Tom Clancy Enemy Contact - Mike Maden Read online

Page 2


  The turbines whined as the choppers lifted in unison, arcing into the warm, starlit sky, streaking for home in single file.

  A heartbeat later, alarms screamed.

  Missile lock.

  Salvio grabbed a handhold as the helicopter plunged violently to escape, blowing auto-chaff in a steep banking turn. Through the gunner’s door he saw a fiery streak slam into one of his choppers and erupt in a cloud of flaming metal.

  The last thing Salvio heard was the roar of the exploding HE charge that tore his aircraft apart, killing most, including him. The screaming survivors perished when the burning wreck slammed into the ground five hundred meters below.

  In the space of thirty seconds, the entire Scorpion platoon ceased to exist.

  Proof of concept number one.

  2

  CRISFIELD, MARYLAND

  Jack pulled up to the curbless street in front of the modest one-story white frame house and killed the engine. It brought back memories. He hadn’t been here since his freshman year in college, when Cory’s mom cooked the two Georgetown students a roast. “Stick-to-yer-ribs food, Jack. That’s what you boys need if you’re sailing today,” she’d said. Taking the skiff Cory’s dad built out onto Daugherty Creek was one of Jack’s favorite memories.

  Cory’s working-class family was a lot like that little house. Solid, sturdy, dependable—and certainly nothing fancy. But Cory had been a good friend, and the memories Jack had from the summer road trip they took in their sophomore year, hiking fourteeners in Colorado, still made him laugh.

  Jack approached the front door with trepidation. He hadn’t seen Cory in years. Always meant to, but they both got busy. When his father died in his junior year, Cory gave up his dream of law school and dropped out of Georgetown to take over his father’s hardware store, and to care for his ailing mother. Jack made it out a few times that year, but Cory was too tied up with customers and inventory to really do anything but shoot the bull over coffee at the store. Jack’s academic plate was also overflowing. No hard feelings. Just a fork in the road. They went their separate ways.

  Jack found his dream job with Hendley Associates and The Campus.

  Cory stocked lumber and bird food.

  Cory’s mother died a few years back, but Jack missed that funeral—he didn’t even know about it until a year after she was buried. He meant to call Cory and offer his condolences, but it just felt too damn awkward after so much time had passed.

  Yeah, awkward.

  Some friend, asshole.

  Jack rang the doorbell. A moment later, a smartly dressed middle-aged nurse in blue scrubs opened the door. Jack noticed her lapel pins. Mary Francis was an RN and a nun. She smiled.

  “You must be Jack. Cory’s expecting you.”

  “Thank you, Sister.”

  Jack followed her through the neat and tidy home, the old wooden floors creaking under his two-hundred-pound muscled frame.

  “How’s he doing?” Jack whispered, as if in church.

  “As well as can be expected,” she replied at full voice. “It won’t be long now.”

  He followed her down a narrow hallway. A dozen family photos in cheap frames hung on the walls. One of them was a picture of Jack and Cory standing next to that skiff so many years ago.

  Ouch.

  “This way,” the nun said, pushing open a bedroom door. An invitation for him to enter alone.

  Jack halted for a second. He would’ve felt more comfortable charging blind into a Tora Bora cave with an empty pistol than dealing with what he imagined was waiting for him inside.

  “Jack, you came.”

  Cory smiled broadly, sitting up in his adjustable bed. He held out his hand. Despite the pallid skin and skeletal frame, he exuded warmth and grace.

  Jack sighed with relief. He crossed the room and took Cory’s soft hand. Jack was six-foot-one and powerfully built. More so now than when they were in school together. But back then, Cory had been six-four and two-twenty. A state champion lacrosse player. A real beast. Hard to believe the frail wraith in the adjustable bed had once carried a 175-pound Jack a mile and a half down a Colorado slope on his back after he twisted his ankle. Now Cory was half his former weight, if that, and could barely hold up his own arm.

  “Good to see you, Cor.”

  “Sorry for the long drive out. I know you’re a busy guy.”

  Ouch. Again.

  Cory saw the flinch. “Sorry, I didn’t mean it that way. I know working for a financial firm like Hendley Associates must be an eighty-hour-a-week job.”

  “Sometimes I bring a cot to the office. Better to sleep than commute.”

