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The Delphi Technique: A Rex Dalton Thriller, page 1

 

The Delphi Technique: A Rex Dalton Thriller
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The Delphi Technique: A Rex Dalton Thriller


  The Delphi Technique

  ___________________________________________

  A REX DALTON THRILLER

  BOOK TWELVE

  JC Ryan

  About The Delphi Technique

  REX, CATIA, AND DIGGER are on Rhodes Island, Greece, when an assassin kills two people right in front of their eyes.

  They jump into action to help. The assassin flees, but Rex and Digger give chase, and when they catch up with her, she commits suicide.

  Back at their hotel, while busy reporting the incident to John Brandt, three masked men storm into their room with guns blazing.

  The trio is drawn into a CIA operation to uncover the identity and whereabouts of a terrorist mastermind about to unleash death and destruction across Europe.

  Your Free Gift

  As a way of saying thanks for your purchase, I’m offering you a free eBook if you join my newsletter here: JC Ryan Books

  Rex Dalton and his dog, Digger, visited the island of Olib in Croatia.

  A girl was murdered.

  The police said it was her boyfriend who stabbed her to death, but Rex and Digger had no doubt they were making a big mistake.

  Dalton decided to conduct his own investigation and bring the real killer to justice.

  A thriller with quirks and twists that will keep you guessing until the end.

  Click here to get it now.

  Dedication

  Dedicated to my good friend Mitch Pender, a military dog trainer, for giving me the idea for this series and guiding me through the intricate and amazing capabilities and psychology of those majestic four-legged soldiers.

  Mitch has a lifetime of experience and an exceptional depth of knowledge as a military dog handler and trainer.

  Epigraph

  “We see people in the Middle East begin to have dreams of a new Ottoman Empire where everyone will be subjected to some of what we’ve seen happen in those countries where we helped bring about an Arab Spring that’s turned into a Winter Nightmare.” Louie Gohmert, American attorney, and former judge serving as the U.S. Representative from Texas's 1st congressional district since 2005.

  Foreword

  The Delphi Technique is a work of fiction written purely for the entertainment of my readers. The names, characters, places, and incidents portrayed in the story are merely the product of my imagination or have been used fictitiously. Any likeness to actual people, alive or dead, businesses, companies, events, or places is entirely coincidental.

  Contents

  About The Delphi Technique

  Your Free Gift

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Foreword

  Contents

  Chapter 1 – A brush pass

  Chapter 2 – Giving statements

  Chapter 3 – We’ve got a situation

  Chapter 4 – It’s a mess

  Chapter 5 – About the professor

  Chapter 6 – It has to be stopped

  Chapter 7 – Speed, surprise, and violence of action

  Chapter 8 - Can you get my agents out?

  Chapter 9 – Leaving Athens

  Chapter 10 – The Delphi technique

  Chapter 11 – The debut

  Chapter 12 – Mobilizing the team

  Chapter 13 – Secured by encryption

  Chapter 14 – Now we’re going somewhere

  Chapter 15 – Talking to a Friend

  Chapter 16 – Meeting the Friends

  Chapter 17 – Meeting the family

  Chapter 18 – They knew his name

  Chapter 19 – Meeting the Ozmerts

  Chapter 20 – My twin brother

  Chapter 21 – The Ottomans

  Chapter 22 – Cravings for seafood

  Chapter 23 – Call the dog off

  Chapter 24 – To kill you

  Chapter 25 - It was bound to happen

  Chapter 26 – Something’s wrong with the Old Man

  Chapter 27 – Make a cold trail hot

  Chapter 28 – What now

  Chapter 29 - The mole

  Chapter 30 – The sniff of a cucumber sandwich

  Chapter 31 – Talking Turkey

  Chapter 32 – An affair to hide

  Chapter 33 – Dragut hunting

  Chapter 34 – An old man in a wheelchair

  Chapter 35 – Hey Jack

  Chapter 36 – Two candidates

  Chapter 37 – Bad news

  Chapter 38 – Singing the Star-Spangled Banner

  Chapter 39 – German cooperation

  Chapter 40 - Lunch in Little Istanbul

  Chapter 41 – We have to get ahead

  Chapter 42 – This is a job for me

  Chapter 43 – Tozlu’s companions

  Chapter 44 – A chat with Tozlu

  Chapter 45 – Who’s this woman?

