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Coonts, Stephen - Jake Grafton 7 - Cuba

Page 54

by Cuba (lit)


  of the oldest cigar companies for beaucoup bucks.

  Rear Admiral Jake Grafton was now an

  assistant to some bigwig in the Pentagon,

  Commander Toad Tarkington went with him as an aide,

  and Toad's wife, the newly promoted Commander

  Rita Moravia, was the exec-

  utive officer of a fighter squadron. Hector

  Sedano was doing an enviable job running Cuba, and

  some fighter pilot nobody ever heard of named

  Carlos Corrado had been promoted to general and

  put in charge of the Cuban Air Force.

  .life goes on.

  Most of the seats on the bus to Boulder were occupied.

  The sun coming through the windows and the motion of the bus were very

  pleasant, and many people dozed. The seat beside

  Carmellini was empty, so he relaxed

  las

  grip on the backpack and closed his eyes.

  He was awake when the bus crossed Davidson

  Mesa into Boulder, roaring down the turnpike at

  seventy-five. He marveled at the upthrust

  granite slabs of the Flatirons which formed a

  spectacular backdrop behind the town.

  As the bus cruised by the university on its way

  downtown, Tommy Carmellini walked to the door

  by the driver and waited. He got off at the next

  stop and stood looking at the red stone buildings of the

  university as the bus accelerated away in

  a cloud of diesel exhaust.

  He had a map in his hip pocket, but he had

  studied it so much he didn't need to refer to it today.

  He strolled along, readily recognized the

  student union, and went from there.

  The buildings were built all of. a pattern, and with

  throngs of students coming and going, seemed to proclaim

  the glory of man's quest for knowledge in the bright

  November sunshine.

  Carmellini glanced at his watch a time or two,

  then strolled along with his hands in his pockets. He

  found the building he wanted, opened the door, and

  went in. He took the stairs up to the top

  floor.

  The hallway was lined with doors, lots of doors.

  He walked along, examining them. Each door

  bore the name of a faculty member, and most had a

  small card advertising the faculty member's

  office hours taped to the frosted glass.

  He found the one he wanted, checked the hours. He

  was early, by ten minutes.

  He knocked.

  No answer.

  Should he wait here in the hallway, or ... perhaps the

  library? The hallway was empty, but

  someone could come along at any moment.

  Of course the professor might not come at all.

  Carmellini recalled his own college days: a

  student could spend weeks trying to waylay a tenured

  associate professor in his office.

  Well, if this didn't work he would try something

  else. Just what, he didn't know.

  He decided on the library. He turned and started

  down the hall. He had taken three or disfour

  steps when disthe door opened behind him and a man in his

  sixties stuck his head out.

  "Did you knock?". "Yes."

  "Got a watch? Can you read? Office hours

  don't start for ten minutes."

  "Yes, but"

  "Oh, come on in."

  Carmellini carefully closed the door behind him. The

  office was tiny, merely a cubbyhole with a desk and

  computer for the professor and one extra chair.

  Bookshelves filled with books lined both side

  walls. A shelf under the window behind the professor

  was piled willy-nilly with papers, manuscripts,

  files. The glass in the window didn't look as

  if it had been cleaned in years.

  "If this is about your thesis, we're going

  to need more time than I have available today, so"

  "You're Professor Svenson, right?"

  "That's right."...The professor had seated himself behind his

  desk. He looked up into Carmellini's face and

  adjusted his glasses. His features twisted into a

  frown.

  "Your face doesn't... You're ...?"

  "Your name is Olaf Svenson?"

  "What do you want?"

  Tommy Carmellini unzipped the backpack,

  pulled out

  the pistol with the silencer. He thumbed off the

  safety.

  A look of terror crossed Svenson's face.

  "The government has no evidenceea"...he said. "They

  decided not to prosecute. They"

  Tommy Carmellini shot Olaf Svenson in the

  center of the forehead from a distance of four feet.

  Svenson collapsed in his chair, his head tilted

  back.

  Carmellini stepped around the desk, put the muzzle

  of the silencer against the side of the professor's head

  and pulled the trigger twice more. Two little pops.

  He bent down, retrieved the spent cartridges that

  had been ejected from the pistol, pocketed

  them, then safetied the weapon and returned it to his

  backpack.

  He had touched only the doorknob. He

  extracted a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped the

  interior knob carefully, then pulled the door

  open. He pushed the little button to lock the door,

  then stepped into the hallway and pulled it shut. One

  hard twist of the cotton handkerchief on the outside

  knob, then he was walking away down the hallway and

  no one could ever prove he had been there.

  Surrounded by young adults strolling, laughing, and

  visiting with each other on the sun-dappled grass,

  Tommy Carmellini walked across the campus with his

  head down, the backpack over his shoulder, thinking of

  Cuba.

  Visiting the former British province, Admiral

  Jake Grafton becomes embroiled in a

  volatile conspiracy that will threaten the fate of a

  nation, the security of the free world, and the future of his

  own family . . .

  HONG KONG

  By Stephen Coonts

  After a series of political murders shakes

  Hong Kong's establishment to its core, paranoid

  government forces shut down a faltering

  bank. Subsequent riots trigger brutal

  military crackdowns, leaving China's position in

  the coveted province anything but certain.

  When shadowy conspirators abduct his wife,

  Admiral Grafton must throw himself headlong into the

  swirling intrigue that has engulfed the city. Only

  by allying with Tommy Carmellinithe CIA

  super-sleuth from CUBA-AND with a clandestine army of

  Chinese patriots, can Grafton fight to the

  shores of totalitarianism's last bastion . . .

  and hope to ever again see the woman he loves.

  HONG KONG

  The explosive new thriller from Stephen

  Coonts. Look for it in hardcover this September

  from St. Martin's Press.

  HK3/00

 

 

 
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