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Excerpt from W.E.B. Griffin's
THE HUNTERS
I
[ ONE
]
Danubius Hotel Gellért
Szent Gellért tér 1
Budapest, Hungary
0035 1 August 2005
When
he heard the ping of the bell announcing the arrival of an elevator
to the lobby of the Gellért, Sándor Tor, who was the
director of security for the Budapester Neue Tages Zeitung,
raised his eyes from a copy of that newspaper—which was so
fresh from the presses that his fingers were stained with ink—to
see who would be getting off.
He
was not at all surprised to see that it was Eric Kocian, managing
director and editor-in-chief of the newspaper. The first stop of
the first Tages Zeitung delivery truck to leave the plant
was the Gellért.
The
old man must have been looking out his window again, Tor thought,
waiting to see the truck arrive.
Tor
was a burly fifty-two-year-old with a full head of curly black hair
and a full mustache. He wore a dark blue single breasted suit carefully
tailored to conceal the Swiss SIGARMS P228 9mm semiautomatic pistol
he carried in a high ride hip holster.
He
looked like a successful businessman with a very good tailor, but
he paled beside Eric Kocian, who stepped off the elevator into the
Gellért lobby wearing an off-white linen suit, with a white
shirt, a white tie held to the collar with a discreet gold pin,
soft white leather slip-on shoes, a white Panama hat—the wide
brim rakishly up to the right, and down on the left—and carrying
a sturdy knurled cane with a brass handle in the shape of a well-bosomed
female.
Kocian
was accompanied by a large dog. The dog was shaped like a Boxer,
but he was at least time and a half—perhaps twice—as
large as a big Boxer, and his coat was grayish black and tightly
curled.
Kocian
walked to a table in the center of the lobby, where a stack of the
Tages Zeitung had been placed, carefully picked up a copy
so as not to soil his well manicured fingers, and examined the front
page.
Then
he folded the newspaper and extended it to the dog.
“You
hold it a while, Max,” he said. “Your tongue is already
black.”
Then
he turned and, resting both hands on the cane, carefully surveyed
the lobby.
He
found what he was looking for—Sándor Tor—sitting
in an armchair in a dark corner of the lobby. He pointed the cane
at arm’s length at him, not unlike a cavalry officer leading
a charge, and walked quickly toward him. The dog, newspaper in his
mouth, never left his side.
Six
feet from Tor, Kocian stopped, and—without lowering the cane—said,
“Sándor, I distinctly remember telling you that I would
not require your services any more today, and to go home.”
A lesser
man would have been cowed. Sándor Tor was not; as a young
man he had done a hitch in the French Foreign Legion and subsequently
had never been cowed by anything or anyone.
He
pushed himself far enough out of the armchair to reach the dog’s
head, scratched his ears, and said, “How goes it, Max?”
Then he looked up at Kocian, and said, “You have been known
to change your mind, Úr Kocian.”
“This
is not one of those rare occasions,” Kocian said. He let that
sink in, then added: “But since you are already here, you
might as well take us—on your way home—to the Franz
Joséf bridge.”
With
that, Kocian turned on his heel and walked quickly to the entrance.
Max trotted to keep up with him.
Tor
got out of his chair as quickly as he could and started after him.
My
God, he’s eighty-two!
As
he walked, Tor took a cellular telephone from his shirt pocket,
pushed an autodial button, and held the telephone to his ear.
“He’s
on the way to the car,” he said, without preliminary greeting.
“He wants me to drop him at the Szabadság híd.
Pick him up on the other side.”
The
Szabadság híd across the Danube River was a re-creation
of the original 1899 bridge that had been destroyed—as all
the other bridges over the Danube—in the bitter fighting of
World War II. It had been named after Franz Joséf, then King
and Emperor of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was the first to
be rebuilt, as close to the original as possible, and when completed
in 1946 had been renamed to Liberty Bridge.
Eric
Kocian simply refused to accept the name change.
“If
the communists were happy with that Liberty name, there’s
obviously something wrong with it,” he had said more than
once. “Franz Joséf may have been a sonofabitch, but
compared to the communists he was a saint.”
There
was a silver Mercedes-Benz S500 sitting just outside the door of
the Gellért.
For
a moment, Sándor Tor was afraid that the old man had grown
impatient and decided to walk. Then there came a long blast on the
horn.
Tor
quickly trotted around the front of the car and got in behind the
wheel. Kocian was in the front passenger seat. Max, still with the
newspaper in his mouth, was sitting up in the back seat.
