Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
you don’t have security cameras on the roof?”
“We have two cameras, one on each gate, and six marines
total,” Bernie said.
Rack snorted. “Hell, the Tulsa Wal-Mart has tighter security
than that.” He loaded shells and chambered a round.
“The host government provides police protection.”
“Like in Tehran?” Rack said.
A half-dozen gunshots went off in rapid succession. Stella
pushed herself flat against the floor, even though she knew it
wouldn’t make much difference. When the gunfire stopped, she
peeked outside. Thousands of fists shook in rhythm with the
chants. A separate group near the gate moved back and forth in
unison. She glimpsed a battering ram as it smacked into a brick
pillar. Chips of brick and mortar flew into the air.
“They’ve broken through! What’s the emergency plan?” Stella
tugged at Bernie’s arm. He yanked papers from their files, threw
the manila folders to the ground and stuffed the documents into
the shredder.
“Go to the vault and wait for rescue. Only shoot in selfdefense.”
Stella nodded, although she was going to make damn sure she
got there, even if it meant laying down fire to hold protesters at
bay. No one was going to take her hostage.
“Death to America,” the mob on the street chanted in harmony, but the protesters already within the embassy walls were
out of sync. The crowd fanned out into the compound, and so
many were pushing from behind, Khan had to keep moving. It
parted momentarily at a mulberry, so he jumped into the tree’s
wake. He doubled over for a moment and caught his breath and
thoughts. He hadn’t planned on participating in the riot, only in-
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stigating it. But he had lived through enough monsoon rains to
know how hopeless it was to fight the rising floodwaters.
Death to America.
Stella was in top physical condition, but she was breathless as
she entered the cramped vault. Over a hundred people were
crammed into it, including not only American officials, but Pakistanis who worked for the facility. Some stood, others sat on the
floor; everyone contributed to the stale air. Stella turned the
shotgun’s barrel toward the ceiling and followed Thompson to
the CIA code room, weaving through the group, careful not to
step on anyone.
Inside the smaller room Congressman Rack was smashing
computers and other machines with a sledgehammer. The sound
echoed off the steel walls. She knew the CIA operatives wouldn’t
destroy their cryptographic equipment unless they believed there
was a real chance the vault was somehow going to be overrun.
Not good
.
They squeezed into the chamber and Rack stopped and looked
up. “Good to see you, Bernie. I really didn’t want to be the ranking officer in here.”
“I did what I could for our friends, but I’m not sure I got all
the payment records,” Thompson said. “Any word from our host
government?”
“Bill’s been stonewalled by the Foreign Ministry. When
pushed, Babar said they’ve sent a runner with a message to President Zia. Seems he’s off bicycling somewhere.”
“A runner. Hi-tech. What about General Ahktar?”
“You know Zia. Where the president goes, the generals are in
tow—insurance against another coup attempt.”
Stella stood uncomfortably close to Thompson. “So what’s the
evacuation plan? Is there a hatch to the roof?”
“My predecessor installed one, but don’t count on the
Marines,” Thompson replied. “We’re dependent upon our
host—”
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“The bicycling dictator?” Stella said. “Don’t you guys follow
politics? We yanked his military aid for knocking off Bhutto. He
has to live with those fundamentalists out there. You don’t think
he’s going to turn on them to help us? That would be political
suicide—even for a military dictator. Right, Congressman?”
Rack nodded. “He’s not about to break up the party. If I were
in his shoes, I’d pedal faster and wait for it to burn itself out, and
us along with it.”
“What the hell do you want me to do?” Thompson raised his
voice, then paused, and, with a calculated breath, returned to the
measured drone of a bureaucrat. “Our emergency plans call for
falling back to this position and waiting for rescue.”
“Those plans went into effect before Tehran. We’re sitting
ducks in a big steel pot and the water’s gonna boil. We need to
go on the offensive before they’re entrenched. Hold the building
or at least—”
A marine wearing a duty uniform and carrying a shotgun interrupted. “Sir, I have a man pinned down at Post-2. They’re prying the grilles off the cafeteria windows and squeezing through.
They’re crawling all over the compound. Sir, permission to use
force?”
“Only Ambassador Hummel or DCM King can authorize
force,” Thompson said.
“That’s bullshit,” the congressman said.
Thompson pointed at Rack. “You shut the door.” He continued, “Gary, has anybody found Hummel or King?”
“They went home for lunch right before the fun started. The
diplomats in the other room have them on the phone. You know
Hummel. He’ll never authorize it—and it would take too long
to try.”
“Sir,” the marine said. “It’s Sergeant Molson trapped down
there—the one whose wife just had twins.”
“Bernie, you can’t work for two agencies at once,” Stella said.
“You gonna let the diplomat’s caution rub off and tarnish the operative in you?”
477
Thompson pursed his lips and squinted an evil eye. At that
moment, she knew he hated her. He said, “I’ve got a Dragunov
in the Agency’s private collection. Take it and do whatever you
need to do—quietly.”
“Your best resource management would be to get me and the
Dragun into a little fresh air on the roof,” Stella said.
“Jesus, you can’t snipe from the roof of a U.S. embassy.”
“The rifle doesn’t exist. I don’t exist. I don’t see the problem.”
“Will you help Molson or not?”
“Whoa.” Rack held up his hand. It was twice the size of Stella’s.
“Are you out of your mind sending this girl to do a man’s job?
Give me the rifle.”
Stella’s face grew warm. “You ever fire one of these, Congressman?”
“You don’t need a trained sniper to take out rioters at thirty
yards.”
“You need someone who knows what she’s doing to tame a
Dragun indoors,” Stella said.
Thompson opened a locker and removed a sleek, black case.
Stella reached out for it. So did Rack.
