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Mission of Honor o-9

Page 23

by Tom Clancy


  "The deacon just called you 'Seronga,' " the Spaniard said.

  Seronga felt Pavant's fingers dig into his side. Neither man had caught the slipup.

  "You are mistaken," the Brush Viper replied. "He said 'lion.' That is my nickname."

  "I see," Diamante said. "I'm sorry. Este Men, be well," he added. "I will see you later at the church."

  Seronga and Pavant continued toward the terminal. He was glad Diamante had been distracted enough to believe that and not to notice that part of his shoulder holster was visible through his torn shirt. He pulled the ripped fabric higher to cover it up.

  "I'm very sorry for what happened out there," Pavant muttered as they reached the door. "That was very careless of me."

  "Now we've all apologized for something," Seronga said. "Let's just get out of here."

  The body of the dead bishop had been covered ^vith a large r shawl. The thick weave was soaking up the dead man's blood. It was the white and black zigzag pattern of the Kava tribe of northeastern Botswana. The tribe members were mostly Vodun.

  No one in the terminal was the same person they had been just a few minutes before. They would never be the same. They would be unable to forget the moment, the shock, the sights, smells, noises.

  People were either subdued or animated. Strangers had become instantly bonded by the tragedy. Some were frightened, others relieved. A few people were talking. Others were standing around, quiet and unmoving. Some were tearfully hugging new arrivals. Still others were trying to get a look at the body. The short, lanky ticket agent was doing his best to keep people away. The statuesque woman from the refreshment stand was helping. A Spanish soldier asked if he could help Seronga, but the Brush Viper insisted he was all right. He had only been grazed. Seronga and Pavant were able to slip through the terminal without being stopped.

  But they were noticed.

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Maun, Botswana

  Friday, 3:18 P. M.

  A third person had moved when the guard fired at the bishop.

  It was Maria Corneja.

  The woman had left Paris Lebbard sitting at the curb in his taxi while she went into the terminal. She saw the shooting. It was done in close quarters with eyewitnesses who could have ID'ed the killer. An amateur. She saw the deacon run onto the airfield, pursued by two swarthy men. All three men moved like soldiers. She did not need a cast list to know who everyone was.

  Maria followed the Spaniards toward the tarmac. The plane was airborne before she could reach the field. Instead of continuing outside, she doubled back to the cab. She grabbed her camera and snapped several digital pictures of the airplane in flight.

  Lebbard had jumped from the cab when he heard the shots. He ran toward Maria.

  "What happened?" he asked.

  "A passenger was shot," she said. "Go back to your taxi. You'll be safer there."

  "What about you?" he asked.

  "I'll be there in a minute," she told him. "Just go!"

  Paris did as she commanded. Meanwhile, Maria waited. She listened to random pieces of conversation. The assassin was the airport security guard. Maria was not surprised to hear that he had been gunned down. If he had not been shot on the tarmac, she had half expected to see his body fait from the airplane. He was not only expendable, he was a liability. When the local authorities checked, Maria was sure they would find a bank box stuffed with cash. It would probably be American currency. A down payment for murder. The woman did not know local law, but she was willing to bet the money would be confiscated by investigators. And, in time, the cash would find its way into other bank boxes.

  Maria stood beside the front door. She watched as the deacons emerged from the terminal. She noticed two things at once. First, the man with blood on his arm was only pretending to be wounded. Maria had seen people who had been shot. A gunshot wound was body wide. It could be seen in the victim's posture, in his expression. It was reflected in the concern of others. This man's pain stopped short of his eyes. And his companion was not doing much to support him. He seemed more anxious to get out of the terminal than anything else. Second, the way the man was leaning, there appeared to be a bulge under his left arm. That was where a holster would be for a right-handed man.

  Maria walked alongside them as they headed toward the curb. She coughed to get the man's attention. He glanced over. It was the same face from the photographs she had seen.

  It was Leon Seronga.

