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Authors: David Rollins

Tags: #Suspense, #Fiction

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BOOK: The Death Trust
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I had moved here to the town of Brandywine, Maryland, when Brenda and I decided life would be better all round if we no longer shared each other’s. We’d hit the wall. My issues revolved around the fact that I didn’t see the wall coming. And just maybe that was a big part of our problem: Even when I was home, I wasn’t. The reality of our marriage was staring me in the face, only I never took the time to open my eyes.

Anyway, where was I? Yeah, Brandywine, somewhere south of D.C. It sounded like my kind of town before I moved here, given my situation, and indeed they do have one or two good bars. The reality is that it’s more of a family town stuck in the middle of five-acre lots with developers licking their chops at the prospect of making the place completely faceless. A lot of air force people live here, renting. On the weekends, dads throw balls to their kids in the parks while moms lay out blankets, setting up picnics. I felt like the place was rubbing my marital failure in my face and I was thinking I might have to move.

Those Disney scenes were in full swing as Arlen and I drove past, this being a Saturday morning. Winter was fast becoming a memory. It was mid-May, and warm. The sun was out and the sky was a pale blue, softened by haze floating down from D.C. But I wasn’t really there, “in the moment,” as my ex-wife would have said. My brain was trying to pick through the information passed on by Arlen, though not with much success. It’s hard to concentrate when you have a headache that’d knock down a buffalo fighting it out with a toothache for supremacy.

Arlen piloted the Chrysler onto Route 5 and accelerated into the traffic heading generally north toward Andrews Air Force Base, where OSI is headquartered. We drove through the rural landscape. People used to grow tobacco here until the government persuaded them it would be far better if they just accepted a handout. These days a lot of folks still left on the land farm old car wrecks and broken-down washing machines, herds of which collect in their front yards. I was thinking about this as I either dozed off or suffered a mild brain seizure, because the fifteen miles to the base seemed to pass in a matter of seconds. The brief sleep did me some good, though, and the handful of Tylenols I had swallowed before leaving home were well and truly on top of things at last, having corralled the buffalo and knocked the barbs off the toothache. I was almost feeling positive, “seizing the day,” as my ex would have said. A meaty case would be good for me, take my mind off said ex, and I silently thanked General Scott for going and getting himself killed.

 

 

OSI, or AFOSI if you want to be anal about it, has a command structure which sits outside the usual operational framework of the USAF. That is to say, we’re autonomous. Our buck stops at the desk of the Inspector General, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, rather than the commanding officer of a particular base or region, or even the Secretary of Defense. The OSI exists because, like any large organization, the USAF has its share of rotten apples, people who murder, rape, embezzle, rob, traffic in drugs and/or sex, commit fraud or arson, and so on. To say OSI is a busy little outfit is an understatement. And, just like any internal-affairs unit operating within an organization, we’re not particularly popular with the arms we oversee. We’re a negative force, as Brenda used to tell me, always looking for the bad in people rather than the good. Well,
duh
is just about all you can say to that pearl of wisdom. We don’t exist to hand out gold stars to hall monitors. According to Brenda, the OSI is high on destructive energy. Or something. Brenda went off the deep end, lost her marbles, call it what you will, the minute she began to walk down the endless path of personal development. I wouldn’t have been surprised if she believed any and all evil could be expunged if it could just be seated in a room with an aromatherapy burner heating up the right combination of oils.

Okay, I’m getting myself worked up again. The truth is, I’m not sure whether it was entirely thoughts of my former spouse that were to blame for my foul mood, or the toothache that had managed to find a way back through the Tylenol barrier.

Arlen stopped at the guard post at the southern entrance to the base as a pair of F-16s in close formation ripped past low overhead. He got our credentials inspected by a bored noncom armed with a loaded M16, while I tried to get in touch with Mr. Happy hiding somewhere deep within.
You’re a single guy again,
I said to myself.
That’s got to be worth a smile, don’t it?

 

 

TWO

 

C
ome in,” said Major General Winifred Gruyere when I appeared in the doorway. I did as I was asked. I stood at attention in front of her desk for some time, waiting for a further sign that she acknowledged my presence. In fairness, I don’t think this was some kind of tactic. She was sifting through files on her desk, like a seagull pecking among food scraps it suddenly realizes are cigarette butts—with initial interest followed by distaste.

I saw my name and number on one of those cigarette butts. Eventually the general picked it out and opened it. I gathered she had been going over the service records of a number of fellow special agents. Without looking up, she ran through a summary. “Special Agent Vin Cooper, rank of major. You studied history at NYU, graduated, and entered the service as a second lieutenant. You put in for the CCTs, the combat air-controller squadron, where you trained with SEALs, Marine Force Recon, et cetera. You saw action in Kosovo and received the Purple Heart.”

At this point, and for the first time, Gruyere lifted her eyes above the half-moons of her spectacles and locked them on to mine. She was trying to imagine whether the soldier standing in front of her was the same person she was reading about.

“I’ve read the citation your CO put in,” she said. “You should have received the Bronze Star.”

I felt like saying thank you, but didn’t, and continued to keep my eyes leveled on the bookshelf behind her.

“You then transferred to OSI. In Afghanistan you took down a drug gang. A local senior politician had been killed by a car bomb and it looked like a strike by the Taliban. You proved otherwise, that it was an operation mounted by a group of U.S. soldiers set on eliminating the competition. You were shot and wounded and received a second Purple Heart. I see you also survived a helo crash on that one. Seems you’re a hard man to kill, Major.”

“Yes, ma’am,” I said, giving her the response I thought she was looking for.

“Next came the episode of the brigadier general.” Gruyere shook her head. “Now, that was a sorry shit piece of business.”

