When the time came, Evan vowed, it wouldn’t be enough.
Determining that time, unfortunately, was the biggest problem of all. It was everything. Without a definitive, advance-notice When and Where, he’d never even get to the starting gate.
A knot of frustration asserted itself at the base of his throat, and he closed his eyes, breathing it away. There were promises to keep and files to read before he slept, but he had to recharge or his effectiveness would dim.
He was about to shut down the laptop when his eye snagged on a red-tagged folder at the bottom of the highest-classification directory.
It was labeled X.
He hovered the mouse over it a moment, took a breath, and then opened it.
What he saw inside made him lean forward to bring his face closer to the screen.
Photos of his former foster home in East Baltimore. Various hangars at Fort Meade. Jack’s farmhouse, the paint peeling, shingles worn through in patches. Naomi Templeton had ordered continuous sat footage on key locations in case Evan popped his head up. The file also contained a few fragments of operations past. A high-value target gone missing in Mogadishu in 1999. A questionable passport at the Al Karamah border crossing in 2005. A bloody fight on the Las Vegas Strip in 2015.
It was barely anything, but he was amazed they had assembled even that.
After another moment reviewing these fragments of his past, he powered down the laptop.
Removing everything from his backpack, he spread the few items out on the carpet and then repacked meticulously. His laptop slid into a padded pouch just beneath Peter’s gift. He stowed Wetzel’s flash drive in the back pocket. Though the intel files it held on the other Orphans were heavily redacted, they could still provide enough for Orphan A and his goons to pick up the scent. It was a sober reminder for Evan of the stakes should he fail.
Which meant failure was not an option.
He finished zipping up his belongings in the backpack. Traveling light meant he could depart on an instant’s notice without leaving a trace.
He set the backpack on the foot of the mattress and lay on top of the goose-down comforter, fully clothed, boots tightly laced. Resting his left hand on his stomach, his right on his chest, he let his mind range over the incalculable number of safeguards and contingencies the Secret Service had erected around President Bennett.
Endless impediments, endless complications.
An idea nibbled at the back of his brain, expanding until he saw, sketched in his mind’s eye, the rough outline of a plan. An insane, Hail Mary pass of a plan.
It was a start.
He mused on the impossibility of what lay before him until he fell asleep.
Sitting in the passenger seat bathed in darkness, Orphan A felt the sweat bead along his widow’s peak.
Excitement.
That’s what life had become for him now. All it held. A jungle cat’s momentary thrill when the right kind of movement flickered across its visual field.
In the other seats, he could sense Wade and Ricky Collins and their cousins displacing a large quantity of air. The van was turned off, its lights killed, the interior laden with the smell of gun oil and hardware.
“Weapons check,” Holt said.
Various clinks and metallic clanks answered him.
Ricky’s blocklike fists encircled the steering wheel. He wore a fully loaded grenade-carrier vest, camo design, over Kevlar body armor. The pockets covering the front of the vest were unsnapped, flaps raised for ready access to the safety-pin rings. He looked ready for an assault on the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Ricky’s brother and the five cousins had likewise gone militia chic, bedecking themselves in army-surplus offerings with fetishistic delight.
It was overboard, all right, but Holt was fine with that. They’d require overboard if they hoped to get X. Part of the Collinses’ job was to loom large anyway. Ultimately they were decoys to draw X’s attention so Holt could get the kill shot.
The hotel parking structure was dimly lit and sparsely attended, the van cloaked in shadow. Zeroing in on the Watergate had taken a hefty amount of computing power. The DoD had put Holt’s hypotheticals through their magic machine, and it had spit out a reservation.
Though only one man had checked in, there were three rooms registered under the same name.
On the part of X, this was smart business. In case he had surveillance in place, Holt and his crew would have to hit all three rooms simultaneously. Divide to conquer.
The only benefit to splitting up was that it would make them less conspicuous. They wore trench coats that fastened at the belt to cover up the gear, but still, if the sight of two Collinses drew attention, seven would elicit widespread panic. They’d break into three teams and infiltrate the hotel through different entrances. Holt would float in a central location, at the ready to respond once the firefight broke out.
Twenty minutes earlier they’d driven unnoticed into the structure and taken the only spot available on the ground floor, in the southwest corner. Unfortunately, that pinned them in, the parking-attendant booth positioned between the van and both exits.
From the shadows they watched the attendant, a heavyset Hispanic man with bulges at the back of his neck. If the guy didn’t exit the booth soon to take a bathroom break, Holt planned to call in a phony alert.
“Let’s go,” Ricky hissed through his teeth, the words riding a tobacco-scented stream.
“Sure thing,” Holt said. “We’ll just clank out of the van and file past him, all eight of us in full battle rattle.”
“We got trench coats.”
“Have you seen you motherfuckers? Police response to this location averages seven minutes. Believe me, we’re gonna need all seven. That countdown can’t start till we engage X.”
“I don’t need seven minutes to cap some bitch,” Wade said from the middle bench seat.
Holt lifted his eyes to the rearview, catching Wade’s reflection in the green glow of an exit sign. His cheeks looked raw from shaving, a few nicks at the jawline.
“This isn’t a fistfight behind a biker bar,” Holt said. “If you know that, you might have a chance.”
“A chance at what?”
“Surviving.”
The parking attendant rose from his stool, stretched, and exited the booth.
“Finally,” Ricky said.
The man looked around and then pulled a pack of American Spirits from his sagging pants and started walking.
Directly toward the van.
“Shit,” Wade said. “He’s coming over here to sneak a smoke.”
“What do we do?” Ricky racked his SIG. “Put him down?”
“It’ll be loud,” Wade said. “But worth it.”
“One in the chest, one in the head,” a cousin piped in. “Pap-pap. People’ll think it’s a car backfiring.”
Holt watched the attendant draw near. The guy had a brick-size radio clipped to his belt. One click of a button and they’d be looking at a whole new set of variables. Holt swept his gaze around the concrete structure, gauged the acoustics of a fired shot.
The attendant stopped a few yards from the van.
By unspoken accord Holt and the Collins crew stayed frozen in their seats.
The attendant tilted his head to light up, and in the flare of light, his name tag came visible: ERNESTO. He sucked in a lungful, leaned back, and dispensed a plume of smoke overhead.