  Chapter 46 – Where’s Dragut?

  Chapter 47 – That’s the plan

  Chapter 48 – A new business opportunity

  Chapter 49 - Let’s not count our chickens

  Chapter 50 - A bad feeling

  Chapter 51 – Contact with the enemy

  Chapter 52 – The most important backpack

  Chapter 53 – A prolific writer

  Epilogue

  Fact and Fiction

  More Rex Dalton and Digger

  Also by JC Ryan

  Your Free Gift

  About JC Ryan

  Copyright

  Chapter 1 – A brush pass

  Rhodes City, Rhodes Island, Greece

  Day 1

  IT WAS DIGGER’S CURIOSITY that inadvertently hauled Rex Dalton and his wife, Catia, out of their Greek Island holiday back into the world of covert operations.

  Usually, when the Daltons, both history enthusiasts, went exploring, they preferred to do it on their own, avoiding organized excursions where they had to adhere to strict timelines, predetermined routes, and often unknowledgeable guides. However, this morning after breakfast, when they visited their hotel’s information desk to collect information about the Palace of the Grand Master, the lady, speaking perfect Italian, changed their minds. “The guide today is Liza, the most knowledgeable and friendliest you’d encounter anywhere on this island. She’ll show you every nook and cranny of that palace, and she won’t rush through it. She also speaks five languages: Italian, Greek, English, French, and German.”

  On the bus on the way from their hotel to the palace, Liza, a petite, good-looking, middle-aged, friendly woman with dark brown hair, told the group, “Rhodes Island is the largest of the Dodecanese islands of Greece.” She spoke perfect English with a strong pronunciation of the r, characteristic of the Irish brogue. “Although Dodecanese means twelve islands, there are one hundred and eight islands; only twenty-six are inhabited.

  “Rhodes city is the historical capital of the Dodecanese islands. It was once the home of one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, the Colossus of Rhodes. It was a bronze and iron statue, thirty-two meters, about one-hundred and five feet tall. It was erected in honor of the sun god, Helios, for helping them fend off the ruler of Cyprus, who besieged Rhodes in 305 BC.

  “It’s believed that Rhode Island, in the United States, was named after this island.”

  She only had to use three of her five languages; English, Italian, and Greek, to inform her audience of twenty-one, excluding Digger. He was seated between Rex and Catia, staring at Liza as if he understood every word she was saying, irrespective of what language she spoke.

  When they arrived at the palace, Liza handed out a set of wireless earphones to each member of the group. Then tested that they could all hear her before leading them to the entrance of the Gothic-style building where she stopped to give them a quick overview.

  “The Palace of the Grand Master is also known as the Kastello. It was the ancient bastion of the Knights of Rhodes. That’s the name given to the Knights Hospitaller, a medieval Catholic military order, after they occupied the Island of Rhodes and established their headquarters here.

  “The original palace was constructed in the late 7th century as a Byzantine fortress. After the Knights Hospitaller came to Rhodes in 1309, they converted the fortress into their administrative center and the palace of their Grand Master. The palace was damaged in the earthquake of 1481 and repaired soon afterward, and that’s the palace you see here today.

  “Italy occupied the island since 1912 and repurposed the palace into this ersatz medieval style. Since the Italians rebuilt it, it served as a holiday residence for the Italian king, Victor Emmanuel III. In 1937, Benito Mussolini, the Fascist dictator from Italy, whose name can still be seen on the large plaque there at the entrance, transformed it into a summer residence for his high-ranking military officers and himself. After the war, it was converted into a museum.”

  Rex, Catia, and Digger were standing at the back of the semicircle of tourists listening intently to Liza when Rex became aware that Digger wasn’t paying attention to Liza anymore.

