Текст книги "The Naked Edge"
Автор книги: David Morrell
сообщить о нарушении
Текущая страница: 20 (всего у книги 25 страниц)
"But what if the orders stop making sense?"
"If a man pays me to do something, I do it. Maybe he didn't tell me all his reasons. My job isn't to think. It's to follow through on an assignment. Are you a coward?"
"Of course not," Raoul said, his face reddening. "You know I've done everything you asked."
"You're supposed to be an operator ."
His face even redder, Raoul said, "I am an operator."
"Then show me!" Carl tugged Raoul along the wall. "Here. The middle of the block. This is where you're supposed to wait!"
More disappointed protestors went up the street.
Carl checked his watch. "In ten minutes, follow the plan!"
"Okay!" Raoul said angrily. "All right!"
Stop , Carl warned himself. What am I doing? Keep control.
He touched Raoul's shoulders with apparent affection. "Don't take it personally. I'm just stressed, keeping track of all the details. You're my most dependable operator. Never doubt that."
Raoul didn't reply, but the compliment clearly made him less angry.
"When you're in my place, you'll understand the burden of responsibility. I'm sorry." Carl gripped Raoul's shoulders harder. "I know you won't let me down."
Raoul didn't answer.
"Is everything straight between us?" Carl asked.
"Yes."
"Then make me proud." Carl stepped away.
"Where–"
"I need to hurry and get to my spot," Carl said over his shoulder. He struggled to conceal the irritation he felt for losing control.
What the hell's wrong with me? This is almost over. Keep cool. Don't screw things up.
The crowd carried him toward the edge of the killing zone. He reached the middle of the next block, where nine minutes from now he was supposed to pull the cord on his knapsack.
He shifted toward a wall. Freeing himself from the passing crowd, he took off the knapsack and shoved it into a garbage bin. Rejoining the protestors, he was eager to let them propel him to safety. He had plenty of time to get to the van and flee the area. A few seconds after ten, he would press a button on the transmitter in his jacket pocket. If the police frequencies hadn't already set off the detonators, the signal he sent would do the job.
Something made him glance back.
Raoul was at the refuse bin, gaping at the discarded knapsack.
Chapter 25.
When Raoul had started to ask "where," his intention hadn't been to find out where Bowie was going. What he wanted to know was whether he should meet Bowie at the van or whether he was supposed to get to Galveston on his own. Because of their argument, they hadn't finalized their arrangements. The way Raoul felt, he wasn't sure he wanted to meet Bowie at the van. Talking to me like he's a chingado guard in the joint. But as seconds passed, the heat of Raoul's anger lessened. He didn't want trouble between them. The truth was, what Raoul felt for him was what he was supposed to feel for his father.
Nine minutes. Plenty of time to ask him and get back here.
Raoul slipped into the crowd, moving toward the next block, where Bowie would be waiting for ten o'clock to occur. There. Ahead. Raoul saw the lanky man, slightly taller than those around him, flowing with the crowd.
Bowie shifted toward a wall. Exactly where he's supposed to be , Raoul thought, working toward him. But then Raoul frowned, seeing Bowie take off his knapsack. Raoul frowned harder when Bowie shoved the knapsack into a garbage bin. Bowie rejoined the crowd.
Stunned, Raoul came to the garbage bin and gaped at the knapsack Bowie had abandoned. He raised his eyes, searching the crowd. Bowie was glaring back at him.
The force of it made him dizzy. The fury in Bowie's eyes was so overwhelming that Raoul felt shoved. He actually took a step backward, his dizziness intensifying. The world he thought he knew spun. The reality he depended on seemed to ripple beneath his feet, making him unsteady.
At once, another world took its place. A mask seemed to slip from Bowie's face. The man Raoul thought of as a father suddenly became a stranger. Worse than that: an enemy. The rage and hatred on Bowie's face shot across the distance and made Raoul lurch back another step.
Immediately, Bowie pushed through the crowd, hurrying toward him. A terrible heat primed Raoul's muscles. The most searing fear he'd ever known fired his protective instincts and sent him fleeing.
Chapter 26.
No! Carl thought. Shoving protestors out of the way, he charged toward Raoul. The look on his face! He suspects! If he warns the others . . .
The constant stream of demonstrators held him back. Turning sideways, ramming his shoulder through the crowd, he was reminded of playing in high-school football games, his father yelling drunkenly from the bleachers.