“Where
the hell have you been?” Kocian demanded.
“I
had to take a leak.”
“You
should have taken care of that earlier,” Kocian said.
It
wasn’t far at all from the door of the Gellért to the
bridge, but if Kocian had elected to walk he would have had to cross
the road paralleling the Danube, down which traffic often flew.
The
old man wasn’t concerned for himself, Tor knew, but for the
dog. One of Max’s predecessors—there had been several;
all of the same breed, Bouvier des Flandres; all named Max—had
been run over and killed on that highway.
It
was a standard joke around the Gellért and the Budapester
Tages Zeitung that the only thing the old man loved was
his goddamned dog, and that the only living thing that could possibly
love the old man was the goddamned dog.
Sándor
Tor knew better. Once, Tor had heard a pressman parrot the joke,
and he had grabbed him by the neck, forced his head close to the
gears of the running press, and promised the next time he heard
him running his mouth, he’d feed him to the press.
“Turn
on the flashers when you stop,” Kocian ordered as the Mercedes
approached the bridge, “and I’ll open the doors for
Max and myself, thank you very much.”
“Yes,
Úr Kocian.”
“And
don’t hang around to see if Max and I can make it across the
bridge without your assistance. Go home.”
“Yes,
Úr Kocian.”
“And
in the morning be on time for once.”
“I
will try, Úr Kocian.”
“Good
night, Sándor. Sleep well.”
“Thank
you, Úr Kocian.”
Tor
watched in the right side rearview mirror as Kocian and the dog
started across the bridge. Tor already had his cellular in his hand;
now he pressed the autodial button again.
Across
the river, Ervin Rákosi’s cellular vibrated in his
pocket, causing the wireless speaker bud in his ear to ring. He
pushed one of the phone’s buttons—it did not matter
which, as he had programmed the device to answer calls when any
part of the keypad was depressed—and heard Tor’s voice
come through the earbud:
“They’re
on the bridge.”
“Got
him, Sándor.”
“He’ll
be watching me, so I’ll have to go up the Vámház
körút as far as Pipa before I can turn.”
“I
told you I have him, Sándor.”
“Just
do what I tell you to do. I’ll pick him up when he passes
Sóház.”
“Any
idea where he’s going?”
“Absolutely
none.”
It
was Eric Kocian’s custom to take Max for a walk before retiring,
which usually meant they left the Gellért around half past
eleven. Almost always they walked across the bridge, and almost
always they stopped in a café, bar, or restaurant for a little
sustenance. Lately, they’d been going to the Képíró,
a narrow restaurant bar which offered good jazz, Jack Daniels Black
Label bourbon, and a menu pleasing to Max, who was fond of hard
sausage.
But
that was no guarantee they’d be going there tonight, and if
Sándor Tor had asked the old man where he was going, the
old man would either have told him it was none of his goddamn business,
or lied.
In
fact it was Sándor Tor’s business to know where the
old man was, and where he was going, and to keep him from harm.
His orders to protect Eric Kocian—“Cost be damned, and
for God’s sake, don’t let the old man know he’s
being protected”—had come from Generaldirektor Otto
Göerner of Gossinger Beteiligungsgesellschaft, the German holding
company which owned, among a good deal else, half a dozen newspapers,
including the Budapester Neue Tages Zeitung.
When
he came off the bridge, Tor saw Ervin Rákosi’s dark
green Chrysler Grand Caravan at the first intersection in a position
from which Rákosi could see just about all of the bridge.
He continued up the Vámház körút for two
blocks and then made a right turn onto Pipa. He circled the block,
onto Sóház U, pulled to the curb behind a panel truck
half a block from Vámház körút, and turned
off the headlights.
Tor’s
cellular buzzed.
“He’s
almost at Sóház U,” Rákosi reported.
“I’m
fifty meters from the intersection,” Tor’s voice said
in Rákosi’s earbud.
Thirty
seconds later, Eric Kocian and Max appeared, walking briskly up
the steep incline.
One
of these days, Tor thought, he’s going to do that
and have a heart attack.
Tor
reported: “He just went past. Follow him and see where he
goes.”
Thirty
seconds after that, the Chrysler came slowly up Vámház
körút.
Sixty
seconds after that, Rákosi reported, “He’s turned
onto Királyi Pál. It looks as if he is going to the
Képíró.”
“Don’t
follow him. Drive around the block and then down Képíró
U.”
