Authors: Dan Hampton
Abbot nodded. “Kane instantly made the Top Ten Most
Wanted, so I've been told in no uncertain terms that my future and his are
joined at the hip.”
Axe chuckled. He'd decided he liked David Abbot. A
bit straight-laced, like most Fibbies, but a smart man.
“I'm going too,” Karen yawned, and the two of them
left the cops to their work.
Once outside, Axe stopped and looked up. Cloudy but
with big enough holes for some stars to shine through. They started for the
parking lot across the street.
“It upsets you, doesn't it?” she suddenly said.
“About John Kane, I mean.”
“Yeah. But not in the way you probably think.”
“What do I think?”
“That he's a psycho. A crazy killer.”
Surprisingly, she stopped and grabbed his arm.
“That's not what I think at all. I think he has an incredibly sad story. And I'm
sorry about his family.”
He looked at her. Those eyes were still sharp but
not with the casual disdain he was used to seeing. Slowly, Axe nodded. “It was a
waste. He wasn't a nice guy, but he was a brave man and a superb pilot. There
wasn't anyone I'd rather go across the line with, and he didn't deserve what
they did to him.”
“Do they deserve what he did to them?”
He sighed and looked at her. Not for the first
time, Karen Shipman was struck by the range of emotions that could play across
this man's face when he allowed it. Right now he looked pensive, and sad.
“I think only he can answer that.”
She gazed at his face and nodded. It was a good
answer. Suddenly she knew what she wanted. The stress of the last few days, the
emotional ups and downs . . . they'd catch Kane or not, but either way
it was over. Gazing up at his face, she realized he was thinking the same
thing.
But she knew he'd never ask.
Smiling slightly, Karen took his arm and turned him
toward her car. “C'mon. My place is closer.”
G
rabbing a galley towel, the Sandman pressed it tightly over the cut on
his leg. The killer had tried for the femoral artery and sliced through the
quadriceps instead. Kane winced.
Good thing, or he'd be
looking at
my
dead face
, he thought.
After a moment, he retrieved the first-aid kit and
pulled off his pants. After cleaning and dressing the wound, he sat back down
and stared at the body. Late thirties or maybe early forties, about six feet
tall and muscular. But not overly so. There were flecks of paint on his hands
but no watch, rings, or other jewelry. Plain brown shorts, now stained with
blood, and no shoes.
That was interesting, since he'd been wearing shoes
earlier when they'd passed on the dock. Might mean a condo nearby. Or a boat.
Getting up carefully, the mercenary then bent over the corpse. Ignoring the
staring eyes, he went through the windbreaker pocketsâno wallet, nothing. But in
the shorts he found several keys on a float chain like sailors used in case they
dropped it in the water. Also a cell phone and a few dollars in cash.
Maybe a boat then.
Straightening up, he cocked his head and listened.
There were normal marina sounds: little waves slapping against hulls and the
creak of rigging. But nothing else. Leaving the corpse as it lay, he took the
keys, switched off the salon lights and let his eyes adjust before softly
stepping up the companionway. At deck level he paused again and waited before
going on. All was quiet.
Retrieving the gun, he sat in the cockpit and
stared down the dock.
If the Americans had somehow stumbled on him they
wouldn't have sent one man. They would've cut off the water exit and surrounded
the marina before sending in a Special Weapons and Tactics team.
No, it wasn't Washington.
Who then? He massaged the bruise on his other thigh
and thought about it. The Israelis certainly had the skill and resources to do
it, but again, how would they have found him? Besides, they still weren't sure
he was alive after the Lebanese operation. Mossad hit teams also traveled in
pairs, and this guy was alone.
He looked at the weapon. A 9mm Beretta with an
Osprey silencer. Good choice. He turned it over. The silencer would work with
almost any pistol, and a 9mm, unlike most small-caliber silenced weapons, packed
a lethal punch. The Sandman picked up the cell phone and tapped on the screen,
lighting it up. “Contacts” was empty so he looked at the “Recents” menu. Two
calls. Both 202 area codes.
