by Allen Wyler
Praise for Allen Wyler’s Deadly Odds
“In ‘Deadly Odds,’ Allen Wyler’s unique thriller, Arnold Gold, an introverted, computer geek goes to Las Vegas to lose his virginity and ends up running from terrorists and the FBI as he tries to save his life and prevent a deadly attack that will rival 9/11. ‘Deadly Odds’ is original and a first rate thriller.”
—Phillip Margolin, New York Times bestselling author of “Woman with a Gun”
With Allen Wyler you get thrills and a dash of humor combined in a high-tech plot written by a guy who knows what he’s talking about. I love his books and Deadly Odds was the best one yet.
—Mike Lawson, award-winning author of the Joe DeMarco series.
Praise for Allen Wyler’s Dead End Deal
“A wild journey… cutting edge science, greed, corruption and political intrigue, you won’t be able to put it down.”’
—D.P. Lyle, award-winning author of Hot Lights, Cold Steel
“Dead End Deal is a medical thriller of the highest order, reviving the genre with a splendid mixture of innovation and cutting edge timeliness. Neurosurgeon Allen Wyler knows of what he speaks, and writes, and the result is a thriller that equals and updates the best of Robin Cook and Michael Crichton. His latest is terrifyingly on mark, riveting in all ways, and a masterpiece of science and suspense.”
—Jon Land, bestselling author of Strong at the Break
“The suspense builds and builds in this riveting page-turner. It’s a skillful merging of the medical thriller and political thriller… Tom Clancy meets Tess Gerritsen!”
—Kevin O’Brien, New York Times Bestselling Author of The Last Victim and Killing Spree
“With its lightning-paced excitement and fascinating science, [Wyler’s novels] have everything you could hope for in a medical thriller!”
—Tess Gerritsen, author of The Mephisto Club
“You’ll be asking the nurse to swab your forehead when you’re admitted into this tense medical thriller… Wyler does for hospitals what Benchley did for the ocean.”
—Joe Moore, co-author of the international bestseller The Grail Conspiracy
“Wyler writes a fast-paced thriller which reawakens your scariest misgivings about the medical-industrial complex and the profit motive corrupting the art of healing.”
—Darryl Ponicsan, author of The Last Detail
“… a fascinating and frightening premise that gives it the potential to be a best-seller in the Robin Cook mold.”
—William Deitrich, author of Hadrian’s Wall
“This is an ‘up all night’ pass into troubled places that only hard-working doctors know about, a turbulent world of trusting patients and imperfect humans struggling with the required image of perfection. Only a gifted surgeon like Allen Wyler could craft such a wild and wonderful best-of-breed medical thriller!”
—John J. Nance, author of Pandora’s Clock and Fire Flight
“The gritty, graphic details of cutting-edge surgical procedures, capped with an exciting conclusion, should keep fans of the genre riveted.”
—Publisher’s Weekly
Praise for Allen Wyler’s Deadly Errors
“A thriller that only a doctor could have written. Wyler’s sense of the worlds of the hospital and operating room are unsurpassed. You’ll feel as if you are right there.”
—Michael Palmer, New York Times bestselling author of Miracle Cure and The Sisterhood
“Deadly Errors is a wild and satisfying ride! This is an ‘up all night’ pass into troubled places that only hard-working doctors know about, a turbulent world of trusting patients and imperfect humans struggling with the required image of perfection.”
—John J. Nance, author of Pandora’s Clock and Fire Flight
“Just when you thought it was safe to go back and have your tonsils removed, Dr. Allen Wyler writes a fast-paced thriller that reawakens your scariest misgivings… This is a story told with authority by an insider, an unsettling backstage tour through the labyrinth of that place we have come to both fear and revere: the American hospital.”
—Darryl Ponicsan, author of The Last Detail
“No one can write operating room scenes like Allen Wyler. You couldn’t get any closer to the action if you scrubbed in and held a retractor.”
—Don Donaldson, author of Do No Harm and In the Blood
Praise for Allen Wyler’s Dead Ringer
“In the tradition of Robin Cook, Wyler takes us behind the scenes to show us things the medical establishment doesn’t want us to see. Dead Ringer builds a high-speed plot on a startling but all-too-plausible premise. This is the stuff nightmares are made of.”
—Joseph Finder, New York Times bestselling author of Paranoia and Buried Secrets
This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this novel
are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
DEADLY ODDS
Astor + Blue Editions
Copyright © 2014 by Allen Wyler
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof, in any form under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by:
Astor + Blue Editions
New York, NY 10036
www.astorandblue.com
Publisher’s Cataloging-In-Publication Data
WYLER, ALLEN; DEADLY ODDS—1st ed.
ISBN: 978-1-941286-03-6 (paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-941286-03-6 (ePub)
ISBN: 978-1-941286-04-3 (ePDF)
1. Computer Hackers—Fiction. 2. Espionage—Thriller—Fiction 3. Terrorists—Thriller—Fiction 4. Professional Gambling—Fiction 5. Internet Privacy and Security—Fiction 6. Nate Silver predictions—Fiction 7. Internet Vigilante—Fiction. 8. Technotrillers—Fiction 9. Las Vegas—Fiction. 10. Seattle, Washington—Fiction.
