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Clancy, Tom - Ballance of Power

Page 27

by Balance of Power [lit]


  Beyond this chamber was the heart of the Royal Palace:

  the throne room. There were two additional guards, one

  on either side of the grand doorway. Maria did not

  doubt for a moment that behind the closed door was where

  General Amadori had established his headquarters.

  Maria was also convinced that more than vanity had brought

  him to this spot. No outside force could attack the

  general without coming through the prisoners. The detainees

  formed a thick and very effective human shield.

  A sergeant stepped from the room. He shouted for the

  new group to enter. The line began to move. When

  Maria reached the door, she stopped and turned to the

  sergeant.

  "I must see the general at once," she said. "I

  have important information for him."

  "You'll get your turn to tell us what you know," the

  gaunt soldier said. He grinned lasciviously.

  "And maybe we'll get a turn to thank you."

  He grabbed her left arm just above the elbow and pushed

  her. Maria took a step. forward to regain her

  balance. At the same time she turned

  slightly and slapped her right hand hard on the backs

  of the fingers

  274 OP-CENTER

  that were holding her. The shock of the slap caused the

  sergeant's grip to loosen momentarily. That was all

  the time Maria needed. Grabbing the fingers in her fist,

  she spun around so that she was facing the soldier. At

  the same time she turned his hand palm up, bent the

  fingertips back toward his elbow, and snapped all

  four fingers at the knuckles. As he shrieked with

  pain, Maria's left hand snaked down. She

  snatched the 9mm pistol from his holster. Then she

  released his broken fingers, grabbed his hair, and

  yanked him toward her. She put the barrel of the

  pistol under his right ear. His forehead was against her chin and

  his legs were shaking visibly.

  The entire maneuver had taken less than three

  seconds. A pair of soldiers who were standing just

  inside the hall started toward her. But she backed

  against the doorjamb, her body shielded by the

  sergeant. There was no way to get at her without

  killing the sergeant.

  "Stop!" she snapped at the soldiers.

  They did.

  The prisoners who had been shuffling along

  behind Maria froze. Juan was among them. Several

  prisoners cheered. Juan appeared confused.

  "Now," Maria said to the sergeant, "you can listen

  carefully or I'll clean your ears for you."

  "I-I'll listen," he replied.

  "Good," Maria said. "I want to see someone on the

  general's staff." She didn't really. She

  wanted to see the general. But if she demanded that right

  away she'd never get it. She had to give someone more

  information than they could handle so that she was moved along

  the chain of command.

  BALANCE OF POWER 275

  A door opened a short way down the wide

  corridor. A young captain with curly brown hair

  stepped from a room on the other side of the detention

  area. As he emerged, his expression quickly shaded from

  puzzlement to annoyance to anger. He began walking

  toward her. He wore a .38 on his hip.

  Maria looked at him. His green eyes held

  hers. She decided not to say anything to him; not yet.

  Hostage negotiations were the opposite of chess:

  whoever made the first move was always at a

  disadvantage. They gave up information, even if it

  was just their tone of voice telling an opponent their

  level of confidence in a situation. Quite often

  that information was enough to let you know whether they were ready

  to kill you, ready to negotiate, or hoping to delay

  things until they could decide their next step.

  The officer's tan uniform was extremely neat and

  clean. His black boots shone and the fresh soles

  clicked sharply on the the floor. His hair was

  perfectly combed and his square jaw was closely

  shaved. He was definitely a desk officer. If

  he had any field experience, even in war games,

  she would be surprised. That could work in her favor:

  he wasn't likely to make an important

  decision unless he checked with a superior officer.

  "So," he said. "Someone does not wish

  to cooperate."

  His voice was very strong. Maria watched his hand. She

  didn't think he was going to reach for his gun. Not if

  he were a desk officer who'd never had to look

  into someone's eyes while he pulled the trigger. On

  the other hand, he might want to impress his

  soldiers

  276 OP-CENTER

  and the prisoners by making an object lesson of her.

  If he did, she'd shoot him and head toward the

  staircase.

  "To the contrary. Captain," Maria

  replied.

  "Explain," he snapped. He was less than

  three yards from her.

  "I'm with Interpol," she said. "My ID is in

  my pocket. I was working undercover and was accidentally

  rounded up with the rest of this

  familia.

  ?"'

  " 'Working undercover with whom?"'" he asked.

  "With Adolfo Alcazar," she said. "The man who

  destroyed the yacht. He was murdered this morning. I

  was on the trail of his killers when I was

  apprehended."

  That much was true, of course. She didn't say she

  was looking for information about Amadori.

  Maria had spoken loudly and, as she'd planned,

  Juan had overheard.

  "jEl traidor!"

  he shouted, and spat. "Traitor!"

