Independence Day: A Dewey Andreas Novel

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Independence Day: A Dewey Andreas Novel Page 18

by Ben Coes


  127

  what about the seals

  If the Internet was, for most, a vehicle for connection, information, and entertainment, for Cloud this surface level of interaction was a thin veneer, indeed, even a distraction. A girl might go online to read about her friends on Facebook, to buy a new shirt from J.Crew, to text her boyfriend. Each separate action involved the movement of data—numbers, letters, and symbols—over wire, or glass fiber, or through the air. These numbers, letters, and symbols, traveling at almost impossibly fast speeds, invisible to the human eye, carried, in their precise structure, very specific commands. That shirt, in this size, send to this address. In exchange for sending it to me, take money from this bank account or that credit card. They were commands. At any given moment, the world was being shaped, changed, and lived in an almost infinitely large architecture of precise data commands and responses. It was where the world was lived. The girl saw only that which had been framed and presented. She saw the results of the commands—pictures of her friends on Facebook, photos of blouses on J. Crew, letters on a screen from her boyfriend. What Cloud saw were the textual representations of the commands and their movement. Within, he saw the human beings behind such commands. He looked for the human brushstrokes, for here is where he could find the human frailties and mistakes that enabled him to penetrate.

  The pathways of the data, the multilayered connections across public networks—where it moved, how it moved—were, to Cloud, like the brushstrokes upon the canvas. This was where he lived.

  128

  roger langley this is jacobsson over

  129

  are you guys ready

  130

  roger that

  131

  were in harbor awaiting your recon

  132

  repeat we are in harbor and good to go over

  133

  thank you lieutenant

  134

  ill hit you up when were go out

  Cloud’s cell phone started beeping. He looked at the number, took a deep breath, then smiled.

  “How was tonight’s performance?” he asked.

  “Wonderful. Thank you for the necklace.”

  “You’re welcome, Katya. Do you like it?”

  “Do I like it? It’s magnificent. It must have cost a fortune.”

  “It is only the beginning of the gifts I will give to you, my love.”

  “I have to go,” she said. “There are fans. I must sign autographs. I will call you from the hotel.”

  “Please—” he began, then stopped.

  Cloud stared at the computer screen. He felt his heart race.

  He wanted to warn her: Don’t go near the red Mercedes.

  “Please what?” she asked.

  “Please be careful,” he whispered.

  35

  REKI FONTANKI

  SAINT PETERSBURG

  Bond nodded to Oliveri in the rearview mirror. Oliveri put the Mercedes in gear and started driving.

  “Roger that, Bill,” said Bond, tapping his earbud. “We’re moving into position. We’ll attempt recon as soon as she exits the theater. What about the SEALs?”

  A voice came on commo for the first time; the reception was poor and he sounded like he was in a tunnel.

  “Roger, Langley, this is Jacobsson, over.”

  “Are you guys ready?”

  The Mercedes moved quickly down Reki Fontanki toward the queue of limousines waiting at the stage door entrance. Oliveri, in the passenger seat, steered it up alongside a pair of young blond women strolling down a cobblestone sidewalk in tight, nearly see-through white dresses, one of them holding an unlit cigarette, laughing as they held arms. The gorgeous, slightly inebriated girls were giggling and singing a song.

  “Roger that,” said Jacobsson. “We’re in harbor awaiting your recon. Repeat we are in harbor and good to go. Over.”

  “Thank you, Lieutenant. I’ll hit you up when we’re go. Out.”

  As the Mercedes pulled into position at the rear of the line of limousines, the girl on the left caught a heel of her stiletto sandals on a cobblestone and stumbled awkwardly. She fell sideways as her companion tried to catch her, but it was too late. She toppled to the ground, her head slamming into the curb as she tumbled awkwardly into the street in front of the moving Mercedes. She let out a terrified scream as the car was about to run her over.

  Oliveri slammed on the brakes, which screeched, drawing the attention of everyone within a hundred feet. The vehicle came to an abrupt halt, its right front tire stopping just as it pressed into her arm, bumping the girl, but ever so slightly.

