Final Target (Wind Dancer)
Final Target (Wind Dancer) book cover

Final Target (Wind Dancer)

Mass Market Paperback – February 1, 2002

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553582130
Dimensions
4.23 x 1.06 x 6.76 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

"Johansen's fans will enjoy the swirling plot lines, staccato dialogue and abrupt scene shifts that mark her style."-- Publishers Weekly The President's daughter...The women determined to save her...The man with the power to betray a nation... Melissa Riley arrives at her sister's isolated Virginia country home to find herself plunged into a deadly drama. There the renowned Dr. Jessica Riley is attempting to draw the daughter of the President of the United States out of a severe catatonic trauma. The last thing young Cassie Andreas saw was an organized team ruthlessly murder her nanny and the Secret Service agents sworn to protect her. But to free Cassie, Melissa and Jessica must trust a mysterious, charismatic man. Michael Travis made his fortune in the international underworld. He risked everything to save Cassie during that terrible night of bloodshed. And he has entered into a secret bargain with the President. But is his show of concern all a treacherous charade? Melissa and Jessica have no choice but to accept Travis as their ally--and to follow a dangerous plan that will lead them into the world of a killer who'll destroy anyone standing between him and the...Final Target. Iris Johansen is the New York Times bestselling author of many novels, including Killer Dreams, On the Run, Countdown, Firestorm, Fatal Tide, Dead Aim, and No One to Trust. She lives near Atlanta, Georgia. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. St. Basil, SwitzerlandJune 14, 1991 The jeweled eyes of the Wind Dancer, secret, enigmatic inhumanly patient, gazed out of the black and white photograph at Alex Karazov.The uncanny impression that a mysterious sentience exuded from the statue had to be a trick of light the lens had captured. Alex shook his head. Impossible. But now he could understand the statue’s mystique and the stories that had grown up around it. The book he held was over sixty years old and the picture probably didn’t even do the statue justice. He skimmed the caption beneath the picture.“The Wind Dancer, recognized as one of the most valuable art objects in the world. The famous ‘eyes of the Wind Dancer’ are two perfectly matched almond-shaped emeralds 65.60 carats each. Four hundred and forty-seven diamonds encrust the base of the winged statue of Pegasus.In her book Facts and Legends of the Wind Dancer, published in 1923, Lily Andreas claimed there were historical references indicating the Wind Dancer had been in the possession of Alexander the Great during his first campaign in Persia in 323 b.c.; later, it was said to have passed to Charlemagne during his reign. Andreas’s book was the subject of controversy. She claimed that a host of the most influential figures throughout the ages had not only possessed the Wind Dancer but asserted that it had contributed decisively to their success or failure. Both the antiquity of the statue and its history were challenged by the London and Cairo museums at the time.”Alex impatiently closed Art Treasures of the World, pushing it aside as Pavel set a stack of five more volumes on the desk. He already knew the contents of Lily Andreas’s book. He remembered Ledford quoting it chapter and verse as if it were the Bible.Pavel raised one busy black brow. “No luck?”Alex shook his head. “Too early. I need facts, not legends.” He reached for the top book on the stack, flipped it open to the index, ran his finger down the chapter headings until he found the one labeled “Wind Dancer,” then thumbed to the correct page. “For God’s sake, you’d think the damn statue had disappeared from the planet.” Speed reading through the chapter, he muttered, “At least this book gets us out of the roaring twenties. It mentions the Wind Dancer’s confiscation by the Germans in 1939 and its discovery in Hitler’s mountain retreat after World War Two.” He slammed the book shut. “But I’m wasting time. Call the curator of the Louvre and...”“Ask where the Wind Dancer is now,” Pavel finished for him. He shook his head, an amused grin creasing his weathered, heavily jowled face. “You know, of course, they’ll probably try to trace the call and notify Interpol. I imagine the management of the Louvre is a bit touchy since they ‘lost’ the ‘Mona Lisa’ yesterday.”