Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
One week later
Dodecanese Islands
Southeastern Aegean, Greece
Lying in the tall grass one hundred meters from a sprawling,
whitewashed villa, Scot Harvath used the Leupold Mark 4 scope
and Universal Night Sight of his SR25 Knights Armament battle
rifle to search for any sign of Theologos Papandreou, the man
U.S. Intelligence had fingered as the mastermind behind the
murder of Ambassador Avery and his multiagency security detail.
As a Navy SEAL, and now as a covert counterterrorism operative for the U.S. government, Harvath had spent the better part of
his professional life pulling a trigger. One of the sadder truths he
had learned was that there were a lot of people in the world who
needed to be killed. He tried to remind himself that more often than
not, the people on the receiving end of his lead-tipped missives
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were beyond reasoning with. They posed serious threats to the stability and safety of the civilized world and had to be taken out.
Tonight, though, Harvath had his doubts. Something didn’t
feel right.
Before leaving D.C., Harvath had been fully briefed on the
murder of Ambassador Avery. Two years prior, a Greek company
headed by a man named Constantine Nomikos had approached
the United States to partner up on a technology venture. They
were developing a revolutionary new system to better track their
fleet of next-generation tanker and cargo ships worldwide.
Nomikos needed heavy access to satellite and radar systems to
further his research. While reviewing the project, the U.S. had
noted several excellent military applications and immediately
jumped into bed with them. It wasn’t until later in the development process that the Defense Department discovered the device’s full potential.
Anything with an electronic guidance system—aircraft, missiles, ships—could be rendered completely invisible to radar. But
that was only the half of it. The device could also override guidance systems and remotely control an object’s course, speed, trajectory—you name it. With the right satellite uplinks, a missile
could be diverted off course or a plane could be hijacked without terrorists ever having to set foot on board.
The Defense Department deemed it one of the most exciting
and dangerous pieces of technology ever developed. They also
gave it its code name, the
Achilles Project
.
Two weeks prior to Ambassador Avery’s assassination, the device had been stolen from Nomikos’s research and development
facility near the Athenian port of Piraeus. Shortly thereafter, an
unidentified organization contacted the U.S. embassy in Athens
and offered to sell it back to the United States. Avery and his team
had been participating in an operation to recover the device
when they were killed.
Despite the fact that a firebomb had been tossed into the car
after the shooting and the bodies were burned beyond recogni-
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tion, ballistics reports indicated that the weapon used to kill
Ambassador Avery, as well as the CIA operative accompanying
him, was a .45-caliber automatic—the same .45 caliber used in
a string of high-profile assassinations attributed to the Greek terrorist organization 21 August.
The name 21 August corresponded to the organization’s
first attack. On August 21, 1975, they shot and killed the
CIA’s Athens chief and deputy chief of station. In a long and
rambling letter to a left-wing Athenian newspaper, they
claimed credit for the murders, spelled out their MarxistLeninist beliefs and outlined their plans for ridding Greece
once and for all of any Western—specifically American—influences.
Be that as it may, the current president of the United States had
different plans for 21 August. He was furious that in a country
of only eleven million, the Greeks couldn’t seem to lay their
hands on what every Western intelligence agency agreed was a
cell of no more than ten or fifteen people. The “Athens Problem,”
as it had become known in Western intelligence circles, had
been a problem for too long, and he wanted it stopped. He
wanted 21 August neutralized before they could mount any more
attacks against American interests or, God forbid, sold the
Achilles device to one of America’s enemies.
The CIA had tentatively identified Papandreou, an associate
of Constantine Nomikos, as a key personality behind 21 August.
Evidence also suggested he had a hand in the attacks upon Ambassador Avery and his team. The dots didn’t connect for Harvath as cleanly as he would have liked—and certainly not cleanly
enough to base a decision to take a man’s life, but nevertheless,
he had his orders. He had been sent to Greece to take Papandreou
out as quickly as possible and recover the Achilles device by any
means necessary. Adding to the mission’s urgency, the CIA had
just learned that 21 August had a buyer for the device—an
unidentified Jordanian national, and the transaction was going
to take place any day.
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Still dubious about the intelligence the U.S. had gathered from
its Greek sources, Harvath glanced at his Kobold tactical wristwatch and wondered where the hell his target was. Papandreou
should have been here by now.
Suddenly, the sound of the ocean crashing on the rocky beach
below was replaced by the sound of tires crunching down the
villa’s long gravel drive. Harvath readied his rifle and pressed
himself flatter against the damp earth. He prayed to God his superiors back in Washington weren’t making a mistake.
A blue Land Rover rolled to a stop before the large double doors
of the house. When the driver’s door opened Harvath peered
through his scope, but it was no good. He couldn’t see the man’s
face. He’d have to wait for him to exit the vehicle.
“Norseman, can you properly ID the target?” said a voice over
his headset, thousands of miles away in the White House Situation Room.
“Negative,” replied Harvath. “Stand by.”
Pressing his eye tighter against his scope, Harvath strained to
get a positive identification on Papandreou so he could do his
job and pull the trigger.
“Norseman, satellite is giving us only one, I repeat
one
individual in that vehicle. Can you confirm the subject’s identity? Do
we have our man?”
Command-and-control elements in the rear always wanted to
know everything that was going on in the field. Harvath, though,
couldn’t give them a play-by-play
and
pay full attention to his
assignment, so he gave them the field operative’s polite equivalent of
shut the hell up
, “Clear the net.”
