Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1) (41 page)

BOOK: Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1)
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C
hapter
41

L
ei Chang sat in his lavish office on the fortieth floor of
one
of
the most historic old
b
ank building
s in Hong Kong
.
The b
uilding
had been
originally constructed in 1864
,
and
torn down and rebuilt several times
, with the last renovation completed
in 1985. At the time
,
it
had been
the most expensive building on earth
,
having cost around
$600 million U.S. dollars.

From his windows, Lei Chang had an unobstructed view of Victoria Harbor. A strict
adherer to the principles of
f
eng
s
hui,
he believed a view of water led to prosperity. So far he

d been right
.
Chang
also believed
his company

s investment in shares of
Montana Creek Mining
would
lead to
even greater
prosperity.

Under Chang

s orders,
U
RAN-
China
Nu
c
lear Corp
.
continued
acquiring shares of Montana Creek Mining. He knew the price for uranium ore w
ould continue to rise
,
and along with it the price of Montana Creek shares. Chang knew this because
his company was tying up enough
uranium
reserves
to manipulate the price
of uranium
.

Chang
looked at his computer screen and smiled at the closing price of MCM.V
.
Four dollars and ten cents. His investment in this little Canadian mining company had already generated healthy paper profits
,
with more to come
.

 

 

On the other side of the globe,
Trace
was also monitoring
the share price
.
Smiling, he flipped open his cell phone and called
Wally
.


Wally, Trace here
. G
ot a sec?


Sure
, Trace
. W
hat

s on your mind?


Toronto
is on my mind. I think it

s time for a road show
,
and the
Toronto Annual Mining Convention
is coming up. I think we should make a presentation and set up a booth.


Hell of a good idea, Trace. There will be twenty or thirty thousand attendees over the four
-
day event. Every prospector, miner, promoter
,
and investor who can get there
,
will be there.


I agree. It

s a hell of a forum. We can present to a lot of private
,
as well as institutional
,
investors.
It

ll g
et a lot of interest cranked up just about the time we list on the T
oronto Exchange.


Perfect. I

ll get us registered, get you signed up for a
PowerPoint
presentation
,
and
reserve a
booth.


I

d like you to go with me, if you can get away.


No worries
. Y
ou couldn

t keep me away with a
sharp
stick.


Okay, Wally, I

ll leave it to you. Would you mind
e-mailing
Jim Lee when you get confirmations
?
I

m sure he

s planning on attending
, b
ut we should give him a heads
-
up on our plans. He may want to participate in the presentation. After all, IUC owns twenty percent of our company.


I

m on it. I

ll send you the confirmation information
,
and I

ll book us some rooms in a nearby hotel.


Perfect. Thanks, Wally.
I

ll put out a news release when I get your confirmations.
Do you think the Chinese will make contact
at
the convention
?


The commies usually blow a bugle before they attack
,

Wally
said with a
laugh.

Stay frosty
. I
t could get real interesting.

 

 

 

 

 

C
hapter
4
2

M
alcolm was
anxious
to land in Houston and
stretch his legs.
He

d been flying most of the day
,
and it was getting near sundown.


Damn,

Malcolm said
aloud
as he massaged
the tops of his thighs
.

T
ime to land this puppy.

He contacted Houston Approach on 124.5.
Air traffic control
cleared him to land on runway 12
L
/32
R
. The wind was off the gulf from the
s
outheast. He
pushed
the
left
-
rudder
pedal
a tad
.
brought the plane to a heading of 120 degrees
,
and continued his descent. Cleared for final,
Malcolm
eased back on the throttle, lowered the
gear
,
and dropped the
flaps
to
full down
.
Three minutes later he touched down smoothly on the
asp
halt
runway.

Malcolm
taxied
the
plane
down
the south ramp
to
Houston
Flight Support

s
hang
ar
area
. He
parked the plane and killed the engine.
A
short
,
stocky
man
with a red goatee and a military
-
style haircut
watched
Malcolm

s
arrival from one of the nearby hangers.

 

 

Al
Pantelli
went outside
his usual bull
pen for th
e
second attempt
on Malcolm
. He wanted a non-Italian, non
-O
utfit
,
killer
with two very specific
skill sets
:
l
ocks and explosives. After a few phone calls, he
found
the
perfect mechanic.

The assassin

s
name was
Sean Flannigan
. He was Irish and
an expert with explosives and locks.
Flannigan
had
made his
reputation
blowing up British installations in Northern Ireland. He

d
worked his way up the chain of command in the Irish Republican Army
before
abruptly walk
ing
away
. Now
,
he
s
old
his services to the highest bidder
, irre
spective
of
his or her
political affiliation
s
. He was perfect
for the hit
. A
nd he was the man
who
watch
ed
Malcolm from the
empty
han
gar
.

 

 

 

 

 

C
hapter
4
3

M
alcolm went into
Houston Flight Support

s
office
,
paid his ramp fee
,
and arranged to have his plane fueled at
8:00
a.m. the following morning. He called a cab and headed to
a
nearby hotel
.
He wanted a shower
, a
steak
,
and about eight hours of sack time.

While Malcolm slept,
Flannigan
went to
work.
He
spotted
Houston Flight Support

s
swing
-
shift f
uel truck driver
.


Hey, bud, the office wanted me to double
-
check on fueling the
TurboAire
. Was it for seven or eight in the morning?


Eight sharp,

the driver answered.


Roger that,

Flannigan
replied
,
with a laugh.

Damned desk jockeys
. I
t

s amazing they can find their ass
es
with both hands.

The driver nodded and laughed
.

You got that right. See you in the morning.

Flannigan
made his way back to an empty hang
ar
and hid out until
4:00
a.m.
The shank of the night
,
and
the time to do evil deeds.
He
took one more look around. Satisfied the coast was clear, he
made his way to
Malcolm

s plane
.

An expert locks
mith
,
Flannigan
picked the
plane

s
door lock in less than thirty seconds.
There were a couple of duffel bags behind the co
-
pilot

s seat. He opened the bottom duffel and carefully inserted the explosive device. The bomb
was a simple timed device with a battery, electric cord
,
and primer. The prime
r
was inserted into a block of C-4 plastic explosive.
The whole mechanism
fit neatly in an empty
first
-
aid kit.
Flannigan
had
used similar devices many times
, with deadly results
.

Flannigan
set the timing device to go off at
10:00
a.m. Figuring twenty minutes to fuel
and
a
nother twenty minutes
for
pre
-
flight and takeoff
, t
he
TurboAire
would be about eighty minutes into its flight to Grand Cayman when the device
would
detonate
,
w
ell past the continental shelf and
the ubiquitous o
ffshore oil rigs
, and
over
the
abyssal deep of the G
ulf of Mexico.

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