All Fall Down - Patriot Acts Part Three by Steven Clark Bradley
stevenbradley | January 30, 2010 14:08
All Fall Down
Patriot Acts Part Three
Ramallah, Palestine
June 6, 1995 1:58 p.m.
“The
Two minute window is closing.” The operative reported perched high up
inside a bombed out building in Ramallah, Palestine that had once been
filled with families who had been forced to flee Israeli tanks, mortars
and laser-guided bombs. With an uninhibited view, he looked out at the
indescribable ruin and carnage that had already been inflicted on this
people whose leaders had passed up every opening for peace.
“Copy that” the operative’s base contact affirmed.
There,
with his precision fully automatic .50-cal. Barrett M82 ready to
accelerate the conflict into a full-blown war, Colonel Fisher Harrison
took in the complete and utter destruction of a society literally
crumbling around his location. He looked to the left and saw the
barricaded windows with camouflage material shrouding the soldiers
posted there, ready and willing to fire at anything that moved.
Fisher
raised his eyes and looked straight out ahead. His view was good enough
to look into the Calandria refugee camp. It was a cauldron of vicious
plots and miniature bomb making factories, which made ad hoc missiles
and jackets designed to be used only once. He glanced downward and saw
a mother with her scarf removed and wrapped around her three small
terrified children’s eyes. Hoards of terrified city dwellers were
crouched down, never glancing upward, and fleeing through the streets;
trying to stumble on a loaf of bread and a few bottles of water during
a lull in the barrage of attacks.
The
world had condemned Israel for its attacks, but Fisher had determined
it was justified and obliged, just like the validation screaming in his
head for the killing of the evil terrorist he was about to blow away.
Every street was strewn with blown up cars, dead bodies and silence,
only cut short by the frequent short volley of gunfire in every
direction.
Smoke rose
high into the sulfur-ridden darkened sky. Throughout the capital city
of the land of a people without a country, old men, young women with
children in their arms and in their wombs hid and prayed to the god in
whose name they were fighting. Fisher doubted they deserved a country.
Then he realized that his job, his own people deserved scarcely more
than these who had been constantly lobbing missiles and sending suicide
bombers into the heart of Israel.
Inside
the so-called governmental zone, every building belonging to the
Palestinian Authority was flattened except Arafat’s own presidential
headquarters, but Fisher knew that the only reason the structure was
still there was because Israeli forces had allowed it to remain. Arafat
had been allowed to live, but with stipulations. The former leader of
the Palestinian Liberation Organization who had carried out and ordered
the torture and murder of hundreds of thousands of people was now the
only hope for peace and survival for this war-weary people.
Arafat
only left his compound twice a day to greet his followers and to speak
with the press, which Fisher knew was now and which was why he had
placed his very steady eye peering through a chamber that would place a
beam of light, invisible to others, but very clear to Fisher, in the
center of the President of the Palestinian Authority’s forehead. As
soon as the clock struck two o’clock; as soon as the clock signaled the
last breath for an elected leader who Fisher Harrison regarded as a
terrorist, it would be time to unlock, pull back on the trigger and
then get the hell away.
Fisher
glanced constantly at his watch and thought about the SPU
superintendent’s words before boarding the El Al flight to Tel Aviv in
Chicago. He had travelled as a civilian and when he arrived at O’Hare
Field, he was not allowed to board the flight until the next day. He
knew that wasn’t a problem and that the SPU was impeccable in its
ability to cover every base.
“It’s
only a shaky finger or a call that can stop this murderer from meeting
his 70 virgins.” Fisher quietly amused himself. “And the recall is
almost over.” Fisher told himself.
Almost
every mission had left him in a kind of obtuse, morose feeling of
remorse and sorrow, but not this one. For Fisher Harrison, this was
simply code enforcement. He was cleaning up the neighborhood. He was
doing what he was trained to do, and he didn’t even have to convince
himself, this time.
“Hey
Yasser, here’s hoping that all them virgins are men.” He almost laughed
out loud. Then he remembered the superintendent’s orders and outrageous
words. “What was it again?” he asked himself with his eye still staring
out the end of a scope at the extremely exposed head and face of one of
the twentieth century’s most ruthless terrorists.
“The war’s not getting the attention it needs, Colonel.”
“War; what war?” Fisher truthfully didn’t know what the superintendent was talking about.
“The
war that your new mission is going to start. There’s never been a
conflict that the SPU hasn’t had its hand in starting, since the
founding of the nation. Now, I need you to get your ass over to that
cursed place and blow the bastard away.”
“Blow him away; which one? That could be any number of bastards’, as you call them. Could even be you … sir.”
“I
don’t care; just kill’em, Arafat, I mean. I want him dead, dancing with
those virgins. I need a war, Colonel!” Fisher Harrison turned slowly
with an unconcealed scowl poignantly stretched across his face.
Without
ever taking his eye away from the scope attached to his M82, Fisher
touched his face as he realized that his thoughts had produced the same
expression of unbelief and anger in the present as in the past. He
returned to the present mission at hand and glanced down at his watch.
Only fifty-two seconds remained. His palms felt uncharacteristically
wet and he wasn’t certain if he were afraid of the result of a
successful mission or if he was exaggeratedly gleeful at once again
meting out a guilty killer’s just recompense.
