Nelson Demille - The Lion's Game

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April 1986: American F-111 warplanes bomb the Al Azziyah compound in Libya where President Gadhafi is residing. A 16-year-old youth, Asad – Arabic for "lion " – loses his mother, two brothers and two sisters in the raid. Asad sees himself as chosen to avenge not only his family but his nation, his religion and the Great Leader – Gadhafi. An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
Twelve years later, Asad arrives in New York City, intent on killing all five surviving pilots across America who participated in the bombing, one by one. John Corey – from the international bestseller PLUM ISLAND – is no longer with the NYPD and is working for the Anti-Terrorist Task Force. He has to stop Asad's revenge killings. But first he has to find him.
A thrillingly entertaining read from a master storyteller.

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"I see that."

"Yeah. I get worked up. Sorry."

"I share your feeling about women doing the jobs of men."

"Good. We gotta stick together." He laughed again, thinking this guy wasn't so bad, despite the fact he was a foreigner, and maybe a little light in the loafers.

Khalil said, "Why do you have that poster on your wall?"

"To remind me of the time I almost put a bomb up his ass," Bill Satherwaite replied without a thought about security. "Actually, my mission didn't include his house. That was Jim and Paul's mission. They dropped one right on the bastard's house, but Gadhafi was sleeping outside in a tent, for God's sake. Fucking Arabs like their tents. Right? But his daughter got it, which was too bad, but war is war. Fucked up his wife, too, and a couple of his kids, but they lived. Nobody wants to kill women and children, but sometimes they're where they're not supposed to be. You know? I mean, if I was Gadhafi's kid, I'd keep a mile between me and Pop." He laughed.

Khalil took a deep breath and got himself under control. He asked, "And what was your mission?"

"I hit the commo center, a fuel depot, a barracks, and… something else. I can't remember. Why do you ask?"

"No reason. I find this fascinating."

"Yeah? Well, forget it all, Mr. Fanini. Like I said, I'm not supposed to talk about it."

"Of course."

They were at their cruise altitude of 7,500 feet. Satherwaite pulled back on the power, and the engines got a little quieter.

Khalil said, "You will call your friend on Long Island?"

"Yeah. Probably."

"He was a military friend?"

"Yeah. He's the Director of an aviation museum now. Maybe if we have time in the morning, I'll shoot over there and check it out. You can come if you want. I'll show you my old F-111. They've got one there."

"That would be interesting."

"Yeah. I haven't seen one of those in lots of years."

"It will bring back memories."

"Yeah."

Khalil stared out at the landscape below. How ironic, he thought, that he'd just come from killing this man's comrade, and now this man was transporting him to where Asad Khalil would kill another of his comrades. He wondered if this man beside him would appreciate the irony.

Asad Khalil sat back and looked into the sky. As the sun began to set, he said his required prayers to himself and added, "God has blessed my Jihad, God has confused my enemies, God has delivered them to me-God is great."

Bill Satherwaite asked, "You say something?"

"I just thanked God for a good day, and asked him to bless my trip to America."

"Yeah? Ask him to do me a couple of favors, too."

"I did. He will."

CHAPTER 40

As the cab moved away from Federal Plaza, Kate asked me, "Are you coming in this time? Or do you need your sleep?"

This sounded a wee bit like a taunt, perhaps even a challenge to my manhood. The woman was learning what buttons to push. I said, "I'm coming up. You say 'up,' not 'in.'"

"Whatever."

We sat in the taxi in relative silence. Traffic was moderate, a passing April shower made the streets shine, and the taxi driver was from Croatia. I always ask. I'm doing a survey.

Anyway, we got to Kate's apartment house, and I paid the cab, which included the trip from JFK, and waiting time. I also carried her suitcase. There's no such thing as free sex, by the way.

The doorman opened the door, wondering, I'm sure, why Ms. Mayfield left with a suitcase and came back a few hours later with the same suitcase and a man. I hope it bothers him all night.

We went up the elevator and into her apartment on the fourteenth floor.

It was a small, basic white-wall rental, carpetless oak floors, and minimal modern furniture. There were no living plants, no wall art, no sculpture, no knickknacks, and thank

God, no sign of a cat. A wall unit was crammed with books, a TV set, and a CD player, whose speakers were on the floor.

There was a sort of open galley kitchen into which Ms. Mayfield entered and opened a cupboard. She said, "Scotch?"

"Please." I put the suitcase and my briefcase down.

She put the Scotch bottle on the breakfast counter between the kitchen and the dining area that had no dining table. I sat on a stool at the breakfast counter, and she put down two glasses and ice and poured. "Soda?"

"No, thanks."

We touched glasses and drank. She poured again and finished another few ounces of Scotch.

She asked me, "Did you have dinner?"

"No. But I'm not hungry."

"Good. But I have some snacks." She opened a cupboard and took out some god-awful stuff-things in big cellophane bags with weird names like Crunch-Os. She ate a handful of orange caterpillars, or whatever.

She poured herself another Scotch, then went over to the CD and put on a disk. It was an old Billie Holiday.

She kicked off her shoes, then took off her suit jacket, revealing a nice white tailored blouse, a bolstered Glock, and whatever. Not many people in law enforcement wear the shoulder rig anymore, and I wondered why she did. She threw the jacket on an armchair, then took off her holster and dropped it on the jacket. I waited for her to get even more comfortable, but that was it.

So, not wanting or needing an armed advantage, I took off my jacket and unstrapped my belt holster. She took the holster and jacket from me and put it on top of hers, then sat on the stool beside me. Being very professional, I talked about the advantages of the new federally issued.40 caliber Glock, and how it outperformed the 9mm model, and so forth. "It won't penetrate body armor, but it will knock down a man."

She seemed uninterested in this subject and said, "I need to get this apartment squared away."

"It looks fine."

"Do you live in a dump?"

"I used to. But I wound up in the marital residence. It's not bad."

"How'd you meet your wife?"

"Mail order."

She laughed.

"I sent for a cappuccino machine, but I think I wrote the item number wrong, and she showed up, UPS."

"You're weird." She looked at her watch. "I want to catch the eleven o'clock news later. There were three press conferences."

"Right."

She stood up and said, "I'll check my answering machine, and tell the ICC I'm home." She looked at me and asked, "Should I say that you're here?"

"That's your call."

"They have to know where you are at all times with this case."

"I know that."

"Well? Are you staying?"

"That's also your call. Surprise me."

"Right." She turned and went through a door that led to her bedroom or office.

I sipped my Scotch, contemplating the length and purpose of my visit. I knew that if I finished my drink and left, then Ms. Mayfield and I would no longer be pals. If I stayed and did the deed, then Ms. Mayfield and I would also no longer be pals. I'd really gotten myself into a corner.

Anyway, she returned and said, "There was just that message from you." She sat down beside me again and stirred her Scotch and ice with her finger. "I called the ICC."

Finally, I asked, "Did you mention that I was here?"

"I did. The duty officer had it on speaker, and I could hear a cheer from the crowd."

I smiled.

She made another drink for herself, then rummaged around the cellophane bags, commenting, "I shouldn't have this junk in the house. I really can cook. But I don't. What do you do for meals at home?"

"I bring home roadkill."

"Do you like living alone?"

"Sometimes."

"I've never lived with anyone."

"Why not?"

"The job, I guess. The hours. Calls at all hours, trips here and there. Reassignments. Plus, you've got guns and classified documents in the house, but I guess that's not a big deal." She said, "The older guys tell me that years ago if a female agent lived with a guy, she was in trouble."

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