Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
and six hours later he was informed that an army special forces
unit would covertly enter the country from Afghanistan by
7:00 a.m. the following morning. He had no intention of taking
possession of bin Laden alone, nor did the military want to be
absent when that happened. So he’d made, as bin Laden had said,
arrangements.
Malone met the unit at a prearranged point on the highway
north of the capital. It consisted of six soldiers and two officers,
all dressed in nondescript civilian clothing. Colonel Rick Cobb
was in charge, a slender man with reddish-blond hair and deepset green eyes. Malone explained what he wanted the unit to do,
then left them on the side of the road as he drove off for Rampur.
At precisely noon Malone strolled back into the ruins. A pall
of impenetrable mist shrouded the precipice and shielded the
cliffs overhead. He stepped with caution, waiting to see what
would happen.
Bin Laden appeared, just like yesterday. Today, Malone wasn’t
going to chitchat. “Ready to go?”
“As promised.”
He withdrew his Glock.
“That’s not necessary.”
“Makes me feel better.”
His prisoner shrugged. “Then, by all means.”
“Your friends here today?”
“Until we’re safely away. Then they’ll be gone.”
It took twenty minutes to hike down to Malone’s car, the going
slow because of bin Laden’s cane-assisted gait. Before loading the
Arab into the passenger’s seat Malone frisked him. Bin Laden
seemed to expect the violation and did not resist.
They left Rampur and started the drive back for the capital.
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About halfway, Malone spied the same battered cars on the
side of the highway. He eased onto the shoulder and parked behind them.
The doors to both opened and the American unit poured out.
“Friends of yours?” bin Laden calmly asked.
“Your keepers.”
“The deal was I surrendered only to you.”
“I lied.”
Malone left the following day. President Sharma attempted no
contact, but he expected none. The announcement that Osama
bin Laden had been captured would come through the White
House, and the American military would receive full credit. Contrary to what bin Laden may have thought, Malone neither expected nor desired public acknowledgment.
Nor, he knew, did Sharma.
Both their jobs were done.
Two weeks passed with no announcement. Malone was dispatched to Germany, then to Bulgaria, Australia and Norway.
After another two months and still nothing, he decided to see
what was happening. Stephanie Nelle was likewise curious, so
she made an official inquiry.
“Cotton, they don’t know what we’re talking about,” she told
him over the phone from Billet headquarters.
He was between planes in London. “Stephanie, I drove the
SOB in my car. He was sitting beside me. I turned him over to
an army colonel.”
“I gave them the name of the officer. Rick Cobb. He’s a colonel,
assigned to special forces, but that day he was on leave in the
United States. Nowhere near you. That’s been verified.”
“You get a description of him?”
She told him, and it in no way matched the man to whom he’d
handed over bin Laden. “What the hell’s happening here? They
playing games with us?”
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“Why? The president would give his left nut to have bin Laden
in custody.”
Malone heard what bin Laden said to him
. These others want
to prevent such a glorious ending for me.
“I need to talk to Sharma. I’ll get back to you.”
Malone found an Internet portal in a business alcove of the
international terminal. There, he connected his laptop and sent
an e-mail, which he knew was precisely how Sharma liked to
communicate. The president hated telephones—
uncontrollable—
and preferred to retain a hard copy of all his messages. So Malone kept his message simple:
MY GIFT IS GONE.
His plane was not for another two hours, so he sat and waited.
Interestingly, the response came in less than ten minutes.
REVISIT THE RUINS.
Malone knew that was all he was going to get. Obviously,
Sharma had been expecting contact. Malone had been on his way
back to Atlanta for three days of rest before his next assignment.
Not anymore.
Late autumn had a firm grip on the Pan Mountains as Malone
parked at the base of the ridge that led up to the Rampur ruins.
The air was a solid forty degrees cooler than it had been three
months ago, and snow draped the surrounding peaks in long veils.
He reached beneath his parka and withdrew his Glock. He
had no idea what was waiting for him, but he had to follow
Sharma’s lead.
He climbed in measured steps, careful on the frozen earth. He
entered the site and allowed his senses to absorb the same barren desolation. He pressed on and explored, his mind alert.
Automatic gunfire startled him.
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Bullets ricocheted off boulders.
“Far enough, Malone,” a man said in English. “Let your gun
hit the ground.”
He released his grip and turned. “Colonel Rick Cobb” hopped
down from a narrow cliff and descended the stacked boulders.
“I was told you returned to the country yesterday,” Cobb said.
“So I knew you’d be here today.”
“I like to be punctual.”
“Funny, too. What a guy.”
“And you are?”
“Colonel Rick Cobb. Who else?”
“You know I don’t buy that.”
“That’s all you’re going to get.”
“Okay, Colonel Rick Cobb, you plan to tell me what happened to bin Laden?”
“How about I show you?” Cobb motioned with the rifle.
“That way.”
Malone walked past more mounds of rubble and turned a corner. A cold breeze raked his limbs and dried his lips. He spotted
a blackened splotch of earth near where an outer wall once stood.
Weather was rapidly erasing the traces, but it was clear something had been burned there recently.
“All that’s left,” Cobb said. “Shot him myself, right about
where you’re standing, then we burned the murdering asshole
till there was nothing left.”
“And the purpose of that?”
“Damn, you have to ask? He killed Americans. He was an
enemy of the state.”
“You’re no soldier.”
“Soldiers have rules, and rules have a nasty way of interfering
with what’s right. I work outside the rules.”
“Bin Laden said you were after him. He told me you wanted
him dead, but for no one else to know. Care to tell me the point?”
