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Altered State
Don Pendleton


Kabul, Afghanistan, remains a front line within a bureaucratic civil war, where spooks, soldiers, fanatics and narcotics collide in profit and death. Added to the mix are rumors of a heroin operation now run by America's largest and most respected private security firm.With no legal remedy on hand, Mack Bolan is dispatched on a scorched-earth mission that threatens to expose more than just hand-holding deep inside the Beltway. With his identity compromised from the start, the Executioner hooks up with a seasoned DEA agent and local informant, blowing out the infrastructure of a massive narco-traffic operation brick by brick, and exposing the long arm of a traitor.









“A report?” Brognola said. “I’d like to see it.”


“I misspoke. Call it a rumor, if you like.”

“I don’t like rumors,” the big Fed stated. “Who are these valued contractors?”

The black eyes pinned him. “Let’s cut the crap. State officially objects to any unauthorized Justice programs you may be running in Afghanistan. That comes from the top. I hope it’s clear enough for you.”

“It’s crystal clear,” Brognola said, rising to his feet. “I can assure you without fear of contradiction that Justice has no unauthorized programs running in Kabul, or anywhere else. And that comes from the top. Have a good one.”

Brognola felt them staring daggers at him as he left. He had a problem now, a leak, and he would have to deal with it before he and Bolan landed in a world of hurt.




Altered State

Don Pendleton


Mack Bolan













www.mirabooks.co.uk (http://www.mirabooks.co.uk)


We have to condemn publicly the very idea that some people have the right to repress others. In keeping silent about evil, in burying it so deep within us that no sign of it appears on the surface, we are implanting it, and it will rise up a thousandfold in the future. When we neither punish nor reproach evildoers…we are ripping the foundations of justice from beneath new generations.

—Alexander Solzhenitsyn

It’s time to reproach and punish evil, once and for all. Beginning here and now.

—Mack Bolan


For Corporal Jason L. Dunham, USMC




CONTENTS


PROLOGUE

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN

CHAPTER TWENTY

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

EPILOGUE




PROLOGUE


Badghis Province, Northwestern Afghanistan

Black helicopters do exist.

After all the fervid speculation among UFO-watchers and conspiracy theorists, despite all the official denials and earnest assurances, unmarked whirlybirds of ill omen are seen on occasion.

And they always bear bad news.

The two aloft this morning, shortly after dawn, had lifted off from Murghab, heading northwest toward the border of Turkmenistan. They did not mean to cross the border, although such a violation of the law would not be out of character for anyone on board.

Their destination was a mountain village called Uzra, inhabited by peasants who had caused more trouble than their tiny lives were worth. This day, the men who called the shots were settling old accounts.

The black choppers were both Sikorsky UH-60L Black Hawks, each with a two-man crew and complement of twelve troops aboard, capable of cruising at 173 miles per hour with a top-end do-not-exceed speed of 222 mph. Their combat radius was 368 miles, but this morning’s jaunt covered only a fraction of that distance.

Each Black Hawk was armed—one with a door-mounted 7.62 mm M-60D machine gun, the other with an M-134 Minigun that spewed armor-piercing bullets from an electrically driven rotary breech at a rate of 4,000 rounds per minute.

Beyond that basic airborne armament, each member of the strike team carried either some variant of the M-16 assault rifle or a Mossberg 590-A1 12-gauge shotgun loaded with No. 4 buckshot—averaging seven hits per round on a man-size target at fifty yards. Most carried pistols of their own selection, chambered for 9 mm Parabellum or .45ACP, and all were packing grenades.

Just in case.

Most of the villagers in Uzra were awake and eating breakfast when the war birds fell upon them, dropping from the newly risen sun to skim at rooftop level, starting with a solid strafing run to soften up the target. The M-60D was brutally efficient, spitting death at a cyclic rate of 550 rounds per minute, but its stutter was eclipsed by the high-tech buzz of the Minigun shredding roofs, walls and bodies below.

Uzra was on the smallish side, for an Afghani village. Its population estimates waffled between 150 and 200 residents in winter, when the sheep stayed close to home. But this was spring, so an even hundred would be a closer count.

The inconvenience caused by Uzra’s citizens was out of all proportion to their numbers and position in Afghan society. Someone had not impressed them with their innate insignificance, and now they had to pay the price for stepping out of bounds.

Ten seconds, circling once around the place with weapons spraying in full-auto mode, turned Uzra into a chaotic shambles. Men, women and children ran or staggered from their riddled dwellings, seeking shelter they would never find, some of them dropping in their tracks to rise no more.

“That’s plenty,” said the strike team leader to his pilot. “Put us on the deck.”

Phase Two was mopping up and making sure that no one lived to profit from the lesson they had learned that morning.

Uzra, after all, was not a classroom.

It was an example.

Touchdown was a gentle bump in the midst of a dusty whirlwind whipped by the Black Hawk’s spinning rotors. Rising from his seat, the strike team leader faced his soldiers and reminded them, “No prisoners!”

They rushed past him toward the open bay, some snarling, others smiling as they jumped off into Hell on Earth.




CHAPTER ONE


Kabul, Afghanistan

Mack Bolan turned his rented car off Jadayi Maiwand, putting the Rudkhane-ye-Kabul River behind him as he entered the Old City, Sharh-e-Khone. He started looking for a place to park after he passed the giant Abnecina Hospital, aware that driving through the Old City without a guide could get him lost, despite the maps he carried.

It might even get him killed.

He found a fenced-in public parking lot, paid the young attendant one hundred Afghanis up front—about two dollars, U.S.—and received a numbered ticket in return. The young man smiled and seemed to wish him well as Bolan left the lot.

How did you say “good luck” in Dari or Pashto?

Bolan didn’t have a clue.

There’d been no time for him to study either of Afghanistan’s official languages, much less the other forty-five in use throughout the country. He would need a skilled interpreter and guide, which brought him to the heart of old Kabul, with soldiers in the streets.

Some of them were American, still hunting Taliban and terrorists nearly a decade after the invasion that was meant to punish those responsible for 9/11. Bolan had a diplomatic passport in his pocket that should answer any questions asked by U.S. soldiers who might stop him on the street.

As for the native military and police, if they tried to detain him, he would have a simple choice: either resist or bluff it out.

He definitely needed that interpreter.

The simple map of Sharh-e-Khone that he had memorized included streets and major landmarks, but it didn’t give the flavor of the Old City. It didn’t simmer with the tension Bolan felt around him, didn’t indicate the spots where bullets, fire and bomb fragments had scarred ancient walls.

Passing along the old wall that had once defended Kabul from its enemies outside, Bolan was conscious of the irony. This day, no matter which side you were on, the city’s enemies were all inside . Whether they strapped plastic explosives to their bodies or wore military uniforms, they were combatants in a struggle dating back, at least, to the Soviet invasion of the country in the latter 1970s.

Or should he take it further back, into the early nineteenth century, when British troops had made themselves at home here, in the midst of a society they never really understood? Where did the grim cycle of kill-or-be-killed have its roots?

Passing a line of busy market stalls, Bolan watched for tails, even as he was scouting for his next landmark along the route to locate his interpreter and guide.

The man he sought wasn’t supposed to be alone.

It was a two-for-one deal, this time, which compounded Bolan’s risk. Without even addressing trust issues, two contacts made it twice as likely that they would be followed to the meeting place. If Bolan’s guide was not under surveillance, then it stood to reason that the guide’s control—a DEA spook from the States—would be.

Bolan could only hope that one or both was smart enough to watch their backs and deal with anyone who tried to crash their rendezvous in Sharh-e-Khone.

In case they weren’t, he’d come prepared.

The pistol slung beneath his left arm was a Jericho 941, the simple but elegant Israeli-made 9 mm semiautomatic. It was slightly shorter than his usual Beretta, held one extra Parabellum round, and had its muzzle threaded for a sound suppressor.

Of course, the supressor was back in Bolan’s car, along with all the other martial hardware he’d acquired upon arrival, prior to seeking out his guide.

A soldier had to deal with first things first.

Now, as he passed a bank of aromatic food stalls, keeping track of each turn in his mind, he hoped the day that had begun with jet lag wouldn’t end with blood. A simple meeting and agreement to collaborate would suit him fine.

The killing would come soon enough.

It was, after all, his reason for being in Kabul to start with. The land that his country was making “safe for democracy” still had some serious problems. Negotiation might solve some of them. As for the rest…

Enter the Executioner.



“I WAS AFRAID HE MIGHT be late,” said Edris Barialy.

Deirdre Falk replied, “He isn’t late. Your watch is fast. Again.”

It was a challenge for him, working with a woman. Make that, working for a woman, since the slim brunette American was certainly in charge. She told him where to go and what to do, approved his weekly pay and judged when it was time for him to risk his life.

Like now.

As a strong Muslim—well, an adequate Muslim—Edris Barialy recognized the subordinate state of womankind established by God when He said, “Be” and created all things. Men were supposed to be the rulers of their homes and of the world, but things had changed a great deal in the world outside Afghanistan.

When Barialy had joined his first protest against the growing Afghan heroin trade, he had not expected covert contact from the American Drug Enforcement Administration. And when he accepted the DEA’s offer of part-time employment, using his freedom as a licensed tourist guide to gather intelligence on smugglers, he had not expected that his control officer would be female.

It was strange how things worked out sometimes.

Now here he stood in Sharh-e-Khone, waiting to meet yet another American. A specialist, as Deirdre Falk had described him.

But in what?

Nervous as he was about the meeting and whatever might ensue from it, Barialy had armed himself with a venerable Webley Mk IV .38/200 revolver. It weighed nearly three pounds and pulled down his slacks at the rear, where he wore it tucked under his belt, but Barialy felt better for having the gun close at hand.

He also prayed that he would not be called upon to use it.

Deirdre Falk carried a pistol, too, of course. Barialy had seen it but could not identify the weapon as to brand or caliber. It was some kind of automatic, presumably she had been trained to handle it.

Unlike Barialy himself.

He had served two years in the Afghan National Army, but his firearms training had been limited to practice with Kalashnikov assault rifles. After the basic course, he had been posted to a clerical position in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand Province, and had never fired another shot.

Still, he knew guns as most Afghanis knew them, having grown up in a nation with one of the world’s highest concentrations of firearms per person—one gun for every two of Afghanistan’s twenty-three million citizens, according to estimates from Oxfam and Amnesty International. It had been simple to acquire the Webley and a stash of cartridges.

But as for using them, well, he would have to wait and see what happened next.

“Who is this man, again?” he asked.

“I told you,” Deirdre Falk replied.

“A specialist, I know,” Barialy said. “Could you be more specific?”

“Are you getting cold feet now?” she asked.

“I’m simply curious.”

“I’m told he’s someone who can cut red tape,” she said. “We’re blocked on this end, going nowhere. If he helps us break the jam, more power to him.”

Barialy understood and shared her natural frustration, but the “jam” she spoke of seemed to be, at least in part, a product of the very government that had dispatched her to Afghanistan. Could Barialy trust another agent from that government to set things right? Or would the specialist succeed only in making matters worse, perhaps increasing Barialy’s risk?

Give him a chance, he thought.

And then, the small voice in his head amended, But keep close watch over him.

And then, what, if it seemed that things were getting out of hand? Should he resign, break with the DEA? Or was that even possible?

At least he had the Webley, Barialy thought. And they had taken care not to be followed.

Still, in Kabul’s teeming streets it was impossible to guarantee security. For all he knew, the enemy might be observing them right now.



“I’ M GETTING BORED ,” Farid Humerya said. “They don’t do anything.”

“They brought us here,” Red Scanlon told him. “And they didn’t do it for the tourist thing. Keep watching.”

If the circumstances had been different, Farid Humerya might have told the rude American to do the job himself but Humerya had his orders.

Not from Scanlon and the pigs he served, although their interests coincided with the wishes of Humerya’s master. And Farid Humerya knew enough of life—and sudden death—to follow orders from the man he served.

He did not wish to think of the alternative.

“You think that they are meeting someone?” he asked Scanlon.

“Why else come down here, together?”

“We would know if they were seeing someone from the National Police or the Special Narcotics Force,” Humerya said.

Both agencies were riddled with corruption from top to bottom. They leaked information as if it was water poured into a sieve.

“Most likely,” Scanlon granted. “But we need to find out if it’s someone new.”

They sat watching their targets from a Toyota Prius, with two armed men in the backseat. Two other cars containing four men each—a Camry and a Volkswagen Passat—had the target zone boxed.

Despite their manufacture in Japan and Germany, the Toyotas and the VW were all emblazoned with maple leaf flags, marking them as “Canadian cars.” Imports from Canada were highly prized in Kabul, regardless of their original source or the fact that some had been refurbished after homeland accidents before finding their way to Afghanistan.

