

Special
Agent Dawna Shepherd thumped the Fiat's rusting roof. "Eleven pounds of TNT, right in here.
I click my remote, these folks will move."
Foreign
Service Officer Casey Collins focused on one of the dozen shoppers crowding the
pitted sidewalk in front of the shabby Budapest storefront.
"I won't mind losing the redhead."
Late
morning on a mid-August Wednesday in district XIX, south of Budapest's city
center and one tall blonde American woman was telling another about the car bomb
she'd be exploding four hours later. Luckily,
none of the prospective victims understood a word.
"You
got to admit, she looks authentic." Dawna
patted the skinny backside of the female who'd caught her friend's eye.
The dummy wore five-inch platform shoes, tight stretch pants and visible
bra straps. She pressed a cell phone to her ear and her skull was painted
a vivid shade of magenta.
Casey
shook her head. "Every shade
of hair dye is available in Budapest these days.
I don't know why Hungarian women are still in love with that awful
henna."
Dawna
sniffed. "You are so out of
touch with what's hot."
"Like
an FBI agent would know." Casey
eyed the straw-colored curls that added another two inches to Dawna's imposing
six-foot-three. "Don't even
think of going red. Overgrown
Orphan Annie is not the look you want."
"Do
more for me than the Barbara Bush look does for you."
A native Texan, Dawna never felt comfortable overseas.
But so long as she was an instructor at Quantico East, the FBI-run
International Law Enforcement Academy in Budapest, she wasn't taking any lip
from her more worldly State Department colleagues.
Especially one half-a-foot shorter and a decade older.
"Time to start touching up those silver streaks."
"I
earned my gray hairs." Casey
had spent most of her eighteen years in the Department as an intelligence
analyst focused on counterterrorism issues.
She was currently assigned to the Bureau of European Affairs in an admin
position with duties Dawna found suspiciously vague.
Like Casey's reasons for visiting Budapest.
She
definitely hadn't come for the weather. Central
Europe was gripped by a heat wave and Budapest was headed toward ninety for the
fifth sweltering day in a row. Dawna
moved into the meager shade of the recessed building entrance and peered down
the street to her right. The portly
security guard manning the barricade at that end of the block crouched in the
shadow of an anemic linden near the street corner.
There was no sign of the representative from the company Dawna had hired
to clean up after the blast. "She's
five minutes late," Dawna said.
Casey
joined her in the doorway. "Your
demolition contractor asked for this meeting?"
"Last
minute, they get ultra-picky, insist their rep has to see inside before
we damage the building. Head office
called me at seven-thirty this morning to say she'd meet me at eleven.
Didn't want to hear I already had a lunch date with you."
"I
don't mind tagging along. You say
their explosives expert is female." Casey
tapped a finger on her forehead as if trying to knock information loose from her
brain. "I might have heard of
her."
"She's
not that one you see on cable news all the time," Dawna clarified.
"Stacey what's-her-name from that family that pulled down the
Kingdome. Their company is the
big name in controlled demolition. Bid
for this job was way beyond our budget.
We went with a British group no one's ever heard of."
Dawna pursed her lips and faked an upper class accent.
"And their Edwina Barcroft-Hunt is not veddy punc-tu-al."
She let her voice drift back to its usual West Texas rhythm.
"Shoot, I don't have time to waste on some Englishwoman who's got a
burr under her saddle."
"Not
with your dog and pony show set for one," Casey agreed.
To
publicize the academy's new post-blast investigation seminar, the embassy's
public affairs office had scheduled a pre-blast media event.
The ambassador and the director of the academy would deliver prepared
remarks and introduce the members of Hungary's special organized crime task
force composed of four FBI agents and eight Hungarian police officers.
Dawna
was no blast expert but the seminar was her baby.
She'd argued to have the training offered in-house, instead of referring
local cops to the existing post-blast school in Athens.
She'd written the proposal and found qualified instructors.
She'd located a suitable building, this crumbling pre-War edifice that
had once housed a dress shop on the ground floor, apartments on the four upper
stories. To make the scene
more visually exciting for the TV cameras, Dawna had added the costumed dummies.
For security reasons, the academy wasn't allowing civilians to witness
the actual blast, but Dawna had an official videographer filming the event, to
edit for broadcast later.
She'd
planned the day carefully, the way she'd been planning strategy all her adult
life, including those four years as a basketball player for UT's Lady Longhorns.
Control all the variables you can, because there are always some you
can't. "The press conference has to begin at thirteen
hundred," Dawna said. "We need to start moving everyone out by
thirteen-fifteen. We'll clear the
exclusion zone before we bring in the TNT.
