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Authors: Scott McEwen,Thomas Koloniar

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BOOK: The Sniper and the Wolf
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7

MALTA

Prone on the deck of a small charter boat, the frustrated Kovalenko couldn’t see the swimmers well enough by the riding lights of the
Palinouros
to make them out in their black wet suits, so he was firing at the white froth of their wake. The rifle was a quality weapon, an Accuracy International AWS (Arctic Warfare Suppressed) in .308 Winchester bought on the Italian black market—very probably having been stolen from the Ninth Parachute Assault Regiment—but the Zeiss scope did not have night vision capabilities.

Kovalenko and his men had chartered the fishing boat earlier that day, killing the Maltese owner and stuffing the small man’s body into the fish cooler at the stern. After boarding the
Palinouros
and murdering her entire crew shortly after midnight, it was their intention to take the charter boat to Pachino on the southern tip of Sicily and then later catch the ferry from Messina to the Italian mainland. Problems with the charter’s carburetor, however, delayed their departure, forcing them back to shore.

With the carburetor fixed an hour later, they were in the process of casting off when one of Kovalenko’s men spotted the tight group of glowing cigarettes over on St. Paul’s Island two hundred yards away. He knew the island was supposed to be deserted, so the sight looked odd to him. He pointed it out to Kovalenko, who immediately took the AWS from its case and had a look through the scope.

“Spetsnaz!” he’d hissed, dropping to the deck and setting up the rifle’s bipod. By the time he was ready to fire a few seconds later, Dragunov’s men had stepped on their cigarettes and waded into the water. His first shot to Brody’s groin had not been accidental, wanting to inflict as much psychological damage to the enemy Spetsnaz team as possible. His second shot was to the throat of the man who had chosen to shout a warning rather than stay alive.

By the time the swimmers drew within fifty yards of the
Palinouros
, he believed he had killed two more but couldn’t be sure. It was possible they were swimming beneath the surface.

“Start the motor!” he ordered, getting to his feet. “We’ll finish them as they try to board the yacht.”

At this moment, they saw a Maltese P21, a seventy-foot inshore patrol boat, coming toward them from the southern rim of the bay. Its spotlight snapped on, and the charter craft was bathed in light. Kovalenko left the rifle on the deck, where it couldn’t be seen immediately.

“Ready yourselves,” he said to the other three. “If they attempt to board us, we kill them all.”

As the P21 approached off the starboard beam, Kovalenko and his men spaced themselves apart.

“Boris, switch on the riding lights. That’s why they’re approaching—because we’re dark. And put smiles on your faces!”

Boris went into the wheelhouse to switch on the riding lights, and Kovalenko waved at the crew of the P21, smiling and shielding his eyes from the spotlight with the opposite hand. He could see that the Browning .50 caliber machine gun on the foredeck was manned and trained directly on their vessel as they came alongside. “Boris,
stay in the cabin until I call. Then kill the gunner on the foredeck.”

“Right!” Boris called from inside the wheelhouse.

The P21 had an eight-man crew. There were three men on the foredeck besides the .50 gunner, one on the quarterdeck behind the wheelhouse, two manning the portside rail, and one at the con. Five of them were armed with Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine guns, but only the man on the .50 caliber appeared ready to fire.

The P21 shifted into reverse, backwatering until the vessel came to a stop alongside. The only unarmed man on the foredeck, the officer, threw a line to Kovalenko, signaling that they intended to board.

Kovalenko waved, making like he was going to tie the line to one of the bow cleats. “Now, Boris.”

Boris sprang from the wheelhouse with an AK-47, firing a perfect six-round burst that struck the .50 gunner in the chest, knocking him backward and clean over the starboard rail into the water. He continued to fire until the magazine ran dry, killing the officer and both MP5 gunners on the foredeck before ducking back inside to reload.

The remaining three MP5 gunners opened up on the wheelhouse with blazing fire, killing Boris instantly but leaving Kovalenko’s other two men free to pull Glock pistols from behind their backs, picking off the gunners in quick succession along the portside rail.