Cover Art: Ervin Serrano
Listen to Allen Wyler’s novels on:
Special thanks to Simone
for her initial read of this manuscript and feedback.
You rock, Simone!
CONTENTS
Cover
Praise for Allen Wyler
Copyright
Dedication
Title Page
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
About the Author
Other Bestselling Titles By Allen Wyler and published by Astor + Blue Editions
deadly odds
allen wyler
1.
“What, no tip?” the cook asked while sliding the medium-size pizza across the chipped Formica counter to Arnold.
See, that’s the problem. Do a person one favor and they expect another. Never ends. But Arnold didn’t mind. In fact, he liked the guy. Besides, what’s not to like? Always good natu
red, smiling, always put a few extra anchovies on the pizzas even though he didn’t have to.
Arnold glanced over his shoulder to check out who might be nearby. The overheated humid room air was spiced with yeast, grease, and tomato sauce. The only other customers tonight were a couple, eyes glued to the high-def big-screen on the far wall, watching the Mariners, a large pepperoni and pitcher of beer in front of them, half-eaten slices en route to their mouths. Last thing they’d be looking at was Arnold doing business with the cook. Arnold slipped a folded paper from his billfold, passed it to the guy, pressing it firmly into his palm with the words, “Danny Boy to win in the third. Thunderbolt to place in the fifth. Saratoga.”
The cook nodded acknowledgment, casually stuffing the note into his breast pocket. “Thanks. You the man!”
Arnold began to pull a twenty from his billfold but the guy waved it off.
“Naw, naw, no way. This one’s on me, dude. After all,” patting his breast pocket, “this more than takes care of it.”
Arnold smiled, stuffed his wallet back in his jeans. “So, we’re good?”
The cook laughed with a quick nod. “Yeah, we good, that is, of course, unless you want to tell me your system.”
Arnold cringed. He’d messed up having ever mentioned it. In retrospect, he probably shouldn’t have given the guy the first tip and just let it be. But he hadn’t been able to keep his big mouth shut—hadn’t been able to muzzle his jubilant pride at being able to match Nate Silver’s uncanny predictive accuracy—so now here they were. “Then it wouldn’t be my system anymore, would it,” making it a statement instead of a question.
Wiping his fingers on the greasy apron, the cook nodded. “Point made,” and shot a glance at the oven where a large meat-lovers pizza was beginning to bubble. “Anything else? Something to drink? Otherwise…”
Arnold thought about that a moment, a vesper in the back of his mind warned of forgetting something. It came to him: “Tell you what. Throw in a couple packs of those hot peppers, will you?”
Arnold was hurrying to get home before the pizza cooled, the smell of melted cheese and greasy pepperoni whetting his appetite. He cut down an alley, crossed a sidestreet, then hung a left into another alley. Greenlake, a Seattle residential neighborhood, had been established before World War II in a bygone era of narrow roads, when alleys were unpaved afterthoughts for accessing impossibly small single-car garages. Years ago this alley had morphed into a contiguous series of opposing garage doors and privacy fences so high he could see nothing of the enclosed properties other than peaked roofs and brick chimneys. The light on the utility pole halfway down the alley had burned out weeks ago, leaving the chuck-holed asphalt in India ink shadows. But from having spent his life in the house he knew each crack and puddle well enough to navigate the narrow alley blindfolded.
His garage—set back from the alley by two feet—anchored the northeast corner of his property. A 7-foot-high cedar fence enclosed a back yard long gone to seed since his parents’ death. A blue recycle and a green garbage bin abutted the fence, providing barely enough room for the garbage truck to navigate its weekly route. He carefully set the box of pizza on the green dumpster to type the six-digit code into the security pad, and the lock emitted a metallic slap. Propping the gate open with one foot, he picked up the pizza and entered the back yard, stopping to make sure the gate had locked securely behind him. Satisfied, he hurried along the short cement path to the back steps, on up to the porch, through the kitchen door, yelling, “Yo, dude, I’m back.”
Heard Howie yell, “Run! Get out!”
“What?” Arnold stopped in the middle of the kitchen. This some sort of joke?
BAM. The unmistakable sound of a handgun made him jump.
Then Karim was filling the doorway from kitchen to dining room, gun in hand.
Dropping the pizza, Arnold spun 180 degrees and bolted through the back door, arms out, palms hitting the porch rail, his momentum carrying him into a Western roll out into space, into an arching fall ending with both feet hitting the ground. Hard. Jolting, searing pain shot from ankle to knee, almost buckling his right leg. Then Karim was up on the back porch, yelling, “Stop!” But now Arnold was limping as fast as possible straight for the gate, hand out to open the latch. Half-way through the gate he recognized Karim’s heavy shoes clamoring down the stairs, coming after him unexpectedly quickly for such a big man.