  “Good for you.” Cory lay back on his elevated bed, obviously fatigued by his efforts.

  Jack glanced around the room while Cory got comfortable, adjusting the IV needle taped to the back of his bruised and sallow hand. A large crucifix hung on the wall opposite the foot of his bed. Next to it was a framed wedding photo of his parents. Cory was an only child.

  Standing next to the bottles of pain meds was a framed novena—“Our Lady of Good Remedy.” A rolling IV stand with a bag stood on the far side of the bed.

  “So, I like what you’ve done with the place,” Jack said.

  “My designer calls it Medical Modern. Sort of like Mad Men, but with drugs instead of booze.”

  “I need to call her.”

  “Just wait a few more weeks. I know a place where you will be able to get all of this stuff dirt cheap.” Cory winked.

  Jack chuckled. He never knew anybody funnier than Cory. Or scarier, when he threw a punch. Fists like cinder blocks tied to tree trunks. Two bikers in a Jackson Hole bar discovered that side of Cory the hard way.

  Jack suddenly felt very self-conscious, his full beard and head of hair in stark contrast to Cory’s naked scalp. Chemo took that thick mane of curly blond hair, no doubt, but not the fire in those dark brown eyes.

  Cory reached for a plastic cup full of ice water, but it was too far away. Jack snatched it up and brought it close.

  “Thanks.” Cory sipped cool water through the straw.

  Jack’s eyes drifted back to the prayer card. “Dear Lady of Good Remedy, source of unfailing help, thy compassionate heart knows a remedy for every affliction . . .”

  “You go to church much, Jack?”

  “Me? Not enough. You?”

  “Kinda hard to wheel this bed down the aisle these days. But I do have my own nun, don’t I?”

  Jack glanced back at the large crucifix. He thought about the coeds that used to draw to Cory like flies to honey, and the beer kegs he’d polished off, almost single-handedly. “I guess you got some religion lately.”

  “No, I got some cancer lately. My faith renewed is the payoff.”

  “That’s great,” Jack said.

  Cory heard the cynicism in Jack’s voice. “Yeah, I know. Foxhole prayers and all of that. But I’m serious. There’s something about facing your mortality that brings eternal things into focus.”

  “Sure, I suppose it would.” Jack didn’t mention he’d stared death in the face a few times lately. Quite a few times. He had a hard time finding faith in the dark abyss of a pistol barrel shoved in his face.

  “Don’t be like me and wait until something like this wakes you up.”

  “Now you sound like my sister.”

  “I liked your sister. She doing okay?”

  “A doctor now, just like Mom. Same hospital, even. Married a great guy.”

  “Good for her. Your folks okay? I don’t watch the news much these days.”

  “They’re doing well. Thanks for asking.”

  Cory coughed violently. Thick gobs of phlegm rattled in his throat. He lurched forward, gasping for breath, his pale face reddening with the effort.

  Jack reached for a clean spit tray on the table and held it up to Co
ry’s lips with one hand while supporting his bony back with the other. Cory coughed and spat until a spoonful of yellow gel finally dropped into the pink plastic tray.

  The nurse burst into the room.

  “Cory?” She rushed over to the bed as Jack gently lowered him. She took the spit tray from Jack’s hand and set it down.

  “Thank you, Jack. Perhaps you can wait outside for a minute,” she said as she wiped Cory’s mouth with a tissue.

  “Sure, no problem.”

  Cory shook his head and waved a frail hand. “No, wait, Jack, I’m fine.”

  “You sure? I’ve got plenty of time.”

  Cory took another sip of water with the nun’s help. It surprised Jack how much effort it took him. He finished and sighed with exhaustion.

  “I’ll be right outside,” the nun said. “But call me before you need me, okay?”

  Cory smiled. “Okay.”

  She left, closing the door gently behind her.

  “So, Jack. Remember those fourteeners we climbed in Colorado?”

  “Sure do. I was thinking about that when I pulled up.”

  “Good times, man. Can’t tell you how often I thought about those days when I was counting pallets of drywall and roofing nails. Got me through some dark patches.”

  Guilt fell all over Jack like a bucket of warm motor oil.

