by J. L. Saint
Lauren pulled free of his grasp and followed Weston. Jack told himself that it was just as well to leave things as they were. Still, it ate at his craw to reduce great love making to pity fucks.
Weston opened the double entry doors and two armed guards dressed in tactical gear moved to block the exit. Jack snapped his mind into gear as he immediately assessed the situation. His earlier uneasiness justified itself in seconds.
“Sorry, Lt. Col. Weston, sir, but I can’t let SFC Hunter or Mrs. Collins leave.”
Weston paused and glared at the young man. Jack knew just how powerful Weston’s ire was and almost felt sorry for him. The kid took a step back but did not move from blocking the way.
“We’re prisoners here?” Jack swung around and confronted Rashid McGuire, who came up behind them.
“Consider yourselves houseguests for a short time. It’s necessary for your safety and ours.”
Weston snorted with disbelief. “Keeping Mrs. Collins under wraps I can understand, but keeping my man is overkill and reeks of bullshit. You’ve got no grounds on which to hold him.”
Rashid shrugged. “Just following orders. Take your complaints up with the Deputy Director.”
Jack expected that Weston would argue more, come out with a bigger stick and use the threat of his presidential connection, but he didn’t. Instead Weston’s phone vibrated again. He glanced at the screen then met Jack’s gaze. “I’ll call you shortly, DT—”
“You’ll have to call either Director SOO’s number or mine. We’ll be taking his cell in case Menendez calls back.” The man rattled off the numbers.
The tone of Lauren’s interrogation had indicated that they’d likely detain her, but Jack hadn’t mentioned it, not wanting to cross that bridge unless he had to. And now that it was here he didn’t feel all that great about it. She’d be relatively safe from assassins in this cushy prison. Safer than he’d been able to keep her. Another chill ran down his spine from what almost happened at Gardner’s. But Jack had news for Rash, his SOO, and the NCS; putting him into that same box wasn’t going to wash. He’d be damned if he was going to sit here with Rico missing, no matter how many brass pipes the orders came down in. He’d be out of there tonight come hell or high water.
Lauren stepped forward to give Rashid a piece of her mind and Jack, blindly sent Beck a coded message from his cell in his pocket.
Blindfolded, gagged and tied like a sacrificial lamb, Conrad had been thrown into a trunk, driven for hours, then stuffed into a crate. Now he was being flown to only God knew where. The SOB who took him down had yet to say another word. Conrad didn’t count it a good thing that he was still alive. It wasn’t the burning fire in his shoulder that made him wish he was dead, it was the five million dollars he was sure he’d now lost. The man knew about Bill’s letters, had confiscated them and would likely be buried up to his balls in greenbacks soon.
It made him sick. He’d done all of the hard work and this bloodsucker was going to reap the rewards?
Snapping wood and prying metal grabbed his attention. At least they weren’t burying him alive or dumping him in the ocean. A rush of cool air met his skin, then rough hands were jerking him up. His every numbed muscle screamed in pain and his injured shoulder protested louder. The blindfold was snatched off. He blinked against the burning brightness of the light until his eyes adjusted. By then his mind separated the fact that while his muscles were in horrendous pain, the actual screaming he heard was from Bill Collins’s brats clinging to a red haired woman he’d seen before. The boy’s crying instantly became a heavenly choir singing Hallelujah in his ears. Another chance at getting the five million and maybe more just fell in his lap. Life was looking up.
He cradled his arm protectively and moved in to play hero. “Dear God! They got you too. Where’s Lauren?”
They looked like Bill Collins, Andreas thought as he watched the video feed of his hostages being freed from their crates. Two miniature Bill Collins cowardly huddled against a red-headed woman who had his murder glaring in her eyes as she looked about. The new Fidel was proving to be a man of his word. He not only planned for the next step, but also was deviously resourceful. He’d been able to smuggle five hostages aboard the Airbus A380 via crates disguised as supplies. They’d refueled, filed a flight plan, and were on their way inside of an hour. His Santaurio, his fortified haven awaited them.
