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Deadly Additive
Deadly Additive
Deadly Additive
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Deadly Additive

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To soldier-of-fortune Jeb Sledge, the assignment seemed simple: Rescue an heiress and her journalist friend from Colombian guerrillas and collect a sizable paycheck for his troubles. But things rarely go as planned.After stumbling upon a mass of dead bodies, Kristin Halvorsen isn't about to leave Colombia without the proof she needs for the story of a lifetime, and Sledge soon finds himself ensnared in a chemical weapons conspiracy that involves civilians, guerillas and high-ranking government officials.But neutralizing the factory isn't enough. Where are the weapons that have already been fabricated? Who are the intended targets? How potent and far-reaching are the effects?A pursuit through South America, the U.S. and the Caribbean embroils Sledge and Kristin in a mission to prevent a catastrophic attack'and leaves Sledge fighting to save both their lives.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 7, 2012
ISBN9781611161861
Deadly Additive

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Title: Deadly Additive: A Jeb Sledge MissionAuthor: Donn TaylorPages: 316Year: 2012Publisher: Harbourlight BooksMy rating is 5 out of 5 stars.Kristin Halvorsen is in the middle of a remote Colombian village in pursuit of the story of her career. What she finds instead will be the story of her life and may be a life cut short by the guerillas who control the area. She has seen something she wasn?t supposed to and now she has been kidnapped by said guerillas. She and her friend from college, a rich daughter of a powerful businessman, have traveled to Colombia together and now her friend?s father must pay a large ransom to free them. What happens next, they don?t expect and soon they are fleeing for their lives in the dense countryside of remote Colombia where whoever has the most guns wins. Can she make it back to civilization to tell the world her story?Jeb Sledge is an independent contractor who performs tasks or missions for people with money who can afford his services and need things done quickly. He is a former soldier and is looking to retire after this last mission to listen to soft music, read books and maybe be trained as a PI. He is determined, battle ready and a high success rate on his missions. He thinks this mission is over once he makes a delivery to his current boss, but soon discovers there is much more going on. He is pulled in again to another aspect of his first mission and then thinks he is finished, but he isn?t. Now, he is tasked with tracking down a chemical weapons expert and his deadly cargo before it gets in the hands of terrorists.This is an action-packed, exciting story with espionage, subterfuge, gun fights, kidnapping and more! I was involved with the characters and their stories throughout the novel and couldn?t wait to turn the next page to see what was going to happen. Kristin is a woman with a lot of guts and determination. Sledge is a protector and mission driven former soldier. Both are trying to fill an emptiness in their lives that can only be filled by the One who made it. Both realize what they are searching for, but will they have time to find it before they lose their lives? I liked the character of Roger Brinkman, the former CIA member, who is still active and going strong at work while in his nineties! I am looking forward to reading more from this author as I like his writing style, story line and plot development. This is one I thoroughly enjoyed!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Title: Deadly Additive: A Jeb Sledge MissionAuthor: Donn TaylorPages: 316Year: 2012Publisher: Harbourlight BooksMy rating is 5 out of 5 stars.Kristin Halvorsen is in the middle of a remote Colombian village in pursuit of the story of her career. What she finds instead will be the story of her life and may be a life cut short by the guerillas who control the area. She has seen something she wasn’t supposed to and now she has been kidnapped by said guerillas. She and her friend from college, a rich daughter of a powerful businessman, have traveled to Colombia together and now her friend’s father must pay a large ransom to free them. What happens next, they don’t expect and soon they are fleeing for their lives in the dense countryside of remote Colombia where whoever has the most guns wins. Can she make it back to civilization to tell the world her story?Jeb Sledge is an independent contractor who performs tasks or missions for people with money who can afford his services and need things done quickly. He is a former soldier and is looking to retire after this last mission to listen to soft music, read books and maybe be trained as a PI. He is determined, battle ready and a high success rate on his missions. He thinks this mission is over once he makes a delivery to his current boss, but soon discovers there is much more going on. He is pulled in again to another aspect of his first mission and then thinks he is finished, but he isn’t. Now, he is tasked with tracking down a chemical weapons expert and his deadly cargo before it gets in the hands of terrorists.This is an action-packed, exciting story with espionage, subterfuge, gun fights, kidnapping and more! I was involved with the characters and their stories throughout the novel and couldn’t wait to turn the next page to see what was going to happen. Kristin is a woman with a lot of guts and determination. Sledge is a protector and mission driven former soldier. Both are trying to fill an emptiness in their lives that can only be filled by the One who made it. Both realize what they are searching for, but will they have time to find it before they lose their lives? I liked the character of Roger Brinkman, the former CIA member, who is still active and going strong at work while in his nineties! I am looking forward to reading more from this author as I like his writing style, story line and plot development. This is one I thoroughly enjoyed!