  “I’m sorry about that, Cory. I should’ve—”

  “Oh, man. No. I wasn’t saying anything. I just mean climbing those mountains meant a lot to me. That high up. Clean air. And the quiet!”

  “Yeah, good times for sure.”

  “I’ve had a lot of time to think about my life lying here, ya know? Things done, and things undone. And to be honest with you, I wouldn’t change a lot. Don’t get me wrong. Arguing a landmark case in front of the Supreme Court would’ve been awesome, but it wasn’t meant to be.”

  “It must have been hard on you.”

  “It was, and it wasn’t. I just did what I had to do to take care of my family. You would’ve done the same thing for yours. I know you would have.”

  Jack nodded. He sure as hell would have. There wasn’t anything he wouldn’t do for his family, especially his mom and dad.

  “So really, no regrets. Well, except one. I never told you this, but I made two promises to my dad when he was on his deathbed. I’m proud to say I kept one of them—finishing my pre-law degree at Georgetown last year.”

  “That’s freaking awesome. Congratulations.”

  Jack stuck out his hand. Cory took it as best as he could.

  “Thanks, man. Summa cum laude, too, by the way.”

  “Not surprised.” Truth was, Cory was the sharpest knife in the drawer.

  “But I didn’t keep the other promise. And it’s killing me.”

  “You do look like shit. But I thought that was the cancer,” Jack said, hoping for a laugh.

  He got one.

  “Ouch, man,” Cory said, touching his stomach. “Don’t do that. It makes me hurt.”

  “Sorry.”

  “No, you’re not.”

  “No, not really.”

  They bumped fists. Friends again. For life.

  However long that was.

  “So, what’s the promise you didn’t keep?”

  Cory told him.

  Jack didn’t bat an eye.

  “It’s a lot to ask, I know,” Cory said. “But I couldn’t think of anyone else I could ask, let alone pull it off. But I hate to disappoint my dad, you know?”

  “Yeah, I know. But I think he’d understand.”

  “He probably would. But this is about me. I want to keep my word. And you’re my only shot.”

  Jack fought back the tears welling up in his eyes.

  “It would be an honor.”

  * * *

  —

  Sister Mary Francis brought in a bottle of twelve-year-old Macallan single-malt whiskey and two glasses Cory had purchased for the occasion. The bedridden man sipped water out of his glass while Jack worked his way through a couple fingers. They laughed and told stories like old college buddies do, but the light began to dim outside and Cory’s eyes began fluttering with fatigue.

  Jack left the room with Cory gently snoring and Sister Mary Francis’s heartfelt thanks.

  “If he needs anything at all, please call me,” Jack said, slipping her a business card. She handed him one of hers as well.

  “I will. Safe travels, Jack. And God bless you for coming.”

  Jack was surprised when his phone rang with her number just three and a half hours later as he sat at his desk, poring over a spreadsheet.

  Cory Chase was gone.

  3

  WASHINGTON, D.C.

  RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING

  Arnie van Damm, President Ryan’s chief of staff, sat in the office of Senator Deborah Dixon. There was something bigger than the massive, hand-carved antique desk separating them at the moment.

  As the chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a former chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Europe and Regional Security Cooperation, Dixon was one of the most powerful people in the Senate and arguably the most important foreign policy legislator. Treaties lived and died on her watch.

  Except this time, a bill didn’t “die,” it was killed—shot in the head and bled out by Dixon herself, a fellow Republican. It had been a straight party-line vote—except for Dixon, who crossed the aisle and voted with the Democrats.

  Arnie was furious. More important, so was President Ryan, along with Secretary of State Scott Adler, Secretary of Defense Robert Burgess, and the Army chief of staff. President Ryan himself had spent months carefully planning and negotiating a bilateral treaty with Poland to build and maintain a permanent army base on Polish soil. That base would serve as a forward defense against encroaching Russian expansion in the region in the face of a weakening Western European commitment to NATO’s defense.

  As chief of staff, Arnie had the task of greasing the wheels on Capitol Hill for any piece of legislation, including the one Dixon murdered. The senator was an old friend and a reliable colleague. Or so he thought until this morning. He polished his steel-rimmed glasses, trying to calm himself.