If their cars were mock-Canadian, the weapons carried in those cars were strictly Russian. Each man had an AKSU-74 assault rifle with folding metal stock and shortened 8.3-inch barrel, otherwise identical to the standard Kalashnikov assault rifle. The twelve of them together could fire 360 rounds without reloading, all within ten seconds.

And wouldn’t that cause bloody chaos in the Sharh-e-Khone?

“What shall we do if they are meeting someone?” Humerya inquired.

“See who it is, first,” Scanlon answered, none too patiently. “Identify them, if we can. Then make our move.”

“To capture them?”

“To do whatever’s necessary. Are you getting squeamish on me now?” the American asked.

“Of course not.”

It was an insulting question. Farid Humerya was certain he had slain more men than the American had ever dreamed of killing.

Then again, he might be wrong.

These grim-faced mercenaries were a breed apart. Like Humerya himself, they killed for money, but this lot also seemed to possess—or be possessed by—an evangelistic zeal. It seemed almost as if they thought their acts were sanctified he some exalted power beyond cash or earthly politics.

“Whatever happens,” Scanlon said, “we’ll have the edge.”

“I simply thought that with the soldiers all around, perhaps we ought to follow them and find a place less public.”

“It’s a thought,” Scanlon agreed. “But either way, we nip it in the bud. This bitch has caused too much trouble already.”

“Will eliminating her cause further problems for your people in the States?”

“That’s not my worry,” Scanlon answered. “And it’s sure as hell not yours.”

Humerya bore the rudeness, understanding that the arrogant American was simply following the dictates of his character. Coming from a culture fueled by sex and greed, he knew no better.

Which would not prevent Humerya from exacting sweet revenge, if the opportunity presented itself.

They were allies of convenience, which should never be confused with friends. Humerya had his orders to collaborate with Scanlon and the others while it served the purpose of Humerya’s masters. When the day came—and it would come—that the mercenaries served no further purpose in Afghanistan, the soil would drink their blood.

But in the meantime, he would watch and wait.



B OLAN KNEW THAT HE WAS getting close. His briefing on the ancient city had included detailed maps, plus satellite and ground-level photos of Kabul’s crowded streets. He recognized landmarks in passing, even if he couldn’t read their signs or tell exactly what trade they pursued.

The Sharh-e-Khone was a riot of colors and smells, the latter ranging from enticing aromas of food that made Bolan’s mouth water, to auto exhaust, raw sewage and a general musty odor of decay.

He could imagine the Crusaders marching—riding—through the very streets where he now walked, meeting the same looks of curiosity, suspicion or hostility that faced him now. The native clothing would have changed, at least a little, and the weapons that they used against him if their mood turned would be more advanced, but otherwise….

Bolan was well aware that many Muslims, in Afghanistan and elsewhere, still recalled the ancient conflict of religions during the Crusades, the same way many U.S. Southerners still brooded over stories of the Civil War. Throughout the Near East, though, grim memories of the Crusades were aggravated by a Western military presence—in Afghanistan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia—and by the saber-rattling on both sides that was too often cast in terms of Muslims versus Christians.

Bolan wasn’t a religious man, by any standard definition of the term, but he knew well enough how faith could bleed into fanaticism with a little push from pastors or imams who had agendas of their own and didn’t mind using their “flocks” as cannon fodder.

Not my problem, Bolan thought, as he drew closer to the designated meeting place.

Despite the setting, his primary targets on the present mission were Americans and self-styled Christians, not Afghani Muslims. Still, it was naive to think that he could pull it off without certain natives who collaborated in the traffic that was poisoning the West.

Come one, come all, he thought. And half smiled as he added to himself, But don’t come all at once.

More soldiers passed, in vehicles painted to match their desert cammo uniforms. They all wore sunglasses, and if they noticed Bolan, none gave any sign of it. Some of the natives watched them pass, scowling or showing poker faces, but the great majority ignored the military vehicle and men in uniform as if they had no substance.

In the long-term scheme of things, Bolan supposed, that was the truth.

He marked a pharmacy ahead and on his left, which meant that he had two more blocks to go. Aside from checking to make sure he wasn’t followed, Bolan now began to watch for indications of a trap.

The problem was, he wasn’t overly familiar with Kabul or its Old City, couldn’t tell whether its normal rhythm was disturbed or right on track. Cars raced and swerved along the narrow streets, parked anywhere they liked, apparently without regard to anything resembling traffic laws, and many of them bore anomalous decals that seemed to mark them as Canadian.

Another mystery.

Nearing the rendezvous, Bolan first checked the obvious. He saw no snipers on the nearby rooftops, no one leaning from an upstairs window with a rifle or an RPG launcher in hand. No one at street level displayed a weapon, and there was none of the war-torn country’s “secret” gun shops within view, where anyone could snatch an AK-47 off the rack.

So far, so good.

Bolan carried no photos of his contacts, but he’d memorized their faces prior to takeoff on his transatlantic flight. The native, his interpreter, was Edris Barialy, twenty-seven, an ex-soldier working undercover with the DEA.

The Yank, and Barialy’s boss—at least, in theory—Deirdre Falk, age thirty-five, with twelve years on the federal payroll. Bolan didn’t know where-all she’d served, but rookies who had never stained their hands with dirty work wouldn’t be posted to Afghanistan.

Well, not unless the brass in Washington was hoping they’d be killed or simply disappear.

Another dozen strides and Bolan had them spotted. They were standing just where he’d been told they’d be, outside a theater whose faded posters showed a wiry old man with a dragon. Bolan couldn’t tell if the old man was feeding the dragon or threatening it with a spear, and he couldn’t care less.

Showtime, he thought, and stepped into the street.



“T HIS COULD BE HIM ,” Deirdre Falk said. “I think it must be.”

Edris Barialy turned to face the same direction.

“Who?” he asked.

“How many Yanks do you see heading this way?” she inquired.

“Sorry.” And then, “But there’s another one.”

“Say what?”

“Across the—”

“Don’t point, damn it!” she snapped at him as he raised an arm. “Just tell me!”

And for Christ’s sake think!

“Across the intersection,” Barialy answered, sounding chastened. “In the black Toyota. I believe the passenger in the front seat may be American.”

Trying to seem as if she wasn’t searching for the car, Falk found it anyway, and even with the windshield glare she saw four men inside it. Sitting there and watching…what?

Had she been followed? Had the men trailed Barialy separately? Were they here for some entirely different reason, mere coincidence?

Falk didn’t like the feel of that, and now that she’d had time to scope him out, she thought the husky white man in the black Toyota’s shotgun seat most likely was American. She’d found that there was something in the Yankee attitude abroad that set Americans apart from Britons, Frenchmen and Scandinavians before they spoke out loud.

So, an American, a native driver, and two backseat friends she couldn’t really see.

So what?

Afghanistan was crawling with Americans, from servicemen and-women through a laundry list of spooks and law-enforcement officers, reporters and photographers, corporate people and their bodyguards—even some freaking tourists, if you could believe it.

Money-seekers, story-seekers, thrill-seekers, mixed up with warriors and manhunters. Afghanistan absorbed them all, and if some never made it home…well, what was life without a little risk?

The man she’d marked as their contact was one block out and closing fast, as Falk played catch-up with another quick scan of the scene. Behind her, parked outside a grocery across the street, a Volkswagen with four men in it sat, immobile, waiting patiently for God knew what.

Eight men, if they were working with the guys in the Toyota. And if any of them even knew Falk was alive.

Because she planned to stay that way, she would assume that they were enemies and act accordingly. But what, precisely, could she do?

The tall pedestrian, her maybe-contact, had closed the gap between them to a half-block now. She thought he had his eyes on her, although the mirrored aviator’s glasses made it hard to say for sure, but there was nothing she could do about it.

Wave him off? Ridiculous. If she was right about him, and he was her contact, she would just be marking him for anyone who hoped to take him out. And if he wasn’t there to meet her, nothing that she did or said would make sense to him anyway.

“There’s a Toyota,” Barialy said.

“Saw it the first time, thanks,” Falk answered.

“No. Another one.”

“Don’t point,” she snapped. “Just tell me.”

Barialy did, and there it was. A third car with four men inside, just sitting there, triangulating on the spot where she and Barialy stood. Thus making hash out of her futile hope that they were in the clear.

The tall, not-so-bad-looking stranger was almost on top of them. Falk hoped she wouldn’t spook him, reaching underneath her lightweight jacket for the Glock pistol that rode her hip.

“Matt Cooper,” the stranger said as he stopped in front of her.

Falk stared into his mirrored shades, ignored his outthrust hand and answered, “Pleased to meet you, Matt, but I’m afraid we’re in a world of hurt.”



“A RE YOU SURE ?” Bolan asked, shifting gears within a heartbeat.

“Sure as I can be, until they nail us. Three cars, four men each, triangulating.”

“You were followed, then,” he said. Not quite an accusation.

“They were here ahead of you,” she said. “So, yeah. Unless they got a tip somehow, they followed one or both of us.”

She didn’t try to dump it all on her companion, which showed class, but Bolan had no time to parse the etiquette of laying blame. It didn’t matter, at the moment, how twelve hostile men had found him.

All that mattered was evading or eliminating them.

“My ride’s a quarter mile behind me,” Bolan said. “Who’s got the closest wheels?”

“That’s me,” the DEA agent replied. “Four blocks, due north.”

“Past the VW,” he noted.

“Right.”

“Okay. We’ll let them earn their money. Are you packing?”

“Absolutely.”

Bolan shot a sidelong glance toward Edris Barialy. “You?” he asked.

“Me?”

“Are you armed?”

After a fleeting hesitation Barialy nodded, and caught the glare from his control agent. He blushed beneath his rich olive complexion.

“Right, then,” Bolan said. “Try to ignore them as we pass their car. If they get out, let me make the first move.”

“There are cops and soldiers all around the—” Falk began.

“None of them can help us now,” he interrupted her. “Our first priority is getting out of here, alive and in one piece.”

“Okay,” she said.

Her native sidekick bobbed his head in mute agreement.

Bolan led the way north, toward the waiting Volkswagen. He didn’t eyeball any of the men inside it, kept his scan of them peripheral and unobtrusive as he closed the gap, seeming to chat with Falk and Barialy about nothing in particular.

One of the men in the VW was talking on a cell phone, now, asking for orders or receiving them. Whatever happened in the next few seconds would depend upon those orders and the ultimate intent of the watchers.

If they’d been sent to take their prey alive, Bolan would have an edge. If they were simply triggermen, he’d have to put his trust in speed and hope that Falk, at least, could back his play effectively.

He put himself at curbside, with Falk on his left and Barialy beyond her, farthest removed from the street. Whatever broke within the next few seconds, Bolan was the front line of defense, trusting an agent he had never met before that day to watch his back.

Ten yards, and there was stirring in the Volkswagen, to Bolan’s right. As he drew level with the car, both doors came open on his side and two men heaved themselves out of the vehicle. Behind and beyond them, flowing traffic briefly blocked the driver and his starboard backseat passenger from exiting the VW.

A flash of metal told Bolan that one of his assailants had a weapon held against his right leg, not quite out of sight. The man was speaking to him now, Midwestern accent ruling out a Briton.

“Hey, you!”

Bolan drew the Jericho 941 as he turned, squeezing the pistol’s double-action trigger as he found his mark between the stranger’s eyes. The shot slammed home at point-blank range and snapped the dead man’s head back, shattered skull rebounding from the car’s door frame behind him as he fell.

The second target was Afghani, trying for a crouch and bringing up his automatic weapon as the Jericho swung toward him, already too late to save himself. Bolan’s next shot wasn’t precision-perfect, but it did the job, drilling his target’s cheek below the left eye, angling downward through the sinuses to clip his brain stem, heading off the mental signal to his trigger finger.

Bolan crouched and lunged, firing twice more into the Volkswagen. He caught the backseat gunner rising through a half-turn, punched a slug through his rib cage but knew it wasn’t lethal, even as the man dropped out of sight.

The driver fumbled with his weapon, tried to swivel in his seat, but found the steering wheel a deadly obstacle. The fourth round out of Bolan’s pistol struck him just below the right nostril, slamming the driver to his left and likely knocking him unconscious, even if it didn’t kill him.

Bolan spent a precious second scooping up the AKSU rifles that his first two enemies had dropped as they were dying, then straightened to find Falk and her Afghan agent gaping at him. Somewhere at his back, tires screeched on pavement, the Toyotas peeling out.

“We’re done here,” Bolan snapped. “Move out!”