Tor
backed away from the panel truck and then drove onto Vámház
körút and turned right. When he drove past Királyi
Pál he saw Eric Kocian turning onto Képíró.
A moment
later, Rákosi reported, “He went in.”
“Okay,”
Tor ordered. “You find someplace to park where you can catch
him when he comes out. I’ll park, and see if I can look into
the restaurant.”
“Got
it,” Rákosi said.
Tor
found the darkened doorway—he had used it before—from
which he could see into the Restaurant Képíró.
Kocian
was sitting at a small table between the bar and the door. A jazz
quartet was set up between his table and the bar. There was a bottle
of whiskey on the table, and a bottle of soda water, and as Tor
watched, a waiter delivered a plate of food.
Sausage
for the both of them, Tor knew. Kielbasa for the old man and some
kind of hard sausage for Max. Kocian cut a slice of the kielbasa
for himself and put it in his mouth. Max laid a paw on the old man’s
leg. Kocian sawed at the hard sausage until there was a thumb-sized
piece on his fork. He extended the fork to Max, who delicately pulled
off the treat. Kocian patted the dog’s head.
A procession
of people entering and leaving the restaurant—including three
hookers, one at a time—paused by Kocian’s chair and
shook his hand or allowed him to kiss theirs. The more courageous
of them patted Max’s head. Kocian always rose to his feet
to accept the greetings of the hookers, but as long as Tor had been
guarding him, Kocian had never taken one back to the Gellért
with him.
In
Vienna, he had an “old friend” who was sometimes in
his apartment—most often coming out of it—when Tor went
to get him in the mornings. She was a buxom redhead in her late
fifties. Kocian never talked about her, and Tor never asked.
The
band took a break, and the bandleader went to Kocian’s table,
patted Max, and had a drink of Kocian’s Jack Daniels. When
the break was over, the bandleader returned to his piano, and Kocian
resumed cutting the sausages—a piece for him and a piece for
Max—as he listened to the music, often tapping his fingers
on the table.
Tor
knew that the old man usually stayed just over an hour, and he had
gone into the restaurant a few minutes before one o’clock.
So, glancing at his watch and seeing that it was ten minutes to
two, he had just decided it was about time for the old man to leave
when he saw him gesturing for the check.
Tor
took out his cellular, pressed the autodial key, and said, “He’s
just called for the check.”
“Let’s
hope he goes home,” Rákosi replied.
“Amen,”
Tor said. “You get in a position to watch him on the bridge.
I’ll stay here and let you know which way he’s headed.”
“Done,”
Rákosi said.
Eric
Kocian and Max came out of the Restaurant Képíró
five minutes later, and headed down Képíró
toward Királyi Pál, strongly suggesting he was headed
for home.
Tor
watched him until he turned onto Királyi Pál, called
Rákosi to report Kocian’s location, and then trotted
to where he had parked the silver Mercedes.
He
had just gotten into the car when Rákosi reported that the
old man was about to get on the bridge.
He
had driven no more than four minutes toward Vámház
körút when his phone vibrated.
“Trouble,”
Rákosi reported.
“On
the way.”
Tor
accelerated rapidly down the Vámház körút,
and was almost at the bridge when he saw that something was going
on just about in the center of the bridge.
Max
and the old man had a man down on the sidewalk, and the man was
beating at the animal’s head with a pistol.
Rákosi’s
Chrysler Grand Caravan was almost on them.
And
then a car—a black or dark blue Mercedes that had been coming
toward Sándor Tor—stopped, and a man jumped out and,
holding a pistol with two hands, fired at the old man and the dog.
Rákosi
made a screaming U-turn, jumped out, and started firing at the dark
Mercedes as it began to speed away.
“I’ll
get the old man,” Sándor Tor said into his cellular.
“You get the bastards in the Mercedes. Ram them if you have
to.”
Rákosi
didn’t reply, but Tor saw him jump back into the Chrysler.
Tor
pulled his Mercedes to the curb.
The
old man was sitting down as if he had been knocked backwards. Tor
saw blood staining the shoulder of his white suit.
The
man on the ground was still fighting Max, whose massive jaws were
locked on his arm.
Tor
jumped out of the Mercedes, taking his pistol from its holster as
he moved.
He
took aim at the man Max had down, then changed his mind. He went
to him and swung the pistol hard against the back of his head.
The
man went limp.
