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Authors: Layton Green

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THE SUMMONER

A Novel of Suspense

by Layton Green

 

Copyright ©2010 by Layton Green

Cover Art by Daniel Will-Harris

eBook Creation by Dellaster Design

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons is entirely coincidental.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Acknowledgments
About the Author

To my wife

THE SUMMONER
 
1

December 9, 2009

T
he only thing Dominic Grey knew for certain about the disappearance of William Addison was that it was the strangest case to which he had ever been assigned.

The facts were few. Three nights ago, Addison, retired head of Consular Affairs at the United States Embassy in Zimbabwe, attended a religious ceremony on the outskirts of Harare. What religion the ceremony belonged to remained unclear. Harris Powell, Deputy Director of Diplomatic Security and the man now walking beside Grey, had described it as “one of those African ones.”

According to Addison’s girlfriend, a Zimbabwean nurse thirty years his junior, Addison was drawn into the center of a ring of worshippers. The girlfriend didn’t know what happened inside the circle. She tried to follow, but couldn’t press through the crowd. What she did know is that he never came out.

As Grey and Harris neared their destination the summer twilight enveloped them, a soft melting of the mammoth sun into the city’s urban hues, a brief and dreamy purgatory before the certainty of the African night. A broad avenue stretched before them, bordered on the left by the lush beauty of Harare Gardens. Better light would have revealed a collection of modest-sized buildings too young to be considered quaint or historic, but old enough to have lost their gleam. Downtown Harare was clean, handsome and quiet—just the opposite of what one might expect from one of Africa’s modern-day tragedies.

The first sign of something amiss was the lack of commerce on the streets. A few people hurried by, most of them smartly dressed and lucky to be returning home from a job in one of the surviving businesses. But in a city this poor, Grey knew, beggars and street urchins should clog the center, fruit and produce stands should feed the masses, rickety bazaars should hawk everything from cheap souvenirs to black market commodities. The absence of these gritty realities glared more than their presence would have.

Grey’s eyes scoured the streets with habitual caution. The Central Business District was a short walk from the Embassy, but downtown Harare at night was not a place to lose focus. Harris was doing what he always did: casting lecherous stares at every girl old enough to use teen as a suffix. His pin-shaped head swiveled on top of his skinny frame, afraid he might miss one. Coarse black chest hair clumped out of his dress shirt, and he ran a hand over his thinning, cropped hair as if it belonged on the cover of a romance novel.

“What’s the protocol on this one?” Grey said.

“The protocol,” Harris whined in his high-pitched voice, “is don’t let anyone get kidnapped. We don’t have jurisdiction, and we’re not detectives.”

“Any feds coming?”

“The Ambassador tried to get some flown in, but the Zim officials wouldn’t hear of it. We’re stuck with it. Improvise.”

Grey shrugged, glad for the change of pace. Most of his days were spent investigating routine visa and passport fraud, and escorting high-ranking government figures to their favorite restaurants. The travel kept it interesting, but outside of a coup or assassination attempt, diplomatic security was not an action-packed profession.

“Maybe this’ll jump-start your career,” Harris said. “If you stumble onto Addison you might get yourself assigned to a decent posting.”

“I happen to like it here. You seem to have landed in the same country as me, last time I checked.”

“You’ll never learn, will you? You have to play the game. I’m here because my next stop is chief of security in the Bahamas. You’re here because no one wants to deal with you.”

“I’m here because I helped a woman who was carjacked.”

“You left your post.”

“It happened fifty feet away, Harris. She got
stabbed
.”

“That wasn’t your job. Protecting United States citizens is your job. She was a local. She could’ve been a decoy.”

“She wasn’t.”

“You’re damn lucky. The only reason you still have a job is because of your… skills. But if you keep getting downgraded you’ll end up in the Congo, protecting spoiled diplomat kids from mountain gorillas.”

Grey had zero interest in climbing the bureaucratic ladder, but Harris was right, his career was on its last shaky rung. Nor had it started well. His stint in the military had almost ended in a court-martial for disobeying his Marine Recon commander’s order. The order at issue had been to fire into a crowd of villagers.