"Hey!" a man said. "Watch where you're going!"
"Out of my way!"
"Don't ram into me, jerk-off!"
The man gasped, struck in the stomach, baffled by the blood streaming from him.
His knife at his side, Carl shoved harder through the oncoming crowd. Ahead, Raoul stayed close to the wall, gaining distance, managing to reach the next block.
A young man with a knapsack saw them coming.
Raoul shouted a warning.
The team member looked confused.
Raoul shouted again.
The team member saw Carl chasing Raoul. Fear tightening his face, he turned and ran.
Chapter 27.
"What's this about?"
In the communications truck, an FBI agent pointed toward a monitor.
"Where?"
"Here. This ."
Cavanaugh and Jamie walked toward it.
"Somebody's in an awful hurry to go the wrong way," the agent said.
"Not one person. Three," Jamie noted.
The camera was angled downward from a roof. The screen showed the crowd filling the street, countless protestors shifting away from the conference center. Breaking the pattern, a line of three men charged in the opposite direction, thrusting their way through the demonstrators.
"Seems like the guy in back's chasing the others," the agent said. "Look at how frightened they are. They keep glancing back to see if he's gaining on them."
"And what about this ?" Another agent pointed toward a monitor that showed a commotion nearby. People formed a circle around a man scrunched sideways on the pavement. He held his stomach, which was dark with spreading liquid. A woman raised her face and soundlessly screamed.
"Looks like he's been shot," an agent said.
Cavanaugh concentrated on the three men forcing their way south as everyone else went north. "Can you get a closer view of the guy in back, the one who seems to be chasing the others?"
"Sure."
The agent twisted dials. Immediately the camera magnified the man at the rear of the line.
As the face got larger, Cavanaugh felt a chill speed along his nerves. "Not shot. Stabbed."
"How do you know?"
"Because the guy chasing the others is Carl."
Chapter 28.
Eight minutes before ten.
Fighting his way through the crowd, Carl saw another young man with a knapsack. Raoul shouted a warning. When the man, already on edge, looked behind the team members charging toward him and saw the rage on Carl's face, he too broke into a run. Carl shouldered through more protestors.
"Hey, dickhead, watch who you're slamming into," a man said, only to groan and double over as Carl lunged past.
Ahead, Raoul hurried straight ahead while the team members he'd warned dropped their knapsacks and split to the right and left, racing down side streets.
They'll alert the rest of the team , Carl thought in a fury. I trained them to feel they belong to a tightly knit unit. That's how they'll act now, protecting each other.
Because of Raoul. All the effort I spent on him, he's still a punk.
Ramming through the crowd, getting nearer, Carl angrily calculated that he had sufficient time to teach him the consequence of disloyalty.
Ahead, the son of a bitch hurled his knapsack away and shouted to a team member waiting farther along the block.
Chapter 29.
"What are they throwing away? Knapsacks?"
"They seem to be shouting at people at the side of the crowd." Cavanaugh stared at the monitors.
"Men standing against walls," Jamie said. "They all have knapsacks. Here, here, here, and . . . My God, once you notice them, they seem to be everywhere."
"I hate to imagine what's in them." An agent picked up a microphone. "Surveillance One to all units."
As the agent described what he saw on the screens, Cavanaugh pointed toward the one that showed Carl. "What street is he on?" he asked another agent.
"Girod near Fulton."
Cavanaugh grabbed a lapel microphone and an earbud. "Keep telling me which direction he's taking."
Before Jamie had a chance to think about going with him, Cavanaugh opened the door and jumped to the street.
"Grab the guys with the knapsacks!" the agent said into a microphone. "For God's sake, be careful. We don't know what's in them."
When Jamie jumped to the street, Cavanaugh had disappeared into the crowd.
Chapter 30.
Seven minutes before ten.
Without looking back, Raoul had a visceral sense that Bowie was gaining on him. His stomach felt on fire. His lungs ached. His legs felt wobbly. Although he stayed along a wall, there were still too many people in front of him. Crashing, shoving, he shouted to another team member, "Bowie lied! Something's wrong! Get rid of the knapsack!"
The already-nervous team member seemed to be grateful for the excuse to run. Raoul leapt over the dropped knapsack and veered left onto Fulton Street. The side street had fewer departing protestors, giving Raoul a chance to run faster.
