Maltese Steel Read online




  Maltese Steel

  John Steel Book 5

  Stuart Field

  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  A Year Later

  Dear reader

  Copyright (C) 2021 Stuart Field

  Layout design and Copyright (C) 2021 by Next Chapter

  Published 2021 by Terminal Velocity – A Next Chapter Imprint

  Edited by Gail Williams

  Cover art by Cover Mint

  This book is a work of fiction. Apart from known historical figures, names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination. Other than actual events, locales, or persons, again the events are fictitious.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.

  This book is dedicated to all the fantastic people of Malta.

  To all the people around the world who work to keep us safe, and

  to all my family and friends who have supported me.

  Thank you.

  Acknowledgments

  I would like to thank

  The Grand Hotel Excelsior in Valletta, Malta. For allowing me to include their fantastic hotel in this book.

  To the US Embassy Malta.

  And a special thank you to my good friend Malcolm Ellul and his family for all their advice.

  And to Miika and the Next Chapter team for all their hard work.

  To my editor Gail Williams.

  Chapter One

  A cold March wind brushed Lucy Foster’s cheeks as she plummeted from the top of the Azure Window. Once a rocky arch that stretched out from the Maltese Island of Gozo. Now just rock face with the broken pieces of the massive arch buried under the waves.

  It was said to be one of the wonders of the world, but after a tremendous storm wreaked havoc on both islands – it was no more. The craggy archway lost to the deep.

  The midnight sky was black and cold, but not as cold as the ocean below. Lucy would not feel it. The velocity of her fall masked the smell of the sea air. Around her, the sounds of the wind were dulled by the crashing of the waves.

  However, Lucy did not feel or hear anything.

  There was no light from the moon for the waves to reflect, which would have made the fall from the cliff seem endless – as if it was a nightmare.

  Lucy’s body slammed against the ocean as if the water were made from concrete. Her neck snapped back, and her ribs shattered. Her right arm was dislocated and pulled towards her back.

  She had felt nothing.

  The waves tossed her fragile body up like a piece of driftwood. The wind howled, and the waves roared. Towering waves crashed against each other. Pounded relentlessly against Lucy’s limp body again and again. Giant, claw-like waves reached up and grabbed her, pulling her down to the depths. The ocean surrendered her battered body to the surface once more as if tired with its prey. The waves crashed as the wind howled.

  Finally, Lucy’s body vanished beneath the surface, dragged down into the blackened depths as she was swallowed into the abyss.

  Chapter Two

  At the same time, over four-thousand miles away from Gozo’s coast, John Steel sat in his office at the NYPD’s 11th precinct. The room had been an old storage room that he had commandeered. The walls were a mix of half red-painted plaster and a lower half made from dark wooden panels. The hardened concrete of the floor was now hidden under a polished wood. There were brass lamps and Cambridge style bookshelves. The whole place looked as though it should belong in a stately home.

  John Steel sat behind a long oak desk. The top was covered with green leather. On the desk was a computer monitor to his right, and a landline pushed far to the left. The computer keyboard and mouse were in front of the monitor, leaving the centre of the desk free. To his right hung a large, lifeless flatscreen monitor, which showed nothing apart from the room’s reflection. His eyes glanced over the report he had just written and was about to file.

  Steel sighed profoundly and tossed down the file in frustration. He had been assigned to the NYPD to monitor and – if necessary – hinder the operations of an organisation called SANTINI.

  SANTINI was an underground organisation that dealt in murder, assassinations, arms smuggling, anything that would serve its purpose. However, unlike organisations such as the Italian Mafia, Yakuza, White Russian Mafia, SANTINI remained in the shadows. Carrying out assignments that would be profitable and draw no attention to their existence.

  But Steel knew of them. His entire family had been murdered by them, and he had been gravely injured while trying to save his family. Steel looked over at his reflection in the powered down the desktop monitor. He gazed into his dark soulless green eyes, which were just another scare had had to remind him of that day. His once pale blue eyes had somehow turned to this dark unnerving dark emerald colour after his life-saving operation. For years he had thought that the old Japanese gardener had saved him, healing his wounds at his home. But Steel had found out later that the very people Steel worked, for now, had saved him.

