Tranquility Denied

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Tranquility Denied Page 31

by A. C. Frieden


  “Not yet,” Linda whispered with a smile. “But parts of my body seem to be cooperating now.”

  As Jonathan and his law partner headed out, Gary leaned into him. “I have good news.”

  “Tell me.”

  “Federal prosecutors are about to indict both counselor Tillerman and Vice-Admiral Scarborough, and they’re considering charging three other officials at the Defense Intelligence Agency and one guy at the CIA. Looks like you’ve tipped a few dominos.”

  Jonathan shook his head. “But at a very high price.”

  They headed out of the hospital, down the front steps, when Jonathan spotted a black Lincoln Town Car idling by the curb. As Jonathan reached the sidewalk, the driver opened the rear door and a passenger got out. It was Vice-Admiral Scarborough, dressed in his Navy uniform, his unfriendly stare pointed at Jonathan.

  Gary said, “Isn’t that...”

  “Yes.” Jonathan stopped to gauge whether he was in danger.

  “Can we have a word?” Scarborough asked, looking rather haggard, like a man who hadn’t slept in a week, or a man who’d suddenly found his powers to be hollow.

  Jonathan turned to Gary. “It’s okay. I’ll talk to him for a minute.” He approached Scarborough, who leaned up against his car as his driver returned to the front seat. “What do you want?”

  “There are a lot of other things that you do not know about what we did in Russia,” said Scarborough, avoiding looking directly into Jonathan’s eyes. “I could fill you in on these details; anything you want to know about what happened. I’d like to help you learn the full truth...in return for you not testifying against me and my men.”

  “I already know more than I ever wanted to about your reckless campaign.” The man’s suggestion was so preposterous, Jonathan was tempted to him.

  “I too have a family,” Scarborough pleaded. “They don’t need to be dragged through this—to see their breadwinner go to jail. I am a patriot. Always have been. What you’re doing may have been right for you personally, but not for this nation. All I ever wanted was to defend us from some of the greatest dangers you can imagine. And instead, you want to put me behind bars.”

  “That’s where you belong.” Jonathan had half expected to hear only fighting words from Scarborough, not this kind of defeatist tone.

  Scarborough paused and raised his head. “Fine. Have it your way. But then you’ll never know from where it will come. Maybe as you drive under an overpass, or while you take a shower, or when you sit by your corner office window, or when you and your wife go shopping for groceries. It will happen. You will die. You have pissed off too many people.”

  Jonathan’s voice hardened. “Your threats mean nothing to me.”

  “They should.” Scarborough glanced up at the hospital’s facade.

  Jonathan knew exactly what he meant. “You better hope she recovers fully. If she doesn’t, one morning in your jail cell, you won’t wake up.”

  Scarborough returned a disgusted glare and slipped back into his car. Jonathan stepped back as the Lincoln drove off. Just as he glanced at the other side of the street, he spotted a woman behind the wheel of a car—a woman he immediately recognized, even though she wore a strawberry blond wig and large sunglasses. There was no disguising Mariya. She briefly met his gaze, but then her focus shifted to Scarborough’s car.

  Jonathan stood riveted to the pavement. He wasn’t sure what the hell was about to happen.

  She waited, a hunter in repose.

  Then, once Scarborough’s Town Car had turned the corner, her car came to life, the engine revving. She turned and smiled—that calm, psychotic smile Jonathan had come to know and fear while in Moscow. She was there for blood, and she would find it. She glanced one last time at Jonathan and nodded. Her car slowly sliced through the sultry N’awlins afternoon and disappeared into the distant traffic.

  About A.C. Frieden

  A.C. Frieden is an attorney, pilot, diver, martial artist and former biologist and army sniper. Born in Africa and raised in Europe and the United States, he graduated from Loyola University New Orleans College of Law and now lives in Chicago.