But he continued to have that visceral sense that Bowie was gaining on him. He saw yet another team member and shouted his warning. For proof, all the man needed was a frightened look behind Raoul toward where Bowie was getting closer. The man dropped his knapsack and raced toward the next corner.
Perhaps Raoul only imagined the footsteps pounding behind him. But he didn't imagine the increasing tightness in his lungs, the worsening unsteadiness in his legs. Never having been tested, never having passed five missions, he was ruled by fear instead of using adrenaline to give him strength. Gotta breathe. As long as I'm running, he has the advantage. Gotta stop. On the opposite side of the street, an archway beckoned. Gotta fight.
Raoul crashed past retreating demonstrators, knocking a man to the pavement. "Damn it!" he heard behind him, but all he cared about was reaching the protection of that archway. He charged inside, but there wasn't a door that he could slam and lock. A musty brick corridor led to metal stairs angling up. Shadows beckoned as he raced to the stairs. He heard footsteps rushing behind him. Drawing his pistol, he spun and saw a blur as Bowie shouted, " Want to make a bet? "
The shout boomed off the bricks. Along with the fright of Bowie's swiftly enlarging figure, the noise was loud enough to startle Raoul. His knees bent. His shoulders hunched. His hands rose to shield his chest. He fumbled to squeeze the trigger, but at once, he felt Bowie walloping into him, jolting the remaining air from his lungs. He landed hard on the stairs, their sharp edges chopping his back as Bowie continued hurtling into him, punching him repeatedly, except that the punches were stabs and now it was blood instead of air that escaped from Raoul's lungs.
Chapter 31.
"You dummy, didn't you learn anything ? Don't bring a gun to a knife fight!" Carl drove the blade deep into Raoul's chest, his stomach, his throat, again and again, each thrust sending a shudder through the body. Gas escaped. Blood flew. He kept pounding until the torn mass beneath him was barely recognizable. With each frenzied blow, he felt as if he were out of himself, smiling down at the punishment he inflicted. Courage. Honor. Sacrifice. But the greatest military virtue is loyalty . This is what you get for–
Carl was suddenly in his body again, conscious of the gore beneath him, the blood dripping from his hands, his shirt, his face. A tremor went through him, a spasm of release that raised his head and arched his back. His vision turned gray. Then everything was vivid before him, Raoul's death-contorted body, the black metal stairs now sprayed with red, the crimson-covered knife in his hand.
How long have I been . . . My God, what time is it? His watch was so covered with blood that he had to wipe it on the back of his shirt before he could see its display. Four minutes to ten. The last thing he remembered was charging into the passageway at six minutes to ten. Several quick slashes with his knife. That was his plan. Thirty seconds to teach Raoul his lesson. In and out. Five minutes to get away. Not all the team members would be warned that something was wrong. Some would pull the cords on their knapsacks and activate the detonators, releasing the gas. Not enough to save the mission, although the target area was still dangerous. He needed to run.
Looking like this? Straightening, he felt the wet heaviness of the blood on his shirt. Every security agent in the crowd will converge on me. Damn you, Raoul. He kicked the body, cursing Raoul for making him lose control.
Think! There's got to be a way to–
He tore off his shirt. In muggy New Orleans, a man without a shirt attracted little attention, but someone with a blood-soaked shirt was another matter. He hurried to a faucet next to the stairs, rinsing the blood from his hands and face. He almost ran back along the alley toward the street, but a commotion out there told him that somebody was charging in this direction.
Trying a door on his right, he found it locked. He tried a door on his left, with the same result. Terribly aware of time passing, he charged up the stairs, all the while folding his knife and shoving it with his pistol into one of the baggy pockets of his pants. His shoes clattering on the stairs, he reached the top and turned the knob, groaning when he found that this door, too, was locked.
Past a closed window next to it, he heard two women talking. When he pounded on the door, their voices stopped.
"Let me in! It's an emergency!"
Below him, footsteps sounded in the passageway. He stared down, feeling his heart skip.
Chapter 32.
"The middle of the block! The south side!"
Listening to the voice give instructions through his earbud, Cavanaugh veered through the crowd on Fulton Street. Reaching an archway, he heard the voice say, "That's where they went! Backup's on the way!"
"No time!"
Staying to the side, he drew his pistol and listened. With the noise of the departing protestors behind him, he thought he heard the echo of footsteps on a metal staircase.
