received, all of them earnest, none of them, according to vocal signature, Bob or Nick Memphis.

“I don’t think it’s working,” said Shreck.

“It will work,” said Dobbler. “I know Bob. Bob has been my project for close to a year. I know him. This is the only way.”

Shreck grunted, displeased.

And so they waited. And so another day passed and another, and Dobbler was at home in his apartment, paging through back issues of The American Rifleman, when the phone call came.

“Dobbler.”

“Dr. Dobbler, it’s the phone watch operations officer. We think we’ve got a positive ID on a phone call we received approximately seven minutes ago. The computer analysis makes it an almost perfect match to Memphis.”

“What name did he leave?”

“Ah…he left the name Special Agent Nicholas Memphis, Federal Bureau of Investigation.”

Yes, this is Special Agent Nicholas Memphis, Federal Bureau of Investigation, calling for Mr. Albright. We have reason to seek an interview with Lon Scott, who was the son of Art Scott, and wonder if Mr. Albright has any information pertaining to his whereabouts. The number is four-four-two, three-one-two, three-oh- eight-oh. I should add that refusal to cooperate could be actionable under federal statute.

Nick’s voice spun itself out of the tape recorder.

“Congratulations,” said Shreck. “Now give me some sense of how we play it.”

“Thank you, Colonel,” Dobbler said, secretly very pleased. “Now, um, as to operating principles. There’s only one, and I can’t press it too forcefully. At no point until the ultimate moment must we seem aggressive. Bob is abnormally attuned to aggression; he lives in Condition Yellow, never completely at rest, always scanning the horizon for clues. His radar never goes down. And when he senses threat, it sets his bells off; nothing must be forced. No one must stare. Nothing must be elongated. No hints of trap must be given. We must operate totally without self-consciousness. Now. Who’s going to call him?”

“You are,” said Shreck.

The phone rang.

“Oh, my,” said Nick.

“Answer it,” said Bob.

“Oh, my,” said Nick again. It had been almost a week since they’d made the initial call.

“Go on,” said Bob.

“Agent Memphis,” Nick said, picking up the phone.

“Yes, this is James Albright. I was told to call you in a phone message last week. I only played the tape today. I – What’s this all about?”

“Yes, thank you for getting back to me,” said Nick as officiously as possible. “It’s come to our attention that you’ve published a book about Art Scott, the target shooter?”

“Yes. I knew Art years back. I saw him shoot one of his last championships. He was a wonderful – ”

“We have reason to suspect that a rifle owned by Mr. Scott’s son Lon may have been used in a serious Federal crime – ”

“The Tenth Black King? Do you know where it is?”

“Ah,” said Nick, a little taken aback, “no, no, we hoped you might know where it is?”

“I wish I did. That rifle would be worth tens of thousands of dollars today.”

“Well, we’re trying to locate Lon Scott, who seems to have vanished thirty years ago.”

“Now there’s a mystery for you. Wish I could help you.”

“Hmmm. Yes. Your ad says you have some of Art Scott’s personal effects – ”

“I have all his shooter’s notebooks, his notes on reloading, the results of his experiments, many of his medals and ribbons. But nothing personal – well, a couple of diaries which I never paid much attention to.”

“I see. Mr. Albright, it’s imperative that we locate either Lon Scott or his remains. It’s my thought that in his father’s effects there might be information useful to us. Perhaps I could send a team down and examine the materials.”

“That’s all you want? Hell, why didn’t you say so. Sure, come on down. Be happy to let you see the stuff.”

“Thank you very much.”

The man on the other end gave him directions and Nick said he’d see him in two days, Thursday, at nine-thirty. Mr. Albright said that was okay by him, he wasn’t going anywhere.

“Not bad,” said the Colonel.

“Did I slather on the old-boy business too heavily?” Dobbler wanted to know.

“No,” said the Colonel, his shrewd eyes narrowed in concentration. “You brought the family in, then backed out of it. You established your distance from ‘Lon Scott.’ What they think they’re getting is another step in the link, and not the final step. Now all we have to do is wait. They’re coming in.”

The waiting was hardest on Payne, man of action. Thus, without orders, he seconded himself to central Virginia and the RamDyne training facility. The men of Panther Battalion, his old compadres under arms, had arrived on its thousands of acres to prepare their assault on Fortress Bob.

There he watched as the lean young troopers worked on the assault plan. He watched them deploy, having moved off their mock helicopters, move up the hill that was a close duplicate of Bone Hill under heavy automatic weapons suppressive fire, and assault its summit, where Bob would be alone with no weapon other than the Colt automatic he was known to favor.

Even Brigadier General de Rujijo had come along on this mission.

“Is it not too much, Sergento?” he asked Payne. “This is one man, no?”

It was a logical question. With a base of full automatic suppressive fire, plus the fire and movement elements pouring out lead as they progressed upwards, Payne had calculated that over ten thousand bullets would be hurled at the summit in less than two minutes. For one man?

“He must be el grande hombre,” said de Rujijo.

“He ain’t that big a deal,” Payne said. “My boys could smoke him.” But still, he took great pleasure in the display. The bullets, soaring raucously upwards and blasting against the summit, had literally torn it to shreds. There was no place to hide or survive on that mean ground; it was the land of the sucking chest wound and the exit hole six times as large as the entrance.

The plan was simple. Three platoons from the counterinsurgency company of Panther Battalion – close to 120 men, all heavily armed with Israeli Galil assault rifles in 5.56mm – were to be deployed at a small deserted airfield some two miles from Lon Scott’s house, their presence completely unknown to the target, and no hints of it allowed to surface. When Bob made his approach, whosoever was playing Lon – not yet determined – would activate a signal simply by removing his hand from the wheelchair grip and thereby allowing a photocell to be stimulated by the light, no buttons to push, no anything. The four choppers with eight men apiece would be airborne in seconds and deploy for the assault within two minutes; four minutes later the choppers would return with the second load of men, then repeat until all 120 men were on site. The debarked troops, as well as the men from RamDyne’s own Action Unit, would converge on the house frontally. Bob, upon seeing the extent of the trap, would almost certainly depart the back, by the pool and the rifle range and discover only Bone Hill, six hundred feet of scrubby pine, gulches, washouts and switchbacks, up top of which was a bare knob. The sniper would almost certainly choose to climb it. Up he’d go, until there was no place to go.

CHAPTER THIRTY

Lon insisted. And Lon could be stubborn and willful and infuriatingly impossible to budge.

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