Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
one wall of the living room; he could see its pink tiles, a plastic
grocery bag of something lying like a disemboweled stomach on
the counter, an open bag of bread. And now this.
He drew a bead on the man’s head. He was going for a clean
kill, one that would short-circuit even the death spasm that
could cause the hostage-taker’s finger to twitch on the trigger and
grant him one last victim. That meant severing the nervous system pathway, an inch wide, at the back of the skull—on a wildly
moving target. Between the rifle’s muzzle and the target were a
hundred and twenty yards of gusty winds and a pane of glass. If
the bullet managed to zing past the hostage’s head to find its
mark, a final barricade of tooth and bone would try to deflect it
away from the brain stem, so crucial to the hostages’ safety.
“Piece of cake,” Byron whispered as he aligned the crosshairs
on the man’s philtrum, the dimple between nose and upper lip.
His heart seemed to thump especially hard, causing Byron’s
aim to jerk away from the man’s head. He knew the spasm, imperceptible to anyone but him, was no involuntary physical tic—
the kind that ended the careers of surgeons and snipers. This one
came from deep within, from a bit of conscience that told him
the object in his sights was flesh and bone.
Perspiration tickled his scalp. The sweatband along the inside
edge of his cap would keep it from blinding him. He allowed his
eyes to close. For only a second, then two. Vision, again…and
the man’s head in the scope. Byron’s stomach cramped.
A creak of wood reminded him he was not alone. His spotter—the second half of every police sniper team—stood on a
chair behind him, watching the scene through powerful binoculars. Usually, the spotter gave periodic updates on wind velocity and direction, SWAT team movements, the position of
hostages. In this case, he would have confirmed the children’s
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whereabouts so the sniper’s attention could have stayed on the
target. But this spotter was different. He had been silent for the
nearly three hours the two had been in position.
Three hours. Sometimes an operation lasted only minutes.
More often, it was a waiting game.
Upon receiving a brief sketch of the situation, Byron had selected this building, and after rejecting three other locations, settled on this abandoned room. The fading ghost of something
rotting lingered in the air, but his nose had acclimated to it.
Carefully, he had cut the pane from the window, because raised
windows tended to draw suspicion, and shooting through glass
decreased accuracy. He’d hung cheesecloth over it like sheer curtains to hide behind, without affecting his tightly focused view
through the sniper-scope.
Then he’d made a platform to lie on from a door and two
chairs. His vantage point and stability were perfect.
Through it all, the spotter had quietly observed. And that was
okay; Byron preferred checking things out for himself.
For the first two hours, he’d waited for the word:
red
to stand
down,
green
to shoot. Some fifty minutes ago, he’d received the
go-ahead. Apparently, the creep had a long history of violence.
Earlier in the day, before taking the woman and two kids hostage,
he’d stabbed his former employer with a screwdriver. Somewhere, a tactical-unit leader had gathered intelligence from
sniper teams, police investigators, a psychologist, a hostage negotiator. He had determined there was sufficient cause to effectively sign the guy’s death warrant.
Byron wasn’t so sure. Against sniping wisdom, he never forgot that his targets were human, men (usually) who’d been boys
full of hope and wonder, who probably loved someone and was
loved back, who had somehow lost their way. Given the choice,
he’d rather see a peaceful resolution. But the choice wasn’t his.
It was in the hands of the guy on the other end of the scope. If
he continued to threaten others, if it looked as though he would
cause them serious harm, it was Byron’s duty to eliminate him.
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So for three hours, Byron had held his position, ready, vigilant.
“Shoot ’im, man,” his spotter whispered. He had grown impatient. “You got the green light.”
Byron ignored him.
In the scope, the man half turned from the window and
seemed to yell at the door. Byron adjusted his aim to a spot just
above his ear, where the side neural motor strip lay, another instant-incapacitation spot. He nestled the rifle stock more firmly
in the pocket of his shoulder. He had already adjusted the scope’s
Bullet Drop Compensator for distance and the difference in their
elevations. The wind was a concern. It was rising and dropping
like gusts through a valley. He had spotted a rag caught on a telephone wire. Its flapping gave him a sense of the wind speeds, and
he could see it without lifting his head from the scope by opening his other eye. He would move the crosshairs slightly to the
left to adjust for the wind at the time of the shot—a method of
compensation called Kentucky Windage.
The perp abruptly spun and fired two shots through the apartment door. The negotiations weren’t going well. Byron maintained his composure. He pressed the tip of his finger against the
trigger. He knew precisely how many ounces of pressure he was
applying to the trigger’s four-pound pull, and when it would slam
the firing pin into the bullet. His lips moved in silent prayer.
Riding a surge of adrenaline, the man threw the woman to the
floor below the window. Her mouth open in a scream Byron
could not hear, he raised the pistol toward her.
The rag was almost horizontal in a strong wind. Byron adjusted.
He took in three-quarters of a breath, held it—and pulled back on
the trigger. The rifle
cracked!
and kicked against his shoulder,
which was well muscled for just such times. He didn’t even feel it.
He was frozen in what marksmen call the follow-through: no movement for a full second after firing to prevent starting the after-shot
procedure a hair before the bullet left the barrel, causing it to miss
its mark. He saw the bullet impact and the target go down. He chambered another round, watching for movement through the scope.
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“Direct hit to the head,” he called to his spotter, who responded, “Suspect down.”
The spotter yelled into his mic, then yanked the earbud plug
from his radio handset, and a buzz of voices filled the room.
The door of the apartment across the street burst open.
