The Warrior (Warriors Series Book 1)

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The Warrior (Warriors Series Book 1) Page 16

by Ty Patterson


  This is the one thing he does regularly as clockwork every day in the otherwise unpredictable life he leads.

  That window of opportunity is enough.

  Bwana has taken more difficult shots than this, in more hostile environments than Rio de Janeiro. There was the one in Iraq where he had to take out a Taliban insurgent and had less than thirty seconds when the insurgent rolled down the window of his car to get some fresh air.

  Zeb had been with him in Iraq.

  The rifle is mounted on a tripod on a flatbed, well inside the apartment so that the muzzle flash will be undetectable from the outside or opposite.

  He stops his mind from wandering, the clock running down in his head. He breathes deeply, slowing down his pulse, slows down his breathing, and makes life fade.

  At exactly ten to eight in the morning, the curtains opposite and below are pulled open, and Jones’s skinny frame fills the window and his scope.

  Bwana waits two seconds to reconfirm the identity, and on the third second he sends the 7.62X51mm NATO round on its mission and sees Jones’s head taken apart a couple of seconds later. As the body staggers back, he sends another two rounds through the center mass just to be sure.

  He disassembles the rifle swiftly, yet unhurriedly, places it in a custom-made guitar case, wipes out all traces of his existence in the empty apartment, locks it behind him, and takes the elevator down.

  At street level, he becomes one with the early morning rush, many heading to the beach, even at this hour.

  Broker is smoking a cheroot, watching Brazilian ass go by, smartly dressed as usual, leaning against an anonymous saloon, when Bwana walks up to him.

  ‘Grade A,’ he says, waving the cheroot, and Bwana knows he isn’t referring to the cheroot.

  Bwana grins, nods at Broker’s unasked question, stows the guitar case away in the trunk, and they set off.

  Broker takes a long detour that takes them to the seediest parts of the city, their destination being an illegal steel mill that reduces the rifle to scrap metal and the guitar case to ash.

  It is evening by the time they reach GIG airport, return their car, and complete the formalities.

  Broker looks a long time at Bwana, an oasis of stillness surrounding them amidst the hustle of the airport, knowing they will meet again, their paths will cross, and hugs him long.

  Bwana, ex-Special Forces, brother in arms to Major Zebadiah Carter, Roger, Bear, Chloe, and Broker, walks away to Departures.

  Bwana Kayembe, a warrior born in Luvungi.

  * * *

  The Reluctant Warrior, Warriors Series Book Two Now Available

  On Amazon

  On Amazon UK

  Bonus Chapter from The Reluctant Warrior

  The boy woke up as soon as he heard his father stirring and peered out from under the edge of his blanket.

  He saw his dad do his usual routine of looking across the small bedroom, from his bed to the children’s beds to see if they were awake, and then stepping cautiously to the window overlooking the street and scanning it.

  His dad had been doing this for the last few months, and one day he’d asked his father what he was looking for. He had been brushed off.

  They had moved to Brownsville not long ago, just over a year back.

  For him life had been long periods of moving about, followed by short periods of stay and calm, and so far Brownsville had been one of those short periods of calm.

  He looked across at his sister sprawled across the edge of her tiny bed, legs twitching spasmodically in response to some dream in her six-year-old mind. He wondered if she enjoyed moving so much; maybe for her it was normal, since she hadn’t experienced anything else.

  His eyes went back to his father still standing at the window – just on the inside, shielded from the outside – and wondered what he was thinking about.

  He gave up after some time, sleep dragging him to oblivion.

  * * *

  Shattner knew his son was awake and watching from the changed timbre of his breathing, and knew his son was used to watching him at the window.

  The apartment was just a single-bedroom apartment in Brownsville – a neighborhood well known for its crime in New York. This window was the only window that afforded him a view of the street below, and he could not avoid his son watching him.

  Shattner stood in the shadows and watched life in the street pass. It had become second nature for him for as long as he remembered, to look out for anything out of the ordinary on the street before he stepped out. Nothing struck him, and he headed towards the door of the apartment. His son would wake up, make breakfast for his sister and himself, get both of them ready for school, and then the two of them would walk a couple of blocks to school.

  After school, his son would collect his sister and do the routine in reverse.

  By the time Shattner returned from work, his son and daughter would have finished their dinner and be ready for bed. Routine for many years.

  His son, a mature adult in an eight-year-old body, had never experienced boyhood, had never enjoyed all the small things that childhood was about. For the briefest moment, the darkness of despair flooded his mind before he ruthlessly shunted it aside.

  Later, when he was dressed and ready, Shattner stepped out of the apartment block, his eyes scanning casually as he walked several street blocks to the car-repair shop he worked in, on Blake Avenue.

  He could have taken a bus to the garage, but he preferred the walk, even if it was a long one, since it gave him the freedom to observe anyone taking any interest in him.

  His supervisor allocated him work as soon as he walked in – a Cherokee with a broken suspension, and that took up most of his day.

