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Authors: David Baldacci

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No Time Left

BOOK: No Time Left
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No Time Left
by David Baldacci
Contents

Cover

Also by David Baldacci

No Time Left

About the Author

Look for David Baldacci’s new thriller featuring Sean King and Michelle Maxwell

Don’t miss any of David Baldacci’s fantastic books

Copyright

ALSO BY DAVID BALDACCI

Absolute Power

Total Control

The Winner

The Simple Truth

Saving Faith

Wish You Well

Last Man Standing

The Christmas Train

Split Second

Hour Game

The Camel Club

The Collectors

Simple Genius

Stone Cold

The Whole Truth

Divine Justice

First Family

True Blue

Deliver Us from Evil

Hell’s Corner

An original short story by
New York Times
bestselling author David Baldacci.

NO TIME LEFT

F
RANK
B
ECKER
was exceptionally good at his job and took great pride at being so exceptionally good. He took his client’s orders promptly
and carried them out with professionalism and attention to detail. This was not simply being a sound businessman or even demonstrating
altruism. It was very much in Becker’s interests to sweat the details, to obsess over them in fact. If he wanted to survive.

He was a small man with an ego many times the size of his body. A fat baby, he’d grown into a trim, methodical adult who did
not overindulge in anything. He was single, lived quietly except when he was working, and had seen a large slice of the world
because in his particular area of expertise there were no borders. He never expected to marry because that would be complicating,
and he never desired to have children because that would be pointless.

He now stood outside on the curb in front of a modern building in the middle of a city that had seen more prosperous days.
It was making a comeback of sorts, to the extent that steel, asphalt, and concrete and the populations that reside in and
on them can have second chances. And it was a historical city with many sites of cultural significance that could draw tourists.

Becker didn’t care about any of this. He had flown here for one reason only and it had nothing to do with tourist sites or
second chances.

He lit a cigarette and blew the smoke out his nostrils as he’d watched his father do when Becker was a child. For many years
he’d longed to release smoke out his nostrils like his father. While some sons pantomimed shaving while watching their old
man, Becker had watched his dad smoke and exhale, memorizing the technique and the timing. And at age sixteen he’d accomplished
his goal, but not without some coughing and hacking. Now he’d become an expert at nostril smoke exhalation, and he did it
with a certain style. That was one of only two things he did that made him stand out a bit. In every other aspect of his life,
Becker blended right into the crowd. The bland suits he wore, the low decibels of his speech, his everyman’s features, and
the vacant expression in his eyes were all designed to place everyone’s attention on any location other than him.

He drew a bit of tobacco off his tongue as his gaze flickered like a dying light bulb at the tall, thin man in the excellent
suit where each jacket cuff showed the exact same margin of white shirt underneath. He was pushing through the glass double
doors of the downtown office building and began walking down the street. Becker bought a newspaper from a vendor and headed
in the same direction. The other fellow was a prosperous and pleased-looking gent principally because he was very successful
at what he did. Indeed, he owned the building he’d just exited. He’d accumulated lots of money, all of it legally, and gave
a substantial portion of it away to good works. He was married to a lovely and refined woman and with her had had three bright
children who would soon make their positive marks on the world. He had few enemies in the world.

But as Becker knew, it took only one determined adversary to change your life.

Becker folded the paper in half and carried it under his left arm, leaving his right one free to swing the umbrella he carried.
It didn’t necessarily look like rain today but the weather person had cautioned folks that morning that a thunderstorm was
certainly possible given the recent atmospheric potboilers of heat and humidity. He wore gloves though the day was not cold.
This was the second thing he did that was out of the ordinary, but vanity left him no option. The gloves were black leather
and had cost him two hundred dollars. He considered them well worth the price.

The fellow up ahead had his daily rituals. A walk during lunchtime was one of them. From watching him the past four days Becker
knew that he would head south down one block, turn left, proceed to the park, enjoy the trees and birds and then retrace his
steps and return to his office. Rituals like that were nice, comforting. And completely asinine, Becker knew. He had no such
routines. At any given minute of his day no one would be able to tell where he would be based on the previous day’s experience.
Most people embraced sameness; Becker raced from it. He knew how deadly routine could be if someone wanted to do you harm.

The man slowed. There was a crowd gathered at the corner. It seemed like something of significance was coming down the street
and for this reason the police were holding folks back. Perhaps it was a parade or an official motorcade carrying a suitably
important person, important enough indeed to warrant traffic police and clogged intersections. Like a rugby scrum at the corner,
folks were massing. Some broke off from this pack and were craning their necks to see who or what was coming. Becker had picked
this day based solely on this event happening at this precise moment. The fellow he was watching reached the intersection
and joined in the head craning and standing on tiptoes to see over the jostling crowd. As more people packed the spot, it
became like a log-filled river with a strained dam ready to burst. The cops sweated and pushed and cursed the citizens into
some degree of order. Becker smiled at their plight. He had never much liked cops. His old man had been a policeman after
a failed attempt at a career running a butcher’s shop in a small town. He’d moved to the city when Becker was still a baby.
After he started wearing the blues he had taken to beating Becker with his nightstick after he came home and downed a few
shots of gin so cheap and strong that it could burn a hole in metal. That and the smokes were his dad’s chief vices, other
than beating his son while Becker’s stepmother looked on, drink in hand, and gave advice on where to hit him next. Becker’s
real mother, he’d been told, had died at childbirth. That was all he knew. That was more than he ever cared to know actually.
He doubted his real mother would have been any more loving than his stepmother.

