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M.D. Grayson’s Action Packed Danny Logan Debut Mystery, Angel Dance is KND Brand New Thriller of The Week– Over 50 Rave Reviews – Just 99 cents!

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And for the next week all of these great reading choices are brought to you by our brand new Thriller of the Week, M.D Grayson’s Angel Dance. Please check it out!

4.4 stars – 57 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
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Here’s the set-up:

Start from the beginning with Danny Logan now for just 99 cents, and you’ll never look back.

Click here for the full series

From M.D. Grayson comes the action packed Danny Logan debut mystery, Angel Dance.

Praise for Angel Dance

“The intensity continues to build. Just when you think you have it solved, Grayson throws you a wild curve. It was an excellent read. I highly recommend it.”- Mack McCormick Author, Terrorists at the Bus Stop

Angel Dance was so much fun to read that I completed it in one day in Cape Cod on vacation. In fact, I resented anyone who interrupted my reading time!”- Bella Luna Book Reviewer

Overview:

Gina Fiore – beautiful Seattle heiress has vanished.
A foreign drug cartel and a Chicago organized crime family are looking.
Can Danny Logan rescue her before the noose closes?

More praise for Angel Dance

“Stuart Woods WAS one of my favorite authors, with the ability to put an unexpected twist to the story, but look out, first time novelist MD Grayson has written a smart and colorful page turner. I never thought I would enjoy a wild ride through drug cartels and crime families, but a weekend read, turned into a book I could not put down….. Can’t wait for the next book!” –Jan Porter Book Reviewer

“With two more books in the works and a cast of interesting characters awaiting development, this author is worth watching.” – Kirkus Review

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Free Thriller of The Week Excerpt! Bryan Devore’s The Price Of Innocence – Unanimous Rave Reviews!

On Friday we announced that Bryan Devore’s The Price of Innocence is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

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The Price of Innocence

by Bryan Devore

5.0 stars – 5 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
In the decade since their younger sister’s death, James and Ian Lawrence have drifted apart – James to pursue a steady but humdrum career as a CPA in Kansas City, Ian to go adventuring off to Leipzig, Germany, for his doctorate in economics. But when Ian mysteriously disappears while researching the economics of organized crime, James must take a leave of absence to look for him. Risking everything, he embarks on a perilous journey across Europe, digging deeply into the business affairs of some very private, very dangerous people. But in the search for Ian, he discovers a brewing revolution that will shock the world – and change what he sees as his own place in it.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

1

February 14, Leipzig, Germany

 

I

AN LAWRENCE’S EYES were tired from scanning through hundreds of Internet articles. Sitting alone in the Handelshochschule Leipzig university computer lab, he couldn’t believe it was already two in the morning. He had chosen ten terms related to the economics of organized crime and translated each from English into German, French, Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Armenian, Romanian, and Hungarian. For each translation of each word, he searched the Web for articles or sites that might be useful to his research. Even though he couldn’t read any of the articles he found, he copied and pasted those with numerous key words into an online translator program so he could read a rough translation.

It was an article from a Krakow newspaper, with a picture of two women, that captured his attention. Both of them could have been models. They looked like sisters: one about 15 years old, the other about 20. The caption under the picture read, “Siostry Zoe i Miska w Krakowie cztery miesiące przed domniemanym porwaniem Miska przez handlarza kobietami.”

Ian stared at their picture. Something horrible must have happened to them, because his Web search included only horrible words. He copied the article into the online program to get a rough Polish-to-English translation. As he read the translated article, his worst fears about the girls were confirmed. They were sisters from Krakow. The oldest, Zoe, was twenty-three, and the younger, Miska, was fifteen. Nearly three months ago, Miska had vanished. The police opened a major investigation, and the story got a lot of publicity in the regional papers around Krakow for a month after the disappearance, but slowly, as days turned into weeks with no breakthroughs, the story faded from the press. According to this article, the whole thing would have been forgotten if not for Zoe’s continued efforts to discover what happened to her sister. Zoe believed her sister had been abducted by human traffickers and put to work as a sex slave. The investigating authorities had uncovered an eyewitness testimony and some credit card data that seemed to support the likelihood that Miska had been kidnapped. Because their family didn’t have much money and there had been no contact from those responsible, the authorities believed that sex traffickers were to blame.

Ian tried not to imagine what had happened to young Miska during the past three months if she really had been forced into the sex slavery trade. Every ounce of humanity inside him fought against the notion of thinking about this fifteen-year-old child suffering such horrible abuse for so long. He clicked back to the article and looked again at the picture of the sisters. He turned his focus to the older sister, Zoe. He thought about her losing her kid sister to crime, just as he had lost Jessica.

That was when he realized he was going about his research all wrong. He had already read every book, paper, and interview in the academic community about organized crime. He needed to do his research on the ground level. With the people. In the dark alleys of the world, where the crimes were committed and the victims suffered. And he would start with this woman Zoe and her missing sister.

He spent the next fifteen minutes typing a long e-mail to the journalist who had written the article. It was four in the morning when he finally sent the message.

He had five hours before he and the professor’s friend, Marcus Gottschalk, met at the Leipzig train station and headed to Prague. Logging off the computer, he grabbed his leather satchel with the papers he had printed from the Internet, and walked up to the twenty-four-hour library. Like a physicist looking for evidence of dark matter in the universe, he was obsessed with discovering the theoretical link between the operations of organized crime and the legitimate corporate world. He would stay up all night if he had to. How could he even consider the luxury of sleep when so many victims were suffering at this very moment?

When the sun came up three hours later, he left the library to return to the computer lab. Logging on to his account, he saw the e-mail reply from Zoe Karminski.

 

*    *    *

 

Ian had come into Prague from the north, circling up around Hradčany Castle, which gave his first clear view of the ancient city below him. From his vantage point on Letná Hill, he could see much of the city across the Vltava River. There seemed to be an old stone bridge every hundred yards along the river. He could see the famous Charles Bridge, permanently closed to automobiles, packed with painters and meandering pedestrians. Red roofs with a dusting of snow stood along the old city walls. Looking out over a sea of Gothic and Renaissance churches, clock towers, stone bridges, monasteries, and graveyards, he felt as if he had gone back in time.

A week ago he had given the professor his dissertation proposal regarding an unexplored research gap: economic policies and strategies that governments could implement to diminish organized crime. The professor had loved it but added that this wasn’t a topic one could research in the comfort and safety of a university library. That’s when the professor told him about his former MBA student Marcus and said they should go to Prague to research his dissertation topic.

Now that he was in Prague with Marcus, he couldn’t wait to delve into the kind of research the professor was talking about.

They took a green BMW taxi to Nový Svět, to a long twenty-foot-high wall set with brightly painted residential doorways. Marcus led him up the sloping cobblestone street that curved into Loreto Square.

“This has long been a working-class neighborhood,” Marcus said. “But it has memories of greatness as well. We are very near where Einstein taught physics for years before defecting to your America, just before Hitler’s blight swept this land.”

Marcus opened a red door and waved Ian into the shadowy interior.

Inside the dim, dank chamber, Ian felt as if he had entered a vampire’s lair. Dust motes floated in the plank of light slanting in from a high window. They descended a narrow stone staircase that might have wound down to a fairy-tale castle dungeon.

With each step he took into the darkness, Ian grew more excited. But when he reached the basement’s dirt floor, his excitement turned to unease. Without needing to take another step into the underground chamber, he saw ten faces staring back at him in the flickering candlelight.

“What is this?” he asked Marcus.

But Marcus had stepped away from Ian and vanished into the shadows like a phantom. And at that moment, it occurred to Ian that he had just walked into an ambush of some sort.

Then, without warning, a dim red light turned on overhead, illuminating the ten faces. From the corner of his eye, he saw Marcus standing next to a light switch. Marcus nodded toward the group sitting around the large wooden table that Ian could now make out. “Ian, I’d like to introduce you to some people from the White Rose.”

“I . . . recognize a few of you from the university,” Ian said. “Are you all students at HHL?”

“No,” Marcus answered. “Some are; some aren’t. Some are alumni, and others have no affiliation with the school.”

“So what do you have in common?”

“Only this,” said a girl Ian knew as Florence. “The professor found us all. Just as he found you.”

“I’m taking him to the factory tonight,” Marcus said.

They seemed surprised.

“Is that smart?” Florence asked.

“He’s ready for it,” Marcus said.

“Ready for what?” Ian asked.

“You’ll see.”

 

*    *    *

 

“I’ve already forgotten half their names,” Ian said. Marcus and he had left the dungeon meeting for the cool open air of the small courtyard.

“You’ll get to know them in time.”

“And there are others?”

“Oh, yes.”

“Where are they?”

Marcus looked down and smiled. “Everywhere.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Quebec, New York, Tokyo, Shanghai, Bangkok, Moscow, Paris, London, Istanbul, Dubai, Barcelona, Rome, Mexico City, Helsinki, Rio, Cairo, Buenos Aires, San Francisco, Miami, Sydney, Los Angeles.”

“What is this, some kind of conspiracy?” Ian asked as they left the courtyard through a narrow walkway between two buildings. He could see people walking in the street up ahead.

“It’s a network.”

“A secret network,” Ian added.

“We have to operate the same way they do if we expect to damage their operations.”

“They? You mean criminal organizations?”

“Yes.”

“So your ambitions are global?”

“Very much so.”

A cold gust shot down the alleyway. Ian zipped up his black leather jacket, and Marcus buttoned his cashmere coat. From somewhere in the distance came the two-tone high-low siren of a police car.

“And all the groups are like this?” Ian asked. “Ten to fifteen people? Mostly students?”

“Mostly students, yes. Change has often begun with mostly students. The size of group varies. We’re the Berlin group and we’re the largest in the world. That’s because we were the first to organize, and we helped the others recruit and develop their own chapters. But our chapter’s size is closer to fifty people. You just met a few of them. Most are still in Berlin.”

“Why are these in Prague?”

“I’ll show you tonight.”

It made surprising sense that at some point a group like this should develop from the same youthful, rebellious passions that had been at or near the heart of every revolutionary change throughout history. Still, he could scarcely believe his luck, after a youth spent troublemaking and adventuring in Kansas, to have stumbled onto what could be the great revolution of his generation. A people’s revolution against global criminal enterprise. His heart raced with excitement.

“And Dr. Hampdenstein helped put all this together,” Ian said. “Incredible.”

“He’s one of the world’s top economic professors, at one of the world’s top universities. Lots of brilliant, ambitious students come here from all over the world. Some come for a degree, some for a semester abroad, some for one of the many global seminars. And the professor travels frequently as a guest lecturer to other top schools. Many of the places he’s been, he’s found committed students eager to start their own local chapter of the White Rose.”

“How long has this been going on?”

“I was one of the first few he recruited,” Marcus said proudly. “That was five years ago.”

They left Nový Svět through a maze of uneven cobblestone streets centuries old, under a stone archway into Staré Město, the oldest part of the city. Ian felt a camaraderie with Marcus that he hadn’t felt since chasing tornadoes in Kansas with his brother. But that was nothing more than a thrill with the excuse of capturing some interesting film footage. This was different. Now he was trying to help save the world.

“You understand this could be dangerous?” Marcus said.

“I’ve been in worse.”

They went up a stairway to a large pedestrian bridge of ancient stones. Medieval gargoyles lit by antique glass lamps lined the parapets, staring out of the fog like phantoms. Ian loved everything about this world that Marcus was taking him into, though he felt a lingering sense of foreboding. He knew that whatever Marcus had in mind for him, whatever the details of the White Rose’s activities, he was ultimately being led into a world of darkness. Beneath all this beauty and history and the flocks of gawking tourists was an underworld of crime.

They had walked over a mile and were now beyond the castles and bridges and historic beauty that most visitors thought of as Prague. There were no more cafés or museums or concert halls. Marcus stopped near a large wooden doorway. Beyond this street lay furrowed fields and, in the distance, what looked like a very old factory.

Marcus led him inside the doorway, where once again a narrow stone staircase spiraled down into blackness, as if someone had carved little steps into the inner wall of a deep well. As he felt his way down the uneven steps, he held out one hand to brush against the cold stones of the wall, while his other hand slid down the iron rail bolted to the steps. At the bottom, Ian could see the dim red glow of an open doorway.

Entering, he found a dark tavern perhaps a quarter the size of a basketball court, packed with at least thirty pale-faced, black-clad Goths. Small wooden tables lined the stone walls and floors.

