Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
weaknesses that would compromise the target. Bravado was his
strong suit. Even the long-entrenched
Capos,
protected by their
armies of minions and bully boys, were not safe from his reach.
Some questioned his abilities, claiming an American didn’t possess the finesse for the work. Not in Europe. They said he was
best left to the gunslingers in Las Vegas and Miami Beach. The
loudmouthed impresarios in Manhattan. And the braggarts in
Beverly Hills. Six years in the trade said they were wrong.
The Greek shrugged, rose from his table and ventured across
the room. “Finally, we meet,” he said, offering an arthritic hand.
Neumann stood. “A pleasure. Won’t you join me?”
The Greek sat down and spent a long moment placing the napkin in his lap, adjusting his necktie, pulling the cuffs from his
sleeves. Finally, he looked up. “I trust you ordered the specialty
of the house.”
“Each year I think of choosing something else, but can’t quite
force myself to do it.”
“In summer, I prefer the Dover sole. I ask them to grill it, then
add lemon juice. Never any butter.”
“I’ll make a note of it.” But Neumann was sure to keep his
hands away from his jacket for fear of upsetting the uneasy truce.
The Greek leaned forward, beckoning with his trigger finger.
“I’ve heard rumors.”
Neumann shifted uncomfortably. “Oh?”
“They say that you enjoy your work as much as I do.”
Neumann considered this. “It’s a living.”
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The Greek laughed richly. “A paltry one for the services we
provide. We cull the weak from the strong. I think of it as ‘natural selection.’ Tell me one thing. Are you satisfied?”
“More or less. You?”
“After so many years, there can only be one answer. However,
I find that it’s hard on the soul. I only think of the bad ones. I
feel as if my hands were covered in blood. So many dreams destroyed. I sleep poorly.”
The waiter arrived. The Greek made sure to hear the specials,
then said, “The same as my friend.”
“And the champagne…Veuve Clicquot is acceptable?”
“Eminently.” The Greek measured Neumann with a respectful eye. “You’re here on assignment.”
“Unfortunately. And you?”
“I can’t afford to quit. A tip…Rome…Sabatini…the trout
isn’t bad.”
“Beirut…Alfredo’s…minced lamb and couscous. Passable.”
“You travel to Beirut?”
“The region’s a bit unstable, but if you know your way around,
it can be lucrative.”
The Greek motioned toward his jacket. “May I?”
Neumann studied the cut of the coat, then said, “Yes.”
“My memory isn’t what it used to be.” The hand dug out a
small notepad and jotted down a few words. “Did you hear about
Yuri? He let one off the hook.”
Neumann didn’t bother hiding his shock. Yuri’s reputation
was second to none. He was ruthless, daring, and always relentless. A master. “Was he terminated?”
“There are no second chances in this game. At least, he can
be thankful it was quick.”
“What happened?”
“They lured him back to the head office in Paris. The Boss likes
to do it in person.” To make his point, the Greek made a
grotesque pantomime of slashing his own throat. Despite himself, Neumann winced. The Greek removed his glasses and spent
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a long moment polishing them with his napkin. “And now you
and I together in Zurich?” he said absently. “After the same target. Hardly a coincidence, I imagine.”
“Probably not.”
“Contract or freelance?”
“Contract. You?”
“Same as ever.”
“And so?”
“We do what we must do. It is our calling. May I wish you
luck.”
“Likewise.” Neumann smiled to himself, viewing the assignment with added relish. He’d always enjoyed competition, the
zest of going face-to-face with another as well trained.
The meal arrived. Heaping portions of sliced, infinitely tender veal bathed in a delicate cream sauce were portioned onto
generous wedges of lightly fried potatoes. He picked up his knife
and fork, hesitating at the last instant. “A Bordeaux? After all,
for one of us, it is to be his last meal.”
“The LaTour ’79 would be suitable.”
“Eminently,” said Neumann.
Afterward, the two men strolled across the Limmat Bridge. The
rain had frozen to sleet. A stiff wind blew off the lake. Winter
was near.
“And so?” asked the Greek.
“One star,” declared Neumann. “Very good in its category.”
“Two,” said the Greek. “Worth a detour to visit.”
“Never!” Neumann looked at Milos, bent, satisfied, content,
and in that instant, knew that his own skills were superior, that
he would triumph, and that the Greek would make the lonely
trip to Paris and give up his badge as an inspector for the Michelin
Guide Rouge.
“It’s true, then, what they say,” Milos whispered, his tired
voice hardly audible above the wind.
“What’s that?” asked Neumann.
“You’re an assassin.”
Brad Thor spends a lot of time in Greece and has always
wanted to set a novel there. When he was approached to
write for this anthology, he knew right away that he wanted
to write about an idea that came to him in the Greek Islands
several years ago.
For decades a terrorist organization known as 17 November wreaked havoc throughout Greece. In fact, the United
States still spends more money defending its embassy in
Athens than any other embassy in Europe. It started in
1975 when the organization assassinated the CIA’s Athens
station chief with what would become its trademark
.45-caliber pistol. Since then, the group has claimed responsibility for twenty-one murders, four of which were
U.S. diplomats. Though 17 November’s initial attacks were
directed at senior U.S. officials and Greek public figures,
they eventually expanded their targets to include ordinary
citizens, foreign businesses and European Union facilities.
Thor was always perplexed by the government’s inability to make any progress in bringing 17 November to justice. For years, no member of the organization had ever
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been arrested, and no clues as to who was orchestrating
their attacks had ever been found.
