Clancy, Tom - Ballance of Power
Page 32
Maria and the sergeant-his nameplate said
Garcia-waited. She swore she could hear his
heartbeat. He did as he was instructed when the
others called to him, and when they were gone Maria told
him to rise. Still facing front, he was told to take
off his uniform.
He did. Maria then turned him around so he was
facing the toilet. She told him to kneel in
front of it.
"Please don't shoot me," he said. "Please."
"I won't," she said, "if you do as you're
told."
There were two things she could do. One was to stuff his mouth
with toilet paper, break his fingers so he couldn't
take it out, then tie him to the heavy tank lid. But
that would take time. Instead, she executed a tight
front-kick to the back of his head. That drove his
forehead into the ceramic tank and knocked him out.
He'd probably suffered a concussion, but there was no
way to avoid injuries in this situation. Grabbing the
uniform and guns, she changed quickly in the adjoining
stall. The uniform was baggy, but it would have to do.
Tucking her hair into the snug pillbox cap, she
bolstered the sergeant's gun and hid the extra
pistols under the front of her shirt.
She stuffed her clothes into the wastebasket- everything
except the shoes. She rubbed the soles on
328 OP-CENTER
her cheeks to give herself "stubble." When she was
finished, she threw the shoes out as well. Then she
went to the mirror to give herself a final check. As
she did, two other sergeants entered. They were in a
hurry.
"You're late, Garcfa!" one of them barked. He
walked past Maria following the other man toward the
urinal. "The lieutenant gave each
group five minutes to get in and-was
The sergeant stopped and turned. Maria didn't
wait for him to act. She faced him and placed her
right knee behind his left knee. Then she hooked her
right arm, locked it around his neck, and threw him over
her leg. He fell in front of her, lengthwise.
Because her weight was on her right leg, she was able
to lift her left leg. She stomped hard on his
chest, breaking ribs and knocking the wind from him. His
companion was facing the urinal. He turned but
Maria had already stepped over the sergeant and was moving
toward him. Lifting her right leg without breaking her
stride, she drove her right knee hard into the small
of his back. He was slammed against the urinal and
fell back. As the soldier hit the tiled floor
Maria kicked him in the temple with her heel. He
went out immediately. The other man was still moaning so
Maria pivoted gracefully and kicked him
squarely in the side of the head. He, too, fell
unconscious.
Maria stumbled back. She had marshaled the energy
she'd needed for the attack, but the effort had drained
her. The blows she'd suffered in the music room
ached wickedly and this activity hadn't helped. But
there was still a mission to complete and Maria
intended to finish
BALANCE OF POWER 329
it. Staggering to the sink, she cupped water in her hands
and drank.
Then she remembered something the man on the floor had
said. Soldiers were being allowed to come in here at
five-minute intervals. She'd just eaten up
nearly two of those. There was no time to delay.
Pulling herself erect, Maria turned and started
toward the door. Then, without hesitation, she stepped
into the hallway. She turned right and then turned
left a few doors down. She was back in the
corridor leading to the throne room.
There were soldiers stationed here but she moved quickly, as
though she were hurrying somewhere. Whenever she worked
undercover Maria had found that two things were necessary for a
successful infiltration. First, you had to act like you
belonged wherever you were. If you did, no one questioned
you. Second, you had to act as though you had somewhere
to go-immediately. If you moved fast and with assurance, no
one stopped you. She was certain that those qualities,
plus the uniform, would get her back to the Hall of the
Halberdiers. They might even get her inside.
After that, Maria would need four things in order to get
to Amadori.
The guns, wile-and two special allies.
THIRTY-TWO
Tuesday, 4:30 a.m. Washington, B.c.
Mike Rodgers joined Paul Hood in his office
to await word on Striker's deployment. Shortly
after Rodgers arrived, Steve Burkow phoned with
news from the White House. Hood hoped the call
was only to give him the news. The hawkish National
Security chief had a way of using calls like these
to push the President's agenda.
According to Burkow, the king of Spain had phoned from his
residence in Barcelona and spoken with the
President. Officers loyal to the king had confirmed
that General Rafael Amadori, head of military
intelligence and one of the most powerful officers in
Spain, had relocated his command center to the throne
room of the Royal Palace.
Hearing that. Hood and Rodgers exchanged glances.
Without a word, Rodgers went to a phone by the couch
to inform Luis at Interpol that they had positively
located their target. Hood allowed himself a little
smile. He was pleased that they'd gotten that one right.
