Death Wave (28 page)

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Authors: Stephen Coonts

Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Suspense Fiction, #Espionage, #Action & Adventure, #Adventure Fiction, #Terrorism, #Technological, #Dean; Charlie (Fictitious character), #Undercover operations, #Tsunamis, #Canary Islands, #Terrorism - Prevention, #Prevention

BOOK: Death Wave
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“Unless he already has a tail on him, the hotel is the likeliest venue. They’ll find a way to gain access to his room, and kill him there, out of the public eye. They may try to make it look like suicide. That’s how they took out Pender.”
“Then my best bet will be to hang around the lobby, try to hook up with him when he gets back,” Lia decided.
“So where’s your new boyfriend?”
Lia made a face, though she knew Marie couldn’t see it. “In his room, getting ready to go check on his project later this afternoon. At least he didn’t try to share a room with me like Feng did.”
“I don’t know, Lia. This one sounds kind of cute.”
“Marie, you can have him.”
“Missing Charlie?”
Was she that transparent? Her relationship with Charlie Dean was less than deep-serious … but it was more than casual, certainly, and right now she
did
find herself missing him.
“How is he?” she asked. Marie wouldn’t be allowed to say anything about Charlie’s mission, but … “How’s he doing?”
“He’s fine. He’s wrapped up his current op, and—” She broke off what she was saying.
“And what?”
“Nothing. He’s fine.”
She was about to tell me he’s getting ready for another op
, Lia thought. She knew that Charlie and Ilya Akulinin were in South-central Asia, chasing some stolen suitcase nukes believed to be in the hands of the Russian
mafiya
. She frowned. Russian
mafiya
and Islamist extremists. A deadly mix.
Please be okay, Charlie
, she thought.
She wondered if he might be thinking of her.

14

 

APPROACHING USS
LAKE ERIE
GULF OF OMAN
230 MILES SOUTHWEST OF KARACHI
FRIDAY, 1040 HOURS LOCAL TIME

 

Dean was thinking about Lia.
Their service with the Agency didn’t exactly encourage personal relationships, with good reason. Field operators, especially, had to make decisions, hard ones sometimes, that always,
always
kept the mission first. Ilya had made a major error in judgment by letting himself get involved with the Alekseyevna woman. Dean didn’t begrudge his partner a bit of fun or comfort, but it would have been all too easy for Ilya to have made decisions out of concern for Masha’s safety, compromising the needs of the op.
Charlie Dean and Lia rarely deployed together anymore. No one had said anything about it back at the Puzzle Palace, but they knew how he felt about Lia. Rubens knew, certainly.
Damn, he missed her.
He sat on a hard, narrow seat in the back of a U.S. Navy MH-60S helicopter, flying southwest across a night-shrouded ocean. Unofficially known as the Knighthawk because it was replacing the venerable CH-46D Sea Knight, the aircraft flew off both aircraft carriers and smaller naval vessels in a multi-mission role that included “VERTREP” resupply at sea, search-and rescue, and even combat with its add-on “batwing,” or armed helicopter kit. An hour ago, he and Akulinin had boarded the helo at Masroor Air Base, a Pakistani military airfield on the western side of Karachi. The Knighthawk had flown in from USS
Constellation
, somewhere in the Gulf of Oman to the south, refueled, and readied for a flight to USS
Lake Erie
.
Ilya was seated across from him, all but anonymous in his baggy Navy flight suit and helmet. Dean wondered where Lia was right now; the last he’d heard, she was in Berlin tracking down the Chinese connection in this puzzle.
He hoped she was okay.
“So what’s the story?” Akulinin asked, shouting to make himself heard above the pounding roar of the Knighthawk’s rotors. “They bringing in a Black CAT?”
“Don’t know yet,” Dean yelled back. “CAT Bravo is being deployed, but that’s going to take time. We may have to use assets in place.”
Black CAT was the NSA’s highly secret Deep Black Combat Assault Team, a specialized unit drawn from active duty U.S. Navy SEAL and Army Delta personnel. CAT Alpha was based in San Diego; CAT Bravo was at the Marine base at Pax River, Maryland.
Getting a twenty-four-man unit with its equipment from Virginia to the Indian Ocean, however, would take at least twenty-four hours, and possibly more … and that was
after
they got clearance to go in the first place. Rubens had told Dean earlier that they were still waiting to hear from the White House on a go/no-go decision about the
Yakutsk
. He was trying to pre-position the team, but even that required high-level authorization, and from the sound of it, everyone in Washington right now was playing a round of cover-your-ass.
There was a SEAL detachment with the
Constellation
Battle Group, and a forty-man troop—two platoons—was being flown in from Kuwait. If they got the go-ahead, Rubens might well decide to use the CBG—the “assets in place” Dean had mentioned—rather than wait for CAT Bravo to deploy halfway around the world. One way or the other, though, Rubens wanted Dean and Akulinin present when the
Yakutsk
op went down.
The helicopter lurched, dropping a dozen feet, then gave a heavy jolt. The air was rough this morning, the sky overcast and promising rain. When Dean turned to peer through one of the rectangular windows set in the Knighthawk’s port-side sliding door, he saw gray ocean below, and nothing else.
Another half hour or so, he thought, until they reached the
Lake Erie
.
Then the real fun would begin.

