Sniper: Ultimate Kill | iPhone |
"He’s got a thermal," Beckett muttered. "He's waiting for us to sweat." "Then don't," Miller replied.
"Target neutralized," Miller said, finally lowering his binoculars. "One shot. Ultimate kill." Sniper: Ultimate Kill
The sun over the Colombian jungle didn’t just shine; it weighed on you like a wet wool blanket. Marine Sergeant Brandon Beckett lay motionless in the high grass, his breathing so shallow it barely disturbed the barrel of his rifle. He wasn't just hunting a man; he was hunting a ghost. "He’s got a thermal," Beckett muttered
In the tower, the shadow shifted. A muzzle rose. Beckett had a split second—the space between heartbeats. He didn't think about the politics or the cartel money. He thought about the lead. He exhaled, feeling the "natural respiratory pause" his father had taught him a lifetime ago. Crack. "One shot
"Wind is shifting, three o'clock," Miller whispered, his voice a dry rasp. "Range is eight hundred meters. He’s in the bell tower, third arch from the left."
Beckett didn't cheer. He didn't move. He stayed on the glass, watching the tower until the dust settled.
His target was "The Devil," a legendary cartel sniper with a penchant for high-caliber precision and zero mercy. For weeks, the Devil had been picking off high-ranking officials with impossible shots, paralyzing the city of Bogotá with fear.