  The captain motioned to a soldier, who struck

  Juan in the small of the back with his truncheon.

  Juan groaned and arched painfully but Maria

  didn't react. The captain had been watching her.

  " "You know who committed the crime?"'" the

  captain asked.

  "I know more than that," Maria replied.

  The captain stopped just a few feet from Maria.

  He studied her for a long moment.

  "Sir," she said. "I'm going to release the

  sergeant and turn over his weapon. Then I have a

  request to make."

  Maria didn't give the officer time to think. She

  low BALANCE OF POWER 277

  ered the gun, pushed the sergeant away, then handed the

  pistol grip first to the captain. He motioned for the

  sergeant to accept it. The man took the gun and

  hesitated before returning it to his holster.

  The captain's eyes were still on Maria. "Come with

  me," he said.

  He'd bought it. He turned and Maria followed him

  toward his office. She'd moved up the ladder. They

  entered the Hall of Columns, which was exactly that.

  Desks, chairs, telephones, and computers were being

  moved in. The large room was being turned into a command

  center. As soon as they were inside, the captain

  turned to Maria.

  "What you did out there was very bold," he said.

  "My mission demanded it," she replied. "I can't

  afford to be stopped."


  "What is your name?" he asked.

  "Maria Comeja," she replied.

  "I had heard that the bomber was dead, Maria," the

  captain said. "Who killed him?"

  "Members

  of the familia,"

  she replied. "But that's a small problem. They

  weren't in it alone."

  "What do you mean?"

  "They are being supported by the United States,"

  she said. "I have names and I have details of what

  they're planning next."

  "Tell me," he said.

  "I will tell you," Maria said, "at the same time that

  I tell the general."

  The captain sneered. "Don't haggle with me. I

  could turn you over to my interrogation group and have the

  information myself."

  278 OP-CEIMTER

  "Perhaps," she replied. "But you'd be losing a

  valuable ally. And besides. Captain, are you so

  sure you'd get the information in time?"

  The sneer remained on his face as he considered what

  she'd just said. Suddenly, he motioned to a soldier

  who was carrying in a pair of chairs. He set them

  down, ran over, and saluted.

  "Stay with her," the captain said.

  "Yes, sir," the young soldier replied.

  The captain left the room. Maria lit a

  cigarette and offered the soldier one. He declined,

  respectfully. As she inhaled, Maria considered

  what she'd do if the captain said the general wouldn't

  see her. She'd have to try to get away. Let

  Luis know somehow where the madman-who-would-be-king was

  hiding. Then hope that someone could get in here and

  dethrone him.

  Try

  to get away, she thought. Let Luis know

  somehow. Hope

  that someone could get in. There were a lot of "maybes"

  in all of that. Perhaps too many on which to hang the fate

  of a nation of over forty million.

  She wondered what her chances would be of getting the

  captain's gun, making her way through the detention

  room, forcing herself into the throne room, and putting a

  bullet in Amadori's forehead.

  Probably not very good. Not with twenty or so

  soldiers between here and there. Somehow, she had to get in

  there legitimately and talk to the general. Tell

  him something that would slow him down. Then get back

  to Luis and help figure out some way of

  toppling the bastard.

  The captain returned before Maria had finished her

  BALANCE OF POWER 279

  cigarette. He strode through the doorway of the

  Hall of Columns and stopped. He smiled

  sweetly and she knew then she'd won.

  "Come with me, Maria," he said. "You have your

  audience."

  Maria thanked him-always thank the messengers in

  case you need a favor later-and lifted her shoe.

  She extinguished the cigarette on her sole. As

  she walked toward the captain she slipped the

  cigarette back in the pack. He gave her a

  curious look.

  "It's a habit I picked up in the field," she

  said.

  "Don't waste your resources?" he asked. "Or

  don't risk starting a fire, which can attract

  attention?"

  "Neither," she replied. "Don't leave a trail.

  You never know who's going to come after you."

  "Ah," the captain smiled knowingly.

  Maria smiled back, though for a different reason.

  She'd just tested the officer with a heads-up and he'd

  failed. She'd hinted that she was schooled

  at infiltration, that she knew more than he did, and the

  captain had let it go. He didn't stop and take

  a second look at her. He was leading her right to the

  general.

  Perhaps Amadori had made a few other mistakes

  in getting his coup underway. With any luck, Maria

  would be able to find them.

  And then somehow, some way, get out to report them.

  TWENTY-SIX

  Tuesday, 8:11 a.m.

  Zaragoza,

  Spain

  The C-141But transport set down heavily

  on the long runway at the Zaragoza Airbase,

  NATO'S largest field in Spain. The four

  twenty-one-thousand-pound Pratt and Whitney

  turbofans howled as the aircraft rolled to a stop.