Even after that incident the CIA had recruited him. They loved his profile: he’d lived almost his whole life abroad, spoke three languages, had no relevant family ties, scored high on the I.Q. tests, and was already trained in self-defense. Not trained, according to his former commander, but extraordinary. Gifted.

Given those qualifications, the CIA could overlook his poor test results in social adaptability and obedience to chain of command. It wasn’t until Grey underwent ethical profiling that they realized Grey’s moral compass guided him far more than partisan dictates. He was told to try again after he’d discarded his hero complex.

He’d contemplated the Foreign Service, but after one meeting knew that forced smiles and handshakes were not for him. During the application process he stumbled upon an opening in Diplomatic Security. It sounded intriguing, and Grey liked the promise of exotic postings.

Four years in and he was restless. He wanted to affect people’s lives in a more direct manner. He fantasized about being a detective in some random city, helping real people with real problems. But he knew he wouldn’t last there either, wherever there might turn out to be. Something would cause him to move on. Like all those who have lived their lives on the outskirts of conventional society, his desire for acceptance was as powerful as his inability to find it.

“So it’s us and the liaison?” Grey asked.

“And some quack the Ambassador called in, a professor-type from Interpol. He wouldn’t be here if Addison wasn’t friends with the Ambassador.” Harris glanced at a group of adolescent girls and sprouted a thin smile. “Waste of a perfectly good evening downtown.”

“A professor?”

“He’s an expert on religious something-or-other. I haven’t seen his CV yet.”

Grey flinched. His parents had taught him everything he needed to know about religion. His father’s code of life was a warped mix of public service, domestic violence, militant patriotism, and the self-serving Protestant theology he used to glue it all together.

As for Grey’s beloved and devout mother, she developed stomach cancer when Grey was fourteen, and he watched her pray every second of every goddamn day until she died a lingering death after six months of soul-crushing pain.

If anyone was upstairs, he sure as hell wasn’t paying attention.

They completed the rest of the walk in silence. Harris stopped in front of a palm-lined, granite and marble facade fronting the bright foliage of Africa Unity Square. White-gloved bellhops filled the entrance.

Harris grunted. “At least the liaison has some taste.”

Grey read the sign carved into the granite in bas-relief. The Meikles Hotel.

2

H
arris led Grey through the lounge, past a gold-embossed elevator bank and to a door at the end of a long hallway. Harris knocked and then pushed the door open. Inside a conference room two people were engaged in conversation behind a long table.

One was a young woman sitting erectly in a beige business suit, sculpted chin held high. She rose with a fluid grace and offered her hand, announcing herself as Nya Mashumba.

She was tall, eye-to-eye with Harris and three inches shy of Grey’s lean six-foot-one. Although her name sounded Shona, Grey recognized signs of a mixed racial heritage: a soft, oval face defined by a mouth too full to be Caucasian and not full enough to be African, a narrow nose and curved eyes, flawless chestnut skin, and hair whose imprisonment in a bun couldn’t conceal its willfulness.

Grey hid his surprise as the older man next to her rose and introduced himself as Professor Viktor Radek. He had pegged Nya as the academic. His surprise grew as Professor Radek rose to his full height.

The man was a giant, and had to be near seven feet tall. Professor Radek’s clipped dark hair, broad face and blacksmith shoulders matched the slight palatalizations of his Slavic accent. Despite the heat, he wore a black suit, and he possessed the confident, solemn bearing of a man used to being taken seriously.

Everyone sat. “We appreciate your government’s assistance in this matter,” Harris said. Neither Nya nor the Professor gave the slight flinch Grey was used to seeing when someone heard Harris squeak for the first time.

Grey ran a hand through a mass of dark hair he kept just short enough to avoid frowns at the Embassy. He rubbed at his perpetual stubble, and rested a finger against a nose left crooked from numerous breaks.

Harris was right. U.S. Diplomatic Security had no jurisdiction, and the Zimbabwean government sure as hell had no interest in the kidnapping of a retired U.S. diplomat. Normally the local police would handle the case, resulting in a rote investigation and an apologetic letter to the victim’s family by a junior FSO. But William Addison counted the Ambassador as a long-time friend, and the Ambassador had requested an investigation. It was an unusual request given the paranoid political climate, but the Ambassador had been successful, probably for reasons Grey didn’t care to know about.

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