Red 1-2-3

Red 1-2-3 by John Katzenbach

Book: Red 1-2-3 by John Katzenbach Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Katzenbach
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Iraq war. But what struck him was not merely the extraordinary competence of these snipers who stole lives, but the emotional detachment they displayed, what the French call sangfroid.
    The military killers called their victims targets, as if they had no more 40
    RED 1–2–3
    personality than a black-and-white bull’s-eye, and boasted that they had not the slightest hint of a subsequent nightmare. He did not know that he believed this. In his murderous experience, the stealing of a life was only as significant as the mental reverberations afterward. Indeed, reliving moments was where the real satisfaction rested. He embraced nightmares.
    He guessed that the snipers did as well. They just weren’t about to say that in public with a documentary camera rolling.
    That, too, made him special. He was documenting everything. That was what he found delicious: actions and thoughts, the stew of death. He typed furiously, words racing at him.
    One of them—at least one, but not all—will call the police. That’s to be expected. But the police will be as confused as they are. Preventing something from happening is precisely not what the police are skilled at. Maybe the police are capable of finding out who performed a murder, after it happens—but they are relatively incompetent at preventing one from taking place. The Secret Service protects the president, and they devote thousands of man-hours, computer time, psychological analysis, and academic study to keeping one man safe. And yet—they fail. Regularly.
    No one is protecting the Reds.
    One—maybe all three of them at some point—will try to hide from me.
    Think of the children’s game of hide-and-seek. The advantages are always with the person doing the seeking: He knows his quarry. He knows what drives them into concealment. He probably knows the places they will try to hide, and he knows the uncertainty that fuels their fear.
    One—I’m sure at least one—will refuse to believe the truth: that they are going to die at my hands. Fear corners some people underground. But sometimes fear insists that people ignore danger. It is much easier to believe nothing will happen to you than it is to think each breath you take may be one of the last you’ll ever enjoy.
    One—maybe all three—will think they need to seek out assistance, only to have no idea what sort of assistance they need. So they will be stifled by uncertainty. And even were they to seek out another person’s counsel—well, 41
    JOHN KATZENBACH
    that person is likely to downplay the threat, not underscore it. This is because we do not want to ever believe in the capriciousness of life. We do not want to believe in thunderbolts and accidents. We do not want to believe that we are being hunted, when in truth, we are every day of our lives. And so, whoever they consult will want to reassure my Red that everything is going to be all right, when the exact opposite is the case.
    What is the challenge facing me?
    My Reds will try to protect themselves in any number of ways. My task, obviously, is to make certain that they cannot. To achieve that, I have to get close to each of them, so that I can anticipate each pathetic step they will try.
    But at the same time, I have to maintain my anonymity. Close, yet hidden—
    that’s the approach.
    He paused. It was nearing the dinner hour. His fingers flew across the keyboard. He wanted to finish up with some of his initial thoughts before breaking for the evening meal.
    No one has ever done what I intend to do.
    Three wildly different victims.
    Three distinct locations.
    Three different deaths.
    All on the same day. Within hours of each other. Maybe within minutes.
    Deaths that tumble together like dominoes. Each one falling against the next.
    Click. Click. Click.
    He stopped. He liked that image.
    Maybe one of those military snipers had achieved multiple kills all on the same day, or in the same hour, or even in the same minute, he thought. But they had a single enemy

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