As the police used their bodies and barricades and the strength of their lungs to keep the human logs back on the curb Becker
angled to the left and stepped further into the crowd. It took him ten seconds to work his way forward, using pointy elbows
and apologetic looks at folks he pushed past. Now he was standing directly behind the man. He checked his watch. He had a
contact who’d given him a heads-up on this traffic-snarling event. In one more minute the limo and the surrounding trucks
with bodyguards would be passing by. He edged closer. Before he slipped the newspaper into his coat pocket he glanced at the
date. May 5, 2000. His birthday was next week. He would turn fifty. His celebration would consist of dinner alone and no presents.
He cared for birthdays even less than he did beatings.

He counted the moments off in his head. This was really unnecessary because the crowd’s collective energy spiked when the
motorcade drew within sight of the intersection. He started taking shallow breaths. It was not to control his nerves. For
all he knew he had none. He wanted to reduce his oxygen a bit, to get a natural high from what he was about to do. He’d found
it better than sex actually, because he had no concerns about pleasing anyone other than himself.

“There he is!” cried out one person.

Becker’s right hand increased its grip on the handle of the umbrella. He edged the point of the device upward and forward
at the same time. The limo was passing, and the crowd had started screaming and waving. Becker thrust the tip into the flesh
and then in the next motion moved to the side and flitted away.

As the other fellow rubbed the back of his thigh where the stinging impact had occurred, Becker was walking away, casually
reading his newspaper with one hand while he twirled his umbrella with the other.

The man’s obituary appeared in the city newspaper two days later. He had succumbed to some inexplicable malady that had left
him in agony before killing him. An autopsy would be done to see what had caused the poor fellow’s demise. His bereaved family
lay in ruins, his business disintegrating without his stalwart hand at the helm.

As Becker sat in his apartment a thousand miles away reading the account on the computer he knew he could save the poor medical
examiner the trouble.

“Compound 1080,” he said aloud. He knew that the man had died of ventricular arrhythmias. Compound 1080, discovered by German
chemists during World War II and used in various pesticides, disrupted cellular metabolism and with it the citric acid cycle,
also known as the Krebs Cycle, depriving cells of energy. The poison worked rapidly and did incredibly unpleasant things to
the person injected with it. The cylinder in Becker’s umbrella point had been filled with enough Compound 1080 to finish off
the fellow in a matter of hours. There was no antidote and his last few hours of life, Becker knew, had been filled with unimaginable
pain that no human could withstand. He had no doubt screamed to his God for mercy. He was a religious man, Becker knew, having
followed him and his beautiful family to Mass the Sunday before plunging his umbrella point into the unfortunate gent’s hamstring.
His God had not answered back. Even all-powerful gods bowed before poisons with no known antidotes.

Becker was a student of history, or at least certain esoteric parts of it. He’d gotten the idea of the umbrella delivery system
from an attack carried out by the Bulgarian secret police in the 1970s against a person making trouble for the government.
Why reinvent the wheel? However, he had put his original spin on the matter because the Bulgarians had used that old standby,
ricin, as the killing agent. Compound 1080 was, at least in his mind, far classier.

He used his computer to check his bank account, making sure that the remainder of his kill fee had reached his overseas bank.
He would never read or think about the man again. He would not mentally commiserate with the widow or the children who’d lost
their father. There was nothing productive about that. If he had those types of feelings, or weaknesses rather, he would not
have chosen this line of work. It was a job, just a job. And it was time to move on to another one. Becker was much in demand.
That came from never having failed and being unwaveringly discreet.

A week later the letter arrived in the mail. It was time to go to work again.

He stepped aboard another plane, landed, rented a car, and drove to the man’s house out near the water. It was a beautiful
estate set amid rows of mature oak and maple trees, fat bushes draped in bloom, flower-lined stone and gravel paths that meandered
in and out of sight. The home itself was large and at least two centuries old with the plentiful trappings of that era’s architecture,
gables and Doric columns and balustrades, lichen-covered ashlar quoins at the corners and rows of arched windows in front.
He was ushered into the library by a dour woman in a black maid’s uniform. The shelves were filled with old books that looked
well read, and the vast room had a pleasant aroma of mingled scents, leather, tobacco and candle wax.

The man who joined him moments later was tall and cadaverous, with a horseshoe of white hair remaining on his head. His mustache
drooped over his small mouth. His teeth looked false. He wore a set of ancient tweeds, with an overly starched collared shirt
and a drab tie that disappeared down into a waistcoat, which looked as though it would be scratchy to the touch. Across its
front was a fat watch on a gold chain. He sat down behind an enormous mahogany desk meticulously organized and motioned for
Becker to sit across from him. Becker had sat across from many clients at meetings like this. They were all different in terms
of sophistication and motivation, yet there was something about the old house, room and man that bothered Becker. Yet details
about his client were not his concern. He was here to listen and accept the assignment or not. Becker crossed his legs and
waited expectantly. He never spoke until the potential client did. At this point in his career, he wanted to feel challenged.
Early on he would accept whatever request came his way. Now he was more selective. Most tasks required weeks of planning and
he wanted to spend it only on something he felt was worthy of his talents. Life was too brief, nearly as brief as the people
he was paid to kill.

BOOK: No Time Left
13.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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