Read Zero Separation Online

Authors: Philip Donlay

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General

Zero Separation

Z
ERO
S
EPARATION

Also by Philip Donlay
Category Five
Code Black

Z
ERO
S
EPARATION

A Novel

Philip Donlay

Copyright © 2013 by Philip Donlay

FIRST EDITION

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

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

ISBN: 978-1-60809-068-6
Published in the United States of America by Oceanview Publishing,
Longboat Key, Florida
www.oceanviewpub.com
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

For my agent, Kimberley Cameron

A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS

This book would not have been possible without the skilled law enforcement professionals around the world whose tireless work and dedication help keep our nation safe. A special thanks goes out to the Federal Bureau of Investigation as well as the Drug Enforcement Administration for all of their valuable assistance.

For their patience, friendship, and insight, I offer a heartfelt thanks to Rebecca Norgaard Peterson, Scott Erickson, Bo Lewis, Emily Burt, Cheryl Bristol, Sheren Frame, Gary Kaelson, Thomas Brandau, Tony Moss, Michael McBryde, Chris Kresge, and Justin Bog. You've played a bigger part in all of this than you'll ever know. For always giving me the unvarnished truth in a way that inevitably makes the stories better, Jonathan Mischkot, Brian and Jen Bellmont, my brother, Chris; my parents, Cliff and Janet; and my son, Patrick. You're an indispensible group of gifted people, thank you for keeping me on course.

A special thanks goes out to Philip Sidell, M.D. and to D. P. Lyle, M.D. for their remarkable medical expertise. Good work, gentleman, I'm most appreciative on many levels. A very special thanks goes to Pamela Sue Martin, who always helps me keep the faith and along the way shows me the world in an entirely different light.

I'd also like to thank dear friends, Pat Frovarp and Gary Shulze, who own Once Upon a Crime, a little bookstore in Minneapolis by which all bookstores should be measured. Thanks for being there.

Finally, to the people who turn words into books. Thank you to my literary agency, Kimberley Cameron & Associates, you're the best. Utmost praise also goes to my publisher, Patricia Gussin, who believed in this project, brought it life, and along the way made it a better book. To everyone at Oceanview Publishing, thank you, there isn't a better team anywhere.

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PROLOGUE

Three miles straight down were the men he'd come to kill. He stood in the open door of the aircraft as the one-hundred-fifty-mile-an-hour slipstream buffeted him, trying to pull him closer to the emptiness that lay beyond. It was a moonless night and there was nothing below him but the darkness of the windswept desert.

Running without lights, the Lockheed C-130 was flying within a very specific set of coordinates over northern Iraq. Temporary markings on the four-engine Hercules read Royal Air Force; the crew wore stolen RAF uniforms and used a valid British call sign. The deception had been months in the making. To the outside world, the aircraft would appear to be flying a routine night-training exercise. Through his headset he heard the pilot tell him they were inside fifteen seconds. Thrill of the hunt. His heart rate accelerated. He could feel it pound in his temples.

When the jump light flashed green, he stepped out of the plane. He arched his back and stretched his arms as he dropped. The wind buffeted his body as he accelerated into a free fall toward the desert floor below. Searching the ground through his night-vision goggles, he finally located the pinprick of light that marked his target. Hurtling earthward, he maneuvered to land far enough away so that no one on the ground would detect his arrival. At the last possible second, he pulled the ripcord and waited for the reassuring jolt that told him his chute had opened. The canopy filled, and as he descended he expertly manipulated the risers until his feet lightly touched the sand. Quickly he worked to shed his harness and then he gathered the folds of his parachute and stuffed the material into a black duffel.

He drew his silenced pistol and started toward his objective. Guided by night-vision goggles, he stayed low, favoring his right hip as he limped his way across the dunes. Inwardly, he cursed the pain from the old injury, but relentlessly pushed himself forward. As he closed in on his target, he flipped up his infrared goggles and waited for his eyes to adapt to the harsh light given off from a powerful lantern. Once his vision had adjusted, he rapidly located all four of the men he'd expected to find. Three were digging a large hole in the sand, and the remaining man was standing above, watching. Quietly, he moved in and positioned himself behind their truck. All four wore body armor, goggles, and each carried a side-arm. He recognized the man watching, he was a friend and compatriot, a deep cover agent who'd worked for months to learn the location of this cache. He also knew the three men digging were former American soldiers, each an exemplary fighter and a highly trained killer. They'd been recruited by a private security firm after their enlistments were up, but their actions tonight marked them as nothing more than mercenaries drawn by greed.