Book preview

Deadly Additive - Donn Taylor

Books

…you are anxious and worried about many things. There is need of only one.

Luke 10:41-42

1

Houston, Texas

By habit, Jeb Sledge disapproved of people who pointed weapons at him. The present offender’s tuxedo did not qualify him for an exception, and the silencer on his pistol only aggravated the offense.

They stood in the living room of Sledge’s drab one-bedroom apartment toward the northern edge of Houston. That morning his doctor had pronounced him fully recovered from last year’s wounds by an assassin. In the afternoon he’d refused an offer of two hundred thousand dollars to rescue the daughter of billionaire Steve Spinner from her Colombian kidnappers.

Sledge needed money. But Spinner had a reputation for ruthlessness hidden under a veneer of philanthropy. And the setup made no sense at all. When Spinner’s envoy grew insistent, Sledge threw him out.

Later that day, he’d gotten a call from Roger Brinkman, the retired CIA officer who now ran an information service known among experts as the best source for data on international crime. Brinkman didn’t say how he heard about Spinner’s offer, but he chided Sledge for turning it down. Vague rumblings of something new among the Columbian guerrillas, Brinkman suggested, and the Skinner problem might make a good takeoff point for the right operative.

Sledge said he’d think about it.

He did—for thirty seconds over dinner at a good Italian restaurant with reasonable prices and servers who didn’t introduce themselves. The dinner celebrated his advent as New Sledge. The old one was a hard case with a bad habit—volunteering for dangerous jobs to support noble causes. The cantankerous Old Sledge also enjoyed throwing his weight around, all two hundred and fifty pounds of it. But that Sledge had not survived the assassin’s bullets. The new one who’d sprung from his ashes would be too smart to take risks where there was no tangible reward. He would live the quiet life—find a safe administrative job on the periphery of law enforcement. And avoid noble causes.

Savoring the thought, Sledge drank a toast to his new self.

Afterwards, he drove his used Toyota pickup north on I-45 through the usual montage of glaring headlights and careening chariots. What he needed to complete the celebration was a good book and a CD of soft music. They would push back the world’s emptiness that closed in on him whenever the action stopped. Sooner or later, New Sledge would have to solve that problem.

But not tonight.

Tonight it was good just to be well again.

When he opened his apartment door, the security system gave no warning beep. Had he forgotten to set it?

Then the intruder switched on the lights, and New Sledge found himself looking into the silencer on a Walther PPK. He was caught. Too far in to dodge back outside and too far from his captor to attempt disarming him. Besides, the man weighed at least as much as Sledge and looked like he’d be hard to handle even without a gun. The ugly curl of his lip said he was itching for an excuse to pull the trigger.

Sledge’s anger blazed, but he raised his hands and controlled his voice. You’re welcome to my fortune—thirty-three dollars and sixty-two cents. You’ll find the silverware in the kitchen drawer, but it’s actually stainless.

Shut up and sit down. The gunman gestured with his left hand toward the sofa. In his right hand, he kept the pistol pointed at Sledge’s chest.

Wait a minute. A second gunman, as large as the first, emerged from the dark doorway of the kitchen and holstered a silenced pistol inside his tux jacket. Incongruously, his smile radiated good cheer. He spread-eagled Sledge and frisked him, then nodded to his companion and backed away.