“Maybe,” Alex said, abstracted. He stood up and walked across the room to a long table on which a number of headlined newspaper articles had been cut out and arranged like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. michelangelo’s “david” disappears from florence terrorist group black medina assassinates cardinal on way to vatican police baffled at rembrandt’s “night Watch” theft from amsterdam museum terrorist group black medina kills three in bombing at charles de gaulle airport “mona lisa” stolen from louvre Several other articles lay under a jade paperweight, and Alex glanced at them as he tried to decide whether he was interested enough to commit to it. If he was right, that call would cause even more furor than Pavel believed.Oh, what the hell. Why not? He couldn’t just sit there on this damn mountaintop and let his brain grow barnacles. “Phone anyway. Give my name and say I’m doing research for a novel. I need to know where the Wind Dancer is right now. The Andreas family lives in the U.S., but I recall an article a few years ago about French public opinion on the Wind Dancer: the average French citizen considers it a national treasure. Find out more about that, if you can. Oh, the Louvre curator’s name is Emile Desloge.”Pavel nodded, his black eyes twinkling as he studied Alex’s intent face. “I call the Louvre and you get another piece for your puzzle.” He gave a mock sigh. “And when the statue is stolen, at whose door will the police come knocking?” He lightly tapped the massive bulk of his gray-sweatered chest with one hand. “Pavel Rubanski’s door. You bring me nothing but trouble. If I had any sense, I’d leave you and find a job with someone who offers less pay and greater job security.” “You’d be bored as hell.” Alex grinned as he sat down at the table and drew the latest article toward him. “God knows I am.” Lumbering to the door, Pavel halted and looked back at Alex in surprise. “I’m glad you’re finally admitting it. Now I can do something besides feed you information for your infernal puzzles. What’s the use of being a rich man if you don’t spend your money? Instead of calling the Louvre, I’ll phone the travel agent and arrange a nice, sunny vacation in Martinique. You always enjoyed going to Martinique at this time of year.” His tone became coaxing. “Or we’ll send for Angela and one of her friends to come to the chalet for a pleasant little weekend orgy. Sex is as good as a vacation anytime.”Alex’s lips twitched as he looked at the hopeful expression on Pavel’s face. “And you’re betting one or the other of those distractions will take my mind off the Wind Dancer.”Pavel nodded. “You may be under KGB and CIA blankets of protection, but I’m not so favored where Interpol is concerned. I’m a peaceful man who wants only a little sunshine, a little sex, maybe a fine gourmet meal now and then...”“Now and then?” Alex smiled affectionately. “You haven’t stepped on the scales lately.”“That’s not fat, it’s muscle. I’m a big man and I need fuel. Besides, what else can I do up here in the mountains but eat? Now, on Martinique I could just lie on the beach with a piña colada and not have to worry about snow or ice—or Interpol asking me uncomfortable questions.”“Interpol’s too busy clutching at straws and chasing after every clue in sight to bother with you.” Alex thought about those recent newspaper headlines and frowned. “I wonder if that’s part of it . . .”“Part of what?”Alex didn’t answer, his mind busily sorting out information, drawing conclusions, discarding them, moving the information to new positions, drawing other conclusions, and fitting pieces together until they formed a picture with which he could be satisfied.“Never mind,” Pavel grumbled. “I might as well live on this blasted mountain by myself. No one can talk to you when you’re working on one of your puzzles. It’s not as if you had to do it for a living anymore. You’re a damn addict.” He swung the door shut behind him.Was Pavel right? Alex wondered. Probably. He had worked at the task too long and knew too well the heady exhilaration of finally solving a puzzle. After Afghanistan he had thought he would never delve willingly into a project again, but he hadn’t counted on the habits the years had formed. Since he had come to St. Basil he had drifted back into the pattern of gathering information and projecting events for his own amusement on subjects as widely varied as the rise and fall of the New York Stock Market to which countries would host future Olympic games.But this new puzzle was much more intriguing than any he had ever run across, and Alex could feel the adrenaline begin to flow through his veins as excitement gripped him. He felt alive, functioning at the top of his form once more.One hour later Pavel entered the study and tossed a legal pad on the table in front of Alex.