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Saucer: The Conquest

Page 33

by Coonts, Stephen


  HARRISON DOUGLAS BROKE AWAY FROM THE REPORTERS and walked quickly to a waiting limousine. Safely ensconced in his padded-leather sanctuary, he began making calls on the vehicle’s encrypted telephone. He was angry, damned angry. The salvage company was demanding their eight million bucks and threatening to sue if he didn’t pony up, even though they failed to deliver the saucer to the dock in Newark; Solo had played him for a sucker and robbed him; and the whole world was laughing at him.

  Well, that thief Solo wouldn’t laugh long, by God! Douglas grew up in Philly, and he still knew some guys. Hadn’t talked to them in years, but they knew him too. These were guys you didn’t screw with. They ate thieving little bastards like Solo for breakfast.

  After three telephone calls, Douglas was tired. He lay back in his seat and closed his eyes.

  THE NEWS THAT THE ROSWELL SAUCER WAS NO LONGER on the floor of the Atlantic hit the White House like a small bomb. The news that the saucer had been stolen from a deepwater salvage ship and was out there … somewhere … flying around … greatly enhanced the explosion.

  A horrified P. J. O’Reilly, the chief of staff, rushed into the presidential bedroom with the news. The presidential pooch hastily bestirred itself and shot into the president’s closet. O’Reilly ignored the dog, as he did all lesser creatures, which was almost everyone. He found the president eating breakfast at a small table. The morning newspapers were piled beside him, apparently as yet unread.

  “What’s the matter, O’Reilly? Did the Canadians invade?”

  “It’s a lot worse than that. That saucer that went into the Atlantic last month was salvaged, raised from the ocean, and someone stole it.”

  The president felt as if he had taken a punch. He seemed to shrink right where he sat. The color leaked from his face.

  “It’s out there now, God only knows where,” O’Reilly continued, digging in the knife. He enjoyed giving the president bad news, although he pretended he didn’t. Now he seized the remote control from the breakfast table and clicked on the television.

  The president found he had lost his appetite. Perhaps the fact that he had lived through two saucer crises in the last fourteen months had something to do with his bad humor.

  At least, he reflected as he watched the talking heads on CNN, Rip Cantrell and Charley Pine weren’t involved in this escapade. Or were they? “Have the FBI find Rip Cantrell and Charlotte Pine,” he growled at O’Reilly. “Just tell me where they are.” O’Reilly rushed off to make the call.

  Charley Pine was a real piece of work, a former fighter and test pilot who could fly anything, but Rip Cantrell was the one the president worried about. The kid single-handedly took on the world’s second-richest man, the president and the U.S. government … and beat them all. Just another all-American boy! Ai yi yi!

  The president decided not to rule out Rip until he saw a photo of Adam Solo.

  He opened his bottle of Rolaids and munched a handful. Then he reached for the waiting newspapers.

  ALSO BY STEPHEN COONTS

  SAUCER

  SAUCER: THE CONQUEST

  PIRATE ALLEY

  THE DISCIPLE

  THE ASSASSIN

  THE TRAITOR

  LIARS & THIEVES

  LIBERTY

  AMERICA

  HONG KONG

  CUBA

  FORTUNES OF WAR

  THE INTRUDERS

  THE RED HORSEMEN

  UNDER SIEGE

  THE MINOTAUR

  FINAL FLIGHT

  FLIGHT OF THE INTRUDER

  WITH WILLIAM H. KEITH

  DEEP BLACK: DEATH WAVE

  DEEP BLACK: SEA OF TERROR

  DEEP BLACK: ARCTIC GOLD

  WITH JIM DeFELICE

  DEEP BLACK: CONSPIRACY

  DEEP BLACK: JIHAD

  DEEP BLACK: PAYBACK

  DEEP BLACK: DARK ZONE

  DEEP BLACK: BIOWAR

  DEEP BLACK

  WRITING AS EVE ADAMS

  THE GARDEN OF EDEN

  NONFICTION

  THE CANNIBAL QUEEN

  ANTHOLOGIES

  THE SEA WITCH

  ON GLORIOUS WINGS

  VICTORY

  COMBAT

  WAR IN THE AIR

  SAUCER: THE CONQUEST

  Copyright © 2004 by Stephen Coonts.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks are published by St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  eISBN 9781429967792

  First eBook Edition : July 2011

  St. Martin’s Griffin trade paperback edition / September 2004

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks edition / March 2006

 

 

 


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