The Medusa Game

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by Cindy Dees




  Praise for The Medusa Project by Cindy Dees

  “Realistic settings and vivid descriptions…. Her characters are both likeable and fallible.”

  —Romantic Times BOOKclub

  “A terrific military gender-bending thriller.”

  —The Best Reviews

  “[Dees] seems born to write this kind of story. Action-packed from beginning to end, The Medusa Project keeps the adrenaline flowing and grips the reader with its compelling storyline.”

  —Writers Unlimited

  “I need a background check on the Ice Doctor.”

  “The guy who invented super-ice?” her boss asked in surprise. “What’s up?”

  “I don’t know.” Isabella closed her eyes briefly. “Call it a gut feeling—”

  Just then a loud cry came from the ice. Isabella looked up sharply, her senses screaming. She turned just in time to see a large black shape hurtle into her charge, sending Anya flying through the air to land with a sickening thud in a heap that skidded across the ice.

  Isabella shouted into her microphone. “Subject down!”

  Dear Reader,

  Welcome to the third installment in my Medusa series! This is Isabella’s story and the story of an Olympic figure skater named Anya, who has grown very near and dear to my heart.

  When my editor asked me if I’d like to write a book about figure skating and the Olympics, I jumped all over the opportunity. My one requirement was that I be allowed to portray the figure skating community that I know—the friendly, fun and supportive one, full of coaches and athletes who work many years to master this incredibly difficult and beautiful sport—not the sensationalized version so often portrayed in the media.

  Yes, I admit it. I’m a skating mom. I sit in ice rinks the temperature of meat lockers for hours at a time, glue crystals on costumes for fun and lace a mean figure skate. Did you know a laptop computer makes a great leg warmer at a skating rink?

  So get yourself a cup of hot chocolate, buckle your seat belt and get ready for a wild ride as the Medusas take on the Olympics.

  Let the games begin!

  Cindy Dees

  CINDY DEES

  THE MEDUSA GAME

  Books by Cindy Dees

  Silhouette Bombshell

  Killer Instinct #16

  †The Medusa Project #31

  ††Target #42

  †Medusa Rising #60

  †The Medusa Game #79

  Silhouette Intimate Moments

  *Behind Enemy Lines #1176

  *Line of Fire #1253

  *A Gentleman and a Soldier #1307

  *Her Secret Agent Man #1353

  CINDY DEES

  started flying airplanes while sitting in her dad’s lap at the age of three and got a pilot’s license before she got a driver’s license. At age fifteen, she dropped out of high school and left the horse farm in Michigan where she grew up to attend the University of Michigan.

  After earning a degree in Russian and East European Studies, she joined the U.S. Air Force and became the youngest female pilot in its history. She flew supersonic jets, VIP airlift and the C-5 Galaxy, the world’s largest airplane. She also worked part-time gathering intelligence. During her military career, she traveled to forty countries on five continents, was detained by the KGB and East German secret police, got shot at, flew in the first Gulf War, met her husband and amassed a lifetime’s worth of war stories.

  Her hobbies include professional Middle Eastern dancing, Japanese gardening and medieval reenacting. She started writing on a dollar bet with her mother and was thrilled to win that bet with the publication of her first book in 2001. She loves to hear from readers and can be contacted at www.cindydees.com.

  Acknowledgments

  Thanks to the dedicated and talented figure skaters at the Dr. Pepper Star Center in Euless, Texas, for their endless patience in answering my every question. I promise, someday I’ll learn how to tell the difference between a loop and a flip.

  Thanks to Sean Beeman for not calling the FBI on me after all my scary questions about chemical warfare.

  Thanks to Larry Lynn, Zamboni engineer extraordinaire and a really nice guy.

  Thanks to Judy Tavalli for designing figure skating costumes that inspire little girls to dream big.

  Thanks to Darlene Cain and Lily Erickson, for your knowledge, kindness, sportsmanship and personal grace that exemplify the very best of the sport of figure skating.

  Special thanks to Mr. Scott Crouse, United States Olympic gymnastics coaching legend, for sharing his expertise about the Olympic experience. It’s an honor to know you.

  Thanks to Elizabeth Cain Lynch and her brother Peter, Australian Olympic pairs skaters at the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics.

  And most especially to Peter Cain. Not only are you a phenomenal coach and a fine representative of your sport, you are also a true gentleman. Or as they’d say down under, you’re a dinky di cobber!

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 1

  The bus the terrorists had demanded was just pulling up in front of the Olympic village apartment building. The casual observer wouldn’t see the dozen German army snipers lying in wait around the street, but Isabella Torres was no casual observer. A trained spotter for military snipers, she ranged her gaze across the scene, picking out the vital details.

  An Olympic flag hung limp behind a policeman on the roof. No wind—good conditions for the shooters. A shadow moved on the floor inside the front door of the building. One of the terrorists—no doubt moving there in preparation for the transfer of the surviving Israeli hostages to the bus. The bus driver’s bulging muscles and lack of visible fear marked him as German Special Forces.