Even as the MP5 gunners were dropping, Kovalenko was pulling the line to haul the P21 in close, jumping aboard and scrambling into the wheelhouse where the first mate was grabbing for the radio. He shot him in the back of the head with a 9 mm, and the bullet exited through the first mate’s face, hitting the radio and causing sparks to fly.

“Get aboard!” he shouted. “We have to run for Sicily.”

One of the two remaining Spetsnaz grabbed up the AWS sniper rifle, and the other took a moment to put a bullet into Boris’s head, making absolutely sure he could never be interrogated. Both of them leapt aboard the P21, and Kovalenko applied the throttle, motoring steadily away from the shattered fishing charter.

“Take their jackets and toss the bodies overboard,” he ordered. “Then man the machine gun. We have to look like Maltese navy.” The radio was destroyed, but that didn’t matter. Kovalenko’s English wasn’t good enough to convince anyone that he was from Malta, where all they spoke was English and Maltese. Their best hope was to make it to Sicily before anyone in the Maltese military could piece together what had happened and give pursuit.

He increased speed toward the
Palinouros
as one of his men came into the wheelhouse to hand him the AWS. “Take the con,” Kovalenko told him. “I’m going to kill as many aboard that pig yacht as I can on the way past.”

8

MALTA

Gil continued to cover the rear as Dragunov led the hurried search of the
Palinouros
, finding no one alive. In one of the smaller state rooms, they came across a couple shot to death in the midst of lovemaking, a single 9 mm hole in each of their heads. Judging from the white uniforms on the floor beside the bed, Gil guessed there was no one aboard other than crew.

Making their way below decks to the crew quarters, they found a veritable slaughterhouse, eleven of the crew knifed in their sleep and two more bodies littering the passageway, one with a vicious wound under the jaw where a blade had been rammed upward into the brain stem. They found another pair of bodies sprawled in the engine room, blood pooled on the otherwise spotless white deck beneath their heads.

“They went through these people like shit through a goose,” Gil muttered.

They accounted for nineteen dead crew members by the time
they arrived at the bridge, where they found two more bodies. The first mate’s throat was cut, and the captain, a man of about fifty, lay faceup on the deck with a single bullet through the forehead. Gil recognized him at once.

“This asshole’s ex-CIA.” He holstered the pistol and took a knee beside the body.

Dragunov stood over him. “How do you know?”

Gil rolled the dead man onto his belly to search his back pockets. “I worked a mission with him when he was attached to SOG.” There was no need to tell Dragunov what SOG was. Spetsnaz operators knew more about the Special Operations Group of the CIA than 98 percent of Americans. Nor did Gil see any need to mention that the dead man was also a former navy destroyer captain who’d been kicked out of the CIA three years earlier for malfeasance. He found an unusually long key in the bottom of the captain’s back pocket and tucked it into a zipper pouch on his wet suit.

“Hate to tell you this, partner, but I’m pretty sure shit’s about to get complicated. Covert elements of the CIA are working with covert elements of the GRU.”

Dragunov leveled his gaze. “The GRU is clean.”

“So’s my ass, Ivan.” Gil got to his feet and put his foot on the body. “This sorry motherfucker here was thrown out of the CIA for raping a fourteen-year-old girl in Thailand three years ago. He only escaped prison because the girl disappeared before she could testify. And now he’s here—
on this boat
—working for a Russian Spetsnaz team that turned back around and shot him in the head. Somebody’s tying up loose ends, and they’re not gonna—”

One of the windows shattered, and Terbish’s head blew apart, splattering gore all over Gil and Dragunov, who both hit the deck.

“You were saying about the GRU being clean?” Gil said, wiping the gore from his eyes.

Dragunov’s blood-spattered face split into a malicious grin. “Are you going to help me kill these
sukiny dyeti—
or run home like a little girl?”

Gil drew the Strike One, unscrewing the suppressor. “Oh, we’re definitely gonna kill ’em.” He got into a combat crouch, moving to the hatchway leading from the bridge to the gangway. He could see that the P21 was already out of pistol range, heading north at her top speed of twenty-six knots, almost double that of the
Palinouros
.