Sledge eased himself onto the sofa, keeping his hands high. In a calm space somewhere behind his anger, he wondered how New Sledge should respond to this situation. Not that he had much choice.

The first gunman pointed with his free hand at the bookshelves that lined Sledge’s apartment walls. We don’t need two men to take this guy. He’s a cream puff. A bookworm.

The second gunman did not reply but called out, OK, Mr. Spinner. He’s clean.

A silver-haired man of medium build entered from the darkened bedroom and took a chair facing Sledge. The florid face above the man’s tuxedo showed a perpetual scowl, and he moved with the arrogance of someone who’d spent his life giving orders. His cologne wafted the subtle elegance only big money can buy.

The newcomer wasted no time. You’re Jabez E. Sledge?

Sledge nodded. He didn’t yet trust his voice.

I’m Steve Spinner. The visitor’s manner implied he’d come down from Olympus. My man who talked to you today described you perfectly. He said you looked like a turretless tank with the commander’s head sticking out the top.

Sledge was used to that kind of talk. People always mentioned the bulkiness first, his full two-fifty crammed into a mere six feet of height. Once accustomed to that, they said they found his face not unpleasing: broad, regular features, dark hair and complexion, with deep-set gray eyes that some found intimidating but others found intriguing.

So he dismissed Spinner’s taunt with a grunt. You didn’t come here to praise my looks.

The billionaire refused to be diverted. You’ve made quite a record: all-conference middle guard for three years at Southwestern, called in as a reservist, decorated for Special Forces work in Afghanistan. And that closet full of uniforms says you’re still in the reserves.

Sledge gritted his teeth. I hope you didn’t steal any of them.

"Not even those pretty gold leaves, Major. Spinner made the word sound like an insult. You could have played pro football, but instead you stayed for a full tour in the Army. Why?"

With danger apparently not imminent, Sledge played along. Two hundred fifty was too light for a pro. And some things in this world are more important than playing games.

Spinner raised a mocking eyebrow. Like going to Colombia as a soldier of fortune? Who were you working for?

Sledge ignored the question. Do you always dress for burglaries? If I’d known this was formal, I’d have rented a tux.

Spinner’s smile did not mitigate his scowl. Officially, we’re attending a dinner-dance in downtown Houston—one of my benefits to send food and medicine to children in North Korea. So don’t bother to call the police about a break-in. Dozens of leading citizens will swear I never left the benefit. Most of them will believe it.

Sledge suppressed another flare of temper. What happened to my security system?

Security company employees are underpaid. Spinner waved a manicured hand. I’m surprised you didn’t know.

Sledge shrugged. Cut the games. What do you want?

Accept my proposition. Spinner made it sound like an order. I assume my man didn’t make things clear this afternoon.

He said Colombian guerrillas were holding your daughter and a companion for ransom, and you wanted me to rescue them. I told him to pay the ransom. Kidnapping is one way the guerrillas raise money to buy weapons. It works because people know they’ll deliver the victim for the ransom. Trying to spring your daughter without paying will probably get her killed. That’s where the discussion ended.

He said you physically threw him out.

Not very far. He was heavier than I thought.

Halfway down the sidewalk was far enough. Spinner’s scowl deepened. He also said you made insulting comments about me.

Sledge grinned, happy to repeat himself. I said you’re stupid to think your food and medicine will reach the children in North Korea. Kim Jong-un and his generals will siphon them off for their army.

I have Kim’s personal assurance on that score. Spinner waved his hand again. But you’re wrong about the kidnappers. I did pay the ransom, but they kept my daughter.

Why? Did they want more money? This was a new twist. Curiosity crept in to dampen Sledge’s anger.

That’s the strange thing. Spinner’s fist pounded his palm. They returned six members of my daughter’s group. But instead of increasing their demands, they broke off negotiations. You’ll get a better picture if I start at the beginning—

Two things before you do. Sledge pointed to the first gunman, who held his pistol at ready. Tell Bonzo there to holster his weapon and sit down. And tell the guy standing behind me to come around where I can see him.