"There's now no doubt about what this General
BALANCE OF POWER 331
Amadori is planning," Burkow
continued. "The President has informed the king about the
presence of the Striker team in Madrid. His
Majesty has given us his approval to take
whatever action is necessary."
"Of course he did," Hood said. The
President's action was expedient and probably
necessary, but it made him uneasy.
"Don't be so quick to judge the king," Burkow said.
"He has also acknowledged that it probably won't
be possible to hold Spain together. He said that too
many long-simmering ethnic demons have been let
loose. He also told the President that if the
U.n. and NATO will assist in an orderly
disassembling of the nation, he will abdicate."
"What good would that do?" Hood asked. "The king's
powers are only ceremonial."
"That's true," Burkow said. "But he's prepared
to use his abdication as a gesture to the people of Spain.
He wants to show them that if they want autonomy,
he won't stand in their way. However, he's
adamant about not handing over power to a tyrant."
Hood had to admit that even though the king probably
had a fortune hidden in foreign banks, there was an
admirable if grandstanding logic to what he had
proposed. "When will the king be making this
gesture?" Hood asked.
"When Amadori is no longer a threat," Burkow
replied. "Speaking of which, what's the stat
us of your
team?"
"We're awaiting word," Hood said. "Striker should
be arriving at the target any mo-was
332 OP-CE1MTER"...TheY'RE
there," Rodgers said suddenly.
"Hold on, Steve," Hood said. "Mike,
what've you got?"
"Darrell just heard from Colonel August,"
Rodgers said, the phone still pressed to his ear.
"Striker has successfully deployed along the
east side of the opera house. They have the palace in
view and so far no one has bothered them. The
soldiers seem to be concentrating on the palace and
nothing more. Colonel August is awaiting further
instructions."
"Thank Darrell for me," Hood said, and repeated
the information to Burkow. As he spoke, he brought up
the mission profile McCaskey had filed a
half hour before. There was a map of that section of
Madrid as well as a detailed map of the Royal
Palace, along with various assault and infiltration
configurations. According to McCaskey, the
estimate from the Interpol spotter put the palace
strength at four or five hundred troops. Most
of them were clustered outside the southern end, where the
throne room was located.
" 'What would the plan and timing be if they had to go
in now?" Burkow asked.
Rodgers had come over to the desk. He looked over
Hood's shoulder. Hood put the phone on
speaker.
"There's a sewer on the northwest corner of the
Plaza de Oriente," Hood said. "It connects
to a catacomb which used to be part of an old
Moorish fortress. It's used to store rat
poison now."
"Hold it," Burkow said. "How do they get into the
sewer?"
BALANCE OF POWER 333
"They use an old French Resistance trick,"
Rodgers replied. "Create a diversion and hit the
main target. Nothing lethal-just lots of smoke."
"I see," Burkow said.
"The catacomb connects to a palace dungeon, which
hasn't been used for that purpose in over two
centuries," Hood said.
"You mean it's just sitting there?" Burkow
said.
"That's correct," Hood replied.
"Given Spain's history vis-a-vis the
Inquisition," Rodgers said, "I'm not surprised
it hasn't been restored and opened to the public."
"Entering the dungeon will bring the Strikers right below the
Hall of Tapestries," Hood continued. "From
there, it's a short trip to the throne room."
"A short trip as the crow flies," Rodgers
said, "though there are probably troops up and down
the corridor. If they go in a three-cut mode,
there'll definitely be casualties among the
Spaniards."
"Three-cut mode?" Burkow said.
"Yes, sir," Rodgers said. "Cut through any
resistance, cut down the target, then cut out. In
other words, if they don't bother to obtain uniforms
and sneak up on Amadori and take pains
to minimize casualties-on either side."
"I see," Burkow said.
"We intended to wait and see if we hear from our
person inside," Hood said.
" "The Interpol agent who allowed herself to be
captured," Burkow said.
"That's right. We don't know whether she'll
try to
334 OP-CENTER
reach us or try to take out the target herself," Hood
said. "But we thought it best to give her time."
Burkow was silent for a moment. "While we wait,
we run the risk of Amadori growing exponentially
stronger. There's a point at which a usurper ceases
to be regarded as a rebel and becomes a hero to the
people. Like Castro when he overthrew Batista."
"That is a risk," Hood agreed. "But we
don't think Amadori is at that point yet. There
are still dozens of riot zones and Amadori hasn't
been named as an interim leader in any of the
newscasts we've monitored. Until a few
major figures join him-not just politicians, but
business and religious leaders-he's probably
going to lay low."
