October's Ghost

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October's Ghost Page 45

by Ryne Douglas Pearson


  Antonio Parades knew what the presidente meant. Perspective truly was everything.

  * * *

  He was breaking his own rule. Sort of.

  “You’ll like it,” Art promised.

  Frankie eyed him with doubt, the chili-covered monstrosity cradled in both hands. “I want you to know you’re the only person I would do this for, and only then because you have a gun.”

  “You agreed, Aguirre,” Art reminded his partner, motioning for her to take a bite.

  “The game was rigged.” She sneered as the thing approached her lips.

  “Fair and square, partner. Four of a kind beats a full house.”

  “Four twos,” Frankie pointed out. She had to lose the hand to that! And now she was Art Jefferson’s Pink’s surrogate for the next six months, until his next allowed venture into cholesterol land. If he had a craving, she had to vicariously fill it. “There’s something about this in that Geneva thing.”

  “Eat.”

  Frankie closed her eyes and opened wide, taking the first gooey bite. She chewed the bacon-chili cheese dog tentatively at first, then her eyes opened as she began to experience the taste that was unique to Pink’s. “Hey,” she said through the first bite, “this is pretty good.”

  Art beamed knowingly. “You just wouldn’t listen, would you? See what you’ve been missing?”

  “Yeah. I guess so.” Frankie took another bite, savoring this one more than the first. It was getting better! “This was the best bet I ever lost.”

  “Yeah, I... Hey! You’re not supposed to be enjoying this. I mean... I’m supposed to be... Not you...” Art leaned against the counter, a frustrated, hungry man. “Oh, forget it.”

  Frankie winked at her partner and bit again into the deliciously messy conglomeration.

  “Seltzer, Mr. Jefferson?” the clerk inquired.

  Art looked over to the kid. “No. Another bacon-chili cheese dog for the lady. And hurry. Can’t you see I’m hungry?”

  * * *

  Major Sean Graber sat staring at the maroon carpet, the words of the chaplain echoing throughout the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center Chapel. His eyes came up only when he knew that the padre was reaching the point in the memorial service that required him to do so.

  It was a show of respect for comrades fallen. For his men.

  “Captain Christopher Herald Buxton. Sergeant Charles Steven Makowski. Sergeant Gerald Morris Jones. Sergeant Alfred George Vincent.” The chaplain paused, closing the book that held the names of Delta’s departed troopers. “The Great Jumpmaster watches over our comrades now. Let us not grieve over their loss, but, rather, let us use them as an example as we cross the next barrier, meet our next foe, defend freedom, and destroy tyranny. Let us not grieve, but let us not forget. Amen.”

  “Hoo-ah,” the assembled troopers responded.

  Sean stood with Colonel Cadler and walked to the back of the chapel, meeting each family member as they departed. It was a private service, intended only for the families and the men of Delta. Despite what the chaplain had said, it was a time to grieve. But it was also, as he professed, a time to remember. In a way, that was more painful than the grieving.

  The last family member drifted toward the cars lining Fort Bragg’s Ardennes Road. Sean walked away from the chapel, stopping near a stand of pines that flanked the hallowed building. Cadler joined him there a minute later.

  “Major.”

  Sean looked around, smiling at the colonel, thinking before saying what he wanted to say. “We lost too many on this one, sir.”

  Cadler looked at the damp, needle-covered ground, his lips pouting. “One is too many, Major. Ten is too many. But missions don’t come with a set loss ratio. Y’all know that as good as I.”

  It was a correct statement, but that still didn’t change what Sean was feeling. Four of his own men were gone. Three from the 160th. And Anderson. Being a Delta trooper was his life. It was all he had wanted to do from the minute the unit was formed. But now he found himself fearing what came with Delta’s hazardous mission profile. Death was no longer just a possibility. It was all too real. He could accept it for himself, but for men working for him? For soldiers who followed his lead? He no longer knew if this was for him, and that doubt itself, he believed, made him ineffective as a Delta trooper.

  “You haven’t mentioned my request, sir.”

  “I was hopin’ you’d change your mind ‘fore I had to act on it,” Cadler explained. “But it seems to me that y’all are pretty sure about this.”