“Well, that’s why God made radar.” He stood up and went to the satellite phone on the console. “Get ready to weigh anchor, Ivan.”

Dragunov went to the window, easily making out the wake of the P21, but the patrol boat itself was scarcely more than a silhouette. “Can you pilot this thing?”

“Sorta,” Gil said, punching numbers into the phone. “We’ll need a little help.”

A few seconds later, Pope was on the line. “Bob, we’ve taken the
Palinouros
. The entire crew’s dead. The skipper was Paul Miller, an ex-CIA man with the Thailand office. I need you to patch me through to a yacht in Auckland called
Frieda’s Joy
. I’ll explain what’s going on while you work your magic.”

“Stand by,” Pope said. “I’ll put Midori to work while you bring me up to speed.”

Within eight minutes, Gil had Pope completely updated, and the satellite phone was ringing aboard
Frieda’s Joy
in Auckland, New Zealand.

“This is the
Frieda’s Joy
,” answered a female voice with an Australian accent. “First Mate Dana Keener speaking.”

“Keener, my name is Master Chief Gil Shannon. I need to speak with Wild Bill ASAP.” Wild Bill Watkins was a retired Navy SEAL from the West Coast teams who now captained a yacht similar to the
Palinouros
for an Australian millionaire.

“I’m sorry, Master Chief, but Captain Watkins is ashore at this time. May I be of assistance?”

“I sure hope so. Listen, Keener, I’m stuck in the Med aboard an anchored Lürssen Kismet with her engines at dead stop. I’m only semi familiar with the controls, and I need to get her under way fast.
All I got for crew is a grumpy Russian, so if you could keep your instructions simple-stupid, I’d appreciate it.”

First Mate Keener chuckled. “I’ll try and keep it fairly dinkum for you,” she said, her lilting voice sounding suddenly sexy. “Where in the Med are you, Master Chief?”

“North coast of Malta.”

“So you’ve got slightly rocky bottom.”

“Yeah, I believe so.”

“And I assume she’s fallen off with the current?”

“Yes, ma’am. To the north.”

“Then you’ll need to ease off the cables before you weigh anchor. Are you at the con?”

“Roger that,” Gil said. “And the computers are all up. I just need to start the engines and get this tub turned around.”

With Keener’s help, it took Gil and Dragunov fifteen minutes to get the
Palinouros
under way and headed north in pursuit of the P21 at her normal cruising speed of twelve knots. Anything faster might have looked suspicious on Maltese military radar. Keener helped them figure out which blip on their own radar was the P21, and judging from the heading, Kovalenko and his men were heading directly for Sicily. Keener remained on the line in case they needed further assistance conning the vessel.

9

MEXICO CITY,
Mexico

Tim Hagen, sitting in the lounge of a third-rate hotel, gaped across a roughly hewn table at Ken Peterson, whose jolly demeanor was starting to annoy the shit out of him.

“So who the
fuck
sent this Lerher guy in there?” Hagen wanted to know. “I mean, whose bright
fucking
idea was it to send someone that Shannon knew, for fuck’s sake, you fucking imp?”

Peterson looked at him, wishing he could leave Hagen to the wolves, but the pen was a long arm from the grave, and there was no telling what Hagen had left with his attorneys. “They were never supposed to come into contact,” he said. “The French authorities were supposed to grab him without the meeting ever being affected. It’s like I told you, there are too many variables to contend with in operations of this sort.”

“You’re not answering my fucking question!” Hagen flared, his face red. “Why Lerher?”

Peterson’s patience suddenly evaporated. “This was a shadow op, you overeducated moron, and there aren’t a lot of men qualified for that kind of job! Lerher had worked with Shannon in the past, so he was the logical choice! Now stop casting aspersions—you don’t even know what the hell happened yet!”

“I know that Shannon is coming after my ass!” The fear was visible in Hagen’s eyes. “And when that crazy bastard gets going, he doesn’t stop until there’s nobody left standing!”

Peterson made a face. “How can you possibly know that?”

“I’ve seen his fucking handiwork!”

“No,” Peterson said, his patience returning as suddenly as it had gone. “I mean, how can you know he’s coming after you?”