  The Jonathan Brooks Series

  Tranquility Denied

  The Serpent’s Game

  The Pyongyang Option (*)

  Letter from Istanbul (*)

  (*) Coming soon

  http://www.acfrieden.com/

  Back to TOC

  Other Books by Down and Out Books

  By J.L. Abramo

  Catching Water in a Net

  Clutching at Straws

  Counting to Infinity

  Gravesend

  Chasing Charlie Chan

  Circling the Runway (*)

  By Trey R. Barker

  2,000 Miles to Open Road

  Road Gig: A Novella

  Exit Blood

  By Richard Barre

  The Innocents

  Bearing Secrets

  Christmas Stories

  The Ghosts of Morning

  Blackheart Highway

  Burning Moon

  Echo Bay

  Lost (*)

  By Milton T. Burton

  Texas Noir

  By Reed Farrel Coleman

  The Brooklyn Rules

  By Tom Crowley

  Viper’s Tail

  By Frank De Blase

  Pine Box for a Pin-Up

  By A.C. Frieden

  Tranquility Denied

  The Serpent’s Game (*)

  By Jack Getze

  Big Numbers

  Big Money (*)

  Big Mojo (*)

  By Keith Gilman

  Bad Habits (*)

  By Don Herron

  Willeford (*)

  By Terry Holland

  An Ice Cold Paradise

  Chicago Shiver

  By Darrel James, Linda O. Johsonton & Tammy Kaehler (editors)

  Last Exit to Murder

  By Jon Jordan

  Interrogations

  By Jon & Ruth Jordan (editors)

  Murder and Mayhem in Muskego

  By David Housewright & Renee Valois

  The Devil and the Diva

  By David Housewright

  Finders Keepers

  By Jon Jordan

  Interrogations

  By Bill Moody

  Czechmate: The Spy Who Played Jazz

  The Man in Red Square

  Solo Hand (*)

  The Death of a Tenor Man (*)

  The Sound of the Trumpet (*)

  Bird Lives! (*)

  By Gary Phillips

  The Perpetrators

  Scoundrels: Tales of Greed, Murder and Financial Crimes (editor)

  Treacherous: Griffters, Ruffians and Killers

  By Gary Phillips, Tony Chavira, Manoel Magalhaes

  Beat L.A. (Graphic Novel)

  By Lono Waiwaiole

  Wiley's Lament

  Wiley's Shuffle

  Wiley's Refrain

  Dark Paradise

  (*) Coming soon

  Back to TOC

  Here’s a sample from Bill Moody’s The Man in Red Square.

  Prelude

  At first glance there was nothing to distinguish the slightly built man, body thickened by a heavy parka, standing opposite the Lenin Mausoleum. A look, a nervous gesture, a tell-tale tic behind the wire-framed aviator sunglasses, none of these would have been evident to the casual observer. It’s difficult to recognize a man poised, however reluctantly, on the brink of his own destiny.

  He’d been standing there for nearly an hour, squinting into the glare of an unseasonal sun that had briefly thawed Moscow and brought its bewildered and confused citizens out in droves to bask in the unexpected mid-winter warmth.

  A lot of the snow had melted, still scattered about Red Square, thick jagged patches remained, like a chain of white islands stretched from the dark, red stone walls of the Kremlin to the incongruous onion-like domes of St. Basil’s Cathedral.

  The icy wind blowing off
the Moskva River swirled briefly about the Kremlin towers and whipped across the square towards the GUM Department Store, stinging the faces of lunch time shoppers scurrying in and out of its ornate facade.

  Was it an omen perhaps, this freakish weather? Nature bestowing her approval? He couldn’t decide. He only knew the earlier confidence and assurance had deserted him now, vanished like the puffs of his own breath in the wind, leaving him with only a cold knot of indecision clawing at the pit of his stomach.

  It wasn’t going to work. He was sure of it.

  But even now, as his mind flirted with abandoning the whole idea, playing with the notion like a child with a favorite toy, he could feel several pairs of eyes, watching, recording his every move, tracking each step. There was no turning back now. One step and he would set in motion a chain of events from which there was no retreat.

