[a little note: surgery as expected a week ago, an unexpected post-op infection intervened and I'm in a new hospital, trying to beat that back. Well enough today to write, so finished this chapter. Not on email (Sorry, Christian). More as I know it...A]
Part IV
Chapter 30
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Callahan and his spotter were standing in a field just north of the little airport in Hayward -- and they were kitted-out as surveyors, complete with blueprints for a golf course that was slated to be built on the property -- and they were indeed surveying, in a way...
"The prevailing wind is generally from the north on this side of the bay, isn't it?" his spotter asked.
"Yeah," Callahan said, "but more often than not a little west of north, coming right out of the Gate. If the plane comes in at night they'll likely land on 2-8, and if it's a twin it'll be on 2-8 Left."
"Can you target an engine from head-on?"
"I can hit it, sure. The real question is what happens if the bullet hits the prop instead of the cylinder head. Nothing would happen, for all intents and purposes, except maybe a badly deformed bullet."
"Could you hit a tire?"
Callahan shrugged. "I dunno -- that might be more a matter of luck than skill, especially at night." Callahan kept talking as a patrol car motored by, and when the cop inside waved at them Callahan waved back. "That's the second time that patrol car has been by."
"Okay, car number 245," his spotter said. "We'd better pack up and get some lunch, do what a survey crew would do around noon."
"Ever been to a Del Taco?" Harry asked.
"No...? What's a del taco?"
Callahan grinned. "Take my word for it...you're gonna love it."
"Right. Let's go..."
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Al Bressler was spotting for Frank Bullitt near the SFPDs headquarters building, tracking down a rumor that McKay had been seen going into the building just after midnight. They'd been staking out the secured personnel entry ever since, but they hadn't seen a thing.
"Maybe he left something in his office, ya know?" Bressler said. "Decided to sneak in and get it and leave without being spotted."
"Maybe," Bullitt grunted. "Whatever. Either he ain't here or he's already blown us off. You got his home address?"
"On Bismarck Street in Daly City."
"Anyone watching it?"
"Yeah. One of the Israeli kids."
"What about his wife? Anyone seen her?"
"No, and there's been no movement inside that house, either."
"Any intel on him would be more than useful right now, know what I mean?"
"Well..." Bressler said, his voice growing conspiratorially low...
"Well, what?"
"This is off the books, okay Frank? But he's a weenie-wagger."
"What?"
"He's been spotted at those weenie-wagger arcades."
"Speak English, would you?"
"Adult bookstores, ya know? The video booths? He's got a habit, Frank?"
"A habit? What kind of fucking habit, Bressler? Heroin?"
"The man's got to pull it off about every three or so hours..."
"Goddamnit, do you not fuckin' know how to speak English?"
"He jacks-off a lot, Frank. Two, three, sometimes four times a day, usually at adult bookstores, usually out near the airport."
"There. Was that so hard?"
"Sorry, Frank..."
"Man, you guys in Vice need to get out more...try walking around in daylight once in a while..."
"Yeah, I know."
"So, are there any bookstores he hits frequently?"
"Yeah. All of them."
"No shit? Pencil-Dick?"
"That ain't the worst of it, Frank."
"What?"
"He, uh, spends a lot of time on his knees."
"Pencil-dick? No shit?" Bullitt chuckled, now shaking his head. "How did you find that out?"
"We run CCTV surveillance up in the ceilings in almost all of them. Besides guys sucking other guys, a shitload of drugs run through those places."
Bullitt nodded. "Okay, we're wasting time here; let's head south, see if we can pick up a trail."
Bressler got on the radio and called in their change of plans. Goodman replied and approved the move; Frank headed for the One-oh-one, still shaking his head. "So, Pencil-dick is in the closet, eh...? Well, that's just too-fuckin'-rich. So, Al, you wanna rain on his parade a little?"
"He might be more valuable as a hostage that as a target..."
"Yeah," Bullitt sighed, still thinking, "it's the holy rollers who are wound the tightest."
"McKay has always been wound pretty tight..."
Which only cause Frank to smile.
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Callahan loaded his spotter down with a couple of tacos and three bean burritos; the results after two hours had been, so far, predictably spectacular. The poor guy squirmed in his seat before quietly lifting a cheek and letting another SBD loose...
