the same thing Buck
had the evening before. But it had been worth a try. He walked down
the short hallway to the kitchenette to grab a coffee before the meeting
and found Nathan already there.
“Nathan?” he asked a little tentatively.
“ ‘Morning JD,” greeted Nathan cheerfully as he
poured himself a cup.
“Nathan, I ahhh, want to apologize for the way I acted yesterday.
It was selfish and … kinda childish.”
“It’s okay JD,” replied Nathan with a smile. “I
understand.”
“It’s just that I really like the way things are right
now.”
So do I kid, thought Nathan to himself.
“But I understand you gotta make the best decisions for you
and I just want to wish you good luck.”
“Thanks JD.”
“After all you and Rain will be in the same city again and
that’ll be great!” he said with a smile.
Nathan replied with a warm smile, he could tell the kid really was
trying to be happy for him. “It will be nice to be in the same
town again.”
“Maybe you two can even think about getting married now?”
“Maybe.”
Coffees in hand, they turned around to find Ezra standing in the
doorway of the kitchenette. Nathan wondered just how much he’d
heard. Ezra had his working face on, expression unreadable.
“I gather we are running on time this morning?” he asked,
his tone bored.
“As far as I know Ez,” replied JD.
“Ezra, Mr. Dunne, my name is Ezra. I dearly
wish we could fight crime at a more civilized hour,” griped
the undercover agent. He attempted, unsuccessfully, to stifle a yawn
as he filled the kettle for his tea.
“The early bird catches the worm, Ezra,” teased Nathan.
“The birds are welcome to their slimy dietary preferences Mr.
Jackson,” replied Ezra as he dropped a teabag into his personal
teapot. “I was under the impression we were in the business
of apprehending gun smugglers. It has been my experience that those
particular slimy creatures usually make their appearances after dark.”
“’Morning all,” greeted Buck with a big smile as
he poked his head around the corner or the doorway.
“Buck,” greeted Nathan
“You three just about ready? Chris is already a little edgy
about this one. I wouldn’t advise being late this morning. Consider
yourself warned,” and with that Buck’s head disappeared
from the doorway.
The kettle began to whistle as the water boiled.
“Coming,” said JD as he headed out with his coffee.
“Right behind you,” said Nathan.
“I will be along post-haste, gentlemen,” assured Ezra.
Ezra could hear JD’s voice as he rambled on. “Look Nathan,
if there is anything, absolutely anything at all that I can help with,
remember, I’m only an e-mail away …”
Ezra was left alone for the moment. He was lost in thought as he
poured the boiling water into his teapot. Stirring the water gently
he watched absently as the tea clouded the water. Mr. Dunne has
made an interesting observation indeed.

This case was a little different than the others.
Peter Harvey, the present owner of the “Coast to Coast”
Trucking Company, had come to them.
Harvey had committed armed robbery more than twenty years before
while still a teenager. His father, Max, was a self-made man who was
used to taking care of matters himself. Max Harvey had made Peter’s
indiscretion “go away” with money but he had also taken
his son in hand and made sure it didn’t happen again. Peter
had gone to work for his father; long hard days spent building the
trucking company into the successful business it was today. Eventually
Peter had re-earned his father’s trust and respect and had gone
on to College to major in business. He returned to take “Coast
to Coast” over when Max went into semi-retirement.
Peter’s teenage partner hadn’t been so lucky. Tony Moffat
had served time for what they’d done. His chosen “career”
had continued until he eventually landed in prison. Prison was where
Tony had received his education and established his “business”
connections.
Now Tony was out of prison now and he was blackmailing Peter with
what they had done. But it wasn’t money that Tony wanted though.
It was respectability. Coast-to-Coast was well known and very reputable,
as a result the Coast-to-Coast trucks were not usually as thoroughly
scrutinized by the authorities as other companies were. Tony felt
this was just what he needed to transport arms to his most recent
customer and establish himself as a player in the arms smuggling trade.
Peter Harvey, after some serious soul searching, decided he wasn’t
going to allow this to happen. He had a responsibility to his company,
and to its employees, neither would suffer for his teenage mistake.
Peter would take whatever punishment the law decided. Max vehemently
disagreed but respected his son for his decision to go the authorities.
That’s how the Harvey’s ended up in Team 7’s offices.
Ezra, as usual, was the inside man. He’d been working as a
shift foreman in the shipping department for more than a month. Since
then Tony had put one of his own men in place in the shipping office,
“to keep an eye” on things. Josiah had subsequently gone
in to cover Ezra’s back; Josiah posed as a labourer on the loading
dock. He’d put in regular shifts in Coast-to-coast’s distribution
centre for ten days now.
Peter Harvey had been “advised” the previous morning
that the first shipment of weapons would be ready to go that afternoon.
This operation was the bust.
JD, as usual, would man the Communications centre in the van. Vin
would take his position in a storage room above the shipping office
within the warehouse before Tony’s man came on at noon. It was
windowless but had four ventilation ducts that provided a reasonable
view of the warehouse storage areas and the loading dock.
Chris and Buck would take the frontal assault with the additional
support of three men from Team 8.
Josiah had discovered the location of a back door indicated on the
warehouse plans. It was almost completely hidden behind tall stacks
of crates. It was not considered a viable escape route but you never
knew. Nathan would cover the back door and since Josiah was on the
inside for this one Nathan would be without back-up.

