DEADLY DRIVER Read online




  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2021 by JK Kelly Consulting, LLC

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever, without prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For information, address

  JK Kelly Consulting, LLC, P.O. Box B, Media, PA 19063 USA

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2021902581

  Philadelphia, PA USA

  ISBN: 978-0-9994099-8-5 paperback

  ISBN: 978-0-9994099-9-2 eBook

  This novel is dedicated to my father

  for encouraging me to continue writing

  even long after he was gone

  and

  To Dani

  Table of Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  CHAPTER THIRTY

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

  CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

  CHAPTER FORTY

  CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

  CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

  CHAPTER FORTY-THREE

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER FORTY-SIX

  CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER ONE

  “Perhaps one of his victims has exacted revenge?” the raspy-voiced homicide detective said as he exhaled cigarette smoke into the face of one of the hotel’s security detail. Having just recently been acquitted on a technicality of 39 charges of producing child pornography, drug trafficking, and weapons offenses the Russian multi-millionaire had been celebrating his release in high style. Until his end came with another type of bang.

  “It would seem there was an explosive device of some sort in the man’s ball cap,” the medical examiner commented as his team placed the body on a stretcher. The autopsy would be a formality to confirm the cause of death. “Anyone know what he was doing wearing a ball cap at a formal gathering like this?”

  “It’s the race crowd. Team hats were everywhere,” someone offered. “So the victim’s hat detonated, while he sat in the bathroom, blowing his lid off?” the detective had asked through a smoker’s cough, making sure he understood exactly what had happened.

  “Boom,” the Medical Examiner said, gesturing with both hands to demonstrate an explosion.

  Sochi may have hosted the Winter Olympics back in 2014, but the cold-weather athletes and the massive trademark flame were now long gone. The sound of record-setting runs on the ski slopes overlooking the city on the Black Sea had been replaced by something just as sleek but noticeably faster and with a much more intriguing sound. The global traveling circus that is Formula One racing had returned to Sochi. The cocktail party held for the drivers and wealthy VIPs was in full swing on the hotel’s veranda, overlooking a massive swimming pool, surrounded by palm trees and overlooking the sea. While the technological advancements over the years had made this type of racing safer, death was always a possibility on the track. Almost no one had expected it here, in the midst of a party.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Formula One driver Bryce Winters, a world champion, was one of the star attractions at the gathering and he’d taken the elevator down from his suite on the top floor of the Radisson Blu hotel just past eight o’clock. With his confidence and enthusiasm at full throttle he made the rounds of the party, shaking hands, posing for photos, hugging, kissing, joking. The intensity of the day, pushing the edge during the three qualifying sessions and being “on” for the countless interviews he’d given had exhausted him but he could turn the charm back on and work a room like no other. He pretended to throw a punch at boxing’s heavyweight champion from Britain who had come to meet the American racer. A beautiful Russian fashion model, her flowing blonde locks coming to rest on the shoulders of a blood red dress was craving his attention and tried her best to lure him in with her piercing blue eyes.

  By nine o’clock Bryce was hoping for a good night’s sleep to prepare for tomorrow’s race. There’d be two hours of exhilarating acceleration, punishing G-forces of the high-speed left and right hand turns, eighteen in all again and again for 53 laps, racing with rivals at over 200 miles per hour. But first, of all things, he needed to attend to something in the men’s room. He’d spotted his prey and the stalk had begun. Minutes later, his business behind him, he came upon two familiar faces. Jack Madigan, an engineer on the race team, was leaning against a wall, beer in hand, talking with an attractive blonde Bryce would normally have been drawn to, an American, Joan Myers. Bryce acknowledged his friend with a smile but frowned at Myers and walked past them without saying a word. It was late and he was done.

  In the elevator headed back up to his suite, he thought of his home far away in his country’s Mountain West. He longed for it. Park City, Utah has something for just about everyone who enjoys the outdoors, particularly if you are a patriotic American. The area Bryce chose to live in was spectacular and full of mountains, moose, elk and mule deer. It was the home of the Sundance Film Festival and was a ski-lovers playground for the rich and famous. A good number of retired Navy SEALS and Army Rangers called the Park City area home, and it was also the site of the Olympic Winter Games in 2002, where many other Americans had earned medals of their own. Athletes intending to represent their countries in ski and snowboarding competitions continued to train at the Olympic Park. When he was in town, Bryce often went there to offer encouragement and, more times than he could remember, to offer financial help where needed. The area was flush with patriots and proud Americans of all sorts. Representing his country, as the lone American competing in the global arena that was Formula One, he felt proud and swore to always do his best. He wished someday that the walls of his trophy room there might bear an award from the government for his clandestine service, but he knew that would never come to pass. CIA operations were top-secret and known to only a handful of people: his handler Myers, his accomplice Madigan, and just a few more back in Langley, Virginia.