  Sean nodded. “Very sure, sir.”

  Cadler nodded with regret and acceptance. “We’re gonna miss your ugly ass around here.”

  “I’ll drag it back once in a while so you can kick it into shape,” Sean joked.

  “Can’t touch no civilians, Major.”

  Civilian. That had a scary ring to it. Sean had known little other than the Army life. What lay outside the comforting walls of Bragg was alien to him. Uncharted territory. New adventures.

  “You did good, Major,” Cadler said, offering his hand.

  Sean took it, fighting the urge to salute. Habits would be hard to break. “Thank you, Colonel.”

  “Now go find that little lady of yours and make some babies.”

  “Is that an order, sir?” Sean asked with a smile.

  “The last from me to you, Major.”

  “Will do, sir,” Sean said, giving his commander a crisp salute before turning and walking away down Ardennes.

  “God speed, Sean.”

  * * *

  The plot was set among a circular clearing ringed by Douglas firs, except for the section that afforded an unobstructed view of the pristine lake below. As if in deference to the man being laid to rest, the water churned with fish broaching the surface and splashing back into the deep blue lake. It could not have been planned more eloquently.

  Only twenty people were gathered at the gravesite, located in the Minnesota backwaters not far from the dock where Joe Anderson had cast his last line. Most were family, but there were two outsiders, one of whom had asked to say something at the service.

  “There is not much that need be said about such a man,” the President observed, concluding his words without the aid of cards or prompters. “It is sufficient, and utterly appropriate, to say that he did what had to be done when the call was made. And that he answered that call not for the sake of glory, or for any less honorable reasons. He answered it because he heard it, and because to turn a blind eye or a deaf ear was not his way.”

  The President went to Joe Anderson’s widow, spending a long moment with her. Then it was time to go, to leave the family to remember without the intrusion of outsiders. Bud followed the President along the wooded path, two Secret Service agents ahead and two behind. They emerged from the trees to the waiting limousine, but the chief executive did not immediately get in. Instead, he stood still and smelled the sweet, damp air.

  “He picked a good resting place, Bud.”

  “Yes, he did, Mr. President.” Bud tasted the freshness himself, pulling in the scents of the forest. “If only the rest of the world was this peaceful.”

  “If only.” The President still could dream, even if such musings were inevitably overcome by reality. “You know, Bud, even with the losses we suffered from this, it could have been so much worse. I hate to even imagine what could have happened.”

  “The important thing is that it didn’t, sir,” Bud reminded him. “In the end you have to count your losses and pray that you’ve learned something from the ordeal that will help you avoid similar situations in the future.”

  “The future.” The President studied the trees for a moment before looking back to his NSA. “What frightens me is that this all came at us from the past. I remember a professor of mine back at UCLA saying ‘History is not the study of what has happened before; it is the study of that which we know has happened before.’ ” He thought to himself briefly. “What else is out there that we don’t know o
f, Bud?”

  The NSA considered the question in the quiet of the forest, looking skyward as the answer came to him. “You’re asking the wrong adviser, Mr. President.”

  If you enjoyed October’s Ghost, all the books in the Art Jefferson Thriller Series are available from Amazon at the following links.

  Cloudburst

  October’s Ghost

  Capitol Punishment

  Simple Simon

  About The Author

  Ryne Pearson is the author of several novels, including Cloudburst, October’s Ghost, Capitol Punishment, Simple Simon, Top Ten, The Donzerly Light, All For One, and Confessions. He is also author of the short story collection, Dark and Darker. His novel Simple Simon was made into the film Mercury Rising. As a screenwriter he has worked on numerous films. The film Knowing, based on his original script, was released in 2009 and opened #1 at the box office, going on to gross more than $180 million worldwide.

  He lives in California with his wife, children, a Doberman Shepherd and a Beagle Vizsla.

  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty One

  Twenty Two

  Twenty Three

  Twenty Four

  Epilogue

  About The Author

  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty One

  Twenty Two

  Twenty Three

  Twenty Four

  Epilogue

  About The Author

 

 

 


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