by Trevor Scott
THE STONE OF ARCHIMEDES
A Jake Adams International Espionage Thriller #8
Trevor Scott
SALVO PRESS
An Imprint of Start Publishing LLC
New York, New York
Also by Trevor Scott
Fractured State (A Novella)
The Nature of Man
Discernment
Way of the Sword
Drifting Back
Fatal Network (Jake Adams #1)
Extreme Faction (Jake Adams #2)
The Dolomite Solution (Jake Adams #3)
Vital Force (Jake Adams #4)
Rise of the Order (Jake Adams #5)
The Cold Edge (Jake Adams #6)
Without Options (Jake Adams #7)
Boom Town (Tony Caruso #1)
Burst of Sound (Tony Caruso #2)
Hypershot (Chad Hunter #1)
Global Shot (Chad Hunter #2)
Strong Conviction
The Dawn of Midnight
This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this novel are fictitious and not intended to represent real people or places.
THE STONE OF ARCHIMEDES © 2013 by Trevor Scott.
This edition of THE STONE OF ARCHIMEDES © 2013 by Salvo Press.
All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Salvo Press, 609 Greenwich Street, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10014.
Published by Salvo Press,
an imprint of Start Publishing LLC
New York, New York
Please visit us on the web at
www.start-media.com
Cover image of shooter by SCM Studios.
Image of Catacombs of Saint Giovanni, Syracuse, Italy by Lexan.
ISBN: 978-1-62793-449-7
Visit the author at: www.trevorscott.com
1
Tunis, Tunisia
Jake Adams ran through the dark, narrow alleys of The Medina, the old town section of the Tunisian capital, his tired legs propelling him toward his target less than a block ahead. Just minutes ago, at one in the morning, Jake had encountered the man coming out of an apartment two blocks from Rue Sidi Mahrez, where one white-washed structure with their flat tops looked like the next. He had observed the man day and night for two days, making damn sure it was the man he had been seeking for the past six months. Now he was sure.
The man running from him looked back for a second and then scooted down an even narrower alley. Nearly out of breath now, Jake slowed a bit and retrieved his .40 caliber Sig semi-auto pistol from the holster at the small of his back. Before turning down the alley, where he could touch both sides with his outstretched arms, he hesitated and listened for the man’s footfalls in the night air.
Nothing.
Catching his breath, his heart nearly bursting from his chest, Jake quickly peered around the corner and pulled his head back in time for three bullets to strike the stone wall next to his face.
Raising his gun, he shoved his body from one side to the next, firing twice before finding safety on the other side.
Both of them were using suppressors, so the only sound was a slight cough. Based on the level of sound, Jake could tell that his opponent was shooting a 9mm auto.
He pulled the magazine from the grip of his pistol and counted four more rounds, plus the one in the chamber. Crap. He had used one magazine early in the chase, dropping it on the ground a few blocks back. Now he wished he had brought his full-sized handgun and not the more easy to conceal sub-compact. But what he gave up in extra rounds he made up in his ability to hide the gun under his T-shirt in the oppressive heat of a Tunisian summer. How many more rounds did his target have?
Running the streets through his mind, Jake knew that this little alley, which he had studied the last couple of days, went nowhere. Well, there were a few doors that led to less than modest apartments. Nothing more. The man was trapped.
Jake flung himself across the opening again, and the man shot at him as expected. He couldn’t do this much longer. The man might actually get lucky and hit him. He thought back over the past six months as he recuperated from the bullet that had gone through his left knee, forcing the Austrian surgeons to implant a synthetic knee. The recovery had been painful, but had been made more so as he contemplated the loss of his girlfriend Anna—his future, his savior from himself. After his long stay in the Innsbruck hospital and that whole Berlin affair, he had tried to soak away the pain with beer and schnapps in his lonely Innsbruck apartment. Then he had gotten serious about finding those responsible for her death. Jake had killed two men that night in Austria at the mountain retreat. A month ago he had tracked down a third man in Italy who had been the driver that night, and after a relatively short session of coercive questioning, the man had gladly given up the fourth man—the man at the other end of the Tunis alley trying to kill him. This would end the who. But he still needed to know the why.
His teeth clenched tightly, Jake took in a deep breath and rushed around the corner, his gun firing twice from instinct. He could see the flashes of the gun ahead but he didn’t stop running. He continued running at top speed, his gun firing and the man ahead returning fire and hitting nothing but air and stone walls.
As he got closer Jake noticed the flashes had stopped and his own gun had slid back empty. He dropped the gun and dove through the air like he had done so many times playing football in high school, striking the man’s chest with his shoulder and plunging them both backwards and onto the hard stone surface.
The man’s gun slid across the ground away from them. Jake recovered and shoved his right elbow into the man’s jaw. He heard a crack and hoped it was the scumbag’s jaw and not his own elbow breaking.
The two of them struggled on the ground until Jake finally put the man into a sleeper hold, with his legs wrapped around the man’s lower body like a boa constrictor squeezing the life out of its prey.