Working to control his heartbeat, he took a breath, held it, counted one, two, three, exhaled through his mouth, one, two, three, and inhaled through his nose, one, two, three. Pivoting into view, he aimed along a brick passageway and saw the lower half of a man climbing the stairs. A blood-covered body lay at the bottom. A blood-soaked shirt was near a faucet.
Continuing to aim, Cavanaugh eased along the passageway, shifting his feet carefully, taking care to place them firmly and maintain his balance. Nearing the stairs, he heard pounding on a door above him. Ignoring the corpse at his feet, he aimed upward.
Carl.
Slowly, Carl's surprised look changed to a welcoming smile. "My, my." The smile widened. "How are you doing, Aaron?"
"I've been better." Cavanaugh tightened his finger on the trigger.
"Yeah, I'm not having a great day, either." Carl's lanky chest was bare, his ribs showing through his lean muscles. His narrow face dripped water. He held up his wet, powerful-looking arms in surrender. "It's been too long, Aaron. You must be taking a lot of vitamins. Either that, or marriage agrees with you. You don't look any older."
"For certain, you haven't changed. I see you're still having control problems."
"Well, he turned against me. I know disloyalty doesn't bother you , but it makes me furious."
"Apparently, a lot of things do."
"Only people who trick me into believing they're my friends when they're actually the opposite."
"Come down the stairs, Carl."
"I don't think so."
"Slowly. Carefully."
"What happens if I tell you to screw off? You'll shoot me?"
"Yes."
At the top of the stairs, voices behind a door made Cavanaugh frown.
"Not today, good buddy."
The door opened. Before Cavanaugh could fire, Carl vanished into the building.
Cavanaugh raced up the stairs, but not before the door slammed shut. He yanked at the knob. Locked. He pounded on the door. Beyond it, he heard shots. The door was metal. Carl knew that pistol bullets wouldn't go through it. That meant the bullets were intended for someone else: whoever had opened the door. Cavanaugh thought he heard footsteps running along a corridor.
"He's in a building on the second floor!" Cavanaugh said into his lapel mike.
"We'll seal off Fulton and the opposite street!" the voice promised.
Loud noises made Cavanaugh spin and look down the stairs. A half dozen agents rushed along the passageway. The person he focused on was Jamie.
"He went through here!" Cavanaugh yelled to them. Seeing flowerpots at the top of the stairs, Cavanaugh grabbed one and hurled it through the window next to the door. Convinced that Carl wouldn't have risked staying, he reached through, freed a lock, and raised the window. Air conditioning cooled his hand.
As Jamie and the agents ran up the stairs, Cavanaugh peered through the window, studied an office, decided that he had to take the chance, and crawled inside. Two women lay on the floor, streaming blood.
"We need an ambulance!" Cavanaugh shouted into his lapel mike. Rushing, he unlocked the door.
Jamie and the agents hurried in but stopped at the sight of the gunshot victims. One agent knelt, trying to help them while Cavanaugh and the others raced along a corridor.
In an office, a man peered up, hiding behind a desk. In another office, a man lay bleeding.
Reaching a lobby, Cavanaugh saw a receptionist trembling in a corner behind her desk. Glass doors led to an elevator and stairs.
"We've got operators waiting on the street outside! He can't get through!" an agent told him. Gun drawn, the agent ran past Cavanaugh and charged down the stairs, the others following.
But Cavanaugh and Jamie lingered.
"What's above us?" Cavanaugh asked the trembling receptionist.
She opened her mouth. No sound came out.
"You're safe now," Jamie said. "What's above us?"
"Other offices."
"And?"
"A roof garden."
Chapter 33.
Three minutes to ten.
A team member stood against a wall as the crowd passed. Impatient, he checked his watch, looked up, and paled when two men confronted him, aiming pistols.
"Hands up!"
*
"Turn around! Against the wall!" an agent shouted to another team member, this one a block away. "Jay, get the knapsack off him!"
*
"I think it's safe to take the knapsack!" an agent yelled to his partner three blocks away. "If it's a bomb, it doesn't have a manual trigger. Otherwise, he'd have blown himself up by now."
Someone in the crowd overheard. " Bomb? "
"Where?"
"A bomb!"
"Run!"
*
"Keep your hands away from the knapsack!" an agent shouted.
When the team member drew a pistol, the agent protected the knapsack and shot the man in the head.
