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Synopsis
Jeff Abbott returns with the next exciting thriller in his New York Times bestselling Sam Capra series.
The darkest day of Sam Capra’s life was when he watched his brother, Danny, being executed by extremists in an online video. But now, evidence has surfaced that Danny may still be alive—leading a secret, hidden life for the past six years while the world believed him to be dead. What’s more, Sam discovers that Danny may be plotting a murder that could change history: assassinating the Russian president.
Determined to stop his brother from committing a murder that may cause a war, Sam goes undercover in a one-man mission to save the world—and to save his brother.
Release date: January 5, 2016
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Print pages: 480
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Reader buzz
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The First Order
Jeff Abbott
—Bookpage
“Will leave readers breathless… Buckle up and hang on to the end of this electric read!”
—BookReporter.com
“Fast paced and just plausible enough to satisfy readers who demand realism in their adrenaline-fueled thrillers, the book should definitely appeal to action fans. Each novel in the series can be read as a stand-alone, which means newcomers can plunge right in. Go for it.”
—Booklist
“Abbott loads his story with entertaining plot twists… The bond and betrayal between the two brothers add emotional depth to the action.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Fast paced, high-octane… plenty of twists.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Compelling stories and characters that keep readers on the edge of their seats.”
—Crimespree Magazine
“Inspired by Shakespeare’s King Lear, this action-packed, bicontinental tale of revenge… is a tightly controlled roller coaster of a narrative, goosing the reader forward with almost every paragraph.”
—Austin Chronicle
“One of the best ongoing series in the thriller genre. Readers will be hooked from the start… INSIDE MAN jumps into the action right away, and the last 100 pages are downright terrifying. Abbott has a gift for creating great character-driven thrillers, and readers will clamor for more, especially given the cliff-hanger ending.”
—Associated Press
“The most layered and personal of any installment in the series… INSIDE MAN is not a book to be taken lightly and clearly sets up the next thrilling chapter in Jeff Abbott’s winning series.”
—BookReporter.com
“Thriller Award–winner Abbott draws on Shakespeare’s King Lear for his outstanding fourth Sam Capra novel… Abbott injects enough of Sam’s backstory to make his intricate plot believable, judiciously spices his tale with tasteful but usually interrupted romance, and convincingly makes Sam a genuine contemporary ‘chevalier.’”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Exciting and imaginative, full of action and intrigue… Abbott’s writing raises the pulse, taking readers on a wild adventure.”
—Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star (VA)
“Think of it as Homeland meets Miami Vice: a South Florida bar owner named Sam, who happens to be an ex-CIA operative, tries to avenge the death of one of his regulars by going undercover in the mysterious and powerful Varela family.”
—O, The Oprah Magazine
“A must read.”
—Associated Press
“Abbott knows how to slowly ratchet up the tension while maintaining great characters and terrific plot twists.”
—Washington Post
“Abbott packs a lifetime of thrills and suspense into a mere five days… Abbott excels at spinning complex webs of intrigue combining psychological twists and abundant action… Sam is both pawn and knight in an exciting chess game.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Action-packed, never-stop-for-a-breath storytelling.”
—Dallas Morning News
“Filled with action, intrigue, twists, and a variety of locales… It’s perfect for a summer weekend’s reading pleasure.”
—Fort Worth Star-Telegram
“[A] whirlwind ride… Downfall moves like a juggernaut out of control and is impossible to put down… a torrid read that grabs the reader by the throat and never lets up.”
—BookReporter.com
“Often wildly entertaining… a ton of action.”
—Austin American-Statesman
“A pulsing adventure… The narrative shocks, repels, intrigues, and ultimately draws the reader in… another Abbott thriller that packs a punch.”
—Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star (VA)
“An explosive cocktail.”
—Washington Post
“[An] adrenaline rush that won’t stop.”
—San Antonio Express-News
“Abbott is one of the best thriller writers in the business, and he delivers action and complex characters… The next Capra novel cannot come fast enough.”
—Associated Press
“This is the second in the Capra series, and he hasn’t slowed down. It has killings, betrayals, big-time conspiracies, and action galore.”
—Oklahoman
“Gripping… edgy… a breathless suspense novel… As a writer [Abbott] is fluid, smart, witty, and easy to take.”