We're using the same charge and delivery system that took out Big Tom
Boros."
With
the collapse of the Soviet Union, over two hundred Russian-speaking organized
crime groups relocated to Hungary, running their global operations from
wide-open Budapest. The resulting
turf war culminated in the 1998 car-bombing of Tamas Boros, a mobster and top
police informant. His body was
obliterated, his lawyer and two bystanders were killed, twenty people were
wounded--and Hungary instituted a major crackdown on organized crime.
The hefty FBI presence in Budapest was in support of the Hungarian
initiative.
"Using
a real life model for your exercise," Casey said.
"I like that."
"Even
so, we can't predict what our students will find when they come in tonight to
search the scene. But that's the
challenge of post-blast investigation."
Dawna double-checked her watch. Her
glance flicked back to Casey. "Hope
I'm not taking you away from anything important.
Tell me again why you're in Budapest?"
Casey
grinned. "To have a blast with
you, of course."
"Right.
I know what a party girl you are." Fun
was not what brought Casey into the field.
A terrorist threat must be behind her visit to Budapest or so Dawna
figured.
The
two women had met in Copenhagen in 1999. Dawna
was serving as legal attach้ when Casey suddenly appeared on a mysterious TDY
assignment. Which she survived only
because Dawna figured out on her own that Casey needed her help.
They'd since become good friends, yet tight-lipped Casey still tried to
keep Dawna from learning one fact more than she thought Dawna needed to know.
Not
that Casey had any hope of succeeding at that, not in the long run.
Dawna was FBI, she knew how to squeeze reluctant informants.
"Soon as we blow this sucker up, I'm going to run you a taste of the
national bitters."
Casey
gave her a skeptical look. "I
thought you were loyal to Johnny." As
in Johnny Walker Black, straight up, no ice.
"Hey,
you're the one always tells me, I'm in Europe, I need to get into the local
scene. This stuff is dynamite
once you get past the look and the taste."
"Sounds
wonderful."
"You
got to take a risk once in a while." Dawna
was interrupted by the arrival at the barricade of a red-and-white-checkered F๔
taxi plastered with the seven two's of its phone number.
The cab door slammed and a tiny figure in khaki waved off the security
guard as she trotted toward them, swinging an oversize briefcase in oxblood
leather.
Dawna
realized that the woman wasn't dressed entirely in khaki.
Her serviceable jump suit was sleeveless and a shade lighter than the
tawny skin on her bare and sinewy arms.
Ms.
Barcroft-Hunt was under five feet tall and weighed less than a hundred pounds.
Blue-black hair was blunt cut around an exotic face that blended features
from the far-flung reaches of the empire. Dawna extended her hand and introduced
herself, expecting to hear a lilting accent from Hong Kong or Karachi in reply.
What
she got was BBC news reader, ancestry buried in Euro-blandness.
"Ed Hunt. ConDem Limited."
The skin on Hunt's hands was warm and dry, her grip firm, her release
business-like. She reached for
Casey's hand.
"Kathryn
Collins," Casey said. "State
Department."
The
new arrival dropped Casey's hand to wave at the Fiat. Narrowing her eyes at Dawna, she asked, "Did you change
anything about the specified explosive?"
What,
was the woman paranoid? Did she
really believe the FBI would run a number on a British contractor?
"We informed your company of all changes to the original
proposal," Dawna said. "The charge is exactly as specified."
Ed
ignored Dawna's chilly tone. "Shall
we get to it?"
Dawna
opened the entry. To the left of a
steep staircase, the door to the former dress store was propped open.
"Everything was set for the blast when we went through last
night," Dawna told Ed. "We checked out every nook and cranny, marking our way
as we went. We've had the area
under guard since."
Ed
sniffed. "I saw your
guard."
Dawna
and Casey followed her into the store. Daylight
came through the show window, deepening the shadows in the back corners.
The hot, stale air smelled of mildew.
Ed
snapped open her brief case and removed a five-cell flashlight and a ballpeen
hammer.
Dawna
spotted a roll of blueprints tucked into one corner of the case.
Maybe she could move things along. "You
can tell from the building plans we sent how the structure will react to the
blast," Dawna said.
"Plans
are useless." Ed was probing
the walls with her hammer, frowning as she tapped her way toward the back.
"'As drawn' always differs from 'as built'.
Especially in this part of the world."
The
know-it-all edge to Ed's voice grated on Dawna. Like Ed believed Dawna was a big, dumb blonde.
