Dragon's Den. Don Pendleton
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“Exactly,” the Executioner replied. “And I’m not real big on having my face splashed all over the six-o’clock news.”
“You have a plan?”
“It’s sketchy, but it’s all I have to go on. Amherst told me about the other surrounding towns within her jurisdiction where they also seized large quantities of the same purity. One of them is Ladera Heights. According to my LAPD contacts, the Bloods control all major drug action in this area. I need to know who’s in charge.”
“I’ll put Bear to work. You’ll have it within the hour.”
Bolan believed him. Aaron “the Bear” Kurtzman wore his nickname well. Not only because of his wrestlerlike body, but also because of the heart to match. The leader of Stony Man’s crack cybernetics team seemed serious, but he hadn’t permitted the internal man to mirror that gruff exterior. That sensitivity set him apart from most men who’d experienced the kind of trauma he had—confined to a wheelchair by a bullet in the spine—and Bolan considered Kurtzman to be one of the most intelligent people in the world.
“You can send it through the plane’s uplink,” Bolan said. “I’ll be waiting there with Jack. Out here.”
Bolan broke the connection, then took the exit ramp leading to LAX and the private hangar leased under one of Stony Man’s paper companies. While the ultracovert group operated at the pleasure of the President, its actions weren’t consistent with constitutional law. Some of Stony Man’s past operations inside the territorial borders of the U.S. would have been considered by most as highly illegal, even with the leeway granted to federal agencies investigating terrorism. That’s why Brognola insisted on the provision of cover names and federal-agency credentials, as much to reduce Stony Man’s culpability as to protect the identities of its operatives.
The Executioner didn’t really need the forged documents, since he could get what he wanted by other means. He disliked working with allies—the other team members of Stony Man notwithstanding—and what he couldn’t glean from his many intelligence contacts or free access to Stony Man’s databases, he could get through enemy interrogation. Bolan rarely had to implement the latter solution and he didn’t believe in torture, chemical or otherwise, although he occasionally understood the need for such methods.
Bolan reached the airport in fifteen minutes. He pulled his rental car around the rear of the hangar—the section not visible from the tarmac—and then strolled inside. In the center of the hangar sat a converted Gulfstream C-20 jet. At just over eighty feet in length, it sported a pair of Rolls-Royce Spey engines and had a range of more than thirty-six hundred nautical miles. Any casual observers wouldn’t have noticed anything out of the ordinary until they looked inside. Bolan had become quite familiar with the decor, which included state-of-the-art surveillance, countersurveillance and secure communications equipment. A weapons locker took up the rear of the plane and contained the latest gadgets. John “Cowboy” Kissinger, Stony Man’s resident weapon smith, had stocked it with enough firepower to start a small war. Nothing unusual for the man they called the Executioner.
“What say ye, Sarge?” Grimaldi asked, looking up briefly from an air chart. He’d never dropped the moniker, a reference to Bolan’s early days as a sniper sergeant in the U.S. Army.
“We’ll be sticking around for a bit longer,” Bolan said as he took a seat at the table across from Grimaldi.
The pilot nodded, then stabbed a finger in the direction of a small stainless steel carafe. “There’s some java if you’re interested.”
Bolan shook his head. “Not really attractive in this heat. What are you doing?”
“Looking over some charts,” Grimaldi said. “I got talk from Hal we might end up going out of country. There was some mention about the sunny beaches of the Golden Triangle, perhaps?”
“Yeah. You know, I’ve been meaning to ask you, most of your navigation is done solely by computers these days. Why do you still use paper charts?”
“Computers fail, navigation systems go out and GPS units have been known to land pilots in Alaska who were going to Hawaii. I’m all about a backup plan, Sarge.”
“Far be it for me to interfere with a master at work,” Bolan said with a chuckle.
The soldier rose and went to the reinforced doors of the weapons locker in the aft compartment. He punched in a nine-character alphanumeric code on a keypad attached to the heavy steel and the latch came free. The weapons reflected the dim blue lights recessed in the sides and top of the cabinet with an oily gleam. The complement included an M-16 A-4/M-203 combo, M-4 5.56 mm carbine and one FN FNC submachine gun. The armory also held a SIG-Sauer SSG 3000 sniper rifle, a spare Beretta 93-R with twin clips and a dozen Diehl DM-51 grenades. Finally, Bolan’s eyes rested briefly on the .44 Magnum Desert Eagle. This gas-operated hand cannon utilized a rotating bolt system and fired 300-grain rounds at a muzzle velocity just shy of 1,500 feet per second.
Bolan picked the Beretta and FN FNC for this trip, as well as a few DM-51 grenades. He’d be entering gangland territory, which meant some autofire and a few low-yield antipersonnel grenades might come in handy, but heavy assault weapons probably wouldn’t be necessary. In fact, he didn’t even know if he had a target yet. He could only hope Stony Man’s intelligence would point him in the right direction.
After drawing his selections, Bolan secured the armory doors, then left the plane with his utility bag. He crossed the hangar to the living quarters, where he found a shower. He stripped, turned on the hot water and enjoyed the high-pressure spray, washing away the grime and dirt of the day. He then turned the nozzle to allow about two minutes of icy spray to cool his body. Bolan finished showering, toweled dry and then donned his skintight blacksuit and slid his feet into a pair of combat boots with vulcanized neoprene soles. He then returned to the plane.
Grimaldi jerked his thumb at a computer terminal set into the two-seater communications panel against the starboard side. “Your transmission from Bear just arrived.”
Bolan nodded and took a seat at the computer terminal. He punched in his access code, and the information immediately displayed across two separate LCD screens. One screen rendered photographs and dossiers taken from LASD evidence computers, with detailed reports of every raid where they had recovered drugs matching the parameters Stony Man already had. Bolan shook his head, unable to resist grinning at Kurtzman’s ability to hack straight into any computer network to get the intelligence Bolan needed. The Executioner scanned the information, which basically confirmed what Amherst had said.
“Well, at least Amherst is telling the truth,” Bolan said aloud.
“What’s that?” Grimaldi asked.
“This Rhonda Amherst,” Bolan replied. “She’s the Marina del Rey station chief with LASD. It looks like she gave me the straight story.”
Grimaldi just hummed an acknowledgment as Bolan turned his attention to the second screen. He tapped the paging key and quickly identified the key information he’d been looking for. Records from the Gang Support Section of the LAPD currently listed Lavon Hayes as the leader of the Bloods, but his current whereabouts were unknown. The file gave too many possible locations, so Bolan mentally filed the information for future reference and pressed on. And then the Executioner got a hit. The GSS briefs listed Antoine Pratt as being Hayes’s second-in-command. Already Pratt had spent the better part of his life in juvenile for everything from petty theft to drug possession, and he currently had a half-dozen warrants