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Omnibus.The.Sea.Witch.2012

Page 17

by Coonts, Stephen


  “I’ll tell you all about it sometime.”

  “So when you coming home?”

  “One of these days. I’m still vacationing as hard as I can.”

  “Kiss her once for me,” Bill Wiley said.

  At the Capetown library I got into old copies of the International Herald Tribune, published in Paris. I finally found what I was looking for on microfiche: a complete list of the passengers who died twelve years ago on the Air France flight that blew up over Niger. Colonel Giraud and his wife were not on the list.

  Well, the light finally began to dawn.

  I got one of the librarians to help me get on the Internet. What I was interested in were lists of U.S. Air Force Academy graduates, say from five to ten years ago.

  I read the names until I thought my eyeballs were going to fall out. No Julie Giraud.

  I’d been had. Julie was either a CIA or French agent. French, I suspected, and the Americans agreed to let her steal a plane.

  As I sat and thought about it, I realized that I didn’t ever meet old Colonel Giraud’s kids. Not to the best of my recollection. Maybe he had a couple of daughters, maybe he didn’t, but damned if I could remember.

  What had she said? That the colonel said I was the best Marine in the corps?

  Stupid ol’ Charlie Dean. I ate that shit with a spoon. The best Marine in the corps! So I helped her “steal” a plane and kill a bunch of convicted terrorists that Libya would never extradite.

  If we were caught I would have sworn under torture, until my very last breath, that no government was involved, that the people planning this escapade were a U.S. Air Force deserter and a former Marine she hired.

  I loafed around Capetown for a few more days, paid my bills, thanked the widow lady, gave her a cock-and-bull story about my sick kids in America, and took a plane to New York. At JFK I got on another plane to Los Angeles.

  When the taxi dropped me at my apartment, I stopped by the super’s office and paid the rent. The battery in my car had enough juice to start the motor on the very first crank.

  I almost didn’t recognize Candy. He had even gotten a haircut and wore clean jeans. “Hey, Mr. Dean,” Candy said after we had been chatting awhile. “Thanks for giving me another chance. You’ve taught me a lot.”

  “We all make mistakes,” I told him. If only he knew how true that was.

 

 

 


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