A breakthrough occurred in 2002 when a bomb being
carried by a forty-year-old icon painter prematurely detonated in the Athenian port of Piraeus. The bomber was also
carrying a set of keys and a prepaid telephone card, which
led police to an apartment in downtown Athens packed
with antitank rockets, missiles and other weapons. Within
two weeks, police uncovered a string of 17 November safe
houses, two of which contained additional caches of
weapons, disguises and the group’s signature .45-caliber
Colt 1911 semiautomatic pistol used in some of their most
high-profile assassinations.
Since those successes things have been relatively quiet in
Greece, but intelligence officials are concerned that several
members of the organization may have slipped through
their net and have gone deeper underground. These same
officials worry that if and when these last remaining members do surface again, it will be with a terrible vengeance.
Which brings us to
The Athens Solution.
June 12
Athens, Greece
U.S. ambassador to Greece Michael Avery picked his way
through the late-afternoon throng of tourists clogging Athens’s
famous Plaka district. Behind him, a team of CIA operatives
mixed within the crowd, while two streets over, in a nondescript
van, a contingent of heavily armed Diplomatic Security Service
agents and NSA communications experts followed as closely as
they dared. Avery had been told to come alone, but both the Departments of State and Defense would hear nothing of it. Too
much was at stake.
With his crisp white sport shirt and blue blazer, Avery looked
like any other upscale Westerner visiting Greece during the
height of the tourist season. He even had a small backpack casually slung over one shoulder. But unlike the other backpacks
around him, his contained an encrypted laptop, complete with
a wireless modem and sophisticated remote-viewing application.
He was passing a small outdoor café with a nice view of the
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Acropolis and the majestic Parthenon atop it when his cell
phone rang.
“Stop here and take a table,” said a voice with a heavy Greek
accent. “You know what to do next.”
Yes, the ambassador did know what to do next. A CD ROM
and final set of instructions had been delivered to the embassy
that morning. The instructions indicated that the CD could only
be used once and that any attempts to copy or crack it before the
appointed time would result in all of its data being destroyed.
Avery sat down at a table and, after ordering coffee, removed
the encrypted laptop from his backpack and powered it up. The
CD whirred in its tray. Within moments an instant-message
screen appeared and the words, “Good afternoon, Mr. Ambassador. Thank you for coming,” flashed.
Back in the van, the NSA communications experts could see
in real time exactly what the ambassador was seeing, thanks to
the laptop’s remote-viewing application, and began trying to locate the source of the transmission.
Are you prepared to transfer the funds? appeared next.
How do we know the merchandise is authentic? typed Avery.
One word was returned, Watch.
The ambassador’s screen split into two separate windows.
Next to the dialogue box, an image came up entitled JFK/ATC.
He discreetly tilted his head and spoke toward the microphone
sewn into the lapel of his blazer, “Are you getting this?”
“Loud and clear. So is Washington,” replied one of the techs
in the van. A satellite uplink was beaming everything back to the
States for verification.
Avery pressed the mini-earpiece farther into his ear as he anxiously awaited word. Seconds later, it came.
“Verification complete. Mr. Ambassador, you are looking at a
live picture of JFK’s Air Traffic Control system.”
Knowing what would happen next sent chills down Michael
Avery’s spine. His hands shook as he typed the following message, We are ready to proceed.
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One by one, aircraft started disappearing from the screen.
Ninety seconds later, the NSA man’s voice came back over the
ambassador’s earpiece. “JFK is reporting a major ATC system
malfunction. They’re losing track of aircraft left and right. The
merchandise is authentic. You are authorized to complete the
transaction.”
Initializing funds transfer, typed the ambassador as he began
the predetermined sequence. The green status bar seemed to
take forever. When the
Transfer Successful
message finally materialized on the screen, aircraft flying in the New York area began
reappearing on ATC radar.
Simultaneously, a third window appeared on the ambassador’s
laptop. In it, he could see a live picture of the device the United
States had just paid so handsomely for. As the image widened,
he could see the Parthenon in the foreground.
“We’re on it,” said one of the NSA men over Avery’s earpiece
as the van took off to claim the merchandise.
The ambassador continued to watch the feed as a pair of hands
came into view, picked up the device and secreted it inside the
nearest trash can, as agreed, for pickup.
“Sir,” said one of the CIA operatives as he approached the
table. “There’s a car waiting. We’d like to get you back to the embassy.”
Avery nodded his head and was just about to shut down his laptop when he noticed the live image from the Acropolis was moving. There were jerky flashes of legs and feet as someone moved
the camera and repositioned it overlooking the road below. Seconds later, the white embassy van with the Diplomatic Security
Service agents and the NSA team entered the frame.
“Jesus Christ,” said Avery. “It’s a trap. Get them out!”
The CIA operative who had been sitting in the café looking
over the ambassador’s shoulder grabbed both him and the laptop while shouting into his radio, “Beachcomber, this is Point
Guard. You’ve been compromised. Abort now. Repeat. You have
been compromised. Abort!”
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Before the men in the white van could respond, they heard
what sounded like a giant knife tearing through the fabric of the
afternoon sky. The ambassador grabbed the laptop back just in
time to see a shoulder-fired missile slam through the windshield
of the van and explode.
The CIA operative, code named Point Guard, didn’t waste any
more time. He steered the ambassador out of the café and down
the closest side street as he radioed the driver of their car to come
get them. The other operatives headed for the Acropolis as people ran out of the shops and restaurants around the Plaka in response to the explosion.
As Point Guard and the ambassador turned the next corner,
the pair could see the embassy’s dark, armor-plated BMW and
began running even faster. They were
almost
there.
Suddenly, a motorcycle screamed out of a nearby alleyway.
Point Guard reached for his gun, but he was too late.