  Like his father before him, John Steel was British Secret Service – or MI8. He had been recruited after his time with the SAS. However, after the murder of his family, MI8 thought it best that Steel went into hiding until the organisation responsible had been identified, or at best eliminated. So, Steel joined the US Navy SEALs. Whitehall suspected putting an ocean between Steel, and the organisation would take them out of their gaze for a while. Also, the training would do him good for
what needed him to do.

  But now, he was stuck behind a desk doing paperwork of a murder investigation. Steel felt nauseous, claustrophobic. This was not him. He was a soldier – an agent of the British Secret Service, not a cop. Sure, he had thwarted the plans of SANTINI on several occasions, but for some reason, they had gone dark. Were they laying low because of him? Possible. But then SANTINI did not just have him after them, there was this Trojan Group. Trojan was also a criminal organisation, but they – Steel’s eyes – were more of a threat. They sought power, control, and would do anything to get it. However, these had also disappeared from his radar. Steel found it curious, but at the same time disturbing. One he could understand – but both, surely that couldn’t be good?

  But despite this upset, Steel had done his job and was ready to come home as far as he was concerned. Ready to do the job he was hired for – and being a cop was it. John Steel grabbed a pair of sunglasses that sat on a wireless docking station and slipped them on. He saw a blink of red light in the corner of an LCD HUB in the right-hand lens, then the words Retina scan complete. Identification confirmed. Steel heaved himself out of the comfort of the padded leather office chair, grabbing the file and then headed over to the door. The report was done, all the eyes were dotted, and Ts were crossed. Despite his reluctance to be there, he knew he still had to do the job correctly. He opened the door, suddenly the silence of the office was shattered by the chaos of the homicide division’s bullpen. Phones were ringing, and voices grew louder. As Steel looked out across the sea of busy people, the small screen in the right lens ran a diagnostic and quickly analysed them. John Steel smiled to himself at the gadget that had saved him, and others live so many times, but he also knew he could not be reliant on it. It was just an aid. Steel knew he had to rely more on his skills and own intuition.

  Steel was looking at the people of the night shift, his shift had left hours ago. He had just stayed over to make sure there were no discrepancies in the report. The last thing he wanted was the guy’s lawyer picking something out and get the scumbag off with. Steel walked over to a Captain Alan Brant’s office and knocked. Steel wasn’t surprised he was still there.

  Alan Brant was a bear of a man. He was in his fifties, but still had the build of a quarterback. Steel looked over at the shaven football of a head. The light from the overhead light gleamed off his dark shin. To Steel, Brant always looked angry – even when he wasn’t. But this time those cold brown eyes scowled at Steel as he entered after knocking. Brant sat back in his chair, his massive form leant back against the PU leather, causing it to creak.

  ‘Take it you done writin that report?’ Brant said. His thick-lipped mouth curled as though every word had a bitter taste to it. His voice was deep like you might imagine a grizzly or brown bear to have.

  ‘Yes, I’m done,’ Steel said. His tone was emotionless. Despite being British, he had no accent to speak of. There was no hint of a regional accent, just British. Brant gave Steel a curious look. Steel wandered if Brant picked up on what he had said – or indeed, how he had meant it, ‘Yes, I’m done.’

  Steel placed down the file in front of Brant and ran his fingers through his raven-coloured hair. It felt longer than he would have wanted it to be. It was possibly time to visit that barbers shop in the morning, Steel thought, catching his reflection in the long window that separated the Captain’s office from the bullpen. His black suit and shirt did not reflect too well in the window, making it appear as if he was a floating head without a body. Steel smiled to himself but did not show it.

  ‘McCall is pissed at ya after what you did,’ Brant said, rocking in his chair. The sound of the metal joints squeaked with the subtle movement.

  ‘She will get over it. Besides, it got the job done, didn’t it?’ Steel said. His tone was cold and unemotional.

  Steel did not care for their rules anymore, he found them tiresome. Rules that kept the allowed the bad guys to go free and hurt the innocent. Rules that with the slightest loop whole could be undone. He preferred his rules, the rules her was governed by. There is your target, investigate and take whatever action is necessary. He lived in a black and white world, with the only red been his enemies’ blood.