Marcus squeezed Ian’s shoulder and said, “You saw that factory outside?”

“Across the field?”

“Yes. There’s something there I need to show you.”

“Well, then, let’s go.”

“No, it’s not time yet. We got here too early.” He looked at his watch. “It won’t really start for at least another thirty minutes.”

“What won’t start?”

“Let’s get a drink,” Marcus said, pulling him toward the bar. “Professor Hampdenstein told me a little about your work at the university. I know you have an approach to fighting organized crime through economics—an approach never attempted before. The White Rose can help you develop and test those ideas. And in return, you can help us take the White Rose to the next level. We both want the same thing. We can help each other fight organized crime.” Marcus paused. “How long does it take to implement your ideas and bankrupt a cartel?”

“It depends,” Ian said. “If it works, two to four years.”

They found a gap in the crowd at the edge of the bar. A thin bartender with long jet-black hair was pouring shots of tequila. Her dark, sleeveless shirt exposed bare white arms with spiraling tattoos. Marcus caught her eye and ordered two vodka shots and two Denkle beers.

“The professor said that you think, with the right simulation, it could be tested in a few months,” Marcus said after the bartender moved down the line of patrons, collecting more drink orders.

“If you picked the right two criminal organizations and were directly involved, you could accelerate the process,” Ian said, leaning back on the underground tavern’s cold stone wall. “You would have to choose two organizations that already have a history of competition, preferably with some violent encounters—you’d need that underlying animosity and tension. Even then, starting a war between them will be complicated. And starting a war is only the first phase.”

“We don’t have that much time,” Marcus said.

The tavern was already a very live room, with loud ambient chatter bouncing off lots of hard surfaces, but now a Swedish death-metal song spilled from the surrounding speakers. It must be a hit in this part of Europe, because several enthusiastic patrons were screaming out the lyrics. Marcus leaned closer to Ian so they could hear each other over the angry-sounding music.

“If my theorem works, it could change the world,” Ian said. “But I need a real case study to prove it to the academic community. Otherwise, they’ll just read it with interest and debate its merit and analyze it to death and write discussion papers, but nothing will change.”

The bartender set their drinks on the wooden bar top, and Marcus paid her. When she walked back to a cluster of chatty patrons in the far shadows, Marcus said, “You sound like you believe you can get rid of organized crime.” He grinned. “I suppose the world needs dreamers.” Taking a long drink, he then set his beer down and grabbed the vodka shots, handing one to Ian. “Lucky for you, I like dreamers.” He held his oblong shot glass up to the light. Prost und trinken.”

“To what?” Ian asked.

“This vodka we drink to forget.”

“To forget what?”

“Everything! Our childhoods and first loves and parents’ warm care and hopeful teachers and those faithful few friends we all had in our youth.”

“You think I can’t handle it—this world of darkness and crime?” Ian asked. “You think that just because I’ve studied it in books I can’t handle seeing the real, ugly thing.”

“Trust me,” Marcus said, still holding his drink up. “It’s better if we pretend to forget everything before going forward.”

“I don’t want to pretend to forget.”

“Ian, you may not realize it yet, but if you continue with me on this path, you won’t be the same person an hour from now that you are in this moment. You need to understand this before we go any further.”

Ian looked at the shot of vodka in his hand and thought about Kansas and all his family and friends still there. For the first time since leaving the States, he felt homesick. The pain and emptiness came upon him as quickly and stealthily as a nightmare can intrude on the sleeping. He wanted the feeling to go away. Marcus was right: he didn’t want to think of home. Not here. Not while journeying into the darkness to do what he felt he was born to do.

He clinked his glass against Marcus’s. “All right,” he said. “To forgetting everything.” He tipped back the shot and felt it burn his throat. His eyes watered, and his heart felt strong. He pounded the bar top twice and looked at Marcus with a sense of liberation.

Marcus finished his shot and grabbed Ian by the arm. “Now that we’re free, I can show you the factory.”

They left their beers, leaving the underground bar for the moonlit shadows of Prague’s outskirts above.

 

*    *    *

 

“Stay low and be quiet,” Marcus whispered. They were hunched over like monkeys, with their hands touching the ground as they moved up a grassy slope. The dim lights of the factory created a hazy illumination rimming the top of the final rise in front of them. The grass was wet and cold. The whole world was cold.

“What do they make in this factory?” Ian asked.

“Sh-h-h! Just keep following me. And for God’s sake, stay close!”

“What about security?”

“Not out here,” Marcus said. “They own enough police and politicians to protect themselves. They have guards near the traffic routes. They also have security around the sensitive areas of the factory. We’re safe here, but we can’t go any closer.”

They stopped at the edge of the final hill, still a hundred yards from the grounds below. Down at the large square gravel parking lot at the back of the factory, Ian could see seven pearl white limousines lined up. No people were in sight.

“What’s going on in there?” he asked.

“Just wait for it. You’ll see.”

“A meeting?”

Marcus looked at him with a volatile, almost hateful gaze. “Look, I promise you again, you’re about to see something you will wish you could burn from your memory.”

Six pairs of headlights were moving toward the factory. The vehicles pulled through the open gate, and maybe two dozen men got out. Ten men came out a sliding steel door of the factory and met them.

“It’s a meeting, all right,” Ian said. “Managers from the various business units of one organization? I can’t tell. Maybe it’s a multicartel meeting of regional bosses from different outfits.”

“That’s not what this is . . . Just watch.”

Another door opened, for a brief moment revealing the silhouettes of several people inside the factory. Three of the men by the car were laughing and motioning toward the door. Then out of the shadows stumbled three women in matching gray sweatpants and white T-shirts. They should be freezing in the cool night air, but their lowered heads and shuffling gait told Ian their senses were numbed.

“What is this?” Ian whispered.

Marcus remained silent as one of the men moved toward the nearest woman and ripped off her T-shirt. Her pale skin and large breasts were briefly visible until she fell to the dirt. He stood above her, waving her torn shirt like a victory flag and laughing to the other men.

“Oh, my God,” Ian said. “Is that what this is? Please tell me that’s not what this is.”

“I told you I would show you the greatest crime being committed in the world today.”

“No . . . not this,” Ian said. His anger was boiling inside him. “I could have handled almost anything, but not that.” His gaze fell to the dark, wet grass between his hands. “I can’t watch. Please tell me it’s not about this.”

“I told you the factory doesn’t make anything. It’s just one of the places they keep their girls. The men aren’t mafia bosses or capos here for a meeting; they’re just customers.”

“We have to stop them. We need to call the Prague police.”

“That won’t solve anything. You’ve studied organized crime. You know that law enforcement and political corruption is a large expense item on criminal operations’ income statements. Even if the police do come, it won’t fix the problem. We have something bigger in mind—something that could help stop these crimes. But if we tried to do anything tonight, we would only be jeopardizing our future plans.”

A deep pain burned in Ian’s chest. The girls looked weak and disoriented, dressed in rags that had been torn to look skimpy. Tears filled his eyes. “We have to do something,” he said.

“We are doing something.”

“What?”

“We’re watching. And we’re learning.”

“We’re just going to sit here as those men rape those girls!” Ian gasped.

“That’s exactly what we’re going to do.” Marcus laid a hand on his shoulder. “Look, do you think this is the first time those girls have been raped? Huh? Do you think they’ll even remember any of this tomorrow morning? They’re so drugged up, they don’t remember their own names. And you think these are the only girls those bastards are doing it to? Trying to stop them tonight won’t do a damned thing to stop this from happening all across the world.”

“You’re crazy.”

“No. Not crazy. I told you, we’ve been planning a big operation.”

“Why’d you bring me here?”

Marcus sat cross-legged next to Ian. “We want to combine our plan with the plan you outlined in your dissertation. That’s why the professor arranged for us to meet: your economic theories can be combined with what the White Rose is planning, and together we could really hurt organized crime.”

“The professor believes this?” Trying to imagine what those girls went through every night was too much for him.

“Yes,” Marcus said. “But the question is, what exactly would you like the White Rose to do to help you prove your theories?”

“You don’t want to know.”

“Trust me,” Marcus said. “We’re willing to consider anything, no matter how unorthodox.”

In a stony voice, Ian said, “I want to start a war between the Geryon Mafia and the Malacoda gang. A war that will bring a revolution.”

2

April 15 (2 months later), Kansas City, Missouri

 

J

AMES LAWRENCE FELT a sudden surge of frustration and annoyance. “What do you mean, ‘missing’?”

He had stopped being concerned about his brother’s activities years ago, and looking back at the party in full swing behind him, he just wanted to get back to his well-deserved celebration for making it through tax season.

“No one knows where he is,” his mother said through the phone. “Not the university, not the U.S. consulate, not the German police . . . no one.”

He set his beer bottle on the wrought-iron table and rubbed his forehead. His mother had a knack for choosing the worst times to call. Here he was, trying to enjoy the after-busy-season party the firm threw annually after the last client tax return went out the door. The firm had rented the Have a Nice Day Café bar in Kansas City’s Westport district, and already the place looked like a small Mardi Gras festival. While all the other tax accountants were drinking and laughing inside, James stood out on a balcony in the cold spring night air, listening to his ever-fretful mother rant on and on about the latest trouble that his younger brother may or may not be in.

“Mom, listen, nothing’s happened to Ian. He always does this. You know how he is: he runs off to God knows where, doing God knows what, without telling anyone. Just give him a week. He’ll turn up; he always does.”

“No, James, you listen to me!” His mother’s voice had taken on a piercing intensity that he couldn’t dismiss. “This isn’t like before. He’s in a foreign county. We have no way to get in touch with him, and who knows what might have happened to him over there!”

“Aw, Mom, he’s twenty-four years old.”

“He’s still your little brother!”

James sighed, realizing that there was only one way to calm her down. “Mom, I’m in the middle of my firm’s after-busy-season party. What is it you want me to do?”

“I want you to come home. We need your help here. Your father and I have been trying to talk with the exchange program coordinator at K-State, but we’re not getting any answers that help us.”

“I can’t believe this!” James groaned, tensing his grip on the phone. “I’ve been working myself to death for the past three months while Ian’s been off screwing around in Europe, and now I have to drop everything just because he’s run off on a road trip without telling anyone. This is unbelievable.”

“James, please. We don’t know what to do. He may need your help!”

He closed his eyes. He couldn’t refuse his mother’s request, no matter how overwrought she was. “Okay,” he said. “Fine. I can drive to Manhattan tomorrow.”

“Can’t you come tonight?”

“Mom, I’m at a party, and I’ve been drinking.” He was stalling. “It’s a two-hour drive—you really want me to try it tonight? I can be there early in the morning. Then I can meet with the coordinator at K-State. We’ll get this figured out, okay? Everything’ll be fine.”

“Your father and I have tried talking to the coordinator, but he’s not concerned—says American students skip classes to travel around Europe all the time when studying abroad.”

“I agree with him,” James said. “I’m telling you, Ian probably just went skiing in the Alps with some French girl he met at a party in Berlin. You know how . . . random he is.”

“We think you need to go to Germany, to make sure he’s okay.”

What? Mom, there’s no way!”

“James, please! We don’t know what else to do! You know your father can’t travel, and I have to stay here to take care of him.”

James felt sick and frustrated. “But Germany? This can’t be that serious!”

“Ian sent me an e-mail,” she whispered through the phone, as if unburdening herself of some great secret.

“What! When?”

“Two weeks ago.”

“Two weeks? But you said he’s been missing for a week.”

“Oh, James, you have to read it. You have to understand. Here, I’ll send it to your phone. Just hold on.”

James took a long swig from his wheat beer. An old Mo-town song was blaring from inside. He tried to think about the volume of tax returns that he and his coworkers had prepared over the past three months for their seemingly endless list of clients. The hours had been brutal—between seventy and eighty billable hours a week—and it had been mandatory to work on Saturdays for more weekends than he could remember. Oddly, though, James had actually enjoyed busy season. He was well into his third year out of college, and happy to be settling into the steady routine of a long-term career in public accounting. The more work he had on his desk, the more secure he felt, the more constant seemed the pulse of his job, and the more satisfied he felt with his professional life. And his professional life was what he lived for.

