could keep up the 120 mph pace he was now setting but there was no way the route would remain this quiet. The I 95 was a main trunk route that fed Boston and New York. However, he would make hay while the sun shone and depressed the accelerator even further, sending another surge to the drive train, increasing the speed to almost 140 mph. Covering over two miles per minute, Sam needed all his wits about him. Cars coming towards him would close at over 200 mph and he could quite easily run into the back of dawdlers travelling in his direction. One such dawdler was dead ahead, having just pulled out from a small side road. Sam was closing fast, travelling at little over 45 mph, Sam guessed the driver of the ageing pick-up was probably in his seventies and was certain would be wearing some sort of head wear. Slow drivers had one thing in common, they always wore a hat, well in Sam’s experience anyway. Sam edged out to see beyond the pick-up and pulled back in sharply. A large truck was bearing down on him. In the blink of an eye, Sam had to make the call, slow and pull in behind the dawdler or accelerate and hopefully just miss the oncoming truck. It would be tight and he would have to be careful. The 300 was fast but only in a straight line. Agility was certainly not its strong point. The road ahead narrowed and disappeared into a wooded area. Being stuck behind the slow moving car was not an option, so Sam floored the accelerator and for the first time, did not feel the surge of the 425 horses. At 140 mph, the car was already pushing towards its limits. Acceleration was now harder to come by. Sam flinched as he noticed the truck bearing towards him. It was going to be closer than he thought. In fact, he may not make it but at the last second, he shot past the pick-up and pulled in ahead of it. Unable not to look, Sam smiled as the old boy with a Stetson who threw him a disapproving look.

That was the last thing he saw before the explosion threw his car clear across the road.

“Direct hit, Sir,” announced the operator as he watched the center of the screen blossom into a fiery red rose indicating impact.

“Whoa!!! Holy shit!” he followed quickly as the initial blossom bloomed and filled the whole screen.

“What?” asked Johnson looking across at the operator’s open mouth. “What the hell just happened?” he asked impatiently as the operator tried to comprehend what had just happened.

“I think, I’m not sure, but that truck may have been a fuel tanker of some type because there was a massive secondary explosion. It certainly wasn’t the hellfire that did that.” He pointed to a massive hole in the ground where the road had been.

“And Baker?”

“No way he survived that. Look, there’s just a hole where the truck, a pick up and his car were.”

“Excellent and we can cover the explosion as a tanker accident. Couldn’t be better, well done. Now get that Avenger out of there before all hell breaks loose and the place is crawling with cops, firemen, news crews and God knows what else.

Chapter 21

“No, that’s absurd,” suggested Charles Baker as he considered the possibility that Russell would have perpetrated such an action.

“Yes, you’re right,” agreed Agent Clark shaking her head. “So tell me about this brother of yours?” she asked keen to change the subject.

“Sam? Well, I’ve not seen him in almost three years,” Baker pondered, considering a question he’d not been asked in many years. “He’s seven years younger than me. I may be older, have the education and position but he’s the brains in the family.”

Clark turned to look at one of the most powerful men in America who was renowned for his intellect and considered the revelation that the younger brother was the brighter of the two.

“I’m not talking here about knowledge you pick up reading books, I’m talking about raw intelligence, the type that makes you compute and see things faster and quicker than anyone else. Solving problems, seeing solutions, that’s what Sam does, he solves problems and avoids creating more problems in the process.”

Sorry, I’m not really following you. What kind of problems do you mean?”

“Sam never started fights but he was always the guy that finished them. He joined the air force to see the world and trained as a pilot but after a crash killed his navigator and almost himself, he retrained and became a Pararescueman, a PJ as they’re called.”

“Never heard of them. A P what?”

“Pararescue Jumper, they’re trained to go into enemy territory and rescue downed pilots and servicemen. One of them saved his life after his plane went down. He doesn’t talk about it much but this guy impressed him so much he gave up flying and joined the PJs.”

“OK, he rescues people, so why the hell was a Russian assassin trying to kill him?”

“He did rescue people but you have to understand my brother. He never does anything by half. PJs go into battle zones to rescue people. They’re trained for just about any eventuality and are considered members of the special forces. They fight their way to wherever they have to get to. Sam joined the forces during the cold war. There weren’t many battle zones that US troops were going into but training opportunities were aplenty. He signed up for just about every course he could. He learnt to scuba with the SEALs, he completed combat courses with Delta Force commandos, he tracked and observed with Marine recon, he was like a sponge. He was even signing up for training courses with the Allies, the SBS, SAS in the UK, jungle training with the Ghurkhas. You name it, he did it. Before he knew it, he was on secret ops deep in the heart of Afghanistan, helping the CIA fight their secret war against the Russians. When shit hit the fan and Special Forces or the CIA needed assistance, it was Sam that would go in to rescue their guys.”

“Can’t believe I’ve never heard of these guys.”

“Only those in the military really know about them. They’re the original unsung heroes. Mind you, if you’re a PJ and you walk into a bar with servicemen, you’ll never buy a drink. Because every guy in there knows that you’re the guy that’s gonna get them out when everybody else has given up.”

“I just don’t get how rescuing people in Afghanistan leads to being targeted by an assassin 20 years later.”

“Ah, well. It turned out that after a few years of rescuing their people from God alone knows what, Sam made a bit of a name for himself. He was the guy everybody wanted backing them up. If you were in trouble and needed help, Sam Baker was the guy you wanted. Whoever was in charge of the CIA’s Special Operations Group at the time began to take a keen interest. Sam’s name kept popping up in reports, injured agents owing their life to the Pararescue guy who had appeared from nowhere, popped a couple of Russians and then carried them to a safe extraction point. Sam’s additional training it seemed had really paid off. Particularly in Afghanistan, his time with the Ghurkhas in jungles and mountains had made Sam quite a specialist. Anyway, Sam was nearing the end of his tour when he received a call-out. An agent was injured deep in the heart of Russian occupied country. Sam was dropped as close as the helicopter dared and then proceeded on foot for the final few miles. He came across the camp where the agent was supposed to be and found it empty. He tracked the trail in the darkness, deep into the mountains and by this time was over three miles behind enemy lines. He found the new camp, took out six Russians and reported back to the extraction point, devastated to report that the injured agent had simply disappeared. He was no longer at the camp and Sam could only assume had been killed at some point and discarded off a cliff face, as there was absolutely no sign of any further tracks leading to anywhere else.”

“Oh God that’s awful, I can only imagine what they would have done to the agent.”

“Don’t worry, there was no agent. As Sam finished his report to his officer, a man walked into the room and dismissed Sam’s officer with a flick of the head. Sam was then face to face with, his words “the coldest bastard I have ever met in my life, I swear to God the temperature dropped when he entered the room.” He informed Sam that there was no agent, the Russians were a Spetsnaz team that had always managed to evade the CIA and Mujahedeen and had been causing untold havoc. Of course Sam took one look at the smug look on the guy’s face and shot a punch straight to his chin. The guy never saw it coming and was knocked to the floor. He never retaliated, he just stood up and welcomed Sam to the CIA’s Special Operations Group, handing Sam a letter signed by the President asking Sam to move across as his skills would save far more lives if he were the one leading the operation, rather than the one mopping up. Sam could not refuse a request from his President and so spent the rest of the war doing what he does best.”

Вы читаете Critical Error
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату