Any Means Necessary: A Luke Stone Thriller (Book 1)
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“Jesus. Why are they doing that?”
“We’re not sure, sir. The timing seems related to the Iranian airspace incursion, but the chatter we’re picking up suggests some confusion at the Russian Central Command. We don’t believe those silos have gone rogue, but they do seem to have misunderstood their orders.”
Ryan looked at Ed. It was typical of the Russians to have their heads that far up their own asses. What were they going to do, start a nuclear war over Iran? He had to admit, though, there was something exhilarating about all this brinksmanship. He had been President less than eight hours.
Ryan addressed the voice. “Do we have missiles that target those Russian silos?”
“Yes sir, we do.”
“Then ramp those missiles up to combat readiness, and make sure the Russians know about it. They need to get their boys in line. If we show ’em our guns, maybe they’ll see we mean business over here.”
The voice on the other end hesitated. “Yes sir.”
“Anything else?”
“Not at this moment, sir.”
Ryan turned off the phone. It was very quiet in the room. He looked at Ed Graves.
“Thoughts?”
Ed’s hands rested on his knees. They were gnarled and liver-spotted hands, like old tree trunks. Ed’s face was craggy and lined. His nose was bulbous, and crisscrossed with broken blood vessels. But his eyes were like twin laser beams.
“It’s silly,” he said, “to send two planes across the border. Why are we testing them? We know what they can do, and we know what we can do. They attacked us first, right? They killed our President.”
Here, Ed made an outrageous wink. Bill was almost embarrassed for him.
“If that’s true, then we need to hit them and hit them hard. We need to retaliate. We have the Fifth Fleet in the Persian Gulf. Let’s take out the Iranian guns in the Strait of Hormuz. We don’t want to give them a chance to lay mines there. Just take them out. Poof. Then, send bombers all the way to Tehran. Give them a full complement of fighter escorts so they get there. I would start all of this today.”
Bill nodded. “They’ll have to fight their way to Tehran.”
Ed shrugged. “Our boys are the best. And isn’t that what we pay them to do? Fight? A week or two of heavy bombing in the city center and I think our whole Iranian problem will go away.”
“What about the Russians?”
Ed Graves seemed to think about that for a moment. Finally, he shrugged. “Fuck the Russians.”
A knock came at the heavy oak door.
“Come in.”
The door opened. A young aide came in. His name was Ben, and he had been on Ryan’s staff for a couple of years. He was an energetic kid in general, but today he seemed positively electric with excitement. The whole team was moving up in the world.
“What can I do for you, Ben?’
“Sir, we just got an identification on the woman found in the SUV that blew up and went into the Tidal Basin last night. You asked me to report to you when I heard anything about that.”
“Yes, I did. What have you got?”
“Dental records indicate it was a woman named Liza Redeemer.”
Those were not words Bill Ryan wanted to hear. “Redeemer?”
“Yes sir. She was a 33-year-old vagrant. Long history of mental illness, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, the works. She had her name legally changed from Elizabeth Reid when she turned 18. There’s no indication here what she was doing in that car.”
Ryan nodded. “Okay. Thank you.”
When the aide went out, Ryan looked at Ed Graves again.
“We need to get Don Morris on the phone.”
Chapter 56
7:15 a.m.
Municipal Detention Center - Washington, DC
“How did you sleep?”
“Like a baby. I was in the lockup with about six other men. Nice guys. I never knew how many innocent people there were in jail.”
Luke stepped into the sunlight outside the detention center. It was bright out. His hands were still cuffed. He was led along by Don Morris. He, Don, and two agents Luke didn’t recognize walked down the steps and headed toward a late-model black sedan parked up the street.
“That was quite a trick you pulled. They had to use dental records to figure out it wasn’t Susan Hopkins in the car with you. And that was barely an hour ago. They still don’t know who it is.”
“Oh?” Luke said. “I could have sworn it was Susan.”
Don stopped walking. He looked at Luke. “Cut the shit, Stone. I’m not in a funny mood today, and I didn’t think you would be, either. You’re going to talk, and you’re going to tell us where Susan is. You realize that, don’t you? Oh, I know. Luke Stone is unbreakable. It’ll take days to get the information from him. Personally, I don’t think so. I think you’re going to talk very fast. We’ve got some leverage on you, in case you’ve forgotten.”
“You said you would never hurt my family.”
Don smiled. “I won’t. Your family is alive and doing fine. You need to know that. But we need to know where Susan Hopkins is.”
“Don, Susan is the President of the United States.”
He shook his head. “You don’t decide that, Stone.”
“No. The Constitution does.”
Don made a sound. It was something like a harrumph. He looked at the two agents with them. “Can you men give Agent Stone and me some time alone?”
The two men walked perhaps thirty yards away. They stood near a parked car and stared at Luke and Don. They didn’t pretend to do anything but watch. Luke supposed they must know that he could kill Don with his arms and his legs tied.
Don leaned back against the black sedan. “Son, what are you doing?”
Luke stared at him. He had known Don a long time, and yet, had never really known him at all. “What are you doing, Don? What are you doing? I’m not the one who just helped engineer a coup.”
