Chapter 28
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2010.
Chapter 28
GEORGE MASON MEMORIAL BRIDGE
WASHINGTON DC, USA
EARTH
22nd January 2026 – 0944 EST (1444 UTC)
“Ok what do we have?”
The sound of traffic was almost deafening around FBI Agent John Baxter, but then with the bridge closed there was a lot of it. Baxter looked out to where the Metropolitan Police officer was pointing. In the distance he could see a single police cruiser parked behind a light truck.
“The unit out there got a call about the truck blocking the inside lane of the bridge about 25 minutes ago. Traffic had snarled up pretty bad. When the officer investigated, he found a distraught female employee in the cab and she screamed at him not to open the door.”
Baxter took the binoculars to investigate more closely and saw that the officer was still standing beside the cab apparently talking to the woman inside.
“Why not?”
“According to the woman, ah…” He briefly checked his notes. “Carlene Anderson, the truck’s booby trapped. Both cab doors, rear loading door and the starter motor. We can’t open it and at the moment we daren’t try and move it. She says that somebody is holding her son and she was told to drive here, park and switch off the engine.”
He focussed on the tailgate of the truck where a smiley face floated above the company logo of ‘FleetFood Flight Catering’.
“What about the company?”
The police officer was beginning to wonder if FBI agents were actually trained to restrict their use of words or whether it was just this particular one.
“Legit company and they confirm the driver’s ID. She was scheduled to make one drop at Reagan this morning and return to the depot for a second.”
Baxter nodded once and finished fastening the Kevlar vest.
“Alright, get somebody on to checking her son if it’s not already underway and see if we can’t get some of this traffic turned around and diverted.”
Without waiting for a reply, Baxter strode back to the black van he’d arrived in and leaned in through the back door.
“Could be genuine,” he said. “Have we received any calls?”
The young woman sat at the operator’s position shook her head. “Nothing so far John. We’ve got an explosives team due in five minutes and the Port Authority is holding all waterborne activity past the bridge.”
He nodded once then removed his radio and placed it on the console. “I’ll go out and check with the driver.”
The quiet as he reached the truck was slightly unnerving. Even the noise of the traffic still backed up at the end of the bridge was subdued.
“Officer?” Baxter waved the man over and spoke quietly. “I’m going to chat with the driver. I need you to stay put here ok? Turn off the cruiser lights and radio.”
“Radios are already off Sir, soon as we heard the truck might be rigged.”
“Good work son.” Baxter slowly approached the truck cab and looked up into the frightened face of a middle aged black woman. “Ms Anderson? My name’s John Baxter, I’m with the FBI.”
Baxter watched as she screwed her eyes tight shut. “It’s true then? This thing is booby trapped?”
Baxter could see no protruding wires or apparent external additions to the truck cab, but that meant nothing.
“Right now we don’t know for sure Ma’am, so we’re going to take this one step at a time ok? I just need you to stay as calm as you can.”
“Oh well that’s ok then Agent Baxter.” She looked at him with tears streaming down her face. “I’ll just stay nice and calm here in my mobile bomb and pretend my son ain’t in danger.”
Baxter could see that the woman was terrified and knew she must be close to breaking point.
“What’s your son’s name Ms Anderson?”
For a fleeting moment, a smile crossed her face. “Please call me Carlene, Agent Baxter. You remind me of my bank manager when you call me Ms Anderson.” Baxter returned her smile but noticed she’d screwed here eyes shut again. “His name is John. My son’s name is John. Looks like a good day for Johns today huh?”
“Alright stay with me Carlene. We’re checking on your son now ok? Soon as we know anything you’ll know but I need your help right now.”
She looked at him once more, a large fat tear rolling down her cheek.
“Is there anything in the cab that you don’t recognise, anything at all that shouldn’t normally be there?”
As the woman started to look around the cab, Baxter saw a small team of men arrive at the bridge on ramp, one of them leading a dog. Holding up his hand, he kept them where they were for now.
Eventually, she shook her head. “Looks as clean as usual. Company policy Agent, anybody found with a dirty cab gets a written warning.”
“Alright, what about around the window edges, anything there?” She reached a hand out to run her fingers along it but Baxter stopped her quickly. “Don’t touch it Carlene, just look closely ok?”