The dying man fired into the sidewalk, fragments hitting the crowd.
Panicking, a woman tripped. Stampeding, three men fell over her. Screams filled the street.
Chapter 34.
Cavanaugh and Jamie hurried up the stairs. An office door was open, startled faces peering out.
"Close the door," Cavanaugh told them.
"Take cover," Jamie warned.
Continuing higher, they reached an open door, sky beyond it.
"Stay here," Cavanaugh said. "You don't need to do this."
"Babe, I'm not letting you do it alone."
Cavanaugh went first, aiming to the right while Jamie aimed to the left. Amid blazing sunlight, potted trees and shrubs surrounded them. Patio tables, chairs, and sun umbrellas provided a lunch area through which Cavanaugh and Jamie darted, searching for a target.
"Over there," Jamie said.
Fifty yards away, a shed-like structure had an open door. With the Mississippi spread along their right, they raced toward the exit.
"He used the roof to head east! Farther along the block!" Cavanaugh shouted into his lapel mike. "The corner!"
They entered a stairwell in time to hear footsteps rumbling below them.
"He's almost onto the street!" Cavanaugh shouted.
"We're waiting!" a voice shouted through his earpiece.
Shots made Cavanaugh pause. Even in the stairwell, he heard screaming along the street.
Chapter 35.
Two minutes to ten.
Nearing the ground floor, Carl heard shots outside. Beyond a window, a frenzy swept through the crowd, people swarming to get away. He veered into an office, where workers stared in alarm at the chaos outside. Turning toward him, they reacted with greater alarm to his bare chest, the water dripping from his face, and the gun in his hand.
"Out!" Carl yelled. When they didn't respond, he chose a man with red hair and shot him. " Out! Out! Out! "
The survivors collided with each other, all of them trying to get through the door at once. Firing above their heads, Carl watched them surge out, joining the turmoil on the street. Agents out there would be totally overwhelmed.
He grabbed a suit coat off a chair and put it on. He picked up a chair and hurled it through French doors. He surged through and joined the screaming, stampeding crowd.
Chapter 36.
Reaching the ground floor, Cavanaugh saw that the door was open, people rushing past. Taken aback by the chaos, he heard a window shatter in an office to his left.
"Go that way," he told Jamie, indicating the open door. "I'll take the side!"
He rushed into the office in time to see Carl leap through the window and charge into the crowd. Immediately, Cavanaugh followed, shouldering past men and women, straining to keep Carl in sight. Another distant shot increased the crowd's panic. "Bomb!" he heard somebody say. The hysterical need to get away was so powerful that, for a moment, Cavanaugh was actually lifted off his feet by the crush of people around him. It was like being swept along in a flood while he tried to break free of the current and maintain a direction.
Ahead, he saw Carl struggling to go sideways through the crowd. But that didn't make sense. Where Carl seemed determined to go–to the right–was a dead end. He couldn't escape there. Abruptly, Cavanaugh realized he was mistaken. What he thought of as a dead end was actually the Mississippi River. The river. That was how Carl planned to get away.
Chapter 37.
One minute to ten.
No matter how hard Carl strained to break free from the crowd, it caught and squeezed him, carrying him with it. The force was so great that he had trouble breathing. Jabbing with his elbows, ramming with his shoulders, he managed to clear a space and thrust closer to the river.
He was too confined to be able to look at his watch. But he sensed that ten o'clock was almost upon him. Any second, the few remaining members of the team would pull the cords on their knapsacks, the police radio frequencies would trigger the detonator, and black clouds filled with nerve gas would drift across the remaining demonstrators.
Vaguely aware of a building on his right, he jabbed harder with his elbows and cleared enough space to draw his pistol, firing into the air. The deafening shots made people scream and run faster. Several fell, others piling onto them. Carl scrambled over them.
Ahead, part of the crowd raced across train tracks, up steps, and into a tunnel. He fired several more shots to keep the crowd hurrying and charged into the shadow of the tunnel. When he broke into sunlight, a wide expanse of concrete ended at the water. Barges and tugboats chugged along the Mississippi. He vaulted a waist-high fence and dove past a paddle wheeler moored at the shore, plunging beneath the surface.
Chapter 38.
