The Kat Bronsky Thrillers: The Last Hostage and Blackout

The Kat Bronsky Thrillers: The Last Hostage and Blackout

by John J. Nance
The Kat Bronsky Thrillers: The Last Hostage and Blackout

The Kat Bronsky Thrillers: The Last Hostage and Blackout

by John J. Nance

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Overview

Two novels by a New York Times–bestselling author who can “keep even the most experienced thriller addicts strapped into their seats for the whole flight” (People).

Featuring FBI hostage negotiator Kat Bronsky, these are two stories of pilots, passengers, and planes in peril that move at supersonic speed.
 
The Last Hostage: When airline pilot Ken Wolfe learns that the presumptive nominee for US attorney general is on his flight, his blood runs cold. Rudolph Bostich bungled the case after Wolfe’s daughter was kidnapped and killed—and let the perpetrator walk. Now Wolfe is prepared to do anything for revenge, including hijacking his own plane. It’s up to FBI agent, psychologist, and rookie hostage negotiator Kat Bronsky to solve the mystery of an eleven-year-old girl’s murder and save the lives of 130 terrified passengers.
 
Blackout: A Boeing/McDonnell-Douglas MD-11 jetliner crashes into the Gulf of Mexico a mile inside Cuban waters, killing all onboard. The last three minutes on the plane’s cockpit voice and data recorders have been erased. Was it a massive mechanical failure or an act of terrorism? When another airliner goes down after its pilots are flash-blinded midflight, Kat Bronsky races from the jungles of Southeast Asia to the forests of the American Northwest to unmask the conspirators before the entire American airline industry comes crashing out of the sky.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781504047487
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 08/08/2017
Series: The Kat Bronsky Thrillers
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 1540
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

About The Author
John J. Nance is the author of thirteen novels whose suspenseful storylines and authentic aviation details have led Publishers Weekly to call him the “king of the modern-day aviation thriller.” Two of his novels, Pandora’s Clock and Medusa’s Child, were made into television miniseries. He is well known to television viewers as the aviation analyst for ABC News. As a decorated air force pilot who served in Vietnam and Operation Desert Storm and a veteran commercial airline pilot, he has logged over fourteen thousand hours of flight time and piloted a wide variety of jet, turboprop, and private aircraft. Nance is also a licensed attorney and the author of seven nonfiction books, including On Shaky Ground: America’s Earthquake Alert and Why Hospitals Should Fly, which, in 2009, won the American College of Healthcare Executives James A. Hamilton Award for book of the year. Visit him online at www.johnnanceassociates.com.
John J. Nance, aviation analyst for ABC News and a familiar face on Good Morning America, is the author of several bestselling novels including Fire Flight, Skyhook, Turbulence, and Orbit. Two of his novels, Pandora's Clock and Medusa's Child, have been made into highly successful television miniseries. A lieutenant colonel in the US Air Force Reserve, Nance is a decorated pilot veteran of Vietnam and Operations Desert Storm/Desert Shield. He lives in Washington State.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Aboard AirBridge Flight 90, Colorado Springs International Airport, Gate 8. 9:26A.M.

The captain was late.

Annette Baxter, the lead flight attendant on AirBridge Flight 90 to Phoenix, tossed back her shoulder-length red hair and studied her watch as she turned toward the cockpit. She could see the copilot's left hand adjusting things on the overhead panel as he ran through his preflight procedures, but she could see that the left seat — the captain's seat — was still empty.

As small as AirBridge was, there always seemed to be a new pair of pilots up front on every other leg. Annette paused and closed her eyes briefly, trying to recall the copilot's name. He was barely in his mid-twenties and already a two-year veteran of AirBridge, sandy-haired and almost too cute to be acting like such a gentleman. Yet he had shaken her hand on boarding and greeted her with perfect formality. She'd had to suppress a giggle.

David! David Gates, like the musician. She smiled to herself. The real David Gates was closer to her generation. Probably even a grandfather by now. This right-seater was just a kid. She leaned into the tiny cockpit and gestured to the empty captain's seat.

"David, who's our captain today, and is he planning on joining us sometime before takeoff, or is he going to meet us in Phoenix?" The young copilot looked around with a startled, defensive expression, and she held out her hand in a stop gesture.

"I'm kidding! I've got a weird sense of humor. You'll get used to it."