George jumped excitedly in the seat next to him.
“Patience, mi hijo. You will see the boys when we get home. Pero, you must be careful not to hurt them until I have what Collins stole from me.” George loved to do things that made children laugh. Collins’s monsters would laugh. Eventually cry again. Then they would scream.
Two men were also unloaded from the crates. One was completely unconscious or dead and had blood staining his blue shirt. Andreas dismissed him and focused on the other man, who was stretching and smiling at the boys as if he’d just found heaven itself. This man had been murdering others for Bill Collins’s letters, of which Andreas now had most of on his desk in front of him. He’d been thoroughly shocked and pleased to find that Collins hadn’t put convicting evidence in the letters but had alluded to Andreas as the man in the yellow hat. Lauren Collins held the key to the evidence of Andreas’s crimes. Bill had promised each of his friends a million dollars if they worked together with Lauren to bring down the man in the yellow hat.
All Andreas had to do was get the formula for GXP back, make a few people permanently disappear, and then he could get back to assuring a future for George and his kind. International authorities, provided they would ever be able to collaborate again, couldn’t touch him with anything more substantial than the man with the yellow hat.
So he’d proceed with the Latimoor Live CNN interview on GXP’s facilities and the wildlife preserve tomorrow and pretend as if nothing was wrong other than he was an innocent man.
Once the oil facilities in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al-Quwain, Ras al-Khaimah and Fujairah were burning, Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan would learn he couldn’t steal from Andreas Miles. For now he’d let Lauren Collins stew until she was desperate to give him anything he wanted for her sons. Once he had GXP back he could then get back to the task of reshaping the world for global social justice.
Chapter Thirty-Two
Roger left the NCS hideaway with the feeling that he’d abandoned DT on the battlefield. He almost turned around to force Rashid McGuire’s hand in a “my daddy’s bigger than your daddy” pissing contest. One call to his cousin and Roger was sure word would reach Rashid with the speed of light directly from the Deputy Director.
The only reason Roger didn’t make the call was to keep DT from carrying through with the determined rage in his eyes. Roger had no doubt DT would go after Menendez/Miles, which is why Rashid was detaining him.
So Roger had driven away and kept on driving no matter how he felt about the situation. Orders were orders. Miles/ Menendez and what Bill Collins had done were now out of his hands and out of DT’s whether they liked it or not.
Putting aside the world-wide destruction the terrorist acts caused politically, economically and socially, Menendez was responsible for creating the crisis in Lebanon—an event which had resulted in tragedy. Something everyone involved would suffer from every day for the rest of their lives. No death would be slow enough or torturous enough to make up for the damage Menendez had done.
Roger clamped down on his anger and shoved his focus in a different direction. It wouldn’t do him any good to dwell on the situation, but he could channel his fury elsewhere against a more than deserving bastard. Frank Dugar. The man who had attacked Mari.
Mari rested in his apartment on post in the care of Senior Airman Holly Gear from the 116th Air Control Wing division of the Air National Guard from Warner Robbins, Georgia. Holly was a top graduate of the National Guard’s Sniper School and was teaching at Bragg in the unique position of informing men on how to think like a woman sniper. More and more women fro
m hostile, radical factions around the world were being trained as snipers, leaving the US Troops and Special Forces vulnerable. Unless you were in her rifle sights, Holly was easy going and single, two reasons why Roger had called her to stay with Mari when he, Jack and Lauren had been diverted to the NCS hideaway.
Before returning to post, Roger went to Neil and Mari’s house. He had a list of things she needed and he wanted to check if the windows had been boarded up and the cleaning crew had cleared away the debris. Until Dugar was caught, Roger wasn’t going to replace them.