  Digger had a ‘Service Dog’ sticker attached to his harness. Rex had the necessary paperwork to back it up. But the big black Dutch Shepherd wasn’t a service dog. It was the ruse Rex had used ever since inheriting the dog from his friend, Trevor Madigan, a former SAS operative from Australia, who’d been killed in an ambush in Afghanistan in 2014. Digger, an Australian military dog, had been his companion since Trevor asked Rex to take care of him with his dying breath. Rex, mortally scared of dogs since he’d bee

n attacked by one as a small child, had agreed.

  And since Rex was a man of his word, he and Digger worked through their issues, and they’d become inseparable mates. Digger had acknowledged him as the alpha in their pack and accepted Catia into the pack from the moment he met her. Digger was Rex’s ‘best man’ at their wedding; he brought the wedding rings in on a dainty white satin cushion balanced on his nose.

  Although Rex never learned to give Digger proper commands, like military dog handlers do, over the years, working as a team on many missions, they had developed a unique communications system. Some of Rex’s colleagues believed that the two indeed spoke a language that only they understood. However, the truth was, it was always Rex who had learned to be very attentive to Digger’s behavior as he was doing now.

  Digger had gotten up from where he was sitting between him and Catia and moved forward a few paces. He was staring raptly at someone or something to Catia’s left. His ears were pitched forward, and his nose was wiggling a little. Rex could see he wasn’t alerting to danger, but something must have stirred his senses and curiosity.

  Rex followed the line of Digger’s gaze, and about four paces away he found the object of interest; a man, about five foot ten, dressed in faded black Levi’s jeans and matching Levi’s jacket, dark blue t-shirt, and black sneakers. The olive-skinned man, by Rex’s estimates, in his late forties, had a smooth-shaven face, dark hair, prominent cheekbones, and dark-brown eyes, lending him an air of intellect. The man carried a small black nylon shoulder bag, about six by twelve inches, hanging off his right shoulder. Although at first glance, his posture suggested he was relaxed, it was his head moving slowly from side to side, his darting eyes, and the biting of his lower lip that were telltales of anxiety.

  Rex was a highly-skilled former black operations operator with, among many other specialist aptitudes, exceptional spycraft skills. He removed his earphones, put his arm around Catia, pulled her close to him, and whispered in her ear, “The man to your left with the black shoulder bag. He’s on edge about something.”

  “How do you—,” she started, turned her head slowly, and looked at the man. After a few seconds, she nodded. Catia was a former Mossad agent, skilled in street craft, surveillance, counter-surveillance, hand-to-hand combat, and use of weapons. “What’s making him nervous? He’s not behaving like he’s a fanatic about to launch an attack,” Catia whispered.

  “No, he’s not aggressive. Digger would’ve warned us. I think he’s looking for someone.”

  “Questions?” Liza asked in three different languages.

  A few paces ahead of the Daltons was an old man with a black fedora hat and full-face silver beard, hornbill glasses with thick lenses, in a wheelchair pushed by a young woman with dark hair in her mid-thirties, dressed in dark slacks, sneakers, and sunglasses. Probably his daughter or his caretaker. The old man asked a question which Rex couldn’t hear.

  But Liza’s reply he heard. “Yes, that’s correct. Archaeologists found evidence that this was the exact spot where the ancient temple of the Sun-god Helios once stood and, in all likelihood, this is also the spot where the Colossus of Rhodes stood.”

  The old man asked another inaudible question. Liza replied, “Yes, in 1522, the island became part of the Ottoman Empire, and they used it as a command center.”

  The old man smiled and thanked her.

  “Any other questions?” Liza asked. When there were none, she said, “Please follow me.”

  The group followed her through the arched entrance and ended in the quad. Other groups varying in number from fifteen to twenty-five were already inside.

  While Rex and Catia surreptitiously kept Digger’s man in sight, they saw him opening the shoulder bag. They were ready to spring into action if a knife, gun, or bomb trigger came out of the bag—but he only retrieved a pair of sunglasses and a light-blue bucket hat with London printed in black on the front and donned them. He moved the black nylon shoulder bag to his left shoulder.