Nathan stood waiting, his rifle held upright close to his body. He
figured he had another thirty minutes to make it through the truck
yard to the back of the building and take his post without being seen.
Then, unexpectedly, the staccato pop of gunfire. At the sound of gunshots,
Nathan launched himself around the corner of the rig he’d been
hiding behind and across the yard toward the back door at a dead run.
Suddenly, without warning, the ground gave way beneath him. For a
brief moment he was weightless as he fell through the dark. There
was no time for his mind to register fear as to what he might land
on below.
He hit water.
COLD. Immense cold enveloped him. His lungs fought to hold onto the
air within them. His body’s reaction to the shock of the cold
water threatened to force what little air was in his lungs, out. The
water was freezing. He kicked hard once, twice, before breaking the
surface. He gasped for air.
It was completely dark. He trod water with hands that were already
beginning to numb and feet that were fast becoming weighted down with
water. He looked upward to see a small opening of light far above
his head. He suddenly realized his headset was gone. Even if the water
hadn’t gotten to it, it was lost and there was no way to find
in the dark to call for help. Help! The others were in the middle
of a bust, he should be there helping them, not floating around here
in the dark!

The bust went sour fast. An employee had noticed some broken and
loose boards on a packing crate labeled electronic equipment. Upon
stripping off the broken board to replace them, rather than CD-players,
the man discovered high-powered rifles. Tony Moffat’s inside
man, Flynn, panicked. He decided to take control of the situation
and pulled out a gun. He fired two shots and started shouting orders.
Ezra and Josiah were wired so Chris and the others were fully aware
of what was going on while Vin supplied a play-by-play monologue.
Ezra, as the loading dock foreman, was front and centre to what was
happening. He caught Josiah’s eye and they silently agreed to
let things play themselves out, otherwise they would end up with nothing
on this bust. Josiah whispered to Chris and others to “hold
position”. It would likely have worked out except that another
employee decided to be a hero and jumped the man with the gun.
Other employees joined in the fray and the next thing Team Seven
knew, the gunman was disarmed and their undercover operation was over.

It occurred to Nathan that with bust going down, it wasn’t
likely he’d been missed yet. He felt around with aching hands,
and found a vertical surface, it was uneven, hard and slippery. He
felt along the wall reaching high for a hand-hold and low for a foot
hold, anything, so he would no long have to support himself. He was
tiring fast as he fought to stay afloat. The cold water was quickly
sapping his strength. He shook his head to clear whatever it was that
kept running into his eyes. He was fairly sure it was blood and used
a cupped handful of water to rinse the stuff away. There was something
wrong with his thought processes because it was then that he finally
realized that he was all on his own and that if he was going to get
out of this he would have to depend only on himself.
The kevlar vest was getting heavier by the second but he couldn’t
take it off. Even if he could get his fingers to work, the warmth
it provided was more valuable. Why was the water so cold?
He got the impression he was going in a circle. There didn’t
seem to be anything he could grab on to. His hands no long ached because
he could no longer feel them.
Some how he’d managed to hang on to his rifle in the fall.
He had slung it over his shoulder so he could search the wall for
something to hold on to. Chris would probably have his head but he
relinquished his weapon to the dark water. The relief, from the loss
of the extra weight, was only momentary.

They were short of time but Ezra was not about to give this operation
up so easily. He came forward with his badge held high. Peter Harvey
joined him and between the two of them, they explained the situation
to the rest of the shift. Instructing them to go back to their work
as if nothing had happened and no matter what happened they were to
stay out of it, the suspects had to take delivery of the weapons if
the perpetrators were to be charged.
Waiting outside in the communications van, Chris dropped his head
and shook it in amazed resignation, after he listened to what had
transpired. He could hear Vin’s quiet Texas drawl in his ear
bud, confirming that the shift crew was returning to their duties
as requested and the warehouse was returning to its usual hive of
activity. “Was it only his team that had these problems?”
he wondered. He lifted his head to see Buck grinning at him and give
him a thumbs-up. Buck knew Chris had had a bad feeling about this
bust. It wasn’t natural to have the crimes come to them before
they happened. Chris only scowled in reply. They weren’t out
of the woods yet.

