CSI09 - In Extremis Page 2
broken only by the intermittent sounds of a single set of footsteps carefully working their way up the narrow trail, moving like a man in good condition who had made the climb many times before. In the brief moments that he was visible between blocking boulders and trees, Mialkovsky was able to identify the newcomer as a Hispanic-looking male wearing dark ski clothes and what now looked like a Vietnam Warera helmet strapped to his head. There was a small tube duct-taped to the helmet so that it hung in front of the man’s right eye that looked like one of the obsolete first-generation nightscopes frequently sold at military surplus stores, and some kind of long object in his right hand that was mostly hidden by his body. Across the clearing, it now appeared as if the two crouching men with the modern night-vision gear were arguing quietly with each other, clearly agitated by the unexpected appearance of this newcomer. Mialkovsky smiled in pleasant satisfaction. In all of the years that he’d been forced to adapt his tactical plans at the last minute, he couldn’t remember a single time when the random movement of individuals had worked to his advantage. But tonight, the happenstances were lining up in his favor as if they’d been choreographed by fate itself. As the Hispanic man neared the crest of the trail where it opened out into the clearing, he suddenly moved off the trail to his right and began to climb through the rocks, heading in the general direction of the small and narrow mesa where the young mule deer was hiding. Humming silently to himself, Mialkovsky reached out and made a final check of the flash repressor he’d mounted a few inches in front of his silencer with a duct-taped wire frame, making sure it was aligned properly.Wouldn’t it be interesting if the hunter-killer had started to muse before he blinked in surprise as the mule deer startled by the now-rapid approach of the Hispanic man lunged out of the darkness into the clearing
stumbled on its rear leg
and then came to an indecisive stop between Mialkovsky and his target. Stunned by the incredible appearance of the one piece of evidence that he had wanted from the very early stages of his planning but whose chances of happening with any degree of predictability were nil, he’d figured Mialkovsky had barely a second to make his decision. He made it as he always did: based on instinct and a constantly updated awareness of his environment. In a series of reflexive motions, Mialkovsky reached forward, bent the flash repressor rig aside, and sent a 150-grain hollow-pointed 7.62x51 NATO round ripping through the fragile neck of the young deer. Feeling the comfortable sense of calm that he always felt when the action started, Mialkovsky smoothly fed a second round into the rifle’s chamber, reached forward to bend the flash repressor back into position, aimed and triggered a second hollow-pointed bullet into the lower neck of his intended target, jacked a third round into the rifle chamber, and then paused to watch the succession of events that would follow. The Hispanic newcomer and the broad-shouldered man saw each other at the precise moment the obese man with the silenced hunting rifle crumpled to the ground. Seemingly puzzled by the sudden collapse of his companion, the broad-shouldered man allowed the neck-strapped binoculars to drop against his chest as he knelt down, pulled off his right glove, quickly put his bare hand against the prone man’s neck, and then seemed to recoil in horror. Three seconds later, the broad-shouldered man lunged to his feet and began running back down the narrow ledge pathway, pulling his glove back on and fumbling for something inside his jacket. Moments later, the still night air erupted in a jackhammer burst of 9mm rounds as the charging broad-shouldered man fired an Uzi submachine gun in the general direction of the already frantically retreating Hispanic. As Mialkovsky watched from his across-the-clearing position, the broad-shouldered man came to a halt beside a large boulder, triggered a second blindly aimed burst from the Uzi that audibly emptied the magazine, tossed the spent magazine aside, pulled another one out of his jacket, rapidly reloaded and charged the weapon, made a quick sweep of the area with the night-vision binoculars still strapped around his neck, and then began to quickly work his way back down to the spot where the Hispanic man had suddenly disappeared along the trail.Surprised, seriously confused, and pissed. Mialkovsky checked the details off reflexively in his mind as he continued to watch the drama he’d instigated with his second bullet unfold. The 9mm bullets were still ricocheting off rocks and boulders high over his head when the desperately fleeing man lost his footing on the narrow trail and tumbled out of control for at least twenty feet, striking his helmeted head against a large boulder that halted his fall but appeared to leave him dazed and even more frightened. When his Uzi-armed pursuer started screaming and cursing high above him at the upper end of the trail, he fell a second time, slamming his right forearm and then his helmeted head again into another boulder. The dual impacts sent the Hispanic man tumbling down the trail again, where he finally came to a halt in a sprawled and seemingly unconscious pile. Mialkovsky had already started to incorporate this unexpected fatality into his calculations when, to his amazement, the man managed to regain his senses, staggered to his feet, and continued stumbling down the trail