—Dallas Morning News
“Like Adrenaline, this is a fast-paced thriller with a likable, morally conflicted hero. Sam is in a difficult situation, seemingly forced to commit murder to find his son, and—this is a testament to Abbott’s skills as a storyteller—we really don’t know whether he will follow through… Let’s hope Abbott isn’t through with Sam. He’s a very well-drawn character, and it would be nice to see him again.”
—Booklist
“Twisty, turny, and terrific.”
—USA Today
“Outstanding… genuinely moving… Abbott hits full stride early on and never lets up. Readers who thrive on a relentless narrative pace and a straight line to the finish won’t be disappointed.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Breathless fun… You really do keep turning page after page.”
—Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Deliciously crafty… heart-pounding thrills… a stunner… Adrenaline has all the hallmarks of a career changer. It should launch him into the Michael Connelly or Dennis Lehane stratosphere… Abbott sets a merciless pace, but he never lets speed hinder his writing… glorious sensory acumen… with just the right amount of snarky wit.”
—Dallas Morning News
“Extremely compelling… a thriller that will get even the most jaded reader’s pulse racing… a grand slam home run… Adrenaline rivets the reader from the very first paragraph, and Capra proves to be a character with enough skills and depth to be extremely compelling… Everyone will want to see what Abbott, and Capra, have up their sleeve next.”
—Associated Press
“Thrilling.”
—New York Daily News
“Exhilarating… Confirms Abbott as one of the best thriller writers of our time… This is a book that’s getting a tremendous amount of buzz; everyone’s talking about it. I think Jeff Abbott’s the next Robert Ludlum. And I think Sam Capra is the heir apparent to Jason Bourne… The most gripping spy story I’ve read in years… It just grabs you. Great read!”
—Harlan Coben
“Exhilarating… keeps the intensity at a peak level… Adrenaline proves worthy of its title.”
—Columbus Dispatch
“[A] complex, mind-bending plot… If Sam improves on his parkour skills, the future thrillers will spill over with nonstop action, just as Adrenaline does.”
—San Antonio Express-News
“This is a wonderful book and the start of one of the most exciting new series I’ve had the privilege to read… Sam Capra is now on my short list of characters I would follow anywhere. Adrenaline provides the high-octane pace one expects from a spy thriller, while grounding the action with a protagonist that anyone can root for.”
—Laura Lippman
“This one hooked me and didn’t let go… Abbott does a great job with pacing and switching perspectives.”
—Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“Adrenaline lives up to its name. It’s pure thriller in pace, but Abbott manages to keep the book’s heart anchored in the right place. The characters aren’t cardboard action figures, but people under incredible stresses and strains. I read it in a big gulp.”
—Charlaine Harris
“A white-knuckle opening leads into undoubtedly the best thriller I’ve read so far this year… Adrenaline will surely vault Abbott to the top of must-read authors. The relentless action will hook you from the heart-stopping opening to a conclusion that was as shocking as it was heartrending.”
—Ventura County Star (CA)
“Nail-biting.”
—Austin Chronicle
“Adrenaline, like its namesake hormone, is all about pace, and a high-speed pace at that. A word of caution: don’t start reading [it] just before bedtime!”
—BookPage
“Engaging from the first paragraph, terrifying from the second page, Adrenaline accomplishes what most modern thrillers can’t. It makes us care about its characters even while we’re speeding headlong down the ingenious rabbit hole of its plot. Well done!”
—Eric Van Lustbader
“Engrossing… flows rapidly from page to page… definitely a page-turner… wonderful descriptive writing… Abbott’s demonstrated ability creates a highly recommended 5-star book.”
—Kingman Daily Miner (AZ)
“The title of this book pretty much sets the pace for this action-packed thriller. Within its pages are all the best aspects of a very enjoyable good-versus-evil plot: intrigue, spies, double crosses, foreign locales, technology used for nefarious purposes, a good-hearted hero, and the obligatory nasty bad guys.”
—Suspense Magazine
“Sam Capra is the perfect hero—tough, smart, pure of heart, and hard to kill. And Adrenaline is the perfect thriller. Taut and edgy, with breakneck pacing and perfect plotting, it’s a breathless race from the shocking, heart-wrenching opening sequence to the stunning conclusion. Jeff Abbott is a master, and Adrenaline is his best book yet.”
