State Of Evil. Don Pendleton

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more. I don’t come out and tell students they should be lawyers or mechanics. If they have an interest, we address it and discuss the options. If they have problems, we talk about those, too.”

      “So, how’s it going?” Bolan asked, sincerely interested.

      “I’ve lost one,” Val replied.

      “Say what?”

      “One of my students.”

      “Val—”

      “I don’t mean that he’s disappeared,” she hastened to explain. “For that, I would’ve gone to the police.”

      “Okay.”

      “I know exactly where he is. Well, not exactly, but within a few square miles. And what he’s doing. That’s the problem.”

      “Maybe you should start from the beginning.”

      “Right. Okay. But promise you won’t think I’m crazy.”

      “That’s a safe bet going in,” said Bolan.

      “All right, then. His name’s Patrick Quinn. He turned twenty-one last weekend, but I haven’t seen him for three months. It’s thirteen weeks on Friday, if you need to pin it down exactly.”

      “Close enough,” he said, and waited for the rest of it.

      “He comes from money. Anyway, a lot by how they measure it in Sheridan. His parents raise cattle. They have a few million.”

      “Cattle?”

      “Dollars,” Johnny answered from the backseat. “Four point five and change.”

      “You hacked their bank account?” Bolan asked.

      Johnny shook his head. “Bear did it for me.”

      Meaning, Aaron Kurtzman, boss of the computer crew at Stony Man Farm, in Virginia.

      “So, the Farm’s involved in this?”

      “I asked a favor,” Johnny told him. “Strictly unofficial.”

      Ah. A backdoor job. But why?

      “Still listening,” he told them both.

      “Pat’s father wanted him in law school, but he didn’t like the paper chase. Premed was too much science. What he really wanted was a job that let him work for the environment. Something like forestry, the conservation side. It made for stormy holidays at home, to say the least.”

      “And he wound up with you,” Bolan said.

      “Right. First in a class I taught last year, then counseling after he set his mind on dropping out completely.”

      “I guess it didn’t take?”

      “We made some headway, working on a new curriculum, before the Process came to town,” Val said.

      “You don’t mean that satanic outfit from the sixties, tied in with the Manson family?”

      “Wrong Process,” Val corrected him. “At least, I’m pretty sure. This one’s a sect run by an African—Nigerian, I think he is—named Ahmadou Gaborone.”

      “Never heard of him,” Bolan admitted.

      “He’s spent a lot of time flying below the radar,” Johnny said. “No flamboyant outbursts like Moon or Jim Jones, no public investigations. He’s been sued twice on fraud charges and won both cases.”

      “Fraud?”

      “The usual,” Val said. “Some youngster donates all of his or her worldly goods to the Process and the parents go ballistic, claiming undue influence, coercion, brainwashing, you name it. Gaborone’s been smart enough, so far, to only bilk legal adults, and they’ve appeared for his side when the cases went to court. All smiles and sunshine, couldn’t be more happy, the usual.”

      Bolan shrugged. “Maybe they are,” he said, catching the look Val gave him. “Some folks don’t function well alone. They need a preacher or some other figure of authority directing them, telling them what to think. You see it in the major churches all the time. It’s what your basic televangelists rely on, when they beg for cash.”

      “This one is different,” Val informed him. “Gaborone’s not just collecting money, cars, whatever. He’s collecting souls for Judgment Day.”

      “You lost me,” Bolan said.

      “Recruits—converts, whatever—don’t just pony up whatever’s in their bank accounts. They also leave ‘the world,’ as Gaborone describes it, and move on to follow him. He used to have three communes in the States, in Oregon, Wyoming and upstate New York, but all his people have been called to Africa. The Congo. He’s established a community they call Obike, also known as New Jerusalem.”

      “You said the Process had a compound in Wyoming,” Bolan interrupted. “Am I right in guessing that your protégé was part of it?”

      “You are,” Val granted. “Now he’s gone. I’m hoping you can bring him back while there’s still time.”

      VAL HAD PREPARED for meeting Bolan, talked herself through the emotions that were bound to surface at first sight, considering their history. She’d braced herself, thought she was ready, but the storm of feelings loosed inside her when she saw him in the flesh still took her by surprise. She’d managed eating, barely, and was glad when they were in the minivan, moving, her story starting to unfold. But now, she had begun to wonder if her master plan was such a great idea.

      “When you say, ‘bring him back,’” Bolan replied, “you mean…?”

      “To us,” she said, too quickly. “Well, of course, I mean his family.”

      “Suppose he doesn’t want to come?”

      “It’s likely that he won’t, at first,” she said.

      “So, it’s a kidnapping you have in mind?”

      “If that’s what it takes.”

      “I’m not a deprogrammer, Val. I don’t save people from themselves.”

      “But Patrick—”

      “By your own admission, he’s an adult. Twenty-one, in fact. I don’t know what kind of donation he’s given the Process, but—”

      “A few thousand,” she said. Her turn to interrupt. “His parents froze Pat’s trust fund when they found out what was happening with Gaborone.”

      “So, has he been declared incompetent to run his own affairs?” Bolan asked.

      “Not specifically. His parents have a pending case, but Patrick’s unavailable to testify or be deposed. It’s all in limbo now, with a judicial freeze on his accounts until the court is satisfied he’s not acting under duress.”

      “A

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