“And the rest of you aren’t?” said Conners, spotting a pair of headlights approaching.

* * *

The Marines took them to a house in the southeast quadrant of the capital, bringing them in through an alley, which made Kiro a little less obvious. Fully conscious, the prisoner had either reconciled himself to the fact that he wasn’t going to escape or had decided to conserve his energy. He meekly allowed himself to be carried from the car into the house.

Ferg left the others to work out shifts for showering and sleeping while he went over to the embassy. He was met not by one of the resident CIA spooks he’d expected but the charge d’affaires — a young woman in a black silk miniskirt who could have stepped out of any one of two dozen wet dreams he’d had as teenager.

And any number of others since.

“You need a shower,” said the charge. Two buttons of her mauve shirt were unbuttoned, giving a hint of lace beneath.

“I need a plane,” said Ferguson.

“We’re working on it.” She brushed back her curly blond hair. Obviously she’d been woken up a short while before — Ferguson wondered what she’d look like if she had time to prepare.

“You really do need a shower,” she said.

She must be right, he reasoned. Despite all of his innate animal magnetism and the powerful ESP messages he was beaming into her brain, she remained across the room.

“First I need to talk to the, uh, consul security coordinator,” said Ferguson, using a euphemism for the CIA chief.

“I’m her. Really, Mr. Ferguson — you need a big-time shower.”

“Really?”

“If I had a fire hose, I’d hose you down myself.”

Ferguson spread his arms. “Take me, I’m yours.”

“Up the steps, to the right.”

“You really are getting me a plane, right?”

“We’re working on it. We were told that you were to be picked up by your own people in Chechnya in a few days.” She looked at him accusingly, as if he’d been boogied out of a date.

“Didn’t make too much sense to hang around there,” Ferguson said. “Russians were beefing up their patrols, and the Chechens were kicking them in the face.”

“I’ll find you some clothes.”

“Why don’t you help me in the shower instead?”

“I doubt I’d make it without passing out.”

“I have first-aid training.”

“I’ll bet.”

Ferguson used half the hot water in Tbilisi washing Chechnya out of his skin. He found a fresh set of clothes — but no charge — in the room outside the shower.

The outfit included polyester boxers — not his style, but at least his size. The rest of the outfit was so preppy it came complete with tasseled loafers.

Miss Miniskirt was waiting downstairs.

“You missed a great shower,” he told her.

“Sounded like it. You were singing.”

“If I’d known you were close, I would have taken requests.”

“I heard you down here.” She held out her hand. “I’m Amanda Scott.”

“Pretty name,” said Ferg. “Goes with your eyes.”

“I think you’ve been on assignment too long.”

“Ain’t that the truth,” said Ferguson. “You going to offer me a drink?”

He followed her into a reception room, then through a side panel to a smaller, book-lined study.

“What are you drinking?” she asked.

“Whiskey. Pour yourself one.”

“No thank you.”

Ferg watched her pour out two fingers into the tumbler. He touched her hand as he took the glass; it was warm, as if her internal thermostat was set several degrees higher than his.

“So I hate to ask — Why the hell didn’t you get us a real helicopter up to make the pickup?” he asked after a sip.

“We tried. It was sabotaged.”

“By who?”

“Take your pick — drug runners, arms smugglers, Muslim crazies, Russians. Place is out of control.”

She gave a weak shrug. Her breasts heaved up in a way that made it difficult to question her further.

“We’ll have an airplane ready no later than tomorrow afternoon,” she told him. “The Marines will stay with you until then.”

“I could stay here.”

“I’m afraid the ambassador wouldn’t approve.”

“I’ll go to your place then.”

“My boyfriend wouldn’t approve.”

“He’s an idiot anyway,” said Ferguson.

“True,” said the woman. “But since he’s standing out in the hall with a gun, maybe we’d better not talk too loud. He’s the Marine who drove you here.”

15

INCIRLIK, TURKEY

Colonel Charles Van Buren tried rubbing the fatigue out of his eyes as he powered up his laptop, waiting to hear from Washington that his people were not needed to grab the team and its prisoner. He’d received unofficial word already — from Ferguson himself — which had allowed him to order most of the men and equipment tagged for the operation to bed. Van Buren sympathized with the complaints as they’d disembarked from their MC-130 — to a man his volunteers preferred action to sleep — but nonetheless he’d been sincere when he offered them a job well-done.

The colonel felt strongly that it was the outcome that mattered. If the team had gotten out without needing them, then the mission had been accomplished as surely as if Van Buren’s two planeloads of paratroopers and Special Forces A teams had gone into action. Indeed, the military people on the Team had been drawn from Van Buren’s own force, and he felt nearly as paternal toward them as he did toward his own son, James.

Ferguson was a different story — more brother and friend than son, though he was nearly young enough to be one. Van Buren admired the CIA officer a great deal; though they’d worked together for only a short time, they were good friends. On a professional level, they were a good match, Van Buren’s caution and ability to plan balancing Ferg’s tendency to work by the seat of his pants.

Still waiting for the official order to stand down — it had to come through the Pentagon — Van Buren pulled out his laptop to compose an e-mail home to his wife and son. Since taking the appointment as the commander of the 777th Special Forces Joint Task Group six months before, Van Buren had communicated with his family almost exclusively through e-mail. It had its advantages — it was certainly quicker than writing a letter, nor did he have to worry about time zone differences. But it surely wasn’t the same as seeing them in person.

Van Buren brought up the most recent e-mail from his son, James. It was typical James, a terse account of his Babe Ruth League baseball game:

Dad — 2 hrs., trip.; won 7–2. — james

Two home runs and a triple — Van Buren wondered if his son might have the makings of a pro ballplayer. He’d always thought of James as athletic and brilliant, but now that his boy was fifteen he wondered how brilliant

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