End of Days (Pike Logan #16)(48)



Like he had done the last two days, he waited on someone to find the body and initiate a response. Yet again, nobody had shown up. On his feeds, he could see the body in the living room, sprawled on the hardwood floor with her eyes open. She hadn’t started to bloat with internal gases, but that was coming.

In retrospect, he realized he’d made a mistake renting the VRBO for four days without checking the scheduled cleaning for his unit. He’d shown up the next day, expecting at least a maid service to empty the trash or change the sheets, but nobody came. After that, he’d checked his rental agreement and saw there was no maid service. At that point, he’d simply waited each day, hoping someone would find the body.

So far, they had not, and he was growing aggravated. He needed to learn the police inspector’s name and address, or this entire trap was worthless. He considered “finding” the body himself, and calling in an anonymous report, but believed that was a risk. From his time hunting terrorists, he knew that such a contact could be peeled back, even if he was careful.

He decided to return to the apartment and initiate an alarm that would tell him when someone opened the door. He had the tools to do so, and could slave it to his laptop. Then he wouldn’t have to keep coming here in person hoping the body was found.

As he was musing about the problem, his phone rang, surprising him.

He pulled it out, saw the Zello app as the culprit, and answered, speaking Croatian. “Donnie, so how’s it going?”

“Good, sir. The hit is tonight, and I think it’s going to be exactly what we want. They’re still hell-bent on a capture, which is fine by me, but once the mission is over, I’m out of here. These fucks are crazy, and they won’t last a day.”

“You have to make sure it works. Get out of the blast radius later, but don’t let them screw it up.”

“I got it, sir. I’m on it. The target is taking a small delegation out to dinner at 1900 tonight, at a restaurant called Rodeo Bahrain. Apparently, it’s an American-themed restaurant, and his guests are foreign. The contact that gave us the itinerary said it was a little bit of a tradition since he took command. As for me, I already have my ticket out for tomorrow morning. I’ll make sure it works, and then bug out.”

Garrett saw a van park with a cleaning emblem, then saw three women exit and go inside the building. He leaned forward, hoping they were going to his apartment.

They did not.

Donatello said, “Did you hear me? Hello?”

Garrett realized he had zoned out. He said, “Yes, I hear you. That sounds like a plan. Just don’t let them screw it up like you did with the Vatican ambassador.”

Donatello changed the subject, saying, “Where are you? What are you doing?”

The words snapped Garrett into the present. He said, “I’m at the palace. What do you mean?”

“Nothing. My phone is showing you in the EUR. The Zello app is saying you’re south of the city center. Must be a glitch.”

Garrett felt his face flush at the mistake. He said, “Don’t worry about my location. Worry about your own. Kill that son of a bitch. Tonight.”

He hung up and returned to his vehicle to emplace the alarm, embarrassed at his own lack of operational security.





Chapter 31




I waited on the screen to clear, hoping it was Bartholomew Creedwater on the other end and not George Wolffe. Creedwater—or Creed as he was known—was a Taskforce network engineer, which was a polite, politically correct way of saying “hacker,” and we were using him to penetrate the terrorist bed-down site. But what we’d found wasn’t very useful as of yet, because nobody at the Taskforce spoke Bosnian.

I’d ordered Creed to rectify that oversight. Working out of the Blaisdell Consulting office in Washington, DC—the name of the cover organization that cloaked Taskforce headquarters—he was supposed to come up and tell me what we’d found. I was afraid he’d also told Wolffe, which would lead to nothing but questions I couldn’t answer.

Earlier, Shoshana had returned to our vehicle outside the KFC without issue, her quick reaction force of Brett and Aaron luckily not needed. She’d entered the car and said, “You were right. That location is not suitable for assault. I could feel the energy all around me. It’s a red zone.”

I chuckled, took the pentest device, and said, “Did you get anything from the walk we could use? I mean besides the Wi-Fi exploitation?”

“Yeah. I took photos of every car on the street. May come in handy.”

“Good work. Let’s go see what we have here.”

She continued, “And the stairwell leading up to the apartment has infrared surveillance cameras. One at the base, and one on the landing floor. It’s good you decided not to assault. No way up there without being seen.”

Incredulous, I said, “What? How would you know that?”

“What do you mean? I went up it.”

And that set me off: “You did what? You were supposed to just walk down the street. You penetrated the complex?”

Miffed, she looked at Jennifer, then back at me, saying, “How was I supposed to get the Wi-Fi exploits from the street? We’d be trying to sort the devices from fifteen different apartments. What’s your problem?”

I squeezed my eyes shut for a moment, praying for the ability to keep me from throttling her ass. I opened them and said, “So you’re on camera now. Is that what you’re telling me? You never, ever listen to me.”

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