“Sorry, Congressman.” He handed it to Stella. “She’s the man
for the job. But no one will stop you from checking the hall to
make sure it’s clear before she goes out.” He passed a smoke
grenade and gas mask to her.
Stella turned toward the marine. “You have a flak jacket?”
“Not here, ma’am.”
“Can you get me radio contact with the sergeant?”
“No, ma’am. He’s on a land line.”
“Tell him to use tear gas when I signal him, then run like hell
to the vault.”
“What’s the signal?”
“He’ll know.”
As soon as I do.
Stella snatched up a large rubber band from atop a file cabinet.
Rack eyed her as she pulled her shoulder-length hair away from
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her face and into a ponytail. She missed some, allowing a few
wisps to frame her face. Now the girl was ready for the man’s job.
Khan scraped his arm as he climbed the mulberry tree. The
crowd was magnificent, topping ten thousand, and he could see
three more buses down the street. They had only imagined stirring up fervor for the Islamic revolution; no one had thought as
far as occupying the embassy like their Shia brothers in Tehran.
Today’s protest was a single event, but if they could leverage it
with hostages, they could steal the show from the misguided Ayatollah Khomeini and energize their brothers around the world
with their message. The Iranians had seized the embassy with a
mere five hundred. They were many times this size and growing. It was regrettable that his students were so disorganized, but
Khan was certain he could change that.
Rack stepped from the vault first, a shotgun pressed against
his shoulder and said, “Clear!”
Stella slipped past him and set the rifle case and a shotgun on
the linoleum floor. “Thanks, Congressman. You can go back inside now.”
Rack didn’t budge. She guessed he was waiting for a glimpse
at the gorgeous weapon. She flipped open the latches. “Okay,
Congressman. She’s a beauty, but it’s time for you to move on.”
“I’m not going anywhere until that boy’s safe.”
She slammed the case shut. “Follow my lead and stay the hell
out of my way.” She opened the nearest office door and stashed
the sniper rifle behind a coatrack, covering it with a sweater.
“What the fuck are you doing?”
Stella held the gas mask with two hands and smoothed out the
face piece with both thumbs, opening it to its fullest extent. She
seated her chin into the chin pocket, pushed it against her face,
pulled the harness over her head and felt for the center patch.
Satisfied, she pulled it off and placed the straps over the front of
the lens.
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Rack adjusted his own mask.
He knows what he’s doing.
She dumped the contents from her purse and stuffed the
grenade and half-mask inside. She picked up the shotgun.
“What was all of that Dragun-taming BS back in there?”
Rack asked.
“Only a fool would choose a Dragunov over a shotgun for
close-quarter combat.” She sprinted toward the stairwell, a long
lock of hair dancing against her cheek. “A Dragun is meant to
have a good wind at its back and sunlight streaming toward her.
She’s like a wild bird. You don’t cage her.”
Stella reached the bottom of the stairway, glanced up at the security camera and then peeked through the fire door’s small rectangular window. Five men were in the hall, two carried Enfields,
a rotten choice to clear rooms. An older man was going door to
door, looking for unlocked rooms. He turned a doorknob and signaled the riflemen into position. One of the Arabs kicked the
door open with a kung fu thrust. The group rushed into the office. One remained behind, aiming the rifle down the empty hall.
Rack whispered to Stella, “We can take them all out.”
“It’s not right. They’re students.”
“They’ve got guns and fingers on the triggers.” Rack raised his
shotgun.
Stella put her hand on the barrel of Rack’s gun and pushed it
down. “They don’t have a clue what they’re doing.”
Just as she turned toward the security camera, movement
caught her eye. She jerked her head back to the window. Two
women marched from an office, followed by three armed men.
One wore traditional Islamic dress; the other sported Farrah
Fawcett hair and a short skirt.
The first American hostage.
“Damn!” Stella whispered. The throbbing of her heart seemed
to shake her entire body. She recalled her father’s training.
Paint
the picture you want them to see
. Stella took out the smoke
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grenade, pulled the pin and dropped it on the stairwell floor.
“Your mask. Now.”
“You crazy?” Rack pulled the respirator over his face.
After a few seconds’ delay, the grenade spewed white smoke.
Stella looked again at the security camera, extended both arms
parallel to the floor and pumped her fists toward her ear three
times, as if flexing her biceps. She prayed Sergeant Molson was
monitoring and caught the military’s visual signal for gas.
Smoke filled the stairwell. “Fire!” Stella shouted in Urdu, then
thrust her chin into the mask, seated it and exhaled. Careful to
stay clear of the burning phosphorous, she opened the door and
held it long enough for a cloud to billow out. Like a skilled
cricket player, she grasped the gun by its barrel and knocked the
white-hot grenade into the hall with the butt. She glided across
the corridor and yanked down hard on the fire alarm. An earpiercing ring filled the hall. She winced.
Down the hall a tear-gas canister rolled across the floor. Within
seconds the gas mixed with smoke. Lost in the thickening haze,
rioters bumped against one another, scrambling to find their
way out of the building. The marine dashed to the stairwell as
ordered.
“Help!” the American woman shrieked.
Stella ran toward the cries. The Pakistani still held her hostage
by the wrist. Stella dug her thumb into the pressure point between the Pakistani woman’s thumb and index finger until she
found bone. The woman released her grasp.
Just then, Rack appeared. He picked up the hostage and carried her to the stairwell.
Stella twisted the Pakistani woman’s hand around and pressed
down, bending it backward. Stella led her without further resistance to the stairs. The stairwell was smoky, but nothing like the
thick cloud in the hall.
On the third floor, Rack pushed up his mask. “What the hell
are you doing with her?”
“Get your own hostage—she’s mine.”
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* * *
Stella escorted the Pakistani woman to the office where she
had stashed the Dragunov. As soon as she let go of her, the