It was a far cry from his and Ian’s rebellious high school days. They had been inseparable daredevils, endlessly seeking one thrill after another. It was always about another party lived, another harmless crime gotten away with, another adventure survived. But so much had changed since those heady high school days. Even though Ian had stayed a free spirit—as they both had once been—James had found comfort in the safety and security of a steady, reliable career. Public accounting had seemed the perfect solution at the time. And it would still feel like the right choice if not for the image of Ian living the free, adventurous life that he himself had given up long ago. Ever since Jessica’s death, there seemed to be a deep and growing chasm between them as their lives had gradually drifted apart.

The flood of memories now brought James the nostalgic pain he had hoped to avoid. He hadn’t wanted to be reminded of all they had lost.

The message hit his phone, and he opened Ian’s e-mail:

 

My time in Germany has always been an adventure, but recently it’s more than that. Much more!

 

I want to tell you everything, but I’m afraid you wouldn’t understand unless you saw what I’ve seen. There is so much happening that people don’t know about! Or so much that they choose not to see. We’ve all heard stories, but until you see it with your own eyes it doesn’t feel real. But it is real! It’s terribly real!!! And I’ve finally discovered my purpose for coming to Germany. This never could have happened in Kansas!

 

I feel guilty about it, but I can’t tell you how exciting it is to have such a sense of purpose. I know exactly what I have to do. You see, it will all be in my dissertation. I will reveal everything, expose everything, and all through an academic paper! It will change the way the entire world looks at business and finance and trade. I will open their eyes to what’s happening. The whole world will see, and they will never again be able to look away. And then, finally, things will change forever!!!”

 

The e-mail ended abruptly, as if Ian had sent it on the spur of the moment. But now it was the last communication anyone in the family had from him, so James could see why their mother hung on its every word.

“What do you think it means?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” he said into the cell phone, now on speaker. “Ian’s smart as hell, but he’s always been a little crazy. It’s hard to say.”

What he didn’t tell her was that the message’s tone reminded him of the last time he and Ian had gone storm chasing: an adrenaline-fueled pastime they had pursued together many times during high school. They had been tracking an F4 tornado approaching Dodge City when the giant funnel suddenly veered from a steady path, straight toward the highway they were racing on. James had screamed for Ian to turn back, but Ian had turned to him with a crazy look in his eyes and yelled, “No! I’ve got this motherfucker!” The enormous funnel had gotten within two hundred yards of them, roaring like a thousand freight trains, before turning back onto its original path at the last moment. And as it pulled away from the road, James would never forget the sound of his brother slapping the steering wheel and laughing like a madman.

Staring at the e-mail, he could only imagine what new danger his adventurous, daredevil brother may have found at the edge of Eastern Europe. But one thing he did know: when Ian went looking for trouble he had a knack for finding it. James didn’t know what his brother had been up to for the past few months, but he was starting to get a bad feeling. Maybe their mother was right after all: maybe something bad really had happened to Ian.

The day the tornado turned away from them, Ian had thought they somehow won, as if anything could win against an F4 twister. But James believed it was because God had shown mercy on them at the last second. It had been a long time since he felt that his life was saved for a reason. Perhaps Ian really had found his purpose in Germany. And maybe now it really was James’s purpose to save him from whatever trouble he may have gotten himself into. Perhaps James’s entire life, since that day the nightmare funnel cloud passed them by outside Dodge City, had been one long, meaningless lingering until this moment, when he must follow his reckless brother toward unknown dangers in a foreign land.

His mother’s words echoed in his mind: He’s still your little brother . . . He may need your help! He pursed his lips and nodded as if giving a delayed answer to her comments. Ending the call, he killed the rest of his beer, pitched the bottle in the trash can, and headed down the balcony steps toward the alley, without a word to anyone at the party roaring inside. And for the first time in years, James felt uneasy about what the future held.

 

3

International airspace, North Atlantic

 

T

HE HUM OF the Boeing 757-200’s jet engines filled the cabin with ambient delta waves that had already soothed the other passengers around James to sleep. He leaned his forehead against the cool Plexiglas window, looking at the stars above the dark and quiet world below. Occasionally, he would spot a cluster of lights thirty thousand feet below—a solitary freighter or oil tanker plying between continents across the black ocean.

He had left Chicago four hours ago and was now probably halfway to Amsterdam. This was the longest flight of his life, and he felt a little nervous being outside the United States for the first time.

With tax season over, it had been easy enough to get a week or two off to go chasing after Ian. But he hadn’t wanted to take off any time at all. He liked his life in Kansas City, liked his steady, peaceful routine of jogging around Mill Creek Park each morning before getting to work on the Plaza at seven sharp. He enjoyed his thirty-minute lunches, sitting outside on the white stone terrace overlooking the giant fountain with its meadowlarks and squabbling blue jays. There was always a sense of achievement when he left work after everyone else, with the entire evening before him to watch his weekly shows, rent a newly released movie, or read. He loved the simplicity and order of his routines, so it was with some trepidation and frustration that he had left his comfy life in Kansas City for a journey into the unknown.

In his inside jacket pocket, next to his own passport, he had Ian’s duplicate passport. Duplicates were sometimes issued to process long-term student visas, and their mom had gotten Ian’s in the mail just before he vanished, so she had sent it with James in case Ian should need it to get back home.

Turning away from the window, he reached up to flick on the reading light, pulled out his bag, and began reading the pages his mom had printed for him before he left. They were the first three of the four e-mails Ian had sent their parents, and maybe they held some clue to what had happened to his brother in Germany.

He read the first e-mail:

 

Mom and Dad,

 

Life here is good. Sorry it took me so long to email. It’s been interesting getting used to life in Germany. The language is hard to learn, but I’m making progress. Many Germans under the age of thirty know English as a second language, which helps. Those who are older learned Russian instead.

 

I’m the only American at the university, which is exactly what I had hoped for. One of my professors was last year’s runner-up for the Nobel Prize in Economics! I plan to go to Berlin this weekend. I’ve read that Berliners, due to the city’s unique past, are very liberal. Some of the parks even have sections reserved for nude sunbathing. You’ve gotta love Europe!

 

I’m always trying to tell the other students about how great college football is, but they still prefer soccer. Next week I’m taking a day trip to Dresden with some other students to visit a castle just outside the city. I’ve never been to a castle before! And a few days ago, we visited a German brewery in the countryside for my strategic management course. We were there to study the production and distribution operations of the business, but we also found time to sample the different beers and got a bit drunk.

 

Well, I need to run. I’m meeting some students at a Biergarten for a few drinks before we head to a club in the city center. Looks like it could be another fun night. Carpe diem, right!

 

Cheers,

Ian

 

James smiled, hearing Ian’s voice in his head as he read the e-mail. He could only imagine how much fun his brother must be having. He sometimes wondered if he had made a mistake in his own life by being so cautious and calculating. His brother just seemed to float through life with such ease, never making sacrifices for the future, always having fun. His own life could easily have followed a similar path if he had made different decisions.

He read the next e-mail:

 

Mom and Dad,

 

Sorry it’s been so long since I wrote. I’ve just completed my first week of the “Transitional Economies” course. Tomorrow I’m visiting Prague with a new friend I met at a dinner party thrown by one of my professors. There’s a group of people that have a pretty different way of looking at the world. I’m looking forward to spending more time with them, and they promised they would show me a side of Prague that would “open my eyes.” The professor is helping me iron out a fairly ambitious concept for my dissertation, and he thought some of the folks in this group could help my research.

 

The professor also said it would be a good city to visit while considering my dissertation. He really likes my idea and thinks it has the potential to be one of the most controversial and important academic papers in years. And he’s one of the most brilliant and connected professors I’ve ever known.

 

Anyway, I need to get back to finishing this case study. Hope everything is going well back in Kansas.

 

Cheers,

Ian

 

Typical Ian: he had found a way to continue putting off a career by hiding in an exchange program that seemed more of an extended vacation than a serious academic effort. But something bothered James: the slight change in focus during the message. There was still the sense of adventure and discovery, but he couldn’t help noticing Ian’s infatuation with the professor who had thrown the dinner party, and the mysterious group of people he was going to see in Prague.

He flipped to the final e-mail:

 

Mom and Dad,

 

The world is a dark place. Not for everyone, of course, but certainly for too many people. And in Prague I saw the darkest of nights that I could have imagined. Not for me but for others: a forgotten group of victims.

 

Now I know exactly what I have to focus on for my dissertation. It will be like no academic paper ever written. I will research its dire themes firsthand—not in the libraries of the world but in the very streets and alleys of a sinister world that has hidden in the shadows for too long. I have it within my power to do something no one has ever done before.

 

The people I met in Prague are the most passionate and honorable I’ve known. The things they’re trying to do are revolutionary. I feel the same way Thomas Jefferson must have felt when attending the Continental Congress. My professor was right: I have a unique opportunity to help them achieve what they’ve been struggling for all these years. And I realize, this is what I’ve been searching for my entire life. Everything I’ve ever done has been specifically designed by fate to prepare me for this moment. I can’t tell you any more right now, but some day I’ll be able to tell you everything. And I promise that you will be proud of everything I’m about to do.

 

Love,

Ian

 

Proud of what? James wondered. What the hell was Ian up to? He closed his eyes and thought about the e-mail. It was the next level, evolving from the second message but not quite as excited and passionate as the one their parents got right before Ian disappeared. There was a pattern here. Each message seemed to progress toward the unknown theme of Ian’s dissertation. Perhaps the doctoral research could shed light on his disappearance. Once James arrived in Leipzig he would need to figure out what this mysterious academic paper was all about. He knew his brother well enough to know that he would risk everything on something he was excited about. And James had never seen him more excited than he seemed to be in those messages. Whatever Ian’s plans had been, something must have gone seriously wrong.

James turned out his reading light. All traces of distant ship lights on the black ocean below had vanished. It was as if he were traveling across an undefined no-man’s-land, being pulled toward a dark world that now beckoned him only a week after it took his brother.

Continued….

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Bryan Devore’s The Price of Innocence>>>>

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The Price of Innocence

by Bryan Devore

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

In the decade since their younger sister’s death, James and Ian Lawrence have drifted apart – James to pursue a steady but humdrum career as a CPA in Kansas City, Ian to go adventuring off to Leipzig, Germany, for his doctorate in economics. But when Ian mysteriously disappears while researching the economics of organized crime, James must take a leave of absence to look for him. Risking everything, he embarks on a perilous journey across Europe, digging deeply into the business affairs of some very private, very dangerous people. But in the search for Ian, he discovers a brewing revolution that will shock the world – and change what he sees as his own place in it.

Reviews

“A first-rate suspense thriller…delivers gripping action, well-rounded characters, and a tantalizing plot…The Price of Innocence is a complete package of entertainment…Devore skillfully immerses his readers in German and Czech cultures, adding rich international flavors…As if an exciting, precise plot weren’t enough, the author also fills his story with subtle but powerful themes, including respect for women, eternal optimism in the face of defeat, and the strength of brotherly love…Fans of John Grisham’s legal thrillers or Robert Ludlum’s intricate action scenes are going to be pleased with Devore’s contribution…Readers of all ages will enjoy this intelligent novel.” –ForeWord Clarion Review (5 Stars)

“The narrative boasts a distinctly cinematic impression…every scene is made memorable by chilling descriptions and dialogue…An enticing plotline, lifelike characters, high octane prose and penetrating visualizations combine to create a compelling, hair-raising story that may not be as far from reality as readers may think.” –Kirkus Reviews

“A fun thriller…By the time the book climaxes (in its final chapters), the action is relentless, with a satisfying denouement.” –BlueInk Review

“After about 20 pages, The Price of Innocence takes an irresistible hold. Devore has a big imagination and the writing skills to match…The story is immediate, personal, and riveting–a page turner, in the very best way…will keep you captivated until the very last paragraph.” –Pacific Book Review

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Winner of the Best Indie Book Award 2013 Action/Adventure.

4.8 stars – 23 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
http://www.amazon.com/The-Tesla-Secret-Project-ebook/dp/B00AR288IC/Book Five in the PROJECT Series
Plans for a devastating weapon invented by Nikola Tesla fall into the hands of
a centuries-old conspiracy bent on world domination. Powerful men will stop at
nothing to use the weapon to achieve their goal, even at the risk of nuclear war.
Nick Carter works for the Project, the shadow hand of the US President.
Selena Connor is his teammate and lover. Their relationship is tested
to the breaking point as they are forced to question their commitment to each other and to the violent life they have chosen.

