One Last Scent of Jasmine (Boone's File Book 3) (33 page)

Read One Last Scent of Jasmine (Boone's File Book 3) Online

Authors: Dale Amidei

Tags: #Suspense & Thrillers, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Fiction

BOOK: One Last Scent of Jasmine (Boone's File Book 3)
4.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

Exiting the parking facility onto the sidewalk, Lambert commenced his return to the hotel where he knew his companion was busying himself with the electronics project.
I am glad it is him. I have always hated working with explosives.

Lambert’s musings on the dangers of stray voltages and random wireless calls reminded him of other dangers encountered in field work … one being the loss of situational awareness. He began scanning the area on the periphery of the conference facility just as carefully as he had the interior of the parking garages, noting the placement and numbers of the law enforcement personnel.
There must be other covert agents here as well.

It was a game all operatives played. Professionals carried themselves differently. Their innate confidence displayed in ways apparent to those who understood the mind-set. Their build and level of fitness were distinctive. They were men and women who pushed themselves far beyond the norm in the pursuit of advancing their physical capabilities, and the results made them stand out from ordinary human beings.
And we each try to see the others first as a point of pride.

Lambert proceeded only a few steps on the most direct route back to the hotel which served as their staging area when one such male caught his eye from a good distance away.
There. He could be one.
The man turned as he and his companion surveyed the expanse of the conference center. Her blaze of red hair was easily distinguishable.

Freezing in place, Lambert looked more carefully, wishing for a set of small field glasses.
This must be her. The other is the American, Ritter.
The Frenchman remembered the warnings from both of them. He consequently felt no need whatsoever of testing the resolve of either of his tormentors to carry out their promised retribution should they spot him on this London street.

He turned instead, determined to give the pair a wide berth.
So InterLynk is here as well. Mister Novak’s troubles have increased.
Lambert smiled, anticipating al-Khobar’s reaction on hearing the news.
And so have the opportunities to extract our revenge.

 

Al-Khobar had just completed the final reseating of the cell's plastic case when the sound of Lambert’s return came at the door. The man looked anxious, the Saudi thought.
As well he should. Here I am working with a bomb.
Fortunately, al-Khobar was as obsessed with safety procedures as he was with the precision required for his tasks.

The ends of the wiring now extending from the cell phone were each covered with an electrical wire nut. Once placed, it would be a matter of a few seconds to confirm an open circuit with a voltmeter, insert the device’s detonator, and twist the leads into place. Even taking every precaution, there was still the remote possibility of a wrong number or random caller activating the phone once it was live.
All reasons we both will want to put as much distance as possible between us and this damned device.

Al-Khobar glanced up once more, seeing Lambert’s obvious relief at not interrupting a critical operation. “So? What are your thoughts, my friend?”

“As to the car, it will be child’s play,” the Frenchman opined, shedding his coat. “The vehicle is nearby and sitting there unattended.”

“I will want an interior placement. There is enough material, but I do not want the blast deflected by the chassis,” the Saudi cautioned.

Lambert shrugged. “Very little extra trouble. The car, I fear, will prove to be the least of our concerns.”

Setting his tools down, al-Khobar relaxed for the first time in too long. “What makes you say this?” he asked, noting his companion’s expression.

Camille Lambert motioned to the window. “
They
are here as well:  the Hildebrandt woman and Daniel Sean Ritter. They are apparently seeking an opportunity to interface with the Hungarian, just as we are.”

His own visage, al-Khobar thought, must have betrayed his disgust. “Perhaps we can finish more business today than we hoped.”

Nodding in agreement, the Frenchman replied, “We must book our flights before leaving, then. The timing will need to be tight.”

“The timing will be what it should be,” al-Khobar predicted. “Neither of us are amateurs at this.”

“This is good,
mon ami,
because it might be mere amateurs would not survive the sort of afternoon I anticipate.”

No reason existed for the Saudi to doubt Lambert’s foresight. It would be a dangerous time because they were dangerous men, ones set to an equally perilous assignment.
Death is like that. It is unforgiving.