“That maniac Pope!” Hagen picked up his drink, taking a gulp.

Peterson suppressed a smile. “Pope contacted you? Here in Mexico?”

Hagen set down the glass hard. “Well, I sure as hell didn’t call
him
, Ken!”

“And he told you that Shannon was coming after you?”

“In so many fucking words, yes!”

Peterson began to chortle. “And that’s why you’re hiding here in this shitty hotel?”

“What’s so fucking funny about that?”

“Oh, I don’t know,” Peterson said with a shrug. “Maybe I can’t believe you’re that damn stupid.”

Hagen’s face clouded over.

“Think about it, Tim.” Peterson signaled the barman for another beer. “If you’re Pope, and you’ve just discovered your entire operation has been compromised by persons unknown, what are you going to do?”

Hagen increased his grip on the glass. “Why don’t you spare me the pop quiz and tell me what the fuck you’re talking about?”

“I’m saying Pope couldn’t possibly have
known
you were involved. He probably suspected, sure. It’s no secret you hate him—but so do five hundred other people in DC. He called to see if you’d panic. And
you did. Now he’s waiting to see if you’ll do something else stupid. Hopefully, you didn’t just compromise me.”

Hagen dared to believe he might actually survive. “Is Shannon still in France?”

Peterson shook his head. “No, he got out—the Russians helped him—but you can believe that
Tim Hagen
is the last thing on his long list of shit to do. Pope’s gonna run him all over Eastern Europe trying to figure what the hell is going on.” He chuckled. “And you can bet the old bastard’s up there in Langley laughing his ass off, knowing he’s got you down here scared shitless.”

“How soon can you verify Shannon’s location?”

Peterson brushed a small cockroach off the table. “He’ll be almost impossible to track in real time. The best we can do is watch for anomalies within the theater.”

“What kinds of anomalies?”

“Unexplained chaos. If one of our people—or one of the GRU’s people—gets killed, it’ll be a safe bet Shannon was there. In the meantime, I suggest you get yourself checked into a better hotel. You’re more likely to get killed by a hooker in this city than you are by Gil Shannon.”

“Have you heard from our friends in the GRU since the Paris meeting fell apart?”

Peterson noticed that Hagen was in no way acknowledging that it was his backwater op that had caused things to go wrong in Paris. “Our people in Rome tell us that Kovalenko went to Malta to eliminate the crew of the
Palinouros
. We’re still waiting to hear how it went.”

Hagen gulped the remainder of his drink. “Let’s hope he took out Captain Miller while he was there. We sure as hell don’t need that fucking pedophile coming back to bite us in the ass.”

“I’m sure Kovalenko was thorough.”

Hagen sat back, clearing his throat. “Can we get at Pope?”

Peterson pursed his lips, thinking it over. “Anyone can be gotten to. Depends on how bad you want to get at him.”

“I want him dead. Is that bad enough?”

“Hitting Pope is a risky move, but I’ve got an ex-Delta operator on standby for domestic ops. Now that I think about it, it might actually be a worthwhile investment . . . considering.”

“Considering what?”

“Well, Pope took a meeting with the president a while back, and it’s still making people nervous up in Langley because nobody—and I mean
nobody
—has been able to find out what was discussed.” Peterson saw an opportunity to rub salt in Hagen’s ever-festering wound: “And who knows better than you how odd it is for Pope to be seen around the White House?”

Hagen let the baiting remark pass, some of his confidence returning. “I can control the president’s reaction if Pope is taken out. I was with him on the campaign trail during his first run for office, and there’s a lot the first lady doesn’t know about his nighttime campaign activities.”

“So the rumors are true?”

“I’ve got the footage to prove it.”

“Does he know?”

Hagen leaned into the table. “He had his drunken face so far up that Korean hooker’s snatch, he couldn’t even see daylight.”

Peterson snorted. “You think that’s enough to blackmail him?”

“Not into starting World War Three,” Hagen said, “but more than enough to make him look the other way on the demise of a pain in the ass like Bob Pope. Very few people know what the first lady’s like when she’s pissed, and, trust me, you do
not
want to be there when that storm hits.”

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