At Spinner’s nod, the surly gunman complied, though with obvious disappointment. The second also moved and sat, his manner still cheerful. They took seats well to the side, giving them the potential for a cross fire.

Spinner leaned forward. You may have heard that my daughter, Jocelyn, is a problem. She was only thirteen when her mother died. That was fifteen years ago. After that, I gave her the best companions and sent her to the best schools, but nothing worked. His scowl deepened. No subject or cause ever interested her. Nothing but having fun.

People don’t go to Colombia for fun.

Spinner gave an arrogant toss of his head. I forced her to go. She’s always been too irresponsible to have her own money. Her first marriage lasted ten months, her second less than six. When she came home last summer after the divorce, I told her she’d have no money at all until she learned responsibility.

So you sent her to Colombia?

I tried other projects first, but nothing changed. Spinner’s jaw jutted out. Nobody crosses me like that. Not even my own daughter.

He made a noise like spitting. Then that massacre happened in Colombia—a village called Chozadolor, at the edge of the Andes about seventy miles north of Bogotá. Paramilitaries wiped out the entire male population because of rumors the village was harboring guerrillas.

I read the news accounts. Only about half of the bodies were found, and those were butchered beyond recognition. No one was ever caught, nothing new developed, and the story died.

Spinner nodded. "I decided to revive the story and shock some sense into my daughter at the same time. One of Jocelyn’s classmates, a woman named Kristin Halvorsen, works for a national news magazine called Panorama Weekly. With her editor’s concurrence, I hired her to go to Colombia and investigate the massacre, with the condition that she take my daughter with her. Jocelyn’s other trips abroad had been to places like Paris or the Costa Brava in Spain. I hoped seeing third world conditions might arouse some compassion in her."

That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard—sending two women into a dangerous place, and one of them a spoiled brat. I can’t believe your daughter agreed to go.

Spinner threw Sledge a contemptuous glance. With no money of her own, Jocelyn had no choice. She’s always been glad enough to get away from me. Besides, I gave them good cover with a bird-watching expedition, five men and three women.

So what happened?

Within a week, guerrillas captured them and demanded a cool three million in ransom. I paid up, and everyone but Jocelyn and Kristin came out. When my agents demanded an explanation, the guerrilla spokesmen shrugged and disappeared. They broke all contact.

Did the people who came back say your daughter and her friend were...uh...in good condition?

They hadn’t seen them. Apparently, Jocelyn and Kristin were captured separately and held separately. That’s all I know.

The room grew silent. Sledge despised everything about this arrogant billionaire, a man so egomaniacal he’d rather see his daughter dead than free of his control. Perhaps for that reason, sympathy drew Sledge toward the daughter. Beyond that, the guerrillas’ uncharacteristic conduct piqued his curiosity, especially in light of the rumors Roger Brinkman had mentioned.

With an effort of will, he squelched those thoughts. They had no place in his life as New Sledge.

My new offer is four hundred thousand. Two hundred thousand up front, the rest plus expenses upon completion. Spinner stared at Sledge. What do you say to that?

Sledge’s temper surged again at the billionaire’s assumption that more money could buy him off. I say no. I’ve given up trying to fix the world. That, he thought with satisfaction, was a sentiment worthy of New Sledge.

Spinner glowered, but said nothing. Faint traffic noises drifted in from I-45. The tension in the room became almost palpable. Sledge decided to give Spinner a way out. I can name several guys who might take the job. They’re as well qualified for it as I am, maybe better.

That’s where you’re wrong, Sledge. Spinner showed a knowing smile. The guerrilla who kidnapped my daughter is Diego Contreras.

The name struck Sledge like a blow in the face. For a moment, pain surged through his old wounds as it had in the first weeks after the ambush. But deeper pain stabbed his heart. He’d thought he had grieved himself numb over Alita, the only person with whom he’d ever known tenderness, but now grief sprang up as powerfully as ever. For a fleeting moment he knew there was something he had to remember, something lost somewhere in the haze of pain and anesthesia. Then it was gone in a surge of the deep, flaming anger he thought he had buried long ago.