HOTEL SOL
PUERTO NAOS
LA PALMA, CANARY ISLANDS
FRIDAY, 1615 HOURS LOCAL TIME

 

Lia DeFrancesca looked up as the tall, slender man entered the hotel lobby. She checked the photograph currently being displayed on her BlackBerry but already knew that it was Vincent Carlylse—pale and wispy hair, glasses, jutting nose.
And he wasn’t alone.
“Target acquired,” she murmured, putting away the BlackBerry. The Art Room had sent her the image—from the dust jacket of a recent book—earlier that morning. The woman with him, though, was going to be a complication. “He’s with someone, a younger woman.”
“A prostitute?” Rockman’s voice shot back.
“Now how the hell am I supposed to know that?”
“I don’t know. Prostitutes carry big, shiny purses, right? How’s she dressed?”
“She looks like another tourist. Slacks, blouse, sunglasses …”
“They used a prostitute to get to Pender in his hotel room,” Rockman told her. “They might be using the same plot here.”
“Wait one. I’m going to make contact.”
As Carlylse and the woman crossed the lobby, the desk clerk called out. “Ah! Señor Carlylse!
Hay un mensaje
…”
Lia emerged from behind one of the tropical plants. The clerk saw her and bowed. “This lady,” he said in English, “wished to speak with you.”
“Mr. Carlylse?” she said, extending a hand. “I’m Diane Lau. It is important that I talk to you.”
“I see,” the writer said, looking her up and down. “Are you a reporter?”
“Not … exactly.” She smiled at the woman. “Is this your wife?”
“Why … uh, yes. Yes, she is.” She looked Spanish, with black hair and olive skin. She might have been a tourist from the mainland, or she could have been a native islander.
“This concerns your books,” Lia told him, “and your collaborator, Jack Pender.”
“Jack? I haven’t seen him in over two months. How is the old son of a bitch?”
“Mr. Carlylse, I need to speak with you alone. Please. It’s important.”
He pulled a keycard from his shirt pocket and handed it to the woman. “Why don’t you go on up to our room, my dear? Room 312. I’ll be along in a moment.”
Without saying a word, the woman took the key, gave Lia a dark look, then walked away, her heeled sandals clicking across the marble floor. She was young, no older than her midtwenties, while Carlylse was easily fifty. She
might
be his wife … but Lia was willing to bet she wasn’t. She glanced around the lobby. There were other people there—a man reading a Spanish newspaper, a young couple watching a television monitor. It was just a little too public here.
“Let’s step outside,” she said.
They stepped onto the outside pool area a moment later. There were several hotel guests here as well, sunbathing on the lounge chairs around the pool, but the wind and the crashing surf would make certain that their conversation remained private. Lia pulled out her wallet and flashed an ID at the man.
“Just what is it you want to tell me, Miss, um, Ms. Lau?” he asked as they walked past the pool toward the safety railing above the cliff. “You know, the State Department ID card you just waved at me had your photograph on it, but the name wasn’t Diane Lau.”
“No, it wasn’t. Congratulations for actually reading an ID when it’s showed to you.” Most people just glanced at a proffered ID without really looking at it. “You asked how Jack Pender is. I’m sorry to have to tell you this. He’s dead.”
“What?”
“He was almost certainly murdered in New Jersey early Wednesday afternoon,” she told him.

Murdered?
Who—”
“We’re working on that, but we have evidence that they may want to kill you as well.”
Carlylse looked thunderstruck. “Who wants us dead? Did we piss someone off? They could always sue us for libel instead …”
“Have you ever written about al-Qaeda, Mr. Carlylse? Or any Islamist terror group?”
“Terrorists?” He shook his head. “This is about
terrorists
? Jack and I … we write about
weird
shit, Ms. Lau. UFOs. Atlantis. Not … not about terrorists!”
“Let’s sit down, Mr. Carlylse,” she said, gesturing toward a vacant poolside table beneath a brightly colored umbrella. “I need to ask you some questions.”

RUBENS’ OFFICE
NSA HEADQUARTERS
FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
FRIDAY, 1225 HOURS EDT

 

“Come in.”
“Mr. Rubens?” Ann Sawyer said, opening the office door. “Miranda Franks.”
“Send her in.”
An older woman walked through the door, carrying a file folder in one hand.
“Miranda. What did you find?” Rubens asked her. Franks was from the NSA’s Research Department.
“We might have found what you were looking for, sir,” she said, handing him the folder. “The book isn’t out yet, but it
will
be in another week or two. We have a call in to the publisher, to try to get some copies. This gives the overview.”
Rubens took the papers and began reading through them. Then he stopped, went back to the beginning, and began reading more carefully.
“Jesus,” he said quietly. “La Palma?”
“Yes, sir. There’s been a little released on the subject already. There was a Discovery Channel show on it last year. The whole idea is
highly
speculative. Most reputable scientists say it would never happen.”
“How sure are they?”
Franks shrugged. “There are impassioned voices on both sides, sir. Like global warming.”
“You’ve certainly earned your pay this week, Miranda. Thank you.”
He reached for his phone.

HOTEL SOL
PUERTO NAOS
LA PALMA, CANARY ISLANDS
FRIDAY, 1634 HOURS LOCAL TIME

 

“So why are you on La Palma?” Lia asked Carlylse.
“A research trip,” he told her. “Jack and I—” He broke off. “Damn, I can’t believe he’s dead!”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Carlylse—and I’m sorry to have sprung it on you like that. But we think the same people might be planning to kill you as well, and it would help us, help us a lot, if you could tell us why.”
“I understand.”
“So why were you here? Research, you said?”
“Yeah. We were planning a new book on the lost continent of Atlantis.”
Lia kept her face impassive. She’d already endured as much of the fabled lost continent as she cared to some months earlier, when she’d been a passenger on board the
Atlantis Queen
, a luxury cruise ship with an Atlantean theme that had been hijacked by terrorists.
Carlylse continued talking, enthusiasm brightening his face. “You see, we, Jack and I, we’re convinced that the Canary Islands were once the southern rim of a larger, single island, perhaps the size of Spain. The northern edge would have been opposite the Pillars of Hercules, just as Plato’s account claimed.”

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