Mission To Burma. Don Pendleton

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Mission To Burma - Don Pendleton

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      “What kind of assholes?”

      Nyin’s smile dimmed in wattage. “U Than assholes.”

      Bolan knew all about U Than. He was an opium warlord, and they were deep in his territory, which was where Lily’s transponder signal was transmitting from. The good news was that U Than was in league with the heroin syndicates in Thailand rather than the triads in China. Of course, ten or twenty million Chinese yuan notes could change that allegiance, but at least he wasn’t going to immediately go goose-stepping to Beijing and hand over Lily without some profitable negotiation first. U Than’s problem was that while he ruled his area, he was surrounded by three ethnic groups that considered him their traditional enemy. He had a private army of his own and some backing by some high-ranking army officers, but his neighbors and even his serfs were highly warlike and given to rebellion at the least sign of weakness or provocation. He guarded his poppy fields to the death, but if he was sending men up into the highlands at night that meant U Than was all stirred up about something.

      Bolan had a good idea what.

      “Have you seen the woman?”

      “No, but I saw crash site. It was no ‘catastrophic mechanical failure.’ That plane shot down. I know cannon hits when I see them.”

      “Any survivors?”

      Nyin shook his head. “No one survive that. You want to see?”

      “No, the woman is our priority, and according to intel she jumped right before the fighters opened up.”

      “What woman look like?”

      Bolan tapped an icon on his screen and called up a photo of Lily Na. “This.”

      “God damn!” Nyin shook his head in wonder. “That worth going to war over!”

      Bolan changed the screen back to the GPS tracking Lily’s transponder signal and then spoke over his link. “Base, this is Striker. Have established contact with Fat Man. Proceeding to signal source.”

      “Copy that, Striker.”

      Bolan turned to Nyin. “You ready to go to war?”

      Nyin grinned and brandished an ancient-looking .30 carbine. “Always!”

      “Then follow me.” Bolan set out at a ground-eating jog, and despite his laughing-Buddha-like physique Nyin kept up easily. Bolan watched as the signal got closer and closer on his screen. They had to stop twice as armed men passed by on the trails through the heavy woods.

      “Dangerous place,” Nyin muttered after a group of men passed by. The men weren’t wearing uniforms and wore a hodgepodge of Western and traditional highland clothing. They also carried a collection of weapons from the latest assault rifles to World War II relics. All carried one or more blades. They were sweeping the forest trails and keeping a wary eye on the forest itself. Traditionally it was where danger came from. They were right to be wary. This night Mack Bolan crouched among the giant ferns, and the forest had never been more dangerous.

      Bolan and Nyin moved out and quickly came to a river. They dropped low by its banks and observed. A village huddled on either side of the river. The lights in the village were all out. On a low hill above the village sat what could only be described as a fortress. The main house was low, sprawling and made of heavy wooden beams and roofed with tile. A number of similarly constructed smaller outbuildings squatted around it like satellites. A bamboo palisade topped with razor wire surrounded the entire complex, and a twenty-foot-tall guard tower that had a good vantage on the village below completed security.

      Bolan was pretty sure he knew the answer, but he asked anyway. “What is this place?”

      Nyin pointed toward the collection of huts huddling together by the river. “That is Ta village.” He peered unhappily at the fortress on the hill. “That is house of U Than.” Nyin chewed on his lip pensively. He seemed to know the answer, but asked anyway, as well. “You have located girl?”

      Bolan nodded as he stared at his screen and noted the distance between himself and the transponder signal. He looked up at the house of U Than. “She’s in there.”

      3

      The village was in lockdown. U Than’s place was lit up like a Christmas tree, but the village was dark and nothing moved. The only activity was a pair of armed men who stood on the little bamboo pier smoking cigarettes, clearly bored with guard duty.

      Bolan and Nyin made their approach through the tiny, muddy lanes between the huts. Most of the huts were up on low stilts, and beneath them pigs grunted in their pens and an occasional chicken squawked. In the distance, a water buffalo lowed in its enclosure. Bolan and Nyin moved past canoes up on racks and fishing nets hanging to dry from posts.

      At five yards Bolan drew his blades.

      He lunged as one of the sentries turned to spit betel juice into the river. The man went limp as the tomahawk head crunched into the top of his skull. The second sentry’s cigarette sagged in his mouth in shock. Before he could do anything other than stare, Nyin’s dha flashed from its sheath with alacrity that would have given a Japanese samurai pause. The sentry’s head came a few tendons short from flying off his neck. Bolan thought rumors about Nyin doing some headhunting with the Naga tribes might not be entirely scurrilous. Bone splintered as Bolan retrieved his tomahawk. Nyin took a moment to relieve the dead gangsters of their money, betel and cigarettes, and then he and Bolan slid the two corpses into the river and washed the blood from their blades. Nyin shoved a leaf-wrapped quid of betel into his mouth and offered the pouch to Bolan.

      The soldier shook his head. “I’m trying to give it up.”

      Nyin grinned and resheathed his blade. “Well, we have conquered Ta village.”

      So they had. “Fort U Than may be a little harder.”

      “Maybe,” Nyin agreed.

      Bolan climbed to the top of the open, A-frame canoe shelter and turned his binoculars on U Than’s domicile. Nyin perched next to him and pulled out his own binoculars. Bolan scanned the grounds and stopped as he came to the wide porch leading to the main house. Most Burmese barely cracked five feet tall, and most of the guards’ assault rifles seemed almost as large as they were. The four men up on the porch were all pushing six feet, were heavily tattooed and had the physiques of gladiators. “Those men on the porch. U Than’s personal bodyguard?”

      “Mmm,” Nyin grunted. “Thai kickboxers. Leg breakers. Bad men.”

      U Than seemed to be recruiting from the heavyweight division. An even larger man came out on the porch. His head was shaved, and his ears were cauliflowered masses hanging from his head. The man’s eyebrows appeared to be mostly scar tissue. He appeared to be several inches taller than Bolan and perhaps half again as heavy. Thrust in his sash was a Colt .45, and the hilt of a dha twice as large as Nyin’s stuck up over his left shoulder. “Who’s the gorilla?”

      “That is Maung. Very bad man.”

      Maung gave off the unmistakable air of command. “U Than’s number two?”

      “Yes.”

      Bolan sighed. “Rescue missions…”

      Nyin

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