“Come on, you’re a bright guy. America is spending tens of billions of dollars on the war on terror. More money than anyone
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can even comprehend. It’s like manna, my friend—straight from
heaven.”
Malone was glad his suspicions now seemed confirmed. “And
there are a lot of corporations getting rich.”
“Now you’re thinking. Have you looked at the stock prices for
some of the defense contractors? Through the roof. Lots of
smaller companies are making a fortune, too. Can’t let that end.”
“And you work for them?”
“They all got together and decided to hire one team. The best
in the business. Hell, we developed a better intel network than
the government. Took us over a year, but we finally got close to
bin Laden. We damn near got him twice. About eight months
ago, though, he dropped from everybody’s radar. Gone. We were
beginning to worry, until you called in.”
“We contacted the military that day, through official channels,
not you.”
Cobb nodded. “That you did. But we have friends real high
on the food chain. After all, this is a gold mine for the military,
too.
Nobody
wants this gravy train to end. So they called us and,
luckily, we were nearby.”
“So you brought him back here and killed him.”
“Good a place as any. His people ran like scalded dogs after
you two drove off. I sent a few additional men to keep an eye on
this place. So instead of driving south to the Afghan border, we
just doubled around and came here. Over and done with it in
two hours. His body burned fast.”
Something else he wanted to know. “Why use real militarypersonnel names? We checked, there’s a Colonel Rick Cobb.”
The man shrugged. “Makes it easier to move around. Damn
computers allow everybody to be monitored. We choose the
guys on leave. Our friends at the Pentagon kept us informed. Like
I said, can’t let the gravy train end.”
“Why would it?”
“Get real. You know the answer. Americans have short memories. They get blown up on 9/11, they invade a few places, kick
510
some butt, then capture Saddam. Next thing they want is it all
to end. Public opinion is already fading. Politicians are feeling
the heat. That means budget cuts, priorities shifting—all bad
things for my employers. Last thing they need is for bin Laden
to be corralled. No. Keep him out there. Make him a threat. Let
’em wonder. Stalin did the same thing with Hitler after World
War II. He knew the bastard was dead, but fueled everyone’s fear
that the devil may still be alive and kicking. All to keep his enemies off guard.”
“So you now control bin Laden’s existence.”
“Every damn bit of it. And we plan on making him quite the
badass.”
“What are you doing here?”
“Waiting for you. I have a message. My employers want you
to stop snooping around. Leave it be.”
“Why would I?”
“’Cause you got squat to show for anything. What are you
going to do? Claim you captured bin Laden? You’d sound like a
nut. No body, no photo. There’s nothing left of him for any DNA
match with one of those twenty or so kids he supposedly fathered. It’s over. Let it be. Move on.”
“And if I don’t?”
“We’re not in the habit of killing our own, but we’re not opposed to it either.”
“You’re no better than he was.” He started to leave, but Cobb
quickly blocked the way. “I’d move if I were you.”
The gun came level. “You a tough guy, Malone?”
“Tough enough I don’t need a rifle to protect myself from you.”
He stood rock still. He wasn’t going to let Cobb know for a
second he was scared. But who wouldn’t be? The dark end of a
rifle barrel was not a pleasant sight.
Cobb lowered the gun.
Malone had guessed right. They wanted him alive. Who better to start the ball rolling than some American agent who
claimed bin Laden surrendered to him and that there was some
511
sort of conspiracy designed to conceal bin Laden’s death. The
military would deny the assertions and, in the process, supercharge the world’s fear of bin Laden. He’d have nothing for proof
and they’d have the terror of the past.
Easy to see who’d win that battle.
“Go on, Malone. Get out of here. Go tell the world what you
know.”
Not a chance.
He slammed the heel of his boot into Cobb’s right knee. The
move clearly caught the man off guard. Maybe he’d thought him
incapable? He heard bone break and he planted a fist into the
jaw. Cobb cried out in agony as he crumpled to the ground,
clutching his wounded leg. Malone lifted the rifle from the
ground.
“I’ll say it again. You’re no better than he was. He killed for
Allah. You do it for profit.”
“The…devil…got his due.”
Malone slung the rifle out into the open air, beyond the crumbled wall, and left.
Malone zipped his suitcase shut and checked out of his hotel.
Downstairs, he stepped out into the frigid evening and searched
the crowded street for a taxi to the airport. One appeared and he
quickly climbed into the back seat. The driver eased his way
through stop-and-start traffic. Darkness came quickly this time
of year to central Asia and night had enveloped the city by the
time they stopped at the terminal. He handed the driver forty
rubles and was about to leave when the man said in Russian, “Mr.
Malone, my president has something for you.”
He stared at the driver from the rear seat as the man handed
him a brown envelope.
“He also said to wish you well.”
Malone thanked the man and added another twenty rubles for
his trouble. Sharma’s reach was extensive, he’d give the man
that. Through the envelope he felt the distinctive outline of a CD.
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Inside the terminal he checked his bag, then, with his carry-on
draped over his shoulder, headed for the gate. There, he opened
the envelope and saw that it contained a disk, along with a note.
He read the message, then inserted the CD into his laptop.
On the screen appeared a video. He watched while the phony
colonel named Cobb shot Osama bin Laden. Then, with the help
of the other paramilitary members, whose faces Malone recognized, Cobb burned the body. The screen went dark, then a new
video began. This one featured him and Cobb hours earlier. Malone found his earphones and switched on the audio. The sound
of their voices was excellent and their entire encounter, including Malone’s assault, was recorded.
Then the screen went black.
He shook his head.
Yossef Sharma had been watching. Though he was the head
of a nation that possessed no means of adequately protecting itself, the president was a clever man. He’d wanted the United