She drew her fingers back as if scalded, but again shook her head.
“Ok you’re doing fine Carlene, just fine.” He waved the explosives team forward as he spoke. “I’ve got a team of explosives experts here and they’ll check the truck over properly ok?” She nodded, seeming slightly calmer. “Now tell me are you wearing your seat belt?”
She looked down and shook her head. “Once they told me to drive, I never even thought about it.”
“That’s good. Don’t worry. I’m going to go back and check if there’s any news about John and let the team here check the truck over alright?”
When she nodded, he gave her a reassuring smile. “We’ll get through this Carlene.”
He noticed that the sniffer dog was already at work around the rear of the truck as he spoke to the officer in charge, a small, bald man with the pugnacious looks of a boxer.
“Agent Baxter? I’m Lieutenant Tom Bradby. We got the initial brief, anything new to add?”
“I got the driver to visually check the cab and window area and she’s pretty certain it’s clean. Oh and she’s not wearing her belt.”
Bradby nodded gratefully. “That’s one less trigger. Ok let me get the dog around here and we’ll do a visual inspection of the underside.”
“I need to get an update on the woman’s son but I’ll be back shortly.”
As Bradby turned to begin the inspection, Baxter began the jog back to the operations van praying that the whole mess would turn out to be some kind of hoax but knowing the state of the world, he was almost certain it wasn’t.
INTERCONTINENTAL AIRLINES FLIGHT 382
NORTH ATLANTIC
EN ROUTE TO LONDON HEATHROW
EARTH
22nd January 2026 – 1300 MIDAT (1500 UTC)
Half an hour previously, Jarvis had been surprised to receive a message on the company frequency regarding his layover in London. Apparently, according to the company rep, his friend had been called away to a business meeting abroad and wouldn’t be able to have dinner.
“My friend?” he’d asked. “You sure this message is for me?”
“Absolutely, Captain Jarvis. It arrived about 15 minutes ago from a young lady.”
Jarvis looked across the cockpit at Chou who was busy working one of the MFDs on his side of the cockpit. He briefly wondered if Bob had set him up but then dismissed the idea.
“Any name at all?”
There was a brief pause as the dispatcher checked their monitor.
“According to the receptionist it was a Ms Shamshir.”
Jarvis’ world froze as his mind unlocked to the key word. In a tumbling frenzy of mental realignment, his future and those aboard the A380 was sealed with that one word.
“Thank you,” he said and without waiting for a reply, disconnected the comm.
“Anything important?” Chou asked as he entered the final commands into the Multi Function Display unit.
“Hmm? Oh, no, just a missed date in London.”
Chou donned a pair of stylish sunglasses and chuckled. “See, you should have made the most of Washington.”
They were the last words that Bob Chou ever spoke as Jarvis’ right hand lashed out to connect with his throat. Grabbing the strap of the first officer’s document bag, Jarvis wrapped it around Chou’s neck and twisted to finish the job. Within moments, Chou’s frantic thrashing ceased. Jravis was clean, methodical and totally unmoved by the murder.
Carefully checking the autopilot settings, Jarvis slid out of the left hand seat then knelt behind the the still form of Chou and popped open one of the main bus panels where it took him around five minutes to disconnect several and activate two spares. The ones he’d disconnected severed communications connections from the main passenger cabin to the outside world, stopped the aircraft’s transponder, overrode the cockpit security lock so that it couldn’t be opened from outside and disabled several other safety elements within the cockpit.
The two spares he had activated were perhaps just as important. He knew that a member of the Sword of Iran group unwittingly employed by the airline engineering staff had primed these two connections in Washington during routine maintenance on their layover.
The first would cross-feed a supply of strong sedative through the air conditioning in the passenger compartments. The passengers were not a major threat to his plans but the cabin crew and air marshals aboard were. In mere minutes they would be incapacitated and his part of the operation would then begin.
The second activated a trigger mechanism to the cargo hold. An amount of baggage had been left off the aircraft to be replaced by a substantial amount of explosives. With the breaker now active, he could detonate these from the cockpit.
Like those before him, the mind control implant left him with no conscious moral indignation at the events unfolding, merely a drive to see them through to completion.
He didn’t really care that the world would forever remember the name Intercontinental 382 as he donned the cockpit oxygen mask.
