Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
A window shattered by his ear. A bullet seared past the back
of his neck. He dropped and pressed against the adobe wall.
The bitch had moved out of the office and was stalking him
from inside the house.
Body, brains,
and
she knew the lay of the land.
No wonder she’d been able to avoid the monsters here.
Distantly a noise intruded. The
whump-whump
of an approaching helicopter. It was their evac chopper. He glanced to
his watch. Of course their ride was early.
“You should run for your friends,” the woman called from inside. “While you still have time!”
Kowalski stared at the manicured lawn that spread all the way
to the beach. There was no cover. The bitch would surely drop
him within a few steps.
It came down to do or die.
He bunched his legs under him, took a deep breath, then
sprang up. He crashed back-first through the bullet-weakened
window. He kept his rifle tucked to his belly. He landed hard and
shoulder-rolled, ignoring the shards of glass cutting him.
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He gained a crouched position, rifle up, swiveling.
The room was empty.
Gone again.
So it was to be a cat-and-mouse hunt through the house.
He moved to the doorway that led deeper into the structure.
Smoke flowed in rivers across the ceiling. The temperature inside was furnace hot. He pictured the pack over the woman’s
shoulder. She had already emptied the safe. She would make for
one of the exits.
He edged to the next room.
A sunroom. A wall of windows overlooked the expanse of gardens and lawn. Rattan furniture and floor screens offered a handful of hiding places. He would have to lure her out somehow.
Outthink her.
Yeah, right.
He edged into the room, keeping close to the back wall.
He crossed the room. There was no attack.
He reached the far archway. It led to a back foyer.
And an open door.
He cursed inwardly. As he made his entrance, she must have
made her exit. She was probably halfway to Honduras by now.
He rushed the door and out to the back porch. He searched the
grounds.
Gone.
So much for outthinking her.
The press of the hot barrel against the back of his skull punc tuated how thick that skull actually was. As he had concluded
earlier, she must have realized a sprint across open ground was
too risky. So she had waited to ambush him.
She didn’t even hesitate for any witty repartee…not that he’d
be a good sparring partner anyway. Only a single word of consolation was offered.
“Adiós.”
The blast of the gun was drowned by a sudden siren’s wail.
Both of them jumped at the shrieking burst.
Luckily, he jumped to the left, she to the right.
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The round tore through Kowalski’s right ear with a lance of fire.
He spun, pulling the trigger on his weapon. He didn’t aim, just
clenched the trigger and strafed at waist level. He lost his balance at the edge of the porch, tumbling back.
Another bullet ripped through the air past the tip of his nose.
He hit the cobbled path, and his skull struck with a distinct
ring. The rifle was knocked from his fingers.
He searched up and saw the woman step to the edge of the porch.
She pointed her Sig-Sauer at him.
Her other arm clutched her stomach. It failed to act as a dam.
Abdominal contents spilled from her split belly, pouring out in
a flow of dark blood. She lifted her gun, arm trembling—her eyes
met his, oddly surprised. Then the gun slipped from her fingers,
and she toppled toward him.
Kowalski rolled out of the way in time.
She landed with a wet slap on the stone path.
The bell-beat of the helicopter wafted louder as the winds
changed direction. The storm was rolling in fast. He saw the
chopper circle the beach once, like a dog settling for a place to
sleep, then lower toward the flat rocky expanse.
Kowalski returned to Gabriella Salazar’s body and hauled off
her pack. He began to sprint for the beach. Then stopped, went
back, and retrieved his VK rifle. He wasn’t leaving it behind.
As he ran, he realized two things.
One. The siren blast from the neighboring jungle had gone
silent. And two. He had heard not a single word from Dr. Rosauro.
He checked the taped receiver behind his ear. Still in place.
Why had she gone silent?
The helicopter—a Sikorsky S-76—touched down ahead of
him. Sand swirled in the rotorwash. A gunman in military fatigues pointed a rifle at him and bellowed over the roar of the
blades.
