Combat Machines

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Combat Machines Page 4

by Don Pendleton


  “Given the other attacks we’ve confirmed, this seems to link them all into a strong covert Russian operation,” Kurtzman said.

  “But to what end?” Price asked. “Several of these obvious links—that one or more of the supposed perpetrators behind these incidents may be of Russian origin—are still so weak that they might be a sophisticated ploy to fool us into thinking Moscow is behind all of this. What if we’re looking at an elaborate false-flag operation meant to make us chase it back all the way to the Kremlin? With US-Russian relations so strained at the moment, we need to make absolutely sure that we’re correct about our intelligence pointing to whoever’s behind all of this.”

  “Barbara’s absolutely right,” the fifth member of the conference said from the large monitor on the wall. “And the best way to do that is by putting some boots on the ground—mine.”

  Mack Bolan, aka the Executioner, was connected to the War Room via an encrypted satellite feed. He and Jack Grimaldi had been returning from a successful operation in northern Africa when this situation had arisen.

  “Fortunately, we’re not too far from Paris,” Bolan said, “and I can begin my investigation there, since that has direct American involvement. Looks like we’re about four hours away from Charles de Gaulle, so I’ll have Jack drop me off, and I’ll see if I can pick up the assassin’s trail.”

  The Executioner picked up a tablet computer and flicked through the data he’d been sent. “DiStephano had been on his way to a meeting when he was assaulted. Are there any other events in the next twenty-four hours I need to be aware of, especially ones with high-value targets? Even wounded, this assassin may try to strike again if the payoff is of high enough value.”

  “Plus, given the timing of these incidents, we should assume we are dealing with at least three to five individuals,” Price said. “It is possible that the wounded attacker won’t even be there tonight but one or two of the others may be.”

  “How about a visit from the Austrian president?” Brognola asked. “He’s in Paris, and what’s more, he put out a statement saying he’s not leaving until he’s concluded his business with the French government—and guess what that is?”

  “A conference to discuss a coordinated response to the recent aggressive actions of Russia?” Bolan replied.

  “Jesus, what do you have over there, the meeting itinerary?” Brognola asked. “That was almost word-for-word.”

  The black-haired man smiled. “What can I say, Hal. I’ve been listening to you gripe about the Foggy Bottom boys and their BS for too long.”

  “He just arrived this morning, and a welcoming dinner is planned at the Hôtel de Marigny, the traditional housing for visiting heads of state in France. It’s right next to the Élysée Palace, so security will be heavy regardless. The event is scheduled to begin at 1900 local time this evening,” Price told him.

  “Well, considering we still don’t have a solid lead on any of these operatives, even with their previous assault, right now they still possess the element of surprise,” Bolan said. “And if they’re still in the area, the chance to take down a sitting president is something they probably won’t pass up.”

  “We’ll make sure you’re added to the guest list and we’ll alert both Interpol and French intelligence, who will be overjoyed to see you, I’m sure,” Price said.

  “As long as we can take down these bastards, I don’t care who I have to work with to get the job done.”

  Chapter Four

  Avenue des Champs-Élysées

  Paris, France

  Alexei Panshin drove the Renault sedan through the narrow streets with ease, staying within a few miles of the posted speed limit, following every traffic law, alert to the occasional uniformed police officer directing traffic through a particularly busy intersection. If he and his companions had been stopped, the officer doing so would have had a career-making arrest, given the various weapons and other illegal equipment inside.

  Assuming he survived the encounter, of course.

  As he drove, eyes flicking from one side of the street to the other, Panshin said, “You both have the plan and timetable down?”

  “Yes, Alexei, we will be there with plenty of time to set up what we need,” the slender woman in the passenger seat replied. Of a similar build and general appearance to the man beside her, the woman, Amani Nejem, also swept her gaze across their surroundings, missing nothing.

  Panshin looked into the small rearview mirror, and met the gaze of Nejem’s backup, Kisu Darsi, staring back at him. “Don’t worry about me, Alexei. I’m not even feeling any pain.”

  The team leader’s eyes flashed. “You’re just fortunate we were able to get the bullet out. You are certain you can complete this operation?”

  Still holding his gaze, Darsi raised his left arm until it was outstretched and level with his shoulder—something he shouldn’t have been able to do, given that three hours earlier there had been two bullets in his upper chest. But he evinced no sign of discomfort as he did so.

  “All right, then. You both know where you are supposed to be,” he said as he pulled the car over in a neighborhood of converted apartment buildings. “I will see you both there.”

  Panshin got out, and moments later Nejem was behind the wheel and the sedan was pulling away, heading toward the hotel that would host the state dinner. Casually looking around as he headed to a structure at the end of the block, Panshin made sure no one was taking any interest in him as he walked up the steps to a four-story apartment building and tried the electronically locked door. It didn’t budge.

  Panshin thought about trying to contact his target through the intercom, but decided against it, as he didn’t want to risk spooking him. Instead, he pulled a trick he had been assured would work in neighborhoods like these, filled with students and young, working-class professionals. He simply ran his hand down the entire line of intercom buttons.

