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touched a penny that wasn’t mine. We never have.”
No, his family hadn’t.
But Article 6 was clear.
If any Man shall violate the Company as a Whole he shall be shot
.
Never had the Commonwealth faced something this threatening. If only he could find the key and solve the cipher. That would end it all and make what he was about to do unnecessary. Unfortunately, a captain’s duty sometimes entailed ordering unpleasant things.
He gestured and three men hoisted the gibbet, hauling it toward the railing.
The bound man screamed, “Don’t do this, please. I thought I knew you. I thought we were friends. Why are you acting like some damn pirate?”
The three men hesitated a moment, waiting for his signal.
He nodded.
The cage was tossed overboard and the sea devoured the offering.
The crew returned to their posts.
He stood alone on the deck, his face washed by the breeze, and considered the man’s final insult.
Acting like some damn pirate
.
Sea monsters, hellhounds, robbers, opposers, corsairs, buccaneers, violators of all laws human and divine, devils incarnate, children of the wicked one.
All labels for pirates.
Was he one of them?
“If that’s what they think of me,” he whispered, “then why not?”
THREE
NEW YORK CITY
JONATHAN WYATT WATCHED THE SCENE UNFOLD . HE SAT ALONE at a window table in the Grand Hyatt’s New York Central restaurant, a glass-atrium eatery that offered an unobstructed view of East 42nd Street two stories below. He’d caught the moment when traffic was stopped, the sidewalks cleared, and the presidential motorcade arrived at Cipriani. He’d heard a bang from above, then the crash of glass to the sidewalk. When shots started he knew that the device had begun working.
He’d chosen this table with care and noticed that two men nearby had done the same. Secret Service agents, who’d commandeered the far end of the restaurant, assuming a position at the windows, their view of the scene below also unimpaired. Both men were wired with radios and the serving staff had intentionally seated no one near them.
He knew their operating procedure.
Presidential security relied on a controlled-perimeter mentality, usually three layers starting with counter snipers on adjacent rooftops, ending with agents standing within a few feet of their charge. Bringing a president into the congestion of a place like New York City posed extraordinary challenges. Buildings everywhere, each a sea of windows, topped by open roofs. The Grand Hyatt seemed a perfect example. Twenty-plus stories and two towers of glass walls.
Down on the street agents reacted to the shots, leaping onto Danny Daniels, implementing another time-honored practice—”cover and evacuate.” Of course, the automated weapon had been positioned high enough to shoot over any vehicles, and he watched policemen and the remaining agents dive left and right, trying to avoid the rounds.
Had Daniels been hit? Hard to say.
He watched as the two agents, standing fifty feet away, reacted to the melee, doing their job, acting as eyes and ears, clearly frustrated they were so far away. He knew the men on the street carried radios with earpieces. They’d all been trained. Unfortunately, reality rarely resembled scenarios enacted at an instructional facility. This was a perfect example. An automated, remote-controlled weapon directed by closed-circuit TV? Bet they hadn’t seen that one before.
Thirty other patrons filled the restaurant, and everyone’s attention was directed toward the street.
More retorts echoed off the buildings.
The president was shoved back into his limousine.
Cadillac One—or as the Secret Service referred to it, the Beast—sported military-grade armor, five inches thick, and wheels fitted to run even on dead flat tires. Three hundred thousand dollars of General Motors ingenuity. He knew that, since Dallas in 1963, the car was always flown to wherever the president required ground transportation. It had
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