“I see,” she said.
There was a long, silent moment on the phone. I could hear people out in the hall, leaving the observation room. Presumably O’Shea would be transferred to the U.S. marshals’ custody and taken to the arraignment courts from here. Then over to the central cell block after that. The pornography charge alone would put him in jail.
“Mrs. Coyle?” I said.
“I’m still here.”
“As long as I have you, I’d like to ask a question about the morning of the kidnapping. If it’s all right.”
“Of course,” she said. I think any distraction from the disappointing news was welcome at this point.
“Do you know if Zoe brought her phone to school that morning?” I asked.
“Her phone?”
“There’s been some talk among the kids about a texting incident last year. Involving Zoe. I just wondered if —”
“Zoe doesn’t have a phone,” Mrs. Coyle said. “Not as far as I know. Even if Secret Service would allow it, her father and I wouldn’t. And believe me, we’ve had our battles about this one.”
My mind started turning over everything I’d heard that day. Everything I’d learned about Ethan and Zoe from the beginning.
“Is it possible she could have gotten a phone on her own? Something she kept secret?” I asked.
“Of course. This is Zoe we’re talking about,” she said. “She knows how to get what she wants. Honestly, everyone likes to talk about how brilliant Ethan is, but if you ask me, my daughter’s the one with a future in politics.”
I liked that word right now. Future. It was a good thing to keep in mind.
“I trust you’re going to look into this,” Mrs. Coyle said.
“Absolutely,” I told her. “I already am.”
AT ELEVEN FIFTEEN that Saturday night, Ned Mahoney and a handpicked team of HRT agents set out from the MPD Third District Heliport in an unmarked FBI van. Mahoney preferred to run his ops in daylight — ultimately at dawn. But this detail was what it was and it had to happen now.
His order had come in to Quantico ninety minutes ago. The arrest plan described four suspects, all Saudi, holed up at a motel just south of Silver Spring, Maryland. Presumably they were Al Ayla, but there was nothing about that in the fax Mahoney had received.
He rode shotgun and looked over the motel diagram as they drove north, at full speed, through the city.
The motel room, number 122, was fairly straightforward: large bedroom, alcove, closet, bathroom. The only way in or out was the door at the front, accessible directly from the parking lot. The FBI entry team would be small, just four agents.
“Command, this is Red Team. We’re on Sixteenth, heading north,” Mahoney radioed over to the command center, set up at an old taxi dispatch a few blocks from the target. “What’s the visual you have on the motel?”
“Copy that, Red Team,” the unit commander came back. “We’re all go on this end. It looks like everyone’s tucked in for the night.”
Advance had already come through and quietly cleared guests out of all the adjacent rooms. SWAT had the perimeter held down, with tactical teams on three different rooftops around the motel. MPD and emergency services were both on standby.
HRT would go in first, as always.
Once the van came into range, Mahoney flipped his goggles down. He gave a thumbs-up to the three agents in back, who flashed the same sign. Samuels, Totten, and Behrenberg were all good to go. The unit was outfitted in full battle uniform — black Nomex flight suits, load-bearing vests, Kevlar helmets, and MP5s. It was heavy gear, enough to slow you down, but the adrenaline would more than compensate.
Before the vehicle even came to a stop, the doors were open and they were out. The team hit the ground running in a single-file beeline for Room 122.
“This is Red Team,” Mahoney radioed on the fly. “We’re going in!”
This had to be Al Ayla.
“FBI! OPEN UP!” Mahoney shouted.
At the same time, a forty-pound battering ram took out the motel room door in one swing. That was the extent of their “knock and announce.”