Matt Drake 8 - Last Man Standing
home in anger. Ben , Sam and Jo were murdered in the street. And Kennedy Moore —shot dead onboard a warship.
    What did they all have in common?
    The fact that they all expected to see each other again. The firm knowledge that, despite the anger and the miles apart, their last look had been one of friends that say “see you soon”, not “goodbye forever”. The fact niggled and messed with Drake’s mind. He never got to say goodbye; never told most of them how he felt. And what about all that was left unsaid? Unknown?
    Lost in time along with hearts , souls and minds that would never feel, never shine, never hold a loved one or a newborn child again.
    On his way to the funeral in Leeds, Drake made a detour. He took Mai to the place where Alyson died.
    With death playing such a major part in his life during the events in DC, and over the last year or so, it seemed right that, here, now, as they paid their respects to Ben and his family and were finally tracking down the enigma that was Coyote, that he visit the site where his wife and unborn child died more than eight years ago. The B-road was a meandering mess, replete with blind hills, curves and concealed exits from which tractors blasted out. More hazardous still were the steep and sudden drop-offs at either side of the road. No wonder the cops had ruled Alyson’s death an accident.
    When Drake reached the place , he pulled off the road and parked on the grass verge, front left tire partly in space. Mai had to clamber across the driver’s seat to get out and join him at the edge of the road.
    Drake stared down, eyes far away, oblivious to the fine English sleet that coated his head and shoulders. “They found the car on its roof. Eventually. Alyson . . . she died alone . . . in pain . . . knowing that her . . . her—”
    Mai laid a hand on his shoulder. “Matt. This will not help you. We have been too close to death of late. It’s like rubbing shoulders with the Reaper. Such exploits can only end one way.”
    Drake heard her words and immediately flashed onto her recent time in Tokyo. “What happened with you?”
    “We will talk later.”
    He nodded absently. The sharp slope, he saw, led to a jagged pile of rocks and a small stand of trees. How had Coyote planned it? And why? If Coyote actually was Shelly Cohen, then they had been friends. They shared a mutual respect.
    He was aware of what had happened to the Ninth D ivision. Thank God Crouch and some of his team had made it out. And to those that hadn’t . . . he bowed his head again, thinking about how death and destruction could swamp you with its relentlessness.
    Mai patted his arm. “We should go.”
    He took a last look, knowing that this was the last time he would ever visit this place. A raw sliver of hurt opened wider inside his gut. Not a sign remained. Not a single sign that Alyson and Emily had died here, alone. It shouldn’t be this way. When a man’s wife and unborn child died there should at least be some mark, some final sign or piece of evidence. It was all so—uncaring.
    Drake turned away and strode back to the car. When Mai had settled herself he put the car in reverse and then stamped on the gas.
    Worse was soon to come.
    ** *
    Drake found himself seated beside Karin, amidst a large crowd, on the afternoon of Ben Blake’s funeral. Seeing so many people both angered and pleased Drake. In the end Ben had forged his own path. The members of his band were there. His girlfriend’s grieving parents. Other college friends that Drake didn’t know. Kids that shared the block of houses where he lived.
    Mai , Alicia and Torsten Dahl stood on the fringes like dark-clad guardians, watching over it all. Komodo was seated to Karin’s other side, a great hulking black-suited figure with a soldier’s frame and tears in his eyes.
    Drake fought his way through it, thinking a war would be easier than a fallen comrade’s funeral. When the rituals were done and the formalities over, Karin turned to
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

September Song

Colin Murray

Bannon Brothers

Janet Dailey

The Gift

Portia Da Costa

The Made Marriage

Henrietta Reid

Where Do I Go?

Neta Jackson

Hide and Seek

Charlene Newberg