  The next morning, after a short ride in a van with the team publicist and Bryce’s personal aide to the paddock area of the race circuit, he took time to pose for photos with the early birds, the race fans that showed up at sunrise to get the best spot on the fence line to see their heroes up close. He spent a few extra minutes with a young Russian family that had dressed their th
ree children up like little racers in Bryce’s team colors. They didn’t speak English but their gestures and smiles between them were universal and easily understood. When the woman pointed with concern to Bryce’s battered knuckles as he signed an event program for them he smiled as if they were okay.

  “Punched a hotel wall in frustration last night,” he uttered knowing she wouldn’t understand. He spent the morning joking with the dozen or so team members doing a last-minute inspection of his Mercedes-powered canary yellow and fire engine red Formula One car. News of the murder spread through the paddock at the track almost as fast as the cars racing in a preliminary event leading up to the F1 race. Bryce shook his head in amazement, stunned to hear that such a thing could have happened. When he encountered Jack Madigan, they simply fist-bumped, smiled, and went about their racing business.

  The two had first connected back in North Carolina when Bryce was racing NASCAR stock cars. They had hit it off from the start, almost as if they were long lost brothers. Just like Bryce, Jack’s heart was in racing and he worked weekends as part of an “over the wall gang” - the pit crew. The two had been on a winning team that seemed destined to claim the NASCAR championship. That was, until a 210-mph crash at Talladega in Alabama broke Bryce’s left leg and ended his run for that title. Frustrated, the team owner lost interest in the North American market and decided it was time to perform in the ultimate arena where over 400 million passionate fans around the world watched every race on TV – Formula One. Bryce was game and encouraged Madigan to come along.

  After doing interviews with various media, Bryce posed for photos with at least ten gorgeous Russian women and another dozen of the country’s wealthiest men – their clients, dates or husbands. He finally retreated to his private quarters on the second level of one of the team’s two hospitality trailers in Sochi. For races in Europe, the team had built a state-of-the-art soundproof VIP suite complete with bathroom, shower, bed, flat screen TV, surround-sound system, a fully stocked kitchenette with small dining table, two black leather captain’s chairs, a desk and matching loveseat. While everything outside of the suite was covered in the vibrant red and yellow of their team owner and sponsors’ brands, the wall panels and décor of this interior space were much more subdued in subtle yellow and contrasting black lines. Bryce poured his fifth coffee of the morning, turned down the volume on the television and thought about one of the Russian beauties he’d just met. Must be something in the water here. But soon a hard knock at the door interrupted his fantasy.

  Two homicide detectives from the Sochi police department stood with one of F1’s plainclothes security force. They had questions and wanted answers now, not later.

  “Mr. Winters,” one of the men said as he held a silver badge up for Bryce to inspect. “There was a homicide at your hotel last night. May we come in?” It took Bryce a second to smile and welcome them inside. At a nod from Bryce, the escort moved off. Bryce held the door open and asked if either of the two wanted coffee or water. This was happening in Russia, a place where opponents of the country’s president were known to be poisoned or disappear without a trace. If a homicide detective wanted to talk, it was smarter to agree than make an international incident out of it.

  Bryce sat back down and gestured to the black leather chairs facing his spot on the loveseat. He was repulsed by the cigarette smoke on their clothing but chose not to comment. The expression on his face let his guests know he wasn’t pleased.

  The first detective sat while the second man closed the door behind him then stood guard, leaning against the door jam without saying a word. The lead detective introduced himself as he accepted a bottled water Bryce handed over.

  “Nikolai Volkoff,” the detective said as he adjusted his suit coat and placed his phone on his knee and hit the record button.

  “Bryce Winters,” the American responded. “What can I do for you?”

  Bryce listened as Volkoff described what had occurred in a men’s toilet just off the large banquet hall of the host hotel.

  “We have closed circuit video recordings of the deceased, Gregori Ivanova, entering the toilet. Forty-three seconds later you followed him into the room.

  “Really? I wouldn’t say I followed him. I didn’t know the man.” Bryce watched as Volkoff broke eye contact with him and looked to the man guarding the door. The man unzipped a leather attaché he’d been carrying and removed an iPad, handing it to Volkoff before returning to his spot at the door.

  Volkoff stood up and sat down close to Bryce. “Please watch this video.” As the black-and-white recording, taken by a camera outside the men’s room in the hallway, began—the victim was seen entering the men’s toilet.