Men and women streamed in. They gathered around the body,
some of them kneeling, pointing at the hole perfectly placed
below the suspect’s nose. A policewoman with short-cropped
hair inspected the bullet hole in the window. She looked up
toward Byron’s position, his “hide.” She smiled and waved. Behind her, a burly-looking cop with a mustache hoisted up the
body, holding it for Byron to see. Someone else gave him the
thumbs-up.
A chill skittered along his spine, and he shook it off.
After three hours of mentally filling in the gaps to make the
target as real as possible, it was a difficult task to start thinking of it again for what it was—an animatronic target mannequin, used for high-level training and top-flight competitions.
Puppeteers, situated safely away from the target, controlled
its movements. He peered once more through the scope at the
face of the pretend hostage-taker. The latex skin looked genuine enough. Even the eyes had rolled back, the mouth had
dropped open. It didn’t look so different from the real corpses
he had seen.
The woman cop was dragging the woman mannequin from
the room. He panned to the other window. The kids were huddled in place, now just looking like sad dolls. The illusion of
reality, so strong in Byron’s mind, was wearing off. When he
looked again, a photographer was trying to snap pictures of
the suspect-mannequin’s wound while someone else danced
with it.
He released his grip on the rifle. It rocked on its bipod and settled on the sandbag below its stock. Joints popped and muscles
protested as he rolled onto his side to look back at his “spotter”—
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actually, a fine marksman himself who’d volunteered to help
judge this contest.
“Jack, I’m getting too old for this,” he said.
Jack came around the side of the platform and extended his
hand. “My man, that was incredible.” His voice, deep and
smooth, made the words sound true. They squeezed each
other’s hands. For a second Byron thought Jack might try to
butt heads, or some such crap. Blowing the heads off things
had that effect on men. Instead, Jack pivoted and planted his
butt on the platform beside Byron. He fished a pack of cigarettes out of a breast pocket and tapped one out. He offered the
pack to Byron.
Byron stared without seeing. His mind had returned to the
shoot, the perp, the hostages. He rolled back to his scope.
Beside him, Jack said, “You got this thing bagged up, dude.”
A cloud of white smoke drifted into Byron’s periphery. “That idiot
Hanson took off the perp’s ear. Schumann, that prima donna acting like his farts don’t stink because he won National, and everyone said he’d take this one. Sorry cuss plugged a hostage.”
He kept rambling, a talker released from a three-hour vow of
silence, but his words became background static in Byron’s ears.
The kid-dolls reminded him of a time when it wasn’t makebelieve, when he hadn’t been so perfect with his aim, when the
perp had retained enough life force to empty his Glock.
One of the kids jerked his head to look directly at him. His
heart wedged into his throat.
The kid jumped out of view. Byron panned to see a cop dragging it by one leg toward the apartment door.
He closed his eyes and moaned internally. Could he ever do
this without investing so much of himself? He doubted it.
“Dude.” Jack elbowed his hip. He turned. “We gotta— What’s
with you?”
Byron pressed his fingers to his cheek. Wet.
“Bug or something flew in my eye…this
smoke
.” He waved his
hand, clearing away a thin tendril.
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Jack glared, suspicious. He stood. “Let’s get outta here, man.
Grub’s on, beer’s flowing.”
Byron nodded, and pushed up onto his knees. He looked out
through the cheesecloth. The windows into the kill zone were dark.
History, action, long-lost secrets, intricate conspiracies and
international settings—these are the main ingredients in a
Steve Berry thriller. His debut,
The Amber Room,
dealt with a
legendary Russian treasure, a room paneled entirely in amber,
stolen by the Nazis in 1941.
The Romanov Prophecy
answered
the question—What happened to the two children of Nicholas
II, the last tsar of Russia, whose remains have never been
found?
The Third Secret
revolved around the Catholic Church,
Marian visions and shocking divine messages.
In his fourth thriller,
The Templar Legacy
, Berry introduced
Cotton Malone, a lawyer/agent who worked with the Justice
Department for many years in a special unit known as the
Magellan Billet. Deciding the risks were too great, Malone
retires out early, moves to Copenhagen and opens an oldbooks shop. Unfortunately, trouble seems to follow Malone,
and
The Templar Legacy
is just the first of several adventures
Berry plans for Malone and the cast of supporting characters.
The Devils’ Due
is a tale from before Malone retired, when
he was still active with the Magellan Billet.
Another unique situation with far-reaching consequences.
Typical for Cotton Malone.
THE DEVILS’ DUE
Cotton Malone stood on the balcony and calmly watched the
books burn.
He was standing next to Yossef Sharma, president of a tiny central Asian nation nestled firmly between Afghanistan, China and
a host of other American enemies. Which was why Washington
had, for years, conveniently ignored Sharma’s excesses, including his audacious plan to burn nearly every book in his country.
“We’ve been collecting for the past month. The people have
brought them from every town and village.” Sharma spoke a mixture of Russian and Arabic unique to the region. “Tonight, there
are fires in every quarter of the nation. All to rid us of Western
influence.”
“I almost think you believe that crap,” Malone said, not taking his eyes off the spectacle.
“After tomorrow, possession of a single book, excepting the
Koran, will be punishable by imprisonment. And if my people
are anything, they’re obedient.”
Malone continued to watch as people, bundled in coats and
jackets, picked their way over slippery cobbles to heap more
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books onto the blaze. Clatter from flutes and tambourines added
to the surreal spectacle.
“That crazy obedience,” Malone said, “more than anything
else, explains your current predicament. The world believes this
place is another Afghanistan, and you know what that led to.”
“Lucky for me, and this country,
you
know that to be false.”