 

 

The Brits are doing it right. There are no opportunities here,
Boone determined. Walking beside her on what she had decided to make the final round of the perimeter, Ritter was the epitome of patience. Even he, she thought, was stymied as to a survivable approach to the target. Knowing such, at least, subdued her frustration.

“I hate to say it,” the retired Lieutenant Colonel finally admitted, “but this might be the wrong venue for the type of show we want to put on.”

“Sean, I’m forced to agree,” she conceded. Glancing at the leaden sky, she gauged the remaining daylight hours. “Suggestions for our day?”

“We could play the same game as the Russians in New York,” he suggested. “Scope his hotel … and take him in place or on entrance or exit.”

“Hmm … not a bad second choice,” she concurred.

Suddenly footsteps, like those of a financier or banker late to an end-of-day meeting, sounded behind them. The pace gained on the pair, stifling for a moment their conversation. Instead of passing them by, though, a well-dressed and classically distinguished white-haired British gentleman of perhaps sixty-five years fell into step at Boone’s right hand, opposite Ritter.

“Doctor Hildebrandt. What a
surprise
to see you here in London,” the man, his hands thrust deep into the pockets of his overcoat, greeted her.

Bloody hell. Chauncey Stewart. We’re made.
Boone summoned her best smile. “Sir Chauncey! What a delight this is!” She halted their stroll and turned to face one of the most senior members of MI5. She indicated the man to her left. “I don’t know if you have ever met—”

“Daniel Sean Ritter,
Leftenant
Colonel, United States Air Force, retired?” Stewart eyed the big American carefully, not offering his hand. “Yes, I know the man, though we have never been formally introduced. A
pleasure,
Colonel.”

“Likewise, sir,” came Ritter’s guarded reply.

We spent too much time on the perimeter. Damned amateurish mistake
. Boone assessed Stewart’s body language as tense and ready.
He’s not offering his hand because something is already in it, and that’s not likely to be leftover fish and chips.

“What, if I may ask, brings one of Terrence Bradley’s people to London sans a courtesy call?” Stewart asked in a dangerously casual tone.

Boone observed people moving in around them:  two plainclothes officers dressed every bit as well as their superior, and a yellow-jacketed matron from the Bobbies, possibly a conscript from a nearby corner.
Here comes the shakedown.
“Simple tourism,” Boone answered, projecting an air of relaxation. “I was just showing Sean the historic delights of the Square Mile.” Her arm intertwined the Lieutenant Colonel’s to the point of planting a solid breast-bump below his triceps.
Sorry, Sean, I need to drill in for the sake of appearances, big guy.
The subterfuge did not appear to be a sell.
Perhaps because of the look on Sean’s face. At least now he knows they’re real.

“Forgive my skepticism, Doctor.” Stewart’s hand—his left one—emerged from his pocket, motioning toward the two of them. Boone’s peripheral vision registered Stewart’s three assistants closing in. “I find it difficult to believe you should be on holiday with
any
married man, let alone one with a history as black as Mister Ritter’s. Raise your hands in the air, please. We will try to make this as dignified as possible.”

Boone sighed and lifted her arms, as did Ritter, without complaint. His upper limbs were patted down thoroughly from both sides before the pair of Chauncey’s men moved to his trunk and legs, leaving no possible hiding place for a concealed weapon untouched. The silent Bobby did the same, working her alone but just as well, Boone felt.
You should at least have bought me dinner first,
Boone thought.
This is worse than a frisking by the TSA.

Finally, all three stepped back. One of Stewart’s men spoke for all of them. “They are unarmed, sir.”

Boone adjusted her clothing discreetly to relieve folds which had tucked in where they did not belong. She smiled again at the MI5 stalwart. “Satisfied, Sir Chauncey? As I said, we are simply visiting.”
Now, that is, since we are completely and utterly screwed for conducting operations against Novak in the U.K.

“It would be my advice, Doctor Hildebrandt. Do be sure to let me know if you will be planning another trip. Perhaps we could arrange a more formal visit.”

“That
would
be lovely,” Boone was able to say without a hint of sarcasm. Her eyes, focusing over Stewart’s shoulder, could see Novak exiting the conference center, consulting in a few last moments with others of a similar stature and strata in the world of finance.
There he is. We’re not even going to get a chance to follow the man to his hotel.