“Here it is. The Wind Dancer is owned presently by Jonathan Andreas.”“Where is it?”“At the Andreas compound in Port Andreas, South Carolina. Andreas is one of the wealthiest men in America and the compound is bristling with bodyguards and security people. The house has a state-of-the-art security system.”“So did the Louvre,” Alex said dryly. “It didn’t prevent thieves from stealing the ‘Mona Lisa.’ “ He looked down at the notes on the yellow legal pad. “What’s this about Vasaro?”“Vasaro, the estate, is located near Grasse in France and raises flowers for the perfume industry. The family Vasaro is distantly related to the Andreases; it was the French cousins who convinced Jonathan Andreas’s father to lend the Wind Dancer to the Louvre in 1939 to earn money to ransom eleven Jewish artists held hostage by the Germans. Five years ago, while she was attending the Sorbonne, a Caitlin Vasaro did a research paper on the significance of the Wind Dancer in history that was used as the cornerstone for a doctorate study by Andre Beaujolis.”“Do the Vasaros have any claim to the Wind Dancer?”Pavel shook his head. “But the French government challenged the Andreas family in 1876 on the grounds that Marie Antoinette’s gift wasn’t legal under the revolutionary assembly. They lost the suit.” He paused. “You think the Wind Dancer is going to be heisted next?”“Probably not.”“Then may I ask why I’ve spent almost an entire hour on the phone with an extremely suspicious French curator?”“Every art object stolen has been of major cultural importance to the countries of Europe. The statue of David in Italy, the ‘Night Watch’ in Holland, now the ‘Mona Lisa’ in France. The Wind Dancer would be a prime candidate for theft if it was still in Europe.” Alex shrugged. “But it’s not likely to be a target while it’s safe on U.S. soil. Too bad.”“I’m sure Jonathan Andreas doesn’t think so.”Alex chuckled, his blue eyes suddenly sparkling in his tanned face. “Why the hell are you so glum?”“Because you’re not. You’re excited as hell and operating on all cylinders. You’re on the trail of something. I know you, Alex.”Alex gazed at him innocently.“Why did you have me call the Louvre when I could have found out what you wanted to know by tapping Goldbaum or one of the usual newspaper sources?”“Interpol won’t bother you, Pavel.”“But you did want me to stir something up when I made the call.”Alex nodded. “I had a hunch and wanted to leapfrog a few obstacles. Don’t worry, it won’t put your neck on the line.”“I’m not worrying. My neck has been on the line before.” Pavel smiled. “Remember that prisoner at Diranev? I thought I’d had it for sure before you stepped in and chopped him.”“You owed me money. I had to keep you alive to collect.”“And all this time you had me convinced you’d done it because of the nobility of your soul.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The President’s daughter...The women determined to save her...The man with the power to betray a nation...
  • Melissa Riley arrives at her sister’s isolated Virginia country home to find herself plunged into a deadly drama. There the renowned Dr. Jessica Riley is attempting to draw the daughter of the President of the United States out of a severe catatonic trauma. The last thing young Cassie Andreas saw was an organized team ruthlessly murder her nanny and the Secret Service agents sworn to protect her. But to free Cassie, Melissa and Jessica must trust a mysterious, charismatic man.Michael Travis made his fortune in the international underworld. He risked everything to save Cassie during that terrible night of bloodshed. And he has entered into a secret bargain with the President. But is his show of concern all a treacherous charade? Melissa and Jessica have no choice but to accept Travis as their ally—and to follow a dangerous plan that will lead them into the world of a killer who’ll destroy anyone standing between him and the...
  • Final Target.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(232)
★★★★
25%
(97)
★★★
15%
(58)
★★
7%
(27)
-7%
(-28)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Im glad I read this book

