Book excerpt from Game Of Killers: The Spartan

In the event China went to war with the United States, the Chinese military had prepared a list of American targets it called “the irreplaceables”. These “irreplaceables” were the best of the best of their enemy: brilliant men and women whose genius-level talent and brainpower could potentially sway any conflict.


Sourced from all races, colors and creeds, “the irreplaceables” had the ability to win battles, create entire industries from scratch, plan trillion-dollar economies, out-think the world’s smartest people, imagine the future and forge the technology and circumstances to bring a country there.


They were once-in-a-generation types, the flukes of nature that sprang up at random, the prodigies that even China – with its own gene pool of 1 billion-plus very smart, very hard-working people – feared. They were the Isaac Newtons of their eras, the Einsteins, the Marie Curies. They were threats to China’s future hegemony.


Their skills and abilities were so impressive that they would be impossible to replace: hence the name.


America would bleed if the irreplaceables bled.


The leader had seen some of the names of the irreplaceables.


Now he decided to act against them.


Game Of Killers: The Spartan is out now as an ebook and paperback.

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Published on March 12, 2018 22:53
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