Tor
looked down the bridge and saw that both the attackers’ Mercedes
and Rákosi’s Chrysler had disappeared.
He
punched another autodial button on his cellular, a number he wasn’t
supposed to have.
“Inspector
Lázár,” he announced. “Supervisor needs
assistance. Shots fired on the Szabadság híd. One
citizen down. Require ambulance.”
So
far as Tor knew, there was no Inspector Lázár on the
Budapest police force. But that would get an immediate response,
he knew. Before he had gone to work for the Tages Zeitung, he had
been Inspector Sándor Tor.
He
went to the old man. The dog was whimpering. There was a bloody
wound on his skull.
Christ,
I only hit that bastard once, and he was out. I saw him beating
on Max’s head, and Max never let loose.
That
dog’s not whimpering because he’s in pain. He’s
whimpering because he knows something is wrong with the old man.
“An
ambulance is on the way, Úr Kocian,” Tor said.
“Sándor,
I need a great favor.”
“Anything,
Úr Kocian. I should not have let this happen.”
“What
you should have done is gone home when I told you.”
“Do
you want to lie down until the ambulance gets here?”
“Of
course not. The first thing I want you to do is call Dr. Kincs,
Max’s veterinarian, and tell him you’re bringing Max
in for emergency treatment.”
“Of
course. Just as soon as I get you to the hospital—”
“The
Telki Private Hospital. Don’t let them take me to the goddamn
Szent János Kórház. They’d never let
Max stay with me there.”
“All
gunshot victims are taken to Szent János Kórház,”
Tor said.
“And
you can’t fix that?”
“No,
I can’t.”
“Jesus
Christ, what are we paying you for?” the old man demanded,
and then ordered: “Help me to my feet.”
“I
don’t think that’s a good idea, Úr Kocian.”
“I
didn’t ask for an opinion, goddamn you, Sándor! Do
what you’re told! Get me the hell out of here before the police
show up.”
The
old man winced with pain as he tried to get to his feet.
A police
car—a Volkswagen Jetta—came onto the bridge. It pulled
up beside the silver Mercedes, and a sergeant and the driver got
out.
“What’s
happened?” the sergeant demanded.
“That
man and two others tried to rob Úr Kocian,” Tor said.
“Who
are you?”
“Sándor
Tor, director of security of the Tages Zeitung,”
Sándor said as he reached down and pulled Eric Kocian erect.
“What
are you doing?” the sergeant said.
“I’m
taking Úr Kocian to the hospital.”
“An
ambulance is on the way.”
“I
can’t wait. Take that slime to the station, and I’ll
come there,” Tor said.
He
half-carried the old man to the Mercedes, hoping the sergeant was
not going to give him trouble.
“I’ll
meet you at the Szent János Kórház,”
the sergeant said.
“Fine,”
Tor said.
I’ll
worry about that later.
The
old man crawled into the back seat. Max got in and jumped on the
seat and started to lick his face.
Sándor
closed the door, and then got behind the wheel.
“Take
Max to Dr. Kincs first,” the old man ordered.
“You’re
going to the hospital first. I’ll take care of Max.”
“Not
one goddamn word of this is to get to Otto Görner, you understand?”
At
that moment, Tor had just finished deciding that he would call Görner
the moment the doctors started to work on the old man at the Telki
Private Hospital.
“I’m
not sure I can do that, Úr Kocian. He’ll have to know
sometime.”
“I’ll
call him as I soon as I can. I’ll tell him I fell down the
stairs. Fell over Max and then down the stairs. He’ll believe
that.”
“Why
can’t I tell him?”
“Because
he would immediately get in the way of me getting the bastards who
did this to me.”
“You
know who they are?”
“I’ve
got a pretty good goddamn idea. They know I’ve been nosing
around. They want to know how much I know about the oil-for-food
outrage. Why do you think they tried to kidnap me?”
“Kidnap
you?”
“The
sonofabitch who came after me on the bridge had a hypodermic needle.”
“A
hypodermic needle?” Tor parroted.
“It’s
in my jacket pocket,” the old man said. “When we get
to the hospital, take it, and find out what it is.”
“They
were going to drug you?”
“They
only started shooting after Max and I grabbed the bastard on the
bridge. Jesus Christ, Sándor, do you need a map? They were
going to take me someplace to see what I know, and where my evidence
is. When they had that, then they were going to put me in the Danube.”
“Where
is your evidence?”
“In
my apartment.”
“Where
in your apartment?”
