all but closed over and his lungs had partially collapsed. There was no way he could move his limbs an inch.
Feeling what he took for the sun beating on his forehead, he risked opening his right eye partially. As grit made him blink repeatedly, he glimpsed the sky directly above him. It was shrouded by thick black smoke. Despite this, the heat intensified and he realized it was coming from a fire. Fearing being burnt alive, the sky began to rain red-hot ash, which settled on his face and fizzled out, and felt to him like the caress of death.
Blinking still, he sensed someone bending down to his face. He winced involuntarily, fearing the worst. The person began speaking in Turkish, a low, muffled voice, or so it appeared. Then his head was being raised. The pain in his head and neck made him clench his teeth and moan. Something was placed around his neck, supporting it. Something smooth yet firm, which, despite his dazed state, he realized was a brace.
When he was raised off the ground he felt the urge to vomit again. His head ached; his eye closed. But as quickly as the pain had risen in a crescendo, it began to abate now, the throbbing being replaced by numbness, even in his neck and chest. He felt as if he was floating and, incongruously, a closed-mouthed smile crossed his face. Morphine, he thought. Thank God for morphine, although he’d felt no prick from a needle, and that meant he might be paralyzed, albeit in one or more of his limbs.
But as he was being carried his head seemed to explode, his skull crack and shift, despite the drug. He sensed what felt like warm blood flowing from the back of his head to the nape of his neck. He panicked, his mind forming words he couldn’t express.
With that, he lost consciousness.
Chapter 16
Tom had drawn the heavy drapes to hide the encroaching sunlight and lay asleep now on his bed, his angular face lost between two chocolate-coloured buckwheat pillows. His cellphone on the nightstand began to buzz in vibrate mode, moving around like a kid’s toy whose battery had almost juiced out. His half-limp hand stretched out and picked it up.
Yawning, he said, “Who’s this?”
“Mr Dupree?”
It was a man’s voice. Businesslike, he thought, blinking his eyes slowly like a reptile.
“Yeah, who’s this?”
“Can you be at Langley in an hour, sir?”
He rubbed his face with his free hand. “Langley? What time is it?”
“Zero one thirty, sir.”
Tom sighed. “You kiddin’ me?” He’d been asleep for the best part of eighteen hours.
“It’s important, sir.”
“Yeah. What’s this all about?”
“Your father, sir. It’s about your father, General Dupont.”
He sat up, switched on the arc light on the nightstand to his left. “What about him?”
“Langley in an hour, sir. The NHB,” the man said, referring to the New Headquarters Building.
Tom thought for a couple of seconds. “Okay.”
The line went dead.
He put the cell down back on the nightstand, pushed back the duvet and vaulted out of bed. What the hell did the CIA want to say to him about his father at this hour? he thought. As he pulled on a pair of jeans and a black sweater, he decided that trying to work that out would be an impossible task and, at best, could only lead to increasingly negative conclusions.
He knelt down, opened the drawer on his nightstand and eased out his badge and SIG. He clipped the badge to the belt on his jeans and, out of habit, released the handgun’s magazine, checking there was a full complement of twelve .357 SIG cartridges, and that the chamber was empty. Satisfied, he walked to his closet and took a nylon windbreaker from a hangar.
Apart from his time as head of the Secretary of State’s protective detail, and a couple of occasions when he’d been in the DS counterterrorism unit, he hadn’t had any interaction with the CIA. Truth was, he felt uneasy around them, not because he feared them, but rather because he found their take on the world changed
Alle Wells
Debbie Macomber
Harry Harrison
Annie Groves
Dorothy Hoobler, Thomas Hoobler
Richard Peck
Maggie Gilbert
Beth Burnett
Kylie Gold
The Devils Bargain