"I'm sure he's on his way," Gates said with obvious caution. "I saw him in operations."

"Oh, good. I was worried he might be stuck in traffic, or something worse." She patted his shoulder, cautioning herself not to act too motherly. She refused to think of herself as motherly. "I'm not panicked. I'm well aware we've still got twenty or thirty seconds before we're late and our airline goes bankrupt as a direct result."

There was a tentative smile from the right-seater.

She tossed her hair again and leaned in farther. "So, who is the supreme commander today?"

"Captain Wolfe."

She paused involuntarily. "Ken Wolfe?"

"Yes ... you know Ken?" he asked.

She nodded, her eyes focused outside the copilot's window. "We've flown together many times. How about you?"

Gates nodded. "Several times." He watched her carefully, but added no more.

Annette looked at him and straightened up with a thin smile. "Well, if Ken slips in without my seeing him, tell him I'll be up shortly, and tell him we've got a legal celebrity aboard today in first class. In the back, however, we have a well-dressed 'Mikey.' He hates everything. I expect him to be trouble."

"You need me to come back and talk to him?"

She shook her head, trying not to smile at the image of the baby-faced five-foot-nine first officer reading the riot act to the very senior, very demanding, very self-important stuffed shirt in 6C.

"No, it's not that bad, yet. I can handle him with whips and chairs. I just need to brief the captain."

"Who's the celebrity?" the copilot asked.

"It's a surprise. I'll brief both of you later."

"What's a surprise?" A deep male voice filled her left ear as Annette turned to find Ken Wolfe standing in the cockpit door.

"Ken! Good to see you. I was just ..." she gestured toward the copilot as she realized she was blocking his way. "Here ... let me move into the galley."

"You were talking about a surprise?"

She nodded. "I'll let you get settled, then I'll tell you."

He smiled and nodded as he moved into the cockpit. He placed his flight bag to the left of the captain's chair and turned to greet the copilot with a handshake before sitting down.

Ken Wolfe let his eyes move with practiced familiarity around the cockpit as he completed the mental transition to airline captain, his mind focused exclusively on the task of orchestrating an airline flight. It was a comforting ritual, the copilot briefing, the flight attendant briefing, the cockpit setups, and the paperwork duties. Even the presence of a malcontent businessman in coach as reported by Annette had an element of comfort about it — a business-as-usual veneer.

"You need me to come back and talk to the man?" Ken asked.

"David, here, made the same offer," she replied, arching her thumb at the copilot. "No, but something tells me our long-suffering passenger will feel even more deprived if he doesn't succeed in having a really bad day. He wants a meal, not peanuts, he hates our coffee, he doesn't like the 'feel' of the seats, he's angry I told him to turn off his cellular phone, and he's upset I won't let him keep his briefcase at his feet during takeoff."

"Oh, is that all?" Ken replied, forcing a smile. "Any idea who the S.O.B. is?"

She smiled and nodded. "His name is Blenheim. The jerk runs a Canadian Rockies bus tour outfit in Seattle. He's sort of a travel agent, and he's livid because we didn't give him first class for free. But, to balance the equation, we've got a celebrity legal eagle in first class who's a real gentleman. That's the surprise."

The captain looked puzzled. "I'm sorry ... who're you talking about?"

"Well-l-l," Annette stretched the word and handed the man's business card to the captain as if it were a trophy.

Ken smiled at her before looking down at the gold seal that adorned the upper left-hand corner. It was the logo of the United States Department of Justice. His eyes moved to the clear, black type in the middle of the card. He blinked and looked again.

"Rudolph Bostich."

"I read earlier this week," Annette was saying, "that he's the frontrunner for Attorney General of the United States. The President is supposed to be submitting his name to Congress this week."

She watched the captain for a few seconds, puzzled at his silence. "You okay?"

All the blood had drained from Wolfe's face, and the hand holding the card was shaking slightly. Annette heard him take a ragged breath and swallow hard.

"I'm okay, Annette. Just a scratch in the throat," he said in a strained monotone before looking back at her suddenly, modulating his words. "Where is ... Mr. Bostich?" He smiled a partial smile that wasn't real, his eyes vacant and distracted.

"He's in seat One-A, Ken. Should I relay a message or something?"

"No!" Wolfe handed back the business card as if it were a spider and shook his head vigorously, his response sharp. "No, please don't."

She started to say something else, then backed through the cockpit door in alarm as Ken suddenly threw off his seatbelt and lunged toward her, questioning through tight lips, "Anyone in there?" with a quick gesture toward the forward lavatory located just behind the cockpit.

Annette glanced at the lavatory door in confusion. "It's empty," she managed, but he was already brushing past her to slip inside. His face was pasty.

She heard the lock slide into place, followed immediately by the sound of vomiting.

CHAPTER 2

Aboard AirBridge Flight 90. 9:44 A.M.

With a late departure behind them, first officer David Gates made the 'flaps up' call as the powerful 737 climbed southbound a thousand feet above the suburbs of Colorado Springs, soaring into the clear blue sky with an amazing view of Pike's Peak on his right.

This was David's leg, and he relished the chance to fly the Boeing and revel in the feel of her — yet a corner of his consciousness was working on the problem of what in the world had been going on with the captain back at the gate.

"Roger, flaps up," Ken Wolfe repeated. "I'm setting speed two-ten knots, and level change."

Even his voice sounded different now. Not exactly carefree, but calm and collected, where he'd sounded haunted and distracted just minutes before.

Why? Just because a national figure had come on board?

But Gates just couldn't get the captain's sudden trip to the lav out of his mind. Departure time had come and gone, but the captain had remained inside. David had left his seat then and tapped on the lavatory door to ask if everything was all right. The captain's pained voice from within had been really unsettling — more of an agonized whine than a voice. David was prepared to alert crew scheduling that they might have a sick pilot to replace when the lav door opened suddenly and Ken Wolfe emerged, looking strangely fit and serene. He'd smiled at his copilot and slipped back into the left seat as if nothing had happened.

"Are you okay, Captain?" David had asked.

Wolfe had looked at him, his eyes staring right through the copilot for several uncomfortable seconds before he smiled a sort of determined, jaw-setting smile, and motioned toward the back with his thumb. "I feel better now, David. Better than I've felt in years."

"Good. I was getting worried."

"Sometimes," Ken began, "God gives us strange and wonderful opportunities, don't you think?" The voice of the Denver Center controller cut into David's thoughts.

"AirBridge Ninety, Denver Center, good morning. Turn right now to a heading of two-six-zero, climb to and maintain flight level three-three-zero."

Instinctively, David's finger caressed the transmit button in case the captain failed to reply. Most AirBridge copilots were used to Wolfe not responding to radio calls, even though the captain was supposed to be talking to the controllers whenever it was the copilot's turn to fly. Throughout his yearlong tenure at AirBridge, Ken was often moody, often distracted, some days saying almost nothing, other days talking nonstop. He was courteous enough, but the unpredictability of his moods had become an uncomfortable legend, and flying with him meant extra stress.

But today, Ken's voice replied instantly. "Okay, Denver, a heading of two-six-zero and up to three-three-zero for AirBridge Ninety."

David engaged the autopilot and checked the settings on the auto-flight panel. They were moving at two hundred fifty knots now, almost five miles per minute, beginning the familiar trek over Durango, Colorado, and Four Corners to Phoenix.

David glanced over at the captain, wondering again about Ken's state of mind. He knew the captain had been hired as the new airline expanded, and he knew Ken came from Connecticut. Other than that, Captain Wolfe's background was a blank.

David realized the captain was looking back at him with what appeared to be a relaxed smile.

"You wondering why we're carrying a full load of fuel this morning?" he asked.

"We're tankering because it costs more in Phoenix than in Colorado Springs?"

Ken nodded as he returned his gaze to the instruments. "Yeah. But this is nuts to have more than four hours fuel aboard out of the Springs."

He looked back at the copilot. "David, have you flown this particular aircraft recently?"

The copilot shook his head, as much to clear away the disturbing thoughts as to reply. "No, I don't think so."

"So, you're not aware of the oil leak problem we've been having on number two engine?"

David Gates looked cornered. There had been nothing in the log book about number two engine, but it wasn't unusual for AirBridge pilots to verbally pass on maintenance concerns that probably should have been entered in the maintenance log. Not a legal procedure, but all too common in smaller airlines, or so he'd heard. AirBridge was his first airline.

"I ... hadn't heard about any oil leak, and the maintenance log showed nothing. I'm sorry if I missed something."