“If
I told you, then you’d know,” the old man said. “Some
place safe.”
“You
don’t want to tell me?”
“No.
Can’t you drive any faster? I’m getting a little woozy.”
A moment
later, Sándor looked in the back seat.
The
old man was unconscious. Max was standing over him, gently licking
his face, as if trying to wake him.
Sándor
looked forward again, and thought, Please, God, don’t
let him die!
He
pushed another autodial button on the cellular, praying it was the
right one.
“Telki
Private Hospital.”
“I’m
bringing an injured man to the emergency room. Be waiting for me,”
Tor ordered.
Five
minutes later, he pulled the Mercedes up at the emergency entrance
of the Telki Private Hospital. A gurney, a doctor, and a nurse were
outside the door.
Tor
helped the doctor get the old man on the gurney.
“He’s
been shot,” the doctor announced.
“I
know,” Tor said.
The
doctor gave him a strange look, then started to push the gurney
into the hospital.
Tor
put his arm around the dog.
“You
can’t go, Max,” he said.
Max
strained to follow the gurney but allowed Tor to restrain him.
Tor
looked at his watch. It was two twenty-five.
[ TWO
]
Estancia
Shangri-La
Tacuarembo Province
Republic Orientale de Uruguay
2225 31 July 2005
At
almost precisely that moment in real time—by the clock, it
is four hours later in Budapest than it is in Uruguay—a U.S.
Army Special Forces medic, Sergeant Robert Kensington, who had been
kneeling over a stocky blond man in his forties and examining the
man’s wound, stood up and announced, “You’re going
to be all right, Colonel. There’s some muscle damage that’s
going to take some time to heal, and you’re going to hurt
like hell for a long time every time you move—for that matter,
every time you breathe. I can take the bullet out now, if you’d
like.”
“I
think I’ll wait until I get to a hospital,” Colonel
Alfredo Munz said.
Until
very recently, Munz had been the director of SIDE, the Argentine
organization which combines the functions of the American FBI and
CIA.
There
were three other men in the room, the study of the sprawling “big
house” of Estancia Shangri-La. One of them—a somewhat
squat, completely bald, very black man of forty-six—was lying
in a pool of his own blood near Colonel Munz, dead of 9mm bullet
wounds to the mouth and forehead. He had been Dr. Jean-Paul Lorimer,
an American who had been a United Nations diplomat stationed in
Paris, and who had taken some pains to establish a second identity
for himself in Uruguay as Jean-Paul Bertrand, a Lebanese national
and a dealer in antiquities.
The
third man in Jean-Paul Lorimer’s office was dressed—as
Sergeant Kensington was—in the black coveralls and other accoutrements
worn by Delta Force operators when engaged in clandestine and covert
operations. He was cradling in his arms a black bolt-action 7.62x51mm
sniper’s rifle, modified from a Remington Model 700. Had he
not pushed his balaclava mask off his face, Corporal Lester Bradley,
USMC, who was nineteen, would have looked far more like what comes
to mind when the phrase Delta Force operator is heard.
With
the mask off, it had just occurred to the fourth man in the
room, he looks like a kid who has borrowed his big brother’s
uniform to wear to the high school Halloween party.
He
was immediately sorry for the thought.
The
little sonofabitch can really shoot, as he just proved by saving
my life.
The
fourth man was Major (Promoteable) Carlos G. Castillo, Special Forces,
U.S. Army. He was thirty-six, a shade over six feet tall, and weighed
one hundred ninety pounds. He had blue eyes and light brown hair.
He was in a well-tailored dark blue suit.
He
turned to Munz, who was looking a little pale from his wound.
“Your
call, Alfredo,” Castillo said. “If Kensington says he
can get the bullet out, he can. How are you going to explain the
wound?”
“No
offense,” Munz replied, “but that looks to me like a
job for a surgeon.”
“Kensington
has removed more bullets and other projectiles than most surgeons,”
Castillo said. “Before he decided he’d rather shoot
people than treat them for social disease, he was an A-Team medic.
Which meant . . . what’s that line, Kensington?”
“That
I was ‘Qualified to perform any medical procedure other than
opening the cranial cavity,’ ” Kensington quoted. “I
can numb that, give you a happy pill, then clean it up and get the
bullet out. It would be better for you than waiting—the sooner
you clean up a wound like that, the better—and that’d
keep you from answering questions at a hospital. But what are you
going to tell your wife?”
