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The trailhead was less than a quarter mile from the Chilanko Forks General Store. When Terrence arrived at the trail junction, he was fifteen minutes early. He sat down on a large cedar stump and rolled a cigarette. Just as he was about to light it, he heard a voice from close behind him. "State your name."
Startled, Terrence jumped up and turned around. He said, "I'm Terrence. Are you the guy?"
A voice that seemed quite close answered, "Yes, I'm the man you're supposed to meet."
Terrence Billy was confused because he couldn't determine where the voice was coming from. Then the bush fifteen feet in front of him started to move.
Ray McGregor emerged. He was wearing a shredded burlap ghillie suit, which he had borrowed from Phil.
Terrence laughed and said, "I guess I should call you 'Mr. Tree.'"
"That name will work just fine, sir."
As he walked forward, Ray said, "Weyt-k," the Secwepemc word for h.e.l.lo.
"Weyt-k," Terrence echoed back.
They now stood just two paces apart. Terrence couldn't see Ray's face through the ghillie suit's green-mottled face net. Ray said, "I'm not of the First Nations. In fact I'm of Scots-Irish extraction, but I have respect for your people. I understand that you don't like the French and their evil deeds."
"You understand correctly. Fact is, you could say that I hate their guts. I want to make war on them."
"I heard about your cousin Katie. The UNPROFOR soldiers are world-cla.s.s sicko b.a.s.t.a.r.ds."
After a pause, Ray asked, "Are you willing to use a dump truck to deliver an explosive device somewhere? You'd set a timer and walk away."
"Skook.u.m. Sign me up."
"Now, wait. You have to realize that this will be a very big device, so there could be collateral damage, and that after you do this, you definitely won't be able to show your face in town. You may have to hide out for years, or perhaps go into exile down in the States. So do you have someplace to go, and a good network with your band that can keep you supplied?"
"Yeah. My uncle has a cabin way back in the woods, outside of Dugan Lake, that he lets me use. It's a 'hike-in' cabin. You take a trail in off Horsefly Road. That cabin was grandfather-claused when the provincial forest service got set up. But a few years back, they made my uncle mad when they told him that he couldn't build a road to it. They had a hearing at the Forest Headquarters office. He told them, 'I'm an old man and getting crippled, and you tell me I can't build a road to my own cabin. You are disgraceful persons.' Anyway, he promised me the cabin after he dies. I can stay there, and I have lots of cousins that can bring me grub."
"Then I guess we can work together. But you are never to know my name-except as 'Mr. Tree'-or see my face."
Terrence laughed again, and said, "You NLR guys sure have a flair for drama."
Ray snorted and said, "Pardon my elaborate precautions. Oh, and by the way, you can call yourself NLR now, too. We are the resistance."
The truck was a 2012 Peterbilt New Way front-end loader Dumpster rig, with a forty-yard capacity. It was painted white with Central Cariboo logos on the sides. It had a c.u.mmins 320 horsepower engine and a hauling capacity of fifteen tons, with a twenty-ton front axle and forty-six-ton tandem rear axles. The Mammoth brand front-end loader had been factory installed. Since the truck was fairly new, the forks were the only part of the truck that looked rusty and well-worn.
To gain the use of the truck, all that Terrence had to do was loosen a hydraulic line coupling slightly, just before he finished his route on Friday. The tremendous pressure generated by the hydraulic pump quickly made a mess of that side of the truck, spraying red hydraulic fluid around copiously behind the cab. When he got back to the transfer station, Terrence pointed to the truck and told his manager: "We got a leaky hose, just like the off truck used to get. I can drop it off at Haynes Machinery tonight, and they'll have someone drop me back here so I can get my car. They can fabricate a new hose for it since they're open on Sat.u.r.days. Do we have an account with them?"
"Yeah, we've got an open account," his manager replied.
