Silent Arsenal. Don Pendleton

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screamed and grabbed up her clothes. Lyons adjusted his aim as goons three and four bulled their way through the crowd.

      “Freeze!” Lyons shouted, the sight of the .45 thrust at their faces freezing SS Three and Four in their tracks. “Eat the deck, facedown!”

      “Mr. Greer, do you want us to call the cops?”

      “I am the cops, asshole. Last chance!”

      “Do what he says…no cops,” Greer sputtered.

      When they stretched out, Lyons flung the Perm to the edge of the stage, the .45’s muzzle pressed between his eyes. “One time. Where is Dee-Dee?” Lyons saw the Perm had trouble finding a tongue he was on the verge of swallowing, released some pressure. “What was that?”

      “You don’t know…who you’re fucking with, Miami.”

      Lyons cocked the hammer to another shrill cry from somewhere near the stage.

      “Room…”

      Lyons bent closer, caught the number of the hotel suite. Time to exit stage left, but Lyons spotted a few wannabe heroes in the crowd, eyes angry, jaws working, shadows shuffling in the mirrors. He pulled the Perm to his feet, sweeping around the .45, barking at a suit to sit. He was halfway to the front door when he came to a table of three guys who looked set to throw up a barricade of muscle, twitching around in their seats, mouthing words Lyons couldn’t make out.

      “Here,” Lyons told them, flinging the Perm over the table. A tumble through bottles and ashtrays, and the Perm flopped down, pinning them to their seats. “You three look like you could use a lap dance.”

      HERMANN SCHWARZ was getting antsy. He was sitting at the bank of monitors in the War Wagon, surveying M Street and the door to the bar, the picture piped in through a minicam, no larger than a pinhead, fixed to an antenna. A twist of the dial and he could monitor the entire street for several blocks, the high-tech eye doubling as an instant camera, able to take night snapshots, infrared lens capable of coming on with the flick of a switch.

      “I don’t like it, Pol. Our fearless leader’s been in there too long. You know Carl, some places tend to bring out the beast in him, and that’s saying something.”

      Blancanales had the wheel, his head rolling side to side as he surveyed the street. “He can give new meaning to bull in a china shop, I’ll grant you that.”

      The whole setup was screwy, but they had already killed enough time hashing it over until they both knew it began to sound like a bunch of bellyaching. Still, that didn’t mean they had to like it.

      A former cop partner of Ironman’s, Schwarz thought, dropping out of the sky, smelling and looking like he needed detox more than walking around in public, hunting down his runaway daughter. This Evans guy back in their suite, drinking their booze, watching 3000 Miles to Graceland, when that should have been them. They were on R and R, sure enough, but Schwarz was waiting for the phone with secured line to start ringing off the hook any second, Brognola or the Farm’s mission controller, Barbara Price, wondering why they had absconded with the supertech War Wagon to go tooling around downtown D.C. What would he tell them, provided, of course, he could even bleat out a word during the ass-chewing?

      “Gadgets, I think there might be a problem. Start shooting pics.”

      After all of two seconds, watching as bodies began streaming out the door, suits harried and hustling off into the night, Schwarz read the body language, loud and clear. They were fleeing from a human wrecking ball.

      “Pol, how come I get the weird feeling Carl made contact and the words ‘please and thank you’ weren’t part of his vocabulary?”

      “Gadgets, Pol!”

      Tac radio in hand, Schwarz punched on, in sync with Pol’s, “Yeah!”

      “Get your fingers out of your asses and your heads out of Graceland. Four assholes and a chippy in a mink coat should be out front by now!”

      Schwarz spied the party in question as they swung away from the front door, began marching down the sidewalk toward a waiting limo. Schwarz began snapping pictures even as Lyons barked for him to do just that. “I’m on it!”

      “I’m especially interested in the guy who looks like van Gogh. You see him?”

      “I’ve got him,” Schwarz answered.

      “What’s the situation?” Blancanales needed to know.

      Schwarz heard the name of the hotel and the suite number.

      “You know where it is?”

      “It’s in Crystal City,” Blancanales answered.

      “I’ll follow in my car, but you get there first, you wait,” Lyons growled. “We just went tactical, so get yourselves strapped in to some serious hardware. On the ride, Gadgets, you can stay busy giving me a computer sketch of van Gogh sans the goatee and shades. You copy?”

      “Roger.”

      Schwarz took one final shot of the limo’s plates as the vehicle lurched ahead, gathered speed and shot past them. Blancanales was cranking on the engine, dropping it into gear when Schwarz spotted Lyons bulling his way out onto the sidewalk. “Hey, Carl. You want me to take a shot of you for our scrapbook?” Schwarz cut off their leader’s voice just as he launched into a tirade.

      Blancanales was throwing the rig into a hard turn to give pursuit when Schwarz said, “Hey, Pol, I just thought of something.”

      “What?”

      “When we write our memoirs I think I’ll call it, 3000 Miles to the Farm. What do you think?”

      “We’re both going to be 3000 miles to nowhere if we don’t do what Carl wants.”

      Just then the red line beeped. Schwarz stared at it as though it were a viper coiled to bite, said, “I think no truer words were ever spoken.”

      “Are you going to answer that?”

      Schwarz slowly punched on, attempted his best winning, innocent voice. “Yes?”

      “You three want to explain yourselves?”

      It wasn’t real hard to read the tone. Schwarz knew Barbara Price wasn’t asking how they were feeling.

      “THEY WHAT? They’re doing what?”

      After so many years in the same office at the Justice Department and climbing the ranks, certain perks now came with the job. Brognola’s spacious office was soundproof, bugproof, with recently installed bullet-and-bomb-reinforced windows. There was a small conference table, a couch for sleeping, a personal workstation, a giant TV built into the wall. All things considered, they were the creature comforts necessary for a man who spent most of his professional hours on his feet and on the edge.

      With perks, however, came more responsibility and worries. Translate added worry to the human factor.

      He wasn’t thirty seconds on the satellite link to the Farm, catching the sitrep from Price, when he was chomping on half a pack of Rolaids. He heard how Gadgets, with

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