CHAPTER TWO


They moved.

Bolan had no idea where he was going, but he ran as if his life depended on it, which it did. Deirdre Falk kept pace with him, Glock drawn and held in her right hand, while Edris Barialy lagged a step or two behind.

“Another block,” Falk told him. “Left on the side street.”

Bolan’s four shots had unleashed pandemonium around the Volkswagen, where he’d left two men dead without a doubt, two others badly wounded at the very least. So far, no shots had answered his, but growling engines and the cry of tortured rubber told him that pursuit was under way.

They reached the side street Falk had indicated, turned left into it, their weapons scattering pedestrians. Cars lined the curb on both sides of the street, narrowing two slim lanes to one and change, but Bolan didn’t have a clue which vehicle was Falk’s.

She solved the riddle for him when she palmed a key and pressed a button that unlocked the doors on a new Ford Focus that might have been silver or gray. In passing, Bolan noted that the agent’s car did not display a crimson maple leaf.

Falk threw herself into the driver’s seat, while Bolan claimed the backseat for himself and left Barialy to ride shotgun. If they got a running start, Bolan knew that the primary danger would come from behind, and his two liberated assault weapons gave him an edge for repelling attackers.

Unless they were trapped at the curb where they sat.

“We should go now,” he said as Falk revved the Ford’s L14 Zetec-E engine.

“We’re going!” she told him, reversing to butt her way clear of an old car parked too close behind them. “It’s damned tight in here.”

“And about to get tighter,” Bolan said as one of the Toyota chase cars swung into their street.

Bolan leveled one of his hot SMGs at the charger, but Falk spoiled his aim with a lurch that put the Ford in motion, barreling along the narrow street in a general northerly direction. Bolan kept the chase car in his view and saw its mate approaching seconds later, just as Falk cranked through another squealing turn.

The backseat of the Focus wasn’t coffin-tight, but it was cramped: four feet two inches wide, to Bolan’s six-foot-plus stature, with three feet, eight inches of head room. It was awkward for defense, but Bolan blessed the windows that gave him a clear 180-degree view of his unfolding battleground.

“Is this car registered to you?” he asked.

“Some kind of lease deal through a paper company,” Falk answered.

“So, you won’t mind if I make some alterations, then?”

She didn’t ask what Bolan had in mind, just shot a hard glance at him from the rearview mirror and replied, “Do what you gotta do.”

The lead Toyota was almost on top of them, its backup car running some thirty yards behind. Bolan wanted to get them off Falk’s tail—or, at the very least, to slow them down enough for Falk to try some fancy footwork, maybe lose them in the maze of Sharh-e-Khone without a higher body count.

He wasn’t squeamish, but every extra body added heat. Or would, if those he killed were men with influential friends.

“So, what’s the plan?” Falk asked him when they’d cleared another block.

“You drive,” Bolan replied. “I’ll shoot.”

And as he spoke he squeezed the AKSU’s trigger, shattering the Ford’s rear window into flying beads of safety glass.



“G ET AFTER THEM , goddamn it!”

“I am trying,” Farid Humerya stated.

“Then try harder! Christ! We’re losing them!”

Red Scanlon might have said that he’d seen everything during his years of soldiering, but he’d been startled—make that shocked—when the tall stranger shot his four men just like that.

Bam-bam-bam-bam.

Four up, four down.

Scanlon knew two of them were dead, for sure. He’d seen the head shots strike, and there was no mistaking how their bodies dropped like puppets with their strings cut. That was brain death, even if their hearts and lungs kept pumping for a few more minutes. On the other two, he wasn’t positive, but they were down and showed no signs of rising as the Prius passed them, following the Camry that was closer to the shooting scene.

The bastard was quick and cool, Scanlon would give him that. Most shooters hesitated for at least a fraction of a heartbeat in a face-to-face encounter, and some of them—especially Americans—were still hung up on John Wayne etiquette, giving the other guy a chance before they drew and fired.

Fuck that.

Scanlon had stayed alive this long by shooting first and generally not bothering with any questions afterward. Somebody threatened him, or seemed about to, and he hit them with a terminal preemptive strike.

When in doubt, take ’em out.

The men he’d handpicked for this job all had the same philosophy, all had sufficient notches on their guns to qualify as shooters and survivors, but the stranger had dropped four of them like it was nothing, cutting Scanlon’s force by thirty-three percent in something like two seconds flat.

That was embarrassing.

It simply couldn’t be allowed to go unpunished.

“There!” he snapped. “They’ve got a car now!”

“Yes, I see it,” Humerya said.

“Shit! What’s Eddie doing?”

Eddie Franks being his second in command for what had been envisioned as a relatively simple job. Follow the bitch from DEA, using a GPS tracking device that one of Scanlon’s men had planted in or on her car, find out who she was meeting and take care of them.

Easy.

With twelve men on the job, it should’ve been like swatting gnats with a sledgehammer.

Now the whole damned thing had blown up in his face, and Scanlon had begun to worry that he couldn’t make it right.

Scanlon was leaning forward in his seat, willing Humerya and their car to greater speed along the narrow crowded street, when someone in Deirdre Falk’s car opened fire on Eddie Franks’s Camry with an automatic weapon. Scanlon couldn’t actually see it, but the rattling sound of a Kalashnikov was unmistakable.

Humerya seemed to flinch at the first sound of gunfire, then stomped on the Toyota’s accelerator to compensate for his flicker of weakness. The Prius surged forward, sideswiping an aged pedestrian and leaving him sprawled in their wake, his packages scattered from curb to curb.

“Closer!” Scanlon barked at his driver. “Get me a shot!”

But that meant two lanes, at the very least, and Humerya couldn’t widen Kabul’s streets, regardless of his skill behind the wheel.

Humerya didn’t answer Scanlon, but he kept his foot down, speeding on in hot pursuit of the Camry and Deirdre Falk’s Ford. Whether he’d ever catch them was a question Humerya couldn’t answer at the moment.

But he knew one thing beyond a shadow of a doubt.

He couldn’t go back and report that he had failed, until he had exhausted every trick at his command.



T HE FIRST BLAST from Matt Cooper’s automatic rifle sounded like one of those 20 mm Gatling guns, inside the narrow confines of the vehicle. Deirdre Falk wished for earplugs but had none at hand, so she focused on driving the Ford like a bat out of hell.

She checked the rearview, trying to see if Cooper had scored any hits, but the chase cars were weaving as much as they could between vehicles parked on each side of the street, while the point car’s shotgun rider tried to aim a weapon through his open window.

Cooper fired again, but Falk had to focus her gaze on the roadway ahead. She felt more than saw Barialy crouch in his seat to her right, his hideout revolver now clutched in his lap.

“Don’t shoot yourself with that,” she chided. “And for God’s sake, don’t shoot me .”

“I won’t,” he promised, and forced a nervous laugh that could have been incipient hysteria.

Another burst from Cooper, as she made a sharp right turn and watched startled pedestrians scramble for safety. They would soon be leaving the Old City, roaring into the Chindawol district one of Kabul’s poorest neighborhoods, where overcrowding and horrendous sanitation made cholera outbreaks a daily fact of life.

“Where are we going?” she asked Cooper, speaking to the rearview between bursts of autofire from the back window.

“You tell me,” he countered.

“Not the office,” she replied, thinking aloud. “And sure as hell not to the Ministry of Justice.”

“No,” he granted, and unleashed another short burst from his stolen SMG.

“We need to lose these guys and ditch this car, then find another one,” she said.

“And pick up mine,” he added. “All my gear is in the trunk.”

“We’re rolling into Chindawol,” she told him. “That’s a big-time slum, and Rika Khana is another one, just over Jadayi Maiwand. We won’t find any decent rides there, but if we can dump these turkeys without winding up on foot, I know where we can make the switch.”

“I’ll do my best,” Cooper replied, and fired another 4- or 5-round burst at their pursuers.

“Listen, Edris,” Falk said to the man huddled beside her. “If we have to leave the car and separate, don’t go back to your flat. Hear me? Somebody may be watching it.”

“I hear you,” Barialy said.

“And don’t go wandering around the streets with that thing in your hand,” she added.

“I am not a fool,” he answered.

“Who told you to bring it with you, anyway?”

“Perhaps I had a premonition that we would be killed,” the slim Afghan replied.

“Hilarious. You doing stand-up now?”

“Excuse me?”

“Never mind. Forget it. Just be careful where you’re pointing that antique.”

The city’s odor changed as they drove into Chindawol, from market stalls and roasting meat to sewage and despair. The streets and sidewalks were as crowded as before, but not with vehicles, since virtually no one in the district could afford to buy a car or keep it running.

“What I need,” Bolan announced, “is combat stretch.”

“Say what?” Falk asked.

“Some room to move,” he said. “At least to turn the car around, instead of leading a parade all over town.”

“We’ve got some waste ground coming up,” Falk said. “If we drive into it, I can’t swear we’ll get out again.”

Bolan considered that for something like a second and a half, then told her, “Try it, anyway.”

“Okay. It’s a half mile up ahead.”

The rearview showed her Cooper switching auto weapons as the first ran out of ammunition. Thirty rounds left, she surmised, and they were back to pistols. Against six or eight Kalashnikovs.

Better to end it while they had a chance.

If they still had a chance.

One last stand, coming up.

Falk focused on the road again, watching for vacant lots ahead and praying that she hadn’t missed her turn.



S CANLON HAD TRIED a long shot through his open window, knowing it was risky, but he couldn’t pull it off. It wasn’t shooting with his left hand that defeated him—he’d trained himself to become nearly ambidextrous with weapons—but the weaving, rocking motion of his car and the obstruction of the Camry traveling in front of him.

Last thing I freaking need, he thought, is shooting Eddie or one of his people.

Scanlon ducked back inside the Prius, spitting road grit or some kind of garbage that was thrown up by the two cars running hot and fast ahead of him. He didn’t even want to think about the garbage that was dumped in Kabul’s gutters every day, or how a person actually inhaled tiny particles of everything he smelled.

It was enough to make him envy the people who lived in plastic bubbles, isolated from the outside world until something broke down and they died like fish out of water, gasping for air.

Another burst of AK fire erupted from the DEA Ford, and this time Scanlon nearly mastered the involuntary flinch that came with it. They’re not shooting at me, he reminded himself. It’s on Eddie.

But still…

The bastards would be shooting at him, if they had a chance, and if anything happened to Eddie, Scanlon’s ass was next on the line.

“I need a better angle,” he announced, already knowing that his driver couldn’t manage it. The streets of Chindawol were so damned narrow, shops and housing crowded on both sides, that vehicles could only pass each other by mounting the sidewalk and threatening lives.

And even then, he knew it wouldn’t be enough. There’d still be people in his way—at least, until the Prius flattened them—and he’d still have a moving target.

Need to stop that, he decided.

Scanlon palmed his cell phone, hit Eddie’s number on speed dial, waited through two agonizing rings, then started barking orders as soon as he made the connection.

“Take out the driver!” he snapped. “If you can’t do that, blow the tires!”

He cut the link before Eddie could answer or object that he was trying. Trying was a lame excuse that losers used to cover up inadequacy. So far, it hadn’t lodged in his vocabulary.

A woman chose that moment, God knew why, to dart in front of the Toyota. Scanlon felt a surge of panic as her clothing fanned across the windshield, momentarily blinding him and his driver. Farid Humerya dealt with it efficiently, giving the wheel a little twist that jigged the car from left to right and dumped her at the curb.

It seemed to energize the driver, somehow, and Humerya put his full weight on the gas pedal, running up close behind the Camry.

If the lead car crashed now, could they stop in time?

Scanlon clutched the AKSU in his lap and offered silent prayers to a long-forgotten God.



T HE PROBLEM WITH A RUNNING firefight was, of course, the running. Moving while you fired shots at a target that was also moving, maybe even shooting back, could spoil the most experienced marksman’s aim. Throw in civilians by the dozen, ambling around downrange, and it became a soldier’s nightmare.

“How much longer to that waste ground?” Bolan asked his driver.

“One block,” Falk replied. “I see it now.”

“Pull off, if you can, and turn around. We’ll make them come to us.”

“Okay,” she said. “But if we get stuck—”

“First things first,” he interrupted her.

“Got it.”

And Bolan’s first thing was one more attempt to slow the leading chase car’s progress. Lining up his sights before the Camry’s shotgun rider could unload on him, Bolan pumped three rounds through the Toyota’s radiator.

“Here we go!” Falk warned, and then the Ford was swerving to her left, jumping a broken curb of sorts and bouncing over the topography of a large vacant lot.

