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Carl Rutherford had grabbed his wife while she gathered her purse and jacket from the back of her chair. The inside agents moved quickly to usher their colleague away from danger.

That’s when Kalinikov pulled the trigger.

• • •

FBI agent Mark Renton was on his knees in the restaurant parking lot tending to a burned valet driver when he heard the familiar sound from behind him. It was a sound he’d heard in Afghanistan many years earlier, but once you’ve heard it, it never leaves your brain. It was the distinct hiss of an RPG heading his direction. Self-preservation kicked in. He instinctively ducked and covered his head. Seconds later the impact of the grenade hitting the restaurant blasted throughout the bay and a giant fireball expelled its energy into the night sky.

The heat swept over Renton as he protected the injured valet from shards of debris. Renton knew instantly it was the Russian assassin. Carl Rutherford and his wife were dead along with two other FBI agents and lots of other innocent people.

His ears were ringing as he scrambled to his feet and saw pedestrians calling 911 on their cell phones. He quickly scrambled around the side of the restaurant, his body slanted to his left as if he’d just come off an amusement park ride and couldn’t gain his balance yet. His equilibrium was shot from the pounding on his eardrums. He saw a yacht going full throttle away from the shoreline, cutting through the bay in a straight line for the Atlantic.

Renton had had a bad feeling about the boat floating so close to the pier, but couldn’t see inside the cabin to quantify his concerns. A police boat was in high pursuit of the fleeing yacht, its lights flashing and reflecting off the water as it gave chase.

Renton needed to get out there. His friends were just murdered and the killer couldn’t get away with it. Not while he was still alive.

He saw a man by the dock checking out his boat. Renton ran over and flashed his FBI shield. “You the owner?” he asked.

The man seemed unsure of Renton’s motive. He looked like he was being accused of something.

“I desperately need your help,” Renton said. “Can you take me out to that police boat?

The man stood there and didn’t answer. Then it dawned on Renton. The man was wearing a button down shirt and nice, creased jeans. His face turned toward the ball of flames. He must’ve had family inside the restaurant. He was in shock.

Renton’s blood was flying through his body, his pulse pounding at his temples. He saw the yacht getting farther out into the bay and had nothing but revenge on his mind.

Renton pulled the man’s shoulders to face him. “Can I use your boat? Please.”

The man absently fished out a set of keys from his pocket and handed them to him.

Renton untied the ropes and jumped on board. He had nothing more than a rudimentary understanding of how to drive a boat. It was a cabin cruiser around thirty feet in length. He hunched down to get inside the cabin and found the control panel. As the engine coughed to life he pushed the throttle and headed out. From behind him he heard sirens. He looked over his shoulder and saw people gathering outside the restaurant. Some were hugging each other. Some stood in shock. The man whose boat he borrowed stood in the exact same spot and stared at the sight.

Renton felt a sense of loss, but there were professionals just minutes away and those precious minutes could allow The Russian to escape. And if he escaped, even more people would be in danger. More FBI agents. Renton couldn’t allow that to happen.

The cabin cruiser had reached top speed and the boat skipped over the water like a dolphin. He found the spotlights and was able to see thirty yards ahead of him. The police boat was close to the assassin’s yacht. Renton felt his phone vibrate. He pulled it from his pocket and said, “Renton.”

“What the fuck’s going on?” It was Lynn Harding, the assistant special agent in charge of the Baltimore field office. The ASAC was taking over while Walt Jackson was in L.A. She’d been at the Bureau for nearly twenty years, most of those as a field agent, so she wasn’t your typical administrator. She was well respected.

“The Russian,” Renton said, his hearing just coming back. “He fired an RPG at Sylvio’s.” Renton glanced over his shoulder, the pier now a dim shadow in the glow of the flames.

“Where are you now?” she asked.

“I’m in pursuit in the Chesapeake. We need the Coast Guard out here immediately. I don’t see this guy going down easy. He’s got an RPG. Who knows how much ammo he has.”

“Don’t get too close,” Harding said. “Let’s keep him in sight. I don’t want you becoming another victim.”

Renton heard the warning but had no intention of listening.

“Mark?”

“Yeah,” Renton said.

“What about the rest of the crew?”

Renton was forced to think about his teammates. Not something he could afford to do right now. Not while he was gaining on the yacht.

“They’re gone,” Renton said.

The line was silent for a moment. The roar of the inboard engines was all Renton could hear.

“Mark,” Harding said. “The Coast Guard is on the way. Tell me what else you need.”

“I need eyes in the sky. If he’s a pro, he’ll have an escape plan.”

“Got it,” Harding said.

“Also get some shoes working the shoreline. I don’t trust this guy.”

“Done.”

Renton finished the call, then slipped the phone into his pocket as the yacht came into view less than a hundred yards away. The police boat was alongside the yacht now; spotlights illuminated the vessel like a night baseball game. Three officers lined the deck with rifles to their shoulders. Renton was close enough to see the shadow inside the cabin. The Russian was standing behind the wheel swiveling his head around between the police boat and the water ahead of him. He waved his free hand in the air frantically, trying to show he didn’t have a weapon. No, it was something else. He was shouting and waving and attempting communication, but he didn’t slow the boat down.

One of the policemen used a megaphone to command him to stop. This caused The Russian to wave even more fervently, shaking his head and motioning to something inside the cabin. Something told Renton to get away from the yacht, but he pressed on, moving to the starboard side until he was exactly even with the vessel. The yacht had slowed slightly, but not much. It was probably still forging ahead at thirty knots. The police boat kept veering into the yacht forcing it to turn into Renton’s path. He was bumping hulls with the yacht which was a bit higher and had more mass. His cruiser was becoming unstable. He opened the door to his cabin and steered with his right hand while gauging the distance to the yacht. He needed to time it just right if he was going to jump.

It was a bad choice. Not something a rational human being would ever consider attempting at night. Not at thirty knots, with an assassin waiting for you in the next vessel. But Renton had just lost some close friends and the only thought running through his head was revenge.

The port side of his boat dipped low enough to take on bay water, then raised high enough to be two feet above the yacht’s deck. He waited three dips before making his move. On the way up, he ran out and jumped. It was only four feet away, but it was clearly the scariest thing he’d ever done. Halfway over, the wind caught him and held him back, keeping him suspended in midair. His momentum got him as far as the railing and he slammed into the brass rails so hard he could feel his ribs cave in. He hung onto the railing, and tried to breathe. His eyes watered from the wind and lack of oxygen. The Russian didn’t move, however. He remained behind the wheel yelling something to the police about a tong. A tong? Renton felt like he was losing consciousness. A tong? He was able to get his knee onto the deck and remove the pressure from his ribcage. He finally took a long breath and gained a better grasp of the railing. The Russian was still yelling at the same time the police ordered him to stop.