Detecting her gaze, Stewart's eyes followed hers toward Benedek Jancsi Novak. Sir Chauncey then turned back to her with the light of suspicion rekindled in his own.

Oh,
she reflected,
what a three-ring goat molestation this trip is turning out to be.

Chapter 20 - Chewing Judas

 

 

The day, over in regard to his reportable activities at least, had been as frustrating in its entirety as it was at the beginning. Finally freed from his last-minute and extracurricular dealings, Benedek Jancsi Novak could now return to St. Ermin’s, where even less pleasant business awaited.

No one seems to be interested in taking my call this day
, his mind observed, tired from nonstop thought. The run of his luck had begun in transit to his financial conferences, with a cryptic text message attempted to the Washington woman who set this mess in motion. Oddly, the communication was not returned, nor were two more during the course of the day. Likewise, two attempts at direct and indirect voice connections had failed, with Valka Gerard’s cell going unanswered and even her staff being less than helpful in forwarding him to the Senior Advisor’s location.

I have never had this much trouble reaching her. Something unusual is afoot.
Now, even Ludwiga seemed to be taking a break from her desk at the front of his suite.
I might as well not have a cellular, if no one out there remains interested in talking to me. In God’s name, for what reason am I paying all of these people?

His driver, at least, seemed to remain competent. Novak watched his car on approach to the front of the conference facility.
It is well I called him. I am almost ready to forgo text messaging altogether. Damned useless technology.
He tried once again to reach Valka Gerard’s personal cell, his phone held to his head as he approached the curb where the chauffeur would pull in.

Novak heard nothing but the eventual rollover as the call again went unanswered.
It is a slow news cycle.
If anything on the international stage was the reason for Gerard’s lack of availability, he felt certain such would have come to his attention. His suspicions, always seeking a reason to reactivate, were now operating at fever pitch.
Something of significance has changed in Washington.

His long, black, gold-accented Mercedes arrived, and his driver emerged to handle the passenger door while Novak stood fiddling with his less-useful-than-anticipated wireless phone. The rear compartment was opened for him, and the billionaire’s eyes darted around in one last assessment of his surroundings. As he eased into place, he noticed at the far end of the block the pair of men who seemed to be having difficulties of their own with a cell phone. His driver moved to close the car’s heavy, armored door as Novak's mind caught up with his eyes.
The Frenchman and the Arab.
At nearly the same instant, he perceived his familiar seat here in the rear of the Mercedes to be out of position.
There is something under the cushion. Get out!

Novak’s foot caught and repelled the door as it came around to shut. Kicking it back toward the startled chauffeur, Novak surprised the driver with his ability to not only move low and fast, but also to drag the larger man with him.

They were tumbling to the concrete behind the rear tire when the explosion sounded inside the limousine, sending a blast of glass and debris over their heads and around them. Protected by the car's armored panels and the tire, the pair of men who an instant before would have taken the full impact of the blast instead were spared most of the force. Their ears, however, absorbed enough buffeting regardless to render them nearly senseless.

Am I dead?
Novak thought, lying on his back on the sidewalk. Next to him, the driver groaned in agony, clutching the sides of his head.
No, it cannot be. They have missed. They have failed.
Another, darker thought followed immediately.
And so has she … the Estonian whore to whom I foolishly lent the Frenchman.

 

The six of them had all startled at the thump of the explosion in Novak’s passenger compartment. It was the first in the line of cars waiting to transport their various VIPs to whatever evening destinations awaited them. The right rear of the passenger space literally
disintegrated,
she could see. Their next reflex had been to turn away from the shower of falling glass and debris peppering the area with stinging fragments. It left barely enough time for Boone and Ritter to react when Stewart’s bodyguards went down next as the angry, whirring noises of arriving bullets barely preceded the sound of gunfire from a distant pair of shooters.

Other books

Ripped by Lisa Edward
Beguiled by Maureen Child
Of Water and Madness by Katie Jennings
The Cocktail Waitress by James M. Cain
Deadly Communications by Lillian Duncan