to danger.

Colonel Quesada, his tailored fatigues soaked, paced the conference hall, motioning with his clenched fist for dramatic emphasis. He told a story of his soldiers betrayed and murdered in the United States. A Negro assassin impersonating a leftist journalist had lured his soldiers into an ambush on a residential street in San Francisco, California. North American mercenaries then lured two squads of his soldiers into death traps in the mountains of California and the slums of Los Angeles. Only with the help of Internationalists in the U.S. government had Quesada escaped a ridiculous arrest warrant issued by the United States Department of Justice.

But the mercenaries had relentlessly pursued him to El Salvador. There, this night, under the cover of the unnatural storm from the Pacific, forces led by North American commandos mounted suicide attacks on the defenses of La Finca Quesada. Despite his personal leadership in the firefights, the invaders breached the outer defenses, only to die, Quesada insisted, in heaps at the walls of the family's residence. He had left the counterattack on the fleeing cowards to his junior officers.

Despite the threats against his family and his properties, the colonel flew on to La Escuela. He knew his responsibility to the International Alliance. He would represent the Quesada family at the conference. Quesada paused in his long story, then delivered his declaration.

'The Fourteen Families of El Salvador, united in patriotism and courage, will join the leaders of the other nations of the Americas in the hemispheric victory of the International Alliance!' He snapped his fist to his chest, then extended his straightened hand and arm.

'Victory to the New Reich!'

Gunther restrained his laughter. Throughout the pompous colonel's speech, the security chief had mentally noted the lies.

'The Negro assassin impersonating a journalist' had, in fact, been a journalist. Floyd Jefferson, a twenty- two-year-old leftist with no military experience, had confronted and killed two of the four soldiers sent to kidnap him.

The mercenaries who 'lured' Quesada's soldiers into death traps had demonstrated only basic military techniques. In the first 'death trap,' Quesada's death squad pursued the North Americans from the interstate highway. The North Americans turned off a road and waited in a narrow canyon. In complete disregard of caution, the death squad's three trucks drove into the ambush. In the second 'death trap,' the North Americans attacked the Salvadorans as they stood in a group in the center of a Los Angeles street.

Death traps? No. Only arrogant and stupid soldiers meeting death in a confrontation with intelligent, disciplined fighters.

But the assault on the fincaworried Gunther. On the eve of what would have been his leader's seizure of Guatemala, North Americans had infiltrated and destroyed the secret base of the army of Unomundo high in the Sierra de Cuchumantes. The assault had come virtually without warning: no firefights, no attacks on the perimeters; only an all-consuming ball of flame that killed a thousand soldiers in their barracks. A squad of Quiche Indians led by North American commandos had liquidated the survivors in a brief small-arms assault. By luck, Gunther had been airborne in a helicopter at the time of the attack. Of more than a thousand soldiers, assassins, officers, technicians and pilots, only Unomundo and Gunther and three soldiers plus the helicopter's pilots survived.

The new attacks seemed similar. Gunther questioned the Salvadoran.

'Colonel Quesada, I am familiar with your estate's very impressive security perimeter. Fences, towers, mine fields. All the modern devices. Even in the darkness and rain, I do not understand how they overwhelmed your perimeter defenses.'

'I await a report,' replied Quesada. 'I will share that information with you the moment I receive it.'

'They gained entry without an alarm sounding?'

'We suspect they parachuted agents into the coffee fields.'

'Could they have had agents in your security forces?'

'No! My men are loyal. They know the penalty for treason.'

'When did the fighting first break out?'

'As they assaulted the walls of the family compound...'

'They passed through all your defenses, all your forces? You did not know of the attack until they rushed the walls?'

'They are very cunning. We will question the prisoners...'

'Yes, the prisoners. Did you not personally question them?'

'My duties required my presence here.'

'How many prisoners did your men take?'

'I await a report on the action.'

'How many Communists did your men kill?'

'Many! I will report on the numbers killed when I receive the report.'

'Did you kill the North Americans?'

'Certainly. They could not have escaped our counterattack.'

'Did you see the North Americans?'

'In the confusion of the battle, I saw only the fighting.'

'But you said North Americans led the Communists.'

'Yes. North Americans.'

'How do you know if you did not see them?'

'One of my trusted lieutenants, they took him prisoner for a moment until he fought his way free. He saw their faces. One was blond. The other...'

'This lieutenant, I would like to question him.'

'When his wounds allow an interview, I will summon him here.'

'Good. I must return to give my report to our leader immediately.'

The colonel protested. 'But you have been here at the School only a few minutes.'

'We leave the moment our jet is refueled.'

Minutes later, the Lear jet streaked north on a nonstop return flight to Washington, D.C.

23

Engines whined, then the misting rain became blue. Gadgets Schwarz looked up to see a small jet lift away from the mountaintop, the airstrip's blue lights reflecting from the underside of the wings and fuselage. He took the moment of artificial moonlight to check his work.

In order to prevent the cutting of the perimeter fence by intruders, security technicians had woven filaments through the chain link. Electric charges pulsing through the filaments allowed guards to remotely monitor the perimeter.

Working by the digital readout of his own monitor, Gadgets had clipped 'jumpers' to each filament. He quickly checked each of three filaments, the first just below the soil, the second about a foot off the ground, the third about two feet up the fence. With plastic ties, he secured the three jump lines in a semicircular arch.

The mountaintop lights went black. Gadgets paused for his eyes to readjust to the darkness. A hundred meters away, security lights created a soft glow in the sky. A searchlight on a mechanical mount swept the cleared ground in automatic cycles. Above the brilliant beam, the shadowy outline of a guard tower stood against the night.

Though the storm had died away to drizzle and intermittent downpours, a slow wind pushed low clouds over the mountain. From time to time, clouds made luminescent by the lights enveloped the hillsides. Other times, darkness returned.

Gadgets waited until the light swept past, then put his wire cutters to the filaments. He watched the digital numbers and snipped the three filaments. The cuts did not interrupt the pulses.

With heavier snips, he cut a shoulder-wide hole through the fence. He snapped his fingers to Lyons and Blancanales.

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