—Lisa Unger
“Hero Sam Capra likes to unwind with parkour, leaping from building to building, clambering up walls and hurtling through space across the urban landscape… The sport’s a fitting metaphor for Abbott’s style, tumbling from page to page with the frantic inevitability of Robert Ludlum… It all works beautifully.”
—Booklist
Manhattan
IT WILL BE the most dangerous assassination in history. You are to kill the Russian president, Dmitri Morozov, when he comes to meet with the American president in two weeks. The client will pay you twenty million dollars.” Mrs. Claybourne said it all in a rush, holding the gaze of the man she knew as Philip Judge.
Slowly he shook his head.
“I am completely serious,” Mrs. Claybourne said. The two of them were alone in the room, a table between them. The entire office had been fitted to counter any attempt at audio surveillance. Her smartphone lay between them, an app on it constantly scanning the room for bugs. She had pasted special privacy film on the windows as a barrier. It would protect against any snoopers using laser microphone technology to read the vibrations of the glass from their voices and decipher their words. Sound-masking equipment had been installed on the doors, walls, and ductwork, playing a low-level hum to baffle any eavesdroppers. The empty office had been leased through a shell company for the next year, although it would remain empty after this meeting.
In the midst of humanity-packed Manhattan, they were utterly isolated and unwatched.
And she was not joking.
The smile vanished from Philip Judge’s face. It was a handsome face, she thought, despite the sharp edges of mouth and cheekbone and chin. He wore a well-cut black suit, Italian, with a silver tie. Only the slight scar on the left side of his throat, a hard line, marred his good looks.
“This is the one you’ve waited for, Judge, the one you’ve trained for. The one you’ve made all your sacrifices for. You will need never work again.”
Judge shook his head. “You want me to kill Dmitri Morozov. No, thanks. Can you recommend a good bar around here? I could use a drink, since you’ve wasted my time.”
“Did you not hear me?”
“I did. I just did not believe you.” He stood, straightening the suit jacket. “I could have stayed another day in Copenhagen, enjoying that lovely city.”
“Please. Sit.” She gestured at the chair. “I assure you I am serious.”
“The first order of business in my work,” he said, “is don’t get caught. Morozov is an impossible kill. At least impossible for me to survive,” Judge said. “I don’t believe in martyrdom. Good day.”
“Please, sit,” Mrs. Claybourne said.
Judge, after a moment, sat.
Mrs. Claybourne’s poker face wasn’t as effective as she believed it to be. She was in her late forties, in an impeccable dark suit with a soft blue scarf, her brown hair stylish and short, with a streak of gray through it. Her voice was calm and measured. But for all her meticulous reserve, Judge thought, she’s scared.
He cracked another smile, to ease his refusal. “I appreciate the compliment. But no.”
“You said impossible. Let’s just explore it for a minute.”
“There’s no point. The Russians would never give up hunting me. Ever. I could never work again. I could never have a moment’s peace. And frankly, I’m ready for some peace.”
The teakettle whistled. “Let’s have tea and talk it through.” Mrs. Claybourne stood, walked to the office’s small kitchen, prepared two mugs of oolong, set the cups on the table, and sat back down at the table. She glanced at him. He had not moved a muscle in her absence and was lost in thought. That beautiful brain of his, she thought, can’t resist chewing on the challenge.
“Thank you for not leaving while I was gone.”
“That would have been rude.”
She sipped her own tea. “I know you don’t often read the papers or news sites. So: The Russian president has been invited by the American president to have an economic and peace summit at the vice president’s ranch near Houston. President Morozov will first visit Washington, and then go on to Texas, close to two weeks from today. He’s also been specifically invited to bring his inner circle—the men who help him run Russia.”
“Those men are all billionaire oligarchs,” Judge said. “They’ve been targeted again and again by the West with economic sanctions over the past couple of years. They won’t come to America.”
“Actually, they will. A source inside the State Department has confirmed this for me. This will be a singular moment in history,” Mrs. Claybourne said. “And the sanctions are being lifted. Relations between Russia and America have been abysmal for too long, and now there is an impetus to improve them. The Americans hope to make the Russians less of an authoritative government, and to open up new markets there. The Russians need Western markets and they need the West to not be undercutting Morozov’s legitimacy.”
