State Of Evil. Don Pendleton

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Do you think he’s been abused? Mistreated? Starved?”

      “There’s been no evidence of anything like that,” Johnny remarked. “All members of the Process who’ve been interviewed so far seem happy where they are.”

      “In that case,” Bolan said, “I don’t see—”

      “Happy messages came out of Jonestown,” Val reminded him, “until the night they drank the poisoned fruit punch. Who knows what people are really thinking, what they’re really feeling in a cult?”

      “Not me,” Bolan admitted. “Which explains why I don’t normally go in for kidnapping. Unless you’ve got some evidence—”

      “You haven’t heard about the Rathbun party, then?”

      Bolan considered it, then shook his head. “It doesn’t ring a bell.”

      “Lee Rathbun is—or was—a congressman from Southern California. Orange County, if it matters. Some of his constituents had relatives who’d joined the Process and gone off to live in Africa with Gaborone. Last week, Rathbun and five others flew to Brazzaville and on to Obike. They should’ve been back on Monday, but word is that they’ve disappeared.”

      “That’s it? Just gone?”

      “It smells,” Johnny said from the backseat. “First, Gaborone and his people swear up and down Rathbun’s party made their charter flight on schedule. When the cops in Brazzaville start checking, they discover that the charter pilot’s killed himself under suspicious circumstances. Killed his sister, too—who, by coincidence, was also in the Process.”

      “Why the sister?” Bolan asked.

      “Police report they found a note and ‘other evidence’ suggesting incest,” Val said. “They think the sister tried to end it, or the brother couldn’t bear his shame. Theories are flexible, but none of them lead back to Gaborone.”

      “Too much coincidence,” Johnny declared.

      “It’s odd,” Bolan agreed. “I’ll give you that.”

      “Just odd?” Val didn’t try to hide the irritation in her tone.

      “How were the killings done?” Bolan asked.

      “With a panga,” Val replied. “That’s a big—”

      “Knife, I know. The pilot stabbed himself?”

      “Not quite,” Johnny said. “Seems he put his panga on the kitchen counter, then bent down and ran his throat along the cutting edge until he got the job done. Back and forth. Nearly decapitated.”

      “That’s what I call focus and determination.”

      “That’s what I call murder,” Val corrected him.

      “Assume you’re right, which I agree is probable. Who killed the pilot? Someone from the Process? Why?”

      “To silence him,” Val said. “Because he knew that Rathbun’s people didn’t make their flight to Brazzaville on time.”

      “How long between their scheduled liftoff and the murder?” Bolan asked.

      “Twelve hours, give or take.”

      “And how long is the flight from Brazzaville to Gaborone’s community?”

      “About two hours,” Johnny said.

      “Leaving ten hours for the pilot to contact police and spill the beans about his missing passengers. Why no contact with 911 or the equivalent?”

      “We’re guessing the pilot was bribed, threatened, or both,” Val said. “Then Gaborone or someone close to him decided it was still too risky, so they silenced him and staged it in a way that would discredit anything the pilot might’ve said before he died.”

      “Okay, it plays,” Bolan agreed. “But it’s a matter for police. There’s nothing to suggest your friend’s involvement with the murders, or that he’s in any kind of danger from—”

      “That’s just the point,” Val said. “He is in danger.”

      “Oh?”

      “The Process is an apocalyptic sect. Gaborone is one of your basic hellfire, end-time preachers, with a twist.”

      “Specifically?”

      “Lately, he’s started saying that it may not be enough to wait for God to schedule Armageddon. When it’s time, he says, the Lord may need a helping hand to light the fuse.”

      “From Africa?”

      “It’s what he heard in ‘words of wisdom’ from on high,” Johnny explained.

      “I never thought the Congo had much Armageddon potential,” Bolan said.

      “Depends on how you mix up the ingredients, I guess,” said Johnny. “In the time since he’s been settled at Obike, Gaborone’s had several unlikely visitors. One party from the Russian mafiya included an ex-colonel with the KGB. Two others were Islamic militants, and there’s a warlord from Sudan whose dropped in twice.”

      “You don’t think they were praying for redemption,” Bolan said.

      “Not even close.”

      “But if we rescue Patrick Quinn, and he agrees to talk, it may all be explained.”

      “Maybe,” Johnny agreed.

      “Or maybe not,” Bolan counseled. “Even if he turns and gives you everything he knows, the rank and file in cults don’t often know what’s going on behind the scenes with their gurus.”

      “It’s still a chance,” Val said. “And Pat deserves his chance to live a normal life.”

      “Can you define that for me?” Bolan asked her, smiling.

      “You know what I mean.”

      “I guess.”

      She saw concession in his eyes, knew he was leaning toward agreement, but she couldn’t take a chance on losing him. No matter how it hurt them both, she gave a quick tug on the line, to set the hook.

      “So, will you help us, Mack?”

      CHAPTER THREE

      Five days after he looked into those eyes and said he would help, Bolan was marching through the Congo jungle, guided toward his target by the handheld GPS device. He found it relatively easygoing but still had to watch his step, as much for normal dangers of the rain forest as for a human threat.

      Contrary to the view held by most people who have never seen a jungle, great rain forests generally weren’t choked with thick, impenetrable undergrowth. Where giant trees existed, their canopy blotted out the sky and starved most smaller plants of the sunshine they needed to thrive.

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