Pirate Offensive. Don Pendleton
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That yielded a small chuckle from the soldiers, but none of the weapons shifted direction, and the woman did not respond.
“We can leave and shoot you through the tent walls,” she said. “Use one grenade, or two.... But you would die, and we would simply be out a tent.”
“Absolutely true,” Bolan said. “But I’m here to cut a deal. Shoot if you want, but it’s a good deal.”
“Amnesty?” sneered a rake-thin teenager, his hands nervously twisting on the wooden grip of an old Browning automatic rifle, now topped with a state-of-the-art Zeiss long-range sniper scope. A bandolier of shells crossed his chest, and an optical range finder was tucked into a shirt pocket.
A fellow sniper? Good to know. “Fuck amnesty,” Bolan said. “I’m talking about missiles.”
“Missiles?”
“Missiles. Carl Gustav, LAW, Sidewinders, Redeye, Loki, Javelin—a truckload of them. Enough to tip the fight in your favor.”
“And what is the cost of this largesse?” asked the woman coolly, her eyes narrowing.
“Your rebellion is not going very well,” Bolan said, choosing his words carefully. “For more than five years, you’ve been doing a major overhaul on an old Mexican cargo freighter, formerly a Canadian steel freighter.”
Nobody said a word, but nervous glances were exchanged.
“You’ve added firewalls and armor below decks, modified the engines, reinforced the main deck, tacked on torpedo tubes and missile launchers.” Bolan smiled. “All of which is carefully out of sight.”
“Supposing what you say is true,” Sergeant Gato said slowly.
“It is.” Bolan interrupted.
She scowled. “Supposing so, you wish to do what, exchange your imaginary stockpile of missiles if we give you this vessel?”
“Oh, hell no. I merely want to rent it for a while. Maybe a few weeks, possibly longer.”
“Rent?” A young girl laughed. “You wish to rent the...” She closed her mouth with a snap.
“I never could find out the name, much less the location,” Bolan admitted. “You security is good. Damn good.” He proffered the grenades. “That’s why I had to go to such an extreme measure.”
“Rent.” The burly man shook his head in disbelief. “You have cojones, I’ll give you that, dead man.”
“I’ll pay with a hundred missiles...and a name.”
“What did you just say?” The man gaped.
“In exchange for renting the warship, I will pay you one hundred missiles per month, until the end of my mission.”
“Per month?”
“Or twenty-five a week. Whichever you prefer.”
“Madre mia,” a bald man exhaled. “With such ordnance....” Abruptly, his face took on a terrible expression. “Bah, it’s a trick! Just more lies from the president, eh? Everybody out of the tent. I will handle this pig personally.”
“Thank you, Miguel, but not this time,” the commander said, lowering her weapon. Her actions were slow but deliberate. “There is no fear in the eyes of this man, and his words carry the ring of truth.”
“But—”
“Let him talk for a little more,” she said, dragging over a folding canvas chair. “Let us see if the strength of his words equals the strength of his hands.”
“Sure as hell hope so,” Bolan said.
Leaning forward, she rested both elbows on her knees. “A hundred missiles per month, you said?”
“Plus a name. The name of a traitor in your organization. A paid police spy.”
“Davido?”
That caught Bolan by surprise. “Yes, Davido Sanchez.”
She shrugged. “Killed him last week.” Then she smiled. “But nobody knows that yet.”
A tense minute passed in silence, then another.
“So, my intel was good,” said Bolan.
“Good, but late. Still, I like that you offered his name without a price,” Sergeant Gato said. “And a hundred missiles seems a fair price for the....”
Bolan waited.
“The Constitution,” she finished.
“Good name,” Bolan said. But remember, you get the warship back afterward.”
“Perhaps. And if we do not? If it sinks or is stolen or damaged beyond repair?”
“Then I help steal you another. But I want the Constitution.”
“Why, if you can so easily steal another warship? Probably something even better than what we have.”
“Because your ship will not look dangerous,” Bolan stated bluntly. “But it actually will be. I’ll need that to get close to my target.”
“A covert attack?”
“Exactly.”
“I see,” the commander said, leaning back in the chair. “So, we each have something the other wants. But can we trust each other?”
“No.”
“Good answer. Let me think on this,” she said, pulling out a cigarette pack. She tapped it on the bottom and one jumped up. She caught it between her lips then offered the pack to Bolan.
“Thanks, but I quit years ago,” he said. She shrugged, lit a match on the sole of her boot and inhaled. The rest of the rebels just stood there, watching him intently, waiting for the next order from their commander.
The muscles in his arms were starting to become warm, but Bolan was no longer likely to let go of the grenades. There was still plenty of time to negotiate. The rebels were poor but proud. They never would have accepted charity, or even a gift, naturally assuming there would be strings attached. But a deal, a trade, this they could accept. Besides, he would need a crew, and who better than the people who knew every nut and bolt in the vessel?
“What is your name, Yankee?” she asked out of the blue.
“Colonel Brandon Stone. And I am addressing...?”
“Major Esmeralda Cortez.”
Bolan nodded. “Major.”
“Colonel,”