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Targets of Revenge

Page 42

by Jeffrey Stephens


  “Can’t be too careful in a close-quarter gunfight, sir.”

  “Anything else you want to tell me, Sandor?”

  “Just a question sir?”

  “Yes?”

  “If a mass murderer starts sniveling about diplomatic immunity, does shooting him qualify as justifiable homicide?”

  Byrnes was not smiling when he asked, “Is that going to be your full report, Sandor?”

  “Yes sir. Except for the last part. That won’t be included.”

  The usual diplomatic scuffle followed, but this time the suits at the State Department surprised both Sandor and his boss when they cast aside political considerations and told the powers in Caracas to go fly a kite. One of them actually said in a memo, “If it is their intention to idealize the murderous acts of a genocidal criminal like Rafael Cabello perhaps they can get Andrew Lloyd Webber to write a musical about him, but as far as we are concerned this matter is closed.”

  When Byrnes gave him the news, Sandor smiled and said, “Go figure.”

  Of all the things he had done in his career—good and bad, right or wrong—the removal of Adina from the living was something he would always be proud of.

  ————

  At the moment, Sandor was concerned about one more piece of unfinished business.

  He was standing shoulder to shoulder with Craig Raabe, Byrnes right behind them, as they studied a transparent screen display of satellite photos from the north shore of the scenic resort town of Agios Nikolaos in Crete.

  It was late in Greece, after ten at night, and none of the three men spoke as they watched the outlines of two figures position themselves near the rocks beside the shore at the base of a large hilltop estate that rose majestically above the sea. A few hundred yards out, sitting at anchor in the Aegean, was a large yacht that Sandor knew only too well.

  The two figures now lay very still among the rocks and remained that way for what seemed a long time.

  “You should have let me do this,” Sandor murmured, as if to himself.

  Byrnes placed a hand on his shoulder. “No way.”

  They became quiet again as they watched a group of men and women leave the main house and walk down a long, winding set of stone steps that led to the shore. There they boarded a tender that carried them out to the yacht. Once the motorboat was tied off at the stern they began climbing up a narrow set of stairs to the rear deck.

  Even in the gloaming, the name on the stern was clear. Odessa.

  The three men in Langley continued to observe without speaking. Without any sound it was eerie as the minutes ticked by, infrared lighting allowing them to follow the images of the group climbing onto the large yacht as the two men near the jetty remained perfectly still. Suddenly there was a brief flash from where the two figures were positioned behind the rocks. Then, an instant later, the head of one of the men boarding the yacht jerked violently, and he fell backward into the sea.

  It was over.

  Sandor took a deep breath, then turned away with a mixed sense of satisfaction and sadness, knowing that he had kept his promise to Farrar and a silent pledge to Lilli.

  EPILOGUE

  NEW YORK CITY

  TWO DAYS LATER Sandor telephoned Bill Sternlich to say he was back home. Sternlich offered to meet him for a drink, but Sandor declined.

  “Not today, Bill. I have something to take care of. Some other time.” Sandor took a cab crosstown to Manhattan’s Upper East Side. The building was a classic four-story tenement, no doorman, no elevator. Old-school New York. He had called in advance, spoken with the building superintendent and explained his business. He met the man out front, a squat, dark-skinned Hispanic wearing a tired expression and a stained gray T-shirt. The man did not seem all that impressed when Sandor flashed his federal ID, but he did give his full attention to the green and beige picture of Benjamin Franklin he was handed.

  The super held out the key. Sandor took it and said, “She’s not coming back.”

  The short man blinked. “That right?”

  “I’ll have someone send the landlord a formal notice. Then you can clean out the apartment.” Sandor took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “We haven’t been able to locate a next of kin. You ever see her with anyone?”

  The super shook his head. “Some different guys, you know how it goes with a good-looking girl in this town.”

  “Nothing steady?”

  “Nah. Nice girl, though. Always friendly.” He shook his head. “Gone, eh?”

  Sandor nodded.

  “Sorry to hear it,” the man said, but he did not ask how or why.

  “Sorry to have to tell you,” Sandor replied. He turned from the super and climbed the front stairs, entered the building, and headed up three flights to apartment 3E. He paused there, key in hand, then unlocked the door.

  The apartment was small, the sort of place he figured Lilli Mindlovitch would have lived in. The foyer was just large enough to accommodate both Sandor and the open door. The area that passed for a living room could barely contain a modern-looking love seat, a round-backed chair, and an étagère that held a television, some books, and an assortment of photographs .

  Sandor had a look at the pictures. Lilli with friends, Lilli as a young girl, and Lilli with an attractive older woman he assumed was her mother. For a moment he thought of his own mother, then decided to let that go.

  He turned away and checked the kitchen, which was so tight he could hardly move without bumping into a wall or a cabinet. The refrigerator was emptier than his, which was saying something. The bathroom was even smaller than the kitchen, but it was neat and clean and full of shelves holding every sort of cream, cosmetic and lotion.

  He went back to the living room and picked up one of the photos. It was unmistakably Lilli as a teenager, which was not all that long ago. She was standing on a beach someplace with a big smile that was framed by her long, windblown hair.

  There was no reason for her to die, Sandor told himself. Too many people die for the wrong reasons. Some, like Lilli, die for no reason at all. He had another look at the photo, then carefully replaced the picture on the shelf, as if it were important that it be placed in the same spot he found it.

  He stood there for a moment, looking around one last time, bearing witness to all that remained of the existence of Lilli Mindlovitch. Then he knew there was nothing more for him to do, that it was time to leave. He headed for the door but stopped and went back to the living room. He picked up one of the more recent photographs, deciding he would keep that one, telling himself it would be fine. There was no one left who would care.

  As he turned to leave with the photograph in hand, he pulled out his cell and dialed Sternlich. “Hey Bill,” he said. “Let’s go get that drink.”

  THE END

  JEFFREY S. STEPHENS is the author of the revered Jordan Sandor thrillers, Targets of Deception and Targets of Opportunity. A native New Yorker who began his career as a novelist while working in private practice as a lawyer, he lives in Greenwich, Connecticut, with his wife, Nancy. They have two sons. Visit him at jeffreystephens.com.

  http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Jeffrey-S-Stephens

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  JACKET DESIGN BY TONY MAURO

  AUTHOR PHOTOGRAPH BY CHUAN DING

  COPYRIGHT © 2013 SIMON & SCHUSTER

  ALSO BY JEFFREY S. STEPHENS

  Targets of Deception

  Targets of Opportunity

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  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2013 by Jeffrey S. Stephens

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Gallery Books Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

  First Gallery Books hardcover edition February 2013

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Stephens, Jeffrey S.

  Targets of revenge: a novel / by Jeffrey S. Stephens.

  p. cm.

  1. Intelligence officers — Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3619.T47676T375 2013

  813'.6—dc23

  2012022211

  ISBN 978-1-4516-8872-6

  ISBN 978-1-4516-8873-3 (ebook)

 

 

 


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