You think I'm dumb? I'll
give you dumb. That was how
Dawna handled people like Ed. "You
do much work hereabouts?" she asked Ed.
From
Casey's grin, Dawna knew she'd caught the hint of y'all, the smidgen of good
ol' girl in Dawna's tone.
"Not
precisely here, actually," Ed replied.
"Mostar, Bosnia, that's where my jobs are these days.
Artillery damage. I haven't dealt with a straight bombing for a while."
"You've
been in this line of work for some time."
From Casey, a statement not a question.
"Related
work. Ten years, more or
less." Ed headed toward the
stairwell. "Looks pretty
straightforward so far. I'll have a
look-see upstairs."
"Go
ahead." Dawna let the smaller
woman move out of earshot. "Ed's
acting mighty suspicious," she muttered to Casey.
Casey
shrugged. "Goes with the job,
I guess. I'm trying to recall where
I heard that name, Ed Hunt."
"Ed,
Edwina, either way she bugs me."
Casey
laughed. "Short people always
bug you. Woman's not built for
basketball, you got no time for her."
Casey nudged Dawna toward the door.
"I want to see her in action."
As they climbed the stairs, she spoke louder.
"So Ed, what drew you to the demolition field?"
"Black
powder must have gotten into my blood."
Ed waited on the landing. Both
apartment dooors were ajar. Ed led
the way through the doorway on the left, which opened into a large studio with a
kitchen area along the interior wall. Silver
duct tape striped the cabinet doors. Ed strode to the sink and untaped the compartment beneath it.
Casey
winked at Dawna. "I read that
explosives expert is one of the ten most dangerous jobs on earth.
The risk didn't deter you?"
Ed's
upper body had disappeared under the sink.
Her reply was muffled. "There's
no risk if you know what you're dealing with."
"Which
you do, if you've studied the proposal," Dawna pointed out.
"So what are the other nine jobs on that list?" she asked
Casey.
Ed
was upright again dusting off her knees, scouring the room with her eyes.
She focused on the near corner of the kitchen where a battered
refrigerator huddled.
"Let's
see." Casey began ticking off
jobs on her fingers. "Blowout
control you know, oil wells. Mercenary.
Bodyguard. Bounty hunter.
Minesweeper. Smokejumper. Special Forces warrior "
"What's that doing there?" Ed demanded, glowering at the refrigerator.
"It's
covered by the contract," Dawna reminded her. "You're disposing of a half-dozen appliances as part of
the demolition."
"I
don't mean the fridge. I mean this
odd-sized piece of tape on the freezer compartment. Strip here is a quarter inch narrower than what you used
everywhere else." Ed peeled
the tape away from the door and carefully eased it open. She trained her flashlight on the neat stack of sausages
inside. Pale gray, the color of
bockwurst, but double the usual diameter.
The
look Ed gave Dawna was triumphant, full of gotcha slimeball.
But her voice remained brittlely correct.
"If you want to make this exercise more interesting for your
students, that is your prerogative. But
our bid was contingent on the extent of your blast.
You assured me you were using only TNT in the Fiat.
Did you think I wouldn't find your stash of C-4?"
Dawna's
throat was so dry, she had to try twice to make her words audible.
"Not mine." So
whose? Russian mobsters, seizing a
chance to wipe out all the FBI agents in Budapest‑-starting with Dawna?
"Very gently. Put that
door back the way you found it. We're
leaving."
"Don't
you want to know who left you this house warming present?"
Ed rose on her toes. "Remote
control fusing system."
Remote
control. Whoever had
placed the bomb could set it off at any time.
Definitely a job for the Bomb Disposal Unit. "Forget it," Dawna warned, "We're gone."
Ed
leaned deeper into the freezer. "Same
signature characteristics as the Bush device."
Gobbledygook,
as far as Dawna was concerned, but Ed's words must have meant something to Casey
because she moved in close for a better view.
Dawna's
heart beat too fast. Sweat filmed
her face. She had to get her people
out of there. "You two, come
on."
Casey
and Ed ignoring her, heads touching as they peered inside.
"Unusually large quantity of black tape," Casey was saying.
"Heat-shrunk plastic protecting the wires."
"Exactly.
And look at the circuit board. The
soldering expertise hasn't improved."
Ed handed the flashlight to Casey and pulled a pair of wire cutters from
her pocket. "I suspect I could
disable this one with my eyes shut, but let's use the torch anyway."
They
were insane, both of them. Going to
blow themselves up and Dawna, too. "Leave
it for the BDU," Dawna ordered.