Washington, D.C.
Dialing with his own phone he blocked the first
number and called it.
“Welcome to the Embassy of the People's Republic of
China . . . our normal hours of operation areâ”
He clicked it off. So.
But how?
He looked out over the water at the well-lit
houses. Even Rama Buradi didn't know his location. No one knew. But somehow they
did. Then, idly turning the phone over in his hand and thinking about
technology, he knew how they'd done it.
The data cartridge. It had to beâ it was the only
thing he had with him from China. American DTCs had no tracking capability and
why would they? But a paranoid place like China? Yes, he nodded, it was entirely
possible that some sort of chip was embedded in that case. In that
case . . .
He sat up, fully alert now. In that case they knew
exactly where he was! No one could've known when he'd come back to his boat so
undoubtedly there were routine check-in times. Every two hours? Six hours? Who
knew? So how much time did he have before a housekeeping call was missed, and
what would happen next? The Chinese couldn't very well call the Americans for
help.
Or could they?
Terrorism plots, money laundering . . .
there were any number of plausible stories that would enlist Washington's help.
And they would, he suddenly realized. The Chinese would rather see him dead than
on the loose with their data cartridge. They'd get it back tooâintact. Bribes,
favors . . . there were lots of ways to do that and the Chinese were
masters of the subtle approach.
That thought overrode the pain in his legs and he
stood up. If the assassin had a boat, it would be in a slip with a clear view of
the
Wanderer
. Studying the available boats, he
decided on three. Flicking the safety on, he tucked the pistol into his
waistband and eased stiffly onto the dock.
Limping slowly down the dock, the Sandman stopped
next to a big cruiser on the left side. The lines were slack and covered with
dark fungus, so it hadn't been moved in a long while. Climbing over the side, he
tried the key anyway on the cabin door and it didn't fit. From the shadows, he
stared across at a sailboat, a forty-two-foot Beneteau called
Bluefin
. No lights were showing and the slip next to
it was empty, giving a clear view to the end of the dock and the
Wanderer.
The boat was clean and in good repair, so he could
see no reason for the cans of paint in the cockpit. Unless a man needed an
excuse to work outside for hours without attracting attention. That would also
explain the stains on the dead assassin's fingers.
And the key fit.
Quickly searching the boat, he found no other
clues, just a shaving kit and a small bag of clean clothes. Locking the cabin,
he stood on the dock beside the other boat thinking of his options. To leave
without killing Sturgis was the easiest solution. He could disappear out into
the Atlantic after clearing the breakwater right here. That was the reason he'd
chosen the Salt Ponds over more sheltered marinas inland.
But to let Sturgis go on living was a repugnant
thought. The man was a pig and deserved the death the Sandman had planned. He
didn't like changing plans, especially plans that involved prior intelligence.
But the ability to adapt was a key reason he was still alive and successful.
Deciding then, the mercenary walked back to his boat, packed one of his bags
with clean clothes, some canned food from the galley and both sets of IDs. The
DTC he stared at for a long moment, then dropped overboard. The salt water would
leak in immediately and destroy the electronics. Walking back to the
Bluefin
, he transferred his gearâjust in case.
The mercenary stepped back aboard
Wanderer
and stared down the channel toward the bay.
He figured at least six, but no more than twelve, hours before the Chinese acted
in response to their missing assassin. That might mean another hit team or it
might mean American involvement. Either way, he had to leave.
Now.
“M
mnnnn . . .” Karen Shipman stretched, arms over her head and toes curled. Doug Truax rolled up on one elbow and watched, a smile on his face. Her body was as slender as he'd imagined but her breasts were much fuller. Not big, just full. Perfect, in fact. She saw his teeth gleam and smiled back.
“What're you so happy about?”
“What do
you
think?”
She stretched again. “I think it took you too long to make a move.”
“I didn'tâyou did.”