  Bond tapped his ear, shutting off commo.

  “Goddammit!” he snapped. “Watch where the fuck you’re going.”

  “I didn’t see her.”

  Several pedestrians flocked to the girl.

  “We need to clean this up,” said Bond, frustration in his voice.

  “Just get her out of the way before the woman gets here.”

  Bond opened the rear door and climbed out.

  “Ne dvigayutsya,” Bond yelled, his Russian flawless. “My dolzhny ubedit’sya, chto ona ne ranen prezhde chem my pereydem yeye.”

  Don’t move. We must make sure she’s not injured before we move her.

  Bond jogged toward the girl, his eyes shooting right, to the stage entrance, knowing that Katya would soon be coming out.

  Several pedestrians were also coming over, seeing if the girl was all right. Her friend had her arm and was trying to lift her up from the street.

  Bond glanced at Oliveri, still seated behind the steering wheel. Oliveri shook his head; he didn’t like the distraction.

  Suddenly, a commotion ensued behind Bond. The excited yells and giggles of young girls came from the theater’s side door. Bond turned. Katya had emerged and was now signing autographs and talking with her fans.

  He needed to clean up the situation, and he needed to do it quickly.

  Bond pushed aside a man who was helping the injured girl to her feet. Bond knelt just above her. She looked up at him and their eyes met. Her head had a gash and was bleeding badly. Bond took the handkerchief from his pocket and placed it against the wound.

  “Thank you, sir,” she whispered in Russian.

  “Are you okay?” Bond asked.

  “I feel dizzy,” she whispered.

  “I am so sorry,” said Bond. “My driver was not paying attention adequately enough.”

  “It was my fault,” she said, slurring her words.

  “Nonsense. I will pay for everything.”

  “May we have a ride to the hospital?” asked her friend. “I don’t know if she can walk right now.”

  Bond lifted the girl up by her right arm.

  “Sir, may we have a ride to the hospital?” she asked again.

  Bond glanced to the stage entrance. Katya was nearly to the end of the line of autograph seekers. He looked back at Oliveri. He was making a circular motion with his right index finger: hurry the hell up.

  “No,” said Bond shifting and looking again at Katya, “I’m sorry. We will pay for a taxi to take you, but I have a situation that requires my immediate attention.”

  For the first time, Bond saw bodyguards flanking Katya’s path—one behind her, one in front. The eyes of the guard in front swept across the sidewalk, back and forth, looking for signs of danger. When he saw Bond, his eyes focused in on him.

  Bond glanced to Oliveri, signaling him with his right hand.

  She has two bodyguards. Get the weapons ready and prepare to engage.

  * * *

  Inside the Mercedes, Oliveri stared out the passenger window, beyond Bond and the two girls, watching as Katya signed a last autograph, then turned and waved with both arms at the crowd, which were still gathered.

  “Come on, Pete,” he whispered.

  Beneath a blanket, Oliveri’s right hand clutched the grip of a Desert Tactical SRS-A1, a compact, concealable sniper rifle with a thick black suppressor screwed int
o its muzzle and a scope mounted on top. Without looking, he flipped the safety off.

  Oliveri knew full well the danger of having witnesses. But it was unavoidable now.

  Emergency Priority.

  A higher mission classification did not exist. It meant the achievement of the mission’s objective was paramount to U.S. national security.

  Leaving the blanket on top, Oliveri raised the SRS-A1 until the snub-nose of the suppressor was pressed against the passenger-side window. He leaned down and, without looking through the scope, targeted the guard in front of Katya. He placed his finger on the trigger, preparing to fire.

  Suddenly, the back door to the limousine opened.

  * * *

  “Here’s my card,” said Bond, handing the girl an alias business card. “I will pay for everything. You need to go to the hospital.”

  Bond leaned forward, into the limousine, a desperate look in his eyes. He registered Oliveri, then the blanket raised across the front seat. He glanced right; Katya was now less than fifty feet from the line of limousines, walking quickly.

  Bond ducked and leapt into the car, yanking the door shut.

  But as the steel of the door was about to close tight, both of the injured girl’s hands shot out and stopped it. Bond turned, a stunned look in his eyes as the girl ripped the door open.