Damn ankle! Sprained. Badly, too.
Arnold only had time to round the recycle bin and wedge into a crouch between it and the garbage bin, back against the fence, knees tucked against his chest before he heard the gate click open and the hinges squeak. He went dead-still one second before sensing Karim slip silently into the blackened alley, breathing hard, like a guy out of shape. Arnold hugged his knees, scrunching into an impossibly tight ball, shoulders wedged between bins, his back flat against the chilly cedar fencing. He strained to listen, heard one heavy step hit alley asphalt, then nothing as the big man waited, listening for footsteps or movement, for any sign of him.
A car engine grew more distant, blocks away. A dog barked somewhere on the next block. Graveyard stillness settled over the alley.
Silently Arnold began massaging his ankle, at first pressing gingerly over the spot hurting worse, the pressure producing excruciating pain, tolerable only because he needed to know if it were fractured or not—not that it made much difference if he had to bolt. He covered his mouth with his free hand to muffle his breathing. Could Karim hear him? Sense him? He caught a whiff of Karim’s nauseating body odor and decided he had to be off to the left, probably just inside the alley at the gate. He gingerly probed the ankle further, deciding the bone wasn’t broken, but shit, the damn thing hurt. He continued the massage, hoping it might alleviate some pain, because first chance he got, he’d make a break for it and run. But unless that opportunity was damn obvious, he’d stay still.
“See him?”
He recognized Firouz’s voice, quiet and urgent, and figured Karim’s brother must be on the porch leaning over the rail.
“No.”
“Find him.” A direct order.
Shit!
Arnold tensed, ready to spring. If Karim discovered him he’d bolt before the bastard could react, hoping for the element of surprise…
Yeah, then what? Guy has a gun. Sheer stupidity to try to overpower him. Certainly couldn’t deck him. Didn’t have the moves. Or the fist, for that matter. Running would be his only option. He certainly had the advantage of knowing every path and shortcut around here. Yeah, maybe…
A shadow denser than others slipped silently past from left to right, the tangy stench of BO stronger, overpowering the rank, rotting garbage. Karim silently radiating a presence of mass. Arnold sensed him stop, probably no more than five feet away, almost close enough to feel his body heat. He held his breath, praying Karim wouldn’t look between the bins, or if he did, couldn’t see him in the inky shadow. Did the bastard carry a flashlight?
A light suddenly flashed on, casting high-contrast trapezoids across the alley. A door clicked, followed by the rapid scraping of claws on wood. Arnold pictured the neighbor’s big male German shepherd shooting out across their back porch and down the steps into the enclosed grass yard. Then, a deep guttural growl from behind the fence.
Silence.
The dog began rapidly sniffing as his nose scraped the fence corner where the properties met, about where he sensed Karim standing. The shepherd barked again, deep, threatening barks.
The alley remained deathly still. No movement, no sounds.
More barks.
Arnold breathed and probed his ankle once more, this time applying more pressure, palpating the bone. No, not broken. Good enough to run on. Get ready. Any second now…
“Fritz, no bark.”
He recognized the neighbor’s voice. The shepherd obediently ceased barking but continued to pant and sniff, his nose glued to the fence corner where Karim’s scent had to be strongest.
“Anybody there?” his neighbor called.
Yell to him?
Yeah, and say what? Call 911? Fat chance. Not with Karim five feet away with a gun. His heart was beating so hard he was certain Fritz could hear it. Surely the pooch recognized his scent. But Karim’s strong, foreign smell would be threatening, causing more threatening barks.
Silence.
A moment later the neighbor said, “Come!”
Fritz’s tags jangled, followed by the scrape of paws on the wood steps. Seconds later the door latch clicked and the floodlight went dark, once again filling the alley in heavy black shadows. Arnold stopped breathing.
Silence.
The mass moved again, stopped, moved a bit further. Probing, searching, intent.
Water splashed, followed by a muttered curse in a foreign tongue.
Arnold smiled. Bastard stepped in a puddle.
Wet footsteps squished in his direction as the mass slowly and silently passed, now moving in the opposite direction, to Arnold’s left.
Suddenly, the alley lit up, shadows streaking from left to right with the crunch of tires on loose dirt. A car was turned in from the far end, headlight straight into Karim’s eyes.
Instinctively, Arnold realized his chance. He bolted, took two steps, cut sharp right, away from Karim, thinking, distance is good, every inch of is one less degree of accuracy. The odds of survival increasing in his brain with each step he ran, legs pumping harder and faster than ever before in his young life, an adrenaline surge igniting afterburners he never knew were there, fear overriding the searing pain from his ankle. He was flying through Mahoney’s yard, onto the side street, cut another right, shot down a short block as one final surge sent him bursting through the pizza shop front door, breathlessly yelling, “Call 911!”
2.
“What exactly was your relationship with the deceased?” Detective Wendy Elliott asked. She was sitting on an aluminum chair opposite him, a small metal desk separating them. She seemed to be studying him with a freaky detached curiosity he found unnerving.