Pierce William Luther - Hunter [Oryg].pdf

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How should an honorable man confront evil?
Should he ignore it, with the excuse that it is not his responsibility?
Should he ally himself with the evil, because that’s where the “smart money” is?
Or should he take up arms against it and fight it with all his strength and without regard for the
personal consequences, even though he must fight alone?
Oscar Yeager, a former combat pilot in Vietnam, now a comfortable yuppie working as a Defense
Department consultant in the Virginia suburbs of the nation’s capital, faces this choice. He surveys the
race mixing, the open homosexuality, the growing influence of drugs, the darkening complexion of the
population as the tide of non-White immigration swells. He finds that for him it really is no choice at
all: he is
compelled
to fight the evil which afflicts America in the 1990s; his conscience will not let
him ignore it, and joining it is inconceivable.
He declares war on the corrupt and irresponsible politicians who are presiding over the destruction of
his race and his country, the scheming media masters who are the principal architects of that
destruction, and the spiritually sick adherents of “diversity” who are their willing collaborators. And
when Oscar Yeager is on the warpath, you’d better not be in his way!
Hunter
is another blockbuster novel of resistance and revolution by the author of the bestselling book
of the genre,
The Turner Diaries.
• “In a May 3, 1995, search of [convicted Oklahoma City bombing conspirator] Terry Nichols’
house, FBI agents seized a copy of
Hunter,
a rightwing novel by William Pierce, who also wrote
The
Turner Diaries,
in which a fictional explosion at FBI headquarters in Washington kills more than 700
people.”—
The Denver Post
• “Represents a graduate course in power politics and the psychology of the ruthless....” —
The
Nationalist
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I
As he pulled into the parking slot near the edge of the huge, asphalt lot an empty beer can crunched
under one of the front wheels of the car. He turned off his lights and surveyed the area. Yes, this was a
good spot; he had a clear view of each automobile turning from the lone entrance driveway into the lot,
where it had to slow almost to a stop under the bright, mercury-vapor lamp there, and he also was well
situated for seeing which row of the lot each vehicle eventually turned into. He pulled his coat more
snugly around his neck, turned the radio dial until he found an FM station which was broadcasting his
favorite Schubert sonata, and settled down to wait.
It was nearly 20 minutes before he spotted what he was looking for. A brown sports van barely
slowed as it came bouncing up the entrance ramp. Its tires squealed as it made the turn at the top. For a
single instant the faces of the two occupants were visible to Oscar: the driver, a mulatto with a bushy
Afro, and the woman beside him, dark haired and with a rather broad nose, but still clearly White.
The van’s tall antenna with the orange ping-pong ball on top made it easy for him to follow the
course of the vehicle with his eyes after it turned into the fourth lane down from where he was parked.
Oscar waited until the van stopped, then he started his engine and swung out of his parking space,
following the route taken by the other vehicle. He wanted another look at the couple before they went
into the supermarket, just to be certain. Then he would choose another parking slot, as near the van as
possible, and wait for them to return.
As he rolled cautiously along the asphalt between the two lines of parked cars, he did not see the
couple in his headlights until he was nearly opposite their van. They were both standing near the
passenger side of their vehicle, apparently arguing about something.
A sudden, reckless impulse struck Oscar: why not do it now, instead of waiting for them to go into
the store and then come back? There were no other cars moving in the lane and no other pedestrians in
sight, except at the far end, near the store entrance. Unfortunately, though, the brown van and the
couple were on his right, and his passenger-side window was rolled up. It seemed to him too awkward
to have to lean across the seat and roll the window down while they were watching.
Would he be able to turn his car around and drive back up the lane before anyone else came or before
the couple moved? Perhaps he should get out of the car now and hit them on foot. His palms became
sweaty, and he felt his muscles tighten as the possibilities flashed through his mind with lightning
speed.
Just as he came fully abreast of the van he spotted a vacant slot three cars down, also on the right.