“Then that ranch will be more secure than Fort Knox,” Judge said. “I’d never get close. The Russians in that inner circle are all ex-KGB. They are not soft American executives; they are robber barons. They have their own private security force, mostly ex–Special Forces people. Add to that the American Secret Service. Drones in the sky. A security perimeter greater than any bullet’s range.” He stared at her. “Not to mention the elephant in the room. A Russian president killed on American soil? It would likely mean war.” He paused and took a deep breath. “I don’t have any desire to cause a war,” he said.
“Ah, yes, your rule book.” She smiled but he didn’t smile back.
“Tattered and worn and it’s only on one shelf.” Here he tapped his temple. “It dictates that I care about the aftereffects of a kill. Every death causes a ripple.”
“And the ripple here is that Morozov dead might open Russia to a more moderate leader. One who will not micromanage and manipulate Russian democracy for his own gain and greed, and put the world at greater risk of conflict.” She spoke with confidence. “If such a result fits into your sacred rule book, eases your decision, and helps you sleep better.”
“Who’s hiring me?” he asked her.
“You know better.” She sipped at her tea.
Judge got up and paced the room.
Dmitri Morozov had been president of Russia for two years, the immediate and controversial successor to his older brother. Viktor Morozov had ruled Russia for nearly twenty years, robbed the nation blind, slashed freedoms, built up (at least in his mind) a Russia that was a counterbalance to the decadent West, and made himself a billionaire off the country’s resources. He called, without irony, his Russia a “careful democracy”—one careful not to criticize him or his inner circle. One careful to check rights, to control all media, to return Russia to its former glories. And one careful to shape and name enemies of the people—journalists, Muslims, gays, atheists, musicians, intellectuals, business leaders who argued for openness and fell out of favor, the individual-obsessed West—all supposedly dangerous forces that the Morozovs, to save Russia, would defeat. Viktor, however, could not beat the Reaper. He’d died from cancer, from chain-smoking. His younger brother Dmitri, who was nicknamed the Little Czar and who served as premier, stepped into office as his successor. The Morozovs weren’t czars, but they were close. The Russians kept electing them, again and again, for the sake of stability, and Morozov and his blood circle of billionaires ran the country like their own private company. “Russia, Inc.,” as Judge had heard critical Western journalists refer to it.
He stopped his pacing. “Why only two weeks’ warning? It wouldn’t be enough time to plan.”
“That is the time frame.”
Twenty million, he thought. Freedom. The rest of his life to live in quiet perfection.
Mrs. Claybourne leaned forward. “Approach the challenge as you see best. You get five million up front, so hire the help you need. If you need to recruit and pay a team, you can. If you choose to act alone, that’s your concern.”
“It can’t be done,” he said. “Not on American soil.”
“He has to die on American soil.”
Die on American soil. He felt a little tickle in the back of his brain. An idea, looking to breathe, struggling for life. A bit of room to move.
Mrs. Claybourne watched him. “You were not my first recommendation to the client. I felt a team approach was best and you work alone. We approached another professional assassin. She and her team thoroughly studied the situation, but she could not see a way to it being done.”
Judge raised an eyebrow.
“That said, once I described you to the client, you were the only candidate of interest. You speak fluent Russian. You can pass for an American. And you don’t exist. The man with no past.” He blinked at this. “And you are a superb mix in your thinking: methodical, yet intuitive, and still able to cope when disaster strikes. You are right: To approach this as a conventional assassination will be to fail. You will not be conventional.”
“I would need to know how he moves. Where he will be. Where he is going. Without that…”
“I can offer you one more advantage, one I did not share with the first candidate for the job.”
“I’m flattered.”
“I trust you in a way I did not trust the other. Our long history…,” she began, but then she stopped for a few moments. “We have someone inside President Morozov’s inner circle. Someone who could apprise you of his movements, his habits, his security detail, even the last-minute changes. You would have regular contact with this person, if needed.”
“Who? One of the billionaires?”
“I cannot say. The contact has only a code name. Firebird.”
“That’s a nice, generic Russian symbol,” Judge said. He thought: I’ll bet the contact is the client. But he said nothing.
“I can serve as a conduit, or you can talk to Firebird directly via text. No face-to-face, obviously, and we’d use encryption and masking technology to protect you both.”
“I need to know who Firebird is.” Everyone inside Morozov’s inner circle could afford a twenty-million-dollar kill fee. They were all billionaires several times over who controlled the most important aspects of the Russian economy and were in turn controlled by Morozov.