Bolan had no idea if shops and houses once had stood there, or if it was undeveloped all along, nor did he care. His eyes picked out the mounds of rubbish dumped by passersby and neighbors, some still smoldering where they’d been set afire the previous night or by sometime in the recent past.

It was a little glimpse of hell on Earth, and kids were playing there, or maybe hunting rats. They scattered as the Ford snarled toward them, with the Camry losing speed now in pursuit, a Prius bringing up the rear.

Bolan kept watching while he could, as Falk raced halfway across the lot, then worked wheel and brake through a sliding 180 that placed them between two looming piles of garbage, facing back the way they’d come through clouds of settling dust. He saw the Toyotas separate, one going right, the other limping to his left before it stalled. Doors opened, gunners spilled out.

Bolan did likewise, warning Falk and Barialy, “Use whatever cover you can find.”

With Barialy’s nerve untested and his skill unknown, Bolan treated the odds as four to one. It could be worse.

Would Bolan’s enemies be edgy, since he’d dropped one-third of them in nothing flat, before they’d fired a shot? Or would it make them more determined to exact revenge? He could have tossed a coin on that one, but there wasn’t time.

Bolan went to his left, saw Barialy trailing Falk off to the right, around the other garbage Matterhorn, and wished them well. His pile of cast-off junk was ten or twelve feet high, which seemed to be the norm. It smelled of dust and something rotten that he couldn’t place, offhand.

Gunshots rang out behind him, but he couldn’t focus on that now, much less retreat to help Falk and her agent. They were on their own, while Bolan faced the Camry’s crew.

He heard one of them coming for him. Or was it only one? Footsteps on loose dirt could deceive the ear, and Bolan tried his hand at mind-reading, hoping that he could reason out what his opponents would do next.

Split up and flank the garbage pile from both sides? Send a man to check the Ford, and then circle around behind Bolan or Falk? The one thing he was reasonably sure they wouldn’t do was scale the garbage piles, going for higher ground.

Two men suddenly appeared in front of him, both swarthy Afghanis, looking startled. Bolan fired on instinct, from the hip, and caught the nearest shooter with a rising 3-round burst to the chest. The guy went down, while his companion bolted, ducking out of sight and shouting what could only be a warning in some language Bolan didn’t recognize.

Damn it!

Now he would have to track the others down, while they were hunting him.

And hope that this time Death was on his side.



R ED S CANLON LET THE OTHERS go ahead of him. He wasn’t frightened, but he wasn’t crazy, either. He had paid Farid Humerya and the others for their services that day, and so far all they’d done was ride through Kabul.

It was time they earned their money.

He’d been quick enough to see the Ford’s three occupants bail out, knew two of them by sight but still had no name for the third. With any luck, he would be taking ID from the stranger’s corpse before much longer, and he could deliver it to headquarters for further research.

Any thought of bringing Falk and her companions in alive had vanished when the unknown shooter took out four of Scanlon’s men, then tried to do the same with Eddie Franks and his three backups. Falk and her Afghani stooge would have been killed, in any case, but now all three had to die without being subjected to interrogation.

Never mind.

By killing them, Scanlon would either cauterize the threat or, at the very least, require his boss’s enemies to start again from scratch, inserting new players into Kabul. And when the new players arrived, they would find Scanlon and his people waiting for them.

There was too much money on the table to permit the DEA’s fumbling investigation to proceed. Perhaps he should have killed Falk earlier—it was debated at the time, then shelved in favor of approaching her superiors with bribes—and next time Scanlon would be ready.

Even if he had to act alone.

But he’d take care of this mess first.

Gunfire, away beyond two mounds of garbage to his right, distracted Scanlon from the hunt for all of two heartbeats. He never lost focus completely—he was too good at his job for that to happen—but he had to wonder whether Franks had met the enemy or if his men were firing at shadows.

Scanlon lost sight of Farid Humerya as his driver moved around the garbage heap, scuttling after the point men Scanlon had dispatched ahead of them. He almost called Humerya back, then bit his tongue.

The more the merrier, if they ran into trouble.

And, as if in answer to his thoughts, there came a rapid pop-pop-pop of pistol fire. Nine-millimeter, by the sound of it, but swiftly joined by something heavier, maybe a .45. A strangled cry of pain raised Scanlon’s hackles as he waited for Kalashnikovs to answer the challenge.

And heard nothing.

Three down, that quickly? Was it even possible?

Hell, yes, he thought. In combat, damn near anything was possible.

Scanlon reviewed his options, listening to autofiring from the second, farther garbage heap, and made his choice. Someone had to survive this fucked-up set and carry word to headquarters, or it was all in vain.

Cursing and flushed with shame, he turned and ran back toward his car.



B OLAN MIGHT HAVE chased his three remaining enemies around the garbage heap all afternoon, but the retreating shooters met someone who put steel in their backbones, snapping orders at them in a fair approximation of demonic rage.

“Where do you think you’re going, damn it?” stormed the unseen man in charge. “Both of you get your yellow asses back in there and fight!”

It could have been a trick to stall him, keep him waiting while they circled to his rear and came up on his blind side, but he didn’t think so. There’d been too much anger in the loud, commanding American voice. If that was fake, the speaker ought to take home an acting award for Best Performance by a Heavy Under Fire.

So, Bolan waited. Kneeling in the shadow of the refuse mountain, hard against it on his right, he sighted down the barrel of second hot Kalashnikov and covered the approach that was their only way to reach him from the front. He counted the seconds, feeling sweat bead on his forehead and begin the slow crawl downward toward unblinking eyes.

Two of them came at him together. Bolan recognized the leader as the one who got away, and saw that he was none too thrilled about returning to the fight. His leading adversary clutched an AK in a white-knuckled death grip. The second in line was almost duck-walking, crouched to present the smallest possible target.

Bolan gave the first one two rounds through the chest, punching him back into his waddling companion. Both fell together, the live one struggling to extricate himself from the other’s deadweight. Bolan waited until he’d almost reached his feet again, raising his gun, then shot him in the neck, with one more through the face to make it stick.

And now, a cautious rush to find the one who gave the orders, wondering if he would stand and fight or cut and run. Would pride outweigh the man’s survival instincts when it counted?

Bolan heard the sound of heavy footsteps crunching toward him, froze in place and had his shot lined up before the husky target stepped into his line of fire. The face and accent of his speech made him American, though Bolan couldn’t place where he’d been born and raised.

No matter. He was dying here.

A 3-round burst surprised the mercenary, dropped him on his backside in the dust with an amazed expression on his face. He clearly hadn’t planned to die that afternoon, but now he had no choice.

It took a moment for the dead man to collapse backward, and by the time he’d managed it, Bolan could hear an engine revving on the far side of the garbage mountain. Snatching up the merc’s AKSU, he ran around the pile and was in time to see the Prius barrel across the waste ground, toward the street.

Bolan fired after it, peppered the trunk and took out half of the rear window, but the car kept going. He had missed the driver, and a sharp left turn at the next intersection put his target out of range.

“I missed him, too,” Falk said, approaching with her Glock in hand.

“And I,” Barialy added, sounding glum.

“It was his lucky day,” Bolan replied. “And ours, too.”

“He’ll report back to the man,” Falk said.

“No doubt,” Bolan replied. “While he’s running, we can ditch the Ford, pick up another ride. And then, we need to talk.”




CHAPTER THREE


Chesapeake Bay, Two Days Earlier

Standing on the dock at Tilghman, Maryland, Mack Bolan felt as if he had gone back in time, not merely to some past familiar day but to a bygone century. The ticket in his hand entitled him to one two-hour cruise aboard the skipjack Rebecca T. Ruark, departing at 11:00 a.m. and returning at 1:00 p.m.

It might as well have been a time machine.

When Hal Brognola had proposed the cruise, suggesting that a sail would grant them maximum security, Bolan had not known what a skipjack was. He’d looked it up online, discovering that it was a type of nineteenth-century sailboat, developed by fishermen on Chesapeake Bay for oyster dredging. Despite modern advances in technology, the boats remained in service because Maryland state law banned use of powerboats for oyster fishing.

The Rebecca T. Ruark, built in 1886, was a classic skipjack, with its V-shaped wooden hull, low-slung freeboard and square stern. A dredge windlass and its small motor—the only mechanical engine aboard—were mounted amidships, but conversion of the ship to tourist cruises had given the Chesapeake’s oysters a long, welcome respite.

Bolan boarded with a dozen other passengers and made a brief walking tour of the ship—all fifty-three feet of it—trying to forget that a freak storm had sunk it in 1999, trusting that its owners had refurbished the vessel and kept it seaworthy since then.

If not, he reckoned he could swim to shore from any point where they went down, but Bolan had his doubts about Brognola.

Speaking of Hal, where was he? They had five minutes before the ship set sail, and if the man from Justice had been stuck in traffic or distracted by some crisis, Bolan was about to waste two hours on the briny deep.

He spent the time remaining in a futile bid to read the big Fed’s mind. Brognola often presented mission briefings at Stony Man Farm, in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains, or on walking tours of Arlington National Cemetery. The vast graveyard of heroes offered ample solitude, and with the exception of a single disastrous lapse, Bolan had never questioned the security at Stony Man.

“Too many ears around these days,” Brognola had explained, without really explaining anything. “A sail sounds good.”

And so it had. Bolan had no problem with seasickness, no fear of open water or the gliding predators that it concealed. A cruise had sounded fine…but he still wondered why the change in their routine was necessary.

Ears, of course, meant spies —but whose?

The Department of Homeland Security had risen from the 9/11 rubble, tasked with coordinating intelligence collection and defense against all manner of enemies, both domestic and foreign. It was supposed to end the age-old bickering and backstabbing that put the CIA at odds with FBI and NSA, and sparked unhealthy feuds among the several branches of the U.S. military.

Note the qualifying phrase supposed to.

In reality, no branch or bureau of the government had ever given one inch to a rival without bitter resistance, sometimes verging on mutiny. Bolan knew, as a matter of fact, that tension was rife throughout all of America’s intelligence and security agencies, each on tenterhooks from fear of another terrorist raid—and each determined to expose that plot, whatever it might be, before “the other guys” could vie for a share of the glory.

It was the same old story, made potentially more dangerous by the official mask of peaceable cooperation that concealed the dissidence and subterfuge within.

But was it what Brognola had in mind?

Or was there something— someone —else?

One minute left until the ship cast off, and Bolan had begun to think that the big Fed was cutting it too close for his own good. A panting sprint along the dock would only call attention to him—which, presumably, was the last thing Brognola wanted.

Bolan drifted to the dockside rail, shook hands in passing with the ship’s captain and settled into the countdown.

If Brognola did not appear, he had a choice: jump ship and eat the thirty-dollar ticket’s cost, or take the cruise alone and hope that his old friend was waiting for him when the skipjack berthed again. He had his cell phone, for a point of contact, but a ship-to-shore briefing made absolutely no sense to him, when a thousand different listeners could snatch their words out of thin air.

With forty seconds left, a black sedan appeared and coasted to a stop at the far end of the dock. Bolan saw Brognola exit the shotgun seat, dressed in a sport shirt, nylon windbreaker and jeans, surmounted by a shapeless fishing hat, with size-twelve deck shoes on his feet.

Compared to Brognola’s habitual dark suits, it might as well have been a clown costume, but Bolan realized that no one else aboard the ship would notice the discrepancy. Hal was a total stranger to them all, and dressing in his normal Brooks Brothers’ attire would have raised caution flags among his fellow travelers.

The big Fed didn’t sprint along the pier. Rather, he walked “with purpose,” as the drill instructors used to say in boot camp, and he reached the gangway just as crewmen were prepared to take it up. He muttered an aw-shucks apology for being late, which was dismissed with airy smiles.

Eye contact from the dock told Bolan that Brognola knew exactly where to find him. They would seem to meet by accident, fall into casual discussion of the ship, the bay, whatever, and conduct their business at a distance from the other passengers who jammed the rails or lingered near the loudspeakers to catch the captain’s commentary.

No unwanted ears aboard the skipjack, unless some demonic master of disguise had learned Brognola’s plan and come aboard with Bolan and the other passengers who’d paid their fares at dockside.

The big Fed waited for the lines to be cast off and let the vessel find its course before he drifted toward Bolan, walking with hands in pockets, still testing his sea legs.

“Nice day for it,” he said.

“Seems like,” Bolan agreed.

“I’d buy a round of drinks, but the sloop’s BYOB.”

“Skipjack,” Bolan corrected him.

“What’s the difference?”

“Sloops were warships, intermediate in size between a corvette and a frigate,” Bolan said.

“You live and learn.”

“With any luck.”

