by Ty Patterson
Zeb, a former Special Forces soldier, was the lead operative for a covert US outfit, known simply as the Agency. Barely a handful of people were aware of its existence.
It was headed by Clare, his boss, who never gave out her second name, who carried the ambiguous title of Director of Strategy and reported only to the President. It had eight agents, all of whom were based in New York and worked in a security consulting firm, their cover. That firm was genuine, had real clients whom Zeb and his team advised when they weren’t on missions.
The Agency took on operations sanctioned by the most powerful man in the world. It took down terrorists and international criminal gangs and went after threats to national security. It took on those missions that alphabet agencies and black-ops outfits deemed too risky, and it had always delivered.
Zeb had been in Berlin to share intel with the BND. Information that they, he and his crew, had gathered while on the trail of a Syrian bombmaker who had connections to Germany’s far-right party.
‘I’ll be happier when you leave my country,’ Eric Schmidt had growled the day earlier. ‘Trouble follows you around.’
Zeb hadn’t taken offense at the words. He and the German were old friends.
I bet he wasn’t expecting this kind of trouble, he thought, as he stood waiting under the watchful eyes of a couple of armed police officers.
The train was still on the bridge, flooded with cops and medics, the former interviewing passengers, the latter tending to the dying and the injured. Fire services personnel were present too, as they forced open jammed carriage doors and escorted travelers to Warschauer Strasse.
The sun continued its climb, beating mercilessly on the scene of carnage. It had witnessed animal and plant species appear and disappear. One day, humans would become extinct too, but it would continue doing what it did, as long as it had hydrogen.
‘You are American?’ one of the police officers brought Zeb a bottle of water.
‘Yes.’
‘What are you doing in Berlin?’
‘I am a tourist.’
‘Tourists don’t carry Glocks. They don’t run towards shooters.’
‘I’ve already answered these questions.’
The officer stared at him curiously for a moment.
‘Who was he?’ Zeb asked the officer as the elderly man’s body was gently laid on a stretcher and carried away.
‘Johann Schwann,’ the cop replied after a moment’s hesitation. The American was unarmed. He had shot the gunman, thereby preventing more killings. Answering his questions wouldn’t hurt. ‘He was a pensioner. He maintained the gardens in a church there,’ he nodded at Warschauer station. ‘He went there every afternoon, worked for an hour, slept for a while and then returned home.’
‘Where was that? His home?’
‘Hallesches Tor. He lived with his daughter, just the two of them.’
‘You found all of that very quickly.’
‘His identity card had enough information on it…’ he broke off when his radio squawked. He turned his back on Zeb who stepped back and leaned against the carriage wall as more officers and more white-coated doctors entered the train.
He looked out of the window, to the street below. It was jammed with police cruisers, ambulances and the inevitable news-vans. A crowd had gathered, many of the onlookers flashing their camera phones. A couple of choppers in the sky, circling, a photographer leaning out of one dangerously, his telescopic lens a thin tube against the blue sky.
Zeb’s cell phone vibrated. He dug into his pocket and withdrew it. Recognized the number and took the call.
‘Zeb!’ Beth Petersen asked anxiously. ‘Are –’
‘I’m fine,’ he replied, smiling involuntarily as he heard another female voice in the background asking questions. Beth and Meghan, twins, the latter the elder of the two by a few minutes. They were his team’s glue. They ran the tech side of the Agency, managed the logistics and led the planning of every mission.
They weren’t mere desk jockeys; they were active members of every mission.
‘How did you know I was on the train?’ he asked.
‘You’ve got GPS tags in your shoes,’ she replied sharply, ‘in case you’ve forgotten. Werner alerted us the moment news of the shooting broke out.’
Werner, their advanced AI, Artificial Intelligence program.
‘Zeb,’ Meghan’s voice replaced her sister’s. ‘The shooter…reports said he’s dead. You had a hand?’