From the streets of Prague to the jungles of Mexico, from the hills of Tuscany to the plains of Eastern Russia, the story moves with relentless pace toward a final, explosive confrontation.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

 

It was what he didn’t hear that woke him.

Nick Carter listened. No insects. No frogs. No rustlings in the trees, no familiar sounds of the night. It was cool in the cabin after the heat of day. The clean scent of California cedars and damp earth drifted through the open windows.

Selena Connor slept next to him. He touched her on the shoulder and she came awake. His voice was soft in her ear.

“Get dressed. Something’s wrong.”

Nick pushed off the sheet. He placed his feet on the hard wooden floor and picked up the .45 on the nightstand.

Selena slipped naked out of bed. Her clothes were on a chair near the front bedroom window. Wranglers, a green tank top, underwear. She stayed away from the window, skipped the underwear, pulled on the jeans and the top. She slipped her feet into a pair of Nikes and slipped her Glock from its holster.

Nick stepped into his pants. He heard a tiny scraping sound of metal against metal outside the window, a familiar click as the lever released. Adrenaline flooded his body, a rush of raw energy.

“Selena, Grenade!” he shouted.

He threw his forearm across his face and ran straight through the screen door that led onto the deck, Selena behind him. He leapt off the deck, stumbled and fell and rolled to his feet again. Pain shot up his spine. The explosion of the grenade rocked the cabin.

The cedars were thirty exposed yards away. They ran across the gap and reached the concealing shadows of the grove. Nick looked back at his cabin. Bright flames lit the bedroom. The fire was already crawling up the outside wall toward the green metal roof.

Incendiary, he thought. An incendiary grenade. Shit. He took deep breaths and calmed himself.

“How many?” Selena asked. Her voice was low, tense.

“Probably more than one.” He watched the flames spreading. “We have to take them down. I’ll circle right and come out near the front. You go left. Watch for me.”

She nodded.

He touched her arm. “Don’t get hurt.”

He moved away. Selena watched him go. Her heart thumped against her ribs. She began moving though the trees, her pistol held in both hands down at her side.

The flames roared through the dry wood of the cabin. Red and orange and yellow embers soared into the night sky. Small explosions sounded from inside the burning building. The noise covered Nick’s movement through the cedars. He pushed branches aside and lifted his bare feet and set them down with careful precision, feeling the uneven ground. He stayed away from the edge of the grove and circled the flames.

He heard them talking before he saw them, two white men dressed in black. They had Uzis.

“They might of got out.” The first man said. He was about six feet tall, lean. Ex-military, Nick thought, the way he’s standing with that weapon. The second man was short, stocky.

“From that? Are you kidding?”

He waved at the building. The cabin was engulfed in flame. The framework began to appear as the inferno consumed the walls and interior.

Nick raised his pistol and listened.

“He shouted before it went off,” the tall one said.

“Yeah, well. He can shout all the way to hell. They’re fried. Let’s get out of here.”

“Hey, look over there. A cat.” The tall one pointed.

A big, orange cat sat at the edge of the clearing, curious, watching the flames. Nick recognized him.

Burps.

The cat was always around when they showed up. Nick owed him. He’d saved their lives a year before.

“Watch this,” the man said. “Cat food.” He raised his Uzi.

Nick put two rounds in the center of the tall man’s back. He went down hard. The next two shots hit the short man in the chest and knocked him backward onto the ground.

Burps ran into the woods. Now we’re even, buddy. Nick watched and waited. The bodies didn’t move. He looked right and left, saw nothing. No one. He walked out into the open.

Selena’s pistol barked in the woods, three hard, flat echoes. A third man fell out into the clearing, dressed in black like the others. Selena stepped from the trees. Nick went over to the man, scanning the shadows. He kicked another Uzi out of reach. Blood bubbled on the man’s lips.

Nick knelt down. “Who sent you?”

The man looked up, his face contorted with fear. He coughed blood. He tried to speak and coughed again, a sudden gusher of bright red that spilled out over the brown earth. His chest stopped moving.

Selena walked over and stared down at the man she’d killed. Don’t think about it. Deal with it later. She was getting good at tucking her thoughts and feelings away until she could look at them.

“Damn it,” she said.

Nick got to his feet and gestured at the bodies. “They deserved what they got. That one over there was going to kill Burps. Just for fun.”

“You’re bleeding a little,” she said. His chest was crossed with welts from the branches and scratches where the screen door had cut him going through.

“It’s nothing. We’d better call Harker. There’s a backup phone in the truck. ”

Selena watched the shifting colors of the flames play over him. His gray eyes were black in the night. His skin glowed red in the firelight, the old scars dark shadows and spots and hollows on his body. They walked to his Silverado. He pulled a gym bag from behind the seat and put on running shoes and an old black tee shirt. He took a phone from the bag and stuck it in his pocket.

The cabin burned. They could feel the heat all the way across the clearing.

“Let’s check the bodies.” He went to the first man he’d killed and started going through his pockets. Selena took the man next to him.

“Nothing,” she said.

“Not here, either.” He went to the last body and felt a hard shape through the clothes. He pulled out a cell phone, the kind of cheap throwaway model you could buy anywhere with prepaid time. He pocketed the phone.

“This place is going to be crawling with cops and fire trucks soon,” he said. “We have to get the bodies out of sight. Help me drag them into the trees.”

They moved the three dead men deep into the woods, went back and collected the weapons, put them with the bodies.

He handed her the phone from the bag. “Give Harker a call while I find some socks.”

Selena stood with the phone and watched him walk back to the truck. As she watched, the propane tank in back of the cabin exploded. She looked at the blazing building and realized she still held the Glock in her other hand.

How did I get here? she thought.

 

 

 

CHAPTER TWO

 

It was a few minutes before six in the morning in Virginia. Elizabeth Harker had been behind her desk for more than an hour. A cup of black coffee warmed her hand. She felt at home when she was behind the desk. The Project had become her life.

Elizabeth Harker had wide green eyes and milk-white skin. She was a small woman. Her size and looks and raven black hair made people think of a Tolkien fantasy where elves and fairies danced in the woods. People sometimes confused size and gender with competence and wrote her off. It was a mistake no one made twice.

Her satellite phone signaled a call.

Trouble, she thought, it’s too early. She picked up.

“Director. Someone came after us at Nick’s cabin. We need a clean up.”

“Bodies?”

“Three. The cabin is toast. Literally.”

“Are you all right?”

“Yes. Nick’s scratched up some.”

“Scratched up?”

“Here, he’ll tell you.”

Elizabeth heard Selena say something and Nick came on.

“Director, we need a clean up team.”

“So Selena said. What happened?” She listened while Nick told her.

“Hold on,” she said. She picked up her desk phone, spoke briefly to someone on the other end. Set the phone down.

“A team is on the way. It will take them two hours. Hide the bodies and weapons before anyone gets there.”

“Already done.”

Nick watched the embers rise, every one a fire waiting to happen. There’d been a freak rain the day before. The cabin was in a wide clearing. There was plenty of space around the flames and there was no breeze. It might be all right. In the distance he heard the first siren.

“Fire trucks and the Sheriff will be here soon.”

“What will you tell them?” Harker’s voice echoed over the satellite link.

“Propane leak. They’ll buy that, the tank went up with the cabin.”

“Any idea who they were? Any ID?”

“No. A cell phone, nothing else. There might be something on it.”

“Get back here as soon as you can. Don’t get arrested.”

Elizabeth leaned back in her chair and thought about it. If someone had gone after Nick and Selena, they might go after the others. She called Ronnie Peete and told him what had happened. She called Lamont and Stephanie and told them Ronnie would pick them up.

The Project was the shadow hand of the President. No one was supposed to know who was on the team or where they lived. The Project was secret as far as the public was concerned, but it wasn’t the public throwing grenades. Over the last few months too many people had found out about her group. She was getting the feeling that secret wasn’t the operative word anymore.

Elizabeth sipped her coffee and looked at the picture of the Twin Towers she kept on her desk. Anytime she began to doubt why she was here, all she needed to do was look at that picture.

The day hadn’t started well. She wondered what else it would bring.

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER THREE

 

Ronnie Peete and Lamont Cameron were on their way to pick up Stephanie.  They rode in Ronnie’s black Hummer,

“What do you figure?” Lamont said. He looked in the mirror on the door. A black Crown Vic tailed them a block behind.

“He was outside your building when I picked you up. It could be a cop or Feds. Could be the people who went for Nick. Harker said they used a grenade.”

“Wouldn’t be the first time. Nick’s got bad karma or something about grenades.”

“Karma? You going New Age on me?”

“Yeah, right.” Lamont took out his pistol and pulled the slide partway back to check for a round. He rested it in his lap. “Nick’s got to be pissed about the cabin.”

Ronnie glanced in his mirror. The car was still there. Another black Ford entered the intersection ahead and turned toward them. The car behind sped up to close the gap.

“Here we go,” Ronnie said.

“Think they’re feds?”

Someone leaned out of the oncoming car as it neared and fired a machine pistol at them. The Hummer was fitted with bullet proof glass. The windshield starred with the rounds.

“Nope. Not feds.”

Ronnie stepped hard on the emergency brake and cranked the steering left. The Hummer slid into a screeching 180 turn and slammed sideways into the other car and knocked it off to the side.

Ronnie released the brake, punched the accelerator down and headed straight for the second car. Lamont saw panic on the driver’s face as the Hummer bore down on him. He tried to turn out of the way.

Ronnie’s truck was modified with armor plating, a beefed up frame, a turbocharged engine and a lot of extra horses. A heavy black steel bumper and grill dominated the front. It hit the Ford like a 6000 pound hammer and bulldozed it over the curb. Ronnie kept the pedal down and pushed the car into a store front with a big plate glass window. The window disintegrated in an explosion of glass. Neatly dressed mannequins fell out onto the pavement.

A man scrambled out of the car. Ronnie rolled out of the Hummer and shot him, three quick rounds. Down the block, a woman started screaming.

Lamont got out and squatted down behind the Hummer a second before a large man came out of the car across the street firing an Uzi. The 9mm rounds rang against the steel plating on the Hummer. Lamont’s first and second shots missed. The third and fourth shots didn’t. The man dropped out of sight.

Ronnie fired. The driver fell forward over the wheel.

That fast, it was over. The echoes died away. Traffic was stopped at the intersections. Nothing moved on the block. Lamont saw a curtain flutter in an apartment window and swung toward it, pistol aimed in both hands. He saw a terrified woman step back out of sight.

Steam rose under the buckled hood of the car in the store front. The driver was dead, his head at an odd angle. The front seat passenger had a thick shard of plate glass from the store window sticking in his neck. An Uzi was clenched in his dead hand. The front of the car interior was wet and red with blood. The man Ronnie had killed lay sprawled on the sidewalk by the open car door.

“Let’s check the other one,” Lamont said.

They started across the street. No one moved by the second car. Ronnie saw gas underneath. He held out his arm and stopped Lamont. The gas tank exploded, ripping through the Ford.

Sirens were coming, lots of them. They went back to the Hummer. The right side was a mess. The rear quarter panel was crumpled and bent, the shiny black paint along the side marred and scratched, the front fender buckled in against the tire. The metalwork and windows were pocked with bullet holes.

“Messed up your ride,” Lamont said.

Ronnie looked at his car and shook his head. “We’ll need help with the cops. I’ll call in.”

 

 

CHAPTER FOUR

 

The team met in Harker’s office. Nick and Selena had gotten in from California an hour before.

Stephanie Willits sat on the couch. She was the Project’s computer guru, a hacker genius. Everything about computers was in her keeping. Stephanie had dark eyes and hair and a pleasant face people characterized as friendly. She usually had a ready smile. At the moment, the smile had gone missing.

Ronnie sat next to her. The story of the Navajo Nation was written on his face. He had square, solid features and dark brown eyes. His nose was large, Roman looking, a noble nose. His skin was light brown with an underlying reddish tint that got darker during the sunny months. He had on one of his favorite shirts, a gaudy panorama of big-finned Cadillacs full of joyous surfers cruising the Hawaiian sands.

A silver pen that had belonged to FDR lay on Harker’s desk next to a picture of the Twin Towers on 9/11. She picked it up and twirled it in her fingers.

“No question this was a concerted attack,” she said. “There were no IDs on the people who came after you, in California or here. But we found out who most of them were.”

“How?” Selena asked.