And one of them apparently wanted Morozov dead.
“I don’t even know,” she said.
Judge knew his life would be in the informant’s hands. It was an unsettling thought. But Firebird, if exposed, was dead as well. “An informant inside is not such an advantage.”
“It’s up to you to make the most of your advantages. After all, you don’t exist, do you? Not like a normal man does.”
His skin felt cold. He would have to say yes or no.
“Just so you know… if you take the job and kill Morozov, but are killed in turn, the remaining fifteen million would be placed in escrow for your named heir.”
“An heir, for a man who doesn’t exist.” He finished his tea. “I think we both know you’d just keep the money.”
“You wound me, Mr. Judge,” Mrs. Claybourne said. “Everyone has someone they love. Perhaps even a man who doesn’t exist. A wife? A child? A parent?” She paused. “A sister? A brother?”
He didn’t look at her for a long moment; then he set down the mug and met her gaze. “Not having someone to love is how I can do what I do,” he said evenly. “No one can be a target for revenge. What if I undertake the job and decide, after further deliberation, it cannot be done?”
She frowned. “You will present me with an itemized list of your expenses, and you will be paid a reasonable fee for your time. You would refund the remainder of the initial five million payment. But… I beg you not to decline. You’re my best hope, Mr. Judge. I do not want to disappoint Firebird by refusing this most generous offer.”
It was a threat and he ignored it. He would not be bullied. He had killed fearsome, powerful men and women before, but Morozov was an entirely different level of target.
“Call me when you’ve decided,” she said. “Since you’re in town for another job, I would suggest you complete that one quickly, and then give your full attention to making your decision. Time is already short.”
He’d thought she’d cancel the job she’d brought him here to do in light of this much greater offer, but no. Fine. He stood.
“Thank you for the tea.” They didn’t shake hands. He turned and left the soundproofed office. He headed to the elevator and a minute later he was on the streets of Manhattan. He walked, thinking, watching for watchers. He got on and off the subway five times, took a cab to Bryant Park. No one was following him. He got out of the cab and headed down the street and saw the name of a bar he recognized.
The Last Minute. Well, that seemed an apt name, given the decision he faced. He almost couldn’t go inside. What if… Why did you come here?
He ignored the impulse to turn away and he walked inside. The bar was handsome with an old-school feel, rich mahogany and a patterned tile floor. Well-dressed office workers and a few tourists drank martinis and craft beers. He sat at an empty table. A handsome older gentleman in a bespoke suit—the manager, Judge assumed—saw that he hadn’t been served, stopped, and glanced for a moment at Judge’s face. Judge thought, I’m no one. I don’t look like anyone you know. And… don’t let him be here.
If he could take this risk, he could take any. Including the Morozov job. Walking into this bar was the most terrifying step he had taken in years. He felt his thundering heart grow steady in his chest.
“What may I get you, sir?” The manager spoke with a slight Haitian accent. He wore a small, elegant name pin that said BERTRAND.
“I’d like a martini. I don’t even know how to order one properly. Whatever is the most classic way, please. And with your best gin and whatever else is in it.”
“Vermouth, sir.”
“Yes, that. And olives, or lemon twist, or whatever. You pick for me.”
“Very good, sir.” Bertrand went to the bar.
Judge surveyed the room. In the back of the bar there was a staircase, roped off from the public. He had been trained to spot surveillance and he could see cameras, tiny, hidden, watching the bar. He moved his chair around the table to the optimum position to keep his face off tape. He wondered how long the tapes were kept before being erased with a new day’s recording. If he walks in…
It was madness to come inside this bar. Yet so was the Morozov job. Sometimes you embraced the madness. He had, and it had made all the difference in his world.
He sat very still, watching the stairs for feet coming down them, but they remained empty.
He’s not here. You’ve gotten this out of your system. Drink your drink, and never do this again. Ever.
Bertrand returned shortly, carrying a chilled martini with two olives speared. Judge tasted it. Icy steel. “That is excellent,” he said.
“Thank you, sir. Would you like to run a tab?”
“No, thanks. I’ll pay my tab now.”
Bertrand nodded and, a few moments later, brought Judge his bill and left it with a polite smile.