“I haven’t been out on a boat in years,” Brognola said. “I used to like it, but you own one, it’s a money pit. As far as friends go, I felt like a barnacle, you know? Just going along for the ride. Anyway, who’s got the time?”

“And yet…” Bolan replied.

“You’re wondering why this, instead of meeting at the Farm?”

“It crossed my mind,” Bolan admitted.

Brognola nodded, his shoulders slumping just a bit.

“I may be getting paranoid,” he said. “But you know what they say, right?”

“Just because you’re paranoid—” Bolan began the old slogan.

“It doesn’t mean nobody’s out to get you.”

“Right.”

“So, this is delicate ,” Brognola said. “I thought a little extra buffer couldn’t hurt. Hey, if I’m wrong, we’re only out a couple hours and sixty bucks.”

“Okay.”

Brognola scrutinized the other passengers, as far as possible, then said, “Let’s head back toward the stern.”

They made the shift, and no one followed them.

“Okay,” he said at last. “What do you know about a group called Vanguard International?”

“They do private security worldwide,” Bolan replied, “on top of various government contracts. They guard oilfields, corporate offices—anything, anywhere, from what I understand.”

“Assuming that the customer can pay their going rates,” Brognola said.

“I didn’t think it was a charity.”

“I guess you’ve heard about the controversy in Iraq?”

“Only what CNN reported,” Bolan said.

He was aware that three Vanguard employees had been kidnapped and executed on camera by Iraqi terrorists in 2005. A few weeks later, Vanguard commandos had raided an Iraqi village said to be hometown of the kidnap team’s ringleader, gunning down three dozen unarmed men, women and children. An FBI investigation found that the victims were slain “without cause,” but Iraqi officials and State Department spokesmen mutually ruled out any criminal charges.

Some people wondered why.

“Well, what they ran was the tip of the iceberg,” Brognola said. “We’ve got allegations of Third World gun-running, and half of the UN is up in arms over supposed violations of the Mercenary Convention.”

“Makes sense,” Bolan said.

He couldn’t quote chapter and verse from the International Convention against the Recruitment, Use, Financing and Training of Mercenaries, approved by the UN’s General Assembly in 1989, but he understood the gist of it. The declaration defined mercs as private soldiers recruited expressly for profit and condemned their employment either in general warfare or for specific projects, such as toppling governments. Companies like Vanguard and its handful of competitors skirted the rules by posing as “security consultants,” or simply ignored the UN’s declaration in full knowledge that it was a toothless order, virtually unenforceable.

How could the UN stop America, Britain, or any other country from hiring private troops to guard facilities abroad? And if those “guards” should run amok, committing acts that qualified as war crimes if performed by soldiers of a sovereign state, what was the legal remedy?

In Vanguard’s case, apparently, there wasn’t one.

“We wouldn’t normally concern ourselves with anything like this,” Brognola said. “Hell, Stony Man was founded to reach out and touch the bad guys when the law can’t do it. And the gun-running, that falls to State or Treasury, if either one of them decides it’s worth their time.”

“So, what, then?” Bolan asked his oldest living friend.

“So, heroin,” Brognola said.

“Explain.”

“You know we keep track of the traffic, right?”

Bolan nodded, waiting for the rest.

“Well, what you may not know is that Afghanistan surpassed Turkey in heroin production during the nineties. In 1999, the Afghanis had 350 square miles of opium poppies under cultivation, with smack refineries running around the clock. A year later, the Taliban moves in and takes control of the country, declaring the drug trade �un-Islamic.’ Whatever else we think of them, hiding Osama, treating their women like slaves and the rest, they reduced Afghan poppy cultivation by ninety-odd percent in one year, down to thirty square miles in 2001.”

“What’s the bad news?” Bolan asked.

“That would be 9/11,” Brognola replied. “Down come the towers in New York, and we invade Afghanistan. Boot out the Taliban and supervise elections. Never mind missing Bin Laden. Anyone can have a bad day, right? Or eight bad years? The trouble is, that with the Taliban deposed, the drug trade started up again, big-time.”

“So I heard. But, what’s the most recent data?”

“Right now, opium cultivation is back up to three hundred square miles and climbing. The UN’s International Narcotics Control Board says Afghanistan produced 3,500 tons of heroin last year, up from 185 tons in 2001. That’s an increase of nearly two thousand percent. Scotland Yard says nearly all the heroin in Britain comes from Afghanistan now. They’ve frozen out the China white and Turkish product, underselling their competitors because they deal in bulk. It isn’t quite that bad, stateside, but I can promise you, we’re getting there.”

“I’ll take your word for it,” Bolan said. “But where does Vanguard come into the picture?”

“It’s looking more and more like they may be the picture,” Brognola replied. “Or, anyway, the transport side of it.”

“I’m listening.”

“They aren’t just in Iraq, okay? That little blow-up got the company its first global publicity, but they’ve got outposts everywhere you go. Saudi Arabia. Bangkok. Jakarta. Take your pick.”

“Afghanistan,” Bolan said.

“Almost from the start, back in 2001,” Brognola said. “They weren’t front-line, but they moved in behind the coalition troops, guarding oil pipelines, corporate HQs and CEOs, the usual. And somewhere in the middle of all that, we think they hooked up with the poppy growers and refiners.”

“When you say we think , that means…?”

“We know,” Brognola said. “We have surveillance tapes of Vanguard personnel guarding the opium plantations, running convoys on drug shipments, piloting some of the planes.”

“So, lock them up and shut it down,” Bolan replied.

“Ah, that’s the rub,” Brognola said. “So far, nobody’s caught them with a shipment anywhere in U.S. jurisdiction, or in Britain. They’ve been able to evade surveillance for the hand-offs, and they let the buyers run with it from there—wherever there is, for a given load.”

“We must have pull inside Afghanistan,” Bolan said. “With the Army, FBI and CIA in place? A president we basically appointed to replace the Taliban? You’re telling me nobody can arrest drug dealers operating in plain sight?”

“It’s all about �democracy,’ these days. Democracy and appearances , okay? Afghanistan was on the economic ropes when we moved in, back in 2001. The government, such as it was, was drowning in red ink and weird religious proclamations from the Taliban. Now they’re on track again—or seem to be—but tossing out the zealots left a vacuum. And who fills it? The same characters who were in charge before the Taliban started its holy war. Oil men and heroin producers. The DEA calls it a �heroin economy.’ I won’t say that drug smugglers own the president, but draw your own conclusions.”

“So the job is what, exactly?” Bolan asked.

“We can’t wipe out the poppy farms or the refineries,” Brognola answered. “No one can, unless the Afghans managed to elect a government that’s more concerned with law and common decency than profit.”

Bolan smiled ruefully and said, “Good luck with that.”

“Meanwhile, we need to shut down our part of the pipeline. Vanguard’s crossed the line, but we can’t touch them legally. Between the jurisdiction thing and their connections from Kabul to Washington, arrests aren’t happening.”

“Connections,” Bolan said. “Whose toes will I be stepping on?”

“Vanguard has friends in Congress and around the Pentagon,” Brognola replied. “They serve huge corporations, which means lobbyists are at their beck and call. As far as opposition on the ground, watch out for people from the Company.”

Bolan suppressed a grimace. Elements within the CIA had dealt with organized criminals from the Agency’s inception in 1947. Espionage was a dirty business, but some of the CIA’s allies were filthy beyond redemption: French heroin smugglers in the late 1940s and early ’50s, Asian traffickers during the Vietnam War, and South American cocaine cartels throughout the Contra mess in Nicaragua. Each time they were caught, the spooks cried “national security” and vowed that they would never touch another load of contraband.

In each and every case, they lied.

“I see a problem going in,” Bolan remarked.

“Which is?”

“I’ll need a guide, interpreter, whatever,” he replied. “We usually use a native who’s been working for the Company. But if they’re on the other side, this time…”

“You’re covered,” Brognola replied. “The DEA’s been working overtime on this. In fact, most of the information I’ve just given you came straight from them. One of their agents will provide a native contractor to meet your needs.”

“We’re in the middle of a bureaucratic civil war, then,” Bolan said.

“No one in Washington will ever call it that,” Brognola stated. “Vanguard’s the target. Do it right, there’ll be some backroom grumbling, but no politician’s going public to defend drug smugglers who’ve already been accused of killing innocent civilians. They can spin the killings seven ways from Sunday, but there’s no way to explain shipments of heroin.”

“And if the Company steps in?”

“Wrong place, wrong time,” Brognola said. “Do what you have to do. They bury their mistakes. It’s one thing they know how to do.”

“I’ll need more background on the targets,” Bolan said.

Brognola took a CD in a plastic jewel case from an inside pocket of his windbreaker and handed it to Bolan on the down-low.

“Everything’s on there,” he said. “Including info on your DEA contact. Just wipe it when you’re done, as usual.”

“I’ll check it out tonight,” Bolan replied, and made the CD disappear into a pocket of his own. “When do I leave?”

“Sooner the better,” Hal replied. “You’ll have to fly commercial, I’m afraid. A charter where you’re going raises too damn many eyebrows, but the CD has some addresses in Kabul where you can pick up tools of the trade. In fact, from what I hear, guns are the one thing in Afghanistan that’s easier to find than heroin. Come one, come all.”

“So, it’s Dodge City in the middle of a bureaucratic civil war.”

Brognola smiled. “Picture Colombia, devoid of any self-restraint.”

“Sounds like a blast,” Bolan replied.



A S PROMISED , the CD contained all of the information Bolan needed, and then some. There was a capsule history of opium and heroin production in Afghanistan, spanning the period from British domination in the nineteenth century, through Russian occupation, modern civil wars, up to the present day. Bolan skimmed over it and focused chiefly on the maps and satellite photos depicting known heroin trade routes.

The background on Vanguard International demanded his closer attention. The company had been founded in 1995 by present owner-CEO Clay Carlisle and a partner, improbably named Thomas Jefferson, who had dropped out of sight after selling his shares to Carlisle in August 2001. Carlisle was the undisputed king of Vanguard, fielding a private army larger than those deployed by some Third World nations.

As for Carlisle himself, he was the son of a self-ordained evangelical minister, born in 1964, who had graduated “with honors” from an unaccredited parochial high school, then volunteered for the U.S. Marine Corps and served with distinction in Grenada. After eight years in the Corps, he’d pulled the pin and entered corporate security as a hired bodyguard. In 1994 he’d shot it out with kidnappers who tried to snatch his client—a Texas oil billionaire—and had suffered a near-fatal wound in the firefight. The grateful client, who emerged unscathed, was pleased to bankroll Carlisle in creation of his own security firm, Vanguard, which claimed the oilman’s vast empire as its first client.

And the rest, as someone said, was history.

An odd footnote to Carlisle’s dossier described his fat donations to various far-right religious groups and his membership on the board of Hallelujah Ministries, which sponsored revival meetings and kept a small staff of attorneys on retainer to defend ministers “falsely accused” of various crimes, including embezzlement and child molestation. At a private Hallelujah gathering in 2002, Carlisle had described the 9/11 raids as “proof that the Second Coming will occur in our lifetime.”

How all of that squared with drug smuggling was anyone’s guess.

Carlisle’s second in command was Dale Ingram, a twenty-five-year FBI veteran who had ended his run as chief of the Bureau’s Counterterrorism Division. September 11 had caught Ingram and his G-men by surprise, despite warnings from several FBI field offices that Arab nationals with suspected ties to al Qaeda were training at U.S. flight schools. Whistleblowers produced memos bearing Ingram’s signature, dismissing the warnings as “red herrings,” whereupon he was invited to retire two years ahead of schedule. Meanwhile, he had become acquainted with Carlisle through contacts still unknown, and Ingram found retirement from the Bureau very lucrative indeed.

If smuggling heroin into the States bothered the former G-man, he had learned to conceal any qualms. In fact, judging from the photos Brognola and Stony Man had supplied, Ingram seemed to be laughing all the way to the bank.

Bolan scanned the reports of Vanguard mercenaries seen on Afghan opium plantations and convoying heroin shipments. The CD included numerous photos and several video clips—one of Carlisle and Ingram together at a Kabul hotel, meeting a native identified as Basir Ahmad-Shah.

Ahmad-Shah’s CD-ROM dossier identified him as one of Afghanistan’s four largest heroin kingpins. Within his territory, he enjoyed a vertical monopoly, from poppy fields through processing and export from the country. He had agents scattered all over the world, but Ahmad-Shah himself had never left Afghanistan, as far as anyone could say. Imprisoned briefly by the Taliban in 2001, he’d been released and lauded as a “prisoner of conscience” after coalition troops drove his persecutors from Kabul and environs. His number two was a cut-throat named Jamal Woraz, identified by the DEA as Ahmad-Shah’s strong right hand and primary enforcer.