undoubtedly propelled by the crashing, cursing, and gasping sounds his pursuer was making as he tried to descend the trail with the Uzi in one hand and the binoculars loosely held in the other. By the time the injured newcomer reached the bottom of the trail, the broad-shouldered man was halfway down and closing the distance rapidly when his right boot appeared to slip on a rock. The sounds of violent cursing, shattering glass, and clattering metal told Mialkovsky that any advantage the outraged pursuer might have had in terms of night vision and firepower had just been negated. And, in fact, by the time the broad-shouldered man finally reached the bottom of the trail, empty-handed and visibly shaking with rage and exhaustion, the fleeing Hispanic man had managed to reach his truck, wrench the driver’s-side door open, pull himself inside the cab, turn the engine on, and send the ancient pickup roaring down the dirt road, headlights off and dirt and sand flying in all directions. Enthralled by the comedic drama playing itself out in the view field of his nightscope, Mialkovsky watched the furious broad-shouldered man stagger around in the darkness for almost a minute before he finally found the dark-painted Escalade. Moments later, the Escalade’s engine roared and its headlights came on as the infuriated driver sent the heavy vehicle into a sliding and spinning turn, and then accelerated in the direction of the dirt road. Anticipating the blinding and scope-sensor-damaging headlights, Mialkovsky had already shifted the aim of his scope back on the fleeing pickup truck that was now halfway down the winding dirt road. He was just in time to see the pickup suddenly swerve toward a large boulder on the left side of the dirt road. A second before impact, the pickup’s headlights snapped on, and the truck made a sharp dirt-and-sand-spewing left turn
missing the boulder as it continued forward for about fifty feet on the side road
and then suddenly accelerating straight at the bikers’ makeshift campsite, where the six figures were out of their chairs and milling around, probably alerted by the echoing sounds of the Uzi gunfire and the revving truck engines. At that moment, as Mialkovsky blinked in surprise, the distant campsite erupted in a blaze of gunfire, billowing flashes streaking from the hands of all six figures in the direction of the accelerating pickup. A professional part of Mialkovsky’s mind reflexively started counting the individual shots, one sounding louder than the others; but he gave up when the number reached twelve and the echoing concussions began to merge into one loud roar. As he watched, the pickup truck, still visibly the focal point of the streaking fireballs, slowly ground to a halt, its headlights blown out and engine stilled. “You
assholes,” Mialkovsky whispered, incredulous that his carefully thought out and nicely adapted plan had suddenly come apart, thanks to a handful of dirtbag bikers who had taken offense to a stray pickup truck suddenly driving into their campsite. But even as the words escaped his lips, the hunter-killer’s mind was rapidly sorting through his options. The notion of said dirtbag biker faces appearing, one after the other, in the crosshairs of his night
scope appealed to Mialkovsky’s inherent belief in violent and immediate retribution. But he also knew the complications would be significant, and the logistics both involved and time-consuming, none of which he could afford right now. He sensed that time had suddenly become a critical aspect of his calculations. The sudden roar of the rapidly receding Escalade told the hunter-killer that the broad-shouldered man had also seen the gunfire directed at the fleeing truck. Apparently no longer interested in revenge, he accelerated the powerful off-road vehicle past the large boulder at the side road turnoff in a billowing cloud of dirt and sand that would have undoubtedly blinded any pursuit, had there been any. But as far as Mialkovsky could tell, none of the distant figures had any apparent interest in going after the escaping Escalade. Instead, as the hunter-killer watched in sudden