Judge turned his thoughts back to the proposal. He thought of various political assassinations through history. The Kennedys, Lincoln, Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Benazir Bhutto, Archduke Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie. Nearly all the assassins ended up dead or in prison. Even Gavrilo Princip, the archduke’s killer, a teenager too young for the death penalty, rotted away in jail from sickness and malnutrition; he’d lost an arm to skeletal tuberculosis. Judge wondered if it was Princip’s shooting arm that died before he did, because then there was some karma. And Princip had known, from his prison cell, that he’d caused the unprecedented suffering of World War I. Princip’s cheap little bullet had claimed far more victims than the archduke and his wife. Judge might ignite a war, too, but he didn’t think he’d get to ponder how he’d changed the fate of the world from a prison cell. He’d most likely be dead.
But he hated to think that he couldn’t find a way.
To strike from a distance on American soil, via a rifle or a fired weapon, would be incredibly difficult. To strike close, with knife or gun, would be suicide. You’d have to penetrate that inner circle; then you’d have to vanish during the moment of greatest suspicion. His escape route would have to be laid carefully: not only a way to get physically away from the scene, but also a way to disappear. Multiple identities would need to be created—fallback upon fallback upon fallback—even more than he had now.
Twenty million dollars. But Mrs. Claybourne’s client Firebird could eliminate him as well. He would be the world’s greatest loose end. Judge would have to protect himself on every front.
His mind danced.
He drank the martini with slow appreciation. He would think about the problem purely as an intellectual exercise. But he could not let it distract him from tomorrow’s job. He finished the drink and stared at the glass on the small granite-topped table, lost in thought. If he had left even two minutes earlier, perhaps he would not have gotten the inspiration. But then the loud foursome at the table next to him were talking about attending an off-Broadway revival of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar starring three famous film actors as Caesar, Brutus, and Mark Antony.
Judge had little interest in theater; he would rather read a play than sit in a darkened room with strangers. Crowds made him nervous when he didn’t need them for cover. And people mentioning, even for a moment, a play in which a leader is murdered in the simplest of manners when Judge was puzzling out an impossible assassination—it struck him as a troubling omen. He left a handsome tip for Bertrand and headed out into the evening. Life roared all around him, and he was pondering death. Three minutes later, as he was walking through Bryant Park, the idle conversation of the theatergoers shook a thought loose in his head.
He saw, with the sudden certainty of the songwriter who hears in her head the first strains of a beautiful new melody, the beginnings of how it could be done.
Islamabad, Pakistan
WHERE WAS HE held captive? Answer me!” Sam Capra gripped the man’s neck and held the combat knife to the man’s throat.
The answer was a gasp. “The village doesn’t even have a name anymore.”
“Then the GPS coordinates. I want an exact location.”
The man tried to jerk away from Sam’s knife, reaching toward his own gun on the table. Sam lowered the knife—a 57⁄8-inch Böker Applegate-Fairbairn, double-edged—to the man’s groin and he froze.
“I don’t want to hurt you,” Sam said, “but I will. I have very little to lose right now. You tell me the coordinates for this village.”
The man whispered the coordinates.
“Thank you,” Sam said. He heard a noise, feet outside the door. One was not often alone in the katchi abadis—the slums of Islamabad where thousands were crammed and piled atop one another in dried-mud-and-stone hovels and makeshift shacks, criminals and refugees and outcasts packed together unwillingly. This was the Afghan Basti, a shantytown of thousands of escaped Afghans and poor Pakistanis. “The Brothers of the Mountain. Are they still using the village?”
“It’s… it’s a place to sleep, only, on a smuggling route. No one lives there. It’s cursed.”
“Why did you talk about the Brothers of the Mountain on your phone?”
“How did you know…?”
“The American NSA has very big ears.”
The man blinked as if he didn’t understand. “The Brothers… They’re not extremists. They’re businessmen. Heroin.”
Sam steadied the knife. The room was cramped, just a table and a chair and a small filthy stove. Two cots in the other room, buckets to carry water, and to Sam’s surprise, a modest amount of heroin stored in the next building. These guys didn’t live here; this was a working space to move cash and drugs. But there were lots of people nearby, and if the man yelled for help… Sam would have a very hard time getting out of the katchi abadis if this man’s friends came to his aid. Most of the people in the Afghan Basti were honest laborers
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