He moved silently alongside the truck and took a quick look inside the bed. He felt a rush of anticipation at being in such close proximity to his prize. Four common cylinders—each was a dirty gray color, four feet in length, a foot in diameter, with a simple valve screwed into the rounded end. They looked like nothing more than the common high-pressure acetylene tanks used by welders. But these cylinders had been modified to carry something besides acetylene, something extraordinarily lethal. The intelligence he'd gathered said there should be two more, for a total of six.

“You're about to have company.” The voice sounded in his ear-piece. “The second half of tonight's party is coming fast from the south—they're four minutes out.”

He acknowledged the warning and exhaled slowly to calm his racing heartbeat. Leading with his pistol, he stepped around the truck and fired at the closest man. Body armor necessitated head shots and the first man dropped instantly, followed by the second. The third managed to draw his weapon before his head snapped
backward from a single slug and he collapsed. The last man, the watcher, frantically ripped away his goggles to identify himself.

“Don't shoot! It's me!”

“Relax,” he said as he lowered his pistol.

“My God, like some sort of ghost you silently materialize out of nowhere.”

“The others are coming,” he said. “How much money are they bringing?”

“The price was set at one hundred and fifty thousand U.S. dollars. How close are they?”

“We have time. What of the informant who told you of this place?”

“Dead.”

“Will anyone be able to connect him to tonight's events?”

“Doubtful. There are many bodies in Iraq. One more will mean nothing.”

“You're right.” He raised the pistol and fired twice, the slugs expertly placed for a quick and painless death. His comrade, a confused expression etched on his face, buckled at the knees and fell to the ground.

“Sorry, old friend—but the mission has changed.” He holstered his pistol and began to move. According to his internal clock, he had less than ninety seconds until the car arrived. He snatched an M4 assault rifle leaning against the truck, lowered his infrared goggles, and half ran and half limped toward the road. He flung himself against a small sand dune and threw the weapon to his shoulder. A quick check told him the magazine held the full thirty rounds. As the speeding black Mercedes came into range, he squeezed the trigger and sent a stream of bullets into the car, destroying the radiator, exploding both front tires. Using short bursts, he walked the rounds across the windshield until it crumpled inward. He kept firing until the car swerved and flipped, hitting on its side and rolling three times before it came to rest well off the road. Flames erupted from under the wrecked hood as the engine began to burn.

The gun was empty and he tossed it aside. He drew his pistol and limped over to what was left of the Mercedes and surveyed the interior. The two men in the front seat were dead; they'd taken the full brunt of the 5.56-mm rounds. The passenger in the back hadn't been so lucky; he was hurt, but alive, frantically praying aloud for Allah to spare him. He reached through the shattered side window and pulled a metal briefcase free from the clutches of the lone survivor. A quick check found stacks of American one hundred dollar bills. The fire was spreading fast and he was forced to take a step back to escape the heat. He then raised the pistol and with a squeeze of the trigger ended the man's desperate pleadings.

He removed his night-vision optics and replaced them with clear protective goggles; the burning Mercedes would now serve to light the night. He limped to where he'd stashed the duffel containing his parachute, and caught the faint whistle of turbines above the sound of the wind. Seconds later a blinding light erupted as all of the C-130's landing lights were switched on at the last second. The airplane roared over his head so close he felt the rush of turbulence trailing the big four-bladed props as the plane touched down on the road.

The chirp of rubber and the roar of propellers going into reverse pitch announced the arrival of the rest of his unit. The Lockheed C-130's rugged airframe and massive turboprop engines allowed it to spin around in a tight one-hundred-eighty-degree turn and power toward him. He stood on the centerline as the deafening whine from the turbine engines grew louder until the nose of the big transport eased into the orange-yellow light cast from the burning car. The engines remained running and the rear door of the C-130 swung down. He joined the lone figure who exited the plane carrying a satchel. Together they headed to their prize.

The new arrival scanned the bodies, peered into the hole, and then dropped the package he was carrying. “We need to hurry or the American AWACS is going to wonder what we're doing.”

“Grab a shovel,” he ordered. They quickly finished digging out
the two remaining cylinders and carefully lifted them into the back of the truck. As planned, they tossed the satchel of drugs they'd brought with them into the hole and half buried it with sand. The kilo of heroin would be discovered later, along with the bodies.

“Drive the cylinders to the plane and then bring the truck back here.” The man with the limp ordered.

As soon as the truck roared off, he methodically searched the men he'd killed. He started with the mercenaries, relieving them of their identification, cell phones, and watches. He took a moment to close his friend's unseeing eyes as he rifled through his clothes and removed his possessions. He felt no remorse. It was unavoidable—the magnitude of this mission demanded a scorched-earth policy. No one with any knowledge of what had taken place here tonight could be left alive.

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