Terrence gave an exaggerated nod. "Okay, no sweat, boss. I'll handle everything and head out from their shop directly to my route on Monday morning. And don't worry, I won't try to log overtime."
His manager snorted. "What overtime? The UN contract says no overtime will be paid, period."
Terrence parked the truck at a prearranged position, a quarter mile short of Haynes Machinery, and left the key under the floor mat. Before he walked away, he used a wrench to retighten the loose hydraulic line.
The truck never went to Haynes Machinery. Instead, at eleven o'clock that night, wearing a ski mask, Phil Adams climbed into the truck and drove it to a large shop with an RV door near the end of Western Avenue. The property had been abandoned after the owners had driven their diesel pusher RV to Montana, just as the Crunch began. Once the truck had been backed into the cavernous shop, they rolled down the door and got to work.
The explosives had been stockpiled in the shop for several months. They were stacked on pallets and covered with tarps. Packing the truck with explosives took Phil, Ray, and Stan nearly twenty-one hours, in three successive seven-hour sessions, over the course of Friday, Sat.u.r.day, and Sunday nights. Stan did most of the positioning of the explosives, while Phil and Ray used a pair of dollies and a large Radio Flyer child's wagon for the many trips back and forth from the explosives pile. Nearly every item got a wrap of PETN detonating cord to ensure that they'd all explode simultaneously. They included every explosive that they could find: hundreds of recovered land mines (with their detonators removed), some mining gelignite, as well as a few dud French artillery sh.e.l.ls, which were handled very gingerly and wedged in nose-upward. By the end of the third night, Stan's back was going into spasm.
In all, they estimated that there was ten tons on board, and even after deducting the weight of the artillery sh.e.l.l casings and land mine housings, there were at least eight tons of various high explosives.
At 10:15 on Monday morning, Terrence drove the Central Cariboo Dumpster truck to the front gate of the UN headquarters building, right on schedule. The gate guard recognized both the truck and Terrence's face and waved him through.
One Dumpster was located at a door on the north side of the building, just east of the round Gathering Place Building, which after the UN took over the campus became jokingly known by the French as the s.e.x and Drugs Building. This Dumpster was near the auto shop. The nearest door was marked: DOOR 5.5 (SHOP). Two other Dumpsters were located at the southeast corner of the building near Door 7. But unlike those, Door 5.5 was outside the field of vision of the gate guards.
Terrence simply backed the truck up to Door 5.5 alongside the Dumpster, using the truck's rearview camera to get the truck within a foot of the overhang. Leaving the engine running, he pulled the fuse igniter and then immediately hopped out of the cab and reached back in to jab the joystick to make it sound as if the truck was lifting a Dumpster, as usual. He ran in a sprint to the north fence. A dozen snips with a small pair of bolt cutters made a gap in the rear fence big enough for him to slip through. In his haste, he tore the shoulder of his jacket. Terrence was soon up and running.
The senior gate guard-a caporal with four years of service-grew impatient. He wondered why the garbage truck had not returned to the front of the building to empty the other two Dumpsters. He muttered, "O tes-vous, Macaca?"
Macaca was an epithet originally used by the French colonials to disparage the natives in the Congo, but more recently it had been applied to the aboriginals in Canada. The guard surmised that the driver was smoking a cigarette. He picked up his radio handset and hesitated. Finally, he pressed the handset's talk bar and hailed the security office in the building.
At that moment a ma.s.sive explosion leveled the building, leaving just one part of the west wall standing. A sixteen-foot-deep crater marked the spot where the dump truck had been parked. The adjoining round Gathering Place Building was also destroyed. Because that building was partially earth-bermed, it left a large circular crater next to the smaller, oval bomb-blast crater. The explosion killed everyone in both buildings. It also seriously injured the gate guards and ruptured their eardrums.