  A lull developed in the scene below. Nobody moved. They hardly breathed. These terrorists were scared, nearly paralyzed with fear. No need to hurry them. It was probably smart of the Germans to let the fear ripen into stupidity. Isabella released a long, slow breath of her own.

  This whole scenario was making her acutely uncomfortable. Her last name might be Torres, compliments of her Mexican father, but her mother was a Middle Easterner. Iranian born and bred. Half of Isabella’s heritage tied her to those masked terrorists. They might be Palestinians, but in the Middle East, there were only two kinds of people in a crisis like this. Israelis and everyone else.

  Of course, she’d never thought of herself as Middle Eastern, even if she did speak Arabic and Farsi, had visited her relatives in Tehran on multiple occasions, and had even worn the heavy black robes and veils of a Muslim woman while she was there. Even when she followed Muslim customs out of respect for her family, she considered herself Americano.

  A flurry of radio chatter in German announced that the eight Palestinians were approaching the exit with their hostages. Finally. After twenty-three hours of stalemate. Since there were more prisoners than guards, the terrorists would no doubt move the hostages as a group, surrounded by captors. And that meant there’d be an excellent opportunity for the snipers to get clear shots and end this thing here and now.

  Each sniper had been assigned a single terrorist target. They’d been watching this nightmare unfold through their telescopic gun sights, long enough for the snipers to easily differentiate between the terrorists, even though the Palestinians
dressed in identical track suits and wore black ski masks over their faces. It wasn’t hard, really. Individual posture, movement and gesture were easy to pick out for a trained sharpshooter.

  These would be very short-range shots. No more than a couple hundred meters. Kid’s stuff for snipers. They could put a bullet through Lincoln’s eye on a penny at that range.

  A command was barked across the sniper radio net. The order to prepare to take their respective shots. Abrupt tension permeated the scene. This was it. This crisis would be resolved in the next few seconds.

  Two men in black ski masks appeared in the building’s doorway. She registered myriad details about them in the blink of an eye. Lean. Tense. Safeties off their AK-47s, fingers on the triggers. Weapons pointed outward at the police. Dumb. The guns ought to be pointed inward at the hostages, so that even if the terrorists were shot, their reflexive grasps on the weapons would fire the guns into the tight cluster of Israeli athletes. The German authorities might not call the kill if the Palestinian guns were pointed at the hostages. But arrayed like this—the op was a go.

  The rest of the terrorists and all the Israelis shuffled forward in a tight phalanx. For their part, the athletes looked equal parts terrified and defiant. The Palestinians were smart enough to make at least some effort to use the hostages as human shields. But it was no good. The shooters surrounding that bus had their shots. There. The entire group of terrorists was exposed. Every one of them was in position for the snipers to take clear shots.

  “Fire!” The command rang sharply across the sniper net.

  Nothing happened.

  Nothing happened!

  “Fire, goddammit!” the German shouted into the radio.

  Still nothing. Not a single one of the shooters took his shot.

  Jack Scatalone, the Delta force colonel responsible for the Medusas’ training, held up a remote control and hit the pause button. He stepped in front of the frozen video image of the Israelis being herded into that bus. It shone obscenely across his crisp uniform, which was encrusted with row after row of ribbons for heroism. For successfully resolving this very sort of crisis without the complete breakdown of response they’d just witnessed.

  Isabella—considered to be the top real-time, visual intelligence analyst in the U.S. Air Force—stared, her eyes opened wide in shock. She glanced at her teammates, the other five women who comprised the Medusas, the highly classified, and first, all-female Special Forces team in the U.S. military. They gaped as well.

  Isabella looked back at Jack and demanded, “You mean to tell me the Germans had the shots, were greenlighted to take them—hell, were ordered to take them—and they didn’t?”

  Jack’s jaw rippled. “Kat? Care to explain?”

  The Medusas’ sniper, Katrina Kim, a petite woman of Asian descent, leaned forward. In a voice so calm it had to be masking fury at what they’d just witnessed, Kat said, “It’s called the Munich Massacre Syndrome. The snipers spent so long watching the terrorists that they started to see them as human beings. As people. As scared young men. Not as targets. By the time they were ordered to shoot the terrorists, not a single one of the snipers could bring himself to pull the trigger.”

  Outrage still vibrated through Isabella’s gut. “In all the news coverage I’ve seen of the ’72 Olympics, nobody ever mentioned that the Germans had a chance to take out the terrorists and save those Israeli athletes.”

  Jack shrugged. “You probably never saw news coverage of Yasir Arafat’s order for the assault, either, but he admitted to it freely by the mid-1990s.”

  Good point. The press was by no means the purveyor of the whole truth and nothing but the truth. She glanced at the picture sprawled across Jack’s gut. “Jeez, that was more than a chance to stop it. That was a slam-dunk. The Palestinians handed themselves to the Germans on a silver platter.”

  “Conclusions?” Jack asked her.

  The words, as dry as sawdust in her throat, wanted to stick there, but she forced them out. “The Munich Massacre never should have happened.”

