Necessary Means

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by Alex Ander




  Also by Alex Ander

  Action & Adventure - Special Agent Cruz

  Vengeance is Mine

  Defense of Innocents

  Plea For Justice

  Jacob St. Christopher Action & Adventure

  Protect & Defend

  Word of Honor

  A Vow to the Innocent

  Above & Beyond

  Patriotic Action & Adventure - Aaron Hardy

  The Unsanctioned Patriot

  American Influence

  Deadly Assignment

  Patriot Assassin

  The Nemesis Protocol

  Necessary Means

  Foreign Soil

  Of Patriots and Tyrants

  Act of Justice

  Standalone

  The President's Man

  The President's Man 2

  Special Agent Cruz Crime Series

  Against All Enemies

  Watch for more at Alex Ander’s site.

  Necessary Means

  (Aaron Hardy Patriotic Action #6)

  By Alex Ander

  .

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  Necessary

  Means

  Aaron Hardy

  Patriotic Action

  .

  This story proudly

  Made in the U.S.A.

  .

  Copyright ©2017 Jason A. Burley

  All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review to be published in a newspaper, magazine or electronically via the Internet.

  This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any similarities to real events or locations or actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Chapter 1: Slopes

  December 22nd, 4:15 p.m. (Mountain Time); Denver, Colorado

  Layla cranked her head around and glimpsed the chair lift that had brought her to the top of Ridge. She pulled her goggles over her eyes and smiled at her friend. “Do you always do what you’re told?” She drove her ski poles into the snow and pushed off, propelling her body down the slope.

  Abigail glanced at the chair lift and saw the two men who had been shadowing both her and Layla the entire day. The men had their ski poles in one hand, while holding onto the chair lift with the other, preparing to jump off and coast away before the next group of skiers disembarked. Abigail was hesitant to ditch the men, but her fear of being labeled a ‘chicken’ superseded her reluctance. She spotted Layla, her outline getting smaller by the second. Abigail dug her poles into the snow and leaned forward, gaining momentum as fast as she could.

  Picking up speed, Abigail felt her heart beating faster. Closing the distance between her and her friend, she could feel her pulse pounding in her head. Her stomach was in knots. Her muscles convulsed. She had never done anything like this before. What’s dad going to do? She drew up behind Layla and watched her friend slow before taking a hard left turn and zipping between two trees, past a boundary sign. Abigail twisted her hips to the left and followed.

  Gliding down a narrow path, trees on either side of them, the girls made a sharp right and headed down a virgin trail, closed to skiers. The snow was fluffy and flew into the air as Layla and Abigail’s skis floated across the surface. Abigail was reveling in the cushion of powder beneath her skis. She followed Layla around a curve in the trail. Taking the curve, Abigail stole a quick look over her left shoulder and saw two tiny specks of color; the ski jackets of the two men who had been with the girls all day. A long way back, the men disappeared from sight, when she went deeper into the curve. Whipping her head around, she saw Layla had stopped, and was staring at a person sprawled on the trail. Abigail slowed before pulling alongside her friend and performing a hockey stop, her parallel skis digging in and throwing snow ahead of the girls. She placed her goggles on her forehead. Her cheeks were bright red. Visible puffs of air shot out from her mouth, while she tried to catch her breath. “What happened?”

  Layla shrugged. “I don’t know. I came around the bend and saw him at the last moment. If I hadn’t seen him, I’d have taken a nasty spill.”

  “Is he all right?”

  “He hasn’t moved, since I first saw him.”

  Abigail used her ski poles to loosen the bindings of her skis before sticking the poles in the snow. Stepping out of her skis, she approached the man. He was lying on his left side, facing away from her. He had one ski attached to his boot, but the other ski and his poles were further down the trail. She could see he had taken a hard fall. She knelt behind him. “Sir, are you okay?” The man did not respond. She put her hands on his right arm and gently shook him. “Can you hear me, sir?” She heard him groan and mumble under his breath. She leaned closer. “I didn’t hear you, sir. What did you say?” Abigail’s left ear was alongside the man’s right cheek. She strained to hear his broken voice. Closing her eyes to help her ears focus on his words, she never saw the man roll onto his back. She felt a gloved hand slip between her body and right arm and clamp onto her upper arm. She jerked her upper body away, but his grip held her close. She sensed a slight prick on the right side of her neck. Seconds later, her vision dimmed and the world around her was reduced to a small, dark circle. Before she lost consciousness, Abigail heard a muffled scream from behind her. Layla.

  Thirty seconds earlier…

  Dressed in white and hidden among the trees, the man watched the two girls whoosh past his position. A few moments later, further up the trail, he saw the two men who were following the girls. The men were approximately seventy-five meters away. The one in the lead was ten to fifteen meters ahead of his partner. They were skiing as fast as they could, trying to catch the girls.

  The man closed his left eye and put his right eye to the scope of the rifle. He was careful to leave enough room, so the rifle’s recoil did not send the scope backward into his eye. He centered the crosshairs of the scope on the second skier’s head and breathed deeply, releasing half the air. His right index finger hovered in front of the trigger of the rifle, while he tracked his prey. He touched the trigger and applied steady rearward pressure, until the weapon jumped backward into his shoulder. The rifle’s sound suppressor made the rapport of the twenty-two magnum cartridge barely audible. He saw his target go down into a twisted mass of arms and legs, rolling and flopping head over heels down the trail.

