had to be willing to take greater risks to make sure that Op-Center earned its international credentials once and for all. Like one of his heroes, Babe Ruth, when you got your turn at bat you swung for the home run, not the double, and you didn't think about striking out. Even if, like the Babe, you did that sixty percent of the time you stepped to the plate

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

Tuesday, 5:25 A.M., Quantico Marine Corps Air Station, VA

The battle was long and hard-fought, bodies falling everywhere, faces twisting in anguish, commands and cries shattering the early morning silence.

'They're such assholes,' Melissa Squires said to the other wives around the picnic table. She tapped the back of her husband's pager. 'You'd think they could just have fun with this.'

'The kids are,' said one woman, wincing as she watched her daughter fall from her father's shoulders in the middle of the in-ground pool. 'Oooh? that'll leave David in a bad mood today. He and Veronica were out there at four forty-five practicing their moves.'

The eight women watched and picked at the bacon, eggs, and muffins that were fast becoming cold. The daily pool war had run over, but they knew better than to call their husbands to the table before it was through. They'd only get pissed off, and they wouldn't come anyway: not with their honor at stake.

There were just two chicken fighters left: lean Lt. Col. Charlie Squires and his spindly son Billy and pumped Private David George and his son Clark. The kids pushed hair from their eyes as their fathers circled each other slowly, each watching for an opening, for a kid who lost his balance, made a clumsy offensive maneuver, shivered and broke his concentration.

Sgt. Grey's wife Lydia said, 'Last week, when we were visiting my folks in Alaska, Chick and I got stuck in a snowbank and he refused to call for a tow. He told me to put the car in neutral, then he got behind and lifted it out. He walked bent over for two days after, but he wouldn't admit he was sore. Not Hercules.'

There was a shout from the pool as Clark lunged at Billy. Instead of stepping back, as he usually did, Lt. Col. Squires moved in: while Clark was leaning forward, Billy grabbed his outstretched arm, pulled down, and the boy flopped back-first into the water. Private George stood there, aghast, as he looked from his son to Squires. There was a smattering applause from the side of the pool, where the other defeated chicken fighters had been watching the showdown.

'That's it, sir?' George said to Squires. 'Lor-dee, that was shorter than the first Clay-Liston fight.'

'Sorry, Sonny,' Squires winked. He reached up and high-fived his son.

'And when did you work that one out, sir?'

'While we were suiting up. Made sense, don't you think? Guy expects a retreat, gets an advance— he's gotta be surprised.'

'He was, sir,' George mumbled, wading toward the shallow end of the pool, his son in his wake.

'Nice fight,' Clark said to Billy as he dog-paddled after his father.

'Don't talk like that,' George muttered as he lumbered up the steps with the bearing and disposition of Gorgo. 'You'll lose your edge for tomorrow.'

Squires followed him out, his eyes drawn to headlights shining through the living-room window of his home in the base family quarters. He snatched a towel from a chaise lounge as the lights snapped off, then watched as a lone figure walked around the one-story cottage, silhouetted by the light blue horizon. No one could have gotten to this quarter without passing through the gate that separated his crew from the FBI Academy, and no one could have gotten through the gate without a call to him directly.

Unless they were from Op-Center.

Draping the towel over his shoulders and slipping on his sandals, the Lieutenant Colonel walked quickly toward the house.

'Charlie, your eggs are getting cold!'

'Be right there, Missy. Set 'em next to George, they'll stay warm.'

Squires's Striker team of twelve full-time men and their support crews was established six months before, the same time as Op-Center. They were the so-called 'black' side of the agency, their existence a secret from outsiders except those who needed to know: the heads of the other military and spy agencies, and the President and Vice President themselves. Their charter was simple: they were sent onto the field when offense was needed. They were an elite squad that could be counted on to strike hard and fast. Though all the Striker members belonged to the military and drew pay from their respective branches, they worked in nondescript camouflage pants and shirts without markings of any kind. If they screwed up, there was no way for anyone to trace them? or place blame.

Squires smiled as Mike Rodgers came around the side of the building. The tall man's arched nose— broken four times in college basketball— high, intelligent forehead, and light brown eyes that seemed almost golden were a welcome sight.

'I hope I'm glad to see you,' Squires said, saluting the two-star General. When Rodgers returned the salute, the men shook hands.

'That depends on whether or not you were getting bored.'

'Does diet Coke fizz? Yes, sir, we're ready for action.'

'Good. Because I radioed the chopper: get one through eleven ready and have Krebs bring an extra grip. We leave in five minutes.'

Squires knew not to ask where to or why only eleven men instead of the full Dirty Dozen were going— not while they were out in the open where their wives or children might hear. Innocent remarks, made over unsecured lines to friends or relatives, could be disastrous. He also knew not to ask about the small black bag Rodgers carried, or why there was a sewn-on design of what looked like a weed growing out of concrete. When and if the General wanted to tell him about it, he would.

Instead, Squires said, 'Yes, sir,' saluted again, and jogged back to the picnic table. The dozen other men were already on their feet and ready to go, the hostilities and disappointments of the morning's sport quickly forgotten.

After a word with Squires, eleven of the twelve men jogged to their homes to get their gear, none of them stopping to say good-bye to their wives or children: a sad face or teary eye might come to them when they were called on to risk their lives, cause them to hesitate. It was better to leave cold and make up later. The one man who hadn't been picked sat and hunkered down over his paper plate: this was not Private George's morning.

Like each man, Squires kept his grip handy and within four minutes they were running across the field beyond the fence, toward the Bell Jetranger that was being fired up for the half-hour ride to Andrews Air Force Base.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

Tuesday, 7:30 P.M., Seoul

The sound truck looked like a gutted avocado, blasted panels peeled back by the force of the explosion, with only scraps and slag in the center.

For over an hour, Kim Hwan's team had picked over those scraps, looking for any leads. There were traces of plastic explosives stuck to the bottom of what used to be the sound panel, and those had been sent to the laboratory for analysis. Other than that, there was nothing. Nothing but the increasing numbers of victims being moved from the ranks of the injured to the list of the dead. The men on the rooftops had seen nothing unusual, one of the two video surveillance cameras they had placed on a rooftop was destroyed by shrapnel, and the other had been trained on the podium, not the crowd. TV cameras were being collected, their tapes studied, to see if they had recorded anything unusual. Hwan doubted they would help, since it seemed as though all of them had been facing in the same direction: away from the truck. And his computer expert doubted that any of them had caught a useful reflection of the truck in a window, one large and complete enough to be enhanced and studied.

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