CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

When the Cessna landed the assassin stated to the pilot another monosyllable word: ‘Thanks,’ then collected his gear and melded with the crowd in the terminal, disappearing from the pilot’s life hoping to be nothing more than a memory soon to be faded or forgotten.

After securing transport, he made a quick trip to Baltimore to challenge the Hardwick brothers, and took vigil on an abandoned rooftop across the street from the surplus store. Earlier he had seen one of the Hardwick’s enter the store, the man moving with all the pomp and circumstance of an aristocrat. The way he held his chin in a self-aggrandizing manner or the way he walked with a hitch in his gait, were clearly gestures that this particular Hardwick thought he was well above everyone else on the urban jungle food chain.

It was also the ‘Hardwick’ myth that the assassin was willing to dispel with the aid of his pick.

As the day wore on he took mental notes from the rooftop, as well as to draw the outlay of the streets. He noted entry and exit routes, vantage points from high and level surfaces, and charted a means of escape from several locations.

The assassin was planning well.

Within two hours of his arrival and approximately ninety minutes after Hardwick entered the store, the assassin caught the glimpse of a man walking with a purpose. The man was large and well built, and he wore a cleric’s shirt with the pristine white band of the Roman Catholic collar. He also wore black fatigues with cargo pockets and high-ankle military footwear. On the pocket of his shirt was the emblem of a silver Pattée within a blue shield supported by lions: The symbol of the Vatican Knights.

Kimball Hayden!

The assassin watched from a safe distance surprised that ‘the priest who is not a priest’ was less aware of his surroundings, given the fact that he knew he was a targeted man. However, the assassin also knew that Kimball was untouchable until the Hardwick brothers were terminated.

For a long moment he watched the Knight stand across the street from the surplus store, Hayden appearing lost in some type of self debate before stepping off the curb and making his way to the front of the mural-laden store. A manila envelope was in his hand.

No doubt the dossiers, the assassin considered.

Now the game would become harder, he thought, the competition much higher. But the odds of three to one deterred him little. He took out Hawk, The Ghost, with little effort, the old man’s skills obviously eroded over time. But the Hardwicks looked fit and ready to fight at the drop of a hat. And there was no doubt to the skills of Kimball Hayden. Without reservation the confrontation between these three just ratcheted up several notches to a much higher degree of difficulty.

This time Kimball would be waiting.

And so would the Hardwick brothers.

From his perch the assassin watched Kimball make his way across the street and to the establishment’s front door. After another moment of hesitation Kimball reached up and pushed the button.

Even from his position the assassin could hear Kimball being buzzed in.

He was that close.

* * *

Jeff Hardwick could hardly believe his ears when the door buzzer sounded off. The army/navy surplus was widely known in the ‘streets’ to be a front and not truly an outlet for goods sold at all.

Curious!

Through the spycam, Hardwick could clearly see the image of a large man. In his hand was a folder of some kind, perhaps an envelope. His first thought was a mail drop-off that had to be signed for. But with closer examination he saw the cleric’s collar. The man’s face, however, remained obscured since he kept his eyes downward.

A priest?

When Hardwick reached beneath the counter he did so for two reasons: one, to hit the buzzer to allow the man in; and two, to ready himself with a Glock, in case something wasn’t quite copasetic.

He took the weapon and placed it within the waistband of his pants, covered it with the tail of his shirt, and buzzed the man in.

* * *

The man looked anything but cherubic, Jeff Hardwick thought. He had broad shoulders and a tapered waist, along with the angular and chiseled features of an athlete rather than a preacher. The edges of his eyes looked as hard as flint with the promise that a single spark could ignite something extremely volatile within. And when he walked he did so with the type of authority neither of the Hardwick brothers could match, no matter how hard they tried.

This man moved like a seasoned warrior.

Hardwick slowly eased his hand behind him and found the familiar curve of the pistol’s grip. “Something I can do for you?” he asked.

The large man moved closer. “Has it been that long that you don’t even recognize me?”

Hardwick cocked his head to one side and closed his eyes into narrow slits, focusing. Like taking a splash of ice cold water to his face his eyes suddenly flared with recognition, the whites the size of communion wafers. He slowly lowered his hand from behind and found a place on the countertop, as if to steady him.

“Kimball?”

The Knight nodded. “It’s been a long time, Jeff.”

Hardwick stepped around the filthy glass casing, his eyes remaining fixed. “You’re supposed to be dead — in Iraq. We held a ceremony for you.”

“Can’t believe everything you hear, right?”

“What happened?”

Kimball stared for a long moment before placing the manila envelope on top of the glass counter. “I ran,” he said simply. “I couldn’t do the job anymore.”

The muscles in the back of Hardwick’s jaw flexed. And Kimball could see something seething inside him.

“You ran.” It was not a question, but a statement of aversion. “You of all people,’ he said with contempt, “the biggest swinging dick in the unit, a coward?”

“It wasn’t like that at all.”

“You ran! Runners are cowards!”

“Jeff—”

“Kimball Hayden, the man without conscience, the killing machine we all wanted to be, a coward.”

Kimball sighed. This was not going to be easy.

“Why are you here? And what the hell is that around your neck? Now I know you didn’t get all religious on me,” he said. “God abandoned you like He did us for the choices we made as members of the Pieces of Eight. You think you’re going to be absolved of your sins by masquerading as a priest?”

“I’m not a priest.”

“Thanks for clearing that up,” he said sarcastically. “To think you were a hypocrite as well as a coward.”

“I didn’t come here to ask you for acceptance.”

“Then why are you here? And why are you wearing that damned collar if you’re not a priest?”

Kimball raised a finger and brushed it lightly across the band. “I’m an emissary of the Church,” he answered.

“An emissary? I’m afraid that’s a ten-dollar word to me.”

“It means agent or representative of the Vatican.”

“The Vatican?” Hardwick couldn’t help himself as he stared at the man, and then at the collar, noting the genuine cast of truth radiating from the man’s blue eyes the same way a battery of heat shimmers off the desert floor. And then he noted the incongruous wear of black military pants and combat footwear. “From the waist up you’re a priest,” he said. “But from the waist down you’re dressed as a soldier.” Hardwick hesitated, and then: “What exactly do you do as an emissary from the Church?”

“Whatever needs to be done,” he answered.

“Are you here to save my soul? Is that — like — a priority in the eyes of God or something?” His smile took on something mischievous and cruel, something maliciously twisted. “Are you here to save the Hardwick boys?”

He pushed the envelope across the glass surface of the countertop towards Hardwick. “In a way I guess you can say that,” he said. “But not in the way you think.”

He opened the folder. Inside were a bundle of photos, black and white glossies. Lying on top was a photo of a legless Walker tied to a wooden table with the letter ‘I’ carved into his back.

“Let’s start with this one, shall we?” said kimball. “But first I think you’ll need to contact your brother.”

Hardwick’s jaw began to fall, his features slowly descending into awe.

“Call your brother,” Kimball stated firmly. “Now.”

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