“What you need is to be shot on sight, Barlowe.” Fisher recalled
telling his boss. “And, I hope I’m the one who gets to do that too.”
The superintendant looked puzzled at first then his face took on an
expression that told Fisher that his SPU superior knew Fisher would do
it. “I can’t wait till that directive comes down …sir!”

“Colonel Harrison, I think the odds are more on my side than on yours.
Just stay useful and you won’t have to forfeit your retirement plan.
Anyway, it’s always been this way, and it won’t be changing anytime
soon.”
“Then the country’s nothing but a lie and never existed at all.” Fisher blurted out.
“Well, Harrison, one day it is going to be just you and me, mono et
mono. We’ll see then who has the biggest package, don’t you think?
Anyway, we both have a boss. So, give me my war, Colonel Harrison.”
March 9, 2011, 3:23 p.m.
Outside Washington D.C.
Suddenly,
Fisher felt himself shaken by explosions erupting in the distance and
very close, and President Fisher Harrison felt his whole world start
quaking. He leapt forward from his bed, but he was forced right back
down on the mattress he was strapped to around his wrists and feet with
a needle forcing a steady stream of sedatives into the veins of his
left arm.
Fisher felt a
throbbing, stabbing pain shoot through his head each time he tried to
recall how he had gotten where he had suddenly awaken.
“I
was speaking … yes, President Tate’s funeral…yes that’s it. Then …” He
shook his head as the throbbing in his head became almost unbearable.
“… then all hell broke loose.”
He
could barely recall it, but he could still hear what had to be the most
deafening sounds even he, a man who had been battle tough, had ever
heard in his life. He began to mouth the words to himself. “The
sanctuary shook, the ground seemed to pound and then it all came down
and … Margaret … Nate? Oh my God, Margaret! Nate.” He screamed. “Where
are they? I can see it in my head. It just came tumbling down on all of
us. Yes, I remember”
Fisher
tried to get a hold of his fear and rationally wondered where he was.
He lifted his head off the bed and looked around the dark room. It had
a musky odor and seemed damp. Slowly, he brought all his skills to bear
and tried to understand where he was. He recalled the dream he had just
had. One set of words he had heard in the dream filled his mind.
“Well,
Harrison, one day it is going to be just you and me, mono et mono.
We’ll see then who has the biggest package, don’t you think?”
“Yes,” Fisher told himself. “He wasn’t there! When we took the Falls Church facility, he wasn’t there! It had to be Barlowe!”
Fisher
heard clapping behind him and a spotlight flashed on forcing Fisher’s
eyes closed from the light that had killed the darkness all round him.
A voice spoke out behind the bed he was latched to.
“Bravo,
bravo, you are a tough one, President Harrison. We knew you had been
inoculated many years ago. So, we thought you’d not be under for too
long. We needed just enough time to get you out and under control.”
“And my family, where are they?”
“Well, let’s talk about that a little later, why don’t we?”
Fisher
began jerking at the straps and shouting and trying to rip his arms and
feet loose. “You will tell me now.” Fisher screamed.
“Mr.
President, though that title hardly fits you any longer, we have to
bring some sanity to the situation, as it is right now; so, first
things first. I did notice that you recalled my words, mono et mono.
That was impressive, to say the least that you remembered them and even
in a drug-induced stupor, those words, from so many years ago, rang out
in your mind. You either have a very well-tuned mind or I made a mighty
impression on you. It’s probably a bit of both, don’t you think? We had
you plugged in Fisher. We saw everything you saw, and I was proud of
you. You haven’t lost a bit of your style, Mr. President.”
“Barlowe, if you hurt my family, I’ll kill you.”
“Now,
Fisher, you’ve said that one before, but just as I told you in nineteen
hundred ninety-five, I have the upper hand. It seems easy to conclude
that now, don’t you think? But then, how could you know? The cat was
away and mice did play. Fisher, you guys made us invisible and more
lethal than ever. Did you think we put all our eggs into just one
basket? Fisher, you know us better than that. You were one of us, and
now, you are nothing; not SPU, not a father, not an operative and
certainly not a president. You don’t need to get used to it, actually.
You won’t be alive long enough to worry about it.”
“What have you done Barlowe? The nation can’t take much more right now.”
“Nation,
what nation would that be? The new one or the old one? The one you
never got a chance to lead, you know, the one I just destroyed? I do
understand you, though. It will take some getting used to by the … what
were they called before? Ah yes, the American people? So, stop with all
the threats.”
Barlowe
walked over to a door behind Fisher’s bed where he was secured. He
waved his hand and closed the door and watched through a window as a
mist filled the air and President Fisher Harrison fell back silent and
motionless to the bed.
“Mr.
President,” Barlowe said. “Don’t waste your breath. You don’t have too
many left anyway. There will be more than enough time for killing
later.”
Patriot Acts by Steven Clark Bradley

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Steven
worked a number of years in various countries in Europe, Asia, and
Africa. He has been to 34 countries and has worked extensively with Kurdish refugees from Turkey, Iraq, and Syria. Steven also established a school by correspondence for African students in the African countries of The Gambia and Senegal West Africa. He is the founder of a Cultural Center for refugees in France,
where he lived for six years. Speaking fluently in French and in
Turkish, Steven has been in 34 countries. Before returning to the
United States in 1995, Steven worked as an instructor of English and
Business skills for four years at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey.
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