“Stand down! Now!”
Kowalski stopped. He lowered his rifle but lifted the pack. “I
have the goddamn antidote.”
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He searched the surrounding beach for Dr. Rosauro, but she
was nowhere in sight.
“I’m Seaman Joe Kowalski! U.S. Navy! I’m helping Dr.
Rosauro!”
After a moment of consultation with someone inside the chopper, the gunman waved him forward. Ducking under the rotors,
Kowalski held out the satchel. A shadowy figure accepted the
pack and searched inside. Something was exchanged by radio.
“Where’s Dr. Rosauro?” the stranger asked, clearly the one in
charge here. Hard blue eyes studied him.
Kowalski shook his head.
“Commander Crowe,” the pilot called back. “We must leave
now. The Brazilian navy had just ordered the bombardment.”
“Get inside,” the man ordered Kowalski, the tone unequivocal.
Kowalski stepped toward the open door.
A shrieking wail stopped him. A single short burst. It came
from beyond the beach.
In the jungle.
Dr. Shay Rosauro clung to the tangle of branches halfway up
the broad-leafed cocoa tree. Baboons gibbered below. She had
sustained a deep bite to her calf, lost her radio and her pack.
Minutes ago, after being chased into the tree, she had found
that her perch offered a bird’s-eye view of the hacienda, good
enough to observe Kowalski being led out at gunpoint. Unable
to help, she had used the only weapon still at hand—her sonic
shrieker.
Unfortunately, the blast had panicked the baboons below her,
their sudden flight jostling her branch. She’d lost her balance…and the shrieker. As she’d regained her balance, she’d
heard two gunshots.
Hope died inside her.
Below, one of the baboons, the dominant male of the pack, had
recovered her sonic device and discovered the siren button. The
blast momentarily scattered the pack. But only momentarily.
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The deterrent was becoming progressively less effective—only
making them angrier.
Shay hugged the tree trunk.
She checked her watch, then closed her eyes.
She pictured the children’s faces…her partner’s…
A noise drew her attention upward. The double
whump
of a
passing helicopter. The leaves whipped around her. She lifted an
arm—then lowered it.
Too late.
The chopper lifted away. The Brazilian assault would commence in a matter of seconds. Shay let her club, her only remaining weapon, drop from her fingers. What was the use? It
tumbled below, doing nothing but drawing the attention of the
baboons. The pack renewed its assault, climbing the lowest
branches.
She could only watch.
Then a familiar voice intruded.
“Die, you dirty, rabid, motherfucking apes!”
A large figure appeared below, blazing out with a VK rifle.
Baboons screamed. Fur flew. Blood splattered.
Kowalski strode into the fray, back to nothing but his boxers.
And his weapon.
He strafed and fired, spinning, turning, twisting, dropping.
Baboons fled now.
Except for their leader. The male rose up and howled as loudly
as Kowalski, baring long fangs. Kowalski matched his expression, showing as many teeth.
“Shut the hell up!”
Kowalski punctuated his declaration with a continuous burst
of firepower, turning monkey into mulch. Once finished, he
shouldered his rifle and strode forward. Leaning on the trunk,
he stared up.
“Ready to come down, Doctor?”
Relieved, Shay half fell out of the tree. Kowalski caught her.
“The antidote…?” she asked.
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“In safe hands,” he assured her. “On its way to the coast with
Commander Crowe. He wanted me to come along, but well…
I…I guess I owed you.”
He supported her under one shoulder. They hobbled quickly
out of the jungle to the open beach.
“How are we going to get off—?”
“I’ve got that covered. Seems a nice lady left us a going-away
present.” He pointed down the strand to a beached Jet Ski.
“Lucky for us, Gabriella Salazar loved her husband enough to
come out here.”
As they hurried to the watercraft’s side, he gently helped her
on board, then climbed in front.