She looked fresher than Nick, but not by much. Her face showed lines of fatigue, her violet eyes were bloodshot. She wore jeans and a blue sweatshirt and hadn’t bothered with makeup. Her red-blonde hair was pulled back in a short ponytail held by a rubber band. She was letting it grow out.

A long way from when she first walked in here, Harker thought. She’s changed. No more rich girl look.

“The three in California were ex military. Their prints were on file. We couldn’t get prints from the one who burned up, but the others used to be with Langley.”

“Mercenaries,” Nick said, “and ex spooks.”

“Yes.”

“I don’t like that. Where did we see this before? Spooks and mercs?””

“In Texas,” Ronnie said. He still felt the effects of the wound he’d taken there. “You think it’s the same people, Director?”

“Yes. There was one incoming call on the phone you found. It traced back to a company called Endgame Development. They design interactive, violent video games. Think Friday the 13th in 3D and high definition. Endgame is a subsidiary shell of a subsidiary of an entertainment company owned by Malcolm Foxworth.”

“Foxworth runs AEON.”

“That’s why I think it’s the same people.”

“What do you want us to do?” Nick asked.

“Endgame is in Brighton Beach, in Brooklyn. I want you and Lamont to go there and see what you can find out.” Elizabeth fiddled with her pen. “This could have been a preemptive strike, so we don’t get in the way of something. They’d go after you four because you’re the guts of the fire team. Steph and I were probably on the list after they got the shooters handled.”

“Big mistake.” Lamont smiled. “They don’t know you two very well.”

Lamont had retired from the Navy Seals just before joining the Project. A shrapnel scar ran from his forehead down across his nose and cheek. It made a thin ridge of pink against his coffee-colored skin. He had pale blue eyes, a gift from his Ethiopian grandfather.

Selena said, “What could they be planning?”

Harker tapped her pen. “If the past is any indication we’ll find out soon enough.”

 

 

CHAPTER FIVE

 

The man who led AEON looked out from his penthouse windows over the city of London. The view took in most of the city. It was a good spot to contemplate power.

Malcolm Foxworth was a small man with a large presence. His hair was black with streaks of silver and carefully styled. His ears were a little too large for his head. His eyebrows formed thin, black streaks over flat eyes blue as glacier ice. Foxworth’s face was unremarkable, common even. When he was angry, his complexion turned red. When he was very angry, his face turned chalk white.

Foxworth had started out with a small newspaper inherited from his father. Over the years he’d created a world-wide media empire by telling angry people what they wanted to hear. He controlled radio stations, newspapers, magazines and television outlets, all with one thing in common. Each worked to feed and strengthen the ominous cloud of divisiveness and fear spreading over the globe.

Fear was Foxworth’s stock in trade. Fear overwhelmed reason. Fearful people became angry and could be manipulated. The world’s leaders had always used fear to get what they wanted. They congratulated themselves and imagined themselves masters of the world. But few knew who pulled the strings that made the world dance.

Foxworth knew, because he was one of them. The conspiracy theorists were right about a hidden group seeking world domination but they’d gotten most of it wrong.

AEON had been called by many names over the centuries. The Illuminati. The Secret Masons. The Hidden Masters. The New World Order. The Trilateral Commission. The Bilderberg Group. Those were useful red herrings, shadows thrown up against the screen of human paranoia, psychological sleight of hand. No one had ever managed to expose the real conspiracy.

In the past year someone had begun to interfere.

Someone had pointed Harker’s dogs at the Demeter operation. It was like throwing sand into a machine with closely cut gears. Years of preparation had been destroyed in hours by an insignificant team of ignorant, washed up soldiers led by a woman. It wasn’t the first time she’d derailed one of AEON’s operations. Every time he thought about Harker, Foxworth wanted to take her throat in his hands and crush it.

Harker drew her power from the Presidency. President Rice didn’t play by the rules. He couldn’t be bribed, or persuaded to see reason about things that mattered. He was weak, opposed to war. Without him, Harker would become irrelevant.

Rice’s opponent in the upcoming US election was AEON’s puppet. Voting was untrustworthy, no matter what the polls predicted. Foxworth had no intention of waiting until November to see his man elected.

He was going to assassinate Rice, then eliminate Harker.

He gazed out at the changing London skyline. A light rain spattered the glass. Beyond the Thames, the giant Ferris wheel Londoners called the Eye stood out against the gray sky.

A sudden stab of blinding pain staggered him. He placed his hand against the thick glass of the window to steady himself. His vision blurred. Then his sight cleared and the pain on his skull receded. He walked unsteadily to his desk and sat down.

A door on the other side of the room opened. A tall, smartly dressed woman with pale skin and long black hair came in. She moved with unconscious ease and sexual promise. She glowed in a cream-colored suit that set off her hair. Her red blouse showed just enough cleavage to intrigue the eye. Her dark eyes glittered with unspoken thoughts.

Mandy Atherton had been a model at the top of her profession when she’d met Foxworth two years before. In the cutthroat world of high end fashion and beautiful women there was always someone scheming to take her place. Mandy was no fool. She knew where her future lay, and it wasn’t with the fashion industry. It lay in a rich man’s bed.

Lately Foxworth had been finding it difficult to perform, but that wasn’t a problem for Mandy. Besides, she had other ways to satisfy her needs. She was inventive and intelligent as well as attractive. During working hours she acted as Foxworth’s executive assistant.

“Malcolm, Doctor Morel is here.”

“About time. Send him in.”

Doctor Morel wore a goatee and mustache and a three piece dark suit that had cost a great deal of money. He was 50 years old, balding and beginning to show a paunch. He looked like an actor portraying Sigmund Freud. Custom shoes that added to his height and expensive cologne hinted at his vanity. In his right hand he carried a smooth black leather briefcase full of select medications.

Morel was under five and a half feet tall, one of the reasons Foxworth liked having him about. Aside from the bonus of his height, Morel was also discreet. He was a man who knew how to make his clients feel pampered and respected. More important, he knew how to make them feel better.

“Goddamn it, Morel, what took you so long? I can’t think with this headache.”

“Sorry, Malcolm, there was construction on the M1. I came as quickly as possible. Please, sit down.”

Foxworth insisted that associates he saw all the time call him by his first name. Worker bees called him “sir”.

Foxworth sat at his desk. Morel placed his case on the desk, opened it and pulled up a facing chair. He took out an instrument and shone a light into Foxworth’s eyes.

“Look up. Now right. Now left.” He put the instrument away, took out a vial of clear liquid and a syringe.

“Any other symptoms, Malcolm? Blurring of vision? Hearing problems? Any problems with balance?”

“Never mind that crap. Just give me something for this headache. I’ve got an important meeting in twenty minutes.”

“Of course.” Morel filled the syringe, squirted a few drops. “Pants, please.”

Foxworth stood. Morel noticed he was a bit unsteady, but said nothing. Foxworth exposed his buttock. Morel gave him the injection.

“You’ll feel better in a minute or two,” he said. “Are you still unwilling to put yourself in for a few tests? Just overnight.”

“I don’t want any tests.” Foxworth felt the drug working. The pain receded. He took a deep breath. “I don’t need any tests. These headaches are just stress.”

“Malcolm…”

“Morel. I said I don’t want any bloody tests.”

Foxworth’s voice had gone cold. Something ancient and dangerous lay just beneath it. Morel took an involuntary step backward, as if he had just seen something unspeakably evil. Ridiculous, he thought. It’s just the stress talking.

Foxworth calmed himself.  “Don’t ask me again. A long as I can reach you, I don’t need anything else.”

“I’m always available for you.” Morel closed his case.

The money he got for these visits guaranteed it. If his patient didn’t want tests, well, that was his decision. Morel had done what he could. He wouldn’t bring it up again, not after what Foxworth had said. For a moment, he’d actually felt threatened.

Continued….

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Plans for a devastating weapon invented by Nikola Tesla fall into the hands of
a centuries-old conspiracy bent on world domination. Powerful men will stop at
nothing to use the weapon to achieve their goal, even at the risk of nuclear war.
Nick Carter works for the Project, the shadow hand of the US President.
Selena Connor is his teammate and lover. Their relationship is tested
to the breaking point as they are forced to question their commitment to each

other and to the violent life they have chosen.

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Enjoy This Free Excerpt From KND Thriller of The Week: Award Winning Cooch by Robert Cook

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Cooch

by Robert Cook

4.4 stars – 23 Reviews
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Here’s the set-up:
Alejandro Mohammed Cuchulain, called Cooch or Alex, became a Marine at sixteen and a CIA special-operations trainee at 17. His father is a wheel-chair bound former Marine and Medal of Honor winner who gives Alex advice as to how to survive in a violent world. His mother is the daughter of a Bedouin sheikh who sends a young Alex off, during his summer breaks, to experience the Bedouin life. The combination of a very young start in learning the art and craft of violence, combined with a thirst for knowledge combine to help him to become both a noted designer and user of explosives and an expert in Islamic affairs. Violent, yet thoughtful, Cooch represents the best in fast-moving, popular thrillers.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Cooch

1

New York

Downtown

Choppers was jammed and loud. Smoke curled around cheap

lamps hanging from an ancient, bulging ceiling, and the sounds of

Ernest Tubbs blared from huge speakers mounted high in two corners

above a tiny dance floor. Groups of young men and women in jeans

mingled with tattooed men in cutoff, black T-shirts, and leather

vests, but mostly the groups were of their own. The smell of stale

sweat competed with the essence of Happy perfume and the pungent

stench of marijuana.

Alex and Caitlin slipped into a booth just as another couple left

it. A large-breasted waitress, going to fat, in shorts and a fitted body

shirt came to take their order. “I’ll have a beer, Sam Adams,” Caitlin

said.

“Me too,” Alex said.

There was a strange medley of people on the dance floor. Bikers in

leather were dancing close with preppy young women with barrettes

in their hair. A few of the women were trying to pull their hips away
from their sweaty, bearded, unwashed dance partners, most of whom

had both hands on the girls’ buttocks, pulling them into their erections.

But a few of the other women were grinding their hips back to

their dance partner, enjoying the danger and the forbidden fruit.

A huge, bearded man walked up to their table, his body odor

preceding him. His belly pushed an old denim shirt over his belt,

which had a wide, silver Harley-Davidson buckle, and a sheath knife

strapped on the right side, facing back. Thick, black hair covered his

arms and curled from his shirt, which was open halfway to his navel.

He smiled at Caitlin, showing his yellowed teeth, one with a prominent

gold cap.

“My name’s Billy. I run this gang. Let’s dance,” he said, and

reached to grasp her hand.

Caitlin pulled her hand from his. “Thank you, but no. I don’t

dance.”

He laughed loudly and reached again for her. “I’ll teach you.

You’re gonna like it.”

Caitlin grabbed his little finger and bent it back. “I said I don’t

want to dance. What part of ‘no’ don’t you understand?”

Billy ripped her hand from his finger. “Listen, bitch,” he snarled.

“This is my bar. If I want to fuckin’ dance with you, you’re going to

fuckin’ dance with me. If I want you to suck my dick, you’re going to

fuckin’ suck my dick and swallow, not spit. Your little fairy boyfriend

there don’t have shit to say about this. I’m the boss here.”

Billy turned to glare and lean menacingly at Alex. “You got the

message, pansy?” he said.

Alex watched two bouncers rush across the room, separating to

approach Billy from either side. Others were flowing among the

crowd, ready to stop budding trouble.

Alex turned his head and stared at him. “Yeah, I got the message,

Billy.”

Just then the bouncers got to either side of Billy, and grasped his

arms. One of them said, “It’s time to go, Billy. We’ve talked about

this before.”

They started to pull him away when Billy said to Caitlin, “Listen,

you snotty cunt. If I ever see you again, and I fuckin’ well hope I do,

then we’re gonna have some fun. You’re gonna find out why they call

me big Billy!”

“You’re an animal!” Caitlin shouted at him. Then she turned to

Alex. “As for you—thanks for all your support! Let’s get out of here.”

Billy crowed loudly as they pulled him away. “No pussy for you

tonight, pansy. No head, neither.”

Alex stood, tossed a twenty-dollar bill on the table, and followed

Caitlin from the bar. As the bouncers hustled Billy out of the bar,

several bikers stood staring at Alex and Caitlin, grinning. Another

made little kissing sounds as they walked by.

When they got outside, Alex said, “Let’s get out of sight and grab

a cab.” He had her arm and was moving her quickly down the street

when she pulled her arm from his grasp.

