Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
Keep going, Special Agent Jacobs.”
“Rousseau wanted Fletcher captured alive and brought back
to Louisiana. That was the condition of the reward. The bounty
hunters and people working for Rousseau, they wanted us to disappear. Everyone would assume you were responsible because
you have a track record of making federal agents disappear. That
way, it would keep the heat off Rousseau.”
“I’m afraid Jacobs is telling the truth about the bounty
hunters,” Fletcher said. “I’ve been following Lee for the past
week. Naturally, I wanted to see what he was up to, so I took the
liberty of tapping into his phone conversations—the FBI’s encryption technology is woefully out of date. After Lee and Jacobs
left your hotel, I followed them back to the house they’ve been
using as a base of operations. You can imagine my surprise when,
two hours later, five rather disturbing-looking men emerged
from the back doors and carried three oversize coolers to the fishing boat Lee used to transport all his surveillance equipment. I
recognized one of these gentlemen from a previous entanglement—a professional tracker, or bounty hunter, who works for
Daddy Rousseau. Now tell Marlena about what you had planned
for her.”
Jacobs didn’t answer.
Fletcher whispered something in Jacobs’s ear. He looked terrified.
“After you planted the transmitter, the bounty hunters were
to move in and take care of Fletcher,” Jacobs said, his voice quivering. “They wanted me to take you out on the boat under the
guise of meeting up with Lee at the operations house. You were
supposed to disappear, out here in the water. The sharks were
going to take care of you. No bodies, no evidence, no case.”
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“And where were you going?” Fletcher said.
“Costa Rica.”
“With how much money?”
A pause, then Jacobs said, “Seven million.”
“It seems the price on my head has gone up,” Fletcher said,
grinning. “Jacobs neglected to mention the part where I slipped
out of the utility closet and caught him in the act of feeling you
up. I think he was preparing to share a special moment with you
before dumping you overboard. It’s not every day he has an opportunity to be intimate with such a beautiful woman. Did you
tell Marlena about your colorful tenure in Boston?”
“I worked as a handler for informants.”
“He’s being modest,” Fletcher said. “Special Agent Jacobs was the
handler for two
very
powerful figureheads inside the Irish mafia. In
exchange for lucrative payoffs, Jacobs ran interference so these two
men could continue committing extortion, money laundering and
murder. When his superiors got wind of what was going on, these
two men suddenly disappeared. Any idea what happened to them?”
“I was cleared on those charges,” Jacobs said.
“You were never indicted because the president stepped in and
invoked executive privilege in order to protect a member of his
high-ranking staff—a member who once worked as your boss in
Boston. The corruption went well beyond Jacobs, and the president wanted it kept quiet. How many people died to protect your
secrets,
Special
Agent Jacobs? How many people did you kill?”
Jacobs didn’t answer.
“It doesn’t matter. I think we’ve heard enough.” Fletcher taped
Jacobs’s mouth shut.
Then Marlena watched as Fletcher dragged Jacobs, kicking
and screaming, to the back part of the boat. The idea flashed
through her mind: Jacobs alone in the water, screaming out in
pain and horror as the sharks ripped him apart. No part of her
rose up in protest or tried to push the thought away.
Jacobs was pinned against the stern, screaming behind the
duct tape as he stared, wide-eyed and terrified, at the water.
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“Do you want me to cut him loose before I toss him overboard?” Fletcher asked her.
Marlena didn’t answer, aware of the intense feeling building
inside her, the one she had when holding things like the postcards and the sweater.
“What would your mother want you to do?” Fletcher asked.
Marlena thought of her mother alone in that terrible moment,
a woman who worked as a janitor and wanted nothing more out
of life than to be a good mother to her two children, now forced
to make a decision between jumping to her death and being
burned alive.
She spotted a bright light on the horizon. The light belonged
to a boat.
“That would be my ride,” Fletcher said. “What’s your answer?”
She
wanted
Jacobs to suffer. But giving the order to do it was
something else entirely.
“I want to bring him in,” Marlena said.
“At the moment, you have no direct proof of his involvement
with the bounty hunters. Jean Paul Rousseau is not a stupid
man. And despite his rather apish appearance, I’m willing to bet
Jacobs covered his tracks just as well. It will be your word against
his. I don’t have to remind you how those cases turn out, especially since Jacobs has connections in very high places.”
“I’ll work the evidence.”
“I doubt you’ll find any.”
“I’ll take my chances.”
“Your choice.” Fletcher released Jacobs. “Turn around, Marlena, and I’ll untie your hands.”
The boat that pulled alongside them was a cigarette boat, a bullet-shaped race boat designed for incredible speed. Standing behind the wheel was a pale man with a shaved head and an
odd-looking nose—Jonathan Prince.
“Malcolm,” Prince said. “We need to get moving.”
She recognized the voice as the one she had spoken to earlier
on the cell phone.
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“You had this whole thing planned out,” Marlena said, more
to herself.
“I needed to move you to safety, and the only way to do it was
to get you on the boat, away from the club.” Marlena felt
Fletcher’s breath against her ear. “Those postcards and whatever
other items you’ve bought since your mother’s death? I suggest
you bury them.”
Her hands were cut free.
“I’ll leave Jacobs tied up, in case you change your mind. Good
luck, Marlena.”
The cigarette boat roared away. She got to work untying the
rope around her ankles. She didn’t rush. She knew there was no
way she could catch up to Fletcher.