  “You’re kind of cute when you’re angry, Arnie. Anyone ever tell you that?” Dixon said. She was fifty-six trying to look thirty-six and nearly pulling it off. Pilates five times a week, Botox three times a year, a strict Paleo diet, and the best hair colorist in the District went a long way, but good genetics didn’t hurt. She was a striking woman, but it was her razor-sharp mind and not her head-turning figure that got her where she was today.

  Well, mostly.

  “If you think I’m cute when I’m angry, then I must be damned beautiful right now, Deborah. A fucking Adonis. I thought we had a deal.” Arnie’s bald scalp pinked with anger.

  “Well, you thought wrong. We had a lengthy discussion and I considered your words carefully. The subcommittee examined the matter from all points, including expert testimony both for and against. You know, Arnie, I do have a job to do. I’m a sitting U.S. senator, not a GOP apparatchik. I’m supposed to ‘advise and consent,’ not just roll over and wag my tail whenever the Ryan administration whistles.”

  “Cute speech, Deborah. You write it yourself?”

  “Let’s cut the shit, Arnie. What do you want?”

  “To begin with, I want a public apology. You embarrassed the hell out of the President—he’s already scheduled for a meeting with the Polish president in Warsaw next month to break ground on the base.”

  “First of all, I’m not apologizing for living up to my sworn constitutional responsibilities, and second, don’t blame me because you already ordered your golden shovels for Fort Ryan.”

  “Damn it, Deborah, that’s not fair and you know it. No one’s asking y
ou to shirk your duties. But if you had concerns, you should have brought them to us, privately, and we could have worked something out. But you know that and you didn’t say a thing. What the hell happened?”

  “Nothing ‘happened,’ Arnie, other than I performed due diligence.”

  “And what did your ‘due diligence’ uncover that we hadn’t already discussed ad nauseam?”

  “C’mon, Arnie. We’re adults here. Let’s get real. This is rah-rah bullshit. A giant photo op. This treaty sends exactly the wrong message at the wrong time to the Russians. It’s time to deescalate, especially with a new Russian president. Give him a chance to settle in. Putting a forward base on his perimeter forces him to respond. Otherwise, the Kremlin hardliners will have his head, literally if not figuratively.”

  “Si vis pacem, para bellum,” Arnie said, leaning in. “If you want peace, prepare for war.”

  “Si vis pacem, para pacem,” she countered. “We should try diplomacy for a change, instead of provocation.”

  “We’re not the aggressors here. We aren’t the ones who put troops over the borders in Ukraine and Lithuania.” Arnie was referring to the recent Russian incursions, pushed back or at least halted by a force of mostly American arms. “But you know that. What’s this really all about?”

  “I think I’ve made myself perfectly clear. This bilateral treaty—which is already pissing off our most important NATO allies, Germany and France—isn’t going to do anything but provoke another war with the Russians. We keep encroaching on their periphery, despite our promises to the contrary.”

  “The Russians are just making excuses—”

  “No, Arnie. Think about it from their perspective. The Russians agreed to allow Germany to reunify, but only after a NATO promise not to expand eastward. What happened? Germany unified—Russia’s worst strategic fear, at least on the Continent—and NATO expanded eastward anyway.”

  “That was before President Ryan’s time.”

  “But he still stands by it. It’s not like he’s pulling back our NATO commitments in the East. Croatia? Albania? For chrissakes, Arnie, Montenegro? You think we need Montenegro for strategic defense in depth? Don’t bother to answer that. We both know the answer. So do the Russians. You’re one of the President’s whiz kids. Tell me, what would you do if you were the Russians and the shoe were on the other foot?”

 