The
snip-snip-snip of Ed's cutters told her Ed wasn't obeying.
"Very
nice," Casey said to Ed.
Who
made a deprecating gesture. "We
all know this one." She
slipped the cutters back into her pocket. "Now,
we can leave," she said to Dawna.
"Out
the rear." Dawna figured the
bomber had most likely put a second device in the Fiat, ready to take out the
VIPs during the press conference. Casual
observers wouldn't know that Dawna's explosives were secured ten blocks away.
They'd conclude that it was Dawna's TNT that had blown up the Fiat,
another FBI fiasco. Rubble from the
upstairs explosion would further confuse the scene, burying all the dead and the
evidence. Allowing the easy escape
of whoever set off the bombs.
Dawna
had her cell phone out as the three women hurried down the stairs.
She tersely instructed Rudy Semvich, lead FBI agent on the organized
crime task force, to order a house-to-house search in the neighborhood.
The cops had to locate the perp holding the remote before the Bomb
Disposal Unit approached the Fiat and checked out the building.
"Postpone the press conference until later," she concluded.
"We'll meet you at the command center."
Outside,
Dawna moved the her two companions quickly away from the building's backside,
along a deserted alley. When they
reached Ecseri Plac, Dawna tapped seven two's into the cell phone and ordered a
taxi to pick them up. "We'll
coordinate this thing out of task force headquarters," she told Casey.
"They've set up a command post there."
Casey
nodded. "Ed Hunt," she
said as they waited. "I
remember. Before you left the
government, you worked IRA cases for MI-5."
"Bombings."
Ed nodded happily. "Spent days studying the Bush device."
Casey
turned to Dawna. "What we call the bomb that Iraqi Intelligence used
against President Bush when he visited Kuwait a year after the Gulf War.
Hidden in a Toyota Landcruiser. We
found it before it exploded."
Dawna scowled at Casey.
"That bomb upstairs has the same signature.
So it was made in the Middle East. Which
means it's not likely the Russian mob put it there.
No, Case, it was your bad guys who did it.
Got too hot for them in Africa. So
they moved onto my turf. You had a
tip, that's why you're in Hungary."
Casey
shrugged. "Suspicious activity
around the embassy. We harden that
target, we have to ask where else they might go. Bin Laden and his buddies, they don't exactly love the FBI
these days."
Dawna's
media event, a golden opportunity. "You
couldn't warn me," she said grudgingly.
Risk-averse, the Bureau would have immediately canceled both the press
conference and the blast. Casey's
terrorists would have struck elsewhere.
"We
wanted them to make their move," Casey said. "I hashed this out with the Department and the
ambassador last night."
"Leave
the Bureau in the dark," Dawna muttered.
"Great strategy."
"I
figured the odds against them using your building were fifty to one.
No point in alarming you."
Ed's
laughter rang like windchimes. "But
Collins, you tipped off my office. You're the anonymous female who claimed the FBI had hidden
additional explosives at the site."
"Even
with those long odds, I wanted expert examination of the building.
Had to be done in a way that wouldn't alarm the perps.
No bomb-sniffing dogs, for sure. A
non-threatening contractor rep seemed ideal."
No
wonder Ed had treated Dawna as a suspect. Casey
had duped her, too. Ed a fellow
victim, Dawna could overlook her lack of height.
"Excellent work," Dawna said to her.
"And don't pretend it wasn't risky.
Explosive expert belongs in the top ten.
You have to let me buy you a drink."
"Zwack
Unicum," Ed replied promptly. "I'm
addicted to the vile stuff."
"Of
course you are. She drinks the
national bitters," Dawna clarified to Casey.
"Looks like motor oil, tastes like medicine.
Ed's tough. Hey, so am I.
That list of jobs you only got to number eight.
Admit it, the ninth is FBI agent."
"Not
even close," Casey retorted. "Bike
messenger."
Dawna
snorted. "Number ten better
not be Foreign Service Officer."
"Not
possible," Ed said. "No
danger in government service, we all know that."
"Absolutely
not," Casey agreed. "Bureaucracy,
what do we risk? A paper cut now
and then? Hardly qualifies."
She waved at the approaching checkered taxi.
"Here's number ten. Cab
driver."
"Just
in time." Dawna's pulse rate
had subsided, nearly back to normal. Not
healthy no aerobic gain in that. Dawna
pulled open the door and gave the driver an address off Vaci Street in Buda.
Once they were all inside, she grinned wickedly at Casey.
"Step on it," she ordered the driver.
"Drive like hell, we need the rush."