Good! He would pull in there. If no one else had appeared he would back out and move down the lane
in the opposite direction, with the van on his left this time.
In the cold night air the perspiration rolled down his cheeks in rivulets as he fought to calm his
nerves. It was always this way just before an operation. Even back in ‘Nam, every time he’d had to
take his F4 up on a run through that deadly North Vietnamese antiaircraft fire, he’d had to fight this
jittery, sweaty feeling. Once he was in the thick of things, the fear disappeared; it was just before that
was always the bad time— the time when it was still possible to back out.
His grip tightened convulsively on the steering wheel, and the motion of the car became jerky as he
maneuvered into the parking space. An instant glance to the rear, and then he put his vehicle into
reverse and backed it quickly around.
In another five seconds he was opposite the couple again. He stopped the car with a jerk,
inadvertently killing the engine. Damn! And in the rearview mirror he saw a fat woman, two bags of
groceries in her arms and a small child trailing her, walking down the lane, about 60 yards away. Both
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the bushy-haired mulatto and his rather dumpy, pasty-faced female companion stopped talking and
turned to look directly at him. They were about eight feet from his open window.
An instant calm fell over Oscar, the expected calm for which he had been waiting. With a smooth
motion, neither too hurried nor too slow but precise and deliberate, he lifted the rifle from beneath the
blanket on the seat beside him, raised it to his shoulder, and, left elbow braced against the door,
carefully squeezed off two shots.
The ear-shattering reports echoed through the huge lot, but Oscar remained calm as he put the rifle
down, restarted his engine, and accelerated smoothly toward the exit ramp. As he turned at the end of
the lane, he paused to glance back toward the van. The mulatto’s body was sprawled out into the
roadway; the woman apparently had fallen backward, beside the van, and was not visible. Both shots
had been head shots, and Oscar was quite certain both the man and the woman were dead. He had seen
their skulls literally explode into showers of bone fragments, brain tissue, and blood as the high-
velocity projectiles struck them.
The icy calm stayed with Oscar all the way home. Not until he had put the car in the garage, entered
the house, and taken off his coat did it give way to the euphoria he always felt afterward. He whistled
contentedly to himself as he gave his rifle a quick cleaning and then returned to the garage to change
his license plates. It took him only two minutes to remove the special plates and replace them with his
regular ones.
He carefully checked the adhesive-backed plastic letters and numerals which he had pressed onto the
flattened plates. He had been worried about the adhesive not holding the thick plastic pieces to the
metal, especially in this cold weather. He pried gently at the edge of a letter with the blade of his
pocket knife. The adhesive resisted, then gradually yielded, so that he was able to work the blade
between the plastic and the metal and, with a few seconds of effort, peel the entire letter loose. That
was reassuring, but he was still mindful of the time, a few days ago, when he had arrived at home and
found a number missing from the plate altogether! After that he had done some experimenting with
different adhesives. It took him nearly 20 minutes to peel loose all of the plastic pieces and rearrange
them into a new pattern this time, but he did not begrudge the extra effort required.
How fortunate, he thought, as he turned out the garage light, that his automobile was such a common
model. There must be 10,000 tan Ford sedans practically indistinguishable from his in the Washington
metropolitan area. Still, he was pressing his luck to keep using the same
modus operandi.
Six times in
a little over three weeks— 22 days to be exact— with the same car, the same rifle, the same routine,
just different parking lots and different license numbers, was really too much, he thought to himself.
But more than two weeks ago he had made up his mind that he would not vary his style until the
news media broke their silence on the killings. There had been a big news splash after the first double
shooting, three weeks ago. “Interracial couple gunned down in parking lot,” the Washington Post
headline had screamed, and the other media also had stressed the fact that the two victims were a Black
male and a White female, even though the newsmen had no way of knowing then that the gunman had
a racial motive. The naughtiness of the notion that he might have apparently was too titillating for them
to resist.