“Keep your hands off me, Cuchulain!” she snapped. “You weren’t

so forceful back there in the bar. I’m not afraid of those people, and

I’m not going to run from them. They‘re animals! God, that was

disgusting.”

They walked at a slower pace and finally turned the corner.

“Well, are you going to say anything, Cuchulain?” she asked.

He waved down a cab and they jumped in. “Let’s go back uptown

and have a drink somewhere quiet and talk about it,” he said as the

cab pulled away from the curb. “I know just the place.”

“You’re sure there are no bad guys there?” O’Connor sneered.

Alex smiled. “I certainly hope not.”

A few minutes later they settled into a corner booth at a small

wine bar in the West 70s. O’Connor looked intently at him.

“So talk to me, Cuchulain. I sort of assumed you were the type to

jump to my defense, whether I needed help or not.”

“And you like men who do that?” he said.

She sat back in the booth and took a sip of her wine. “No, for

the most part, I detest it. It’s just so macho. Billy scared me. What a

fucking pig! I think he scared you too. He did, didn’t he, Cuchulain?”

“Caitlin, of course I was scared. Billy had a knife and a ton of

friends there. I know this is going to sound like bullshit. I’m sorry

about that, but I think it’s the truth. Quite simply, there was no need

for me to do anything. So I didn’t.”

She studied him over the rim of her glass. “And you think you

could have? Is that bodybuilder look just a bit of narcissism or do you

have that much animal in you? I’m pretty damned sure you don’t, but

I would have been less sure before watching you tonight. And if you

were that much of an animal, I’m not sure I’d like you.”

Alex chuckled. “Ah, the conundrum of civilized behavior. If you

deal with animals by using animal behavior against them, are you

civilized for protecting the society, whatever it takes, or have you

become an animal and consequently not fit to mingle in civilized

society? Do we say thank you and give out a medal and invite him

to speak at graduation, or do we keep our would-be hero chained

in the backyard like a pit bull, always half afraid he will turn on us

someday?”

O’Connor sat tapping her foot reflexively, studying him. Finally

she said, “In your case, I suspect that the argument is academic, but

I’ll probably never know. I do know that Brooks Elliot would have

reacted differently.”

He shrugged. “Maybe.”

“Well, I’m going to be in New York for another week and a half.

Before I go back to California, I’m going back there. Back to that

animal farm. I hate this feeling of intimidation that I have right now.

I’m going to exorcise it.”

“That’s probably a bad idea,” Cuchulain said, “but it’s none of my

business. Do you mind if I trail along with you? I didn’t get to drink

my beer.”

Caitlin studied him for a second. “You’re welcome, but you may

get spanked if you’re not careful.”

Cuchulain smiled and said, “Sounds kinky. I can’t wait.”

New York

Midtown

Several days later Caitlin walked beside Brooks Elliot from a
conference room at Goldman Sachs. Axial was trying to schedule

another round of public fund-raising in a difficult environment;

Brooks Elliot was leading the charge at Goldman. As they stood

awaiting the elevator, Caitlin said, “Why don’t I buy you lunch? I

want to ask you about something.”

“Sure!” Elliot said. “Any ‘druthers?”

“You pick, I’ll buy.”

“Deal. There’s a great sushi place that’s not too far.”

Fifteen minutes later they sat in a booth at a Japanese restaurant

named Hana, each sipping hot miso soup from black lacquer bowls

held in two hands. No spoons.

“Okay, what’s on your mind, Caitlin?” Brooks said.

“Have you talked to Alex lately?”

Elliot nodded. “I played squash with him yesterday morning, and

then we had breakfast. Why?”

“Did you win?”

“Yeah, I won. I usually do.”

“Why do you usually win?”

“Alex is fairly new to the game. He tends to muscle the ball.”

“Did he tell you about taking me to that biker bar the other

night?”

“Why don’t you just tell me what’s on your mind, Caitlin,” Elliot

said. “You may recall that I don’t like to be quizzed about Alex.”

She sat for a moment, phrasing in her mind. “I’d just like to get

a better handle on him,” she said. “I don’t know, Brooks. Alex just

seems so calm, so cautious. But there seems to be this underlying

aura of menace—of ruthlessness. I can’t seem to put my finger on it. I

thought that I had a beginning handle on him until the other night,

but it looks as though I was wrong. He puzzles me enough to make

me uncomfortable.”

Elliot sat, waiting.

“You’ve known me too long,” she said. O’Connor gave a faint

smile and shrugged her shoulders almost imperceptibly. “But let’s

just say that I’m curious. He says he’s interested in me. I’m trying

to figure out if I’m interested in him. I just can’t get a handle on

him. He seems like the kind of guy who would jump up, all macho,

and embarrass the shit out of me if anyone said a cross word to me,

and you know I just hate that bullshit. But we were in a nasty situation

in a biker bar downtown the other night. I was pretty scared

and really pissed too. I’ll spare you the details, but this fat pig was

saying some strong shit to me, and Alex just sat there; he didn’t

say a word. If the bouncers hadn’t shown up, it could have gotten

ugly. Alex didn’t defend me; he didn’t tell the guy to back off. He

just sat there like a wimp. Dumb—and probably terrified. I know

I was.” She shifted in her chair, thinking.

“Alex is not a coward, Caitlin,” Elliot said with an odd smile on

his face. “He wouldn’t bring dishonor on your warrior clan. It’s even

possible he could bring something to the table.

“Caitlin, there’s something I just don’t get here,” Elliot said as he

gazed at her still, closed face. “This just doesn’t sound like the Caitlin

O’Connor I know. You could have broken the fat guy’s finger, but you

didn’t. Your father once told me you got a brown belt in judo when

you were thirteen and wanted boxing lessons too. He worried for a

while about the way you got violent when you didn’t get what you

wanted—anger management expense for him, wasn’t it?”

“That shit!” O’Connor said, her eyes flashing. “He never told me

he told you that. Anyway, that anger counselor was dumber than a

fence post and tried to look up my skirt all the time. Jesus H. Christ,

where do they find those idiots and give them a PhD?”

“Remember me?” Elliot said quietly. “I’m the one who doesn’t

get distracted easily. Give up on the defensive time warp, and let’s

continue to discuss your relationship with the lovely and charming

patrons at Choppers.”

“Oh, fuck you, asshole,” Caitlin exploded loudly. The other Hana

patrons turned to stare.

“You had never been afraid before like that, had you? I mean really

stark terrified,” Elliot said. “You lost your nerve because of it, because

that much adrenaline was a new thing, and you had more than one

potential assailant, all armed. Now you’re trying to rebuild your ego

by laying the problem off on Alex. Jesus, Caitlin! I’d forgotten how

self-centered you are—how driven by your view of yourself!”

“Up your giggy, Elliot,” O’Connor whispered. “Take your tabletop

psychoanalysis and put it where the sun don’t shine.”

“And what would you like to discuss instead, my charming, articulate

friend?”

Caitlin leaned forward, her right hand extended toward him, long

fingers curling repeatedly back in supplication. “Come on, Elliot—

give! This is not about me, right now. What’s the story on Cuchulain?

You know I wouldn’t ask lightly. This is embarrassing enough without

me having to beg.”

His mind was racing. She was tough to brush off. “What do you

want to know? Alex is my best friend, and I’ve only known him as

an adult. He’s honest, incredibly bright, even by your standards—a

wonderful and loyal friend, and hardworking. There’s no one on the

planet I respect more.”

“I bare my soul and you give me platitudes—pablum!” she spat,

while coolly thinking she never dreamed she would hear that kind

of endorsement from Brooks F.T. Elliot IV, about anyone. Cuchulain

suddenly became more interesting to her. She decided to take a different

tack.

“Brooks, Brooks—I’m lonely,” she said softly. “I’d like to have

someone in my life. Someone presentable to take to the occasional

charity ball, someone to take a vacation with, someone who just likes

me for me and not what my press says I am. You know what it costs

me to have this conversation with you; it’s just not the kind of thing

I do.”

“Yeah, I know it’s not.” Elliot sat for a few moments, sipping

green tea, thinking. “Caitlin, you know I want to help, but I’m not

going to act as Alex’s unauthorized biographer. Okay—if I’m going

to answer the question, I’ll answer it short and straight, or I’ll decline

to answer and take a pass on not just the subject, but the whole topic

area. If you structure and phrase your questions carefully, I’ll answer

them. Don’t ask me anything you could just as well ask him. Don’t

game me.”

She picked up a piece of raw tuna with her chopsticks, dunked

it into a film of soy sauce in a ceramic saucer, and popped it into her

mouth. Then she picked up her tea mug.

“Okay, here goes,” she said, sipping. “Is he a wimp, or a wuss, or

something dressed up like a wolf that isn’t a wolf?”

“No,” Elliot said.

“Is he a wolf?”

“Pass,” he said.

“Does he have the courage of his convictions and the willingness

to defend them?”

Brooks smiled. “Maybe more than anyone I’ve ever met.”

“That’s interesting,” Caitlin said, sitting up a little. “Could be a

little scary, though. Do I need to think or worry about that?”

“Yes.”

She gazed intently at Elliot. “Tell me about that.”

“No, and the broad topic is off the air.”

“Is he dangerous?”

“Is he dangerous to you?” His eyebrows rose and he allowed a look

of incredulity to flicker across his face. “Absolutely not.”

“That wasn’t what I meant, and you know it!” she fumed.

Elliot shook his head. “Broad topic’s gone. You’re winning. I’m

giving you more than I said I would. This little interrogation is close

to being over.”

She held her hands up in surrender. “Okay, okay. Just a couple

more. Do you want to hear the biker story?”

“No. I already heard it from him.”

“Really! Tell me what Alex said.”

“No. Ask him.”

O’Connor was fighting her temper, and losing. “Goddammit,

Brooks, this just doesn’t compute. Why are you being this way?

Jesus, remember me? I’ve known you for more than ten years, and we

were sleeping together for three of them. I was a virgin when I met

you, for Christ’s sake. You’re one of my best friends. Why won’t you

help keep me from being hurt? You’ve managed to hurt my feelings

a little, which I didn’t think you could do anymore.”

Elliot started to speak, then stopped, groping for the right words.

“I’m not comfortable with this conversation,” he said. “But I’m going

to give this one more try, because even if you’re gaming me with the

hurt feelings to get more information, I think you should probably

know anyhow. You’re a good friend, and I want to help keep you from

getting hurt.”

Elliot leaned back in his chair and looked at the ceiling, then

said softly, “First, I’m more loyal to him than I am to you, even

though I very much like and respect you. You should take that

feeling into consideration. I agree with you on the marriage and baby

thing—probably wouldn’t have worked. I owe you big for that.

Second, Cuchulain is fully formed, intellectually and emotionally.

He’s not your intellectual equal, but he’s in the neighborhood,

and anyway, formed in a far different mold. He’s applied intelligence;

you are pure.”

 

 

He looked back down and smiled. “God, I could sell

tickets to Mensa for a chance to listen in on the two of you if you ever

get serious. Third, you should avoid putting him into situations where he

may have to react violently. The biker bar could have been ugly. He

and I play by different rules than most people.”

Caitlin looked thoughtful. “I’m going back down there. I just

have to, and Cuchulain said he wanted to come along. Maybe I should

just go without him.”

“You should probably take him, my previous comments notwithstanding.

He’s useful in places like that. I assume that drinking one

beer and sitting for a few minutes in defiance will satisfy this unreasonable

compulsion of yours to be the Irish Rambo.”

She delicately raised her middle finger to Brooks as she screwed

her face into a grimace. He laughed.

“Look, Caitlin. You should give him a chance. This is a wonderful

guy. He’ll try to keep from hurting you. He’ll try to deal with your

ego and your intellect, and they are about equal in size. Dealing with

them together is no day at the beach—I’ve been there.”

“Oh, I see. I’m fucked up and he’s perfect?”

“Don’t you pull that shit with me, Caitlin,” Elliot snapped.

“You’re not perfect and neither is he. What I’m not going to do is go

down that road with you—or for you.”

New York

Downtown

Alex and Caitlin were back in Choppers, once again in business

clothes in a booth at the corner of the room. Billy was nowhere to be

seen, and Caitlin had nearly finished her beer. The nachos proved nearly

inedible. Bouncers converged on a bearded drunk who was standing

behind a girl with his hands cupped over her breasts, pretending to

dance as she fought and scratched at him over her shoulder.