"Nice one," Callahan grumbled before leaning over and letting another one rip.
"How do you do that?" the kid asked.
"Do what?"
"Make them so loud?"
"Practice, man."
"So, you eat a lot of tacos?"
"Only when I need to clear the air."
They both laughed...until the radio chattered and came alive.
"X-ray One, go ahead," his spotter said
"Possible target information," Goodman said from the safe house. "DC-3 inbound from KSAN."
"Got it," the kid said.
Callahan shook his head. "What the hell are we supposed to do with a 'possible' target? Shoot them down and hope they turn out to be the right target...?"
"Maybe wait 'til they come to a stop, shoot out the tires and nail anyone who comes out the door."
"I don't like it," Harry snarled, now looking at the fence line along the west side of the airport. "There's cover over there..."
"What's the range from there to those hangers?" the kid asked, pointing at a row of hangers on the east side of the airport.
"Looks like six, maybe seven hundred yards."
"How long does it take you to set-up that scope?"
"A minute or so. Maybe a little less."
"Let's move over there."
The radio crackled to life once again and the kid answered: "X-ray One, go head."
"Suspect DC-3 approaching San Jose. Get in position."
"Roger."
"Okay, that does it," Callahan whispered as he started the Chevy Blazer. He looked at the fence line, and the glassy-smooth bay beyond, then shook his head. "We'll be too exposed over there, and it's the middle of the afternoon. This is nuts..."
"We can set out the surveying gear, hide by that pile of rocks and debris."
Callahan drove slowly, carefully, not wanting to attract attention, until he found an old dirt track that led alongside the airport fence and took it. Once by the pile of rocks they set out all their surveying equipment, and Callahan took his H&K PSG-1 out of it's case and began to enter all the physical parameters he'd need for the shot.
The kid tuned the radio to the SF approach control and they listened as the DC-3 reported leaving San Jose airspace, making for the East Bay and Hayward Municipal...
"Tuning in the control tower now," the kid said.
Callahan took out a pair of binoculars and scanned the area: men in the control tower were looking to the south; ramp activity across the airport by the fueling stands looked normal; traffic on nearby roads moving slowly as the evening commute began...and a patrol car parked in deep shade by a building, almost out of sight -- but...not quite...
"Pack up. Let's go," Callahan snarled.
"What is it?" the kid asked.
"We're being watched. This is a set-up."
"What?"
The radio crackled to life again, and this time the DC-3 checked in with the tower at Hayward Municipal, which cleared the aircraft for a straight-in approach to Runway 28, then cleared them to land.
The kid packed up the equipment while Harry slipped the rifle back in it's case, then Callahan heard the DC-3 out over the bay. He turned and watched as it came in south of the San Mateo Bridge, heading for Union City...
"That's not a straight in approach...?" he said. "Get in, let's move..."
As Callahan moved to get in the Blazer he stopped and watched the DC-3 as it turned on final. He could just see the flaps lower, then the landing gears as they extended -- when he saw a puff of smoke emerge from an industrial area underneath the aircraft, then a streak of flame as some kind of missile leapt into the sky, streaking for the DC-3...
...and the missile struck the DC-3's left engine, severing the entire wing from the fuselage. The aircraft wallowed sideways once then fell straight down into a cluster of mobile homes. The explosion was devastating, and Callahan could see wildfires erupting all over the hillside beyond the homes.
And then five patrol cars emerged from their hiding places and streaked across the airport towards their Blazer.
Callahan slammed the transmission into Drive and turned towards the bay, driving across the rough landfill towards the water's edge. He could see the kid on the radio, telling Goodman the situation as Callahan maneuvered the truck between piles of rock and construction debris...
'Got to get that rifle,' he said to himself, 'secure it or swim out and dump it where no one can find it. Incriminating...'
Then, just ahead, a group of men stood and began firing at the Blazer...
"Get down!" he yelled as he spun the wheel...
Glass shattered and rained down on them as he made his way to a huge pile of rock.
They slid to a stop; Callahan grabbed the H&K from behind his seat and ran for cover, the kid not far behind -- carrying an MP-5 of his own. Bullets slammed into the rocks and wet sand as they slid into positions of cover.
"You get the radio, kid?"
"Yeah."