During the commotion, Jacobs had managed to rub off part
of the duct tape from the corner of his mouth. “I have an account
set up here on the island,” he mumbled. “I’ll transfer the money
to you. All I need is a laptop. You let me go, and I’ll disappear.
You’ll never see me again.”
Marlena didn’t answer.
“Seven million,” Jacobs said. “That kind of money can buy you
a lot of things.”
But it can’t buy me what I need
, Marlena thought, and went to
start the boat.
“Wait, let’s talk about this,” Jacobs said. “We can come to
some sort of agreement.”
Marlena drove toward the bright lights of the island. She heard
Jacobs screaming over the roar of the engines and wind, pleading with her to make a deal. Marlena drove faster and thought
of her mother falling through the sky and tried hard not to dwell
on the limitations of justice.
Both a literary and suspense novelist, Dennis Lynds is credited with bringing the detective novel into the modern age
then, twenty years later—in the 1980s—introducing literary
techniques that propelled the genre into its current dynamic
form. An award winner, Lynds wrote under several pseudonyms, publishing some eighty novels and two hundred short
stories. His most famous pen name was Michael Collins.
Under that label he created fiction’s longest-running detective series, starring the indelible private eye Dan Fortune. The
New York Times
consistently named Lynds’s mysteries among
the nation’s top ten. One year, it listed two of his titles, each
written under a different pseudonym, without realizing he was
the author of both. His awards include both the Edgar and
the Marlowe Lifetime Achievement.
Lynds also published literary novels and short stories. Five
were honored in
Best American Short Stories
. Then, in the late
1980s and into the 1990s, he pioneered the detective form
again, writing books in both third and first person and lacing them with short stories, techniques which today’s writers employ regularly.
“Powerful and memorable, [these works] indicate Collins
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has embarked on a new course after some 60 books,” wrote
critic Richard C. Carpenter in
Twentieth Century Crime and
Mystery Writers
. “Truly, he is a writer to be reckoned with.”
Of his most recent short story collection,
Fortune’s World,
the
Los Angeles Times
commented, “To spin tales as intriguing and
thought provoking as these for three decades is a remarkable
enough achievement. Even more remarkable is the sustained
quality…. It takes style to bring that off. Bravery, too, of
course.”
Iconoclastic, witty and generous, sadly Lynds died
August 19, 2005, at the age of eighty-one. Several of his
short stories will be published posthumously, including the
one here,
Success of a Mission.
This story was first published
in 1968. Since then, it has been nominated for several
awards and anthologized. The story is still relevant today in
both its triumph and its tragedy.
The minister of defense stood with his back to the room. He
faced a large map on the wall of his office.
“They will attack,” the minister said. “If we do not know the
locations of their ammunition dumps, supply depots and fuel
stores, we cannot stop them.”
The minister turned. He was a small man with a round face
that would have been kindly except for the hard gray surface of
his eyes. These hard gray eyes studied the faces of the other two
people in the room the way a scientist would study a specimen
on a microscope slide.
“That data would only be at army headquarters in their capital, Minister,” the tall infantry captain said.
The minister nodded. “Yes. Our man at their headquarters
knows that much, has already located exactly where they are in
the building.”
“He cannot get the data for us, Minister?” the woman asked.
“No. He cannot get into the building. It would be quite impossible in his disguise, and in any case we need him to remain
in his present position. His contacts are too low level, and we
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have no other reliable agents with the necessary experience at
their headquarters for a job of this degree of difficulty, sensitivity and importance. There is no time to place an undercover man
in the headquarters now. It will have to be a single swift operation from outside army headquarters. Get in, get the data, bring
it back without them being aware that we have it.”
The woman paled under her olive complexion. There and
gone, the quick fear, but it had been there. She was little more
than a girl, despite her officer’s uniform. Her face was oval, with
a small nose, wide and full lips and soft brown eyes. She had been
in the army three years, and had killed four men with a knife in
the dead of night, but she paled as the minister described what
would have to be done at the headquarters of the enemy’s army
in the heart of enemy country.
The tall man only nodded. “When do we leave?”
His voice, when he said this, was low, and had a faint trace of an
accent different from that of the woman and the minister. There
was a long scar on his lean, tanned face. The middle finger of his
left hand was missing. His almost-black eyes showed no expression.
“In ten minutes, Captain. All your papers are ready,” the minister said. “You, Captain Hareet, will be an American automobile salesman on a long-planned combined vacation and business
trip that could not be canceled despite the crisis. We have picked
you for this job because of your experience, your colloquial
American English and your command of Arabic. With some
darkening of the skin, your features will also pass as Arab, if that
becomes necessary. You know their army and their city.”
Captain Hareet nodded. “Yes, sir. I know both only too well
to lose a war to them.”
The minister faced the girl. “Lieutenant Frank, you will be his
wife. Your home is in Santa Barbara, California. You have lived
there, and no special regional accent is required for an educated
Californian. Standard American will do. Your Arabic will pass in
an emergency, but we hope there will be no need. It is hard for
a woman to infiltrate in Arab countries.”
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“Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Frank said. The shiver in her voice was
so faint no one but a man as trained as the minister, or Captain
Hareet, would have caught it, and it disappeared as quickly as it
had come. The two men looked at each other, nodded, and then
smiled at the woman.
“You are lovers?” the minister asked.
The captain was silent. Lieutenant Frank hesitated for a moment. Then she nodded. “Yes, sir. Paul and I have lived together
for over a year. We were lovers before that. We planned to marry
soon, but that will have to wait now until after the crisis has