“This is disgusting,” Caitlin said. “I’m done proving whatever

I was proving to myself. I’m going to the ladies room. I’ll see you

outside.”

Alex waved for the waitress as Caitlin slid from the booth and

walked away. When she finally waddled over, he handed her thirty

dollars, then turned to walk toward the restrooms and the exit. There

was some sort of fuss at the door. As he got closer, it faded to the outside

and he walked into the men’s room behind a biker in full black

leather regalia. When he stepped back into the hallway, Caitlin was

not there. He felt a faint tug of alarm. He pushed the door to the

women’s room partly opened and said loudly, “Caitlin, you okay?”

There was no answer. He stepped partway inside. There were two

women at the sinks, but no Caitlin. He ducked to look under the toilet

stall doors. No feet. He could feel the familiar sensation of adrenaline

rushing into his body.

“You looking for a tall blonde in a suit? A looker?” one of the

women asked, as she glanced at him in the mirror.

“Yes. You see her?” he said.

“She left a couple of minutes ago with a bunch of bikers,” she said.

“Didn’t seem real happy about it.”

Alex spun and raced outside. The street was empty except for one

Harley at the curb. Just then the biker from the john hurried out,

pulling keys from his pocket and moving to his machine, a cigarette

hanging from the corner of his mouth.

Alex walked over to the biker, and just as he looked up, Cuchulain

grabbed the man’s nose between the knuckles of his index and middle

fingers and twisted sharply, breaking it. He dropped his hand and

snatched the cigarette from the man’s mouth, as he grabbed the front

of his shirt, rushed him to the outside wall of the bar, and banged his

back against the old bricks, hard.

“Where did they take the girl?” Cuchulain demanded.

The biker sprayed blood on him as he spoke. “Fuck you, asshole.”

“I don’t have a lot of time,” Alex snarled. He pushed the lit end of

the cigarette into the man’s cheek for a second, and the smell of burnt

flesh filled the air. When the scream ended, he pushed the cigarette

within an eighth inch of the biker’s eye, singeing the eyelashes from

the lid. “You’ll be blind in ten seconds if you don’t tell me, then I’ll

dig around in the sockets. Believe it.”

The biker was suddenly aware that his feet were not touching the

ground; he was being held in the air against the wall with one hand

while the other held the cigarette. His cheek felt on fire and urine

was burning down his right leg. He quickly blurted the address.

Alex slapped him on the forehead with the heel of his hand, bouncing the

biker’s head against the wall; the cigarette fluttered to the sidewalk.

Cuchulain grabbed the keys from the hand of the falling, unconscious

man and jumped onto the motorcycle, kicked it to life, and

accelerated down the street, necktie flapping wildly behind him.

The cooling motorcycle engines were still ticking when Alex

jumped from the bike and ran to the door, just as a roar of approval

and laughter went up from inside. A large man in a black T-shirt and

dirty jeans stepped in front of him, blocking his way as he stuck a

hand in Alex’s chest.

“Beat it, asshole,” he said. “This is a private club.”

Cuchulain grabbed the hand with his left, just below the wrist,

then gave it a hard snap up and out, breaking the wrist, as he stepped

under the raised arm and drove his right elbow down and back into

the guard’s lower back, just above the belt on his right side, then

again. Cuchulain reached down quickly, and pulled the man’s thighs

back from just above the knees so that his face was driven to the pavement

with a resounding thunk. As Cuchulain reached for the door,

he snapped a kick into the man’s left ear.

The door was unlocked and Cuchulain stepped inside. O’Connor was being held in a chair by two men, bare breasts exposed, while Billy, the leader, had his penis out

from the fly of his dirty Levi’s, four inches from her terrified, furious

face.

“Hey, whoa!” Alex yelled.

The room went quiet as heads snapped to see the intruder. Billy’s

face lit up in a delighted grin.

“Well, if ain’t the fuckin’ pansy. This is my lucky day! You can

referee a gangbang—me first. You know, pick out who gets to fuck

her next, make sure no one goes twice before everyone goes once, and

all that shit. By tomorrow we’ll be starting to wear out, and might

even give you a little. But first I want a little blowjob from Blondie. I

sort of promised it to my buddy here,” he leered, pulling the foreskin

up and back. “If she bites me, I’ll just knock her teeth out and try

again.”

“I don’t think so,” Alex said loudly. “That would be dumb. There

will be cops everywhere, and you guys are in enough trouble already.

For what?” He looked around at the gang, assessing them. He quickly

settled on a small, wiry man with still eyes and a telltale easy balance.

He knew the type.

Cuchulain eased toward him and spoke again. “I’ll tell you what.

You guys are supposed to be the baddest asses in New York. What if

I arm wrestle two of you at once for the girl? If you win, you keep the

girl and no cops. If I win, we walk. It would save you a ton of hassle

with the cops. You know I can’t beat two of you, so why not? I gotta

do something! Deal?”

Ignoring the others, he looked steadily at the small, quiet man,

who looked around and then said, “What if we all fuck her, beat the

living shit out of you, and toss you both in an alley somewhere? We’ll

just give you both some pills that Billy bought down in Mexico,

where you can’t remember shit about what happened lately. What

then? Cops? You won’t remember enough to make a decent witness.”

The room was quiet as the other bikers turned to look at Alex.

“No, slick. You get me,” Alex said coldly.

The small man felt a surge of recognition and imminent danger.

The quiet eyes moved over Cuchulain again, assessing him, noting

the familiar combat balance, feeling himself sink involuntarily

into a defensive posture as cold hostility oozed from Cuchulain. The

flesh on the outside edges of Cuchulain’s eyes began to bunch and

extend, giving him the facial cast of a hooded cobra. Breath whistled

loudly from his nostrils. The small man pulled up his right sleeve

and bared a veined, muscular forearm. The distinctive beer can logo

of the Navy Seals was tattooed on the inner arm, starting to fade, but

unmistakable.

“I used to be in the navy. The name’s Dodd. Do I know you?”

Alex smiled coldly. “I need something from my right pocket,

okay?”

Dodd reached behind his vest and swung out a small, stainless

steel automatic. He clicked the safety off, thumbed the hammer back,

and pointed the pistol directly at Alex’s navel. “Do it very slowly.”

Cuchulain reached slowly into his right trouser pocket and pulled

out a half-dollar coin. He offered it to the small man.

Dodd nodded in recognition, lowered the pistol, and said, “No. I

heard about this. I just gotta see it.”

Alex held the half-dollar in front of him, at eye height, showing

it to the crowd. Then he positioned his thumb on the bottom of the

coin and his middle and index finger on the top. He began to squeeze.

As he increased the pressure, veins swelled across his hand, and the

skin pad between his thumb and forefinger humped slowly up like a

ragged tumor. The room was still, except for the noise of Cuchulain’s

breathing. The coin began to bend, then slowly fold.Cuchulain’s hand was now quivering visibly, and his forearm hadswollen to stretch tight his suit jacket sleeve. Then the coin folded in half.

“Jeeesus Christ!” one of the bikers exclaimed softly.

Cuchulain casually flipped the folded coin at Dodd’s right shoulder

and shifted his weight toward him. The pistol came back up as

Dodd snatched the coin out of the air with his left hand.

“Nice try,” he said. “But I still got it. And I still got you. But I

know who you are.”

Alex waited.

“I’m tempted,” Dodd said. “You know we can’t just let you go.

What happens if we just waste you now? No fuss. You know I got

you, don’t you? And there’s twenty of us.”

Cuchulain nodded. “You have me. I might not even get you. But

I probably would. Probably Billy too, and three or four others when I

take your gun. For sure I wouldn’t get all of you.”

Dodd smiled faintly. “And?”

“And you get everyone here dead. Fast. No cops. No jury. Just

dead. Probably more than a bit of pain for you, if it’s convenient. But

dead.”

“By?” Dodd asked.

Cuchulain smiled. Now he had Dodd. “The Horse, Jerome

Masterson, lives in town here,” he said. “You know about him and

me, and the folks that the two of us know well. Lieutenant Elliot is

here too. He owes me from a Middle East operation. You just might

know him.”

Dodd shifted as memory rushed in. “Yeah, Lebanon. You saved

his ass. I missed that one. Lieutenant Elliot, huh? He ain’t no prize;

he’s meaner than a fuckin’ cottonmouth.” He looked around at the

gang. They were getting restless and stealing glances at Caitlin’s bare

breasts, thinking about their turns.

“Okay, I’m in,” he said softly to Cuchulain. “But I don’t think

they’re going to buy it—won’t believe me. We may have to kill

some—probably will. Shit!” He raised his eyebrows in a question.

“Try to sell us walking. If it won’t go, sell the arm wrestling.

Lacking that, I’ll take the Colt from the guy behind you and we’ll

nail eight or ten. After I kill Billy, go to one knee and work from the

right. Head shots. Killing a few more should end it, and the cops

will be here by then. That should end it. I’ll handle the mess. Anyone

looking for you?”

“The cops in a few cities have my prints and would like to find

me. Same with DEA. You sure about the arm wrestling? There’s some

big fuckers here, and I don’t want the shooting to start.”

Cuchulain nodded. “Sell it.”

Dodd shifted back slightly, turning to the group, keeping his

right arm hanging down and slightly behind him.

“Listen up, guys!” he said. “I know about this guy. A lot of Seals

say that he’s the baddest motherfucker that ever lived, and you guys

know there’s a bunch of mean motherfuckers among us. He is truly

a badass.”

Alex stepped back a little, as he chose his target if the balloon

went up. He’d need a gun and shifted slightly toward a fat, bearded

man with the checkered wooden grips of a Colt .45 automatic sticking

up from his belt. The hammer was down and the thumb safety

on; Alex would have the gun and take out his throat before the man

could ever get his gun into action.

“Our lives won’t be worth a shit if we don’t let him and her go,”

Dodd said. “Trust me on that. And if we kill him, ten or fifteen bodaciously

bad guys are coming for us. Gloves off. They wouldn’t dream

of using their fists if they could easier shoot or knife you in the back.

They’ll have machine guns, explosives, sniper rifles—all that shit.

It won’t be pretty, and none of us will live through it. For sloppy

sevenths on a piece of ass? And can you imagine the fucking cops?

They’re already like flies on shit around here!”

“That’s bullshit!” Billy bellowed. “I told her what I was going to

do and I’m gonna do it! This is prime pussy, and that pansy don’t look

so bad to me. If I wasn’t fucked up from spilling my bike the other

day, I’d take him myself. You don’t run this fuckin’ gang, Dodd, I

do!”

Dodd sighed as some of the men nodded at Billy’s speech. “Look,

Billy, there’s a bunch of us that don’t want to see the cops or the feds

up close. You’re left handed. Why don’t you arm wrestle him for it?

You’re messed up for a fight, but there’s nothing wrong with your left

arm. Besides, no one has ever beaten you but Bubba, and no one beats

Bubba. We’re getting enough shit from the cops already. It wouldn’t

be good for business.”

Billy looked startled, and then the ends of his lips curled up in a

cruel, wolfish smile. “Fuck that! He said he wants two at once, and I

want the girl. He gets Bubba and Kevin while me and One-Eye take

a rest so’s we have lots of energy for later. Whichever one slams the

pansy’s arm down first gets seconds on the pussy after me. The loser

gets the second blow job.”

Dodd took control quickly. “Deal! Let’s get a table cleared and

some chairs over here.”

Alex jerked his tie down and unbuttoned the top three buttons on

his shirt, giving him access to the throwing knife that always hung

at his back, just below his collar. If things went bad, Billy would find

himself with it buried in his throat. Cuchulain pulled his jacket off

and threw it over a chair backed to the wall and stood, casually rolling

his shirtsleeves, waiting and assessing the crowd for the ones who

could be trouble. Caitlin watched him, her eyes wide and her jaw

hanging slack, oblivious of her naked breasts.

Alex moved his chair across the wall to the table and waited.

Bubba and Kevin brought out chairs and sat down, grinning at

Cuchulain. Bubba had long, shaggy hair and a ragged beard, tangled

with the remnants of the past few days’ meals. He was well over six

feet and enormously fat, probably weighing upward of three hundred

pounds. He put a huge arm on the table, hawked his throat, and spat

a brownish wad of phlegm on Alex’s shirt, just splattering the edge

of his tie. There was a large tattoo on the inside of Bubba’s huge forearm

that spelled out “Eat Shit!” in Old English letters. Kevin was a

bodybuilder, and a big one. He had acne and his hair was sparse, but

steroids had given him enviable bulk.