realization, two of them pulled portable radios out of their jackets as the other four approached the truck in a manner that suggested a great deal more training and experience in small arms tactics than one would expect from the average dirtbag biker. “Oh shit,” Mialkovsky muttered to himself as he reached into his jacket pocket, pulled out a small cell phone identified by a small strip of masking tape as #1, and punched in a number. “About time you called. How did it go?” the gruff voice on the other end of the line demanded. “The primary event occurred as planned,” Mialkovsky replied calmly, “but there’s been an unexpected complication.” “What kind of complication?” As Mialkovsky stared out across the dark landscape, the first set of flashing reds-and-blues suddenly appeared at the edge of the Las Vegas lights
and then a second
and a third
all heading north in the general direction of the Desert National Wildlife Range. Mialkovsky nodded thoughtfully, thinking the situation might not be quite as bad at it had first appeared depending, of course, on who was responding to the scene and what they’d find, the emphasis definitely resting on the “who” and the “what.” It had suddenly occurred to Mialkovsky that the one thing he’d been determined to avoid when he grudgingly agreed to do this job might actually happen now, because nothing was currently making any sense.Random movements by random people will screw up a good plan every time, the hunter-killer reminded himself, echoing the long-memorized words of a nameless drill sergeant, as he began to seriously reconsider his options in light of this new possibility. “I said what kind of complication,” the voice on the other end demanded. A lightning bolt suddenly flashed in the distance, followed eight seconds later by rumbling thunder, an act of nature that caused Mialkovsky to pause and then smile briefly. “Hopefully a minor one,” he replied calmly even as his mind churned. “This is just an advisory call. The basic story should hold together just fine. But you should be prepared for a police contact some time this evening.” “The police? Here, tonight?” The person on the other end of the connection sounded shocked, as if the possibility had never been considered.You really are incredibly dumb, Mialkovsky thought as he watched one of the four distant figures cautiously pull open the truck’s driver-side door. It always amazed him that outwardly successfully men who routinely used violence as a primary tool could be so stupid when it came to forward thinking. But, he reminded himself, that’s why they pay people like me to handle the complicated work. “It’s highly unlikely that they’ll discover the body on their own, and make the connection; but you need to be prepared, just in case.” “But I thought you said ?” “Shit happens. You’re paying me to deal with it,” Mialkovsky snapped, a dangerous edge to his voice. “I’m going to stay out here for a while to monitor the situation. After I hang up, you destroy phone number one. Use a hammer on the chip, and then run it through the garbage disposal in the manner we discussed. If you need to contact me in the next twelve hours, use phone number two. Don’t forget, you only have four secure phones for this project, so don’t waste them.” “But ” “I’ll contact you again if and when I learn something useful. Right now, I’ve got things to do,” Mialkovsky said flatly, and then disconnected the call. Working quickly now, the hunter-killer disassembled the cell phone, removed and wadded up the strip of masking tape, smashed the chip and the phone parts with a handy rock, removed the flash suppressor system from the end of his silencer and buried it along with the pieces of the crushed phone under a large rock about ten feet away from his lookout point, located the two expended casings and placed them in one of his jacket pockets, put on and activated a set of night-vision goggles, and then began working his way across the narrow mesa to a scene that would have to be carefully rearranged in a very few minutes. The storm developing in the northern mountains could be useful, if it continued to come this way; but that was another random event that would simply have to play itself out. There was only one thing Viktor Mialkovsky was absolutely certain of now: time was no longer on his side.2
GIL GRISSOM AND CATHERINE WILLOWS had driven the entire twenty-three miles from the crime lab to the State Highway 95 turnoff leading to the Desert National Wildlife Range in comfortable silence, much like a long-married couple. Grissom was lost in thought about the recent article in Science about domestid beetles that he really disagreed with, but wasn’t quite sure if he wanted to “I was supposed to have the night off, you know,” Catherine said, interrupting her supervisor’s train of thought as she pulled the black GMC Denali up to a stop at the Corn Creek Field Station entrance. “What?” Grissom blinked and then looked over at her quizzically. “You haven’t heard a word I’ve said, have you,” the slender, strawberry blond CSI said as she lowered her side window and waited for the uniformed U.S. Fish & Wildlife Refuge officer waiting at the entrance to approach their vehicle. Grissom looked thoughtful for a moment. “Well