“Oh yeah . . . well, someone has to be the man.”
He grabbed her then and tickled, enjoying the warm, musky smell of her skin. She ended up on top, gripping his ribs with very strong legs and dangling her hair in his face. Halfheartedly thrashing, he gave up and they both laughed.
Her seduction of him had been straightforward. She'd cooked him a meal and suggested he could use a shower. When he came out, his clothes were gone and she was lying in bedânaked.
Well, Axe chuckled to himself, even I could take that hint. It was long overdue and her sexual appetite had gone a long way to easing his despondency over Stormy Kane.
“What's funny?” Karen breathed out, her lips brushing his cheek.
“I was thinking of the last time I saw your toes curl.”
She laughed, deep back in her throat, and raised her head high enough to look him in the eye. “Can you make them curl again?”
So he did.
T
he Sandman had rightly concluded that the Chinese were behind the attempted hit. He'd also been correct about periodic reporting times but he was wrong about the frequency. He'd figured on at least six hours when, in fact, he had less than two.
Apparently Beijing was extremely angry, vengeful, and paranoidâin that orderâregarding the data cartridge. So when their contract killer missed his prearranged 2200 check-in, the case officer was to dutifully wait one hour, then inform his superior. This man, a deputy attaché named Xu Fengzhi, worked for Office of Cultural Affairs and was, like most of his kind, an intelligence officer. Colonel Xu Fengzhi in fact, worked for the Ministry of State Securityâ Office of Counterintelligence, and knew all about the mercenary. He was leading the team that had been deployed to find the mercenary and bring back the DTC.
There
was
a tracking device in the cartridge. A tiny, flat track chip that gave a GPS location every eight hours. Certainly not foolproof against a moving target and, as they'd discovered, not completely consistent. But they'd inserted it with the idea of tracking a defecting jet fighter, not a man; consequently, they'd missed the Sandman in Jordan by hours. Sometimes the signal was too ambiguous to traceâthey'd lost the signal entirely in the British Virgin Islands and hadn't re-acquired it until the Sandman left the cartridge on his boat in Virginia. Two days of stationary data had allowed them to get a fix on the location in the Salt Ponds marina.
The contractor was a specialist they'd used on two other occasions. A former Royal Dutch Marine, he'd found the boat empty and decided that the best way to watch a boat was on a boat. So the embassy had purchased the Beneteau and the assassin had settled down to wait. In fact, he was to check in every four hours until a sighting was made, then he was to confirm it and retrieve the DTC by any means necessary. Both the Chinese colonel and the contractor had understood that the Sandman was to be eliminated.
Now, with the check-in an hour overdue, Colonel Fengzhi was forced to conclude that the Dutchman had failed. Sighing, knowing what he had to do and dreading it, he picked up the phone and dialed a number that was answered on the second ring.
“FBI Critical Incident Response Group. How may I direct your call?”
T
he chimes on her cell phone woke them both. Axe yawned, pulled his arm out from under her neck and turned over.
“Shipman,” she managed to answer, then listened.
He was just dozing off again, trying not to think about another lover calling her at . . . 1130. Is that all it was? Plenty of time to go back to sleep. He reached for her and found a warm buttock. Plenty of time forâ
“You've gotta be shitting me!”
He smiled. She rarely swore and he knew she'd picked up that expression from him but he didn't smile when she swatted his hand away and poked him. Hard.
“NoâI understand. I'll get dressed and be right there.” He sat up and stared at her dark outline. “I . . . I'm not exactly sure where he is . . . Yes, I'll find him and let him know. Thanks.”
“What's up?”
“We are,” she said and slipped out of bed. For a brief instant he saw her naked, beautiful silhouette in the weak moonlight. “C'mon.”
Fumbling for his pants and socks, Axe muttered something about government bullshit and she flipped on the bedside lamp. “Not bullshit this timeâthat was Abbot.”
“So what?”