  Jack nodded grimly. “That’s correct. And out of this incident came counterterrorism as a formalized training specialty within the armed forces of most of the world’s major armies. It completely changed how snipers were trained and deployed, and the psychological selection criteria for snipers were heavily revised.”

  Isabella still reeled. It could have been prevented. A tragic and vicious attack on a group of athletes who’d gone to Munich to celebrate the unity of mankind in a demonstration of the best of the human spirit. Instead, eleven young men had been murdered in cold blood, plus five terrorists and one policeman had died. Worse, they could’ve been saved. It had been the ultimate corruption of everything the Olympics stood for.

  “Why was this covered up?” she demanded.

  Jack shrugged. “I can’t speak for the politicians. It would’ve been pretty ugly for Germany to admit that Jews were slaughtered on their watch again and they could’ve prevented it—again. The whole idea behind taking the Olympics to Munich in the first place was to demonstrate that World War II was in the past.”

  Isabella stared at the frozen images looming on the screen over Jack’s shoulder like vengeful ghosts. A cold finger of dread rippled down her spine. “And why did you choose today to teach us about this syndrome?”

  Jack nodded tersely at her. “Very perceptive, Adder.”

  Adder was her field handle. All the Medusas had nicknames that matched the names of dangerous snakes.

  Jack continued. “I have a job for you ladies.” He clicked the remote and the silver screen went blank. “It’s at the Winter Olympics next week. And it involves a girl. Her name is Anya Khalid.”

  It was a soft, gray day. Desultory snow drifted down toward the tarmac, and Isabella huddled in her white, down-filled parka against the chill blowing across the runway. Her ears aching from the scream of its engines, she watched a jet pull up to a gate at the newly renovated Lake Placid, New York International Airport.

  Of course, everything about Lake Placid was newly renovated these days. The sleepy little Adirondack town had spent the past five years and close to a billion dollars revamping its historic Olympic facilities for its third Winter Games, which would begin in a few days. The Games were also why a town of three thousand year-round residents boasted this high-tech terminal and jet-length runway.

  With a last look around the ramp for possible threats, she nodded at the marshaller with his orange wands and headed for the steel door to the terminal. The ramp supervisor opened it when she knocked and she hurried upstairs into the main arrival area.

  A cluster of Olympic officials waited in the baggage claim area to collect incoming athletes, while several loudly dressed resort employees waited to collect tourists coming to watch the games. A group of camera-toting reporters stood off to one side. Oddly, most of them were olive-skinned. Must be a big delegation of athletes coming in on this flight from some warm-climate country.

  She had special permission to be in the relatively deserted, ticketed passenger-only area to meet Anya and her coach. The passengers on this flight had already cleared customs in New York City, and they began to exit directly off the plane and stream toward the baggage claim area. Standing by the gate, Isabella scanned each face as it emerged, looking for her new charge.

  Anya Khalid.

  Until a few months ago, not a soul outside of a local ice skating rink in Brisbane, Australia had ever heard of her. But now, she was undoubtedly the most well-known—and controversial—member of the international figure skating community. Born in the emirate of Bhoukar, a small principality smack-dab in the center of the Arab world, she’d had the un-mitigated gall to flaunt her country’s conservative Muslim culture and become a figure skater. Global debate raged over whether or not that constituted freedom of expression or a capital crime punishable by death. Either way, she was a young lady in need of protection from the numerous threats that had come her way and would continue to escalate if she d
ared to skate at the Olympics.

  The emir of Bhoukar, an Oxford-educated religious moderate, supported her and had authorized her to represent Bhoukar. Although she’d been living in Australia for a decade while her father worked there as a petroleum engineer, her citizenship was still Bhoukari. With the exception of a men’s downhill skier nearly thirty years ago, she was the only athlete ever to represent the tiny country in a Winter Olympics.

  But instead of embracing her, her fellow countrymen, mostly religious conservatives, had reviled her. They accused her of being immodest and anti-Muslim for showing too much flesh and performing such outrageous maneuvers as raising her leg in the air and exposing the bottoms of her feet.

  When she’d burst onto the Olympic scene six weeks ago by finishing in the top ten at the last of the qualifying events and earning a spot in the Winter Games, the rhetoric had started flying. And some of it had taken on a dark enough tone that the IOC—the International Olympic Committee—had requested the Olympic Security Group provide extra protection for the nineteen-year-old upon her arrival in Lake Placid. The Medusas had been called in to do the job in the interest of not further offending the Muslim world by putting male bodyguards on the young woman.

  Isabella was chosen as the front woman for the team because she spoke fluent Arabic, Anya’s native tongue. Of course, the girl probably spoke excellent English, having practically grown up in Australia. Isabella had only seen a handful of photos of Anya. She was a beautiful, slender girl with black hair, doelike brown eyes, and a dancer’s carriage. Whether she would arrive today in the full black robe and veil Bhoukari women traditionally wore in public or merely a hijab, the head scarf preferred by more moderate Muslims was anybody’s guess.

 

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