  “Notice the hat he is wearing. It is the same color as your race team’s sponsor, and that company name appears above the bill.”

  Bryce nodded. “German company. They have holdings here in your country, I believe. They make everything from wine and weapons to military drones and jet airplanes.”

  The video continued, nothing of note happening until Bryce came into view. Without any cameras inside the room itself, there was nothing more to watch other than one man leaving the room, then a second man. Thirty-one seconds after that – nearly three minutes after he had entered the room—Bryce was seen leaving it. Twenty-six seconds later, an attendant was seen entering the room and shortly thereafter, the same man rushed into the hallway outside the men’s toilet waving frantically for help.

  “So how can I help you?” Bryce asked as he sat back into the plush sofa.

  “You told us when we arrived that you did not know the victim,” Volkoff said as he leaned in toward Bryce.

  “So far so good,” Bryce responded.

  “How do you explain this then?” Volkoff asked. He placed the iPad in front of Bryce again. There on the screen were two images; on the left, a black-and-white image of the hat the victim had worn entering the toilet. To the right of it was an image of a yellow and red ball cap, the top of it torn away, but the bill showing something that wasn’t there when the man had entered the room. It was Bryce’s autograph.

  “Explain,” Volkoff demanded.

  Bryce smiled.“Sure.” He got up, grabbed a bottle of orange Powerade Zero from the cabinet, retook his spot, and told them his story. He said he had noticed the big fella with the ball cap at the opposite end of the urinals. He’d found it strange that someone at such a high-class event was wearing the hat but thought the guy might be a guest of the sponsor.

  Bryce recounted that the man had been speaking in Russian to someone on his phone. There had been two other men there as Bryce remembered it. One was washing his hands and the other was coming out of one of the stalls.

  “Sounded like a cocaine blast if you ask me, but who knows. Maybe he just had a runny nose.” Bryce opened the sports drink and chugged half of it down.

  “When the big guy saw me standing there, he ended his call, zipped up, and came charging towards me like he was going to give me a damn bear hug. And I was still pissing!”

  The man at the door began to laugh, but Volkoff’s glare stopped him.

  “So, I put my right hand out and asked him to wait. I finished and washed my hands while this guy’s pulling his phone back out of his pocket and asking for a selfie, right there in the damn john.” Bryce explained that he posed for the photo and told the stranger that since he was wearing his sponsor’s hat he’d autograph it, if he wanted. And he did. Then the man grabbed Bryce’s hand and shook it. “But as he did, his expression changed. The guy thanked me, wished me good luck in the race, and then ran into a stall. Strange move. I don’t usually have that effect on people.”

  “Yes. Strange.” The detective frowned.

  “Maybe he had to poo. Anyway, I washed my hands, again, and then left the men’s room.” Bryce watched Volkoff take it all in.

  “Did you overhear any of the conversation he had on his phone?” the detective asked. Bryce shook his head no. “Did you see him talk to anyone else in
the room, or did anyone else approach him while you were there?”

  “No sorry.”

  “Did you hear if the victim locked the stall door?” the detective asked.

  “Nope, I didn’t. I just left the room, reunited with some friends, and then headed up to my suite and called for room service.”

  Volkoff shook his head as if he didn’t understand. “Room service with all the food and drink at the party?”

  “Da,” Bryce said. “Yesterday morning at a press breakfast, I watched the locals eat cucumbers and sardines and boiled potatoes for breakfast. Then I saw black fish, caviar, all sorts of pickled who knows what, at the buffet last night. No thanks. I love the fans and love racing here, but I went upstairs and ordered a cheeseburger and fries and that hit the spot.”

  Volkoff looked to his partner and smiled. “I prefer American food, too,” he said. “Just don’t tell anyone I said so.” He laughed.

  Bryce looked at the digital clock on the wall and then apologized but told the detectives that he desperately needed to relax before the race. “Unless there’s anything else, I’d appreciate it if you would leave me to it.”

  “Of course,” Volkoff said, but then looked up sheepishly at Bryce. “A selfie - if you don’t mind?”

  Over the next few minutes Bryce obliged their request. He posed for their photos and then pulled two ball caps out of a cabinet, took a Sharpie from his pocket, and signed both bills. His autographs were always big, bold, and easy to read.

  “You carry those with you all the time?” Volkoff asked, gesturing to the Sharpie seemingly amused.

  “Always. You can’t imagine what some people ask me to sign. Boobs, babies, whatever.”

  Volkoff stared at Bryce and tilted his head. “Boobs?” he asked.

  Bryce smiled and held his arms out, his palms cupped toward his own chest. Volkoff laughed then turned to leave. He stopped shy of the door and spent a moment looking at the three photos mounted on the wall.