Title:
Sabotage
Author: Bryan Koepke
Publisher: Writers Cabin Press, Ltd.
Pages: 316
Genre: Thriller
Author: Bryan Koepke
Publisher: Writers Cabin Press, Ltd.
Pages: 316
Genre: Thriller
Reece Culver and his friend Haisley Averton travel to Scotland with only
one thing on their minds - fishing.
After witnessing an automobile accident involving a freelance journalist
they quickly realize that something far greater than a crash caused his SUV to
sink into the frigid waters of the North Atlantic.
With increasing curiosity, Reece inserts himself into the complicated
life of Marie Rhodes who is in the middle of her own crises as she watches her
20-year marriage crumble.
Realizing that they’ll never make it out fishing, Haisley uses his
skills in computer forensics to find out who hacked into Karl Rhodes’ office
computer at Draecon International and made it appear that he’d remotely
accessed the dead journalists laptop. As
Haisley combs through logs on the chief of strategy’s computer he stumbles upon
an even bigger plot involving a secret drone factory somewhere in the United
Kingdom, what looks like funds being embezzled out of Draecon International,
and a plot that threatens the national security of the U.K.
Reece spends increasingly greater amounts of time with Marie Rhodes
trying to learn what she knows and soon finds that he can’t resist the
temptation of falling in love with the woman of his dreams. But as things heat up he questions her true
motives.
When Karl Rhodes’ executive secretary is found dead Reece agrees to
protect Marie’s soon to be ex-husband Karl.
In a tricky game of cat and mouse Reece travels the globe as he tries to
keep Marie, her husband, and Karl’s mistress out of harms way, and unknowingly
puts himself directly into the crosshairs of a hired assassin.
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Excerpt:
Saturday June 8, 2013
Julian had been told the target would be
traveling south along the coastal road. With a practiced hand he pivoted the
stock of the Russian-made sniper rifle on its black steel swivel mount atop the
bipod legs and aimed toward the highway below. The SUV would be passing right
through his sight . . . there. A chilly
breeze blew through the tent, rippling the damp cotton shirt that lay molded to
his back. He wasn’t nervous, but he did tend to sweat as the killing hour
approached. He regarded the unpleasant sensation as just part of the job. It
wasn’t like anyone would ever find out.
Peering through the
custom-made rifle scope, he adjusted the magnification between his thumb and
index finger, zooming in on the worn white strands of the highway’s center line
several hundred yards below. As he rotated the knob back out, he spotted the
farthest flag he’d placed in the branches of a nearby tree. The strip of white
plastic barely fluttered, telling him the wind was calm.
His square unshaven chin
pressed firmly against the cold black stock of the Dragunov SVD, and he pushed
upward, seating the steel magazine that housed multiple 7N1 steel-core sniper
rounds. With its 151-grain projectile and velocity of 830 meters per second, it
was perfect for this type of work.
A rifle was the best—precise,
anonymous, and decisive. He ran the shot through his mind one more time. Envision
what you want to have happen. He’d read about that in an e-zine, and he
adopted it as part of his preparations, even though it was supposed to be part
of his ten-year life plan. He didn’t need any plan. In ten years he’d be rich
and retired on a private island in the Caribbean.
The tracking device he’d stuck
under the rear bumper would tell him when the SUV was near. It would approach
on its way south toward the city of Talbert. He’d picked the perfect spot. The
narrow Scottish road curved left around a large hill, and the vast expanse of
the North Atlantic Ocean spread beyond the guardrail.
Confirm the license plate
BV-061-EK, lead the target, and pan upward to the windshield. He’d draw a bead on the man’s head, squeeze the trigger, and watch as
the windshield filled with a fine red mist. He’d envisioned the heavy vehicle
veering sideways and crashing through the flimsy rusted guardrail before
plunging into the depths of the sea. The driver would be dead before he
realized how freezing cold that water was.
As the assassin waited
patiently enduring the wet chill that reminded him of his home on Bainbridge
Island, he monitored the moving red dot on his cell phone. A young woman with a
yellow scarf drove past in her blue Volvo sedan. His stomach growled, and he
remembered the bacon he’d had at the inn.
The slabs were thick and cooked only in patches. Typical British
cuisine.
The dot was rapidly
approaching, and he shifted his attention to a silver Nissan Pathfinder rapidly
making its way up the road. It carried two occupants. Damn it, he
thought as a maroon BMW X5 came around the corner. The Pathfinder would pass in
front just as the BMW entered his field of fire.
He could feel a drop of sweat
rolling down the knobs of his spine. He zeroed in the rifle scope on the BMW
windshield. The cross hairs remained steady as the SUV slowed to make the
curve. He saw the Pathfinder pass through in a blur. He had a split second of
clearance as he squeezed the trigger. The windshield misted red and flashed
beyond his line of sight.