“So,” Karen pulled a white cable-knit sweater over her head and buttoned her jeans. “The Fibbies got a call, get this, from the Chinese embassy. They claim our mercenary is a deranged madman who destroyed State property and is planning a mass act of terror right here in Virginia.”
“Why would they tell us that? What do they care?”
“Ah,” she said, gathering up her keys and various pieces of plastic IDs, “that's the same question the FBI is askingâprivately. Publicly, they have to act. And they are.”
Axe was fully awake now and tugged on his shoes as the implication of that statement set in. “You mean . . . we know where he is?”
“The Coast Guard and the FBI Special Ops Unit in Norfolk are both on the way to get him at the Salt Ponds Marina.” She turned at the door and held it open. “Right here in Hampton Roads.”
W
anderer
was a half mile short of Plumtree Island at 1130, about to turn into Back River, when the Sandman saw the lights. Switching on the autopilot, he tugged on the M949 night-vision goggles that'd he'd purchased right here in Newport News. Made by ANVIS, especially for aviators, they were only Generation II goggles but more than adequate for his needs.
Staring toward the flashing red lights off the starboard side, he twiddled the focusing knobs and a small speedboat jumped into view. Enclosed glass cabin festooned with antennas . . . a Coast Guard Response Boat, without a doubt. He raised the goggles and watched. There was a Coastie station over near Cape Charles on the western shore and they could be out after anything.
Spinning the wheel, he lowered the goggles and brought the
Wanderer
around to the middle of the Back River, called the Gut. Looking back over his shoulder, he'd almost decided it was a false alarm, when the boat visibly altered course directly toward him.
Swearing softly, the Sandman figured him to be about eight miles awayâmaybe fifteen minutesâand he instantly spun the wheel hard to starboard, bringing the
Wanderer
all the way around heading southeast into the bay. He switched the autopilot back on and dropped down into the main salon for his diving gear.
Already dressed in the black wetsuit, he slipped on the booties and dive knife, then carried the BCD up to the cockpit. Returning to the salon, he then pulled the assassin's stiffening body up the ladder and dumped it next to the gear. On his last trip down, the mercenary opened all the hatches and retrieved the flare detonator, thanking his stars he hadn't delayed making the thing.
Unsheathing the machete from under the wheel he rolled the corpse on its back. Prying open the mouth with his foot, he took careful aim then chopped down hard till the blade stuck. Leveraging it back and forth, he felt the jawbone break. Using his hands, Sandman pulled and twisted until the jaw came away. Flinging the grisly object overboard, he sat back to catch his breath. No dental records, at least.
Glancing back he now estimated the Coastie about five miles distant. Time enough. Correcting the Wanderer's course a bit closer to shore, he caught another flash. There! Coming around York Pointe about seven miles away was a set of lights from another boat.
No doubt now.
Staring a moment, he opened the access hatch to the engine compartment. Lowering the body down by its armpits, he ignored the shattered head and dropped the corpse on the deck next to the extra five-gallon fuel tank. When the detonator package was dropped down the diesel vent, it would fall directly into the scavenge tank. The flare would detonate both the fumes and the twelve-gauge shells, causing a massive and catastrophic explosion in the engine bay that would destroy the rest of the boat. The body, if found, would be nearly impossible to identify and they would assume Kane was dead.
Hopefully.
Pulling himself back up, he shut the cockpit hatch and looked aft. Nothing. Donning the goggles, he slowly swept back and forth across the bay and . . . there. The boat from Cape Charles was three miles off his stern to the west. Looking north, he found the other boat a bit farther . . . perhaps five miles. Both without lights. Interesting. Who, he wondered told them to go “midnight”âto run without lights?
Tilting his head back, the Sandman methodically scanned the sky off the bow. There was the usual commercial traffic, but nothing obvious from the south, where, he reasoned, any air support would come from. Little Creek Amphibious Base and what, he wondered? Not conventional police. They wouldn't have had the clout to set an operation in motion this fast. Had to be the FBI and, if so, they'd use a Special Operations unit with tactical helicopters.
