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Seven Ancient Wonders - Matthew Reilly [123]

By Root 432 0
made him sick to his stomach.

But now, right now, he worried if by breaking Zaeed out of Guantanamo Bay he had unleashed an unspeakable terror on the world.

Zaeed wasn’t going to abandon his quest for the Capstone, not when he knew where the final Piece could be found, not when it was this close. The terrorist wasn’t out of this race. He would reappear before the end.

West radioed Sky Monster and arranged to rendezvous with the Halicarnassus on some flat ground at the far end of the valley, then he and Pooh Bear headed out across the valley on foot.

They never saw the lone figure crouched on the rocky hill high above them watching them as they did so.

Never saw the figure pursue them from a careful distance.

Twenty-five minutes later, West and Pooh Bear, with Horus, strode up the rear loading ramp of the Halicarnassus, dirty, bruised and beaten.

Inside the main cabin, West paced, thinking aloud. Pooh Bear and Sky Monster just watched him.

‘Every move we’ve made, Judah’s known it ahead of time,’ he said. ‘We arrived in the Sudan, and he showed up soon after. Tunisia, the same. And in Kenya, hell, he got there before we did. He was waiting for us. And now Iraq.’

‘It’s like he’s had a beacon on us all along,’ Pooh Bear said. ‘A tracing signal.’

West pursed his lips, repeated Judah’s taunt from before: ‘“There is nowhere you can go that I cannot follow. There is nowhere on this Earth you can hide from me.” I think he’s had a tracking beacon on us all along.’

‘What? How? Who?’

West looked hard at Pooh Bear.

‘Four missing days, Pooh. Four missing days from my life.’

‘What are you talking about, Huntsman?’ Sky Monster asked.

‘Zaeed had a chip in the neck, implanted while he was imprisoned in Cuba, making him forever traceable by the Americans. I can’t account for four days of my life, Pooh, four days when I was exclusively in American hands.’

West stood up abruptly and grabbed the AXS-9 digital spectrum analyser—the same bug detector that he had used before to test for the locater chip in Zaeed’s neck.

He flicked it on, and fanned it over Pooh’s entire body. Nothing. No bugs.

Sky Monster was next. Also nothing. As expected.

West looked at them both. . .

. . . before he turned the wand on himself, running it up his entire body.

Legs: nothing.

Waist: nothing.

Chest: nothing.

Then the spectrum analyser came level with his head, and it started beeping off the charts.

Pooh Bear and Sky Monster gasped, speechless.

West just closed his eyes, cursing himself.

All the time he’d thought there had been a traitor in their midst—in particular, Stretch or Zaeed—but there had been no such traitor.

It had been him.

He had been the one leading the Americans to their location every single time.

Four days of his life: those four days he had spent in that American military hospital after his accident in the wargame exercises at Coronado.

Four days during which the Americans had tagged him with a microchip, so that they could keep track of him over the ensuing years.

Why? Who knew—because he had talent, because they wanted to keep track of everyone, friend and foe alike.

West couldn’t believe it. Australia was a close ally of America’s. And this was how the US treated it. America, it seemed, treated its allies no differently than its enemies. No, it was simpler than that: America treated everyone outside the US as a potential enemy.

He thought about Judah. Somewhere amid Judah’s equipment there was a GPS-equipped computer with a map of the world on it and a little blinking blip that represented Jack West Jr—a blip that had represented him for nearly 15 years.

The Americans had known about the safehouse in Kenya since Day One.

Likewise they had known about the mine in the Sudan from the moment he’d got there; it was the same for the Tunisian coast— which only West and Wizard knew about. It also meant that Judah and the Americans would know it was West who had busted Zaeed out of Guantanamo Bay. They wouldn’t have liked that.

West strode across the cabin, watched in stunned silence by Pooh and Sky Monster.

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