  “Ahh… signaling someone,” Rex muttered.

  “Ten o’clock. The blond man with the Roma cap,” Catia whispered.

  Rex spotted a Caucasian male among a group leaving the palace heading toward them. He was in his mid to late forties, blond hair, about six feet tall, blue jeans, black t-shirt, and blue denim jacket. On his head was a black baseball cap with Roma embroidered in gold on the front. A black nylon shoulder bag identical to London’s was draped over his left shoulder.

  They saw London making eye contact with Roma, and the very slight, almost imperceptible, nod from Roma.

  Roma and London were a few seconds and about ten to twelve steps away from making what was known in the lexicon of covert operators as a ‘brush pass.’ A technique typically used in a crowded public area, where operatives pass information to each other. In a properly executed brush pass, they won’t even stop walking; at most, they’d bump into one another. A common method of exchanging the information was for both to carry identical objects, such as a newspaper, briefcase, magazine, or, as in this case, black nylon shoulder bags, containing the information.

  Then they saw Roma come to a sudden stop and twist around. A tall woman with a shock of shoulder-length raven-black hair, large sunglasses, dressed in dark blue jeans with a white blouse and zipped up jean jacket, bumped into him. She apologized, took a step to the side, and kept on walking straight toward London, who stood about five paces away from Rex and Catia.

  Roma had turned back to start walking again, but he took only one step, grabbed his heart with both hands, and dropped to his knees without making a sound, then slowly tipped forward on his face.

  In different languages, people had started screaming, “Heart attack!” “Is there a doctor here?” “Get an ambulance!”

  By now, the tall woman was next to London. She stopped and turned to look back at Roma, then slowly turned sideways, looked at London, and said something to him. He turned to face her looking surprised, raised his sunglasses, and smiled. The woman put her arms around his neck, and he put his arms around her in an embrace.

  Digger started growling, and that was when Rex saw the stiletto in her right hand. Rex pulled the quick-release string on Digger’s leash and started toward London and the woman, but he was too late. The stiletto had plunged into London’s heart.

  London screamed and dropped to his knees; his hand clasped over his chest.

  The woman tried to rip the shoulder bag off London’s shoulder, but couldn’t get it off; his arm was inside the loop of the strap. The woman saw Rex and Digger coming, turned, and ran toward the exit, the stiletto still in her hand.

  London toppled forward onto the gray tiles of the courtyard floor.

  “Digger, follow! Don’t attack! Catia, help him,” he pointed to London. “I’m going after the woman.”

  As Rex set out after the woman, she was already more than fifteen paces away. Mass hysteria erupted as people started yelling, “Terrorists!” “Attack!” “Hide!”

  Digger was about three yards behind her, barking and yelping. Rex was worried that the woman, no doubt a professional killer, would hurt Digger with that stiletto if he came too close to her. But Digger must’ve understood the command not to attack as he kept his distance.

  As she exited the palace gate at full speed, she turned left and headed for the nearby copse of trees.

  Rex was closing in on her quickly. He was about seven yards away from her when she stopped and turned to face him and Digger with the stiletto in her left hand, swinging it in a wide defensive arc in front of her.

  Rex didn’t slow down. Digger had stopped out of her reach but kept on growling and snarling.

  With her right hand, she reached inside her denim jacket.

  A gun!

  Rex raced past Digger.

  When the woman’s right hand reappeared, there was a .22 Beretta pistol in it, and she was about to turn it on Rex. He was three steps away from her; he had the momentum, he leaped into the air and kicked her in the solar plexus with both feet. The force of the kick body-slammed her into the tree behind her with a grunting thud. Her sunglasses and the stiletto were gone. She had light-gray eyes, the eeriest, most lifeless eyes he’d ever seen. Contact lenses. She was shocked and bewildered and looked as if she was going to lose consciousness. The gun was still in her right hand, which was crossed over her breasts.

 

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