Racing after him, Cavanaugh saw Carl sprinting toward the river. He stretched his legs to their limit and sped closer, but not enough. There wasn't sufficient time to close the gap. As Carl vaulted the fence, Cavanaugh didn't have time to stop and try to control his exertion-trembling body enough to aim. In a blur, Carl dove past a paddle wheeler into the river. Three seconds later, Cavanaugh vaulted the fence. Afraid of being weighed down, he dropped his gun and the knife on his belt. He threw off his jacket, tugged his claw knife from its neck sheath, gripped it securely, and dove.
The river was cold. Gritty. Greasy. Submerged in the weight of the muddy water, he heard the muffled vibrations of engines. The water was so murky that when he opened his eyes, he couldn't see. All he could do was keep kicking with his heavy shoes, blindly sweeping his arms, following the course that Carl had taken into the water. As he thrust with his hands, he gripped his claw knife, slicing, hoping to wound Carl's legs. Already short of breath from running, he felt pressure in his chest, his lungs demanding air. He kept thrusting, his clothes weighing him down.
Caught in the current, no longer hopeful that he was on Carl's trajectory, he thrust again with the knife. The engine vibrations were louder. Then he realized that what he heard was the pounding of his heart. Lungs feeling as if they'd explode, he kicked upward, pawed through the water, broke the surface, and gaped at a tugboat looming toward him. It was so close that he had to shove his feet against its hull, thrusting his body away before he was struck. Nonetheless, the suction of the current pushed him back against the hull. The propeller, he thought.
A row of tires hung from the tug's side, buffers that kept it from banging against a dock. Stretching up, Cavanaugh snagged a hand into one of the tires and felt an agonizing strain in his shoulder as the tug carried him along. Staring back, he saw Jamie standing at the side of the river, helplessly watching his struggle.
In the distance, a black cloud rose.
Farther over, so did another.
Suddenly understanding Carl's plan, he prayed that Jamie would realize what she needed to do. As a third black cloud rose, he raised his free hand, the one with the knife, waving insistently that he was all right, urging her to go. She returned his wave, and with a frightened look behind her toward the isolated black clouds, she broke into a run.
*
PART EIGHT:
THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE KNIFE
Chapter 1.
"So far, we know almost one thousand people died," Dawn Finch told him, "including forty Federal agents and fifteen GPS operators."
Cavanaugh was too overwhelmed to reply. He sat in a Coast Guard office, where a patrol boat had brought him after he was transferred from the tug. Although he clutched a blanket wrapped around him, he shivered–only partially because of his wet clothes.
Jamie brought him a steaming cup of coffee. "At least, another two thousand needed medical care, enough to fill the emergency wards in every hospital in the area."
"But it could have been significantly worse," an FBI agent said. "The canisters were so carefully sealed, none of the toxin detectors in the crowd registered what was in them. If the conference had occurred, if all the protestors had remained in the area, if all the knapsacks had been detonated and all the gas released . . ."
"The preliminary estimate is that at least fifteen thousand protestors would have died, plus the thousands of tourists and business people in the downtown area" another agent explained. "Lord knows how many others would have needed medical attention. This came close to being the worst–"
Outside the office, boat engines rumbled. A door opened. Everyone turned toward a Coast Guard officer who entered. Rutherford and Mosely followed, neither of them looking happy.
The Coast Guard officer reported, "No luck finding him. We're beginning to think he might have been hit by boat traffic on the river. Perhaps he was knocked unconscious and drowned."
"He didn't drown," Cavanaugh said.
"One of our men saw you chase him," an FBI agent reported. "Our man was too far away to help, but he managed to see both of you go into the water. Only you came up."
"Maybe he struck his head on something under the water. Maybe his body's caught on something down there," the Coast Guard officer hoped. "We're dragging the area. We sent for divers."
"And you're searching the banks all the way up and down the river?" Cavanaugh asked. "Using helicopters as well as boats?"
"Of course."
"Still think you're running things?" Mosely demanded.
The hostile interruption made everyone turn.
"Just contributing to the conversation," Cavanaugh said.
"Sure."
Except for the rumbling of the boat engines, the room became silent.
"Don't mind me," Mosely said.
Cavanaugh told the Coast Guard officer, "Carl's an expert swimmer. In high school, he was state champion. On our Delta Force team, it was one of his specialties. I once saw him swim under water for a minute and forty-five seconds. Given the current, he could easily have gone quite a distance downstream before surfacing, probably using a boat for cover. He's miles away by now."