Ken looked up at the overhead panel and reached for the FASTEN SEATBELT switch. He cycled it twice, sending a two-chime signal to the cabin crew indicating their passage through ten thousand feet, then glanced back at the right-seater.

"You didn't miss anything. No one has written it up yet, including me, but we're all suspicious. Either a main oil seal is going, or something else is happening out there. Last week it started making strange noises in flight and I seriously considered shutting it down."

David was silent for a few seconds, the image of the powerful CFM-56 jet engine hanging in his mind. "The engine instruments didn't give you any indication of what's wrong?"

Ken shook his head and shrugged his shoulders, "Not a clue. We'll just have to watch it closely."

On the flight attendant jumpseat by the forward entry door, Annette glanced at a small panel of colored lights on the ceiling and shook her head in disgust. Just after the ten thousand foot chimes, someone had already punched a passenger call button.

She leaned over to see around the forward cabin divider — just as the man in 6C reached for the call button again.

Annette took her time unbuckling her seatbelt and folding the aft-facing seat before moving quietly through the first class cabin into coach and kneeling beside the man's seat.

"You called, sir?" she asked in quiet, discreet tones.

The man's voice boomed back at her, loud enough to be heard in the forward section of the coach cabin.

"Does it meet with your royal approval now, madam, that I get up and get my computer out of the overhead so I can get some work done?" he asked in a demeaning tone. "I could also use a vodka tonic, if it wouldn't be too much trouble to ask you to do your job."

Annette looked at the carpet for a few seconds and cleared her throat, before looking back up at him.

"You'll have a chance to order a drink in a few minutes when the other flight attendants begin their service, sir. Right now, the seatbelt sign is still on and I must ask you to stay seated. I'll get your briefcase down for you, though, if you'll answer a question for me."

"What?" There was sudden suspicion in his eyes.

"Have you ever flown commercially before?" Several passengers in nearby seats suppressed smiles, one actually chuckling out loud at her question.

He leaned back and snorted to emphasize a practiced look of disgust as he checked a large, gold wristwatch. A Rolex, she noted.

"That's an inane question, woman! I own a tour company. I fly commercially all the time."

Annette nodded. "Well, anyone who's in the travel business and who uses this airline system on a regular basis should be aware of a few basic procedures, such as all the rules you seem to be angry with me for enforcing."

The man came forward in his seat, his eyebrows raised, his squarish face turning slightly purple. "How dare you lecture me?" he said in a loud, outraged tone.

Annette smiled at him. "And how dare you fly on a discounted ticket and beat up on me for not giving you first class?"

"That does it. When I get to a phone in Phoenix, sweetheart, you're toast!"

"Why wait?" Annette said as sweetly as she could manage. "There's a phone in your armrest. In the meantime, if you undo that seatbelt before the light's out, the first officer will come back with a set of plastic handcuffs and we'll have the FBI meet you in Phoenix. Understand?"

Annette ignored the man's obscene retort and walked back to the first class galley, pulling the curtain behind her before turning off the smile and clenching her fists in the privacy of the small cubicle. There was no point in bothering Ken Wolfe with the latest installment of the man's temper tantrums. In little more than an hour the boor would be off the airplane anyway, and then she could spend her ground time writing a report to cover herself when the inevitable "fire-the-bitch-or-else" letter arrived in AirBridge headquarters.

"Did you feel that?"

Ken Wolfe's face was a mask of concern as he looked at his copilot.

"What?"

"That vibration? It's faint, but repetitious."

David cocked his head and closed his eyes for a few seconds, trying to discern what the captain was sensing amid all the normal vibrations of a jetliner in flight. His eyes came open just as quickly.

"I ... don't feel anything unusual, but ..."

"You may not be attuned to that particular range of vibration," Ken offered.

"Maybe not. Was it a ratcheting?"

Ken nodded. "Yes, but very faint. It happens every few seconds. There! Feel that?"

David looked even more concerned than before. "I don't ... well, maybe."

"In the background," Ken prompted, "a kind of distant grinding or growling, coming and going."

"Yes! I do feel it," David replied.

Wolfe nodded as he leaned over the center console to study the engine instruments, then looked up.

"Okay, I need you to go back quietly and take a look at the engines through the cabin windows. Look at the front and the tailpipe area, and see if you see anything unusual."

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "The Kat Bronsky Thrillers"
by .
Copyright © 2000 John J. Nance.
Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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