  The man swung the rifle and lined up the other skier, who was oblivious to his partner’s demise. Repeating the procedure, the man dropped the second skier. Instead of bouncing and flopping, the skier fell onto his back and slid down the trail, stopping twenty meters away.

  The sniper stood and emerged from his hiding place. Ascending the hill, he came up to the first felled skier. Raising the rifle to his shoulder, he put the muzzle almost against the man’s head and pressed the trigger twice. He ran up the hill and shot the other man in the head two times before performing a three hundred and sixty-degree scan around his position. Once he was satisfied no one had seen anything, he spun around and hurried down the hill.

  Chapter 2: Leland

  7:59 p.m. (Eastern Time); Leland, Michigan (22 miles northwest of Traverse City)

  Close to the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Leland, Michigan, settled in 1853, is an unincorporated community, situated at the mouth of the Leland River. With Lake Michigan to the west and Lake Leelanau directly to the east, Leland is the departure point for anyone wishing to take a ferry to ei
ther North or South Manitou Islands. The population of the entire township of Leland stands at a little more than two thousand people. In the early 1900’s, people from Chicago, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and other cities began building summer cottages in Leland. This influx of wealthy individuals kicked off the construction of hotels in the area and contributed to Leland becoming a summer resort.

  Less than two miles south of Leland, on the east side of North Manitou Trail stood a two-story, two-bathroom, four-bedroom home built into the side of a hill that gently sloped toward the western shoreline of Lake Leelanau. The eighteen hundred square-foot structure was snuggled among the trees that lined the shore. The modest home had simple vinyl siding, asphalt roofing and an attached garage.

  The interior had modern wood paneling and a combination of carpeting and linoleum tile. A brick fireplace was in the middle of the living room, near the sliding glass door that led to the deck, from which the view was anything but ordinary. Enough trees had been cleared to provide an unobstructed line of sight all the way across the lake. At certain times of the year, the rising sun would line up with the path cleared through the trees. During those times, the home’s occupants felt as if God himself was peering into their home.

  Sitting on a black leather couch with her feet tucked close to her body, FBI Special Agent Raychel Elisa DelaCruz leaned into the man sitting to her left and playfully pushed him. She smiled and laughed before pretending to pout. “Stop it. That’s not funny.”

  Laughing, Aaron Hardy put his right arm around her shoulders, drew her closer and kissed her on the cheek. “I’m sorry, Cruz,” – Even though her legal name was DelaCruz, everyone close to her called her ‘Cruz.’ She received the nickname when she was in the military. Her fellow soldiers called her Cruz, joking that her real name was too difficult to pronounce – “but I’m just so use to you being so good at everything that I was really surprised at how bad you were at skiing.”

  Cruz stared at him. “Have you forgotten where I was born and raised?—Dalhart; as in Dalhart, Texas. Not a whole lot of snow in Texas, Mr. Hardy.”

  Pretending to be upset with her son, Evelyn Hardy defended Cruz. “Oh, leave the poor girl alone, Aaron.”

  Cruz flicked her eyes toward the older woman. “Thank you, Mrs. Hardy—”

  Mrs. Hardy stuck her finger in the air. “Please call me Evelyn, dear.”

  “Thank you, Evelyn. He’s been teasing me about it all day.”

  Hardy attempted to defend his actions. “We’ve done a lot of things together…basketball, bowling, even tossing around a football. You’ve held your own at all of those. So, you can understand my surprise to learn that you just…plain…can’t…ski.”

  “Aaron!” said Mrs. Hardy.

  He shrugged his shoulders and smiled. “What? I’m giving her a compliment.”

  “I think that’s called a backhanded compliment.” Cruz craned her neck and kissed him. “But, I know what you’re getting at.”

  Hardy felt his cell phone vibrating in his pocket. Retrieving the phone, he looked at the screen and stood. “I should take this. I’ll be right back.” He crossed in front of Cruz and walked past his mother, who was sitting in a rocking chair near the fireplace. Drawing even with her, he bent over, kissed her on the left cheek and kept going, never breaking his stride.

  As Hardy opened the sliding glass door that led to the deck, Mrs. Hardy left her chair to take her son’s seat next to Cruz. “I just wanted to tell you that I’m so glad you came here.” She put her hands on Cruz’s left forearm. “It’s been a joy getting to know you these past couple of days.”

  “Thank you, Mrs.—” Cruz stopped speaking and grinned. “Thank you, Evelyn. That means a lot to me.” Cruz rolled her eyes toward the fireplace. “To be honest, I was a little nervous coming here.”

  “Why’s that, dear?”

  “I’ve dated men, but I’ve never met the mother of any of them.” She observed Mrs. Hardy. “I guess I was a little self-conscious of what you would think of me.”

  Mrs. Hardy locked eyes with Cruz. “You have nothing to worry about. If my son is anything like his father,” she grinned, “he has good taste when it comes to women.”