    Changing of the Guard Read onlineChanging of the GuardClear and Present Danger Read onlineClear and Present DangerHounds of Rome Read onlineHounds of RomeBreaking Point Read onlineBreaking PointTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 7-12 Read onlineTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 7-12Full Force and Effect Read onlineFull Force and EffectThe Archimedes Effect Read onlineThe Archimedes EffectCombat Ops Read onlineCombat OpsInto the Storm: On the Ground in Iraq Read onlineInto the Storm: On the Ground in IraqUnder Fire Read onlineUnder FirePoint of Impact Read onlinePoint of ImpactRed Rabbit Read onlineRed RabbitRainbow Six Read onlineRainbow SixThe Hunt for Red October Read onlineThe Hunt for Red OctoberThe Teeth of the Tiger Read onlineThe Teeth of the TigerConviction (2009) Read onlineConviction (2009)Battle Ready Read onlineBattle ReadyPatriot Games Read onlinePatriot GamesThe Sum of All Fears Read onlineThe Sum of All FearsFallout (2007) Read onlineFallout (2007)Red Storm Rising Read onlineRed Storm RisingThe Cardinal of the Kremlin Read onlineThe Cardinal of the KremlinExecutive Orders Read onlineExecutive OrdersLincoln, the unknown Read onlineLincoln, the unknownThreat Vector Read onlineThreat VectorThe Hunted Read onlineThe HuntedShadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces Read onlineShadow Warriors: Inside the Special ForcesEnd Game Read onlineEnd GameSpecial Forces: A Guided Tour of U.S. Army Special Forces Read onlineSpecial Forces: A Guided Tour of U.S. Army Special ForcesLocked On Read onlineLocked OnLine of Sight Read onlineLine of SightTom Clancy Enemy Contact - Mike Maden Read onlineTom Clancy Enemy Contact - Mike MadenFighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing Read onlineFighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat WingSpringboard Read onlineSpringboardLine of Sight - Mike Maden Read onlineLine of Sight - Mike MadenEndWar Read onlineEndWarDead or Alive Read onlineDead or AliveTom Clancy Support and Defend Read onlineTom Clancy Support and DefendCheckmate Read onlineCheckmateCommand Authority Read onlineCommand AuthorityCarrier: A Guided Tour of an Aircraft Carrier Read onlineCarrier: A Guided Tour of an Aircraft CarrierBlacklist Aftermath Read onlineBlacklist AftermathMarine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary Unit Read onlineMarine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary UnitCommander-In-Chief Read onlineCommander-In-ChiefArmored Cav: A Guided Tour of an Armored Cavalry Regiment Read onlineArmored Cav: A Guided Tour of an Armored Cavalry RegimentTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 1-6 Read onlineTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 1-6The Ultimate Escape Read onlineThe Ultimate EscapeAirborne: A Guided Tour of an Airborne Task Force Read onlineAirborne: A Guided Tour of an Airborne Task ForceDebt of Honor Read onlineDebt of HonorCyberspy Read onlineCyberspyPoint of Contact Read onlinePoint of ContactOperation Barracuda (2005) Read onlineOperation Barracuda (2005)Choke Point Read onlineChoke PointPower and Empire Read onlinePower and EmpireEvery Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air Campaign Read onlineEvery Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air CampaignEndgame (1998) Read onlineEndgame (1998)EndWar: The Missing Read onlineEndWar: The MissingSplinter Cell (2004) Read onlineSplinter Cell (2004)The Great Race Read onlineThe Great RaceTrue Faith and Allegiance Read onlineTrue Faith and AllegianceDeathworld Read onlineDeathworldGhost Recon (2008) Read onlineGhost Recon (2008)Duel Identity Read onlineDuel IdentityLine of Control o-8 Read onlineLine of Control o-8The Hunt for Red October jr-3 Read onlineThe Hunt for Red October jr-3Hidden Agendas nf-2 Read onlineHidden Agendas nf-2Acts of War oc-4 Read onlineActs of War oc-4Ruthless.Com pp-2 Read onlineRuthless.Com pp-2Night Moves Read onlineNight MovesThe Hounds of Rome - Mystery of a Fugitive Priest