Far Gone (35 page)

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Authors: Laura Griffin

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Contemporary, #General

BOOK: Far Gone
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“We need to get high, get a vantage point.” Jon pointed to an office building and nodded at the older-looking agent, who was thin and balding. “Get inside that gray parking garage. And you”—he made eye contact with the young, stocky one—“see if you can access the rooftop on that office building. You’ll have a bird’s-eye view of everything going on. You guys have radios?”

“In the car.” The younger agent hustled back to retrieve them.

“There’s a better vantage point two blocks south,” Andrea said. “It’s a five-story parking garage with visibility on all four sides. It’s over on Lavaca Street.”

Jon glared at her, and she could tell he didn’t want her involved in this. She didn’t wait to hear his reasons.

“Too bad, North, I’m in. We need all the eyes we can get.”

“Sorry. You are . . . ?” The bald guy was frowning at her.

“She’s Austin PD,” Jon snapped, and his phone buzzed in his hand. He made eye contact with the agent. “Follow her lead. She knows the neighborhood.”


 

Dread settled over Jon as he watched Andrea and the agents rush away. He didn’t like her here, but he didn’t have a choice.

He answered his phone.

“We have a problem,” Maxwell said. “I just got off the phone with Torres.”

Jon jogged toward the guardhouse, pulling the ID folio from his jacket pocket.

“We think we’ve got a truck bomb on our hands,” Maxwell said.

The words stopped Jon cold. And then he was moving again as his mind raced. “Where’d this come from?”

“Torres got a message from Elizabeth LeBlanc,” Maxwell said. “She was at a warehouse following up on the bank robberies when she witnessed a white cargo truck being loaded with metal drums and—”

“Where?” Jon cut in.

“San Antonio. North side of town.”

“What time?”

“Message came in ninety minutes ago, but he just listened to it. We sent a team of agents over. No Elizabeth, no truck, nothing. So now we’ve got a missing agent and a missing vehicle, possibly loaded with explosives. And we have no idea of the target—”

“The Governor’s Mansion,” Jon said. “At least, that’s what I think. I think that’s the floor plan we found on the flash drive.”

“How—”

“Kirby’s on his way over here. I can’t explain it all now, but you need to get hold of his security team and have them keep him
away
from the area. I’m on my way in right now to talk to the governor’s people.”

“You’re at the mansion?”

“That’s right.”

“Where’s the governor?”

“I’m about to find out. Give Kirby’s people the heads-up. I’ll call back in five.”

The trooper in the guardhouse was on his feet now, looking suspicious as Jon jogged over to him, holding up his ID.

“Who’s in charge of the governor’s security detail?” Jon asked.

“Uh . . .” The trooper glanced at Jon’s identification. “That’d be my lieutenant.”

“I need him on the phone. Now.”


 

It was an urban battlefield, and Shay felt good in it. He peered over the concrete wall and planned the shot. Carefully. Methodically. He took a deep breath and let his heart rate slow.

Gazing through the scope, it came back to him—his first kill. He remembered the instant of panic, then the bone-deep thrill. There had been others, and soon it wasn’t a thrill but a duty. He did it out of necessity, with clinical detachment, same as now.

His country had trained him well.

The phone vibrated beside him and he glanced at the text.

Just turned north.

Shay settled in to wait. He’d been disciplined and patient. Now it was time for his payoff.

Time for Message Three.

The tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants.


 

The location was a sniper’s heaven. Andrea gazed up at the concrete canyon surrounding her and saw a dizzying array of potential hides: multilevel parking garages, apartments, office buildings that surely had vacant suites. The parking garages were the worst. Their concrete half-walls offered concealment and even the possibility that someone could get a shot off without leaving a vehicle.

She picked the highest garage on the block and took the stairs two at a time. She poked her head out at each level, scanning the rows of cars for anything suspicious, but saw nothing. When she reached the roof, she rushed to a corner and gazed out at the sweeping view of downtown.

From her vantage point, she had a clear view of all the buildings surrounding the estate and most of the mansion itself, except for the far southern corner, which was partially blocked by a church. She recalled the cross symbol on the corner of the computer drawing on Hardin’s thumb drive.

