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Altered State. Don PendletonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Altered State - Don Pendleton


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understood the Langley-speak. A “legend” was a false identity created to withstand at least a cursory examination, covering for…what?

      “That doesn’t tell me anything of value,” he replied.

      Latimer nodded. “I agree, and I’ll keep digging. But I know already that he doesn’t have a package with the Feebs or with the Pentagon. We’re running prints they lifted from the rental car, but in the circumstances, I’m not hopeful.”

      “What’s your gut saying?” Carlisle asked.

      “It could go either of two ways,” Latimer responded. “One, this Cooper is some kind of independent crook with business here in Kabul, unrelated to the incident this afternoon.”

      “Who shows up just before my men get wasted, with a carload of weapons parked near the scene? Then disappears and leaves his car behind, after the shooting? I can’t swallow that kind of coincidence.”

      “Neither can I,” Latimer said. “The second option is that he’s a black-ops artist sent or summoned for a meeting with your nemesis from DEA.”

      “That sounds more logical,” Carlisle said.

      “I agree. Unfortunately, at the moment I can’t tell you where he comes from, who he works for, what his orders are.”

      “All right. What can you tell me?”

      Latimer frowned and replied, “Smart money says that he’s official. The sophisticated cover tells me he’s got juice behind him.”

      “And?”

      “And I can’t see the DEA calling a private shooter in, no matter how badly you’ve pissed them off.”

      “Could he be one of yours?” Carlisle inquired.

      “From Langley?” Latimer appeared to be surprised by the suggestion. “I don’t think so, but it wouldn’t be the first time one hand didn’t know what the other was doing.”

      “Can you check it out?”

      “I’ll definitely try, but if there’s some kind of covert team-within-the-team, I may not have full access.”

      “This is critical,” Carlisle reminded him. “I’ll deal with the man when he comes up for air, but I need to find out who’s behind him.”

      “Agreed. It’s priority one.”

      “Then I’ll let you get to it,” Carlisle said. A nod to his driver and the limo pulled over. “This must be your stop.”

      “Looks like it,” Latimer agreed. “Listen, about before—”

      “If you want to impress me, Russell, earn your pay.”

      “I will.”

      One of the guards stepped out, allowing Latimer to leave the car, and then the limousine rolled on, leaving the CIA’s deputy station chief to find his own way home.

       Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan

      J ALALABAD LIES ninety miles due east of Kabul, in Nangarhar Province, where small farmers have traditionally supported themselves by growing opium poppies. Recent claims suggested that production had been slashed by ninety-five percent, but Bolan knew that those statistics were skewed.

      In fact, while many of the local growers had been driven out of business, large opium plantations thrived in the Cha-parhar, Khogyani and Shinwar districts.

      Bolan was headed for Shinwar, with Deirdre Falk riding beside him and Edris Barialy in his now-traditional backseat observatory post.

      “So, have you seen this farm before?” he asked her when they were a half hour from Kabul.

      “Not the way I think you mean it, in the flesh,” she said. “We have a ton of photos at the office. Hidden camera, flyover, satellite, you name it. I can draw a map of it from memory, if that’s a help.”

      Sending Falk back to her office for whatever maps or photographs they might have used, in Bolan’s view, had been too risky after their first clash with Vanguard warriors. He assumed the DEA office would be under surveillance, or might even have a paid-off mole inside who would, at the very least, tip off their enemies to Falk’s movements.

      “Maybe later,” Bolan said.

      In fact, he didn’t plan to hit the farm itself. At least, not yet. It would be covered by seven ways from Sunday by a troop of Vanguard mercs, most likely with the Afghan National Police or army on speed dial, in case the hired hands couldn’t cope with a particular emergency.

      On top of which, Bolan was not equipped for razing crops in cultivated fields. He wasn’t armed with napalm or defoliants, and even if he had been, their delivery required aircraft.

      “You’re after the refinery?” Falk asked him, frowning at the thought.

      “I want to see it,” Bolan answered, “but it wouldn’t be my first move.”

      He’d destroy more drugs by taking out a heroin refinery, along with whatever equipment Vanguard might have to replace after he blitzed the plant. That was part of his plan, but not the first move that he had in mind.

      Falk shifted in her seat, plucking her damp blouse from her damper skin. Despite the small Toyota’s air-conditioning, the outside heat still made its presence felt with sunlight blazing through the windows, baking any skin it touched.

      As with her office, Bolan had been forced to veto letting Falk go back to her apartment for fresh clothes or any other personal accessories. They’d done some hasty shopping back in Kabul, but he knew she wasn’t thrilled about the merchandise available.

      “Feel free to share,” she said, a hint of irritation in her voice.

      “They ship the heroin through Pakistan, correct?” he asked her.

      “Right. It’s just a few miles farther east, and Nangarhar’s the next best thing to Pakistan, already. Most of the district uses Pakistani rupees when they pay their bills or bribes, instead of the official Afghanis. The provincial governor is kissing-close with Pakistan’s Intelligence Bureau.”

      “And they move it how?”

      “Depends on the size of the shipment. These days, most of the big loads roll by truck convoy.”

      “Well, there you are.”

      “I am?”

      “A convoy isn’t fortified. It doesn’t have high walls or razor wire around it, and it’s not next door to a police station.”

      “Aren’t you forgetting something? Like twenty-five or thirty shooters who’ll be guarding it?”

      “I didn’t say it would be easy,” Bolan answered. “But it’s still our best shot for an opener.”

      Grim faced, she said, “Okay. Give me the rest of it.”

       United States Embassy, Kabul

      A TWENTY-SOMETHING SECRETARY smiled at Russell Latimer and said, “The vice consul will see you now.”

      The man from Langley thought about making some kind of smart-aleck remark, like James Bond in the movies, but his mood was too sour for levity. Instead of cracking wise, therefore, he gave the little redhead a low-wattage smile and moved past her, toward his contact’s inner sanctum.

      “Come in, Russell! Come in!” his contact said, beaming. By that time, Latimer was in, closing the office door behind him. “Can I get you something? Coffee? Tea? A nice cold beer?”

      “Scotch, if you have it, sir,” Latimer said.

      “That bad, is it?”

      Vice Consul Lee Hastings forced a chuckle. It reminded Latimer of dry bones rattling in a wooden cup. And yes, he’d heard that very noise some years ago while visiting a village in Angola.


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