  Cruz laughed when she realized the woman was also giving herself a compliment in the process of alleviating Cruz’s insecurity.

  “I also want you to know I’ve never seen my son as happy as I’ve seen him in the last couple days. I see the way he looks at you. It’s the same look I would see in my late husband’s eyes.” Mrs. Hardy patted Cruz’s arm. “Aaron adores you, Raychel. You’re good for him.” She caught sight of her son through the sliding glass doors. “He’s always been a serious and driven person. His teasing you is the lighthearted side of his personality I’ve not seen since the death of his father.” Mrs. Hardy stopped talking and stared at her son. He’s so much like his father.

  Cruz could see the woman was lost in her thoughts. She cupped the woman’s shoulder. “Are you okay, Evelyn?”

  After a few moments, Mrs. Hardy waved her hand in front of her body. “I’m sorry.” She let out the air she had been holding and smiled. “I just wanted you to know how happy I am he has a woman like you in his life. It gives a mother comfort knowing her son is loved and taken care of.”

  Cruz smiled.

  Standing, Mrs. Hardy picked up a serving tray from the table in front of the couch. “I’m going to get us some more cookies. Can I get you another cup of hot chocolate?”

  Cruz held up her hand before placing it on her stomach. “I really shouldn’t. I’m afraid I’ve put on a few pounds this holiday season.”

  Mrs. Hardy, who had started walking toward the kitchen, stopped, looked the younger woman over from head to toe before continuing on her way to the kitchen. “My dear, I would have loved to have had your figure and gorgeous hair when I was your age.”

  Cruz was five-feet, eight inches tall and had a slim and athletic build. Her long hair was dark brown, almost matching the complexion of her skin. She had dark brown eyes with long curly eyelashes, not needing mascara to provide fullness. Her face was long with high cheekbones. Though she did not like to talk about it, she had competed in beauty pageants since she was a teenager. She won her state competition before placing second in the Miss America contest. Physical health was important to her and she had always taken care of her body, both inside and outside. Whenever anyone complimented her on her good looks, she would squirm and deflect the attention. She wanted to be viewed and respected for her other accomplishments in life; serving her country in the military, becoming a police officer for her hometown and an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. On this occasion, however, she accepted the compliment. “Thank you.” She held up her thumb and forefinger less than an inch apart. “Maybe I’ll have a small cup.”

  After Mrs. Hardy had left the room, Cruz watched Hardy. He had his phone pressed to his ear, but he was not doing any of the talking. His eyebrows were furled downward. She could see his lips were slightly pursed. I wonder who’s on the other end of the phone. She got a strange feeling in the pit of her stomach. She had seen the look on his face many times before, usually before he had to leave for some other part of the world on a mission. She hoped she was wrong.

  …………………………

  At thirty years old, Hardy was in the prime of his career. He had spent the last twelve years as a United States Marine, the most recent years as a Special Forces team leader, until his entire team was killed in a blast at a tavern in Washington, D.C. During the days that followed, he found those responsible and brought them to justice, catching the eye of the President, who offered Hardy his current position.

  Hardy stood on the deck and peeked through the sliding glass door. He saw Cruz staring at him. He also caught his own reflection in the glass. At five-feet, eleven-inches tall, he was in the best physical condition of his life. Standing sideways, he could not remember a time in his life when his chest and arms had been bigger. His hair was light brown and cut sh
ort, although it was in need of a little trim.

  A light layer of snow had gathered on the deck from an earlier flurry. The air was cold, but it felt good for the moment. The cold also helped keep his mind sober and focused on what the caller was telling him. I can’t believe what I’m hearing. Am I dreaming? No, dreams were supposed to be good. This was a nightmare. He could not take it any longer and he interjected his thoughts into the conversation. “Has anyone claimed responsibility?”

  FBI Director Phillip Jameson, Hardy’s boss, responded. “Not yet, but details are still coming in from the Secret Service and other agencies. We should have more information by the time you get here. The President has called a meeting of all the top brass from the various law enforcement agencies. He specifically requested that you and Cruz be there, too.”

  “The President wants Cruz there, too?”

  “Yes. He thinks highly of her, especially since she put her life on the line to protect Abby at the summit. And, he’s been on me to get her more involved in the war on terror. Anyway, he wants her there. I assume she’s with you.”

  “She is, sir.” He and Cruz had been dating since mid-July. It was no secret. Most everyone at the FBI knew about the relationship.

  “Good. That’ll save me a phone call.”

  “What time is the meeting?” Hardy switched the phone to his other ear.

  “Eleven o’clock tonight,” said Jameson.

  “Tonight?” he said, his voice rising.

  “That’s right.”

  Hardy did not have to check the time to know there was no way he was going to make it to Washington, D.C. in time for the meeting. “Sir, it’s a twelve-hour drive to D.C., if the weather is good.”

  “I’ve sent a car to your mother’s house to take you to the airport. A jet will be waiting for you, ready to take off the minute you and Cruz arrive. The car will be there in…fifteen minutes. Have a safe flight, Hardy, and I’ll see you at the White House.”

 

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