The chatter on his headset fell silent and Harvath watched as
the driver began to exit the vehicle. From where he was positioned,
he’d have to wait until the man came around the Land Rover and
made it to the double doors of the villa before he had not only a
clear view of his face but also a clean shot to take him out.
“Ten seconds until subject ID,” said Harvath, more for his own
benefit than the men and women gathered in the Situation Room.
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Three more steps
, Harvath thought to himself as the man
rounded the grille of the Land Rover.
It was hot and Harvath could feel beads of perspiration collecting on his forehead.
What if this wasn’t the right guy?
As the man’s head came into view, Harvath took a deep breath,
held it, but delayed applying pressure to the trigger of his SR25.
A few more steps
, he thought to himself.
A few more steps
.
Suddenly a shot rang out and Harvath’s target fell face-first in
a spray of blood onto the gravel drive.
“What the—” Harvath whispered into his microphone.
“Norseman,” came the voice from the Situation Room. “What
just happened?”
Harvath scanned the area as best he could with his scope. “We
have another shooter on-site and the subject has been downed.
Who else is on this job?”
“You’re the only operator on this assignment,” replied the
voice from Washington. “Can you ID the target?”
Harvath stared through his scope at the man lying in the driveway. “Negative. A positive ID is impossible from my position.”
Moments later the voice responded. “Norseman, you’re going
to need to change your position ASAP and get that ID.”
“The subject’s facedown in the gravel.”
“Then get down there and lift him up.”
Harvath tried to keep his anger in check. “We’ve got an active
shooter. I need you to pinpoint him for me first.”
“Negative, Norseman,” said the voice from the Situation
Room. “No can do. All the infrared satellite is showing is you
and the subject adjacent to the vehicle.”
“No heat signature from a recently discharged weapon?” asked
Harvath, though he knew if they could see it, they’d tell him.
“That’s a negative. No heat signature.”
Whoever that shooter was, he was very good and being very
careful.
Harvath was truly up against it. There was no way he could
move to the driveway, not when the other sniper could be out
there waiting for someone to approach the body.
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Though he was trained to expect the unexpected, an additional shooter was something Harvath hadn’t banked on. Nevertheless, the idea that somebody else might be after the Achilles
device was perfectly reasonable, but none of that mattered now.
Harvath needed to identify the guy in the driveway and make his
way into the villa where the device was supposedly being kept,
and to do that, he was going to need a distraction.
Waiting for him two hundred meters offshore was the
Amalia,
a weather-beaten Greek trawler manned by the only two people
in Greece Harvath could trust, Ben and Yannis Metaxas. Harvath
had met Ben while his SEAL team was training in the Aegean
with the Greek navy. The two had become fast friends, and to
this day Harvath still spent a good amount of his vacation time
every year kicking back at Ben’s beach bar on the island of Antiparos.
Changing his radio frequency, Harvath raised Ben out on the
Amalia
and told him what had happened and what he needed
him to do. When Ben’s flare broke over the water four and a half
minutes later, Harvath was already up and running.
He never bothered ID’ing the body—it would have been suicide. Instead, Harvath grabbed the man by the collar, kicked open
the villa’s double doors and dragged him inside the courtyard. It
was only then that Harvath rolled the body over. There was no
mistaking the man whose photo he had seen during his briefing
in Washington, Constantine Nomikos.
What the hell was he doing
here?
Harvath examined him. Head wounds always bled profusely and he looked like he had lost a lot of blood. Harvath
doubted he would make it.
“Goddammit,” he mumbled under his breath. Nomikos had
picked a hell of a time to come visit his old pal. Changing freqs,
Harvath clued the Situation Room in on the development.
With no other vehicles inbound, Harvath was told to shift to
locating the Achilles device.
Easy for them to say,
he thought.
Somewhere, very nearby, was a killer who was most probably sent
to Papandreou’s villa with the same orders as he was.
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With the Metaxas brothers offshore on the
Amalia
, Harvath
had no direct backup. He could only rely on himself. He was in
the process of rigging a booby trap when the landscaping lights
illuminating the neat rows of olive trees throughout the courtyard dimmed and went dark. Harvath had been in this game long
enough to know there was no such thing as coincidence. The
other sniper had just cut the power. That could only mean one
thing—he was about to breach the villa. Harvath needed to move.
Finding the front door unlocked, Harvath quickly made his way
inside and searched for the study. Five minutes later, he had uncovered Papandreou’s safe. While he knew more than most about
safecracking, tonight it made no difference. Secreted behind a false
panel was an American-made Safari-brand safe. Safaris were the
best and Harvath knew he had no choice but to blow it. The only
question was whether or not he’d brought along enough C4.
Considering Safari’s impregnable reputation, Harvath prepared
to use everything he had. If he overestimated and it resulted in
him damaging the Achilles device inside, then so be it. He knew
Washington would be glad just to know the device was out of
commission.
Taking cover behind Papandreou’s desk, Harvath blew the
door off its hinges in an enormous explosion. Once the smoke
had cleared, he rushed forward only to discover that it was totally empty.
The CIA was positive the device was being kept at the villa—
most likely in Papandreou’s safe, but apparently that location had
seemed too obvious.
Knowing that blowing the safe had drawn the attention of the
other sniper, Harvath quickly exited the room and began making his way down the hallway, his SR25 up and at the ready.
He passed several rooms, and was about to pass the kitchen