William Tyree - Line of Succession
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- Название:Line of Succession
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- Издательство:Massive Publishing
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- Год:2010
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Line of Succession: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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Abrams found her in his scope, placed gentle pressure on the trigger and tried to regulate his breathing as he waited for the targets to come within range. Ten more yards, and he’d put two rounds into the point target and reset his aim to one foot above the water. Combatants in water instinctively went neck deep when attacked. Rarely did they have the composure to hold their breath and swim underwater.
Then the unthinkable happened — Smith lost his footing and slipped below the surface. The sound of his splashes cut through the tunnel’s silence like the ringing of church bells, spoiling the element of surprise.
“Lights out!” one of the HVTs shouted. The targets froze twenty five yards out and shut off the backlights of their cell phones. The glow lingered in Abrams’ night vision goggles.
He pulled the trigger and placed two rounds squarely into one of the target’s chest. Then he moved his barrel to the right and fired another burst, but the targets were not where they were supposed to be; they had dispersed to each side of the tunnel and vanished from view.
A lone body floated on the water’s surface.
Smith got to his feet and, although his rifle was waterlogged, blasted half his magazine indiscriminately at the now-dark tunnel before him. Abrams braced for return fire, but none came. He was afraid that Carver amp; company would take advantage of the tunnel’s winding path and slip away. He motioned to Smith to move quietly forward. Abrams hung back several feet, deciding to let Smith take the point.
The water broke just ten yards out. Ten more rounds flared out the end of Smith’s rifle in less than two seconds. Both men retreated to the sides of the tunnel. Moments later, something floated to the top. The eviscerated remains of a massive carp. It twitched violently as some ancient-looking tunnel creature gnawed at it.
A figure rose up in Abrams’ peripheral vision, impossibly close. The tunnel lit up once again with the flare of gunfire. Abrams recognized Carver’s determined face only feet from his own.
Abrams’ torso listed, throwing his return fire well off the mark. Hot blood pumped out his neck and chest. His legs split into a widened stance as he managed to stay upright long enough to watch Smith slip under water for the last time. Thousands of tiny tadpoles swam around him, eager to pick at his flesh.
*
Carver reached into the water and pulled the assailant’s corpse to the surface. Abrams’ face was ghoulish in the blue cell phone illumination and he wore a Pentagon security badge around his neck. Carver put the badge into his jacket pocket for safe keeping. If they made it out of here alive, he was going to link Abrams to every dirty Pentagon official he could find.
Something flipped on the surface. Carver felt a force pulling Abrams’ body away from him. Carver fired into the tunnel water. Whatever it was let go and swam away.
Behind him, Speers cradled Agent O’Keefe’s floating body. Her green eyes stared endlessly upwards. Strawberry-blonde hair bloomed around her like kelp.
Carver had lost plenty in his career. He had been at the scene of terror attacks, where civilian guts were splattered about like so much paint. He had even cut Lieutenant Flynn’s corpse into luggage-size pieces for the sake of national security. But he could not look. This was O’Keefe. This one hurt. He should have never let her walk point. He should have never demanded that she take weapons training. He should have taken her home and made love to her that summer night at the train station. He should have said and done so many things.
“Blake,” Speers said softly, “There could be more of them in the tunnel. We have to get going.”
“Shut up,” Carver snapped as he clung to Abrams’ corpse. He had to think about next steps. That was how he was going to get through this. Next steps. Thought, action, result. Focus on what to do with the bodies. The Army always retrieved their dead, but it was different for intelligence agents working off-the-grid cases. Protocol was to strip the body of identification and destroy it. Like it never happened. Like the person had never lived at all.
But Carver could not bear the thought of surrendering O’Keefe to whatever tunnel creatures lived in this cesspool. He stowed his weapon in his shoulder holster and reached out to touch her hair. The skin of her scalp was still slightly warm.
“Blake,” Speers tried again. “The inauguration…We have to move.”
He looked past Speers’ shoulder, where Angie stooped behind Eva like a frightened child. “We’ll buddy up,” Carver said at last. “Eva, you’re with Angie.”
Carver sized up Julian. The Chief wasn’t strong enough to carry O’Keefe’s body out. Carver took her in his arms and swung her over his right shoulder. With his free hand, he pulled Abrams’ body toward Speers. “Julian, you’ll take Abrams.”
The Chief was mortified. “Why don’t we leave this a-hole here? He’s fish food.”
“No. When this is over, the Pentagon is going to say Abrams never existed.”
“So take a DNA sample.”
“No. We need a full set of teeth, fingerprints, everything.”
Speers gripped the dead man’s collar and floated the body behind him. On the other side of the tunnel, something was boiling the water near where Mr. Smith had gone under. “Leave him,” Carver said. “He’s too small to keep.”
Capitol Hill
8:40 a.m.
Special Agent Jack McClellan opened the door to the tiny backyard. His miniature Doberman Pinscher bounced past him and lifted his leg to pee on the wooden fence. The home was located just a few blocks south of the Library of Congress. Back in 1994, McClellan purchased the two-bedroom row house for $80,000 and became the first white homeowner on his block in twenty years. Now the house was worth more than ten times that. It was a good thing. Considering what happened at the Willard last night, he figured he could kiss his pension goodbye. He was going to have to sell the house just to make ends meet.
The Doberman’s ears pricked up. Someone was at the door. The dog darted past McClellan and went to the front door. He didn’t bark or growl. He wagged his tail. It was someone he knew.
McClellan peered through the peephole and saw Special Agent Rios staring at him. Of course it would be Rios. The last person he wanted to see.
He opened the door anyhow and looked up at his hulking colleague, who was still in his clothes from the night before.
“I’d like to explain about last night,” Rios said. He looked past McClellan into the home, hoping the old veteran wouldn’t make him beg for an invitation.
McClellan opened the door just wide enough so that Rios could turn sideways and squeeze in. Rios sat in the chair closest to the door. The Doberman came to him and laid at his feet, hoping for some attention.
“You know they suspended me for that bullcrap,” McClellan said. He had whiskey on his breath.
“Not just you,” Rios said. “They sent everybody home.”
“What?”
“You heard me. There are no Secret Service agents in the White House. Uniformed Division, ERT, nothing. They’ve all been expelled. Right now, the White House is surrounded by about a hundred Ulysses MPs. Several hundred more are deployed on the National Mall.”
McClellan sat back in his seat. “Well what the hell do you make of that?”
Rios told him all Speers had told him about Ulysses and the Joint Chiefs. When McClellan had absorbed that bit of news, Rios explained why he had snuck the DEFSEC out of the Willard.
“I don’t know why I didn’t see it before,” McClellan said. “They planned this thing perfectly.”
“What do you mean?”
“Summer recess,” McClellan said, referring to the yearly ritual of Congress, the Executive branch and just about every other federal agency in Washington clearing out of the Capitol each August. “Homeland Security deployed six hundred agents to the President’s ranch in advance of the recess. That’s double the usual number. Another three hundred were sent out to Wyoming for Number Two. Made no sense. They only had a hundred acres to secure there. Another fifty were traveling with the Secretary of State in Hungary. Then you consider that half the Service takes their own vacations in August.”
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