The shock wave from the explosion threw Terrence off balance and made him stumble to his knees, even though he was more than 450 yards away. Looking back, he could see that the explosion was sending fragments in all directions, and it had raised a huge reddish cloud of smoke and dust. The red hue of the dust had been created by pulverized bricks. The blast wave shattered house windows in a quarter-mile radius and set off car alarms even farther out. The sound of the explosion was heard as far away as the hamlet of Riske Creek.
Terrence regained his footing and began running. It sounded as if every dog in town was barking or howling. Nearby, he heard emergency service vehicle sirens wailing. He started to sing an old Salish fight chant as he ran. His getaway vehicle was his rusting old Ford Escort, now outfitted with stolen license plates. It was parked a kilometer away at the junction of Highway 97 and Dixon Road.
Terrence quickly got on the highway and past the reservation to make the turn to Dugan Lake before any new roadblocks were set up. A woman from his band was waiting right where she promised she would be. As she got in the car, she exclaimed, "Wow, I could hear that ka-boom from here! Was that really all the way down at the TRU campus?"
Terrence nodded and said with a laugh, "Yep. Big explosion!"
Ten minutes later, he stopped three hundred meters short of the trail to his uncle's cabin and pulled his backpack and a duffel bag out of the trunk of the car. He handed the middle-aged woman the car key.
Terrence said, "Take bad care of my car for me, okay?"
"Okay. Ptucw!" (Good-bye.) * * *
The scene around the headquarters was chaotic. Aside from the gate guards, the firefighters didn't find any survivors, only bodies in the rubble. And close to the north door, where the truck had exploded, they found only parts of bodies. The unofficial casualty count was 207, but it was eventually arrived at by taking the full unit rosters and deducting the number of soldiers and airmen who were at the airport or at outlying posts. Among the dead were the French brigade commander and his entire staff.
In the following five days, UNPROFOR patrols and checkpoints began hand swabbing anyone they contacted. Anyone who tested positive for explosives-and false positives were commonplace-was subjected to arrest and lengthy interrogation. It was already well established that false positives were created by soaps and hand lotions containing glycerin. Traces of fertilizer and cleaning products also gave false positives for nitrates. Two elderly residents who took nitroglycerin pills for angina also had their hands test positive. There were summary executions of five men, all aboriginal, who were suspected of conspiracy in the bombing. Two of these men had failed hand-swab tests. Only one of them was a close friend of Terrence, and none of them had anything to do with the bombing.
Terrence later learned that his small house on Proctor Street had been searched very thoroughly by a composite team of RCMP and UNPROFOR officers. They even removed many Sheetrock wall panels. The yard was scanned with a metal detector and dug up in several places, but the investigators found nothing. The UNPROFOR officer in charge then ordered the house burned. Since it was a rental, Terrence's landlord was not pleased.
Two weeks later, Terrence sent identical handwritten letters via courier to the editors of both the Kamloops and Prince George newspapers (there was no longer a newspaper published in Williams Lake). The letters read: Dear Editor: By now, you've heard that I drove the truck that carried the load of explosives to the UN HQ at the TRU Campus. Yes, I done it. I am not ashamed of what I done. Those basterds deserved it. We blew them up with their own land-mines and artilary sh.e.l.ls. Serves them right! They are rapists, thiefs, and murderers.
But I do want to say that I am sorry for all the broken windows and the upset dogs, in town. (I hear they barked for two days.) Most Sincerely,
Terrence Billy, Of The Secwepemc People
UNPROFOR's censors refused to let the letters be published.
Terrence Billy was killed in a gunfight with an UNPROFOR patrol two months later, in which Terrence killed two French soldiers and wounded two others. Ironically, they never identified his body, even though he had been the prime suspect in the bombing and his photograph had been circulated widely. Following the gunfight, his body was intentionally burned in a house on Stanchfield Road near the hamlet of Miocene.