oh, I’m sorry. Once this is all over
” “Yeah, yeah, I know. Another comp day I can add to the pile.” There was an argumentative edge to her voice, but Grissom ignored it, smiling as he considered the visual imagery. “This time, I promise you. Once this situation is resolved, take a few days. Seriously,” he said, his eyes twinkling with amusement. “And besides, Brass was pretty insistent.” “That’s what concerns me, more than anything,” Catherine admitted. “You know how he operates. He never tries to tell us how to do our job. So why ?” “Good evening, ma’am, are you the folks from the Las Vegas Police Department Crime Lab I’m supposed to meet here?” the uniformed refuge officer asked, gesturing with her head back at the two other almost identical black GMC Denalis that had pulled in behind Grissom and Willows. The woman’s long blond hair, very youthful features, and deep southern accent seeming jarringly incongruous with the holstered pistol on her hip, the glistening badge on her new down uniform jacket, the four-cell flashlight in her gloved hand, and the surrounding Nevada desert. “That’s right,” Catherine said, nodding and holding out her credentials and then shielding her eyes irritatedly in an effort to maintain her night vision as the young refuge officer focused the glaring beam of her flashlight on her ID case and then Grissom’s. “I’m Senior Investigator Catherine Willows and this is Supervising Investigator Gil Grissom. The CSIs in the other two vehicles are Warrick Brown, Nick Stokes, Sara Sidle, and Greg Sanders.” “Shanna Lakewell, and I’ll take your word for the other investigators’ ID’s,” the youthful officer responded as she removed her glove and extended her right hand in a quick handshake. “Connor asked me to wait here and lead you up to the scene,” she added as she put the glove back on and shut off her flashlight. “He’s definitely going to be happy to see you folks up there tonight.” “Oh, why’s that?” Grissom asked, his curiosity piqued by the sudden edge in the young officer’s voice. “Things were really pretty tense when I left the scene a few minutes ago,” Lakewell said uneasily, “and I really doubt they’ve improved a whole lot since.” “You mean things were tense among the investigating officers at the scene?” Grissom pressed. “Well, I guess I’m not really sure what you mean by ‘investigating officers,’ ” Lakewell responded hesitantly. “The officers involved in the shooting are pretty upset; but that’s because
they want to go looking for some drugs they think a big shot dealer dumped out of his truck somewhere on the range, and your Captain Brass won’t let them leave the scene.” Grissom’s thoughts flashed back to his phone conversation with Brass; Grissom had already explained to Catherine and the other members of the graveyard team as they were loading up their crime scene gear into the Denalis that Brass had been extremely brief in his description of the scene:”A buy-bust investigation has gone bad at the Desert National Wildlife Range, and I need the entire graveyard team to respond to the location ASAP with all of your shooting scene reconstruction equipment. Yes, that’s what I said, Gil, the entire team
as soon as you can get here.” And that was all he’d said to Grissom before hanging up. Everything else Lakewell was now revealing was new information to the two senior CSIs. “Some of our Metro officers got involved in a shooting on a federal refuge, and Captain Brass won’t let them leave?” Grissom continued to press Lakewell from the front passenger seat, determined to find out as much of what she knew as possible. He was getting an uneasy feeling that reliable info might be difficult to obtain once up on the mountain. “Well, no sir, not exactly,” Lakewell said, chewing her lip nervously. “In fact, I don’t think that any Metro police officers were involved at all; just Connor the supervising refuge officer out here a couple of state narcotics officers, and two DEA special agents.” “DEA agents?” Catherine turned to stare at Grissom. “Brass is holding federal and state agents on a federal facility, and not letting them leave?” “All of them, and their snitch, too; she was definitely involved in the whole mess,” Lakewell added. “You’re saying an informant was involved in this shooting?” Grissom interjected calmly. “Presumably meaning an informant was allowed to be at a federal-state buy-bust scene armed?” “I think that’s what happened, but my information is all secondhand