  Maria headed back to the cab. She watched as Seronga and his partner got into a taxi. Then she got into her own cab.

  "Paris, do you see the white car at the front of the line?" she asked.

  "Yes, that is Emanuel's car," he said.

  "I want you to follow it," she said.

  "Follow it?" he asked.

  "Yes," Maria said. "Keep a car or two between you, if possible."

  "We may not encounter any other cars on the road," Paris pointed out.

  "Then keep a two-car distance," she said. "I don't want it to seem as if you are following it."

  "I see," he said. "What about the person you came here to meet?"

  "He's in that cab," she said.

  "You mean the bleeding man?" Paris asked.

  "Yes."

  "And you don't want him to know you are here?" Paris asked.

  "That's right. And I don't think he was really hurt," Maria added.

  "I am puzzled," Paris said. "You came to meet someone who you don't want to meet. And now you think he isn't hurt even though he is bleeding."

  "Please just drive, Paris," Maria said. "It will be easier on both of us."

  "Of course," Paris said. "I will do whatever you ask." He sat tall. He gripped the steering wheel tightly. He was trying to regain some of the professional dignity his questions and confusion had cost him.

  Seronga's car pulled onto the road. A moment later, so did the taxicab of Paris Lebbard.

  "You know, I can always call and ask where they are going," Lebbard said helpfully. He held up his cell phone.

  "If you do that, and Emanuel answers, it may be the last thing he says," Maria informed him.

  "I see," the Botswanan said. He fell silent and slouched slightly. His dignity had vanished again.

  As for Maria, she felt vindicated. And fired up. She wished that she were driving the car herself. Or better yet, she wished she was on her motorcycle. Or on horseback. Doing something where she was able to move. Burn off some of her energy.

  For the moment, though, Maria would have to contain herself and do something that would give her deep satisfaction of a different sort.

  She had to call Op-Center with an update.

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Washington, D. C.

  Friday, 8:40 A. M.

  Since the Striker debacle in Kashmir, Mike Rodgers had not spoken very often with Colonel Brett August. When the two men did chat, it was over the telephone or on-line. It was never in person. They simply did not want to look into each other's eyes. They never said that was the reason. They did not have to. They knew each other too long and too well.

  And they never mentioned the death of nearly everyone in the unit. The risk of death came with the uniform. The ultimate responsibility for those deaths came with the stripes. There was no official blame. Officially, there was no mission. There was just guilt. Though the two men had to look ahead, the loss still hurt. It hurt them every moment they were not busy. They both knew it would hurt until they could no longer feel a damn thing.

  Ironically, by avoiding the subject, each man had to think about it more. He had to consider what to say, what not to say. That served to reinforce the loss and sense of failure both August and Rodgers were feeling. They each took the hit because they did not want to inflict it on the other.

  Colonel August had accepted a temporary transfer to the Pentagon. He was stationed in Basement Level Two for SATKA. That was the multiservice department of Surveillance, Acquisition, Tracking, and Kill Assessment. August worked as a liaiso
n between the Pentagon and his former coworkers at NATO. He studied data that came from potential combat regions and helped to determine the force necessary to contain the struggle or crush it. The desirability of such a response was left to his superiors. It was not an assignment August would have selected for himself. But he had run an unauthorized covert operation in Kashmir. Even though he prevented a nuclear war between India and Pakistan, someone had to take the fall for exceeding mission parameters. The Pentagon picked him. It could just as easily have been Rodgers.

  August knew he could have turned this assignment down. He could have requested a transfer back to NATO. But implicit in the Pentagon position was a promise. If Colonel August stayed off the radar for at least half a year, there would not be a military or congressional investigation into his actions in Kashmir. Members of all the elite forces took exceptional risks in their work. They were not only the first ones into enemy territory. Sometimes they were the only ones into a region like Iran or Cuba. Groups like Striker conducted recon, sabotage, search and rescue, and ran surgical strikes. The military could not afford to undermine their morale. Away from the attention of the media, the so-called "centurion line" looked after their own.