Spinner’s malignant grin broadened. I thought that would interest you. You get another crack at the man who shot you up and killed your sweetheart. He shifted subjects abruptly. By the way, it isn’t clear who paid your medical bills. I don’t suppose you’d like to say...

Sledge said nothing. Brinkman had taken good care of him, all things considered. When his thoughts returned to Spinner’s proposition, Sledge realized that the white heat of anger had made him reconsider. But not anger alone. If he survived this fool’s errand, the four hundred thousand would finance the training required for his life as New Sledge.

He sighed. If I do take the job, exactly what do you want me to do?

Find the two women. Spinner’s jaw tightened. And if they’re alive, bring them out. Your job is done when you deliver them to my home office in New Orleans.

Sledge remained cautious. You’d be smart to offer Contreras another million or so. This job will cost plenty beyond what you pay me. I’ll have to buy information and then mount two operations, one to divert the guerrillas and another to extract the women. They may be dead already, or they could be killed during the escape. In the end, you may get nothing but disaster for your money.

Spinner snorted. That’s my worry. You’ll be paid in any case. Half in advance and the rest upon delivery, with an extra hundred thousand if you kill Diego Contreras.

Sledge allowed an unpleasant grin to show. I’m surprised a philanthropist like you would suggest such a thing. Besides, you’ve spent years being a cheerleader for the guerrillas. Why the sudden change?

Now Spinner looked unpleasant. "Contreras cheated me out of three million dollars. As I said, nobody double-crosses me and gets by with it. You’ll do well to remember that."

Sledge made a point of changing the subject. You’ll give me information on the two women?

The billionaire handed him two black-and-white photographs and a page of typewritten notes. The photos showed attractive blondes who could have passed for either Dutch or Norwegian. They looked enough alike to be sisters. Neither was beautiful, but both radiated a lively energy Sledge found surprising. He’d expected Spinner’s daughter to be slack, but both women seemed equally alive.

The name Jocelyn Spinner was written in a masculine hand on the back of one photo. Sledge wondered why she was using her maiden name, but he decided not to ask. On the back of the other picture he read the name Kristin Halvorsen. He examined the two faces again, but found no clue as to the character or motives of either woman.

Another worry nagged at the back of his mind. He had the feeling Spinner was withholding something, but he couldn’t guess what it might be.

Spinner interrupted his thoughts. We’ve done what we can for now. I have to go back downtown before people get curious.

He stood, and Sledge rose with him. The two gunmen also stood. At a glance from Spinner, the cheerful one headed out through the front door. Sledge followed him, with Spinner and the surly gunman trailing behind.

Spinner paused in the doorway. One of my executives will contact you tomorrow. He turned on his heel and left.

The remaining gunman stopped in front of Sledge and sneered.

The anger and frustration of the evening boiled up in Sledge like a thermometer in a blast furnace. Almost before he thought, his right hand ripped upward with his full weight behind it. The heel of his palm struck the gunman’s jaw. The man toppled through the doorway and lay still on the sidewalk.

Spinner’s face reddened as he surveyed the fallen bodyguard. He threw a furious glance at Sledge. You’ve broken his jaw. Did you have to do that?

Sledge gave him a hard look. Of course not, he said. That was optional.

It looked like Old Sledge was back in business. And the prospect of vital action should, for a while, push back his brooding consciousness of the world’s emptiness.

2

Colombia

In a bare hut high in the Andes, Kristin Halvorsen looked into the black eyes of Diego Contreras and wished she’d never agreed to switch identities with Jocelyn Spinner. If she hadn’t, then Jocelyn would be suffering this third life-threatening interview. And she, Kristin, could rest with relative safety in the rat-infested hovel that had been their prison for the last two weeks.

Without the identity switch, though, she wouldn’t even be in Colombia. For Steve Spinner had been adamant. Forcing Jocelyn to travel as a lowly reporter rather than a rich heiress was part of his incredibly cruel plan to humiliate his daughter. And for Kristin the choice proved simple: no identity change, no story about the massacre. Traveling on false passports was illegal, but it gave her the chance at a blockbuster story that would catapult her into journalistic stardom.