The collection of butterfly and flower themed wind chimes lining the front porch hung in tatters, peppered with bullets, still and quiet. Amid the silence and the damage lay remnants of Neil’s life. His and Mari’s wedding picture. NASCAR memorabilia. An autographed picture of Marilyn Monroe posed on a 1957 Chevy Bel Air Convertible, an exact replica of Neil’s car, his pride and joy. Neil’s football trophies from little league games and from high school. The big screen TV and the circle of sofas where the team would gather for Super Bowl and World Series showdowns, maybe even a fight night or two, depending on who was in the ring. Roger could almost hear Neil laughing, smell the Doritos, pizza and beer, and see him relaxed in the recliner with the remote in his hand.
This was the result of Menendez and Collins’s act. This was the ghost Mari had been living with since Neil’s death. Roger’s heart kicked hard and his soul tied into knots. He moved toward the bedroom at the end of the hallway, practically blinded by emotion.
The wind chimes on the porch clamored and Roger froze then quickly registered the fact that something was pressing his shin through the material of his jeans. He wouldn’t have felt it had he not come to a complete standstill at the sound of the chimes.
Looking down, he saw a trip wire had been rigged across the hallway. From the set-up, Roger had no doubt that he stood in the blast zone of an IED.
Trouble was, he had no idea just how sensitive the triggering device was. Would it blow if he backed away from the line?
The chill that scraped down his spine was followed by a full body sweat of terror. He barely breathed as he pulled his cell phone from his pocket and called Officer Cain, who could assure nobody came barreling into Neil’s house. God only knew what else might be rigged.
“Officer Cain,” the policeman said.
“Lt. Colonel Weston here. We have a situation.”
“Sir?”
“I’m at Neil Dalton’s house. I’m alone. I’m in the hallway to the bedrooms to be exact. The place has been booby trapped. I have likely partially triggered a bomb. How many more there are here is anyone’s guess. I need the bomb squad. And nobody but a fucking expert had better come near this place. If my ass is going to blow up, I’m going to be the one to do it, and not some idiot. Clear the perimeter and proceed with caution. The wind chimes outside went haywire just a minute ago and there was hardly a breeze when I arrived, so somebody may be lurking in the shadows. I’m calling my superior. They may send help as well. Any questions?”
“No.”
“Hurry.” Roger disconnected. Sweat trickled down every groove and dent, making him itch places he hadn’t felt since stranded behind enemy lines and under fire. His body, heart and soul screamed at him to move. To get the hell out of there as fast as he could.
His mind even rationalized that he’d be quick enough and would likely even escape death if he were to thrust himself back down the hall. But he forced himself to stay put. To wait. To sweat. And to relive his life in a flash. There were few regrets and they boiled down to Lebanon, his men—Neil, DT, Beck, Rico, Pecos—and Mari.
He called General Alex Dekker next, prepared for an ass chewing because this would be the second situation to—ha—blow up in Roger’s face that he’d yet to appraise Dekker about. The first being DT’s involvement with Lauren Collins, the CIA, her terrorist dead husband, and the case’s connection with the whole Lebanon cover up. Roger hadn’t made that call until this morning when he had proof in hand. He’d purposely kept his mouth closed about Mari’s ordeal as well. He hadn’t wanted any strangers butting in. Mari wasn’t dealing well with strangers since the attack and she was already pushed to the edge.
The general answered.
“Houston,” Roger said. “We have a problem.” Roger went on to explain his current predicament in Neil Dalton’s house and what had transpired with Mari Dalton over the past forty-eight hours. “Bomb squad is on its way.”
“I’ll have men there inside of ten minutes,” General Dekker said. “Meanwhile, shit, Roger, keep your ass intact, will you?”
“Planning on it. But do me a favor, if things don’t go as planned, would you…”
“Son of a bitch. Anything, just tell me. You’re in for one hell of an ass chewing.”
“Would you personally see that Neil’s wife and his baby are protected and provided for? And my men, DT, Rico, Beck, Pecos, see that they end up good. They’ve given their all for the team and deserve no less.”
“Yeah. Make it a double ass chewing. You hear me?”
“Yes, sir.” Roger disconnected and dialed Mari’s number.
“Mr. Wes— Uh, Roger, are you all right? You’ve been gone a long time.”