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2010.
Chapter 28
GEORGE MASON MEMORIAL BRIDGE
WASHINGTON DC, USA
EARTH
22nd January 2026 – 0944 EST (1444 UTC)
“Ok what do we have?”
The sound of traffic was almost deafening around FBI Agent John Baxter, but then with the bridge closed there was a lot of it. Baxter looked out to where the Metropolitan Police officer was pointing. In the distance he could see a single police cruiser parked behind a light truck.
“The unit out there got a call about the truck blocking the inside lane of the bridge about 25 minutes ago. Traffic had snarled up pretty bad. When the officer investigated, he found a distraught female employee in the cab and she screamed at him not to open the door.”
Baxter took the binoculars to investigate more closely and saw that the officer was still standing beside the cab apparently talking to the woman inside.
“Why not?”
“According to the woman, ah…” He briefly checked his notes. “Carlene Anderson, the truck’s booby trapped. Both cab doors, rear loading door and the starter motor. We can’t open it and at the moment we daren’t try and move it. She says that somebody is holding her son and she was told to drive here, park and switch off the engine.”
He focussed on the tailgate of the truck where a smiley face floated above the company logo of ‘FleetFood Flight Catering’.
“What about the company?”
The police officer was beginning to wonder if FBI agents were actually trained to restrict their use of words or whether it was just this particular one.
“Legit company and they confirm the driver’s ID. She was scheduled to make one drop at Reagan this morning and return to the depot for a second.”
Baxter nodded once and finished fastening the Kevlar vest.
“Alright, get somebody on to checking her son if it’s not already underway and see if we can’t get some of this traffic turned around and diverted.”
Without waiting for a reply, Baxter strode back to the black van he’d arrived in and leaned in through the back door.
“Could be genuine,” he said. “Have we received any calls?”
The young woman sat at the operator’s position shook her head. “Nothing so far John. We’ve got an explosives team due in five minutes and the Port Authority is holding all waterborne activity past the bridge.”
He nodded once then removed his radio and placed it on the console. “I’ll go out and check with the driver.”
The quiet as he reached the truck was slightly unnerving. Even the noise of the traffic still backed up at the end of the bridge was subdued.
“Officer?” Baxter waved the man over and spoke quietly. “I’m going to chat with the driver. I need you to stay put here ok? Turn off the cruiser lights and radio.”
“Radios are already off Sir, soon as we heard the truck might be rigged.”
“Good work son.” Baxter slowly approached the truck cab and looked up into the frightened face of a middle aged black woman. “Ms Anderson? My name’s John Baxter, I’m with the FBI.”
Baxter watched as she screwed her eyes tight shut. “It’s true then? This thing is booby trapped?”
Baxter could see no protruding wires or apparent external additions to the truck cab, but that meant nothing.
“Right now we don’t know for sure Ma’am, so we’re going to take this one step at a time ok? I just need you to stay as calm as you can.”
“Oh well that’s ok then Agent Baxter.” She looked at him with tears streaming down her face. “I’ll just stay nice and calm here in my mobile bomb and pretend my son ain’t in danger.”
Baxter could see that the woman was terrified and knew she must be close to breaking point.
“What’s your son’s name Ms Anderson?”
For a fleeting moment, a smile crossed her face. “Please call me Carlene, Agent Baxter. You remind me of my bank manager when you call me Ms Anderson.” Baxter returned her smile but noticed she’d screwed here eyes shut again. “His name is John. My son’s name is John. Looks like a good day for Johns today huh?”
“Alright stay with me Carlene. We’re checking on your son now ok? Soon as we know anything you’ll know but I need your help right now.”
She looked at him once more, a large fat tear rolling down her cheek.
“Is there anything in the cab that you don’t recognise, anything at all that shouldn’t normally be there?”
As the woman started to look around the cab, Baxter saw a small team of men arrive at the bridge on ramp, one of them leading a dog. Holding up his hand, he kept them where they were for now.
Eventually, she shook her head. “Looks as clean as usual. Company policy Agent, anybody found with a dirty cab gets a written warning.”
“Alright, what about around the window edges, anything there?” She reached a hand out to run her fingers along it but Baxter stopped her quickly. “Don’t touch it Carlene, just look closely ok?”