When I bought this book I didn't bother reading the excerpt on the back of the book because Iris Johansen has never let me down and this book was no exception.
Although reading some of the reviews I must say I am surprised at how many low ratings there are!
Cassie (a seven year old girl) has witnessed a horrid robbery gone wrong! monsters, death, hide! Is all she will allow her mind to register?
Dr. Jessica Reily has helped her sister and other traumatized cationic children return to reality, so when the President of The United States asks her to help Cassie back how could she say no!
Jessica's sister, Melissa, returns home from college for what Jessica thinks is a well needed break, but what we learn very quickly is everyone has there own agenda!
Travis, the man who rescued Cassie, is brought in to find the man responsible for Cassie's trauma, yet he's not to be trusted because his past is beyond shady.
There's some physic and telepathic parts, which may seem unreal, but I don't find these parts to lessen the story but make them more interesting. Its not any different then believing in knights in Shinning armor coming and sweeping us off our feet -Real?
to some... intriguing for others and plain stupid for the non-believer.
I couldn't put this book down! If you like Iris Johansen give this book a try... although most reviews are against this particular book, don't let that stop you. Judge for your self!
10 people found this helpful
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Le President from the south of France

Having not read other books in Iris Johansen's series about a mythical statue The Wind Dancer, I may be handicapped by not having some background that would be necessary to appreciate this book. But truthfully, with or without the statue as a part of this thin plot, I could not accept any of the characters or their actions as Johansen superficially described them.
The failure in the area of character development is not the only reason that Final Target was a true disappointment however. Where can I even begin?
What suffices for a story line has a president's seven year old daughter involved in a kidnap plot, plunged into a catatonic state, caught up in the search for a priceless art object, and reached in her fugue state through some sort of paranormal mind-melding by the sister of her psychiatrist.
When I found that the book was partially set at the president's country home in the south of France (huh?) alarm bells should have gone off so loudly I would have been prevented from continuing. Alas, I persevered, to find even further disappointment.
The child's father meanwhile is portrayed like a patsy serving as commander in chief, President Andreas. (The name is where my first leap of faith is required) His main function is to growl menacingly on the phone to kidnappers as he shows himself to be utterly unpresidential. The man, who sounds more like the French Ambassador to the UN, goes along with unrealistic demands without much apparent involvement by the Secret Service, CIA, FBI, Interpol, or even the child's mother, who remains conveniently bedridden in the last month of her pregnancy and does not even merit mention in more than a sentence or two.
A plot that was superficial at best, characters that seemed flat and not well fleshed out, very little in the way of description and next to no scene setting made this book one I kept wondering why I continued to read. But I persevered, keeping alive hope for future chapters. I reminded myself that Iris Johansen is a well recognized writer and that the book made the New York Times bestseller list. In short I tried to believe that the best was yet to come.
Now that the final page has come and gone and the book closed, the disappointment remains. There was no redemption in those closing chapters and no feeling of vindication. The characters continue to seem hollow, the detail sketchy and my disappointment deeper. I'm left shaking my head and wishing that I`d let my first impressions guide me. This book is one I wish I'd put back on the shelf after chapter one.
8 people found this helpful
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Exciting ride.... with a little "X-files" feel to it......

