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Unified Action. Don PendletonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Unified Action - Don Pendleton


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the meet?” Hawkins asked.

      McCarter nodded. “I’ll put Hawkins out on flank in an overwatch position. Manning will move forward, then set up the machine gun for a secondary angle of fire. The rest of us will go in paranoid.”

      “Let’s do it,” James agreed.

      Phoenix Force moved out in a slow accordion formation toward their RZ, or rendezvous point. U.S. intelligence had set up a meeting with a local indigenous asset who would provide them with materials and transportation their rapid response infiltration had made impossible to bring with them.

      In this case a local smuggler friendly to Western money had agreed to supply them with a heavy-bodied diesel engine truck of the type used by local military units. Calvin James carried a fanny pack filled with local currency in the sum of eighteen thousand U.S. dollars.

      Such pay-to-play operations were inherently dangerous for obvious reasons, but were common in tribal regions removed from the influence of a centralized government. Cold hard cash had become as much of a tool in the paramilitary operators’ arsenal as carbines and shape charges.

      The three-man fire team consisting of McCarter, James and Encizo slid into position behind a screen of sturdy mountain shrubs with oily, cold-resistant leaves and sticklike branches. Ahead of them they saw the old truck sitting beside the dirt road that eventually led into town.

      The night was silent except for the wind through the pines. Nothing moved out beyond their perimeter. McCarter lifted his weapon and utilized his night scope in precise patterns, covering vectors in a methodical manner. He could detect no sign of obvious human presence.

      James leaned in close and whispered into the Briton’s ear. “You see the driver door is open?”

      McCarter nodded. A bar of shadow separated the gloomy metal gray of the door from the body of the cab. The hair on the back of the ex–SAS commando’s neck began to rise in almost preternatural warning.

      “Feeling hinky,” he muttered.

      “Big time,” James agreed.

      Encizo shifted his weight and leaned in toward the other men. “I’ll slide up and check it out.”

      McCarter frowned as he realized the exposure the man was vulnerable to, but then nodded. If the plan was going to unfold, they needed the truck. Giving up on the truck at this juncture meant giving up on the hostage. He wasn’t willing to do that until he had exhausted every possibility.

      Encizo carefully rotated his Soviet-era submachine gun around on its sling until it hung muzzle down across his back. He pulled his silenced pistol from a shoulder holster on his web gear and silently disappeared into the dark.

      McCarter waited patiently, James at his side. The two men scanned the darkness as clouds began to gather overhead, further obscuring the terrain. Long, tense minutes later James quietly nudged McCarter with his elbow.

      The Phoenix Force leader turned away from his survey of the far side of the roads and watched the dark shadow of Rafael Encizo slide out of the ditch next to the back of the truck. Both men gripped their weapons tightly.

      Encizo moved like water flowing over the ground, staying low to present a subdued silhouette as he edged toward the front of the big truck. Carefully using his free hand to peel back the canvas tarp covering the cargo bed of the five-ton vehicle, he held his position, peering inside. Satisfied, he gently lowered the edge of the tarp back into place and crept forward.

      Moving in silent increments he approached the open door to the vehicle cab. The blunt muzzle of his pistol silencer led the way like a hunting dog on point. He reached up with his free hand and made contact with the truck, checking for trip wires or other obvious booby traps.

      Suddenly he put a combat foot on the running board and stepped up, swinging the door open and leveling the pistol. Behind him McCarter and James tensed, mentally prepared for a sudden hellstorm of gunfire.

      Encizo froze for a moment in the open doorway, his broad-shouldered back orientated toward his teammates, making it impossible for them to see past him. After a long, pregnant pause, the Cuban turned and hauled something out of the truck before jumping down.

      McCarter swore silently as he saw the limp body strike the hard-packed dirt road like a sack of loose meat. His eyes ran over the corpse with an expert forensic eye. The head was obviously concave on one side, either from a point-blank firearm shot or some blunt instrument.

      If the ambush was going to come it was going to come now, he realized. His finger took up the slack on the smooth metal curve of his trigger. Beside him he felt James stiffen in readiness. Across the little clearing Encizo had taken a knee with his back to the truck. His pistol was back in its holster and his submachine gun was now up and ready in his hands.

      Nothing happened.

      Slowly, McCarter felt his adrenaline begin to bleed off as they weren’t hit. After a minute he tapped James. When the ex-SEAL turned toward him he gave the man the hand-and-arm signal for a perimeter sweep. Instantly, James stepped backward into the tree at the bottom of the defilade and began a 360-degree search of the rendezvous zone.

      McCarter rose into a crouch and jogged over to where Encizo waited by the corpse. The bulk of the ancient five-ton truck loomed above them. As he drew closer he saw the bloody hole that filled the left side of their contact’s face.

      If a bullet had entered through the driver’s window it would have struck the truck occupant in just such a fashion, he realized.

      “Is this our guy?” Encizo asked him.

      “Don’t know,” McCarter whispered back. “We had location, time and code exchanges.”

      Both men turned at the same time, weapons ready. Calvin James appeared in front of them, then squatted. “It’s clear out to seventy-five yards in these woods. Beyond that anyone watching us would either be down the road or up in elevation.”

      Encizo got up and investigated the vehicle cab as McCarter shook the corpse down for any useful information. James, a trained medic and forensic investigator, performed a cursory inspection of the major head wound.

      “Low velocity, larger caliber.”

      “Pistol?”

      “Almost certainly. Maybe one of your favorites—a Browning Hi-Power or even a .45 with a silencer.”

      “How can you tell a silencer?” McCarter asked as he pulled several items out of the dead man’s clothes.

      “Can’t be one hundred percent sure,” James admitted. “But the entrance wound was pretty damn traumatic for there to be no exit wound. That suggests a soft-nosed slug with a subsonic load.”

      “High-end electronic jammers and silencer kills?” McCarter grumbled. “We stepping on someone else’s toes?”

      “Chinese?” James offered.

      “Chinese gear beating Bear’s electronics?” McCarter shook his head. “Not a chance.”

      “Curioser and curioser,” James replied.

      “Hey, guys,” Encizo said from the cab. “Get a load of this.”

      Dominican Republic

      THE WOMAN SPUN in the chair, obviously surprised by Schwarz’s revelation.

      The Stony Man operative smirked back at her. “Let’s keep it simple,” the Able Team electronics genius said. “Skip your transient codes and go right to your mother parole.” He paused, then said, “India Delta Six.”

      The woman, tension draining from her limbs, frowned and sighed. “Delta India Nine,” she replied.

      “I was almost shot by one of our own stringers?” Lyons demanded. “Christ, that happens too often. Fine. Where the hell’s Smith?”

      The woman turned back and looked at him. “I don’t know. He never showed up to our meet. I went to the secondary rendezvous


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