He cleared his throat, thinking her voice sounded like an angel’s, something every man on death’s doorstep craved to hear. “Yeah, I’m fine. Just…just delayed. I had a few extra minutes and thought I would check on you. Is Holly still with you?”
“Yes. She has been very kind.”
“Good. Humor me a minute. There’s been so much happening that I never got the chance to ask. Tell me about the baby. What your and Neil’s plans were for the little one. Names, hopes, dreams. I’d like to know.” Roger shut his eyes as Mari spoke. The flood of things he’d yearned for from the bottom of his soul, but had never found the time to make happen, was overwhelming considering he might be living the last minutes of his life.
1600 Hours
“What other clues or discrepancies can you point out?” the man called Rash asked as he handed her Bill’s letter. They’d changed their interrogation room from an office to the kitchen, likely hoping the cozier atmosphere would get them better results. The only two things that had changed was the once welcoming scent of coffee now turned her stomach and she’d come to the realization that these men didn’t make a move without calculating it first. Cold. Methodical. Relentless.
All the men surrounding her in her cozy little prison—Rash, two guards outside the front door, maybe more on the grounds, and Jack—were strong, capable, trained fighters. Men whose mere existence made her want to shake them and scream because they were completely equipped in every way to rescue her sons. They had the skill do it. The force of the government behind them. And they were DOING NOTHING to rescue Matt and Mitch and Angie. They just sat here asking HER questions.
She scrubbed her face with her hands, staving off the tears that kept clawing to the surface. Were she to give into them, she wouldn’t be able to stop. Couldn’t these men see she was bleeding all over the floor as if someone had slit her spiritual wrists? Her sons. Dear God, her sons and her best friend were in the hands of a murderer. Angie wouldn’t be in danger now if Lauren hadn’t brought her into this mess.
Several deep breaths helped Lauren gather enough calm to survive—for another few moments at least. She could only think about making it through one minute at a time, telling herself to breathe, telling herself that Matt and Mitch would be all right, telling herself that at any minute she’d be able to hold them in her arms and never let them go.
She had long passed the point of being able to tell the authorities anything new or significant about Bill. And since learning about Matt and Mitch, she’d answered all of their questions the same. “Until you bring me Matt and Mitch, I have nothing else to say.”
THAT was the only relevant or important point at the moment.
Everything around her was filtered through the thick fog of pain that her sons had been taken
, and she couldn’t seem to think or feel about anything else. Even what happened with Jack yesterday and this morning was removed from her by layers of hurt, anger, fear, terror and frustration. She had to get to her sons. She had to get to Andreas Miles, but how?
Sure she understood the global ramifications of the terrorist acts Bill had helped orchestrate. And she realized the CIA, NCS, and every other acronym had to aggressively investigate in order to stop any future attacks, but she didn’t know anything about any of it. Meanwhile her sons were in immediate danger.
That the men were agitated with her was an understatement. Except for Jack, he’d leaned back in his seat with an angry smirk. He didn’t like being held prisoner either and her stubborn resistance either amused him or satisfied his desire to stick it to the bowling ball SOO and the scary Rash McGuire at the moment.
Everything that had happened over the past forty-eight hours plus since Matt and Mitch’s birthday party ran through her mind like a sick reality show, one with a garish billionaire with a chimp and— Oh, hell yes!
She stood up so fast that the blood drained from her brain and her vision wavered a minute before settling out. “I need some fresh air.”
“There’s plenty of air inside,” the SOO said.
Lauren glared at him. “Afraid I’ll leap the deck in a single bound? Race like a speeding bullet?”
“Better call your watch dogs.” Jack rose, opened the French doors, and gestured for her to precede him out the door. “Because I think she could very well do both right now. Why don’t you two smarten up and give her some news about her kids.”
She passed him, praying the idiots would take Jack’s advice. Then she went directly for the steps leading down to the ground. The sun, already low on the horizon wouldn’t be around for long. Nights were cooler in North Carolina, with a hint of fall in the breeze. She turned her face to the brushing wind and the fading sun and blinked back the bite of tears in her eyes. God she was a mess.