  The plane had made a refueling stop at the

  NATO base in Iceland before completing the eighthour

  trip against daunting headwinds.

  During the flight Colonel August and his Striker

  team had received regular updates from Mike

  Rodgers, including a complete rundown on the

  White House meeting. Rodgers said that Striker's

  orders vis-a-vis General Amadori

  would be given to them by Darrell McCaskey. Receiving

  them face-to-face wasn't so much a security

  issue as an old tradition among elite forces:

  if you were sending a team on a hazardous mission, it

  was customary to look the leader in the eyes. A commander

  who couldn't do that did not have the mettle, and thus the

  right, to send anyone into danger.

  Colonel August had also spent a few hours

  going through NATO'S dossier on General

  Amadori. Though Amadori had never participated

  in any NATO maneu-

  BALANCE OF POWER 281

  vers, he was a top-ranked officer of a member

  nation. As such, his file was short but complete.

  Rafael Leoncio Amadori had been raised in

  Burgos, the one-time capital of the kingdom of

  Castile and the burial place of the legendary hero

  El Cid. Amadori Joined the army in 1966,

  when he was twenty. After four years he was moved

  to Francisco Franco's personal guard, the

  result of a longtime friendship between Franco and

  Amadori's father, Jaime, who was the

  Generalissimo's bootmaker. By the time Amadori

  was made a lieutenant in 1972, he was one of the

  top men in charge of Franco's

  counterintelligence team. That was where he met

  Antonio Aguirre, ten years his senior, who was

  to become his top aide and most trusted advisor.

  Aguirre was Franco's advisor on domestic

  affairs.

  Once he had joined the inner circle, Amadori

  was personally responsible for sniffing out and eliminating

  opponents of Franco's regime. With the death of

  Franco in 1975, Amadori moved back into the

  general military. However, his years in intelligence

  had not been wasted. Amadori rose quickly. More

  quickly than his accomplishments would suggest. If

  August had to guess, his promotions were probably

  the result of having collected compromising data

  on everyone who had been in a position to help or

  hinder his advancement.

  August was convinced that if a coup were in progress-and

  it certainly looked as if one were-it had not

  simply happened overnight. Like the American kid

  who grew up wanting to be President, General

  Amadori obviously grew up wanting to be

  Franco.

  282 OP-CENTER

  August and six other Strikers had made the trip

  to Spain. Because a situation was developing in

  Cub
a which could require HUMINT, Sgt. Chick

  Grey had been left behind with a contingent of Strikers

  in the event they were needed. Grey was a bright and

  highly capable leader who was due to get his second

  lieutenant's stripes very soon.

  In Spain, August's second-in-command would be

  Corporal Pat Prementine. The serious young

  NCO, an expert at infantry tactics, had

  distinguished himself in the rescue of Mike Rodgers and

  his team during the Bekaa Valley operation.

  Prementine would be more than able to step in if anything

  happened to August. Privates Walter

  Pupshaw, Sondra DeVonne, David

  George, and Jason Scott had performed

  brilliantly in that operation as well, just as they had

  on previous missions. Communications man Ishi

  Honda was also on hand. Neither Colonel August

  nor his predecessor, the late X. Col.

  Charles Squires, would have gone anywhere without their

  ace radio operator.

  The Strikers changed to civilian clothes before landing.

  They were met at the airbase by an unmarked

  Interpol helicopter, which flew them directly to the

  airport in Madrid. Their uniforms and gear,

  carried in oversized duffelbags, went with

  them. At the airport they boarded a pair of vans

  and were driven to the office of Luis Garcia de la

  Vega. August and his team were greeted by Darrell

  McCaskey, who was awaiting the return of

  Aideen Marley.

  McCaskey and August retired to the small,

  cluttered office of an agent who was on

  assignment. McCaskey

  BALANCE OF POWER 283

  had appropriated a portable coffeemaker and moved

  it in here.

  "It's good to see you," McCaskey said, shutting the

  door.

  "Likewise," August replied.

  "Sit," McCaskey said.

  August looked around. The two chairs beside the door

  were full of overstuffed folders so he perched himself on

  the corner of the desk. He watched as McCaskey

  went to the coffeemaker and poured Colonel August

  a cup.

  "How do you take it?" McCaskey asked.

  "Black, no sugar," August replied.

  McCaskey handed him the cup then poured some for

  himself. August took a sip and set his cup on the

  mousepad.

  "That's some pretty shitty stuff, isn't it?"

  McKaskey said, pointing to the coffee.

  "Maybe," August said. "But at least the price

  is right."

  McCaskey smiled.

  It hadn't taken long for August to determine that

  McCaskey was what the elite forces called

  "TBW." Tired but wired. The former G-man was

 

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