  “No!” he screamed, just as the second girl blew into the cigarette that had been dangling, unlit, from her lips. A small dart the size of a toothpick tore from the cigarette and stuck into the center of Bond’s right eyeball. His hand shot up to his eye as he groaned in pain.

  The injured girl ducked and stabbed forward into the back of the limousine, followed by the other girl, whose hand reached inside her leather purse as she too infiltrated the vehicle.

  Oliveri, hearing Bond’s groan, turned from the sight of Katya and the two bodyguards. Before his head could swivel all the way around, the girl tore a Glock 18C from her bag. Oliveri’s eyes went wide as he registered the weapon. He ducked and tried to reach for the door, but he was too late. She pumped the trigger. A dull thud sounded as a slug tore through the back of the leather seat, then ripped into Oliveri’s neck. A mist of blood splattered the steering wheel and windshield as Oliveri was kicked forward. His hand shot to his neck as he tried to scream. She fired again, this time sending the bullet into his head.

  Bond, the lead CIA agent, watched helplessly as Oliveri was killed. He tried to reach for his commo to say something, but he was paralyzed by the highly lethal, fast-acting toxin in the dart. A few seconds later, unable to breathe, he suffocated to death.

  The injured girl climbed over the front seat, pulling Oliveri to the passenger side, pushing his large frame to the floor.

  She took up position behind the wheel, then turned.

  “I can’t see,” she said in Russian, her view blocked by the blood on the windshield.

  The girl in the backseat handed her a handkerchief to wipe what she could from the windshield. A few moments later, she hit the gas pedal and tore down Reki Fontanki.

  36

  REKI FONTANKI

  SAINT PETERSBURG

  “This is an Emergency Priority operation. I repeat, Emergency Priority. Safeties off. Take whatever action is required to get the girl.”

  Dewey heard Polk’s frantic words just as the final act was nearing its conclusion.

  Moscow had gone bad.

  Stay calm.

  He stood and moved quickly up the aisle, then heard Bond’s voice over commo for the first time.

  “Roger that, Bill. We’re moving into position. We’ll recon as soon as she exits the theater. What about the SEALs?”

  Dewey exited through the front of the Mariinsky Theatre as, behind him, clapping and cheering echoed out from the theater.

  “Roger, Langley, this is Jacobsson, over.”

  “Are you guys ready?”

  Dewey went left, then crossed the side street. A few yards from the corner was a bench, part of it occupied by an elderly couple. Dewey walked past it and stood near the corner. From there, he could see down the street that ran alongside the theater. Halfway down the block, outside the private stage entrance, a line of limousines and dark sedans idled, their drivers waiting for VIPs and cast members to emerge. Dewey registered the red Mercedes a block behind the line of cars, but moving quickly.

  “Roger that. We’re in harbor awaiting your recon. Repeat we are in harbor and good to go. Over.”

  Dewey felt his heart racing. He reached inside his coat, feeling the butt of his gun, as he scanned the mission zone.

  It was coming again. The paralysis he’d first experienced in Mexico was coming. He felt it. He tried to think of Tino and the fight at Whitewater, but all he could see now was his shaking hand, frozen in the Iguala air, unable to open the door to the cocaine refinery.

  Dewey watched the Mercedes move toward the line of limousines outside the theater. He heard the old woman on the bench say something. He turned. The couple was holding hands, sitting peacefully, enjoying the warm evening. He watched them for an extra moment, trying to calm down and get his emotions under control.

  Polk had been right all along. He did need help. He would’ve frozen up all over again.

  At that moment, Dewey felt self-loathing as powerful and intense as he’d ever felt it before. Everything he’d built, all of it, was gone.

  “Thank you, Lieutenant. I’ll hit you up when we’re go. Out.”

  Dewey walked away from the scene. He drifted toward the canal, lost in thought, lost in self-hatred and doubt, a knot in his stomach. He would drop his gun in the canal, along with his earbud. He’d find a hotel room, then the bar at the hotel, and drink until he couldn’t walk, or think. Tomorrow, he’d fly home. He’d return to Castine. He’d stay there until he was an old man.