‘I shot him,’ he turned and lowered his voice when the second police officer looked at him. ‘He was in the carriage next to me.’ He briefed them quickly and then said, ‘gotta go,’ when the other cop approached.
‘Come with me,’ the officer told him.
‘Where to?’
The cop didn’t reply. He hopped off the carriage, onto the bridge and walked to the station, fully expecting Zeb to follow him.
Zeb did. He had no choice.
Chapter Four
Half an hour later Zeb was in the Mitte district in the center of Berlin. In the Klaus Kinkel Center for Intelligence, the BND office, the largest intelligence headquarters in the world.
The police officer had driven him from the train station, away from the prying eyes of cameras, using back routes. He had looked consideringly at Zeb as he handed him over to a security detail, wondering just who the heck this American was to get such treatment.
‘I told you to leave Berlin,’ Eric Schmidt said heavily but there was no anger, no rancor in his tone. The German, short, powerful-looking, with thinning grey hair that was neatly combed, looked weary as he turned off the wall-mounted TV. ‘Twenty-eight dead, Zeb. Eight children, seven women, among them. Many more injured.’
His fists clenched and unclenched on the blotter on his desk. ‘The chancellor has declared a national emergency. We are on the highest alert, but it looks like he was operating alone.’
‘Who was he?’
‘Otto Freisler, a mechanic in a garage in Pankow. The police are still investigating but it looks like he was a loner. He lived in the garage itself. Rent-free, in a small room, in return for also acting as a janitor.’
Pankow. East Berlin. Most populous neighborhood in the city.
‘You know how many were in that carriage?’
Zeb didn’t reply. He knew his friend was venting. The BND chief hadn’t offered him a shower or a change of clothes. That too was normal in the circumstances. ‘More than sixty! He would have shot all of them like sitting ducks. There was no escape from that carriage, not while the train was moving.’
‘Schwann tried to resist.’
‘Ja,’ Schmidt nodded his head. ‘Perhaps others would have joined him, but who knows!’ He rose suddenly, walked around his desk, caught Zeb by his shoulders and hugged him tight. ‘Thank you,’ he said and by the time he returned to his seat, his composure had returned.
‘Now,’ he said, all business, ‘you don’t want your name in the papers?’
‘Yeah.’
‘It’s done,’ he waved a hand airily as if it was a simple matter. ‘I spoke to Clare moments before you arrived. Our story is that an off-duty police officer shot Freisler. Linda Rosen, you know her, don’t you?’
Zeb nodded. The Berlin Police Chief was a highly competent and decorated officer who had risen up the ranks to command one of the largest police forces in the country.
‘She has agreed to this as well, as has Dieter Hamm, the head of the Bundespolizei.’
Law enforcement in the country was the responsibility of its state police while the Federal police, the Bundespolizei, looked after border protection, counter-terrorism and protection of federal buildings and agencies.
‘A couple of police officers were with me,’ Zeb began. ‘One of them drove me here.’
‘Taken care of. They’ll forget they saw you.’
‘The passengers –’
‘Your description is hazy. No one took any photographs or videos.’
‘My gun?’
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Schmidt reached into a drawer and produced his Glock. Zeb inspected it. Yeah, it was his. He checked the magazine. It was empty.
‘You weren’t wearing armor,’ his friend said. It wasn’t a question.
‘No.’
‘What if he had opened on you?’
‘I wouldn’t be here, in that case,’ he shrugged. A long silence broken only when the BND chief sighed. ‘Thank you,’ he repeated and got to his feet. ‘Come,’ he said and placed his hand on Zeb’s back. ‘I’ll get someone to drive you to the airport. Clare said you were flying to London. To meet Alex?’
‘Yes.’
‘Twenty-eight people,’ the German said softly to himself as they went down the elevator. ‘We will take his life apart and we will find answers.’
‘Schwann’s daughter,’ he said, as they were walking across the tiled floor to the building’s exit. ‘She’s a teacher. Science to primary school children. She never married. She sacrificed her life to look after her father.’