  Within seconds, one of them buzzed the door, and he opened it and slipped inside. His target’s apartment was on the top floor, and Panshin took the stairs, not wanting to be seen by others in the building. He reached the floor quickly and started down the hallway until he found the door he was looking for. After glancing to the right and left to make sure no one was around, he knocked softly.

  The muffled sounds of movement came from inside. “Who is it?” an annoyed voice asked in French.

  “It’s Reynard,” Panshin answered, giving the name of one of the apartment dweller’s coworkers.

  “Reynard?” A chain rattled on the other side, and the door cracked open. A young man peered at him. “What do you—Wait, who are you?”

  By then it was too late. As the young man struggled to make sense of the man who was nearly a mirror image of himself, Panshin grabbed the edge of the door and pushed hard.

  It wasn’t a big movement, but it was enough to tear the chain from the wall and shove the boxers-clad man back from the door, sending him stumbling into the high-ceilinged one-bedroom apartment. His butt hit the stained Formica counter that framed part of the kitchen, and he winced even as he threw up an arm to try to fend off this unknown assailant.

  “Hey—” was all he got out before Panshin had closed the door and was on him, moving so fast his quarry appeared to be crying out in slow motion. One lightning-fast hand batted aside his upraised arm, and Panshin’s other hand, fingers curled into a tight ram’s head position, shot forward into the man’s throat, crushing his larynx.

  The effect was immediate. Gasping, the young man grabbed his injured neck as his windpipe swelled and closed, cutting off the flow of air to his lungs. Mouth opening and closing helplessly, he sank to his knees, face reddening as his brain became starved for oxygen. He grabbed at Panshin, who sidestepped him and let the dying man fall to the floor, where he thrashed helplessly and clutched at his throat before falling unconscious.

&nbs
p; A startled yelp alerted him to the presence of someone else in the apartment. Panshin looked up to see a young woman in a spaghetti-strap tank top and panties staring back at him, a look of openmouthed horror on her face. He cursed inwardly. All of their surveillance data indicated the target should have been alone today.

  As he started for her, the woman whirled and darted back into the bedroom, slamming the heavy door in Panshin’s face. He hit it with his shoulder just as she turned the lock. Stepping back, he raised a leg and pistoned it into the doorknob, smashing it apart, but the door still held. Cursing, he hit the same spot again, this time shoving the door open hard enough for it to fly into the bedroom wall and smash a hole in the plaster.

  Panshin shot inside and saw the open window in the larger dormer. Running to it, he saw the woman, now dressed in a leather jacket and combat boots, carefully moving across the roof toward the next building. A feral grin creasing his face, he stepped out and gave chase, cursing her for putting him behind schedule, knowing every second counted now.

  She had a decent lead, but for him, walking the three-inch pathway around the sloped roof was as easy as walking across a street, and he soon closed the gap. She glanced over her shoulder to see him gaining fast, and that knowledge spurred her to greater speed—straight toward the narrow alley between that building and the next. Fortunately, she was running too hard to draw enough breath to scream for help.

  Panshin ran faster as well, wanting to cut her off before she leaped, but he just missed her, his fingers brushing her jacket as she desperately soared through the air. She landed hard and rolled, losing one boot, but was up and running again within moments.

  He backed up a few steps, then accelerated to his top speed, easily leaping the three-yard gap with a few feet to spare. Unlike his quarry, he landed on his feet and kept running, easily catching up to her.

  When his right hand grabbed her neck, the woman opened her mouth to scream, but he quickly cut her off by the simple expedient of clapping his left hand over her mouth and nose. Already panting from fear and the chase, with her air cut off, she panicked completely, tearing and beating at his iron-like hands as he dragged her out of sight behind a large air-conditioning unit.

  Already her struggles were weakening, but Panshin didn’t let his guard down, and made sure she didn’t reach his face with her nails by using the hand that had been holding her neck to pin her arms—anything out of the ordinary now could interfere with the mission. He maintained his hold until she passed out, then carried her to the back side of the building and peeked over the side.

  As he’d hoped, it was a narrow backstreet filled with trash receptacles and piled bags of refuse. With a quick look around to ensure that no one was watching, he grabbed her by the legs and held her upside down over a section of alley that was clear of garbage, then let her go, not even waiting for the impact of her head on the pavement to reach him. Her death was a foregone conclusion.

  At the edge of the building, he made sure to find the loose boot and toss it toward where he’d dropped the woman. At this point, it didn’t matter if it also fell off the roof or stayed where he’d tossed it. Now it was just a clue pointing toward a young woman committing suicide.

  He jumped back to the other building, reentered the apartment, closing and locking the window behind him, and walked to the closet. Hanging in a black garment bag was his disguise for the evening. Quick searches of the nightstand and the body produced the final pieces—Yves Montauk’s smartphone, his billfold with his driver’s license, and a government identification badge that would allow Panshin access to the Élysée Palace and the Hôtel de Marigny.

