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Authors: Ethan Jones

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BOOK: Fog of War (Justin Hall # 3)
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“I hope it’s a conclusive match. She needs closure.”

“Yeah. It would be good for her. Allow her to move forward with her life.”

“And Romanov?”

Justin tried to read McClain’s face. Unable to do so, he asked, “What about him?”

“Where do you two stand now?”

“We’re on good terms. He came through with information that helped us get rid of Adams. We’ve settled our differences.”

“That’s good. As much as I dislike saying this, we may need him, well, his influence, on another matter.”

McClain pulled open a drawer and retrieved a black folder.

“Is this it?” Justin asked.

“No, this is your next assignment. Unrelated to Romanov or this previous mission.”

“How urgent is it?”

“Utmost.”

“Where is it?”

“Somewhere hot, very hot.”

“When do I need to leave?”

“Right away.”

“Alone?”

“Yes.”

Justin smiled. “I’m ready,” he said and reached over for the file with his new assignment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Author’s Note

 

I hope you enjoyed FOG OF WAR. I would love to hear your thoughts about this book, and you can always reach me at
[email protected]
. I promise to answer all e-mails.

 

Your opinions are truly important, and they can inform other readers about this book and my style of writing. Please take a minute and post a review of FOG OF WAR on Amazon at this link
http://amzn.to/1IY9Kyt
or on your other favorite book retailer.

 

Join my Loyal Readers’ List at this link:
http://eepurl.com/HIG7r
to receive the second thriller in this series, TRIPOLI’S TARGET, for FREE. You will also receive updates on new book releases, special deals, and promotions.

 

My blog at
http://ethanjonesbooks.wordpress.com
is the place to learn about my future works. You can also follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/SpyAuthorEJones
or find me on my Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/Author-Ethan-Jones-496274310537554/

 

Enjoy my other works here:

 

The Interrogation: A Justin Hall Story
- FREE

 

Arctic Wargame (Justin Hall # 1)
- FREE

 

Tripoli’s Target (Justin Hall # 2)
- $2.99 until February 29

 

Fog of War (Justin Hall # 3)

 

Justin Hall Series Collectors' Edition # 1
- $5.99 until February 29

 

Double Agents (Justin Hall # 4)
- $4.99 until February 29

 

The Diplomat: A Justin Hall Novella (Justin Hall # 4.5)
- $2.99 until February 29

 

Rogue Agents (Justin Hall # 5)
- $4.99 until February 29

 

Shadow Agents (Justin Hall # 6)
- $4.99 until February 29

 

Homeland (Justin Hall #7)
- $4.99 until February 29

 

The Saudi Strategy (Justin Hall #8)
- $4.99 until February 29

 

Priority Target (Carrie O’Connor # 1)
- $2.99 until February 29

 

Codename: Makarov (Carrie O’Connor # 2)
-
out on April 12, 2016

 

The Secret Affair (Jennifer Morgan # 1)
- $2.99 until February 29

 

The Last Confession
- $0.99 until February 29

 

Burying the Truth
- $0.99 until February 29

 

Table of Contents

Front Page

Title Page

Also by Ethan Jones

Praise for Fog of War

Dedication

Epigraph

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Epilogue

Acknowledgements

Copyright

Bonus content from Double Agents

Prologue

Chapter One

 

 

 

 

 

This work would have not been possible without the great support of my wife and son. I would also like to thank Claude Dancourt, Ty Hutchinson and Kenneth Teicher for
their helpful suggestions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FOG OF WAR. Copyright © 2013 by Ethan Jones

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Cover design: Kim Killion

First edition: June 2013

 

 

Bonus content from Double Agents

 

Please enjoy the prologue and the first chapter of Double Agents, the fourth novel in the Justin Hall series.

 

The CIA learns that a powerful Chechen terrorist group is plotting a major attack on US soil just as the same group assassinates Russia’s Minister of Defense in Moscow. The CIA and the FSB, Russia’s internal security service, deeply distrust each other, crippling any CIA efforts to unravel this plot.

 

Justin Hall and his partner, Carrie O’Conner—two of the Canadian Intelligence Service best operatives—are dispatched to Moscow to secure the FSB’s intelligence, which will allow them to discover the plotters. But an FSB spy and a CIA double agent are dead set against this mission.

 

Justin and Carrie find themselves on the run on treacherous Moscow grounds and are forced to form a shifty alliance with rogue operatives. As loyalties change in the blink of an eye, Justin and Carrie hunt down Chechen militants in their stronghold in Dagestan, to uncover the truth, and to stop the terrorist attack in the US.

 

This cutting-edge thriller is the hottest page-turner of the winter. Fans of David Baldacci, Vince Flynn, and Brad Thor will love this tensely plotted novel.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prologue

 

 

Moscow, Russia

November 22, 4:25 p.m.

 

The shooter looked through the scope of his sniper rifle and focused on the windows of the building across the street. He could see a group of men in suits around an oval table in a large conference room. From the flat roof, he had an excellent vantage point. It provided him an unobstructed view of the headquarters of Russia’s internal security and counterintelligence service, the FSB, in Lubyanka Square.

