“Good riddance, I say,” an older man interrupted from the back row. “We all know Congresswoman Williams is in bed with these people. She’s defended that crazy mullah or wallah or whatever they call him—”
Reverend Ahern raised a hand. “The Imam’s name is Ali Rahman al Sallifi, Mr. Simonson.”
The older man sneered. “If you know his name, then you know this Sallifi character is wanted by the law in his native country. He’s a terrorist.”
Reverend Ahern offered the man a patronizing smile.
“You have to understand, countries like Egypt and Pakistan have repressive governments. Imam Ali Rahman al Sallifi tried to practice his personal brand of Islam in peace, but was forced to flee. That’s why he came to America, for the right to practice his faith without persecution.”
Simonson waved a dismissive hand. “Fine. I’ll wait and see what the Grand Poobah has to say for himself.”
Ahern fixed his wide-eyed stare on Brice Holman.
“You see what I’m up against. There’s a tragic mistrust of the stranger, the other, even among the members of my own flock.”
“Yet you strive always to be a unifying force,” Holman said. “That’s why New Jersey Cable One sent me here, to cover this story.”
“You brought no cameras,” Ahern noted.
“I didn’t want to be too… intimidating,” Holman lied.
“I’ll certainly conduct on-camera interviews later, with you and perhaps Ali Rahman al Sallifi, if he’ll speak with us.”
“He agreed to meet with my group today, which is certainly a breakthrough. Imam al Sallifi is a private man, very spiritual.”
Holman raised an eyebrow. “So you’ve met the Imam?”
“I’m told,” Ahern amended. “I’ve met with the Imam’s disciple, Ibrahim Noor, several times. He’s a fascinating figure. A former gang leader and convicted felon who found redemption through faith. His is a story we can all learn from.”
“Indeed,” Holman replied.
“Excuse me, Reverend Ahern,” Mrs. Reed called from behind the steering wheel. “I think that’s our turn up ahead.”
“Yes, that’s the turn, Emily,” the Reverend declared,
“We’re to make a left and follow the road for about a mile, until we see the gate.”
Mrs. Reed nodded and slowed for the turn. Reverend Ahern faced the other passengers in the minibus.
“Again, I want to apologize on behalf of Congresswoman Hailey Williams,” he said. “She was quite eager to make the trip, but legislative duties prevented her from joining us.”
Brice Holman shook his head. If the Reverend had half a brain, he’d know Congress is on spring break — which is why Congresswoman Williams is in her home district, instead of Washington.
Whatever’s going on here stinks, thought Brice. But at least it will get me inside that compound.
Beside Mrs. Hocklinger, a teenager named Danielle Taylor fidgeted nervously. Holman had originally estimated her age at fifteen or sixteen, but upped it when Reverend Ahern mentioned she would be attending Columbia University in the fall.
Dani was here because of an incident that had occurred several months ago.
Her dog had broken from its leash and wandered into the compound. Dani had gone in after it, and found the dog dead — shot — and two men with guns standing over the corpse. When she demanded to know why they had killed her pet, one of the men sneered and declared that
“soon all dogs will die.”
Instead of being intimidated, Dani had filed animal cruelty charges against those two men. A court date was still pending.
The minibus swerved onto a narrow road that was pitted and bumpy. Emily Reed switched to low gear, and they climbed a short rise. At the crest of the hill, the front tire bounced off a particularly deep pothole.
“With all the taxes they charge us, you’d think they could fix these roads,” Mr. Simonson grumbled.
“It’s the trucks from the cardboard factory,” Mr. Cranston explained. “Those semis really tear up the highway.”
Joseph Cranston told Holman he was a retiree from New York City, who used to be an engineer for the Bridge and Tunnel Authority.
“I really hope to get a look inside that factory,” Cranston continued. “It’s the oldest paper fabrication facility in the country.”
Abby Cranston pointed. “Look, there’s the front gate.”
“Does that man have a gun?” Emily Reed cried.
Reverend Ahern swallowed hard. “Slow down and I’ll have a word with him.”
But as the bus approached the gate, the old man with the rifle slung over his shoulder smiled and motioned them forward. Another man limped out of the guardhouse, offering them a toothless grin. He carried no rifle, but there was a.22-caliber handgun tucked in the belt around his shalwat kameez. Together, the two men swung the chain-link and barbed-wire gate open to admit them.
Ahern visibly relaxed. “I told you they were expecting us.”
Holman studied the guards as the bus passed through the gate.
In weeks of surveillance, he’d never seen the main gate guarded by anyone but tough-looking former felons in their prime, all of them Americans. But these two guys looked Middle Eastern, and they were probably pushing eighty.
Reverend Ahern pulled a copy of Ibrahim Noor’s e-mail out of the pocket of his black shirt. As he read, he adjusted his clerical collar.
“Just go straight ahead until you reach the Community Center,” he told the driver.
The bus bumped through the center of town. To Holman the place seemed abandoned. Of course, the men were probably working at the factory, but the women should have been out and about.
Finally, a man with a rifle slung across his back stepped in their path, waving his arms.
“I think he wants us to stop,” Ahern said.
The bus halted in a cloud of dust, in front of a large building made of unpainted cinder blocks. The aluminum screen door opened, and a woman in a black burka exited the building. Though her features were obscured, she carried a bundle of flowers in her tattooed hands.
“That’s nice,” Mrs. Cranston said.
Emily cut the engine, and Reverend Ahern opened the sliding door. Before he could step out, a howling mob of people burst from the Community Center and charged the bus. Another mob rushed out of the communal baths next door. They were women, mostly, along with a smattering of young boys and girls and old men. The males had guns.
The women carried knives, clubs, axes.
The mob swarmed the bus, threatening to tip the vehicle over on its side. Reverend Ahern was assaulted and pummeled into unconsciousness. Emily Reed tried to restart the engine and drive away, but an old man fired an ancient pistol at her through the windshield. The bullet struck her right eye, killing the woman instantly.
Brice Holman kicked the first person to reach for him.
The woman howled and fell to the floor. Clawing and screaming like animals, the rest of the pack crushed her in an effort to get at the passengers.
Holman heard Dani scream. Mr. Simonson lunged at the women attacking the teenager, knocked them aside.
Then someone stuck the man in the throat with a machete.
He went down spewing blood.
Holman lashed out again, his fist striking flesh. Then someone struck him on the back of the head and his world went dark…
Tony Almeida ducked behind a pillar and observed the white-smocked kid he fingered for the murder of the guard. The Hispanic youth was standing near the ER, talking into a cell phone. No doubt he was reporting his situation, which was dire.