  Being hidden in an underground data processing center was absolutely not August's favorite place to be. That was why he had called Mike Rodgers. Not to complain but to stay connected. To talk to someone in a place where things were not simply discussed. They happened. August knew that his lifelong friend would understand.

  The men chatted about their work and about people they both knew. August told him that he had bumped into Colonel Anna Vasseri, who worked on the president's Intelligence Oversight Board. Years before, in Vietnam, August had gotten himself an unofficial reprimand for writing new lyrics to the old standard, "The Anniversary Waltz." He called his version "The Anna Vasseri Waltz." Then-Private Vasseri wrote for Stars and Stripes at the time. The lyrics speculated about what happened during a night she had spent just outside Saigon with another private who worked on the newspaper. A storm and flash flood had stranded them on top of a small hill. When they were rescued the next morning, all they had with them were the blankets and bottle of Jack Daniel's they^ had taken out with them.

  "Has she forgiven you?" Rodgers asked.

  "No," August replied. "Which doesn't surprise me. From the look of her, that was probably the last time her uniform was off. What the hell was the name of that cat mummy we saw in the British Museum?"

  "Bast," Rodgers replied. He did not know where the hell in his memory the name was stored, but there it was.

  "Right," August said. "Bast. Well, this woman is wrapped as tight as that cat mummy."

  Rodgers whistled when he heard that. It was good to look back at happier times. And at mistakes that did not cost so damn much.

  Rodgers also talked a little about the team he was putting together. He did not tell August he had already put three members in the field. August would not have approved of that. Experienced lone wolves could be more dangerous to each other than inexperienced team players. But circumstances did not always give a leader the luxury of choice. With the help of the operatives themselves, Rodgers and Paul Hood had made that choice.

  The conversation was interrupted by a call from the outside. Rodgers told August he would be in touch later in the week. Maybe they would get together for dinner. It was long overdue.

  Rodgers punched the button to switch phone lines. "General Rodgers," he said.

  "General, it's Maria," the woman said. She did not use her last name because she was calling on a nonsecure phone line. "The American bishop was just assassinated."

  "How did it happen?" Rodgers asked.

  The general fought his first, involuntary reaction. The one that went back to stories his grandfather used to tell about jinxed platoons during World War I. Units where the new lieutenant or the guy about to be mustered out or the sergeant who just had a kid always died. Rodgers refused to believe that Op-Center was cursed.

  "It was right after the plane landed," she said. "The airport guard shot the bishop in the back of the head as he entered the terminal. A Cessna taxied over, and the killer ran toward it. Then the pilot opened the door and shot him. The guard died on the tarmac, and the plane took off. I managed to take a few digital photos of the tail markings."

  "Can you download them?" Rodgers asked.

  "As soon as I can get to a computer," Maria told him. "I'm in a taxi right now."

  "Was anyone else hurt?" Rodgers asked.

  "No," she said. "Most of the people in the terminal ducked behind chairs and counters. That's how I was able to see what happened next."

  "Which was?" Rodgers asked.

  "There were two deacons waiting for the bishop. They ran onto the field to try to stop the killer. One of the deacons had a gun."

  "Was he one of the Spanish representatives?" Rodgers asked.

  "No," she replied. "Both deacons were black men."

  Rodgers had seen the file on the Grupo del Cuartel General, Unidad Especial del Despliegue. None of the soldiers was black.

  "I'm almost certain one of them was the man whose photograph was in the file," Maria added.

  Apart from Dhamballa, the only black man pictured in the file was Leon Seronga. "Did you get a picture of him?" Rodgers asked.

  "Yes, but it's not a very good one," she replied. "He was facing away from me most of the time."

  "What happened to the deacons?" Rodgers asked.

  "The gunman fired at one of them," Maria went on. "The deacon was not hit, but he pretended to be."

  "Are you sure?" Rodgers asked.

