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With his lover imprisoned in a Russian gulag, the Gray Man will stop at nothing to free her in this latest entry in the #1 New York Times bestselling series
Midnight has descended on the Gray Man’s soul. Not only has his lover Zoya
Zhakarova fallen into the hands of the Russian intelligence service, but the CIA is
convinced she was executed. The one thing keeping Court Gentry going is his
repeated belief, “She’s not dead.”
He’s spent six months trying to bribe, bully, and kill his way into Russia to rescue Zoya.
There’s only one move left to him, but it’s something only a crazy man would try—an
organization of anti-communist believers who once helped political dissidents escape
from the Soviet Union. It’s a desperate ploy, but if he can reactivate the chain of agents
who’ve been dormant for thirty years, he’s got a shot.
But crossing the border is only the first of his problems. If Zoya is anywhere, she’s in IK-
2, Yavas, a former Stalinist gulag that squats in the icy cold 700 miles from the nearest
border. It’s a place where dreams and prisoners go to die. If he’s going to get Zoya out
of there, he’s going to need help. The kind of help that can start a war.
“Greaney’s action scenes are as kinetic and chaotic as ever—especially an exhilarating chase through the Moscow subway—but it’s Court’s tender humanity when it comes to protecting his allies that shines brightest. This is one of Greaney’s best yet.”
“Things come alive when Zoya is introduced. Her jousting with the power-mad twerp who controls her life in the Russian hellhole prison is on a different level. Does the journey end in lovers’ reunion? That’s for Greaney to tell in the last chapter, where he reveals the true reason for Zoya’s arrest and gives action fans what they want.”
“If there was any doubt whatsoever, MIDNIGHT BLACK – one of the best books I have ever covered – cements Mark Greaney’s place as one of the premier titans in the genre today. This is the book that Gray Man fans have hoped for, and rest assured, Greaney dials it way up, fully unleashing Court Gentry and holding nothing back to give his readers an unmatched experience that not only resets the bar but will, in all likelihood, ultimately prove to be the measuring stick future thrillers are judged against.”
The ringing of the midnight church bells cued the four men standing on the rooftop that the killing had begun.
They moved towards the edge of the roof of the parking garage, four stories above the street, leaving their Audi behind and advancing through a row of parked cars and vans so they could get a better view of the action that should now be under way just a few blocks to the north.
They’d expected gunshots, explosions, something, but after the twelfth low chime from the church next door, they all peered into the darkness, and they heard nothing save for the sounds of the street.
The men waited in silence a moment more, and then Vartan, only twenty-two years old, spoke in Romanian. “Something’s wrong. It should sound like a war.”
Iosif sniffed. He was thirty and muscular, with a trim beard that rimmed his jawline and no mustache. He answered back in Romanian. “What war? It’s just one guy.”
“Yeah, against four, five enemy? All armed. And . . . one guy or not, that dude is a killing machine. You know he smoked six men down in Sofia.”
“I heard four,” Alin retorted from Vartan’s other side. He was nearly forty, tall and overweight but strongly built; a thick red beard grew from his round face.
Vartan shook his head. “It was six. The last two with his bare hands.”
A fourth man, a small forty-eight-year-old named Avram, chimed in now. “I talked to a Bulgarian cop I know. He read the police report. The killings happened down in Varna, on the coast. Three victims. Two bodyguards and the main target, an underboss of the Kyulev crime family.”
Vartan leaned back against the grille of a tan Renault van in the middle of the row of six parked vehicles here on the edge of the rooftop lot. “I heard it was in Sofia, and I heard it was six.”
All four of the Romanians thought the other three to be full of shit, and soon the silence returned as they concentrated again, listening for the sounds of violence.
When it came it was disappointing. A single crack of a gunshot snapped somewhere behind them, maybe half a kilometer away, but no one turned towards this noise. Gunfire wasn’t anything special around here, and a shot from the south had nothing to do with them.
The Ferentari district of Bucharest had once been ranked the fourth most dangerous place to visit on Earth, and that was back before it really went to shit. The streets at this time of night were full of addicts, dealers, pimps, prostitutes, and gangsters.
There was no legit reason to move through Ferentari after dark.
The dealers, pimps, and prostitutes working the district were wisely frightened, though the addicts were blissfully unaware of the threats. But it was the gangsters who both knew what lurked in the shadows and remained unafraid, and the four on the rooftop belonged to this class. They were Balan Brigazi-Romanian mob-and as dangerous as this district was after nightfall, the four knew that no one around here would bother them.
They carried handguns inside their leather jackets, and Vartan, the youngest, also kept a tiny MP5K submachine gun hanging from a cable under his arm and extra magazines in his coat pocket.
But it wasn’t the guns that protected them.
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