Alex dropped into the chair and put his upper arms on the table,

with his veined and pulsing forearms vertical and shoulder width

apart. Then he began to focus his energy. He felt his local awareness

fade as he focused his conscious being into a core of energy just

beneath his navel, feeling as if each molecule of his being was rushing

to one central repository, then waiting to be dispatched. The sound of

his breath whistled even louder through his nose.

“Okay,” Dodd said. “Get them lined up, and I’m going to count

to three. On three, go for it.”

Alex was barely aware as Kevin and Bubba lined up. As they each

clasped a hand and bore down with their grip, Cuchulain was only

peripherally aware that he was countering their force. He heard Dodd

at a distance, say, “One, two…” Cuchulain released his energy just

before Dodd said “three,” driving every ounce of his being into his

hands in a single, furious contraction. He felt both their hands collapse,

then yield under his sudden onslaught; the sound of snapping

bones could be heard in the room. Alex slammed both their hands

across his chest to the table and stood, then casually grabbed Bubba

by the front of his hair and smashed his face into the table, twice. It

had taken less than ten seconds. He folded his jacket over his arm.

“I think we will be leaving now, gentlemen,” he said, and turned

toward Caitlin.

“You cheated,” one biker yelled. “You went before three!”

“Sit down, asshole,” Cuchulain said coldly. “You go on three and

I’ll go on six. Then I’ll rip your arm off at the shoulder.”

“Fuck you,” the biker yelled. “Why don’t you just get the hell out

of here?”

Alex nodded and walked swiftly toward Caitlin. The gang was

momentarily stunned by the vision of Kevin and Bubba still at the

table, each holding a mangled hand, moaning softly as the swelling

started and blood began to pool around Bubba’s twitching face.

“Bullshit!” Billy yelled as he stepped in front of Cuchulain, pulling

his fist back. Cuchulain stepped in quickly and used his huge

neck to slam his forehead into Billy’s nose and eyes; he felt nose and

cheekbones collapse and eye sockets crack and crumble an instant

later. The web of his left hand slammed into Billy’s Adam’s apple and

his thumb closed on the carotid artery, shutting off the blood supply

to his brain. Cuchulain drove his right hand deep into Billy’s crotch,

squeezing his penis and testicles through his jeans. He began to rip,

focusing on delivering all the power he could generate. The sound of

denim tearing pierced the silent room.

As Alex felt resistance there collapse, he began to twist as he

squeezed, feeling flesh and tendons ripping and releasing. As Billy

lost consciousness, Cuchulain bent his knees to lower him to the floor,

his head up as he watched the gang. When he stood, he was holding

Billy’s pistol. The snap of the safety being released by Cuchulain’s

right thumb was eerily loud in the room. He worked the slide on the

automatic once, and a cartridge tumbled noisily across the dirty floor.

He turned and reached for Caitlin, looking coldly at the two men

holding her, who stepped back quickly. Cuchulain draped his jacket

over her shoulders and led her to the door. He nodded at Dodd just

before he stepped out and pulled the door closed.
Outside, Cuchulain stepped hard on the inert guard’s neck as

he grabbed Caitlin’s arm and guided her. He engaged the safety on

Billy’s pistol and slid it behind his belt at the small of his back. They

were almost at a run as they left the alley and moved down the street

and around the corner, Cuchulain waving to an approaching cab with

its “on duty” light on. He opened the door and pushed her inside,

almost roughly, then moved in beside her. He gave the cabbie his

home address, then put his arm around Caitlin. She was already shaking,

and her teeth were beginning to chatter.

“Just take it easy,” he said. “It’s over now. We’re going to my

place.”

“No, I want to go back to my room. I want to be alone!”

Cuchulain shook his head and turned to her on the ragged seat
.

“Listen to me, Caitlin. This is the worst possible time for you to be

alone. You could go into shock. Someone has to keep an eye on you,

and that’s going to be me. We’re going to my place.”

“I am in no mood for romance, Cuchulain. Okay?” she chattered.

“I promise,” he said.

They took the elevator to his apartment. It was sparsely but expensively

furnished, with the look of a place done by a decorator and seldom

touched since. The exception was two floor-to-ceiling bookcases

full of volumes and a small desk that held a dual computer setup with

neatly stacked papers around it. A large oil painting on the living

room wall depicted a group of fishermen in a traditional boat, pulling

in nets at sunrise under the shaded mass of Gibraltar. On the stand

beside a reclining reading chair was a worn leather-bound copy of the

Quran with a yellowed ivory bookmark placed partway through.

Cuchulain led her to the couch and said, “I’ll get some blankets

and make some tea. Tea’s good in this situation. Maybe a drink later.”

She wrapped her arms around herself, shivering. “A drink now! A

big drink!”

He walked quickly to the bedroom and came back with two wool

blankets and a towel. He wrapped the blankets around her, tucking

them tight, then smoothed the towel across her lap, pushing a little

dent in the middle. Caitlin seemed a little startled and curious by the

towel, but said nothing.

“I’ll get the drinks,” Alex said.

He came back with two glasses of cognac and the bottle. “Sip

this,” he said, handing her one glass with a light portion of cognac

poured into it. He sat beside her and sipped on his own glass, waiting

for her to give him a hint as to how to distract her from the evening’s

events. Caitlin tipped up her glass and drained it, then shuddered. “Oh,

my God, Alex. I’m still terrified,” she said, shaking. “I’ve never been

that afraid before, or that furious. I’m also sorry I didn’t kick that

asshole in the balls as we walked out! That was just awful! I hate that

those animals exist.”

“They’ve been around since the beginning, Caitlin. Society just

doesn’t let them out that often, at least in this country,” Alex said,

happy she had picked a topic familiar to him. “More of them were

in Nazi Germany, Kosovo, and Bosnia-Herzegovina lately than elsewhere,

but they’re always around. There’s still a bunch in the Middle

East.”

“With all of our technology and power, why can’t we just get rid

of people like that?” Caitlin fumed.

“I’ve thought a lot about that,” Alex said. “I don’t know of a politician,

alive or dead, that could be trusted with the power to accomplish

that, if even we could do it. Politicians are, by my definition,

megalomaniacs to some degree, and most of them care only about

money and votes. Those bikers tonight were one form of villain, but

religious fanatics are worse, because they think they can both interpret

and enforce the word and the will of God—to their personal

benefit, of course. I think we should just kill the leaders of those

sociopaths, one by one. Their followers will disappear with no piper

to follow.”

Caitlin snorted. “I don’t think they know the first thing about

God, or what she thinks!” she said, throwing up suddenly, and barely

catching the foul mass in the towel on her lap.

“Sorry,” she said. “That came from nowhere. Gross!”

Cuchulain held his hands in front of her so she could see them

shaking. “It’s part of the adrenaline depletion. Try to relax and take

your mind away from tonight. It will make things seem more normal,

and you’ll recover faster. It happens to everyone. This is what

happens when you’re scared, and I was scared too.”

He sat for a few seconds sipping his drink, then started to push

the conversation back to something distracting. “I sometimes have

nightmares about Torquemada returning in modern form,” he said.

“People should study the Spanish Inquisition to see what happens

when vast power is granted to religious fanatics. It’s a shame no one

killed him early.”

“So, if you’ve thought about this a lot, what’s the right answer?”she asked, studying him, still shaking.

“Darned if I know,” he chuckled. “I guess if I’ve reached any tentative

conclusion at all, it’s that we should worry about our own country

first, and then the others—and pick off the bad guys’ leaders, one

at a time. Without us the world could once again become a real cesspool—

and quickly. It’s happening slowly anyhow, it seems to me.”

The images of the evening suddenly came back to Caitlin. She

turned quickly to Cuchulain, the blanket falling from her shoulders.

She pulled his jacket around her ripped blouse. “When you came

through that door, I was so proud of you for coming in there to defend

me from those animals, but I knew you were going to be hurt very

badly, if not killed. I don’t even want to think about all of those fucking

vermin above me, humping and pumping, one after the other.

How did you know what to do? Your behavior seemed so bizarre, but

it worked!”

He sat for a second and took another sip of his cognac. “Bizarre

behavior freaks people out and limits what they think they can do.

I stunned them with it until I lucked out enough to find a guy who

knew me a little; my face change helps to create bizarre when I’m

excited.”

Caitlin sat silent for several moments, wrapping the blanket more

tightly around her shoulders, still shivering. “Yes, you looked like a

fucking snake, and I hate snakes! But how did he know you? Who are

you that he said, and I quote, ‘He is the baddest motherfucker in the

whole world’?”

Alex sat silent for a while, then said, “I was an active marine for

quite a while—eight years, in fact. I told you about it, briefly. I was

good at it. Dodd had been a Navy Seal, and he just knew me, or knew

about me. I have unusually strong hands, as you saw, and that kind of

word gets around.”

She sat thinking for a while longer, as the shivering subsided. She

took the bottle from the table, poured another full glass of cognac,

and drank half of it.

“I thought I was going to be humiliated and debased. I was terrified—

I was consumed with fury! I wanted so badly to kill them, but

had no way to do it. They are such a bunch of worthless pigs! And

then you came in—and I was afraid for you. But I didn’t need to be,

did I Alex? That reptilian little man was afraid of you, wasn’t he? You

had it under control, didn’t you?”

Alex sighed, and said, “No, Caitlin. I didn’t have it under control.

I just worked with what I had, and I got lucky. But thank you

for being afraid for me. It could have gotten very ugly, very quickly.”

“And that little man wasn’t afraid of you?”

“He was wary, not afraid. He had heard about me when he was a

Seal. Because of what he had heard, he believed what I told him, and

didn’t like the odds.”

“Jesus Christ!” she said. “You told him Brooks Elliot and some

horse person would kill them all if they didn’t let us go. And he

believed you! Was it true?”

Alex gave the shrug she had seen before. “Who knows? They

probably would have tried, and I can’t imagine that a bunch of hoods

like that would have stood much of a chance against them. Dodd

knew that.”

“Who the hell are you, Cuchulain? You force your way into my

life, and I think that you’re a nice, good-natured guy with a great

body and a good mind, who happens to own a bunch of my stock.

And God, I was worried you were a fucking wimp! You’re clearly a

lot more than that, and a lot of what you seem to be is disturbing to

me. I didn’t even know that people like you existed; you were like an

animal, and your face got spooky—not that I wasn’t glad to have you

there tonight, but God, you’re not what I thought. You were probably

some kind of killer or something, trained by the government,

and Brooks was probably one too. Again, who the hell are you?”

And how did you get this way? she asked herself.

Continued….

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Cooch

by Robert Cook

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Here’s the set-up:

Alejandro Mohammed Cuchulain, called Cooch or Alex, became a Marine at sixteen and a CIA special-operations trainee at 17. His father is a wheel-chair bound former Marine and Medal of Honor winner who gives Alex advice as to how to survive in a violent world. His mother is the daughter of a Bedouin sheikh who sends a young Alex off, during his summer breaks, to experience the Bedouin life. The combination of a very young start in learning the art and craft of violence, combined with a thirst for knowledge combine to help him to become both a noted designer and user of explosives and an expert in Islamic affairs. Violent, yet thoughtful, Cooch represents the best in fast-moving, popular thrillers.

5 Star Amazon Review

I enjoy a fast paced action thriller and Cooch delivers. Cooch is a very educated, physically strong, highly trained special-ops hero. Bob Cook provides details and nuances that give Cooch and the supporting characters credibility. This is the kind of read that makes you wonder who will play Cooch in the movie. If Vin Diesel got a PHD or Matt Damon plumbed iron for 6-months, they could qualify.

About The Author

Shooter, soldier, entrepreneur, venture capitalist, vintner and now author.

Robert Cook is a United States Army Vietnam veteran, who attained the rank of Major and holds the parachutists badge, Bronze Star Medal and the Army Commendation Medal.

Cook was named the Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year for the Metropolitan Washington, DC Region in 1987.

Mr. Cook is an active philanthropist. He endowed the Robert E. Cook Honors College of Indiana University of Pennsylvania that was recently covered in Donald Asher’s book, “Cool Colleges for the Hyper Intelligent, Late Blooming and Just Plain Different”. www.iup.edu/honors

Mr. Cook, originally of Altoona, Pennsylvania, holds a BS in Mathematics from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and an MBA from the George Washington University.

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