  He was committed, as surely as a diver who springs off the high board and waits only for the water to rush up and meet him.

  Only his reason for being there defined him, set him apart from the swarm of foreign tourists and Muscovites waiting patiently in the long line snaking towards him across the square. Weary pilgrims to a godless shrine, shuffling ever closer for a fleeting glimpse of Lenin’s waxen figure encased in glass.

  Still motionless, his eyes restlessly wandered over the slow moving file. The Russians were easily distinguishable. Uniformly dressed in drab olives and dark browns, their enduring somber faces wore resignation like a mask. They were in sharp contrast to the animated group of Japanese, nervously chattering, eyes darting everywhere, clutching cameras and thumbing guidebooks.

  Just ahead of the Japanese group, his eyes stopped and riveted on a man and woman. The man—tall, angular, seemingly oblivious to the cold in a light coat, tie flapping in the wind—stood ramrod stiff next to the much shorter woman. A mane of blond hair spilled over the folds of her thick fur coat.

  They were exactly as he remembered.

  The woman’s breath expelled in tiny puffs as she gushed in obvious delight and pointed around the square. The man nodded absently, occasionally following her gestures. Once, they turned in his direction; he thought for a moment the man’s eyes locked with his own. He turned away quickly, pulling the hood of his parka up around his face. Then, almost angrily, realizing he couldn’t possibly be recognized at this distance, jammed his hands in the pockets of the parka, and felt his hand close over the small slip of paper.

  Relax. How long had it been? Years. He forced himself to take several deep breaths and tried once again to shake off the anxiety. Was this all it would take? A hastily scribbled note?

  The file was moving faster now. He would have to make his move soon. But there was something wrong with his legs. They wouldn’t move. Again, almost angrily, he took off his sunglasses, as if they were the cause of his immobility. He turned into the wind and strolled casually towards the line.

  He pushed through a large crowd coming out of the tomb, unmindful now of the grunts of protest as he jostled for a position nearer the Japanese group. A few turned to eye him curiously as he suddenly veered away and broke into a kind of slow jog. His boots crunched over a patch of snow; the blood began to pound in his ears.

  Abruptly, he changed direction. He turned quickly, pushed through the orderly file, directly in front of the man and woman. Startled, the woman cried out, clutching her handbag close as he brushed against her. The fur of her coat lightly grazed his face. Angry voices filled his ears. Someone was shouting for the guards. The man, equally surprised said something but it was lost in the shouting.

  He palmed the folded slip of paper and slid it easily into the tall man’s coat pocket.

  For a fleeting moment, so vital that everything depended on it, he turned his face squarely to the man. He saw the flashing spark of recognition dissolve into shock, the mouth drop open to speak a name, silently formed on bloodless lips. Then he was gone, melting into the crowd, past curious stares, indignant voices.

  It was done.

  He walked hurriedly, zigzagging across the square, glancing back over his shoulder, knowing there would be no pursuit. He paused at the steps of the Metro, free at last of the crowds.

  Perhaps, free of Russia.

  ***

  Tommy Farrell was waiting for Santa Claus.

  He’d had other plans for Christmas Eve–plans that didn’t include freezing his ass off in the back of a broken down van on the New York Thruway. He sat hunched on the floor near the rear doors, shifting his position for the third time in as many minutes but finally gave it up as a useless exercise. There was simply no way to get warm or comfortable. He could only take solace in the knowledge that the red, disabled vehicle tag flying from the van’s aerial was as false as his hopes that the Jets would make the Super Bowl.

  He looked out the van’s rear window. The late evening traffic rushing by was lighter now than when he’d taken up his position nearly an hour before and moving steadily. The road had been cleared, but new snow flurries were already starting to fall and a heavy storm was predicted by midnight. Perfect weather for Santa Claus, Farrell thought, lighting a cigarette and pulling the collar of his coat up around his ears.

