end.”

“What do you want him to deliver?”

Harry glanced at his phone, his fingers dancing across the screen to bring down a menu. “Uploading a wish list presently.”

“What are your plans concerning Asefi?” the DCS asked after a second.

Harry looked across the hotel lobby in the Iranian’s direction, a cold look coming into his eyes. “Kill him, most likely.”

“Then take care of it,” Kranemeyer replied calmly. “Your best option is to do it there in Beirut, before you leave.”

“No, can’t do that.”

“Why?”

“He knows something he’s not telling us. And we don’t have the time to get it out of him. That’s what he’s betting on.”

“Is his information regarding the terrorists on the level?”

A moment’s hesitation, then Harry responded, “No. He’s hiding something, like somebody bluffing with a pair of deuces.”

“Is the Land Rover worth following?”

“We back-tracked the Gulfstream to Tehran. They’re in Israel for a reason. We won’t know why until we hunt them down. So, yes, I think we need to take them down. And take Asefi along for the ride. As long as he’s useful.”

“Do it.”

11:43 A.M.

Beer-sheba, Israel

Avraham Najeri was reassembling a PSG-1 sniper rifle when his prepaid cellphone vibrated with an incoming call.

A frown crossed his face as he glanced at the screen. The Agency. “Salaam alaikum,” he answered cautiously. Blessing and peace be upon you.

He listened carefully for the space of five minutes, then closed the phone without another word, going to a safe on the other side of his workroom. Fingers moving over the biometric keypad, he pulled the door open and removed a pair of Galil assault rifles, laying them out on the workbench. Three magazines for each, followed by two sets of night-vision binoculars.

Working quickly, he expertly field-stripped the rifles, dumping the components into a sack. The resulting jumble would have confused most, but not a man of his experience. He could have put them both back together in the space of five minutes if he had been so inclined. It wouldn’t baffle the men he was delivering them to either.

Another glance around his workroom and he turned off the lights, running the beads of a rosary through his fingers as he headed toward the stairs. Time to make the delivery…

12:01 P.M. Local Time

The hotel

Beirut, Lebanon

The two men were no longer in sight, but he could feel their presence. They were watching. Asefi turned back to his food, picking at it with a fork. His appetite left something to be desired.

The big man had been the sniper-or was there a third?

He looked out the window of the hotel restaurant at the street outside, the sunlight streaming in through the glass. The fork trembled in his hand as he thought of the deception he was perpetrating. Hossein and his men didn’t have the toxin-he knew that. But they linked him to the Ayatollah, and if they were dead…

His eyes closed as he imagined the firefight between Hossein’s picked guerillas and the-Americans, maybe? It was not so much that the man looked like an American, but he acted with the confidence of one. A cowboy.

A shadow fell across his plate and he glanced up. “Come on, Achmed,” the man announced in Russian. “It’s time to go.”

A worried expression crossed Asefi’s face. “I thought our business together was concluded?”

Harry smiled. “Nyet. I sincerely wish it was. But it is not our lot to be so fortunate. You’ll come with us until we’ve verified the information you provided.”

12:13 P.M.

The foothills of the Golan

The patrol wasn’t going anywhere. Hossein came to this realization after half an hour of watching the Israeli Humvee through the lens of his binoculars.

They had hidden the Land Rover about half a mile back, leaving two men guarding it. Now he, Mustafa, and another of the militants lay in the bushes on the outskirts of the village, their weapons trained on the four Israeli soldiers.

No more time, Hossein decided, reaching for the pistol at his hip. Motioning for his men to stay put, he screwed a silencer into the muzzle and rose to a crouch.

Forty yards. He could have made the shot, but there was no room for error. One shot and the remaining soldiers would react. With two of them inside the house beyond the vehicle, he wouldn’t stand a chance.

He moved into an alley between the houses, marveling at the incongruity of modern Palestine. A donkey grazed in the courtyard of a house surmounted by a television aerial. The old and the new fused together in an inseparable bond.

A wheelbarrow full of bricks stood in front of a house farther down the street and Hossein moved toward it, shoving his pistol into the load.

One of the two soldiers on guard looked up at his approach, dismissed him as a common laborer and continued to scan the street.

It was a fatal mistake. Five yards away, Hossein dropped the handles of the barrow and grabbed the pistol, his arm a blur as he brought it to bear.

The pistol coughed, a bullet spitting from its cold muzzle to strike the soldier in the middle of the forehead. A young man, he observed dispassionately, almost young enough to be his son.

His body fell backward, thudding softly against the metal of the Humvee. His comrade reacted, the muzzle of his weapon swinging upward in a sickeningly slow motion.

Hossein squeezed the trigger again. Target down. He ducked and moved forward, unclipping a stun grenade from the belt of the second man.

Alerted, the last two soldiers emerged from the door of the dwelling just as he pulled the pin on the grenade, lofting it into the air.

Thunder and lightning. The major shielded his eyes as the stun grenade went off, a blinding flash lit up the area.

He raised himself up, the pistol in both hands. Chaos. Surprise. The Israelis had been blinded by the blast and he shot both of them, one after the other, watching as their lifeless bodies crumpled to the ground.

The way was clear. The path to Al Quds…

4:25 A.M. Eastern Time

NCS Operations Center

Langley, Virginia

“I need a sitrep, Carter,” Kranemeyer announced, bustling around the end of the cubicle. “Do we still have

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