This is it.

The thought crystallized in her mind as she scanned the area. She couldn’t explain why, but she had a sudden certainty that everything, all the pain and exhaustion and disappointment, had been building toward this moment. Her shoulders tensed. The air hummed as she looked around. She could practically see Hardin crouched behind a wall somewhere, peering through his rifle scope and waiting for his target to arrive. What thoughts would be going through his mind as he waited to end someone’s life? What had he been thinking as he waited for Carmen Pena? And Julia Kirby?

A chill swept over her. She glanced around to confirm that she was alone on the roof as she dialed Jon’s number.

“Okay, I’m on top of the garage just east of the bank,” she told him. “That’s west of the mansion.”

“New development,” he said sharply. “We have intel about a truck bomb. Can’t confirm the target, but we think the mansion’s a good bet. How’s your vantage point up there?”

“I can see everything.”
A truck bomb?
She pictured the carnage in Philadelphia, and her stomach twisted into a knot.

“You see any white cargo trucks?”

“How big?”

“No idea. All I know is it’s white.”

Panic gripped her as she gazed out over the labyrinth of streets and alleyways. “God, North, I see . . . dozens. Practically every truck on the road is white.”

“Focus on the parked ones. The ones closest to the mansion.”

“You guys have to evacuate!”

“We’re working on it.”

“Work faster! There’re people everywhere! Pedestrians, bikers—”

“Andrea,
stop
! Focus. Don’t think about everyone else right now. I need you to take a careful look around and tell me what you see.”

She swallowed her fear and tried to block out all the cars and innocent bystanders. She took a deep breath. “Okay, I see two white vans parked behind the mansion.”

“Those are caterers. We’re checking them now.”

“I see a white cargo truck, fairly big, looks like two blocks north of the mansion. There’s a pushcart next to it, so maybe he’s unloading.” Her gaze skimmed across the sloping green lawn in front of the Capitol Building, where people were strolling and picnicking. “I see a brown delivery truck just east of the Capitol. About half a block south of him is another white truck with a logo on the side, but I can’t read it from here.” She took a deep breath, scanning the streets. “A white cargo van just pulled off Congress, heading west now toward the mansion . . .” Her pulse picked up. “But it isn’t slowing. Now it’s turning north onto Lavaca.”

“What else?”

Exhaust drifted up from the streets below, along with the traffic noise.
Too many cars, too many people. Why aren’t there sirens yet?

“Andrea?”

“I see a white cargo truck . . . No, maybe it’s gray. It’s two blocks east of me, which means four from the mansion—” She halted as a black SUV swung into view, dark-tinted windows, bristling with antennae. It was followed closely by a black Lincoln sedan.

“I see a black Chevy Tahoe, looks like maybe a motorcade. North, is it Kirby?”

“Shit!”

“Didn’t someone call him?”

“Where is it? Tell me exactly.”

“It’s moving east on Eleventh Street, heading straight toward the mansion. Is it Kirby or the governor?”

She glanced around frantically, looking for a police car, a trooper, something.

Over the phone, she heard Jon shouting orders at someone.

Andrea tuned out the noise. She tuned out the traffic and the exhaust fumes and the din of road construction as she scoured every building, every rooftop, looking for the telltale jut of a rifle barrel. She tried to penetrate the shadows of the parking garages, looking for the dark silhouette of a gunman.

“Andrea, are there any cargo trucks parked near the route of the approaching motorcade?”

She snapped her gaze to the SUV. “No.”

A flash of light caught her eye. A slight glint just above the wall of a parking garage—


Gun!
I see a scope!” She dropped into a crouch and peered over the wall. “Ninth and Lavaca!
Wait.
No,
Tenth
and Lavaca! Gray parking garage! Fourth floor!”

She had her pistol clutched in her hand but couldn’t even remember pulling it. She aimed it uselessly over the wall, but the gunman was much too far away.

The pair of black vehicles glided past her, nearing the mansion.

“North, he’s out of my range!” She heard commotion on the other end of the phone but still no sirens, no warnings.

She darted a look at the sniper hide. The shot was wide open. She couldn’t disrupt his aim.

But she could disrupt his target.