What attracted me to this novel at first is that it has one of the characters from "The Search", Sean Galen, in it. Galen also plays a secondary character in this book, but he does have a lot of page coverage.
The book's beginning brings us into the middle of a kidnapping in process. The target of the plot is the US president's daughter, Cassie Andreas. Fortunately, she's saved by the hero of this story, Michael Travis. However, after experiencing the traumatic event, the 7 year old girl became a mute and mentally detached person.
The president hired Jessica Reily, a pychologist, to help Cassie. Jessica's sister, Melissa, was a patient herself. Melissa was mentally detached for 6 years before Jessica brought her back. However, she has formed some sort of psychic ability after the incident. Lately, she's been having nightmares that forebodes bad events to come. Also, Melissa has also developed some sort of psychic connection to Cassie.
Michael Travis is not a good man. He's been part of the underworld (smuggling and other illegal acts) since his birth. That's why he sneaked away after saving Cassie. He's been on the run with his own problems on hand. Therefore, he agreed to help the president find the kidnapper in exchange for protection. So he was placed in the same facility as Jessica, Melissa, and Cassie. There, he helps Jessica when Cassie has nightmares since Cassie views him as her savior and hero.
Unfortunately, circumstances wouldn't allow Travis to stay at the facility. So he orchestrates an escape plan and brings along Jessica, Melissa, and Cassie with him too. While the president is after them, the kidnapper/killer is also on the lookout for them. A trail of murder and violence follows the group while they try to cure Cassie...
Unlike some other readers, I wasn't disappointed with this book. Yes, it is slightly different than her past novels in that it concentrates more on the pyschological interplay between the characters, especially Melissa and Cassie's mental interchanges, but it still have its fair share of action, especially parts with Galen in them. It does have some level of X-files intrigue and as a fan of the show, it's easy to follow these lines of thought.
The only thing I think could have been better is the villain, Edward Deschamps. The author does show his violent and murderous characteristics, but didn't really show the readers his mentally twisted mind. Compared to Rudzak (the villain in the "The Search"), Deschamps' character was not as fully developed and didn't really give us a chill. The final resolution(the fall and death of Deschamps) was simple and not brilliantly thought out.
Overall enjoyable read. A good addition to the author's suspense collection. Again, I would like to see more Sean Galen in the future.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Exciting ride.... with a little "X-files" feel to it......

What attracted me to this novel at first is that it has one of the characters from "The Search", Sean Galen, in it. Galen also plays a secondary character in this book, but he does have a lot of page coverage.
The book's beginning brings us into the middle of a kidnapping in process. The target of the plot is the US president's daughter, Cassie Andreas. Fortunately, she's saved by the hero of this story, Michael Travis. However, after experiencing the traumatic event, the 7 year old girl became a mute and mentally detached person.
The president hired Jessica Reily, a pychologist, to help Cassie. Jessica's sister, Melissa, was a patient herself. Melissa was mentally detached for 6 years before Jessica brought her back. However, she has formed some sort of psychic ability after the incident. Lately, she's been having nightmares that forebodes bad events to come. Also, Melissa has also developed some sort of psychic connection to Cassie.
Michael Travis is not a good man. He's been part of the underworld (smuggling and other illegal acts) since his birth. That's why he sneaked away after saving Cassie. He's been on the run with his own problems on hand. Therefore, he agreed to help the president find the kidnapper in exchange for protection. So he was placed in the same facility as Jessica, Melissa, and Cassie. There, he helps Jessica when Cassie has nightmares since Cassie views him as her savior and hero.
Unfortunately, circumstances wouldn't allow Travis to stay at the facility. So he orchestrates an escape plan and brings along Jessica, Melissa, and Cassie with him too. While the president is after them, the kidnapper/killer is also on the lookout for them. A trail of murder and violence follows the group while they try to cure Cassie...
Unlike some other readers, I wasn't disappointed with this book. Yes, it is slightly different than her past novels in that it concentrates more on the pyschological interplay between the characters, especially Melissa and Cassie's mental interchanges, but it still have its fair share of action, especially parts with Galen in them. It does have some level of X-files intrigue and as a fan of the show, it's easy to follow these lines of thought.
The only thing I think could have been better is the villain, Edward Deschamps. The author does show his violent and murderous characteristics, but didn't really show the readers his mentally twisted mind. Compared to Rudzak (the villain in the "The Search"), Deschamps' character was not as fully developed and didn't really give us a chill. The final resolution(the fall and death of Deschamps) was simple and not brilliantly thought out.
Overall enjoyable read. A good addition to the author's suspense collection. Again, I would like to see more Sean Galen in the future.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Exciting ride.... with a little "X-files" feel to it......