  ‘You threw the man outta the window Steel!’ Brant growled. His eyes bulged from their deep-set sockets. A slither of spit formed in the corner of Brant’s mouth a was held by the hairs of his circular beard.

  ‘And if I hadn’t, you’d have several officers in the morgue or hospital right now – including McCall,’ Steel said with an angry tone.

  Brant sat back and sighed deeply. ‘Yeah, I know, but still, these cowboy actions of yours are getting outta hand.’

  ‘Understood,’ Steel said calmly. ‘don’t worry, they won’t happen again,’ Steel said and turned to leave. Brant looked over at Steel, a look of concern filled his face.

  ‘What do you mean by that?’ Brant asked. He had read Steel’s innuendoes and body language. Brant was the only one in the precinct who knew what Steel was, who he worked for. Sure, Steel had closed some exceptional cases, but now Brant felt Steel was just treading water.

  ‘I mean –.’ Steel paused and looked over at the commendations and photographs on Brant’s wall. It was impressive, but Brant was a cop and Steel wasn’t. ‘I’m going home, I’m tired,’ Steel said and left the office, closing the door softly behind him.

  Captain Alan Brant watched Steel cross the bullpen floor and wait for the elevator and wandered, had Steel just said goodbye or only good night?

  Chapter Three

  Dwejra sea birds hovered overhead. Their baby-like calls hung carried on a refreshing sea breeze which hurried across the coastline. The sun began to gather warmth over the Maltese Islands though it was still early morning.

  The surrounding landscape had a dangerous beauty, like something from another time or planet. Yet, the image was broken by the parking spaces and shops.

  Special Agent Marcus Foster stood near the rocky ground where the Azure Window had stretched out into the ocean. An enormous craggy arch that had been created by weather and stormy waters. Now, just a strange rock formation remained to mark where the arch had stood.

  Some people would swear that there was a face in the rock if looked at from a certain angle. Set in the San Lawrenz district of the Island of Gozo. The window had been a magnificent natural structure that Foster had in years gone by brought his family to see.

  Now, he was there for a very different reason.

  He had received the call around six that morning. Pat and Michael Fabri, who owned the ice cream store close by, had found a young woman’s body while walking their dog at the Blue Hole; a tourist trap and diving ground. They always walked their little terrier, Skippy, there before getting ready for the tourists. Skippy had alerted them to the woman in the water. She had been too far for either of them to swim out, so Pat had called the police on her cell phone. The police boat had found only the body, no purse or form of ID. However, the sergeant in charge had recognised her as Foster’s daughter. Despite her broken body, her face was somehow mostly undamaged – enough for her to be identified at least.

  Foster was a tall man with massive shoulders. Six-foot three and a haircut any Marine would be proud of. The fresh sea air brushed across his face as he looked out across the ocean. Trying to think of why his little girl would take her own life. For him, there was only one answer: She wouldn’t.

  ‘Marcus, the medical examiner, is about to take her away,’ said Sergeant Gann Burlo. Burlo was a friend of the family since Foster’s arrival five years ago.

  Foster starred out at the serene beauty of the ocean and nodded silently. Burlo moved to speak – but felt awkward breaking the silence.

  He turned to head back to the police Land Rover that waited for him.

  ‘Gann, are you putting this down to suicide?’ Foster asked without turning to look at his friend.

  ‘I will wait to see what the medical examiner finds, but everything points to that, or just an
accident. Why? Something we should know?’ Burlo asked curiously.

  Foster turned slowly and shook his head.

  ‘Just so I can tell Martha. An accident would be better, knowing her little girl took her life would destroy her,’ Foster said.

  Burlo gave a sympathetic smile and nodded slowly. ‘I’ll let you know. But I think it was more likely to be an accident, but it’s not for me to say I’m afraid. That’s down to the medical examiner. But, out here late at night, and last night was pretty dark,’ Burlo said.

  Foster turned back to the view and sighed while Burlo returned to his car. Foster pulled out his cell phone and pressed a speed-dial number.

  ‘Hi Janis, it’s Marcus Foster. Can you find me John Steel’s number in New York?’