“Lie,
Alfredo,” Castillo said. “Tell her you were shot by
a jealous husband.”
“What
she’s going to think is that I was cleaning my pistol and
it went off, and I’m embarrassed,” Munz said. “But
I’d rather deal with that than answer official questions.
How long will I be out?”
“You
won’t be out long, but you’ll be in La-La Land for a
couple of hours.”
Munz
considered that for a moment, then said: “Okay, do it.”
“Well,
let’s get you to your feet and onto something flat where there’s
some light,” Kensington said. He looked at Castillo, and the
two of them got Munz to his feet.
“There’s
a big table in the dining room that ought to work,” Kensington
said. “It looks like everybody got here just in time for dinner.
There’s a plate of good-looking roast beef on it. And a bottle
of wine.”
“Okay
on the beef,” Castillo said. “Nix on the wine. We have
to figure out what to do next and get out of here.”
“Major,
who the fuck are these bad guys?” Kensington asked.
“I
really don’t know. Yung is searching the bodies to see what
he can find out. I don’t even know what happened.”
“Well,
they’re pros, whoever they are. Maybe Russians? Kranz was
no amateur, and they got him. With a fucking garrote. That means
they had to (a) spot him and (b) sneak up on him. A lot of people
have tried that on Seymour and never got away with it.”
“Spetsnaz?”
Castillo said. “If this was anywhere in Europe, I’d
say maybe, even probably. But here? I just don’t know. We’ll
take the garrote and whatever else Yung comes up with, and see if
we can learn something.”
When
they got to the dining room, Kensington held up Munz while Castillo
moved to a sideboard the Chateaubriand, a sauce pitcher, a bread
tray, and a bottle of Uruguayan Merlot. Then he sat him down on
the table.
“You
going to need me—or Bradley—here?” Castillo asked.
“No,
sir.”
“Come
on, Bradley. We’ll find something to wrap Sergeant Kranz in.”
“Yes,
sir.”
Sergeant
First Class Seymour Kranz, a Delta Force communicator, who at five
feet four and one hundred thirty pounds hadn’t been much over
the height and weight minimums for the Army, was lying face down
where he had died.
A light
skinned African-American wearing black Delta Force coveralls sat
beside him, holding a Car-4 version of the M-16 rifle between his
knees. Despite the uniform, Jack Britton was not a soldier, but
a Special Agent of the United States Secret Service.
“Anything,
Jack?” Castillo asked.
Britton
shook his head.
“It’s
like a tomb out there,” he said. And then, “Is that
what they call an unfortunate choice of words?”
He
scrambled to his feet.
“Let’s
get Seymour on the chopper,” Castillo said, as he squatted
beside the corpse.
The
garrote which had taken Sergeant Kranz’s life was still around
his neck. Castillo tried to loosen it. It took some effort, but
finally he got it off, and then examined it carefully.
It
was very much like the nylon, self-locking wire and cable binding
devices enthusiastically adopted by the police as “plastic
handcuffs.” But this device was blued stainless steel, and
it had handles. Once it was looped over a victim’s head and
then tightened around the neck, there was no way the victim could
get it off.
Castillo
put the garrote in his suit jacket pocket.
“Okay,
spread the sheets on the ground,” Castillo ordered. “You
have the tape, right?”
“Yes,
sir,” Corporal Bradley responded.
He
laid the sheets, stripped from Jean-Paul Lorimer’s bed, onto
the ground. Castillo and Britton rolled Sergeant Kranz onto them.
One of his eyes was open. Castillo gently closed it.
“Sorry,
Seymour,” he said.
They
rolled Kranz in the sheets and then trussed the package with black
duct tape.
Then
he squatted beside the body.
“Help
me get him on my shoulder,” Castillo ordered.
“I’ll
help you carry him,” Britton said.
“You
and Bradley get him on my shoulder,” Castillo repeated. “I’ll
carry him. He was my friend.”
“Yes,
sir.”
Castillo
grunted with the exertion of rising to his feet with Kranz on his
shoulder, and for a moment he was afraid he was losing his balance,
and bitterly said, “Oh, shit!”
Bradley
put his hands on Castillo’s hips and steadied him.
Castillo
nodded his thanks, then started walking heavily toward where the
helicopter was hidden, carrying the body of SFC Seymour Kranz over
his shoulder.
[THE
HUNTERS, Book III in the new best-selling Presidential Agent series
by W.E.B. Griffin, published January2007. Click here to find your
favorite bookseller]
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