  He turned back one last time to the theater. At the stage entrance, a commotion ensued as Katya emerged. Autograph seekers, mostly squealing teenage girls, cheered and yelled at the sight of the famous ballerina.

  His eyes scanned the scene. He watched as the red Mercedes moved into position.

  Then his eyes were drawn to two girls walking along the sidewalk, weaving slightly, alongside the Mercedes. Dewey looked away, thinking nothing of it.

  Dewey was now at the granite abutment above the canal. He put his hand inside his jacket and found the butt of his gun. He pulled it out, clutching it by the barrel. He started to toss the gun into the dark water below …

  The sound of screeching brakes was like a thunder clap, interrupting the quiet scene, awakening Dewey from his reverie.

  He held on to the gun, then turned.

  A cold chill emanated from the base of Dewey’s spine. He stared in disbelief, then horror, as one of the girls pretended to slip and fall, then was struck by the limo.

  “Decoy,” he said.

  Bond and Oliveri were in extreme danger.

  Dewey moved back toward the theater. A crowd was gathering to help the fallen girl. Bond stepped out of the limo and went to her, helping her up, then led her to the back door of the limo.

  Dewey crossed the street, watching as the girl reached her hands out then leapt inside the Mercedes. Just as he reached the corner, blood splashed across the inside of the windshield, like mud being thrown.

  A few seconds later, the limo lurched away.

  Bond and Oliveri were dead.

  The Mercedes sped away from the theater. It was now coming directly toward where Dewey stood. The limo was accelerating, fleeing from the scene. As it was about to reach him, Dewey stepped into the street, directly into the path of oncoming vehicle. His hand was already inside his coat, clutching the hockey-tape-covered grip of his .45-caliber Colt M1911A1. The driver didn’t slow down or attempt to avoid him.

  Just before the Mercedes struck him, Dewey tore the gun out, then leaned right. He fired the gun as fast as his finger could pump the trigger. Unmuted gunfire punctuated an already chaotic scene. Slug after slug tore into the driver’s-side
window, shattering glass, then the girl’s head; her skull bounced sharply to the right as a bullet entered just above her ear. Blood sprayed across the front seat as the limo sped by, tires screeching, the back bumper barely missing Dewey as it swerved wildly. A moment later, it veered right and smashed violently into a parked delivery truck.

  The first sirens sounded from a few blocks away.

  Dewey charged, coming from behind the limo, knowing the other assassin would be targeting him. In stride, sprinting for the cover of the back bumper, Dewey popped the mag from his Colt and slammed a new one in just as bullets from the other assassin shattered the back window. Dewey lurched left, then dived to the street just as bullets pocked the tar near his feet.

  He scrambled beneath the rear bumper, sheltered from the fusillade. He crawled beneath the car, feeling the heat of the engine on his back. He crawled until he reached the front passenger-side door. He came out from under the limo, then quietly opened the door as sirens grew louder. Two dead bodies, Oliveri and one of the girls, along with a sniper rifle, and a riot of blood covering the white leather seat. He climbed into the vehicle, skulking soundlessly, weapon out, trained at the back of the girl’s head, loaded, safety off, and cocked to fire.

  Through a crack in the seat, Dewey could see the other girl’s back as she searched frantically for him behind the limo.

  Dewey leapt over the seat and smashed the girl’s head down. With his other hand, he grabbed her shooting arm, yanking it behind her back.

  “Where’s Katya going?”

  “I don’t know.”

  Dewey yanked up her arm until it snapped. She screamed.

  The sirens were within a block now.

  “Where is Katya going?”

  Dewey grabbed the woman’s neck and choked her. Her face turned bright red.

  “Tell me where and I won’t kill you.”

  “Four…” she groaned.

  “Seasons?”

  She nodded.

  Dewey snapped the girl’s neck, ripped open the door, and jumped out, running, just as police cruisers descended upon the scene.

  He disappeared down Reki Fontanki, blending into the crowds that were fleeing the crash scene, making their way toward Nevsky Prospekt.

 

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