Don shook his head. “Luke, whatever you prefer to call it, it’s already over. Things are moving forward, not backwards. Bill Ryan is President of the United States, whether you like it or not. Your family is in jeopardy, but they’re not dead, and they haven’t been hurt. You can get them returned to you. You just need to play ball here a little. I can’t even believe your reluctance. You’re not holding any cards.”
“What’s in this for you, Don? Surely you didn’t do this just because Bill Ryan is your old college buddy.”
Don nodded. “Okay. Fair question. If it helps you do the right thing, I’ll answer it. I’m tired of America being weak. I’m tired of America being hesitant. That kind of thing was never in my training as a military man, and frankly, it isn’t in my DNA. I can’t stand it. And I’m tired of begging for resources to keep the Special Response Team afloat year after year. We were doing great work, you saw it, you were part of it, and the whole thing was going down the tubes.”
Luke was beginning to see. “So Bill Ryan is going to give you the budget you want for SRT?”
Don shook his head. “No. Bill Ryan is a figurehead, as I’m sure you’re aware. There are other powers at work here. And they would like to see America restored to greatness, just as I would, and you would. So this afternoon, Bill’s going to announce that I’m his nominee for Secretary of Defense.”
Luke stared at him. He thought back to the night before, David Delliger taking a bullet at the 50-yard line inside the Naval Academy football stadium.
“You sure you want that job? I was with your predecessor last night. His tenure ended pretty abruptly.”
Don smiled. “Dave wasn’t a good pick for that job. He was a military man, but he wasn’t a warrior. These times call for a warrior. I’m sure you of all people can understand that.”
“Don, if we go to war with Iran, the Russians…”
Don raised a hand. “Luke, don’t lecture me about the Russians. I was killing Russians when you were shitting in your diapers. I know what the Russians are going to do. Nothing, that�
��s what. They’re going to stand by and watch. Now tell me where Susan is. Please.”
Luke didn’t say anything.
“Rebecca and Gunner are going to die today, Luke. That’s what is going to happen. And you won’t have anyone to blame but yourself.”
Luke turned his head away. “You’re a traitor, Don.”
Up the street, in the direction Luke was looking, something strange was happening. The two agents were walking quickly back this way. Behind them, a group of men in suits and wearing sunglasses followed them along on the sidewalk. Luke counted seven men. He turned and looked in the other direction. Maybe they were all headed somewhere else.
No. Another half a dozen were coming up the sidewalk the other way. Luke glanced back at the agents who were with Don. Suddenly, they bolted. One darted into the street. He ran halfway across before a car hit him. The car screeched to a halt. The agent rolled over the hood and fell to the street. Three men ran toward him, guns drawn.
The other agent ran across a lawn toward a parking lot. Five men chased him.
Three men approached Don and Luke from one side, two from the other side. They drew their weapons. A man held up a badge.
“Secret Service,” he said.
They put Don on the ground, face first. They took his guns and cuffed him.
“What are the charges?” Don said.
“Where to even begin?” the man said. “Treason. Domestic terrorism. Murder. Kidnapping. Conspiracy. Those will do for a start.”
They cut Luke’s wrists free. He massaged his wrists, getting the feeling back in them. “Some of those sound like death penalty offenses.”
The Secret Service man nodded. “They are.”
“My wife and son have been kidnapped. This man knows where they are.”
Luke stared down at Don.
“If I were you,” he said, “I’d start talking, and fast.”
Chapter 57
7:45 a.m.
United States Naval Observatory - Washington, DC
A black SUV pulled up the circular driveway in front of the Vice President’s official residence.
The back door opened, and Susan Hopkins stepped out. The Iraqi doctor had set her arm and her wrist in the night. Her face was beyond his abilities—he had merely put a topical painkiller on the burns so she could sleep.
She had talked to Pierre just fifteen minutes ago, after she was assured it was safe to do so. He had cried, and she almost did, too. She still hadn’t talked to the girls.
She walked up the path toward the big white house wearing full body armor under her suit. Chuck Berg walked with her, as did Walter Brenna.
The house was beautiful, and it had never looked more beautiful than it did this morning. She loved that house. It had been her residence for the past five years.
They entered the foyer.
About a dozen men in Army dress blues and business suits stared at them as they came in. She recognized a few of the men. They were Secret Service agents. All Ryan’s people.
They stared at her as if they had seen a ghost. One of the men shook hands with Chuck Berg. A low murmur went through the crowd.
“Can I help you?” a man in Army dress said.
“I’m here to speak with William Ryan.”
“Who may I say is calling?”
“My name is Susan Hopkins, and I’m the President of the United States.”
More people came into the foyer. Many of them were tall men in blue suits, with guns strapped under their jackets. A small woman in a maid’s uniform walked in. Susan recognized her. Her name was Esmeralda, but people called her Esa, and she had worked in this house for more than twenty years. She seemed puzzled. She looked at Susan as if Susan were one of those Catholic miracles that believers sometimes flocked to. She could have been a weeping Virgin Mary in the sheer face of a stone cliff.