Zeb nodded, wondering what his friend was leading to. He got his answer a moment later.
‘She told the police she heard about the officer who held her father as he died.’ His eyes flicked momentarily to the dark, dried patches of blood on Zeb’s jacket. ‘She thanks that officer and says that her house is his home.’
Chapter Five
As Zeb boarded the British Airways flight at Berlin, a text message was sent from one burner phone in one continent to two others in two different continents.
It has started.
Just that line. Its recipients knew who had sent it and what it meant.
* * *
‘Lone wolf mission,’ Sir Alex Thompson, head of MI6, his friend, told him the next day in London. Zeb had briefed him on the Syrian intel and then the conversation had turned to Berlin.
They were in the SIS Building in Vauxhall Cross, the headquarters of the British foreign intelligence agency. A Mayan temple, one architecture critic had described the structure. It flowed from the top down, leveling out several times until it reached the ground.
Zeb listened absently as he looked out of its window, at the sluggish flow of the River Thames. He had suspected as much after reading the updates the twins had sent him overnight.
‘What about social media?’
‘Nothing there. That’s what is puzzling and scary. Freisler had a Facebook page, but there’s nothing on it that indicated he had violent tendencies. Nothing about his motives. He was your typical loner shooter. Kept to himself. His co-workers in the garage said he had no friends. He didn’t go drinking with them or join them for meals. Kept to himself.’
‘Where was he from?
‘Stuttgart.’
Zeb frowned. ‘Isn’t that the capital of…Baden-Wurttemberg, in the southwest of Germany?’
‘I am impressed,’ the Brit said drily, ‘and you are correct.’
‘Germany’s far right party did well in that state, didn’t it? In the last election.’
‘Yes. Eric and I discussed that. But there’s no sign that Freisler had any connection to that party. But it’s early days. The Germans are throwing everything at the investigation. Something will come up.’ He glanced at his watch and smiled wryly. ‘I’ve got to be in Whitehall,’ he said apologetically. ‘Ministerial briefing. You know how it goes.’
* * *
Why would he fire on innocents? Where did he get that AR15? Zeb wondered as he walked from the MI6 building to Regent Street.
He had no answers by the time he reached his destination. The street was a broad avenue with traffic flowing in both directions, separated by a central divider. Stately buildings flanked it on either side with designer label stores at the ground level and offices on the upper floors.
Shopping wasn’t his thing…but the sisters will murder me if I return empty handed.
London was his second favorite city in the world, after New York, his home town. The capital’s trademark red, double-decker buses, black cabs and that delicious sense of irony that its people had, those were just some of the reasons he loved spending time in London.
He peered through a store window, at a hat on a rack while pedestrians stepped around him, apologizing in that way only the British did. As if it was their fault that he stood in their way.
Yeah, he decided, Beth will like that. What about something for Meg?
And that’s when he heard the first scream.
Chapter Six
His head snapped up at the panicked sound. It came from his left, close to him. He stood rooted to the spot for a moment, horrified, when he took in the scene.
A black cab, driving on the sidewalk, mowing through pedestrians, heading directly at him.
Zeb sucked his breath sharply, looked away and then back. Nope, his eyes weren’t deceiving him. There was a taxi on the sidewalk, crashing into people, as it drove towards him.
It slammed into a couple even as he watched, the man flying through a store window, the woman crushed beneath its wheels with a sickening crunch.
Shrieks rent the air as people fled from its approach. Someone shoved into him, an elbow knocked into his face and then he too was moving, running, no, sprinting at the cab, hurtling towards a mother who stood frozen in her spot, her hands gripping her pram tightly, her mouth open in a soundless scream and then Zeb was lunging, his feet leaving the ground, his left hand curling around her waist, his right grabbing the pram’s basket and they were flying in the air just as the cab’s nose brushed past them, a wave of air blasting them as it rushed away.
