to know in combat. How come they didn't both have AKs?'
'As near as we can determine,' Owens said, 'the man you wounded disabled the car with a rifle-launched antitank grenade. Forensic evidence points to this. His rifle, therefore, was probably one of the new AK-74s, the small-caliber one, fitted to launch grenades. Evidently he didn't have time to remove the grenade-launcher assembly and decided to press on with his pistol. He had a stick grenade also, you know.' Jack didn't know about the rifle grenade, but the type of hand grenade he'd seen suddenly leaped out of his memory.
'The antitank kind?' Ryan asked.
'You know about that, do you?' Ashley responded.
'I used to be a Marine, remember? Called the RKG-something, isn't it? Supposed to be able to punch a hole in a light armored vehicle or rip up a truck pretty good.'
'Then what?' Owens asked.
'First thing, I got my wife and kid down on the deck. The traffic stopped pretty quick. I kept my head up to see what was happening.'
'Why?' Taylor inquired.
'I don't know,' Ryan said slowly. 'Training, maybe. I wanted to see what the hell was going on—call it stupid curiosity. I saw the one guy hosing down the Rolls and the other one hustling around the back, like he was trying to bag anyone who tried to jump out of the car. I saw that if I moved to my left I could get closer. I was screened by the stopped cars. All of a sudden I was within fifty feet or so. The AK gunner was screened behind the Rolls, and the pistolero had his back to me. I saw that I had a chance, and I guess I took it.'
'Why?' It was Owens this time, very quiet.
'Good question. I don't know, I really don't.' Ryan was silent for half a minute. 'It made me mad. Everyone I've met over here so far has been pretty nice, and all of a sudden I see these two cocksuckers committing murder right the hell in front of me.'
'Did you guess who they were?' Taylor asked.
'Doesn't take much imagination, does it? That pissed me off, too. I guess that's it—anger. Maybe that's what motivates people in combat,' Ryan mused. 'I'll have to think about that. Anyway, like I said, I saw the chance and I took it.
'It was easy—I was very lucky.' Owens' eyebrows went up at that understatement. 'The guy with the pistol was dumb. He should have checked his back. Instead he just kept looking at his kill zone—very dumb. You always 'check-six. I blindsided him.' Ryan grinned. 'My coach would have been proud—I really stuck him good. But I guess I ought to have had my pads on, 'cause the doc says I broke something up here when I hit him. He went down pretty hard. I got his gun and shot him—you want to know why I did that, right?'
'Yes,' Owens replied.
'I didn't want him to get up.'
'He was unconscious—he didn't wake up for two hours, and had a nasty concussion when he did.'
'I moved around the right-rear corner of the car and looked around. I saw the guy was using a pistol. Your man Wilson explained that to me—that was lucky, too. I wasn't real crazy about taking an AK on with a dinky little handgun. He saw me come around. We both fired about the same time—I just shot straighter, I guess.'
Ryan stopped. He hadn't meant it to sound like that.
'I don't know,' he said again. 'Maybe I should have tried something else. Maybe I should have said, 'Drop it! or 'Freeze! like they do on TV—but there just wasn't time. Everything was
'Why didn't he—quit, run away, something! He saw I had him. He must have known I had him cold.' Ryan slumped back into the pillow. Having to articulate what had happened brought it back all too vividly.
'Doctor Ryan,' Owens said calmly, 'we three have personally interviewed six people, all of whom had a clear view of the incident. From what they have told us, you have related the circumstances to us with remarkable clarity. Given the facts of the matter, I—we—do not see that you had any choice at all. It is as certain as such things can possibly be that you did precisely the right thing. And your second shot did not matter, if that is troubling you. Your first went straight through his heart.'
Jack nodded. 'Yeah, I could see that. The second shot was completely automatic, like my hand did it without being told. The gun came back down and zap! No thought at all… funny how your brain works. It's like one part does the doing and another part does the watching and advising. The 'watching' part saw the first round go right through his ten-ring, but the 'doing' part kept going till he went down. I might have tried to squeeze off another round for all I know, but the gun was empty.'
'The Marines taught you to shoot very well indeed,' Taylor observed.
Ryan shook his head. 'Dad taught me when I was a kid. The Corps doesn't make a big deal about pistols anymore—they're just for show. If the bad guys get that close, it's time to leave. I carried a rifle. Anyway, the guy was only fifteen feet away.' Owens made some more notes.
'The car took off a few seconds later. I didn't get much of a look at the driver. It could have been a man or a woman. He or she was white, that's all I can say. The car went whippin' up the street and turned, last I saw of it.'
'It was one of our London taxis—did you notice that?' Taylor asked.
Ryan blinked. 'Oh, you're right. I didn't really think about that—that's dumb! Hell, you have a million of the damned things around. No wonder they used one of those.'
'Eight thousand six hundred seventy-nine, to be exact,' Owens said. 'Five thousand nine hundred nineteen of which are painted black.'
A light went off in Ryan's head. 'Tell me, was this an assassination attempt or were they trying to kidnap them?'
'We're not sure about that. You might be interested to know that Sinn Fein, the political wing of the PIRA, released a statement completely disowning the incident.'
'You believe that?' Ryan asked. With pain medications still coursing through his system, he didn't quite notice how skillfully Taylor had parried his question.
'Yes, we are leaning in that direction. Even the Provos aren't this crazy, you know. Something like this has far too high a political price. They learned that much from killing Lord Mountbatten—wasn't even the PIRA who did that, but the INLA, the Irish National Liberation Army. Regardless, it cost them a lot of money from their American sympathizers,' Taylor said.
'I see from the papers that your fellow citizens—'
'Subjects,' Ashley corrected.
'Whatever, your people are pretty worked up about this.'
'Indeed they are, Doctor Ryan. It is rather remarkable how terrorists can always seem to find a way to shock us, no matter what horrors have gone before,' Owens noted. His voice was wholly professional, but Ryan sensed that the chief of Anti-Terrorist Branch was willing to rip the head right off the surviving terrorist with his bare hands. They looked strong enough to do just that. 'So what happened next?'