“Mrs. Hopkins?” Esa said. “You’re alive.”
She walked up to Susan as if in a dream. The two women hugged. It was tentative as first, but then Susan pulled Esa closer. Abruptly, Susan started to cry. It felt so good, so good, to be here with this woman, at this moment.
“I am,” she said. “I’m alive.”
She closed her eyes and let the hug go on.
“You’re not the President,” a booming voice said.
Susan let Esa go. Coming down the grand marble staircase was none other than William Ryan. He looked hale and hearty, fit and energized, much younger than his years. “I am the President. I took the Oath of Office last night. It was administered by the Chief Justice of the United States.”
He reached the bottom of the stairs and walked directly to Susan. He was very tall. He towered over her. She looked up at him. Chuck Berg was on her right. Walter Brenna was on her left.
“Susan,” Ryan said. “It’s nice to see you. But I’m going to have to ask you to leave. You’ve obviously been under terrible strain during the past twenty-four hours. I’m pretty sure you’re in no frame of mind to take the Oath.”
A crush of military men and Secret Service agents had gathered in the foyer now.
Ryan gestured to a couple of military men near him. “Will you escort Mrs. Hopkins out, please? We have work to do here.”
Susan pointed at him. “Arrest that man. For treason, and for the murder of President Thomas Hayes, and more than three hundred other people.”
There was a moment when she didn’t know what would happen. Everyone simply stood and stared. Somewhere, a clock ticked. Three seconds, four seconds.
Five.
Chuck Berg stepped forward. He took a pair of steel handcuffs from his belt.
He moved toward Ryan. “Sir, you have the right to remain silent.”
An Army man stepped in front of him. Chuck pushed the man. Suddenly, there was pushing and shoving everywhere. Susan was jostled as big strong men moved each other back and forth. Then she felt a sharp pain.
Someone had stepped on her foot.
The Secret Service agents outnumbered the military three to one. All of the Secret Service men upheld their jobs.
In the end, Ryan fought them. He went down swinging, but down was where he went. In seconds, he was face first on the polished wooden floor, two Secret Service men pressing him down.
The Secret Service stood Ryan to his feet. His face was red from exertion. He glared at Susan as they led him toward the front door.
“I am the President of the United States!” he shouted.
Susan waved a dismissive hand at him.
“Get out of my house,” she said.
*
Pierre and the girls were flying in to see her. The thought of it gave her hope, and happiness. She needed a little of that.
This being President was going to be a tall order. The conspiracy against Thomas Hayes had been far-reaching. At this juncture, it was impossible to know everyone who was involved, and what branches of government they were in. For the foreseeable future, the domestic threat level against her would be considered the highest level. She would wear body armor during all public appearances.
The problems in the Middle East would not go away overnight, but maybe she was already making some headway. She had spoken briefly today with the President of Russia. He told her, through an interpreter, that he was very glad to hear she was alive. He assured her they could work together to smooth out the problems with Iran.
But there were even darker problems on the horizon. In the afternoon, she sat in her office with two visitors.
“I want to keep funding the Special Response Team,” she said. “But I’d like to take it out from under the umbrella of the FBI.”
Luke Stone stood at the window, staring out at the grounds of the Naval Observatory. “Whose umbrella would you like to put it under?”
She shrugged. “It could be a branch of the Secret Service. Or it could simply be its own organization that reports directly to the President.”
“That sounds nice,” Ed Newsam said. He sat in a wheelchair with his bad
leg up on the desk. He held an unlit cigar in his hands. “I like the ring of that.”
Stone turned around. “Until yesterday, I was on an extended leave of absence. I don’t know if I even work for the Special Response Team anymore.”
“That’s funny,” she said. “I kind of had you tapped for Director. I was wrong about you, Stone. That’s what I’m telling you. In the past twenty-four hours, you’ve saved my life again and again.”
Stone shook his head. “I need to find my wife and son. The plot has unraveled, and the conspirators don’t need them anymore. Every minute that passes…”
Susan nodded. “I know. We’ve got every available resource working on finding them. I promise you we will find them. But in the meantime, I can’t have you walk away from the SRT. There are only a handful of people I can trust right now, and you two are at the top of that list.”
She walked to the door of the office and looked outside. Chuck Berg and another agent were ten feet away. She quietly closed the door.
She turned back to Stone and Newsam.
“The truth is I have another urgent mission for you. I only heard about it in the past half hour. Unfortunately, our enemies see us in a weakened position, and they’re taking this moment to strike. The next forty-eight hours will be crucial.”
Now Stone and Newsam stared at each other.
“Come on, guys. I need you.”
“Do we even get to know what it is?”
She nodded. “I’m about to tell you. But I want you to say yes first.”
A long moment passed.
“Yes.”
*
Luke walked the manicured grounds of the Naval Observatory toward the parking lot. Next to him, Ed Newsam rolled his wheelchair along, his massive arms giving the wheels a spin every once in a while.
“Are you ever going to get out of that thing?” Luke said. “I feel like you’re slacking off. Can’t you do physical therapy or something?”
“Stone, I’ve only been in it since last night.”