Now she had the story, if she lived to tell it. And, of course, if she could find her way back to the place where she’d hidden the evidence.

She didn’t know exactly where she was now. She and Jocelyn had been brought here blindfolded, but they couldn’t be much more than twenty miles from the scene of their capture. The frigid air that made her shiver even with her jacket collar turned up told her they’d been taken much higher into the Andes. And she hated this grubby village of a dozen huts that served as a guerrilla headquarters.

The elevation had to be quite high, for her short walk through the village left her out of breath. Her nausea didn’t help either. Even in the fresh, cold air of this mountain valley, her guards, reeking of garlic and unwashed bodies, made her want to retch. Armed with AK-47s, they stood behind her now in this bare room. Seated in a lumpy, rough-hewn chair, she faced Diego Contreras across an unpainted wooden table.

Contreras gave her an intimidating glance, followed by a smile that went no farther than his lips. How is your journalist companion today, Miss Spinner?

So he was trying the good-cop routine today. He certainly should, after the way he’d threatened her last time.

Well enough for someone who’s being held prisoner. She returned the guerrilla’s stare and rested her arms on the table. When will you return us to my father?

I have great admiration for your father. Contreras leaned back in his chair with a gesture of relaxation that seemed too deliberate. For his daughter, too. You have shown us courage. I thought your journalist friend would have some spunk, yet she goes into hysterics whenever we question her.

Thank goodness for that. If both of us answered, we might get our stories crossed.

Kristin fixed her gaze on her captor. You didn’t answer my question.

She tried not to blink, determined not to show the terror that constricted her heart. The dark, heavily bearded man across from her, his fatigue sleeves rolled up to show the thickly matted black hair of his forearms, looked like a comic-opera parody of Fidel Castro. But the evidence she’d discovered showed him deadly as a cobra. Her hope of staying alive lay in his not knowing she possessed that evidence.

Good breeding will out, Contreras quoted, now seemingly affable. Your friend may be a good journalist, but your father gave you something more valuable. Genes that give you courage. Your friend goes to pieces over nothing.

It must have been the sight of so much blood.

The guerrilla’s black eyes flared. His body stiffened.

Blast! Why did I have to mention blood?

She’d known there was something odd about the blood, yet she’d blundered onto the subject in a way that could cost her life.

Nothing to do now but brazen her way through. I wasn’t ready for it, either. I’d been told that automatic weapons had savage effects, but I was shocked when we stumbled onto the bodies. She shook her head in feigned unbelief. I’d heard how brutal the right-wing death squads were. But I didn’t believe it until I saw their handiwork.

Contreras’s bodily tension eased a cautious fraction. Tell me again how you happened to find the atrocity.

Again? She made a disdainful face. Well...As I told you, we thought we’d seen every kind of bird in the area. Then this new one flew by, all yellow and orange. My friend and I followed it and got separated from the rest of our party. Kristin hoped she could lie better than Contreras. At least she was consistent.

We were trying to photograph the bird when we found the bodies. Then your men grabbed us. They smashed our cameras. She feigned exasperation. Now we can’t prove we discovered a new bird.

My men thought you were photographing them and their equipment. Contreras turned his palms upward. They were liberating that area from the paramilitaries, the scum who committed the massacre several weeks ago and murdered the men whose bodies you found. My soldiers are trained to protect military secrets. I’m not surprised they thought you were spies.

What a liar! Kristin hoped her face didn’t show her disbelief. Since you know we’re not spies, you’ll release us soon?

As soon as it is safe. Contreras’s smile again stopped short of his eyes. First, my guerrillas must finish clearing the area of paramilitaries. Then we will send you home.

Why do we remain under guard?

For your protection. You’ve seen what the death squads can do. We must return you safely to your father—a great man, as I have said.

Kristin’s journalistic instincts got the better of her. When did you know him?

Contreras’s eyes flickered for an instant. I met him during the eighties in Managua while our brothers there fought for social justice. Your father and I were helping them, but your country worked against us. His eyes

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