He lifted his rifle and moved it slowly to the left, as he leaned on the three-foot-high protective wall. The sniper team on the roof of the FSB building, Alpha One, came into his crosshairs view. He nodded slightly at them, then tapped his throat mike. “Alpha Two, we’ve got visual contact.”

“Copy that,” replied the sniper team. “Alpha One confirms the same.”

The shooter dropped his gaze down to the street. Cars crawled in the heavy traffic. People leaving their offices at the end of the workday walked briskly in the light rain. The precipitation had just begun, but the tiny, cold drops prickled the shooter’s face. The temperature was close to freezing, and the rain could turn to snow at any moment. At this hour, the metro stations around the square were full of commuters waiting for their trains.

Four black Mercedes-Benz sedans sat parked by the side exit of the FSB building’s right wing. Russia’s Minister of Defense was one of the men present at this long-planned, high-level meeting with senior security officials. The two sniper teams, along with two others—Alpha Three and Alpha Four, stationed on top of other buildings around Lubyanka Square—were part of the security detail in charge of the Minister’s security.

The shooter pulled the zipper of his scope cover to protect the eyepiece lens from raindrops. They had turned heavy and pounded the roof with a rhythmic, drumming thud. He lifted the hood of his raincoat over his cap, then looked at the man lying next to him. He was his team partner—the spotter—who helped him to set up and carry out a successful shot on target.

“Anything to report?” the shooter asked.

The spotter kept his eye on his scope, a much more powerful version than the shooter’s. He covered the rooftops of adjacent buildings.

“All good,” the spotter replied. “Nothing unusual.”

The shooter glanced at his wristwatch. Five minutes until the end of the meeting, if the meeting ended on time. Handshakes, goodbyes, and the time to get downstairs, perhaps another three, four minutes. The security team outside the conference room would notify them when the Minister was on the move and also before he exited the building. It was a seven- or eight-second walk from the side door to the bulletproof Mercedes-Benz.

The Minister would have no protection during those seven or eight seconds. A short time frame for someone to make an assassination attempt against him. A difficult, but not an impossible mission. That’s why the shooter, the spotter, and the other sniper teams were placed in their positions. They were to intercept any hostile sniper and neutralize all threats.

The shooter tried to relax. This mission was supposed to be easy. At least that’s what he was told. But he knew there was no such thing as an easy mission. The sniper teams had eyes everywhere and covered all directions. The security staff on the ground watched over the activity on the street. A visible police presence surrounded the area. But no one could offer a hundred percent guarantee on the life of the protectee. He was not untouchable, even if he thought so. Many people wanted him dead. Some of those people had the means to carry out their threats, means that reached everywhere.

The shooter took a deep breath and exhaled through his nose. He looked at the thin cloud of frost in front of his face and took another breath.

“There’s movement,” the spotter said. “The meeting’s over.”

The shooter focused back on the windows and peered through his scope. The Minister smiled and shook hands. A moment later, the Minister moved out of his sight.

“Target’s on the move. I repeat, target
is
on the move,” came over his earpiece.

It was Beta One, the security detail positioned outside the conference room.

“Copy that,” said Alpha One.

“Copy that,” said the shooter.

The other two sniper teams confirmed they had received the new intelligence.

“Two minutes to exit,” the same strong voice from Beta One informed them. “We’re on the move.”

The spotter slid his scope along the skyline and covered the nearest buildings to the FSB headquarters, their roofs, and their windows.

The shooter tightened his grip around the wet sniper rifle.

His true mission awaited him. It was time.


* * *

 

A large man stepped out of the second Mercedes-Benz and stood by its rear doors. One of the Minister’s bodyguards. The hard rain soaked him, yet he stood there stoically and waited to open the car door at the right time.

Another bodyguard stood ready with a large, black umbrella just outside the side door. Two uniformed police officers observed the area in front of the door, although it was within the cordoned-off parking lot. Another pair of plainclothes agents of the Ministry of Defense braved the rain outside their unmarked cars beyond the parking lot gate.

The shooter heard Beta One’s voice over his headset, “Sixty seconds.”

“Copy that,” he said.

He looked at the spotter, as he turned off his mike and his earpiece. The spotter was focused on his observation. The shooter tapped his partner on the shoulder as he moved slightly behind him. When the man turned his head, the shooter grabbed it with both hands. He slid his right arm under the spotter’s head, ripped the spotter’s throat mike from his neck, and put the man into a sleeper hold, as he lowered him behind the wall.

The spotter fought back, but the shooter kept his tight grip around the man’s neck. His fingers dug deep into the spotter’s skin. He pushed the spotter down, climbed on top of him, and rested all his body weight on the man’s back. The spotter tried to unlock the shooter’s strong fingers. The shooter increased the pressure on the spotter’s neck and throat. The man was slowly slipping into unconsciousness, but his survival instincts kept him in the fight. His hands reached for the shooter’s arms, then for his head. His grip was weak, and the shooter kept his hold on the dying man. The shooter pushed the spotter’s face down against the roof’s wall and tried to muffle any noise of their fight.

“What’s that scraping noise?” asked Beta One.

The shooter heard the voice through the spotter’s earpiece. He could not answer it, but also could not allow the spotter to do so. He moved his left hand over the spotter’s mouth to mute any calls for help. His right hand brushed away the throat mike, which had fallen by the spotter’s face.

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