  He checked the luminous dial of his watch. Eight o’clock. He dragged deeply on the cigarette and tried to dredge up thoughts about duty to country, but they were easily obscured by the vision of his wife, at home in front of a glowing fire, putting finishing touches on the tree and explaining to their two young children why daddy had to work on Christmas Eve even if he is in the FBI.

  He shivered again and poured the last of the coffee from a thermos. It was still hot but flat, tasteless. He felt the van shudder and turned sharply as the interior was suddenly bathed in blinding light, revealing for a moment the tripod-mounted Nikon with a long-range telephoto lens. A klaxon horn shattered the night as a heavy diesel thundered by dangerously close.

  Farrell’s hand shook; the coffee spilled. He cursed the huge truck as the hot liquid splashed on his hand. Tossing the cup aside, he wiped his hand on his jacket and squinted through the lens of the Nikon.

  The camera was trained on a phone booth across the expressway.

  He carefully adjusted the focus and checked the meter reading. With high speed, infrared film to compensate for the poor expressway lighting, the pictures would be sharp and clear if conditions held. He rotated the lens slightly until he could read the number on the dial of the telephone.

  “Bingo One, Bingo One, this is Caller.” The metallic voice crackled out of the small hand-held radio beside Farrell.

  “Go, Caller,” he answered.

  “The Navy’s on the way. Just passed the toll booths. ETA, four minutes.”

  “Gotcha.” Farrell laid the radio aside, checked his watch and the camera once again and nervously watched the minutes tick off. In just under four minutes, a dark blue sedan pulled off the expressway and parked in front of the phone booth.

  The driver emerged cautiously from the car, briefly scanned the oncoming traffic and gave Farrell’s van a cursory glance. For an instant, the driver’s face was framed in the lens. “Gotcha,” Farrell murmured aloud. The Nikon’s motor drive whirred as he clicked off several frames.

  Through the lens, Farrell continued to track the man as he strode towards the phone booth. Inside, a dim light came on over his head as he closed the folding door. Farrell watched tensely as the man took a large envelope from under his coat and stuck it under the shelf below the phone. He hung up the receiver and quickly returned to his car. Farrell shot the last of the roll at the retreating car as it merged with the traffic heading toward New York City.

  With practiced hands, Farrell rewound the film, loaded the camera with a fresh roll and re-adjusted the focus. He paused for a moment, lighting another cigarette, then picked up the radio.

  “Caller, this is Bingo One.”

  “Go Bingo,” the voice replied.

  “Santa’s helper has come and gone.”

  “Roger, Bingo. Santa
should be along in a minute. How you doin’ out there?” The business-like voice suddenly became friendly.

  Farrell smiled. “Okay if I ever thaw out.”

  “Hang on. I’ll buy you a drink when we wrap this up, okay?”

  “No thanks. It’s Christmas Eve remember?”

  “Aw, you married guys are all alike. Why don’t you...wait a minute. Santa just went through the gate. Black Buick, four-door.”

  “Right,” Farrell said. He snapped off the radio and rubbed his hands together. He counted off three minutes and forty-two seconds before the second car pulled off and parked near the phone booth. For more than a minute, the flashing tail lights winked at Farrell, but no one got out of the car.

  “C’mon, c’mon.” The snow flurries were beginning to thicken. As if responding to Farrell’s anxiety, the door opened and a man got out. Short, thick-set, and as with the first man, his face was briefly framed in the lens.

  Farrell’s breath quickened at the sight of the familiar face. He pressed the shutter button. Swiveling the camera, he tracked his prey to the booth and locked in for a waist-high shot.

  This time there was no pretense of dialing. The man simply held the receiver in one hand and felt under the shelf for the envelope. He seemed to stare directly into the lens, as if he knew it was there, Farrell would remember later.

  While the man grappled with the folding door, Farrell shot the remaining film and grabbed the radio, almost shouting now. “All units, go!”

  Red lights flashing, tires screeching in protest, a police cruiser arrived seconds later. It skidded to a halt blocking the outside lane and was quickly joined by three unmarked cars. Together they boxed in the black Buick.

 

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