"He's already started leaning hard on industrial
leaders," Burkow pointed out. "The men on the yacht
and
thefamilia
members he rounded up-was
"He probably will scare others into line," Hood
agreed, "but I doubt that'll happen within the next
hour or two."
"So you think we should wait."
"Striker's on alert and ready," Hood said. "The
delay isn't likely to do much harm and it
may
give us some valuable onsite intel."
"I disagree that the delay isn't likely to do much
harm," Burkow said. "General VanZandt
believes that it may also give Amadori a chance
to punch up his own security. And getting him is the
primary
objective."
Hood looked up at Rodgers. They both knew
what Burkow was implying: this wasn't the time to be
cautious.
BALANCE OF POWER 335
Hood agreed, to a point. The blitzkriegs,
purges, and murders seemed to put Amadori in a
class with Hitler and Stalin, not Fidel Castro
or Francisco Franco. He couldn't be allowed
to rule Spain.
"Steve," Hood said, "I agree with you.
Amadori is the primary objective. But the
Strikers are the only resource we have. If we
use them recklessly, that'll endanger their lives and
also jeopardize the mission." He looked
at the computer clock. His assistant Bugs
Benet had programmed it to give him the local time
as well as the time in Madrid. "It's nearly
eleven a.m. in Spain," he continued. "Let's
see what the situation is at noon. If we
haven't heard anything from Maria Comeja by then.
Striker will move in."
"A lot can happen in an hour, Paul," Burkow
complained. "A few key endorsements could make
Amadori unstoppable. Remove him then and you
kill a world leader instead of a traitor."
"I understand that," Hood replied. "But we need more
information."
"Look," Burkow pressed, "I'm starting to get
pissed off. Your team is one of the best strike
forces in the world. Don't sit on them. Let them
loose. They'll collect their own intel as they
proceed."
"No," Hood said emphatically. "That isn't good
enough. I'm going to give Maria the extra hour."
"Why?"
Burkow demanded. "Listen, if you're afraid
to give the order to waste that son-of a-bitch
general-""
"Afraid?" Hood snapped. "That
bastard sat back
336 OP-CENTER
and let one of my people die. I can eat what's on the
plate. Gladly."
"Then what's the problem?"
"The problem is we've been so damned target
focused we haven't worked out an exit strategy for
Striker."
"You don't need Maria for that," Burkow said.
"They go out the same way they go in."<
br />
"I don't mean we need an exit strategy from the
palace," Hood said. "I'm talking about
culpability. Who's going to take the heat for this,
Steve? Did the President work that out with the king?"
"I don't know. I wasn't in on the conversation."
"Are we supposed to disavow Striker if they're
caught?" Hood asked. "Say they're mercenaries
or some kind of rogue operation and then let them twist
in the wind?"
"Sometimes that has to happen," Burkow said.
"Sometimes it does," Hood agreed. "But not when
there's an alternative. And the alternative we have
here is to let a Spaniard be involved somewhere. A
patriot. Someone Striker is there to support,
even if that's just smoke-and-mirrors for
public consumption."
Burkow said nothing.
"So I'm going to wait until noon to see if we
get anything from Maria," Hood said. "Even her
whereabouts in the palace will do. If Striker can scoop
her up on the way to Amadori, then no-I won't
have any problem giving the order to waste the
son-ofabitch."
There was a long moment of thick silence. Burkow
BALANCE OF POWER 337
finally broke it.
"I can tell the President it'll happen at
noon?" he asked.
"Yes," said Hood.
"Fine," Burkow said coldly. "We'll talk
then."
The National Security chief hung up. Hood
looked up at Rodgers. The general was smiling.
"I'm proud of you, Paul," Rodgers said.
"Real proud."
"Thanks, Mike." Hood closed down the computer
file and rubbed his eyes. "But God, I'm tired.
Tired of all of this."
"Close your eyes," Rodgers said. "I'll
take the watch."
"Not till this is over," Hood said. "But you can do
me a favor."
"Sure."
Hood picked up the phone. "I'll get on top
of Bob Herbert and Stephen Viens, tell them I
want that woman found and pinpointed. Meantime, see
if there's anything else Darrell can do. An
hour's not much time, but maybe somebody once bugged
the palace. See if he can scare up any
enemies of the king."
"Will do."
"And make sure he briefs Striker about what
we're waiting on."
Rodgers nodded and left, shutting the door behind him.
Hood made the calls to Herbert and Viens. When
he was finished, he folded his arms on his desk and
rested his forehead on them.
He
was
tired. And he wasn't particularly proud of
338 OP-CENTER
himself. To the contrary. He was disgusted by his eagerness