What attracted me to this novel at first is that it has one of the characters from "The Search", Sean Galen, in it. Galen also plays a secondary character in this book, but he does have a lot of page coverage.
The book's beginning brings us into the middle of a kidnapping in process. The target of the plot is the US president's daughter, Cassie Andreas. Fortunately, she's saved by the hero of this story, Michael Travis. However, after experiencing the traumatic event, the 7 year old girl became a mute and mentally detached person.
The president hired Jessica Reily, a pychologist, to help Cassie. Jessica's sister, Melissa, was a patient herself. Melissa was mentally detached for 6 years before Jessica brought her back. However, she has formed some sort of psychic ability after the incident. Lately, she's been having nightmares that forebodes bad events to come. Also, Melissa has also developed some sort of psychic connection to Cassie.
Michael Travis is not a good man. He's been part of the underworld (smuggling and other illegal acts) since his birth. That's why he sneaked away after saving Cassie. He's been on the run with his own problems on hand. Therefore, he agreed to help the president find the kidnapper in exchange for protection. So he was placed in the same facility as Jessica, Melissa, and Cassie. There, he helps Jessica when Cassie has nightmares since Cassie views him as her savior and hero.
Unfortunately, circumstances wouldn't allow Travis to stay at the facility. So he orchestrates an escape plan and brings along Jessica, Melissa, and Cassie with him too. While the president is after them, the kidnapper/killer is also on the lookout for them. A trail of murder and violence follows the group while they try to cure Cassie...
Unlike some other readers, I wasn't disappointed with this book. Yes, it is slightly different than her past novels in that it concentrates more on the pyschological interplay between the characters, especially Melissa and Cassie's mental interchanges, but it still have its fair share of action, especially parts with Galen in them. It does have some level of X-files intrigue and as a fan of the show, it's easy to follow these lines of thought.
The only thing I think could have been better is the villain, Edward Deschamps. The author does show his violent and murderous characteristics, but didn't really show the readers his mentally twisted mind. Compared to Rudzak (the villain in the "The Search"), Deschamps' character was not as fully developed and didn't really give us a chill. The final resolution(the fall and death of Deschamps) was simple and not brilliantly thought out.
Overall enjoyable read. A good addition to the author's suspense collection. Again, I would like to see more Sean Galen in the future.
6 people found this helpful
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I expected MUCH more

This was the first Johansen book I read and it might well be the last. Actually Final Target was not that bad, but very close.
The main flaw of the story was the lack of any background. Not only characters' background, but also information about the trauma condition and all the psycho-related things going on.
And they were hardly believable. Toward the end it turns almost ridiculous.
I was amazed by Johansen's lack of vocabulary. First the book has no descriptions whatsoever, that would establish some kind of mental picture of what and where the action is taking place. But also Johansen keeps using the same and the same words and phrases thorughout the whole book. Her characters "shudder," "stiffen" and "twist their lips" at least a couple of times in each chapter.
As if the book was written overnight. No editing at all.
If I can employ Johansen's style to comment on her book:
"Bland. Plain. Boredom."
4 people found this helpful
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Two Thumbs Down

Final Target was the first book I've read by Iris Johansen. It will be the last.
The storyline may have worked in this book, but without character development it fell flat. I put this book down when I found myself laughing at what was supposed to be a serious turn in the plot.
Only two words come to mind to describe Final Target - claptrap and tripe. Save your time and money.
4 people found this helpful
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Boring boring boring

Stopped reading it halfway. I just found the whole premise, and the author's attempt to create a dramatic context, half-baked. This struck me as a book churned out in a hurry to meet some quota. Save your money...
3 people found this helpful
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Excellent!

This book has a nice story and a very strong message: 'If you really want to do something, but really want to do it. Nothing will stop you.' The book's thrilling part is not so thrilling, but you won't be able to close the book until you get to the last page.
When you read a book and every page shows how can people do whatever they want just because they have perseverance and you learn that. That's a good book.
I don't think you'll regret reading this book albeit the part with the president is a little bit shabby.

You'll never guess the book's very end.

So I'll grade this book with SIX stars
2 people found this helpful
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Convoluted tale that wasn't overly believable

Heard the taped version of Iris Johnansen's FINAL TARGET,
a somewhat convoluted tale about a kidnapped girl who just
happens to be the daughter of the President of the United
States . . . I just didn't find it believable, nor did I care for any
of the main characters . . . only the ending, which involved
a love story of sorts, managed to pique my interest . . . I also
found Carolyn McCormick's narration excellent; in fact, much
better than the book.
2 people found this helpful