Susan snapped off a coughing round from the Beretta that pitched one hood backward. If the slug did not kill him, then there was no mistaking the sickening crack as his skull hit the marble floor.

The Executioner triggered Big Thunder, sending hood number two into oblivion. A headless body flew backward as if tugged by an invisible string. Blood splattered the wall as high as the ceiling, then the body crumpled into a heap near the closed front door.

They left the house through a corridor that led to a side exit.

Bolan allowed Susan to lead the way.

They emerged into the night and into a parking lot on the blind side of the house from the floodlit fountain out front.

A half-dozen vehicles occupied the area, including a Datsun station wagon.

Susan led him to it.

'Any idea how many men we're up against?' Bolan asked.

Susan yanked open the door on the driver's side and slid behind the wheel. She reached for keys that were in the ignition as Bolan jumped in alongside her.

'Miller took the main force with him.'

The car roared to life.

'Miller took them where?'

They sped along the driveway, hugging the tight curves. They raced past the fountain lights that illuminated the front courtyard.

'I don't know where they went,' Landry told him. She wheeled into the straightaway toward the iron gates. 'But I overheard him giving orders. There are two men at the gate. Hang on.'

'You do the same,' grunted Bolan. 'Good luck, lady.'

Landry aimed the vehicle on a direct course for the iron-grille gate, where the two guards stood with shotguns, alerted by the sound of the revving engine.

The stunning brunette twirled the steering wheel hard to the left. The tail end of the wagon skidded to the right, gouging the trimmed edge of the turf. The Datsun stopped its slide, the passenger side parallel to the guards' left flank.

The sentries spun in Bolan's direction. Too late.

Bolan's AutoMag spoke.

The sentries were kicked backward from the impact of the .44 headbusters.

Susan left the car. These fresh kills were still shuddering in their own blood as Susan dashed to the guardhouse and activated the mechanical gate release.

She dashed back into the Datsun wagon and trod the gas so hard that the rear end of the subcompact danced from side to side as it sped through the gate.

The investigative journalist sped into the Maryland night.

Leaving Mack Bolan to wonder.

A fireball from his past named Susan Landry had reappeared.

It was all coming down.

Tonight.

A night of blood.

16

The vehicle driven by Susan Landry flew along the dark county road away from the Miller place.

Bolan bolstered his AutoMag in its fast-draw rig on his hip. He reclaimed and holstered his Beretta.

'My car is in that clump of trees,' he told her as they approached the spot where he had concealed the vehicle. 'I suggest you come with me. This car is your death warrant if these people have the connections I think they do.'

Susan cut her speed and guided the Datsun over the gravel shoulder and among the trees that Bolan had indicated.

'Miller has connections,' she acknowledged. 'You're right, of course. Care to give a lady a lift?'

Bolan's rented wheels were right where he left them.

'Wouldn't have it any other way,' Bolan assured her, already climbing from the station wagon.

Landry briskly kept pace with him, easing into the passenger seat as he kicked the engine over, backed out and continued their course toward MacArthur Boulevard and D.C.

He felt her eyes appraising him in the darkness as he drove.

'Thank you for saving my life,' she said.

Those were the exact words Kelly Crawford had used less than two hours ago.

What a night.

Without looking up, he reached for the pack of cigarettes wedged behind the sun visor above his head, stuck one in his mouth and lit it with the dash lighter.

Susan Landry had gone through changes since he last encountered her in Cleveland several years ago. Then, she had been an idealistic young woman; an idealistic young journalist. The toughness had been there, but not the maturity, the inner strength that had come from years as a roving investigative reporter.

There were character lines around her eyes that made her more beautiful than she had ever been before she had earned them.

'You got us out of there in one piece,'' he reminded her as he caught MacArthur Boulevard heading back into the city. The street was virtually untraveled at this hour. 'You're a hell of a wheelperson, Landry.''

He offered her a cigarette. She shook her head.

'I'm also a reporter,' she said. 'Even if I wasn't, I'd sure like to know what a man named Phoenix is doing stalking the wilds of Maryland like some jungle panther. Don't laugh. That's what you are, and mister, you look like pure trouble.'

'Trust your instincts on this one, Susan. You're right. I am trouble.'

'I'd say I was in a good deal more trouble before you showed up. I guess I will have a cigarette.'

Her hands shook when she took the smoke from the pack and tried to light it.

'Let's trade,' said Bolan.

'Fair enough. Ladies first, I assume.'

Bolan grinned at her. He liked her style.

'Talk to me, Susan,' Bolan said.

'I'm investigating the soldier-for-hire community that thrives in this city. Men with professional military training, soldiers, ex-government service people.'

'Mercs,' growled Bolan. 'A real mixed bag.'

Landry nodded. 'And I drew the rottenest one.'

'How did you hook up with Miller?'

'I was a disgruntled woman with a prison record. Bitter. Unable to find work. I knew some of the places in Washington where contracts for services in the merc community are lined up. I made sure I was in the right place at the right time. It goes with the territory.'

'Miller must be pulling in some heavy bread to have a place like that in Potomac.'

'He's paid well, but that house isn't really his. No one in the community knows that, of course. Say, this is the way to the airport....'

Bolan fired another cigarette. It was close. What he'd been tearing this town apart all night to find out.

'The house in Potomac. Did you trace it?'

'As far as a paper corporation operating out of an Arlington PO box. It dead-ended there. Why are we going to the airport?'

'I have a friend waiting there with a helicopter. What was Miller doing behind those walls with all that acreage?'

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