That left the file on Bolan’s DEA contact, one Deirdre Falk. Bolan had worked with female Feds before and found them more than capable, but he was still a bit surprised to find a woman stationed in Afghanistan, where brutal violence was a daily fact of life and male officials of the Islamic Republic were predisposed to treat females with a measure of disdain.

The good news was that she’d been handling it for nearly three years now, and showed no signs of cracking up. She’d built some solid cases, although only one of them had gone to trial so far, sending a second-string drug smuggler off to prison for three years. The big boys were protected, and Falk had to know it.

Which perhaps explained why she was willing to collaborate with Stony Man—or the organization “Matt Cooper” said he represented.

There was no reason to suppose she’d ever heard of Stony Man Farm or the covert work it performed. If she had , then the Farm’s security needed a major tune-up. The flip side of that coin might be shock, when she realized that Bolan hadn’t come from Washington to help her put the Vanguard gang on trial.

Officially, the U.S. government did not engage in down-and-dirty vigilante tactics. Since the 1960s, when the CIA’s clumsy attempts to kill Fidel Castro had backfired with disastrous, embarrassing results, no federal agency was authorized to carry out “executive actions”—otherwise known as assassinations.

Scratch that.

No agency was publicly authorized to do so.

Stony Man had been created expressly to do that which was forbidden. A former President, beset by enemies on every side, domestic and foreign, had realized that every nation had to defend itself, by fair means or foul. When the system broke down, when the law failed, clear and present dangers had to be neutralized by other means.

Deniability was critical.

If Bolan or some other Stony Man agent—the troops of Able Team and Phoenix Force—were killed on a mission at home or abroad, they did not officially exist.

If worse came to worst, if one of them was caught alive and cracked under torture or chemical interrogation, providing verifiable details of Stony Man’s operations, the buck stopped with Hal Brognola at Justice. He’d been prepared from the start to fall on his sword, confess to launching and running the program on his own initiative, financing it covertly, without the knowledge or approval of superiors.

It was a fairy tale that might be hard to swallow, but the Washington publicity machine would sell it anyway. The corporate media—so far from “leftist liberal” that Bolan had to laugh each time he heard the talking heads on Fox News rant and rave—would ultimately join ranks with the state to cover any tracks that led beyond Brognola’s office to respected politicians higher up the food chain.

The trick, on Bolan’s part, was not to get captured or killed. So far, he’d managed fairly well.

And this time?

As he started to erase Brognola’s CD-ROM, he knew that he would have to wait and see.




CHAPTER FOUR


Kabul, Afghanistan

They ditched Falk’s bullet-punctured Ford near the Park-e-Timor Shahi, on the River Rudkhane-ye-Kabul, and found another waiting two blocks over, thanks to one of Falk’s associates who asked no questions when she’d called him on the telephone.

“The other one will be reported stolen,” she told Bolan as they drove across the city to a safe house in the Shash Darak district.

“You’ve done this kind of thing before?” he asked.

“We’re living on the edge, here, Mr. Cooper. No one really wants us in Afghanistan. We get that message from the beat cops, right on up the ladder to the president.”

“Which one?” Bolan inquired.

She smiled at that and told him, “Take your pick. Ours has to talk about the �evil scourge of heroin’ to get elected, but I swear, sometimes it feels like it’s all talk.” She frowned, then added, “Hey, forget I said that, will you? I still need this job, and I don’t even know who sent you.”

“Someone who agrees with you and wants to make a difference.”

“Well, anyway, we gave someone a wake-up call,” she said.

“They knew where we were meeting,” Bolan countered. “How do you suppose that happened?”

“Damned if I know. I could swear I wasn’t followed, and I’d guess Edris will say the same.”

“Indeed,” Barialy said from the backseat. “I was very careful, following all necessary steps of tradecraft.”

Tradecraft?

The last time Bolan could remember hearing that was in a movie from the late eighties.

He let it slide and asked Falk, “Do your people sweep their cars?”

“We do,” she said. “But that’s not saying someone couldn’t slip a homer past us. It would mean access to the secure motor pool, but with Vanguard, anything’s possible.”

“And will this car have been checked?” he asked.

“You put it that way, I can’t swear to anything,” Falk answered.

“Then we need a rental office, stat.”

“Jesus. Okay, I know a couple places we can go. I’ve got a credit card, and—”

“This one is on me,” Bolan said. “If you’re under a sophisticated shadow, using plastic is like sending up a flare.”

“Shit!” she said. “Do you always shake things up this way?”

“It wouldn’t be the first time,” he replied.

Falk found an auto rental agency and Barialy went inside with Bolan, translating his bid for a midsize four-door sedan. They left with a Toyota Avalon, rented by Bolan in his alternate identity as Brandon Stone. The Visa Platinum he used was paid in full and had a $20,000 credit line.

“No tail on this one,” Bolan said as he slid in behind the steering wheel. “About that safe house, now…”

“You’re thinking that it might not be so safe,” Falk said.

“It crossed my mind.”

“All right. It’s not the only place we have in Kabul, but if one of them is compromised, we can’t trust any. Can we?”

“No.”

“This sucks.”

“Welcome to my world,” Bolan said.

“Hey, mine was bad enough, thanks very much.”

“The good news is, you have them worried,” Bolan told her.

“Great. They want me dead now and they almost pulled it off, first try.”

“It wasn’t even close,” Bolan replied.

“Were you and I at the same party?” Falk inquired. “They shot the hell out of my car.”

“And we all walked away,” Bolan reminded her. “Their side sent twelve men out to do a job and lost eleven. I’d say we’re ahead.”

“Except that now we’re fugitives,” she said.

“That’s only if police are looking for you,” Bolan said. “We’re going underground. There is a difference.”

“Care to explain it, Mr. Cooper?”

“Call me Matt, if you feel like it,” Bolan said. “As for the difference, a fugitive is always running, hiding, constantly on the defensive. When you’re underground, you have a chance to be proactive. Bring the war home to your enemies.”

“When you say war—”

“I mean exactly that,” Bolan replied. “The men who staked you out today were there to kill us. They don’t know me, but they thought a public hit was worth the risk to keep you from revealing what you know to an outsider.”

“Maybe it was just supposed to be a snatch, before you started shooting,” she replied without conviction.

“What’s the difference?” he asked. “You think they planned to warn you off or question you, then let you go?”

Instead of answering, Falk asked, “So, then, what’s your plan?”

“I told you—take it to the enemy. Rattle their cages. Disrupt operations. Blow their house down.”

Falk was staring at him now. “You mean, just go around and shoot them, like some kind of hit man?”

“I imagine there’ll be more to it than that,” Bolan replied. “But understand, before you take another step that I’m not here to serve warrants. You’ve already tried that route, and you can keep on trying if you like. Just tell me where to drop you off.”

She spent another moment staring at him, then replied, “Screw that. I’m in.”

“And you?” Bolan met Barialy’s dark gaze in the rearview mirror.

“With misgivings,” the Afghan said, “it appears that my best prospects for survival rest with you.”

“Okay, then,” Bolan said. “The first thing that we need to do is see about my gear.”

Vanguard International Branch Office, Kabul

“L ET ME GET THIS STRAIGHT. You ran away?”

Clay Carlisle’s voice carried no hint of animosity, despite the seething anger that he felt inside, the acid churning in his stomach.

“I withdrew,” Red Scanlon said, “and broke off contact with the enemy in order to report, so you would know what’s happened, sir.”

“I’d know when the police called me to view your body at the morgue,” Carlisle replied.

“That wouldn’t help you, sir. A corpse can’t give you any information.”

“Right, then. Enlighten me, by all means. Share the information that entitles you to leave your men behind.”

“My men were dead before I left. I saw them drop.”

“Dead, but identifiable,” Carlisle replied. “You’ve put me in an awkward spot with Eddie Franks. I have to disavow him now, and still pay off his family to keep their damned mouths shut.”

“I’m sorry, sir.”

“I’m waiting,” Carlisle said.

Scanlon swallowed, his Adam’s apple bobbing, then pressed on. “I saw who Falk was meeting, sir. In fact, he set the whole thing off.”

“Explain.”

“Two of our men stepped up to brace him, and he shot them both, then popped two others in the car before they could defend themselves.”

“He’s no procrastinator, then.”

“Some kind of pro, no question,” Scanlon said. “He took a couple AKs from the first two that he dropped. Without that extra firepower, we would’ve had him, sir.”

“I wonder.” Carlisle studied Scanlon’s face and said, “I understand that one of those this man of mystery gunned down in Shahr-e-Khone is still alive. Not talking, I presume?”

“He can’t talk, sir. Shot in the face. I’m taking care of it.”

“And this bitch from the DEA. We’ve found her car?”

“Abandoned, sir. The GPS tracker was still in place, but by the time I called up reinforcements—”

“She and her playmates had disappeared.”

“Yes, sir. They got another Fed mobile then dropped that one after a couple miles. They’re getting wise.”

“I’d say they were already wise enough to run rings around you,” Carlisle observed. “The question now is, whether you’re entitled to a second chance, or if I ought to cut my losses. Starting with your throat.”

Carlisle had no fear of the younger man seated across from him, with nothing but a teakwood desk between them. Scanlon was unarmed, defeated, a spent force. He also had to have known that any move against his boss would bring an armed security detachment charging into Carlisle’s office through the door immediately to his left.

“I saw the shooter, sir. I can identify him, and you know I’m motivated.”

“Motivation’s good,” Carlisle replied. “But he’s already kicked your ass. You lost eleven men and barely got away alive. That kind of failure is expensive and embarrassing.”

“Yes, sir,” Scanlon replied through clenched teeth. “Let me make it up to you.”

Carlisle considered it, then said, “Call me a sentimental fool. I’ll give you one chance to clean up your mess, but use it well. And do it quickly. If you fail a second time, you would be well advised to die trying.”

“Yes, sir!”

Scanlon rose from his chair, snapped to attention and saluted before leaving Carlisle’s office. Carlisle watched him go and wondered if he’d made a critical mistake by letting Scanlon live.

No sweat.

That kind of error, if it was an error, could be easily corrected any time he had the urge. A simple order, and Scanlon would never see it coming.

More important at the moment was the task of covering his tracks and Vanguard’s on the mess that Scanlon had created.

Carlisle would explain that he’d fired Eddie Franks for insubordination and produce back-dated paperwork to prove it, if push came to shove. As for the local talent, Eddie could have found them anywhere. There were no Vanguard payroll records for them, certainly no canceled checks or any other kind of paper trail.

His word would be accepted where it mattered. That was where the bribes Carlisle had paid to various Afghan officials—and his contacts at the U.S. embassy in Kabul—served their purpose. He was an established man of substance, with connections all the way from Afghanistan’s Republican Palace to Pennsylvania Avenue, and adversaries who forgot that did so at their peril.

There was nothing for Carlisle to worry about.

Not just yet.

Shahr-e-Khone, Kabul

T HE RENTAL CAR with Bolan’s hardware stashed inside was lost to him. He knew it when he reached the parking lot where he had left it, in the Old City, and found police milling about like ants on spilled sugar. He waited long enough to see one of them exit with a heavy duffel bag he recognized, then put the Avalon in gear and drove away, not looking back.

“I guess you’re short on gear now,” Falk suggested.

“Not for long,” Bolan replied.

He couldn’t use the same dealer again, in case the cops had traced his hardware or were on their way to doing so, but Brognola and Stony Man had given him directions to four weapons merchants in Kabul, trusting Bolan to find alternatives if all of those went sour.

And as Hal had told him, there was never any hardware shortage in Afghanistan.

He skipped the second armorer on Brognola’s list, no clear reason other than gut instinct, and went on to number three. The dealer’s cover was a pawnshop in the Shar-e-Naw district, near the intersection of streets called Shararah and Shar Ali Khan. It meant driving back across town, to the northwest quarter, but the trip gave Bolan time to question Deirdre Falk in more detail.

He learned that she’d been tracking Vanguard’s operation for a year and change, collecting evidence that no one in authority would take time to review. Her boss in Kabul was a thirty-year man with the DEA who faced compulsory retirement in the fall, and he encouraged her to forge ahead, while warning Falk that he could not protect her, short of sending her back to the States.

So much for the omnipotence of Uncle Sam.

She still seemed ill at ease with Bolan’s plan of action, not that he’d provided any details, but he thought she’d keep her word and go along.

If not…well, she could pull the pin and split at any time, unless the heavies took her down.

He found the dealer’s shop and made a drive-by, trusting Falk and Barialy to help him spot anything odd, out of synch. They told him that the busy street looked normal, so he found a parking place and all three of them walked back to the shop.