  Chapter Five

  General Directorate for

  Internal Security Headquarters

  Levallois-Perret, France

  “Look, we can sit around here for the next ninety minutes or so and argue jurisdictions and whatnot, but the evidence we’ve obtained—and already made available to your department—indicates that the Austrian president is at risk of an assassination attempt tonight, and I plan to be there, with or without your government’s approval.”

  “Be that as it may, Agent Cooper, our security has already been doubled for the function,” Captain Bellamy Lambert, of the Terrorism Department of the Direction générale de la sécurité intérieure—DGSI—replied. “Our people are among the best in the world at what they do, and I have no doubt that the president and the rest of the guests will be safe under their watch.”

  The brown-haired man cleared his throat. “And while we appreciate your government’s sharing of the data you have uncovered, as far as I know, you are here to investigate the attack on Richard DiStephano earlier today. So then, by all means, please do so, and let us handle tonight’s event. Your presence there would be unnecessary, and even detrimental to our own established security protocols. It would be as if we had showed up to your White House and demanded to oversee the security details for your own President—hardly acceptable, n’est pas?”

  He leaned forward on the desk and speared Mack Bolan with his dark blue eyes. “If you do show up there tonight, you will be escorted off the premises. If you attempt to detain or arrest anyone on the premises, you will be arrested instead.”

  Bolan blew out an exasperated breath. Bureaucratic red tape was to be expected, but at this level, it was hard to stomach. The fight against terrorism was a global one, and for the most part, cooperation between countries was usually a given. However, in every counterterrorist organization, there were always those people either more interested in following the letter of the law, unwilling to accept that their own country’s resources weren’t up to handling a possible threat, or trying to protect whatever little fiefdom they’d carved out within the organization. Bolan was pretty sure Captain Lambert was a combination of the first two.

  “Captain, I’ve been trying to tell you for the past ten minutes that every indicator we’ve found shows that that the two events are related. The same assassins who tried to kill Richard DiStephano will attempt to assassinate the Austrian president tonight. Let me help you catch them.”

  “And if they do try anything, which sounds most incredible, given the failed attack on your own senator, we will apprehend them. Please, Agent Cooper, there is no need for your assistance this evening—” The DGSI officer was interrupted by his desk phone ringing. “Excusez-moi.”

  Bolan leaned back in his chair and regarded the other man steadily while he picked up the phone. He had an idea as to the nature of the call, and while he’d hoped he wouldn’t have to use the option, preferring to operate in cooperation with local law enforcement whenever possible, Lambert had left him no choice.

  “Oui...oui...” The captain’s eyes widened as they flicked to Bolan, then he scowled. “Oui...oui, Minister, je comprend.” He jerked the phone away from his ear, looked at it for a moment, then set it back in its cradle. When he looked back up at Bolan, his gaze was, if anything, even steelier.

  “Exactly what department of American law enforcement are you with again, Agent Cooper?”

  “The Justice Department.”

  “Hmm... I would have thought this would be a State Department matter, the FBI, or perhaps even CIA...” Lambert cleared his throat again, but Bolan didn’t even twitch at the so-called bait dangling out there.

  “Regardless, the minister of my department has just informed me that I am to extend any and all assistance to you in your investigation, including a suitable escort to guide you around the city. I have selected just the officer to help you in this matter.” He picked up his phone again, punched in a number and spoke a few rapid-fire sentences to the person on the other end of the line. He hung up and addressed Bolan.

  “Sergeant Palomer will be awaiting you in the foyer. If there is anything else my department can assist you with, she will also be your liaison. Good luck, Agent Cooper.”

  “Thank you.”
With a nod, Bolan stood and let himself out into the hallway, retracing his steps back to the main entry of the DGSI headquarters.

  “Agent Matthew Cooper?”

  Bolan glanced to his left, where the query had come from, and saw a petite woman with dark brown hair pulled back in a ponytail. She acknowledged him with a curt nod. “I am Sergeant Marie Palomer, assigned to assist you in this case. Where would you like to begin?”

  “How familiar are you with the situation?” Bolan asked as he began walking toward the front door again.

  She fell in beside him. “I have been briefed on the attack on your Senator DiStephano. That is the incident we are investigating, correct?”

  “Not tonight,” Bolan replied as they walked outside and toward a black Range Rover on loan from the US Embassy. “Do you have formal wear?”

  “I can pull something together,” she said with only a slight pause. “May I ask why?”

  “Because tonight we’re attending the state dinner welcoming the Austrian president to your country,” Bolan said as he opened the passenger door for her. “With any luck, we’ll be there to prevent his assassination.

  “But first, we have to stop and pick up my tuxedo.”

  * * *

  “YVES MONTAUK,” NOW impeccably dressed in his serving tuxedo, got off the bus on the Champs-Élysées and slowly walked the last half mile to his destination, smoking a cigarette along the way, enjoying the smooth blend of tobacco, so much better than what he could get back home in Russia.

  He took the opportunity to sight out the primary and secondary escape routes they would use to get clear of the building once the assassination had occurred. Due to the more public nature of this event, they were planning a more subtle attack by using poison this time. By the time the Austrian president began to feel the effects, ideally Panshin’s team would be long gone, heading on to the next target.

 

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