When the second double killing came four days later, it had been mentioned briefly on the inside
pages of the Post and then quietly dropped. The third, fourth, and fifth pairs of shootings had been
greeted with total media silence. The reason was clear: at some time between the second and third
shootings it had dawned on the media people that the killings were racially motivated, and the
realization frightened them. They didn’t want to encourage any would-be imitators, or even give hope
to a great many Americans who would cheer anyone who might be going around picking off racially
mixed couples.
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By now the bastards really must be bursting at the seams trying to keep the lid on this, Oscar thought,
grinning. They couldn’t hold out much longer. He had a strong hunch, approaching certainty, that
tonight’s work would crack them wide open.
In the passageway between the garage and the house Oscar hesitated. He had some paperwork in the
study to finish, if he were to have the new proposal ready in time for his meeting with Colonel
Ericsson Thursday. But he couldn’t stomach the idea of any more paperwork tonight, and it already
was a bit late for calling Adelaide. He decided to put in a couple of hours in the shop before bedtime.
Happy with his decision, he snapped his fingers and began whistling again as he turned down the stairs
to the cellar.
Oscar Yeager was a consulting engineer by profession, a tinkerer and occasional inventor by
inclination. After leaving the Air Force in 1976, he had gone back to school and earned graduate
degrees in both electrical engineering and computer science. He had begun hiring out as a consultant
even while finishing his graduate work at the University of Colorado. After that he had set up shop in
the San Francisco area and, through an Air Force acquaintance from his Vietnam days, now a contract
officer in the Pentagon, had acquired a series of design contracts. It was these contracts which had led
him to move to Washington four years ago.
Actually, Oscar didn’t have to work at all; the royalties coming in on one of his antenna patents were
quite sufficient to meet his rather modest needs. He worked, not so much because he was eager to pile
up more money in the bank, but because he thought it a good idea to keep his hand in. Furthermore, the
extra income made it possible for him gradually to increase his stock of laboratory equipment, which
was damned expensive. Anyway, the work fitted in nicely with his own tinkering inclinations, he did it
all at home on his own schedule, and he almost never spent more than 20 hours a week at it.
Oscar moved easily between the racks of electronic equipment, carefully avoiding tripping over
interconnecting cables, as he made his way to the corner where the computer quietly hummed and
chittered to itself. He glanced at the sheaf of fanfold paper which the printer slowly had been
disgorging all evening and noted with satisfaction that the calculations for the new antenna system
were nearly finished. If things continued to go well, he just might have all the work done for which he
was seeking another Air Force contract even before the contract was signed Thursday.
He wouldn’t tell Ericsson that, of course. He would dribble out results over the next six months. That
would keep the Air Force happy and give Oscar plenty of opportunity to justify expenses to pay for the
new spectrum analyzer he wanted.
If it weren’t for the damned paper shuffling, this government contract work would be ideal, Oscar
reflected. But every contract required filling out literally hundreds of pages of absolutely asinine
forms, for which the instructions were maddeningly obtuse. What percentage of his suppliers and
subcontractors during the past three years were Blacks? the government wanted to know. How many
were Spanish surnamed? How many were American Indians, Asiatics, or Aleutian Islanders? Were his
percentages in each of the above cases at least equal to the percentages of the corresponding minorities
in the work force in the county or municipality where the contract work was performed? Had he ever
knowingly used contract funds to purchase supplies from a company not in compliance with
regulations 148 c.(4) or 156 a.(1) of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission? If so, why?
Give full particulars. And on and on and on.
And the bastards actually checked all the answers! Once Oscar had tried to shortcut the paper work
by scrawling “not applicable” across a whole page of questions which asked what percentage of the
contractor’s advertising budget went to media oriented specifically toward minority markets, whether
the pictorial or photographic material used in the contractor’s advertising depicted the contractor’s
employees/customers as racially mixed (and if not, why not?), and the like.
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