The French often found it easier for their troops to burn buildings than to haul bodies. So they systematically burned any house from which "bandit" gunfire had originated. This sent a strong message to the locals. In Fort St. James, resistance was so strong that the French army ma.s.sacred more than five hundred mostly unarmed people (of a population of seventeen hundred) and burned every building in the town. Years later, when he eventually went on trial, the brigade commander lamented, "That was our Philippeville," referring to a dark day in Algerian history.
45.
LE DERNIER COMBAT.
One of the most dangerous errors is that civilization is automatically bound to increase and spread. The lesson of history is the opposite; civilization is a rarity, attained with difficulty and easily lost. The normal state of humanity is barbarism, just as the normal surface of the planet is salt water. Land looms large in our imagination and civilization in history books, only because sea and savagery are to us less interesting.
-C. S. Lewis Williams Lake, British Columbia-April, the Sixth Year In the aftermath of the UNPROFOR headquarters bombing, it was learned that most of the casualties had been support and service-support troops. These were mostly pencil-pus.h.i.+ng clerks, paymasters, bakers, supply NCOs, mechanics, and various technicians. There were also two French Directorate of Military Intelligence (Direction du Reseignement Militaire or DRM) agents in the building. Those in the French contingent who survived did so by virtue of being out "on the line" when the bombing happened. These were nearly all regular combat troops. The survivors reacted with predictable ferocity. Their new battle cry was: "Leurs ttes vont rouler"-their heads will roll.
All of their old smiles and feigned civility were gone. The UNPROFOR troupes de ligne were now quick on the trigger and had zero tolerance for insolence. There were more checkpoints, more searches, more raids, more arrests, and much more torture. If anyone had doubted it before, British Columbia was now clearly under the iron heel of military occupation. They even stopped cleaning up their messes, allowing ravens to police the battlefield.
The strong resistance in the western provinces-highlighted by the Williams Lake headquarters bombing-was well publicized in the east, and consequently the level of UNPROFOR brutality was stepped up nationwide.
UNPROFOR's heightened oppression had a surprising effect: Instead of making people cower, it brought out their courage. French patrols could now expect to be sniped at wherever they went. Any UNPROFOR or RCMP vehicle left unattended would soon be firebombed or at least have its tires slashed. NLR and MOLON LABE! graffiti was spray-painted and penned almost everywhere imaginable.
Nearly everyone felt that there would soon be a general uprising, but that subtle breaking point had not yet been reached.
46.
THE TRAP.
Shortly before World War I, the German Kaiser was the guest of the Swiss government to observe military maneuvers. The Kaiser asked a Swiss militiaman: "You are 500,000 and you shoot well, but if we attack with 1,000,000 men what will you do?" The soldier replied: "We will shoot twice and go home."
-Historian Stephen Halbrook, as quoted by Bill Buppert in ZeroGov: Limited Government, Unicorns and Other Mythological Creatures The McGregor Ranch, near Anahim Lake, British Columbia-May, the Sixth Year The continuing threat of UNPROFOR's two remaining Gazelle helicopters based at Williams Lake weighed heavily on the minds of the McGregor resistance cell. The helicopters patrolled regularly, and they often engaged at any sign of activity. In several instances, woodcutters and fishermen were strafed without provocation. The FLIR sensors that they carried had been given the menacing nickname "The Eye of Sauron" throughout Canada, making helicopters greatly feared by the resistance.
Since the Gazelles sat in hardened revetments, they were invulnerable to small-arms fire. The helibase was also heavily guarded and lit with infrared floodlights. A Pilatus PC-12 patrol airplane that belonged to the RCMP at the same airport had been covertly sabotaged with a time-delay firebomb-apparently set by another resistance cell or a solo-but there had been no other successful hits in recent weeks. The Team Robinson cell spent many hours brainstorming ideas-everything from fabricating mortars to adulterating the base's deliveries of JP4 fuel. In early May, news leaked out from the airport that one of the two Gazelle helicopters at Williams Lake was grounded with engine trouble.
