But Yamada had lied. The robotic arm on his stealthy research UUV had only attached large magnets to the submarine’s hull. Pearce promised Yamada that his UUV would never be deployed in a military operation, so it took a while to convince his friend that scaring the Russians with magnets was not the same as blowing them out of the water with mines. Yamada finally yielded the point on the promise of lavish funding for his next round of whale research. Yamada was actually glad to screw with the Russians. He knew that the Soviets had killed whales illegally for over forty years, slaughtering nearly two hundred thousand of them globally and causing several population crashes. Making a Russian sub captain piss his pants seemed like a good start on payback to the idealistic pacifist.
Pearce was just as glad they were only magnets attached to the
Ali had kept his side of the bargain. Galling as it was, now it was Pearce’s turn to ante up.
San Diego, California
Two days later, Ali appeared at the Pearce Systems hangar at the San Diego airport, as per Pearce’s instructions. One of Pearce’s private jets, a Bombardier Global 8000, sat in the cavernous space. Ali could see the two pilots in the cockpit window prepping for takeoff.
Pearce escorted the Iranian up the stairs into the luxurious cabin. On the back end of the passenger compartment was a sliding cantilevered door for privacy. The door was locked open. A rolling medical/surgical bed was in the separate space, along with a heart monitor and IV pump.
“What is that?” Ali asked.
A clean-shaven thirty-year-old Pakistani man in a sport coat and tie stepped into the cabin, carrying a doctor’s satchel and a small roll-on travel case. He was out of breath. “Sorry I’m late.”
Pearce shook the Pakistani’s hand with a smile. “You’re fine, Doctor. Take a seat, please.”
“Who is that?” Ali asked.
“I promised you safe delivery to Tehran. I didn’t promise to reveal my underground network to you so we’re going to have to knock you out with drugs.”
Ali’s eyes narrowed with suspicion.
“Dr. Khan is a professor of anesthesiology at the USC Medical Center. He’s also a Muslim.”
“Sunni Muslim,” Khan corrected.
Ali bristled. “A heretic.” The Iranian was a devout Shia.
“That’s the best I could do on short notice,” Pearce said.
“This was not part of our deal,” Ali said.
“If I was going to kill you, you little shit, I promise you I wouldn’t do it with tranquilizers.”
“And if I leave right now?”
“It means our deal is off. Then I’ll put a bullet in your stomach before you reach the exit door, and then the fun times can really begin.”
Ali was trapped. Without the threat of the explosives at Petco Park, he didn’t have any more leverage.
“I am trusting your honor to deliver me safely,” Ali reminded Pearce, mustering as much ferocity as he could.
“You’re lucky I value my honor.”
“I am surprised you do. Infidel mercenaries have no loyalty to anyone but themselves, and there is no honor in that. Perhaps Allah will indeed be merciful to you on the Day of Judgment.”
“I’m curious. Why did you reveal the location of the Petco Park explosives to us? I thought you people enjoyed slaughtering helpless civilians.”
Bravos had posed as installers two weeks before and replaced the foam bumper guards that wrapped around the support poles throughout the stadium, but instead of using styrofoam in the replacement job, they had used tubes packed with C4 and steel fléchettes, then reattached the advertising sleeves that covered the bumpers. After Pearce had confirmed the Russian submarine with Ali, the Iranian revealed the location of the bombs. An FBI demolition squad took care of the rest.
“New American civilian deaths would have served no purpose, but they would have incurred the wrath of the United States upon my government. And for the record, I did not install those devices. It was Bravo’s men who did it. So, technically, I and my government have assisted the United States in defeating a terrorist attack by the Bravos upon your nation.”
“And we’re supposed to be grateful?”
“No. That would be presumptuous.”
Pearce marveled. Like most Eastern cultures, Iranians had no sense of irony.
Ali continued. “I just want the record to be clear. There must be no false pretext for hostilities between your government and mine.”
“We don’t need a false pretext to wipe your maniac government off the face of the earth. You’ve given us plenty of real ones.” Pearce checked his watch. “Time to get rolling. Dr. Khan is going to put you to sleep, and when you wake up, you will be in Tehran, alive and safe. The rest is up to you.”
“I must warn you that the anesthesia I will be using is quite potent. You will probably have a slight headache when you wake up, but it’s nothing to worry about,” Khan added.