All Jake could smell was sweat, musky body oil, and some kind of greasy hair product to slick back the guy’s long black hair.
Jake needed answers. Needed to know the why behind his girlfriend’s murder. “You remember me, asshole?” Jake whispered into the man’s left ear.
He said something in Arabic, which Jake didn’t understand. It wasn’t slang or cursing, since Jake knew most of those and had been called nearly every possible bad thing in that language. And that was about all he knew in Arabic.
“Speak English,” Jake said to the man as he tightened his grip across the dirtbag’s throat.
“Scopilo,” the man forced out through clenched teeth.
Jake laughed under his breath, knowing this Italian word. “I don’t do that with men. But I’m guessing you do.”
What little Jake knew about this man was the fact that he spoke Arabic, Italian, French and English. The Arabic and French from his home country of Tunisia, the Italian from his ancestors, and the English from going to college in England.
“Who hired you for the hit in Austria?” Jake asked.
“You’re dead,” the man finally said, a hint of London in his words.
“Bold words for a man in my grasp.”
“No, we killed you.”
Jake shook his head. “Not quite, asshole. You tried to kill me. But you screwed up.”
“You are Jake Adams?” It was clearly a question, with his British accent coming out more this time. “You were not the target.”
Jake knew that much from the last man he had caught up with a month ago. “Who hired you to kill Anna Schult?”
The Tunisian let out a puff of air from his nost
rils.
“Answer me,” Jake said, his grip tighter.
“You mean that Interpol whore?”
With a quick jab of his left hand, Jake’s knuckles smacked into the man’s kidney, taking his breath away. This gave Jake a chance to clear his mind and survey his surroundings. He couldn’t stay here forever. Eventually someone would notice them in the alley. It wasn’t like they had been entirely quiet. His gaze rose to the sky above and he was struck by how many stars were visible, and even more at how he couldn’t be certain of the constellations in this part of the world at this time of year.
“A little more respect now,” Jake said to the man, “and I might decide to let you live.”
“You mean like the driver last month in Napoli?”
So, he knew Jake had found that man. Either that or he was simply fishing. Use it to your advantage Jake. “Then you know I’m serious. Who hired you?”
“I tell you and I’m dead.”
“Well, then you have a conundrum. Because if you don’t tell me you’re dead.”
“That’s a dilemma,” the man said smugly. “A choice between two equally unpleasant choices.”
Great, English lessons from a terrorist and hitman. “That’s right. You went to Cambridge. So, how does one go from one of the best colleges in the world to become a known terrorist?”
“Not so well known. It took you six months to find me.”
Right, but at least four months of that was spent at the bottom of a bottle dealing with self pity, something entirely unfamiliar to Jake.
“Who hired you to kill my girlfriend?” Jake repeated.
“The Pope.” The Tunisian laughed.
This wasn’t going to work, Jake knew. He needed to get the man somewhere to be properly persuaded.
But the Tunisian had his own agenda. When he began calling Anna every derogatory name in more than one language, Jake found himself tightening his sleeper hold and twisting his body as the guy struggled beneath him. The snap surprised Jake. He had broken a man’s neck a few times in the past and it was always a disgusting sound as life left the enemy’s body. But this time was worse, since it wasn’t Jake’s intention. At least not at this time. Not without first finding out who had hired the four men to kill Anna.
As Jake shoved the dead man away from his own body, he was disoriented and distracted enough to not notice his surroundings.
First came the familiar sound of rifles cycling rounds into chambers, and then the frenetic Arabic of both men telling him something. He could guess they wanted him to not move or to put his hands behind his head or some such order that all law enforcement learned in their training. But it wasn’t until one man switched to French that Jake knew he needed to sit still on the stone pavement and place his hands above his head. Crap. He had no way out of this. He had just killed a citizen of Tunisia in The Medina, and he had no diplomatic status. He would surely end up in some squalid prison. On the bright side, he probably wouldn’t be there long, since life in prison there was never a very long sentence, with most dying by the hands of other prisoners or from dysentery.
As Jake sat expecting to be cuffed, one of the policemen approached and shoved the butt of his gun into Jake’s forehead sending him sprawling onto his back, where his eyes again glanced at the stars above briefly until his world went to darkness.
2
A week had passed since Jake killed the man in the narrow alley in The Medina of Tunis. The daily beatings consisted mostly of thrusts to his stomach and ribs, where he was sure a couple had been broken early on and he now tried to protect with his arm each time they hit him. The food, what little there was, consisted mostly of molded semolina bread and meat that had turned sweet beyond expiration. He would have done better hanging out in an alley feeding from a restaurant dumpster. He had supplemented this food with bugs and scorpions that got close enough to him in his solitary, dark cell. The heat was unbearable, and he knew he was in trouble when he could no longer sweat. It meant he was dehydrated. The water they gave him infrequently looked like it had come from the toilet in a Mexican restaurant. But he drank it anyway. He had no choice.