If they were there he couldn't see them. Usually their exhaust showed up very well but it didn't matter. Removing the NVGs, he dropped them into a mesh diving bag and zipped that into a waterproof case along with the remaining Irish and Lebanese identification documents. The Tobin and Tyler IDs he left in the salonâif found, they'd give credence to his âdeath.'
Throttling full forward, the mercenary felt
Wanderer
surge ahead and he turned the scuba tank's airflow valve on. Flipping the BCD over his head, he dropped it into place, adjusted the regulators and buckled up.
Clipping the waterproof case to his harness and slipping into the fins, the Sandman sat on the cockpit cushions and wiped his mask. Pulling it down so it dangled around his neck, he took a long look off the starboard side and twisted the compass heading ring on his dive watch to 200 degrees. About a mile and half of the closest shoreline was the Grandview Nature Preserve and just south of it was a row of brightly lit condos. Not a difficult navigation problem but it was still over a mile's swim to shore.
Taking a last look around, the Sandman picked up the detonator and removed the cap. In one smooth movement he pulled the tab, dropped it into the starboard scavenge port and dove over the side.
Closing his eyes as he hit the water, the mercenary began powerful dolphin kicks down and away from the boat. Clearing his ears for the first time, he figured he'd gone at least fifteen feet down and maybe twenty yards laterally. Continuing to kick, he let the regulator fall from his mouth and pulled the mask up from his neck. Sweeping the trailing regulator back up, Kane flipped onto his back and forced the compressed air up into the mask to clear it.
Suddenly, the dark water turned bright orange and for few seconds the sea lit up all around him. Immediately rolling away, he kicked straight up for the surface, knowing that the shock wave would radiate down from the explosion. The flash died rapidly to a reddish glow and darkness closed in again. Neck craned back, he watched his little silver bubbles begin splitting apart and he stopped. Maybe ten feet under, he thought, and looked back at the dying light. And thirty yards away.
Not far enough.
Jackknifing down again, he kicked for the bottom and held his dive watch to his face. Peering at the luminescent compass rose, the Sandman adjusted his heading, noted the time and methodically kicked away into the blackness.
“R
epeat that!” David Abbot snapped into the phone, then listened, the frown deepening across his face. Axe and Karen Shipman had been joined by Jolly Lee in the Langley Command Post. Everyone was keyed up and watching the agent closely. He wasn't happy.
“What about a body?”
Axe glanced sideways at Karen and she raised an eyebrow. Her hair was neatly combed back and tied and even in a sweater with jeans she looked like a major. He, on the other hand, felt grubby and bleary-eyed, and smelled like sex.
“Okay,” Abbot sighed. “Update me in half an hour.” He clicked off and sat down, facing them. “The boat they were tracking blew up. The SWAT team was airborne and maybe ten minutes out . . . the Coast Guard had two boats within several miles and they saw the whole thing.” He jerked a thumb over his shoulder to the east. “Right out there near the entrance to Back Bay.”
“So he was coming for Langley.”
The agent shrugged. “Who knows? It's gone. They're collecting pieces.”
Convenient, Axe thought. An explosion at sea. Hard to gather much forensic evidence from that. He met Karen Shipman's eyes and saw she thought the same thing.
“Damn Coasties had their lights on,” Abbot went on. “The tactical unit screamed at them and they shut off but not before they were seen. Our mercenary tried to make a run for it.”
“And the explosion?” she asked.
He shrugged. “No idea. Diesel engines can get over pressurized pretty easily. We'll have to wait and see.” Abbot's phone buzzed and he picked it up. “Whatcha got?” He stood and walked away a few steps.
“Kane's done this before,” she said quietly.
“Whatâblown himself up in a boat?”
“A death.”
Axe shook his head. “He had God knows how many months to plan that airplane trick. He had no idea what was going to happen tonight.”
“How do you know
what
he knows? This is a very, very clever man.”