She leaned over the wall and took aim at the SUV, realizing she was about to bring the wrath of every state trooper and bodyguard within miles down upon her head.

No hesitation.
She lined up her sights.

Pop.

She hit the bumper, and the SUV lurched to a stop as a sharp
crack
reverberated and the driver’s-side window exploded.

“He took a shot! They’re hit!” Her gaze jerked to the garage, where she saw a blur of movement behind the wall. She sprinted for the stairwell, clutching her phone to her ear.

Tires squealed and sirens howled up from the streets below as she raced down the stairs.

“Shooter fleeing! Tenth and Lavaca! I’m in pursuit!”

chapter thirty

 

JON SPRINTED FOR THE
parking garage, gun in hand. Tires shrieked. A gray pickup blasted through the wooden arm, sending splinters flying as it careened onto the street. Horns blared. Jon ran into the road, halted, and fired three shots in rapid succession.

The back window burst. The truck jumped the curb and crashed into a fire hydrant. Jon bolted toward it as the passenger door popped open, and a blur of white leaped out.

“He’s getting away!” Andrea was beside him now, and they both raced after the gunman. White T-shirt, blue jeans, baseball cap—Hardin. He was moving fast, no rifle or handgun that Jon could see.

Jon dodged around the pickup and sidestepped the geyser spewing from the fire hydrant. He ran hard, clutching his weapon, but didn’t dare pause for a shot until he closed the gap. He was gaining, gaining, gaining, with Andrea at his side. Footsteps slapped behind him as the other two agents strained to keep up. One of them was on his phone calling for backup. Andrea peeled off suddenly and darted down an alley.

Jon surged ahead, intent on his prey. He needed transportation. Maybe he’d carjack someone at a stoplight.

Hardin reached an intersection, paused to look around. Jon lifted his weapon, but then he disappeared around the corner, out of sight. Jon plowed through a pair of joggers and raced around the building. More people on this block, sidewalk cafés, a valet sign.

He instantly spotted Hardin’s objective: a young woman tipping a valet attendant and sliding into a car. Hardin sprinted toward her as someone lunged from the alley. Andrea.

She was on him like a panther, and they slammed to the ground in a tangle of arms and legs. Jon crashed onto Hardin’s back and pushed Andrea aside as he jammed his pistol into the man’s neck.

“Check for weapons!” Andrea yelled, pawing at his shirt, his pants.

Jon wrestled Hardin’s hands behind his back as the other two agents appeared, guns drawn. Gasps and yelps went up from the shocked onlookers as Jon jerked Hardin’s wrists back and slapped on the cuffs.

“No weapons.” Andrea stood up.

Jon was busy searching for a cell phone, a garage-door opener, anything that might be used to detonate a bomb. He came up empty. The stocky agent helped haul Hardin to his feet, and they pulled him away from the restaurant patrons and into the mouth of an alley.

Jon heaved Hardin against the wall and planted his forearm against his neck. “Where’s the truck?”


 

“Where is it?”

Still no answer.

Andrea watched them facing off against the side of the building. Jon held his Sig loosely at his side, but he looked ready to kneecap the man if he didn’t answer the question.

“Jon.”

Hardin slid down the wall. He plunked one booted foot over another and glowered up at them defiantly. His lip was bleeding, probably from when Andrea had tackled him.

She pulled Jon away and lowered her voice. “The senator?”

“Injured but alive. Motorcade’s en route to the hospital. But I don’t think that’s all Hardin had planned.” A bead of sweat slid down Jon’s temple as he glanced around angrily. “I mean, look at this place.”

She didn’t have to look, because she could hear. Sirens echoed all around them as emergency vehicles converged on the nearby Governor’s Mansion. Every trooper in the city and probably half the Austin PD were responding to the attack. These were Andrea’s coworkers, people she
knew
. If he’d wanted to target law enforcement, he couldn’t have planned it better.

She looked at Hardin, sitting tight-lipped on the ground, a man who obviously knew his Fifth Amendment rights and wasn’t talking.

His eyes were a startling shade of blue, she discovered. She’d only seen them up close through a camera lens. They were the kind of eyes women swooned over in bars. How could eyes like that hide so much evil?

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