She circled her arms around his waist. She noted his bloody
ear and weeping lacerations across his back. More scars to add
to his collection. She closed her eyes and leaned her cheek
against his bare back. Grateful and exhausted.
“And speaking of the love of one’s life,” he said, igniting the
watercraft’s engine and throttling it up. He glanced back. “I may
be falling in love, too…”
She lifted her head, startled, then leaned back down.
Relieved.
Kowalski was just staring at his shouldered rifle.
“Oh, yeah,” he said. “This baby’s a real keeper.”
Gayle Lynds did not intend to start a series. When she wrote
her first book,
Masquerade
, in the mid-1990s, she was simply
creating a modern espionage thriller. But in those early postIron Curtain days, not only was there serious discussion in
Congress about dissolving the CIA, the
New York Times
eliminated its regular review column titled, “Spies & Thrillers.”
Within book publishing, the spy novel was declared as dead
as the cold war.
Still,
Masquerade
became a
New York Times
bestseller. A
great adventure story, it was infused with fascinating doses of
history and psychology. In an odd way, Sarah Walker, the
heroine, was Lynds. Both were magazine journalists, but
Sarah had the misfortune to have an uncle who was a notorious assassin called the Carnivore, although she did not
know this. In the novel, Asher Flores, the hero, is a CIA man
of the fascinating ilk—charming, terribly smart, with the
soul of a rogue. Together, Sarah and Asher must unearth the
Carnivore.
Lynds went on to publish two more stand-alone thrillers,
Mesmerized
and
Mosaic,
and collaborated with Robert Ludlum to create the Covert-One series. Through it all, she con-
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tinued to receive mail from fans who wanted her to bring
back Sarah, Asher and the Carnivore. So
The Coil,
a novel
about the Carnivore’s only child, Liz Sansborough, was born.
A former CIA operative, Liz had played a pivotal role in
Masquerade,
just as Sarah and Asher would play pivotal roles
in
The Coil
.
Liz and Sarah are two matched flames, not only in appearance but in spirit, with quick wit and the sort of personal
courage that is both admirable and sometimes daunting.
Costarring with Liz in
The Coil
is Simon Childs of MI6. For
him, the “M” means maverick. Hotheaded and coolly charming, Simon reflects Lynds’s endless fascination with politics—
he’s a penetration agent in the antiglobalization movement.
Lynds’s latest espionage thriller is
The Last Spymaster,
and
will be followed by another book in the Carnivore series.
The
Hunt for Dmitri
is part of that continuum.
It’s a Liz Sansborough story.
Which means the Carnivore must appear, too.
The French never got enough credit. The Germans never got
enough control. The Romanians had a guilt complex. And the
Americans hadn’t a clue. As the good-natured slanders continued, Liz Sansborough, Ph.D., peered around the Faculty Club for
her close friend and colleague Arkady Albam. He was late.
The dimly lit bar was packed, every table filled. The rich aromas of wine and liquor were intense. As glasses clinked, a world
atlas of languages electrified the air. Academics all, they were celebrating the conclusion of a highly successful international conference on cold war political fallout, post-9/11, which she had
helped to organize. Still, there was no sign of Arkady.
The economist from the University of London grinned pointedly at Liz—the only American in their group. “I hear Russia’s
economy is so rotten that the Kremlin has had to sack dozens of
its American moles.”
“Only because we don’t sell ourselves cheap.” She grinned
back at him. “Moscow can afford to keep your MI6 turncoats on
the payroll forever.”
As laughter erupted, the sociologist from the Sorbonne nod-
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ded at the empty bar stool beside Liz and asked in French,
“Where’s Arkady? He isn’t here to defend his country!”
“I’ve been wondering, too.” Liz’s gaze swept the lounge
once more.
Arkady was a visiting scholar in Russian history, on campus
here at the University of California at Santa Barbara since January. They had met soon after he arrived, when he sat beside her