He was so tired. The cold and the weight of his wet clothes, boots
and kevlar jacket were taking their toll on him. He wasn’t sure
how long he’d been in the water but he was aware of the relentless
chatter of his teeth and the fact he couldn’t feel his extremities.
He was beginning to feel lethargic.
Nathan could hear the instructor’s voice from the EMT seminar.
“Hypothermia: a decrease in the core body temperature to a level
at which normal muscular and cerebral functions are impaired.”
He was becoming progressively more fatigued. His water-laden clothing
and kevlar jacket might be holding some badly needed heat to his body
but the boots felt as if they were made of cement. Even if he could
reach his boots he wasn’t sure he could make his frozen fingers
loosen the waterlogged laces. Extreme cold, fatigue - he was in serious
trouble … and he knew it.

They weren’t considered magnificent for nothing.
Two trucks had pulled in for the all night run to Tijuana. Gum-smacking,
obscenities-prone shift foreman, Ed Sawyer, was making a big fuss
over the paper work. So much so that Tony Moffat who hadn’t
even planned to get out of the truck had gotten fed up with the delay
and had decided to deal with the foul mouthed, signature fixated,
foreman himself. They were falling behind schedule.
Tony eyed Ed Sawyer critically, the cigarette behind his ear, the
tattoo of a naked woman on his forearm, the hands would have confirmed
it but they were covered with well worn work gloves. He’d lay
money that Ed had served time. He could use this.
“What’s the hold up,” demanded Tony.
“Your fuckin’ paper work’s incomplete and the weight
of your cargo is way outta whack, too fuckin’ heavy for CD players.
Says here your going to Tijuana, crossing the fuckin’ border
your gonna have to have every fuckin’ “t” crossed,
and every fuckin’ “i” dotted."
“Ed, Ed, I can see you’re a good man ... maybe we can
work a deal here?” Ezra suddenly had the feeling he was dealing
with a cheap car salesman.
Ezra snapped his gum before replying, “No fuckin’ way
asshole, you ain’t got CD players in these crates.”
“Ya done time haven’t you, Ed?” The fear Tony now
saw in Ed’s eyes confirmed it, Ed Sawyer hadn’t told his
employer about his record. His whole demeanor changed.
“Hey man don’t screw this up for me, I got a wife and
kid now.” Ezra put the right amount of tremor in his voice.
Tony smiled evilly. “Maybe we can work something out.”
“Whatta want?” Ezra drew back warily from Tony.
“I just want to get going here, I have deadlines to meet, customers
to satisfy. Business … ya know?”
“I could be open to a business opportunity.” Tony could
see that Ed, despite his offer, was still nervous, he liked that,
a little fear went a long way to keeping people in line. “What’s
in these crates anyway?”
“Automatic weapons.”
Ed eyes got wide, “no shit!”
Tony watched Ed swallow convulsively.
“Who the hell are your customers?
“Let’s just say South American parties.”
Ed eyes narrowed, “What do I get for putting everything I got
on the line here?”
“My silence… and 5 g’s as a show of good faith
toward our future partnership.” He was going to get rid of Flynn
anyway. Ed here would work out much better.
“We gotta at least make it look legit, someone has to sign
beside my signature on this weigh bill.”
“Of course,” Tony took the proffered pen.
Once the shipment was signed for Ed suddenly lost his fear and his
good old buddy attitude and with an eat-shit smile and a smooth southern
drawl advised Tony Moffat “You sir, are under arrest!”
Realizing, too late, that he had been set up Tony reached for the
pistol tucked into the back of his pants. He froze instantly when
three hot draughts of air zipped past his ear and the rear tire of
the rig behind him began to hiss with escaping high pressure air.
Suddenly men yelling “ATF” were swarming around the trucks
yanking drivers from the cabs of the rigs and giving orders to “spread’em”.
Realizing all was lost and hoping to bring the innocent man who had
doubled-crossed him, down with him, Tony Moffat started yelling about
how Peter Harvey had been in on from the beginning. How it had been
Harvey’s idea and then finally heaping his own brand of curses
on Harvey, Ed Sawyer and ATF law enforcers in general. Josiah handed
Moffat off to Douglas Stone, the bull of a man from Team 8, who dragged
Moffat away out of earshot toward a waiting vehicle threatening to
gag him if he didn’t shut up.
Only then did Chris hear the urgent voice hissing in his ear bud.
“Chriss! Chrisss! God Damn it Chris! Listen to me will ya?”
“Don’t take that tone with me, Agent Dunne!”
Ignoring Chris’ annoyed indignant reply, “Is Nathan with
you?”
Holding his ear piece closer to ear to block out the moans of shifting
slats as ATF Agents began prying open the crates of weapons, Chris
looked around, “No, no he’s not.”
“Chris I can’t raise him and he hasn’t checked
in. I’ve lost his personal signal as well.”
“When?” Chris tone was urgent as he started walking.
“Since right before the bust went down.”
Checking his watch Chris realized that was forty minutes ago. Nathan
had been incommunicado for forty minutes!
“What happened?”
“I don’t know, his signal just disappeared, like he dropped
into nowhere!”
Chris was running now, “Team seven report!”

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