Jake drew strength from the knowledge that he had killed the last man responsible for the death of his future wife, even though he had not found those who had hired them. Maybe it wasn’t that important to know. He had found retribution and now he would die here in Tunisia. Perhaps he deserved to die. He had done things in his life that he wasn’t particularly proud of, so maybe his past was finally catching up with him.
When he heard the outer doors being unlocked and the footfall of men heading toward his cell, he mentally prepared himself for today’s beating. They were early, he thought. Usually didn’t show up until after they fed him. That way they could force him to puke up his meal and let the taste linger in his mouth for hours.
He heard French outside his door. Someone different, he guessed, since they normally spoke Arabic to each other.
His cell door opened and a man in a frumpy linen suit stood before him, his eyes surveying Jake from top to bottom. The man turned to the two guards and now spoke Arabic harshly to them, as if a father addressing two troubled children. The guards simply shook their heads and backed away from the door. The man stood at least six-two, his longer grey hair combed back over the top of his skull to try to cover his baldness. If he had been dressed nicer Jake would have mistaken him for a funeral director.
“Mister Adams,” the man said formally.
“I’m guessing you’re not from Publisher’s Clearing House, since you don’t have that big check with you,” Jake said, trying his best at levity.
The man laughed. “Afraid not.” He stepped closer to Jake, who was sitting on a straw mattress on the floor, and put his hand out to shake. “I’m Robert Pierce. Rob to those who know me. I’m the cultural affairs officer from the U.S. Embassy.”
Jake took the man’s hand and stood up onto his bare feet. They had taken his shoes, his belt, leaving him only with his T-shirt and khaki pants, which were now falling off his hips from his loss of weight.
“Splendid,” Jake said. “Are you here to show me the ruins of Carthage?”
The embassy man laughed. “I heard you were funny.”
“Yeah, well this place has let me hone my stand-up routine. What can I do for you? I have a tennis match in a half hour.”
The man glanced outside the door and turned back to Jake. “You’ve gotten yourself into quite the mess here, Mister Adams.”
“Listen, Rob. Can you just call me Jake?”
“Of course. Anyway, the authorities are not quite sure whether to hang you in the public square or give you a medal for killing that man last week. He was a nasty terrorist. They know that.” He hesitated.
“There’s always a but involved,” Jake said.
“Right. The problem is, this man is a second cousin with someone high up in the government.”
“Wonderful.”
“All is not lost, though. There has been no mention in the local news about the death.”
Jake was confused. “Why not?”
“Probably a couple of reasons. First, then they’d have to admit that a relative of a high-ranking official was a terrorist. Secondly, they’re trying to clean up their image here after all the protests and the change in government. We’re working with them to get all the American cruise lines to come to port here. Murder in the souq does not bode well for that effort. Nor does the trial of an American. You’re lucky nobody has discovered your background with the Agency.”
Jake smiled. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
The embassy man looked out into the corridor again and turned to Jake a bit more serious. “Listen, you have to be frank with me. Why did you kill this man?”
Shaking his head, Jake said, “I didn’t mean to. We were wrestling and his neck suddenly broke.”
Rob lowered his head to his chest and let out a breath of air. “Come on. You expended all the ammunition on a silenced
handgun with its serial number removed with acid. The spent casings had no finger prints, nor did the magazines.”
Jake shrugged his shoulders. “It’s hard to break with training. But did you notice how many shots the man took at me?”
“Thirty-two.”
“I told you I wasn’t trying to kill the man. I just wanted some information. Wanted to know who hired him to kill my ex-girlfriend.”
“I believe you, Jake, but how can I sell that to the Tunisians? Let’s see. . .I know Mister Adams was not trying to kill the man, since he was a highly trained Air Force Intelligence Officer and then an experienced CIA officer. A man with Jake’s considerable shooting ability would not have missed the man with all those shots unless he was trying to miss. Splendid. Let’s all go home.”
It was the truth to a certain extent. Although Jake would have killed the man anyway once he had given up his employer. “What do you want from me?”
Rob took one more look outside at the guards. Satisfied, he said, “A favor.”
Jake laughed out loud. “Seriously? I’m gonna die in this country and you think I can help you?”
“Exactly. It will cost us, but we have a way to get you out of here.” Rob stopped short as if searching for the right words, his gaze everywhere but on Jake.
“Who do I have to kill?”
“It’s nothing like that,” Rob said, his hands out in protest. “It’s just a job. Nothing more.”
“I’m listening.”
“A missing person. Someone in our government needs you to find her.”
“Who is it?”
“An important constituent.”
“Who is it?” Jake repeated.
“Sara Jones.”
“Just some random American?”
“Not exactly. She’s the younger sister of United States Senator, from the great state of Texas, James Halsey.” He said the man’s last name as if it should mean something to Jake.
“So, this senator can’t hire someone to bring back little sis? Aren’t all senators rich?”