I agreed. The asshole beat his gay lover’s head to jam because he caught him in an embrace with someone who turned out to be the young man’s half brother.

“So what the fuck’s gone wrong, Major? Seems to me you’re not the man you were.”

Swearing just sounds plain odd when it comes from the mouth of a woman old enough to be your grandma. “I don’t know, ma’am,” I said.

“That much is obvious, Special Agent.”

The general was possibly referring to the charge of assault against me. The man on whose face my knuckles played the anvil chorus happened to be a full bird colonel, which never goes down well on one’s record, even if the charges are eventually dropped because there are, as they say, extenuating circumstances. I’d caught the colonel in question in fellatio delicto with my wife, and I’m sorry, but rank does not extend to those privileges.

“Separation and divorce are never easy, soldier,” Gruyere remarked, breaking in on my trip down memory lane. She shook her head and continued. “Aside from the assault, says here you’ve been arrested three times in the past year for drunk and disorderly behavior.”

I’d forgotten about those items, possibly because, as the record said, I was drunk at the time. And I was sure it was only twice, but I kept that to myself.

“I’ll let you in on my problem, Major. I need an investigator, a very good investigator. A year ago I’d have said you were that man, but, going through this,” she motioned at the file on the desk in front of her as if it were kitchen trash, “I’ve got serious doubts. The trouble is, someone upstairs likes you. But I’ve got a feeling that, with you, we’re scraping the bottom of the barrel.” She glared at me over her glasses. “Yeah, that’s what it feels like to me.”

I continued to study the bookshelf behind her. What friends upstairs? I wondered. As far as I knew, Arlen was it in the friends department, and he wasn’t so much upstairs as sideways in the room down the hall.

“At ease, Special Agent, and take a seat. Give me a reason to believe. Talk to me.”

I did as I was told and sat in the chair beside me. “General, I’ll be straight with you. I’ve had a hell of a year. Sounds like you’ve got the broad sweep of it there in front of you, but maybe not the details. My divorce came through yesterday and that closes the book on a few chapters I’d like to forget were ever written.”

“Major, cut the folksy shit and just reassure me you’re the man for the job.”

General officers, it seems to me, can occasionally be capricious, uncaring of the fates of mere mortals, and, although I knew why I’d been summoned, I thought it best to play dumb. I can be good at that. “What job, ma’am?” I asked innocently.

“If you don’t know why you’re here, Cooper, then you’re not half the investigator your record says you are. Or were.” The general tilted her head and looked at me as if I were a puzzle with several pieces squeezed into the wrong holes. “Dismissed.”

Gruyere then began shuffling papers. I’d played it badly. If getting me on the case was Plan A, I’d just managed to convince her to go with Plan B.

I cleared my throat. “Ma’am, General Abraham Scott, a seriously connected four-star, commanding U.S. forces in Europe, stationed at Ramstein Air Base, has been killed in a glider crash.”

“Well, so much for security,” Gruyere muttered to herself. “Who brought you in?”

“Major Arlen Wayne, General.”

“Did he tell you about Scott?”

“No, ma’am. Caught it on CNN.” That was a lie, of course, but an easy one for her to swallow.

“CNN! I might have known they’d get onto it eventually.”

Gruyere pursed her lips. She went back to shuffling her files, then said, “Well, Major, you seem to have been given the overview. There are additional details from the crash investigation team’s preliminary findings, as well as a summary report from OSI there on the ground. I don’t have to tell you what a shit storm this has caused in the Pentagon, General Scott’s connections by marriage notwithstanding. COMAIRNORTH—General Scott’s command—is a vital cog in the defense of the United States, as well as Europe. I don’t care what else you’ve got on your plate. Consider yourself reassigned.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“You will be the SAC on this one.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“There’s a C-21 departing for Ramstein in eighty-six minutes. You’ll be on it. And, Special Agent, you’ll report directly and
only
to me. Is that clear?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Gruyere leaned forward. “You’ll be liaising with the author of the preliminary investigation, Special Agent Anna Masters. Dismissed.”

I didn’t move as I was expected to.

Gruyere sighed. “Something on your mind, Special Agent?”

“Ma’am, I was hoping to see a dentist this morning.” The Tylenol had worn off completely and I was chewing razor blades.

“They’ve got dentists in Germany, too. Can’t it wait till then?” Gruyere was getting impatient.

I shoved the tip of my tongue into the hole once filled with amalgam. It was huge and bottomless, like you could drop a stone into it and not hear it strike the floor. But the pressure applied by my tongue helped. Maybe I could get by with a double dose of those painkillers. “Yes, ma’am.”

Gruyere’s body language told me I’d answered correctly. “Don’t blow this one, Vin. It’s either the biggest case of your career, or the last.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Oh, and Special Agent?”

“Yes, ma’am?”

“For the third and final time, dismissed.”

I walked back into the sunshine. So I was to be SAC, special agent in charge. If someone was needed to take the fall, it’d be me who’d get the push. I should’ve been an acrobat.

 

 

THREE

 

A
s I said, I’m not good with flying. Not anymore. Not since Afghanistan. But they’re into it with a passion in the USAF, as you might expect. The C-21 waiting on the apron at Andrews AFB was a small austere aircraft full of naked aluminum, basically a Learjet without the executive leather. It was like riding inside an empty high-speed can of Coca-Cola. Thoughts of plowing into the Atlantic halfway to Europe took my mind off the tooth. While the plane was being fueled, I read through the reports handed over by General Gruyere. They were dry reading, especially the chief crash-investigator’s assessment on the remains of the weapon that killed the general—Scott’s privately owned sailplane. Dry it may have been, but it still caused me to break a sweat.

BOOK: The Death Trust
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