And then he fell hard on the street, the mother on top of him, the pram on its side, but the baby was safe.
Senses heightened. A sharp look up and down the street. No traffic, thankfully. He got to his feet, helped the woman up and righted the pram. The child was screaming, her face red, her tiny fists beating the air punctuating her distress. But she was unhurt.
Zeb tracked the cab which was fifty feet away, moving slower as it continued its murderous rampage, heading towards Oxford Circus Station.
A police officer leaped at the cab only to fall back when the driver fired at her through a window.
Zeb took off in pursuit, leaping over bodies, dodging fleeing Londoners. A bus careened off the street on the other side and crashed into a store front.
Blood on the sidewalk. A writhing woman here, a crushed chest there. And then he forced himself to focus on the black vehicle, letting the darkness inside him, the cold rage that he often referred to as the beast, fill him up with deadly intent, sharpening his speed and senses.
Fifty feet became twenty. The cab was passing a last line of stores on the left. Glock? It was on him, secure in its shoulder holster.
‘MOVE AWAY!’ he roared and shoved past bystanders who were watching the rampage.
Ten feet. The wheel’s on the right in this country, he reminded himself. He could see the driver through a rear window. Bald. White. Hunched down. A man went flying even as Zeb ran, his body crumpling from the impact and falling to the street.
The door handle, he panted as he strained to reach for it. It was there… He got his fingers on it as the driver turned his thick neck. Small eyes. Dark. Lips twisted in a snarl. First impressions registering like a camera clicking at high speed. The door opened suddenly and Zeb almost lost his grip. He was dragged by the cab, its driver swerving left and right in an attempt to shake him away.
Zeb hung on. He gritted his teeth and pulled himself level with the window, letting his feet slide on the sidewalk. He reached inside the window with his right hand and grabbed the wheel. Attempted to turn it and let go suddenly when the driver shouted something and a snub-nosed revolver appeared in his hand.
Zeb ducked instinctively as a round fizzed through the air. He punched at the man’s face before he could fire again. Above the sound of the growling engine, he heard screaming. Snapped a look up and ahead.
A thick crush of people on the sidewalk where the stores stopped and the large circle of
Oxford Circus began. There was the subway entrance to the Tube, London’s Underground train network, metal barriers around it, leading to the flight of stairs. More people racing down the steps.
Can’t crash into them, he thought as he smashed the driver’s face again and wrestled with the wheel.
Where then? He could turn the cab to avoid the Tube entrance and go the center of the circle where Regent Street and Oxford Street met. He would have more room there to try to stop the killing machine.
The driver seemed to read his thoughts. He cursed and his revolver rose again, the black hole of its bore bearing down on Zeb who gave up trying to work the wheel, drew his Glock even as he let his left hand go loose allowing his body to sag behind the window. As rounds flew past his head, he thrust his gun into the cab and blindly triggered until he felt the cab go slack and knew that his rounds had scored.
Zeb flung his gun away. Pulled himself forward with his right hand, pushed the slumped driver away from the wheel with his left, got a hand on the wheel and yanked it hard until the careening vehicle crashed into a lamppost that bent from the impact.
With the driver’s foot still heavy on the pedal, the cab’s engine groaned, steam escaped from beneath its hood, rubber burned on the sidewalk. The post buckled, metal twisted and tore.
It won’t hold for long! Zeb yanked the door open and searched desperately for the ignition. There. He turned off the engine, panted as if he had run a marathon and sagged limply against the vehicle sweat pouring down his face.
Footsteps approaching. Boots. He raised his eyes to see grim-faced police officers train their weapons on him.
‘I’m the good guy,’ he sighed but raised his hands and followed them to a van.
He climbed inside and found it was a command vehicle. Officers monitoring screens, speaking softly in their radios, and there, next to a uniformed man was Sir Alex Thompson who looked at him and said,
‘This can’t be a coincidence!’