  "Very," Maria said. "The two men said they were going to the hospital and left in a taxi. I am following them now."

  "What did the Spanish do?" Rodgers asked.

  "They stayed at the field," she said. "I think they believed that the two men were deacons."

  "Were there any police officers at the airport?" Rodgers asked.

  "Not that I saw," she replied.

  Rodgers brought up his computer file on the Maun airfield. He looked at the map of the surrounding area. The nearest police station was back in the city itself. That meant it would be at least a half hour before authorities could get to the airfield. Anyone who had been involved in this by accident or design would have plenty of time to get away. And several routes to do it.

  "What road are you on?" Rodgers asked.

  Rodgers heard Maria ask the driver. "He says we're on the Nata Road," she told him.

  "The police will be coming along the Central Highway," he said. "Our deacons obviously know that."

  "I'm sure they do," she said. "On the other hand, they may not be headed toward Maun."

  "True," Rodgers said. He should have thought of that. He glanced at the computer clock. "Your associates from Washington should be reaching Maun in about three hours. Can you keep the taxicab?"

  "I've hired a driver for the day," she said. "He's a good man."

  "All right," Rodgers said. "I'll make sure the others hook up with you along the way. Try to check in every half hour. And Maria?"

  "Yes?"

  "Be careful," Rodgers said. "And thank you."

  Maria thanked Rodgers for giving her this opportunity. Then she hung up. The general did not bother to replace the receiver. He hit Paul Hood's extension. He felt as if Maria had lit the afterburners. He collected his thoughts as Bugs Benet put the call through.

  An American clergyman had been killed. Edgar Kline and the president would have to be informed. So would Aideen Marley and David Battat. Then Op-Center would have to do two things more. They would have to find out who wanted this situation to spin out of control.

  And then prevent that from happening.

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Maun, Botswana

  Friday, 3:44 P. M.

  Upon getting into the taxi, Leon Seronga told the driver to head out along the Nata Road. Seronga told him they would be taking the highway toward the town of Or
apa. The driver pulled away from the curb. As he drove, he used his cell phone to call his dispatcher in Maun.

  Seronga was oblivious to the driver's conversation. The airconditioning grumbled loudly beneath the dashboard. The muffler hacked under the car. Seronga heard none of that either. His senses had shut down to everything but lingering shock over the assassination. It held him like nothing he had ever experienced. He had seen men killed before, but he had never been caught by surprise like this. And he had never been faced with a greater crisis.

  Someone obviously wanted to frame Dhamballa, possibly draw him out to defend himself, Seronga thought. Until this moment, he had not realized how truly vulnerable Dhamballa was. Not necessarily to physical attack but to being undermined. His ministry could end before it had truly begun.

  In time, support for the Vodun leader would have grown exponentially. That was when Dhamballa intended to take a very strong public stand on the question of outsiders influencing or controlling Botswanan religion, culture, and industry. But that would not happen for many months. At the moment, Dhamballa was not yet well enough known to become a martyr for the Botswana cause. If he were connected to the attacks against the Church and blamed for the death of the bishop, their cause would be irredeemably lost.

  Protecting Dhamballa over the next few htiurs and days was only part of the problem. There was also the matter of finding out who was actually responsible for the killing. In Seronga's mind, anyone from government moles to the Spanish soldiers to the Vatican itself would have had cause to kill the bishop. But whoever was behind it, the result would be the same. National opinion would come down heavily on the side of aggressive action. To show that they were still in control of the nation, the government would be forced to redouble their efforts to find Father Bradbury and crush the Vodunists. The Brush Vipers would have to try to prevent that. They would have to stop the government, find the real perpetrators, and protect Dhamballa.

  There was also a separate issue: what to do about Father Bradbury. Releasing the priest would invite prosecution as well as the inevitable return of the missionaries. Their work would be undone and resistance to it strengthened. The priest might just have to disappear the way the two deacon missionaries had.

 

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