Inside, a man who looked like Gandhi with a port wine birthmark on the left side of his face greeted them enthusiastically. He introduced himself as Izat Khan and listened carefully as Barialy translated for Bolan, spelling out his needs and specifying that the payment would be made in cash.

If dealing with a group of total strangers bothered Khan, he didn’t let it show. Smiling, he locked the front door to his shop, reversed a dangling sign—presumably changing Open to Closed—and led them through a screen of softly clacking plastic beads to reach a storeroom at the back.

Bolan saw no weapons in evidence, and had already braced himself to shoot his way out of a trap, when Khan opened a door in the west wall, revealing stairs that vanished into darkness. Finding a switch beside the door jamb, he illuminated bright fluorescent fixtures that revealed a spacious basement. The familiar scent of gun oil wafted up to Bolan’s nostrils from below.

Bolan let Khan go first, followed by Barialy, then himself, with Deirdre Falk watching their backs. He no longer suspected that police or Vanguard mercs had found the shop ahead of him, but there was still a chance that Khan might plan to double-cross these strangers who had showed up without warning on his doorstep.

In the dealer’s spotless basement, guns were mounted on the walls and racked in standing rows across the floor, with crates of ammunition, magazines, grenades, and other such accessories positioned like the specials in a supermarket. Bolan took his time, examining Khan’s wares, and told Falk she could pick out something for herself, to supplement the Glock.

At length, bearing in mind that he couldn’t predict what situations might still lay ahead of them, Bolan chose a range of weapons suitable for all occasions.

They already had the captured AKSU automatic rifles, but he took a third one, plus spare magazines, and stocked up on the 5.45 mm ammunition they devoured. With distance work in mind, he also chose a 7.62 mm Dragunov SVD sniping rifle, fitted with a Russian PSO-1 scope whose features included an elevation adjustment knob for bullet-drop compensation, an illuminated range-finder grid, a reticle that permitted target acquisition in low-light conditions, and an infrared charging screen that served as a passive detection system. He found spare 10-round magazines for the Dragunov, and picked up more 9 mm Parabellum ammo for his pistol. While he was at it, he added hand grenades for balance.

Bolan reckoned that he was done, then changed his mind and selected a 40 mm MGL grenade launcher, the South African spring-driven, double-action weapon that resembled an inflated 1920s Tommy gun. The launcher measured twenty-eight inches with its folding stock collapsed and weighed thirteen pounds empty. Its revolving 6-round cylinder could launch two rounds per second in rapid-fire, with an effective range of four hundred yards. To cover all eventualities, Bolan picked out a mix of HE, thermite, smoke and triple-aught buckshot rounds for the launcher.

Falk was prepared to settle for the second AKSU rifle, then decided Barialy might need it to supplement his vintage wheelgun, so she chose a mini-Uzi for herself, with a suppressor and a stack of 32-round magazines, plus more 9 mm Parabellum rounds.

Pleased with his payday, Khan furnished the duffel bags required to carry their new acquisitions at no extra charge. He counted Bolan’s money, smiling all the while, then led them back upstairs and showed them to a rear exit that let them walk most of the distance back to the Toyota Avalon along an alley hidden from the street.

When they had stowed the gear and Bolan had the car in motion, Falk said, “That was strange, you know?”

He smiled at her and said, “You ain’t seen nothing, yet.”

Vanguard International Branch Office, Kabul

“Y OU LET R ED HAVE a pass?” Dale Ingram asked.

“He’s on a leash,” Clay Carlisle said. “He isn’t going anywhere, except to clean up his own mess.”

“And then?”

“Then, nothing. If he does the job, he’ll have redeemed himself. If not, he pays the price.”

“Which doesn’t help us, either way,” Ingram replied.

“It settles his account,” Carlisle said.

“But we’re still out eleven men, three cars, the lost hardware.”

“The locals are a dime a dozen, Dale. Their paychecks stopped when they quit breathing, so they cost us nothing. Eddie Franks had no dependents, just a barfly brother in Kentucky. If we can’t find him, we scrub the life insurance payment. I regret the cars, of course, but we have others. Most important, we’ve preserved deniability.”

“Which helps us how, with the DEA problem?” Ingram asked.

“I’m on it,” Carlisle said. “I’ve got a call in to Russ Latimer at the embassy.”

“And you think he can yank the reins on this narc and her boss? He hasn’t done us any good, so far.”

“Let’s say that I’ve enhanced his motivation,” Carlisle said.

Ingram knew what that meant. The damned spook had his hand out for more money, promising the world and paying off in peanuts.

“We could deal with him, you know,” he told Carlisle.

“Don’t start on that again.”

“I’m serious,” Ingram said. “Why don’t we take advantage of the situation while we can? Civilian casualties are higher in Afghanistan than in Iraq these days. They headlined it on CNN. Who’d be surprised if insurgents took out the CIA’s head of station in Kabul or greased the DEA’s front man? I’m surprised they haven’t done it already.”

Carlisle stared him down and let the silence stretch between them, making Ingram nervous in the knowledge that he’d overstepped his bounds.

“You know we have a firm, long-term relationship with Langley,” he replied at last. “We get thirty percent of our gross from the jobs they can’t handle, everything from diplomatic coverage to wet work. I don’t plan to foul our nest with an impulsive and unnecessary action, nor do I plan waging war against the U.S.A. I hope we’re crystal clear on that.”

“I hear you,” Ingram answered.

“And to hear…”

“Is to obey,” Vanguard’s vice president replied, feeling the angry color rising in his cheeks.

Carlisle put on a smile. Ingram wished he could reach across the desk and slap it from his boss’s face, but that would be the next best thing to suicide.

“Dale, you’re a valued member of the team,” Carlisle pressed. “You know I cherish your connections to the FBI, but sometimes I think you inherited old Hoover’s pathological aversion to cooperating with the other agencies of government. Langley is not our enemy. We’re in this thing together, for the long haul. Terrorism and the heathen hordes of Islam will be crushed in our lifetime. And if we turn a profit on the deal, so much the better. No one loses but our enemies.”

“You’re right, of course, Clay.”

“Thanks for that. Humility becomes you,” Carlisle said. “Now, if you only had a closer personal relationship with our eternal savior…”

“I’ve been working on it,” Ingram said, “but when you’ve been out in the wilderness as long as I have, it’s a problem.”

“He forgives us everything,” Carlisle said. “All you have to do is ask, but you must be sincere.”

“I ask Him every night,” Ingram said, lying through his teeth.

“Then your place in the kingdom is assured,” Carlisle replied. “Now, if you’ll just excuse me, Dale, I have to touch base with our friends and see about kicking some heathen ass.”



“I N THERE ,” F ALK SAID as Bolan drove along a street of office buildings on Jadayi Sulh.

He looked in the direction she was pointing and beheld one structure that stood out among the rest. It had been walled off from the street with concrete barricades along the curb to frustrate car bombers. The wall itself was eight feet high and topped with shiny coils of razor wire. Behind the black steel gate, an armed guard watched pedestrians and traffic pass.

“Looks like a bunker,” he remarked.

“It is,” Falk said. “Clay Carlisle may be a religious crackpot—or, at least come off like one in public—but he’s grounded well enough to know that thousands of Afghanis would be thrilled to take him out. His apartment’s inside there, along with Dale Ingram’s.”

Bolan glanced briefly at the other nearby buildings, then scratched Vanguard HQ off his mental list of targets. Infiltrating one of Carlisle’s neighbors for a shot over the walls of his command post seemed too risky to be worth the effort it would take.

But he would find another angle of attack.

Turning southward, they drove past the historic royal citadel built by Amir Abdur Rahman Khan in the late nineteenth century, which presently housed Afghanistan’s president, his chief of staff and national security adviser, and the president’s protocol office. At a glance, Bolan guessed that stronghold would be easier to penetrate than Clay Carlisle’s headquarters, two blocks farther north.

They passed the Prime Ministry, then the Republican Palace, while Bolan put his thoughts in order.

“Carlisle won’t be fielding mercs from a CP that close to the president’s office,” he said. “Where does Vanguard keep its mercs and hardware?”

“Next stop on our tour,” Falk said. “We’ve got another quarter mile or so to go. It’s by the Plaza Hotel complex, in the Pol-e-Shahi quarter.”

“Lodgings for his visitors?” Bolan asked.

“Right again,” the DEA agent replied. “He has a steady stream of drop-ins from the States, Britain, some places you might not expect.”

“Such as?”

“Last month, there were some gentlemen from Bogotá,” Falk said. “They’re wanted in America for cocaine smuggling—a couple of the so-called �Extraditables’ that no one ever gets around to extraditing. Booked in at the Plaza under phony names, but you can recognize them from the Wanted posters.”

“Anybody tip the local law?” Bolan asked.

“Absolutely. And the cops showed up to question them…the day after they flew back home. But, what the hell, you can’t expect them to drop everything and do their jobs.”

“Who else comes calling?” Bolan asked her.

“It’s a regular Who’s Who . We’ve spotted Corsicans, a nice Sicilian delegation, Russians, Turks, some Yakuza.”

“All in the smack trade,” Bolan said, not asking this time.

“Those were,” Falk agreed, “but Carlisle has all kinds of shiny, upright friends on the flip side. Think of a CEO from any petro company that’s doing business in the region, and he’s been here. Diplomats stop by, after they touch base at the embassy, sometimes before. We even had a stateside televangelist swing by and press the flesh, before he shot a TV special in the Holy Land.”

“You check them out?” Bolan inquired.

“As far as possible,” Falk said. “They all have public faces, but we try to dig a little deeper. Still, we don’t get much. The really big oilmen have more security around them than the President. Diplomats, forget about it. We couldn’t arrest them if we caught them with a limo-load of kindergarten prostitutes. The preacher may have trouble, when the IRS gets through with him this year, but don’t expect the dirt to rub off on Carlisle.”

“You’re frustrated,” Bolan observed.

“Who wouldn’t be? The prick’s untouchable.”

“Not anymore.”

“I wonder.”

Bolan couldn’t fault the lady Fed for being skeptical. Her own superiors had undermined her efforts against Carlisle and the Vanguard set, while the Afghan authorities played ostrich and banked their payoffs. Now, Bolan dropped in from out of the blue, and drafted Falk into an illicit war that might well get her killed.

If she’d wanted to bail, Bolan wouldn’t have argued. And he knew it still might come to that. Meanwhile…

“We’ve got the Plaza over there,” she told him, pointing to the left. “And coming up a half block farther down, that’s what I call the Vanguard Hilton.”

It was different from the company’s headquarters, not so reminiscent of the Führerbunker in 1940s Berlin, but still secure enough with heavy gates and lookouts guarding entryways to the lobby and an underground garage.

“What kind of vehicles does Carlisle stash downstairs?” Bolan asked.

“Just the normal,” Falk replied. “You want to see the hardcore motor pool, with APCs and all, we’ll need to go west, to the Bala Kohi deh Afghanan district. Out by Kabul’s big TV tower.”

“Let’s see it,” Bolan said. “And then I need to find out when Carlisle is moving freight.”




CHAPTER FIVE


Park-e-Zarnegar, Kabul

The mausoleum of Abdur Rahman Khan stands in Zarnegar Park, near Kabul’s city center. Once, it was a palace, converted to a vast tomb by the king’s son when Abdur Rahman died in 1901. Its red dome mounted on a white octagonal structure, surmounted by small minarets, still ranked among the finest examples of nineteenth-century baroque architecture in Kabul.

Clay Carlisle loved beautiful things. He had booked the mausoleum for a private tour soon after his arrival in Kabul, but at the moment he had no eye for antiques. His thoughts were focused on the future, both immediate and long-term.

Zarnegar Park was the hub of Kabul, located near Embassy Row, overlooked by the stylish Kabul Serena Hotel and Afghanistan’s Ministry of Communications. None of those features had drawn Carlisle to the park, however. He was not a tourist, and his visit on this fading afternoon was strictly business.

His limousine stopped at a newspaper kiosk on the park’s western boundary. One of Carlisle’s four security guards stepped out of the car and returned seconds later with a new passenger in tow.

The man was fortysomething, with a long face under thinning sandy hair, his slender form clothed in a tailored suit of charcoal-gray. Black wingtips made his feet seem overlarge and heavy. Opaque sunglasses concealed his eyes, which Carlisle knew from past experience were washed-out bluish-gray with a tendency to squint.

“Strange days,” said Russell Latimer, the CIA’s deputy station chief in Kabul.

“Getting stranger all the time,” Carlisle replied. “What can you tell me about our dilemma?”