She drew her fingers back as if scalded, but again shook her head.
“Ok you’re doing fine Carlene, just fine.” He waved the explosives team forward as he spoke. “I’ve got a team of explosives experts here and they’ll check the truck over properly ok?” She nodded, seeming slightly calmer. “Now tell me are you wearing your seat belt?”
She looked down and shook her head. “Once they told me to drive, I never even thought about it.”
“That’s good. Don’t worry. I’m going to go back and check if there’s any news about John and let the team here check the truck over alright?”
When she nodded, he gave her a reassuring smile. “We’ll get through this Carlene.”
He noticed that the sniffer dog was already at work around the rear of the truck as he spoke to the officer in charge, a small, bald man with the pugnacious looks of a boxer.
“Agent Baxter? I’m Lieutenant Tom Bradby. We got the initial brief, anything new to add?”
“I got the driver to visually check the cab and window area and she’s pretty certain it’s clean. Oh and she’s not wearing her belt.”
Bradby nodded gratefully. “That’s one less trigger. Ok let me get the dog around here and we’ll do a visual inspection of the underside.”
“I need to get an update on the woman’s son but I’ll be back shortly.”
As Bradby turned to begin the inspection, Baxter began the jog back to the operations van praying that the whole mess would turn out to be some kind of hoax but knowing the state of the world, he was almost certain it wasn’t.
INTERCONTINENTAL AIRLINES FLIGHT 382
NORTH ATLANTIC
EN ROUTE TO LONDON HEATHROW
EARTH
22nd January 2026 – 1300 MIDAT (1500 UTC)
Half an hour previously, Jarvis had been surprised to receive a message on the company frequency regarding his layover in London. Apparently, according to the company rep, his friend had been called away to a business meeting abroad and wouldn’t be able to have dinner.
“My friend?” he’d asked. “You sure this message is for me?”
“Absolutely, Captain Jarvis. It arrived about 15 minutes ago from a young lady.”
Jarvis looked across the cockpit at Chou who was busy working one of the MFDs on his side of the cockpit. He briefly wondered if Bob had set him up but then dismissed the idea.
“Any name at all?”
There was a brief pause as the dispatcher checked their monitor.
“According to the receptionist it was a Ms Shamshir.”
Jarvis’ world froze as his mind unlocked to the key word. In a tumbling frenzy of mental realignment, his future and those aboard the A380 was sealed with that one word.
“Thank you,” he said and without waiting for a reply, disconnected the comm.
“Anything important?” Chou asked as he entered the final commands into the Multi Function Display unit.
“Hmm? Oh, no, just a missed date in London.”
Chou donned a pair of stylish sunglasses and chuckled. “See, you should have made the most of Washington.”
They were the last words that Bob Chou ever spoke as Jarvis’ right hand lashed out to connect with his throat. Grabbing the strap of the first officer’s document bag, Jarvis wrapped it around Chou’s neck and twisted to finish the job. Within moments, Chou’s frantic thrashing ceased. Jravis was clean, methodical and totally unmoved by the murder.
Carefully checking the autopilot settings, Jarvis slid out of the left hand seat then knelt behind the the still form of Chou and popped open one of the main bus panels where it took him around five minutes to disconnect several and activate two spares. The ones he’d disconnected severed communications connections from the main passenger cabin to the outside world, stopped the aircraft’s transponder, overrode the cockpit security lock so that it couldn’t be opened from outside and disabled several other safety elements within the cockpit.
The two spares he had activated were perhaps just as important. He knew that a member of the Sword of Iran group unwittingly employed by the airline engineering staff had primed these two connections in Washington during routine maintenance on their layover.
The first would cross-feed a supply of strong sedative through the air conditioning in the passenger compartments. The passengers were not a major threat to his plans but the cabin crew and air marshals aboard were. In mere minutes they would be incapacitated and his part of the operation would then begin.
The second activated a trigger mechanism to the cargo hold. An amount of baggage had been left off the aircraft to be replaced by a substantial amount of explosives. With the breaker now active, he could detonate these from the cockpit.
Like those before him, the mind control implant left him with no conscious moral indignation at the events unfolding, merely a drive to see them through to completion.
He didn’t really care that the world would forever remember the name Intercontinental 382 as he donned the cockpit oxygen mask.