wasn't the one that alerted the missile crews in the city. They had a radio at the airport communicating with their headquarters in the city. Think about it. They wouldn't have just one man with a buzzer and one man with a voice radio. Ten to one, they got a network of spotters out there at the International.'
Blancanales shook his head slowly. 'That's not certain. Their agent in the tower couldn't radio his information straight, so they had a backup. Makes sense that way, too.'
'Maybe. But look at how they operate in the city. They've got a central command, then satellite units scattered all over the place. The command center got the word, then relayed it to all the other units.'
'Not anymore,' Lyons told his partner. 'Command Central is deactivated.'
Gadgets gulped his coffee, poured more from the thermos. 'We killed some of them. I checked inside those trucks. Crated SAM-7s and good radios. But you said four trucks got away. And how do we know all of their field units were in the warehouse? Anyway, they hit Air Force planes. Why not American airliners? That's what scares me.'
'We've been chopping arms off the octopus,' said Blancanales. 'We have to take the head off. But we don't know where the head is.'
'Might have already done it,' insisted Lyons. 'That one I saw had to be a diplomat. He had the look of an international type. I put an M-67 grenade under him.'
'We didn't find his body,' Blancanales reminded Lyons.
'I think I got him. Blood all over the place…'
'Blood spots don't make the body count.'
Gadgets cut them off. 'Doesn't matter if that one's alive or dead. I don't think the head was the diplomat the Ironman saw. Dig it, these people have infiltrated
'What about that Egyptian with the Agency?' Lyons asked.
'I listened in on a conversation between Katz and that Parks guy. They've checked him and checked him. They say he's straight.'
'I don't care what they say,' Lyons snapped back. 'That one saw us. I bet you, and I'll give you even odds, that we get it because of him.'
'From Washington?' Blancanales commented. 'Don't worry about it.'
'I'm not talking about Washington. Now the Egyptians know. I'm saying we could get shat upon out here in the desert.'
Gadgets tapped the radio linking Able Team to Katz. 'I got a message from the colonel. He's sticking close to that Sadek. He won't let him spill it for a while.'
Mohammed shouted out, 'El-Minya, two kilometers.'
'Time to split up again.'
They buzzed their drivers. Gadgets pressed his argument as the taxi slowed. 'So we've still got to positively identify the head man. Otherwise we're wasting our time, we're just shooting sand dunes.'
'Tell it to the colonel.' Lyons gripped the door handle as he waited for the taxi to slow. 'We can't do it all.'
Lyons jumped out the door. Dust billowed in the glare of the other taxis' headlights. Blancanales gave Gadgets a salute and stepped out, too. Mohammed waited until the two men got in their cars, then threw the Fiat into gear. 'We'll be at the village in about two minutes. Road we want cuts east, into the desert.'
'Go. You're the driver — just go.' Gadgets flicked on the switch of the high-powered radio unit. Cairo would be at the extreme range of the radio. But he needed to send one last message to Colonel Katz.
Bleary-eyed orderlies with plastic bags shuffled through the warehouse. Soldiers struggled to descend the stairs with stretchers.
Katz watched Sadek and a technician search through the battle litter. He limped across the warehouse, pausing every few steps. He glanced at weapons the soldiers piled, looked inside trucks, as if evaluating the armament of the terrorists. Edging closer to Sadek, he listened to the Egyptian's comments to the laboratory technician.
'Examine those .45-caliber casings under a microscope,' Sadek told the technician in Arabic. 'Compare the casings to the ones found at the earlier incident. I want it done immediately.'
'The staff will not be there until after nine o'clock in the morning…'
'You will do it. You will do it now...' Sadek turned, saw Katz standing near '...or must I request our American allies to open their facilities? I need a report in an hour.'
Dismissing the assistant, Sadek stepped over to Katz. 'And what are your conclusions, Mr. Steiner, supposedly of the American Foreign Service?'
'Perhaps it was an industrial accident.'
'No. I think not.'
'A religious rite? I understand that often what a foreigner mistakes for extremism is actually the expression of a fervent devotion to Allah. Perhaps self-flagellation with whips did not cleanse their souls of guilt, and they used automatic rifles to purge their sins instead… with unfortunate consequences.'
'Again, I think not.'
Katz limped back to Parks. 'Assemble your men. We're returning to the embassy.'
'What?' Parks asked, feigning surprise. 'And leave Sadek here to send coded information to the Communist International?'
Katz smiled at the sarcasm. 'Actually, yes.'
Wind swirled sand. In the distance, the lights of the National Liberation Front stronghold blinked in the predawn darkness. Able Team and their 'taxi drivers,' changed from their street clothes to black night suits, now checked weapons and equipment by the glow of penlights. Lyons loaded Atchisson magazines. Blancanales inspected the rockets and launchers they had taken from dead Muslim terrorists. It would soon be the dawn of another terror-racked day for Mack Bolan's avengers.
They did not prefer their days to be ablaze with terror, any more than Mack Bolan, the rogue supercommander of the U.S. government's leading security enterprise, preferred execution to mercy.
But, like Mack Bolan, his three American freedom fighters known as Able Team knew well enough that somebody had to be true to the way things really were. Somebody had to go beyond mercy and face terror openly, fearlessly, immediately. Somebody had to realize there was no other choice.
Able Team was born of the same fires as Bolan's long-ago Death Squad. The same fires of Mack's own mythical immolation in New York's Central Park that brought The Executioner emerging from ashes as John Phoenix, the greatest counter-terrorist known to man. So Able Team went in blazing. Every time.
They were an extension of Mack's will and yet, out of love and out of duty, they acted entirely independently, unpredictably, for the patriotism of it, for the love known only to the selfless volunteer. It was a high path that shimmered with sacred fires.
They went in blazing, but their enemies cropped up everywhere, unendingly.
Their enemies were the children of the devil, whoever they may be, and there were many. The devil's ilk might be Americans, they might be Chinese, they might be Arab or Jew or Englishman or Congolese, they might be man or woman, very young or very old, but they all identified themselves in one way: their fanatical devotion to destruction for its own sake.
Such destroyers needed a stiff lesson. The lesson was Able Team. The avenging warriors taught the ancient law, that for every action — especially destructive action — there is as powerful a reaction. For every act — especially the act of taking innocent life, especially the act of destroying productive endeavor, especially the act of spilling the blood of the harmless and wrecking their lives with shock and horror — there is always an accounting.
Whether you are Jew or Arab or Christian or black man or preacherman or soldier, your life is in the care of