It was finally Phil Adams who came up with a workable plan to eliminate the remaining helicopter. Phil had spent hours poring over topographical maps, comparing them with a set of aerial photos that had been pilfered from the unoccupied BC a.s.sessment office. Much of the region was a sea of trees, dotted with occasional clearings-either angular clear-cuts or more oblong openings from lightning-sparked timber fires.
When scanning through an aerial map of the area five miles east of Nimpo Lake, Phil spotted one small clearing that was the only open ground within a one-mile radius. If they were going to have a good chance of isolating the helicopter anywhere, then this would be it. By comparing some distinctive curves of a stream bottom, he correlated the aerial photo to the topo map and was pleased to see that the opening was at the edge of a plateau, with a steep descent on one side.
He tapped on the map with a forefinger and said to himself, "Perfect."
That afternoon he brought the map and aerial photo to present his plan to Ray and Alan, who had just come in from doing some fence work. They sat down across the kitchen table wearing their socks. (Claire was strict about allowing muddy boots in the house.) Phil began, "I think I've found a way to ambush the last functional ALAT Gazelle at the helibase. If we present them with a target that they can't engage effectively from the air, they'll probably want to insert airmobile troops or an artillery forward observer. But we've seen that the ALATs certainly don't like fast roping."
"Mauviettes!" Ray blurted out.
"Yep, they're wimps. Operationally, they've demonstrated that they prefer to pop into open LZs and land briefly or just hover for a few seconds to drop off troops."
Ray jumped in. "So we create an attractive target and make them want to use a nearby LZ on a promontory terrain feature that we already have covered."
"So how do we then take out the helicopter? With IEDs?" Alan asked.
"Much simpler than that: We use five-eighth-inch steel cable. There's miles of it available, with all of the old logging operations around here. A steel cable in the main rotor will ruin your whole day."
Ray shook his head and chided, "So we string a cable over an opening. Even if we were to paint the cable to make it blend in, depending on the lighting, they'd probably spot the cable and divert at the last minute."
Phil pointed his forefinger toward the floor and said, "Not if the cable is hidden in the gra.s.s."
Ray c.o.c.ked his head. "What? How's that going to work?"
"I'll explain it all to you when we hike out there for a recon."
Rigging the LZ for helicopter ambush took some time, but the terrain was advantageous, from the size of the trees to the steep drop-off just east of the clearing. One end of the cable was attached with three cable clamps in a row, twenty-four feet up a large cedar tree on the northwest edge of the opening. The cable was left slack, so that it touched the ground at the base of the tree. It was then threaded as deeply as possible through the knee-high gra.s.s, diagonally across the middle of the oblong seventy-yard-wide opening. At the southeast side of the opening there was a large cottonwood tree with a wide fork twenty-five feet off the ground. The cable was tossed over that fork, but again left slack on the side that faced the opening. The far end of the cable was carefully aligned through the trees to a large, dying western larch tree at the edge of the drop-off.
Now came the tricky part. Using a girth strap and a pair of tree-topper's climbing spikes, Ray quickly climbed thirty-five feet up the larch, hoping that the tree wasn't rotten at the core.
Watching him climb so deftly, Phil said, "Hey, that's pretty slick. You climb with a purpose."
Ray shouted back, "Just a Jedi trick that I learned from my cousin Obi-Wan."
Phil laughed. Ray often joked about the actor Ewan McGregor, who shared their surname. He kidded about the actor being a first cousin, when he was more likely a fiftieth cousin.
Trailing from his belt was fifty feet of parachute cord. Once he'd reached the desired height, he reset his boot spikes solidly and leaned back in the strap. He felt solid, but the situation still made him nervous. Climbing a dying tree that might be rotted or hollowed out by wood ants was a dicey proposition.
He shouted down to Phil, "Okay, tie on the cable with a sheet bend and a half hitch!"
"Ummm . . . okay. What's a sheet bend?"