Latimer cocked one eyebrow behind his shades. “I’m not sure that I’d call it our dilemma just yet.”

“Wouldn’t you?” Carlisle made sure his practiced frown fell somewhere short of hostile. “My mistake, then. As an uninvolved outsider with no future stake in anything that happens to my company, what can you tell me about my dilemma, then?”

“Hold on a second, now.”

“Hold on to what, Russell? Remember what our Lord and Savior said in Matthew 12:30: �He who is not with me is against me.’”

“Hey, I’m with you, Clay. All right? I only meant—”

“Don’t tell me what you meant. Tell me what whatever you’ve found out about my problem.”

Sandwiched between two bodyguards who made him look emaciated, Latimer put on a brave face and replied, “You seem a little out of sorts today, my friend.”

“Seeing eleven of my men gunned down has that effect, Russ. Call me crazy.”

“I’d call it normal, in the circumstances. And I’m working on it, but—”

“I hope you’re not about to disappoint me,” Carlisle said.

“That’s never my intention.”

“But you don’t know anything.”

“We have a name, okay? Maybe we have a name.”

“Let’s hear it.”

“Matthew Cooper. He left Baltimore for Paris yesterday, then caught connecting flights to Rome and into Kabul. Had a rental car waiting when he arrived. We have it now, impounded from the Old City around the time of your…unpleasantness this afternoon. Trunk full of guns and ammo, see? And I don’t mean the magazine.”

Carlisle ignored the feeble joke and asked him, “Is there more?”

“I ran a check on Cooper, stateside. He’s got credit cards that bill him through a P.O. box in San Diego. Some months he buys nothing, other times he’s in the high four figures. Always pays on time, with postal money orders. No luck running down a bank account or any kind of residential address in the time I’ve had, so far. It’s looking like a classic legend.”

Carlisle understood the Langley-speak. A “legend” was a false identity created to withstand at least a cursory examination, covering for…what?

“That doesn’t tell me anything of value,” he replied.

Latimer nodded. “I agree, and I’ll keep digging. But I know already that he doesn’t have a package with the Feebs or with the Pentagon. We’re running prints they lifted from the rental car, but in the circumstances, I’m not hopeful.”

“What’s your gut saying?” Carlisle asked.

“It could go either of two ways,” Latimer responded. “One, this Cooper is some kind of independent crook with business here in Kabul, unrelated to the incident this afternoon.”

“Who shows up just before my men get wasted, with a carload of weapons parked near the scene? Then disappears and leaves his car behind, after the shooting? I can’t swallow that kind of coincidence.”

“Neither can I,” Latimer said. “The second option is that he’s a black-ops artist sent or summoned for a meeting with your nemesis from DEA.”

“That sounds more logical,” Carlisle said.

“I agree. Unfortunately, at the moment I can’t tell you where he comes from, who he works for, what his orders are.”

“All right. What can you tell me?”

Latimer frowned and replied, “Smart money says that he’s official. The sophisticated cover tells me he’s got juice behind him.”

“And?”

“And I can’t see the DEA calling a private shooter in, no matter how badly you’ve pissed them off.”

“Could he be one of yours?” Carlisle inquired.

“From Langley?” Latimer appeared to be surprised by the suggestion. “I don’t think so, but it wouldn’t be the first time one hand didn’t know what the other was doing.”

“Can you check it out?”

“I’ll definitely try, but if there’s some kind of covert team-within-the-team, I may not have full access.”

“This is critical,” Carlisle reminded him. “I’ll deal with the man when he comes up for air, but I need to find out who’s behind him.”

“Agreed. It’s priority one.”

“Then I’ll let you get to it,” Carlisle said. A nod to his driver and the limo pulled over. “This must be your stop.”

“Looks like it,” Latimer agreed. “Listen, about before—”

“If you want to impress me, Russell, earn your pay.”

“I will.”

One of the guards stepped out, allowing Latimer to leave the car, and then the limousine rolled on, leaving the CIA’s deputy station chief to find his own way home.

Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan

J ALALABAD LIES ninety miles due east of Kabul, in Nangarhar Province, where small farmers have traditionally supported themselves by growing opium poppies. Recent claims suggested that production had been slashed by ninety-five percent, but Bolan knew that those statistics were skewed.

In fact, while many of the local growers had been driven out of business, large opium plantations thrived in the Cha-parhar, Khogyani and Shinwar districts.

Bolan was headed for Shinwar, with Deirdre Falk riding beside him and Edris Barialy in his now-traditional backseat observatory post.

“So, have you seen this farm before?” he asked her when they were a half hour from Kabul.

“Not the way I think you mean it, in the flesh,” she said. “We have a ton of photos at the office. Hidden camera, flyover, satellite, you name it. I can draw a map of it from memory, if that’s a help.”

Sending Falk back to her office for whatever maps or photographs they might have used, in Bolan’s view, had been too risky after their first clash with Vanguard warriors. He assumed the DEA office would be under surveillance, or might even have a paid-off mole inside who would, at the very least, tip off their enemies to Falk’s movements.

“Maybe later,” Bolan said.

In fact, he didn’t plan to hit the farm itself. At least, not yet. It would be covered by seven ways from Sunday by a troop of Vanguard mercs, most likely with the Afghan National Police or army on speed dial, in case the hired hands couldn’t cope with a particular emergency.

On top of which, Bolan was not equipped for razing crops in cultivated fields. He wasn’t armed with napalm or defoliants, and even if he had been, their delivery required aircraft.

“You’re after the refinery?” Falk asked him, frowning at the thought.

“I want to see it,” Bolan answered, “but it wouldn’t be my first move.”

He’d destroy more drugs by taking out a heroin refinery, along with whatever equipment Vanguard might have to replace after he blitzed the plant. That was part of his plan, but not the first move that he had in mind.

Falk shifted in her seat, plucking her damp blouse from her damper skin. Despite the small Toyota’s air-conditioning, the outside heat still made its presence felt with sunlight blazing through the windows, baking any skin it touched.

As with her office, Bolan had been forced to veto letting Falk go back to her apartment for fresh clothes or any other personal accessories. They’d done some hasty shopping back in Kabul, but he knew she wasn’t thrilled about the merchandise available.

“Feel free to share,” she said, a hint of irritation in her voice.

“They ship the heroin through Pakistan, correct?” he asked her.

“Right. It’s just a few miles farther east, and Nangarhar’s the next best thing to Pakistan, already. Most of the district uses Pakistani rupees when they pay their bills or bribes, instead of the official Afghanis. The provincial governor is kissing-close with Pakistan’s Intelligence Bureau.”

“And they move it how?”

“Depends on the size of the shipment. These days, most of the big loads roll by truck convoy.”

“Well, there you are.”

“I am?”

“A convoy isn’t fortified. It doesn’t have high walls or razor wire around it, and it’s not next door to a police station.”

“Aren’t you forgetting something? Like twenty-five or thirty shooters who’ll be guarding it?”

“I didn’t say it would be easy,” Bolan answered. “But it’s still our best shot for an opener.”

Grim faced, she said, “Okay. Give me the rest of it.”

United States Embassy, Kabul

A TWENTY-SOMETHING SECRETARY smiled at Russell Latimer and said, “The vice consul will see you now.”

The man from Langley thought about making some kind of smart-aleck remark, like James Bond in the movies, but his mood was too sour for levity. Instead of cracking wise, therefore, he gave the little redhead a low-wattage smile and moved past her, toward his contact’s inner sanctum.

“Come in, Russell! Come in!” his contact said, beaming. By that time, Latimer was in, closing the office door behind him. “Can I get you something? Coffee? Tea? A nice cold beer?”

“Scotch, if you have it, sir,” Latimer said.

“That bad, is it?”

Vice Consul Lee Hastings forced a chuckle. It reminded Latimer of dry bones rattling in a wooden cup. And yes, he’d heard that very noise some years ago while visiting a village in Angola.

“It’s bad, all right,” he said before thanking his host for the drink and tossing it down in one gulp. “I can’t say how bad, at the moment, but it has fubar potential.”

“Come again?”

“ Fubar . Fucked up beyond all recognition.”

The bony laugh again, as Hastings settled into his chair behind a standard-issue foreign service desk.

“In that case,” Hastings said, “I guess you’d better fill me in.”

Hastings was in his late forties, losing the battle of the bulge around his waist, but otherwise in decent shape for an American who’d spent the past three years in Kabul, fixing cracks and pinholes in the diplomatic dike and listening to bomb blasts in the streets outside. Latimer saw him slip one hand beneath the desk and knew that everything they said from that point on would be recorded, which was fine. He’d worn a wire, himself, prepared as always for the day when one of his superiors might try to sacrifice him for some personal advantage.

He began the briefing with a question. “Have you heard about the shootings in the Old City and Chindawol this afternoon?”

“Not yet,” Hastings replied. “Anything serious?”

“Eleven dead, sir,” Latimer informed him, giving Carlisle credit in advance for silencing his wounded soldier in the hospital.

“That’s most unfortunate, of course, but—”

“Sir, it’s not the number I’m concerned about,” Latimer interrupted. “It’s who they were.”

“I see. And who were they?”

“Vanguard employees. One from stateside, that I’m sure of, and the rest natives.”

Hastings was silent for the best part of a minute, then replied, “Were they…um…What I mean to say is, did the police find anything?”

In any other circumstances, Latimer would have considered it a strange question. But at that moment, it made perfect sense.

“Just weapons, sir. They weren’t running a shipment.”

He enjoyed the vice consul’s dilemma, thinking of the tape and how best to avoid seeming to understand the reference to drugs. After another moment’s thought, Hastings sidestepped the subject altogether, asking, “What do you suppose they were doing, Russell?”

“Some kind of surveillance, I take it. From what I’ve been told, there’s a person of interest in town, just arrived, seeking contact with some of our friends down the hall.”

He left Hastings to guess whether he meant the DEA or FBI. In either case, it had to be bad news.

“There was a meeting, then?” Hastings asked.

“So it seems.”

“And Vanguard’s people tried to…interrupt it. Isn’t that a rash decision?”

“Rash depends on whether you’re successful, sir. But in this case, I have assurances that they were simply watching.”

What the hell. Latimer reckoned that another small lie wouldn’t break the camel’s back.

“How did the shooting start, then?” Hastings asked him.

“I suppose one of their men was spotted. Probably a local, since they’re not the sharpest. Anyway, the other side starts shooting, and it goes downhill from there.”

“And were there any casualties on the other side?”

“If so, they weren’t left at the scene. None found so far, at least.”

“What do you make of that, Russell?”

Meaning, What’s wrong with Carlisle’s people, getting killed like that, with nothing to show for it?

“Sir, I can’t explain it, at the moment. If I had to guess, I’d say we’re looking at imported talent.”

“But, imported for what reason? That’s the question we must answer, isn’t it?”

“One of them, definitely. I’d be happy with a name and address, mind you, but we’ll have to look at the big picture sometime.”

“Someone underneath this roof,” Hastings said, as if talking to himself. Then he asked Latimer, “How certain are you?”

“There’s no question, I’m afraid. One of their personnel was seen. May have participated in the killings, but that is speculation. Anyway, she’s disappeared.”

“She?”

“I’m not sure how much more you’d care to know, sir.”

“If we’re threatened, Russell, I must know enough to mount a competent defense.”

“All right. Her name is Deirdre Falk. She’s DEA. You may have passed her in the halls, sir.”

“DEA? Was this official?”

“I’m in no position to determine that, sir.”

“No, of course not. I’ll look into it, discreetly. In the meantime, someone needs to find her. And this stranger. What’s he call himself?”

“Matthew Cooper. It’s a cover.”

“Damn it!” Hastings reached beneath his desk again, to kill the tape, then said, “I’ll make some calls and see what I can do—or learn, for that matter. If you see Carlisle, tell him he’s expected to clean up after himself.”

Latimer smiled and said, “With pleasure, sir.”

Nangarhar Province

T HE POPPY PLANTATION was more or less what Bolan expected: acres of flowers in bloom, tended by peasants who stooped and shuffled along the rows, using razors to etch the plants’ bulbs and release the sticky sap from which raw opium gum was derived. A sprinkler system kept the crop from wilting underneath the brutal Afghan sun.

Bolan saw all of that in passing, with the houses set well back from the two-lane highway running past the property. A glance through compact field glasses showed him two figures on the farmhouse porch—one carrying an automatic rifle and the other tracking the Toyota Avalon through glasses of his own.

The land around the farm, predictably, was flat and open. A direct approach in daylight, without air support or armored vehicles, would be a clumsy sort of suicide. The place was dwindling in his rearview mirror when he said to Deirdre Falk, “Okay. Where’s the refinery?”




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