  On returning home, he picked up the tail.

  A short stocky man was trailing him from a distance. He was good, but Shattner at one time had done this for a living and sensed the tail immediately.

  He sat down on a bench near Stone Avenue Library, bought some nuts, and ate them leisurely, taking the time to subtly observe the reaction of the tail and also to think the situation through.

  The tail hung well back, and Shattner decided to do nothing about him. Those who employed the tail already knew where he was living and everything else about him. If he took on the tail, it would only tip them off that he knew.

  He carried on home, stopping on the way to buy groceries. When he entered the apartment complex, he stood back in the shadows and saw the tail window-shop.

  His apartment was on the third floor on Blake Avenue, in an apartment complex that housed many like him for who hope and a future was alien.

  He could hear the excitement in Lisa’s voice as she talked with her brother, the voices audible through the thin door of the apartment. He stepped in silently, and the world fell away as he saw his son and daughter doing their schoolwork on the table in the cramped living room.

  ‘Daddy,’ Lisa squealed as she rushed across the room and jumped into his arms.

  ‘Shawn helped me with schoolwork.’ Her voice came out muffled as she buried her face in his shoulder.

  ‘Had dinner, princess?’ He looked over at Shawn questioningly.

  Both nodded.

  ‘How was school, princess?’ he asked her as he went to their small bathroom to shower and change. Over the noise of the shower, he heard Lisa recite her day.

  Mrs. Harwood had awarded her a gold star for art. Michele, her best friend, had spilt milk on her uniform during lunch hour. Paul, that boy that Lisa didn’t like, had called her stuck-up – at which Lisa had reported him to Mrs. Harwood. Shattner allowed her voice to wash over him along with the water, draining away his day, leaving him refreshed.

  Lisa was jumping on her bed when he came out of the bathroom and leaped in his arms when he finished tidying up. He spent a long hour playing with her and then prepared her for bed.

  She squealed in delight as he hoisted her on his shoulders and carried her to her side of the room and commenced reading her favorite bedt
ime story. She fell asleep during the second chapter, and silence fell over the apartment.

  Shawn had gone to bed during the storytelling, had listened for some time before he, too, drifted off to sleep. Shattner sat with Lisa a long time, his mind emptied, before he roused himself and went to the kitchen to put together his dinner.

  The way their routine worked, Shattner stocked up on all groceries and essentials during the weekend, and Shawn and Lisa fended for themselves during the week. The Office of Children and Family Services would not be happy if they knew.

  ‘Dad?’

  Shattner turned from the refrigerator to see Shawn tousled with sleep. ‘Can’t sleep?’

  Shawn shook his head. ‘Dad, will we ever have a normal life?’

  Shattner heard the refrigerator door shut behind him, the soft thud drowned by the beating of his heart as he felt his son’s eyes on him. A couple of long strides and he was crouching in front of Shawn.

  ‘Two to three months at the most, baby. And then we’ll be living like any other normal family. We’ll celebrate birthdays, go on holidays, and have loads of friends…trust me, baby. Okay?’

  Shawn nodded, his eyes dark, the faintest sheen of tears in them.

  Shattner pulled him close and crushed him in a hug. It would not make up for giving his children a life on the run for eight years, but he didn’t have anything else to give his son.

  He carried his son to bed and sat beside him till his breathing slowed to a deep sleep. He checked his mobile, his only communication point, and saw a text message.

  It was the one he was dreading.

  ‘Tomorrow.’

  No pleasantries of any kind. Short, terse, like the sender.

  He thought he knew what the summons was about. He went to his gun cabinet – a grand description for a wooden drawer high up in the closet in the bedroom – and removed his Glock 30 and cleaning materials, and carried them to the drawing room.

  He stripped the gun, wiped the parts clean, and then started a more thorough job of lubricating them. The smell of gun oil filled the room. A comforting smell, bringing back good memories. He assembled the gun, loaded its magazine, and chambered a round.

  He didn’t think he would need the gun the next day, but it never hurt to be prepared.

  * * *

  Author’s Message

  Thank you for taking time to read The Warrior. If you enjoyed it, please consider telling your friends and posting a short review. Word of mouth is an author’s best friend and much appreciated.

  You can find the reviews page here: http://amzn.to/1sFqkQh

  About the Author

  Ty has lived on a couple of continents and has been a trench digger, loose tea vendor, leather goods salesman, marine lubricants salesman, diesel engine mechanic and is now an action thriller author.

  Readers of Ty's books frequently use 'Intense,' 'Gripping,' and 'Riveting,' in reviews.

  Ty lives with his wife and son, who humor his ridiculous belief that he’s in charge.

  Connect with Ty:

  On Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/pattersonty67

  On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AuthorTyPatterson

  Website: http://www.typatterson.com

  Mailing list: http://eepurl.com/09nyf

  Table of 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 20

  Coming soon

  Bonus Chapter from The Reluctant Warrior

  Author’s Message

  About the Author

 

 

 


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