Read onlineThe Hounds of Rome - Mystery of a Fugitive PriestInto the Storm: On the Ground in Iraq sic-1 Read onlineInto the Storm: On the Ground in Iraq sic-1Threat Vector jrj-4 Read onlineThreat Vector jrj-4Combat Ops gr-2 Read onlineCombat Ops gr-2Virtual Vandals nfe-1 Read onlineVirtual Vandals nfe-1Runaways nfe-16 Read onlineRunaways nfe-16Marine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary Unit tcml-4 Read onlineMarine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary Unit tcml-4Shadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces sic-3 Read onlineShadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces sic-3Jack Ryan Books 1-6 Read onlineJack Ryan Books 1-6Cold Case nfe-15 Read onlineCold Case nfe-15Changing of the Guard nf-8 Read onlineChanging of the Guard nf-8Splinter Cell sc-1 Read onlineSplinter Cell sc-1Battle Ready sic-4 Read onlineBattle Ready sic-4The Bear and the Dragon jrao-11 Read onlineThe Bear and the Dragon jrao-11Fighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing tcml-3 Read onlineFighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing tcml-3Patriot Games jr-1 Read onlinePatriot Games jr-1Jack Ryan Books 7-12 Read onlineJack Ryan Books 7-12Mission of Honor o-9 Read onlineMission of Honor o-9Private Lives nfe-9 Read onlinePrivate Lives nfe-9Operation Barracuda sc-2 Read onlineOperation Barracuda sc-2Cold War pp-5 Read onlineCold War pp-5Point of Impact nf-5 Read onlinePoint of Impact nf-5Red Rabbit jr-9 Read onlineRed Rabbit jr-9The Deadliest Game nfe-2 Read onlineThe Deadliest Game nfe-2Springboard nf-9 Read onlineSpringboard nf-9Safe House nfe-10 Read onlineSafe House nfe-10EndWar e-1 Read onlineEndWar e-1Duel Identity nfe-12 Read onlineDuel Identity nfe-12Deathworld nfe-13 Read onlineDeathworld nfe-13Politika pp-1 Read onlinePolitika pp-1Rainbow Six jr-9 Read onlineRainbow Six jr-9Tom Clancy's Power Plays 1 - 4 Read onlineTom Clancy's Power Plays 1 - 4Endgame sc-6 Read onlineEndgame sc-6Executive Orders jr-7 Read onlineExecutive Orders jr-7Net Force nf-1 Read onlineNet Force nf-1Call to Treason o-11 Read onlineCall to Treason o-11Locked On jrj-3 Read onlineLocked On jrj-3Against All Enemies Read onlineAgainst All EnemiesThe Sum of All Fears jr-7 Read onlineThe Sum of All Fears jr-7Sea of Fire o-10 Read onlineSea of Fire o-10Fallout sc-4 Read onlineFallout sc-4Balance of Power o-5 Read onlineBalance of Power o-5Shadow Watch pp-3 Read onlineShadow Watch pp-3State of War nf-7 Read onlineState of War nf-7Wild Card pp-8 Read onlineWild Card pp-8Games of State o-3 Read onlineGames of State o-3Death Match nfe-18 Read onlineDeath Match nfe-18Against All Enemies mm-1 Read onlineAgainst All Enemies mm-1Every Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air Campaign sic-2 Read onlineEvery Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air Campaign sic-2Cybernation nf-6 Read onlineCybernation nf-6Support and Defend Read onlineSupport and DefendNight Moves nf-3 Read onlineNight Moves nf-3SSN Read onlineSSNCutting Edge pp-6 Read onlineCutting Edge pp-6The Cardinal of the Kremlin jrao-5 Read onlineThe Cardinal of the Kremlin jrao-5War of Eagles o-12 Read onlineWar of Eagles o-12Op-Center o-1 Read onlineOp-Center o-1Mirror Image o-2 Read onlineMirror Image o-2The Archimedes Effect nf-10 Read onlineThe Archimedes Effect nf-10Teeth of the Tiger jrj-1 Read onlineTeeth of the Tiger jrj-1Bio-Strike pp-4 Read onlineBio-Strike pp-4State of Siege o-6 Read onlineState of Siege o-6Debt of Honor jr-6 Read onlineDebt of Honor jr-6Zero Hour pp-7 Read onlineZero Hour pp-7Ghost Recon gr-1 Read onlineGhost Recon gr-1Command Authority jr-10 Read onlineCommand Authority jr-10Tom Clancy's Power Plays 5 - 8 Read onlineTom Clancy's Power Plays 5 - 8Checkmate sc-3 Read onlineCheckmate sc-3Breaking Point nf-4 Read onlineBreaking Point nf-4Gameprey nfe-11 Read onlineGameprey nfe-11The Hunted e-2 Read onlineThe Hunted e-2Hidden Agendas Read onlineHidden AgendasDivide and Conquer o-7 Read onlineDivide and Conquer o-7