Diplomacy Directive. Don Pendleton
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Bolan pressed his back to the wall and held the MP-5 K in ready position, muzzle leveled at the door on the far side of the hallway. No further threats presented themselves. Bolan heard the heavy, steady beat of what sounded like rave music emanate from beyond the door. He waited a full minute before trying the handle on the door nearest to him. To his surprise it turned without resistance. Bolan opened the door onto a small, cramped room containing only a bed and a sink. He went to work immediately—dragging the two bodies into the room—but since there wasn’t enough space to hold them both side by side he had to stack them. Oh, well, it wasn’t as if neatness counted.
Bolan locked the door before closing it behind him. If this back hall served the purpose he thought it did, it would be some time before anybody got curious and made forced entry into the room. By that time he planned to be long gone. He proceeded along the hallway until he reached the far door. He’d consider checking the other rooms just to make sure he covered his flank, but quickly dismissed the idea as too time-consuming. While they might not come looking for their colleagues immediately, Bolan knew he still didn’t have a lot of time and especially not if he was forced to deal with other enemies inside the club proper.
The soldier opened the door, keeping the MP-5 K held low against his leg, muzzle down. Near blackness accompanied the deafening music, and people took scant notice of him. The place was wall to wall with bodies and Bolan figured many of those faces—what he could see of them anyway—were dazed by too much loud music, noise and chemical stimulation to be focused on him. This kind of crowd actually proved fortunate, allowing the soldier to move through the club with relative anonymity.
Bolan passed beyond the crowds until he found another door set in a wall just beyond where the curved bar ended. The two bar attendants were so busy filling orders that neither even noticed him as he approached the door. They also didn’t notice him raise the MP-5 K and stick it into the gut of the lone monster in the silk suit standing guard. The guy started to look in their direction, but a nudge of the weapon and shake of the head proved adequate in squashing any designs he entertained to warn them. Bolan inclined his head toward the door, and the man seemed all too happy to comply.
Not that he had a choice.
The soldier followed the man into the room, which actually turned out to be a very large office, and closed the door behind them. Against a far wall, a man sat busily typing at a computer keyboard, his lithe body wedged between the massive desk and credenza. The guy barely looked up from whatever held his attention on the computer screen and mumbled something about leaving whatever it was he’d been expecting on his desk.
Bolan cleared his throat and the man looked in their direction, an expression of surprise melting the stony sculpture of his features.
“Leave your hands where I can see them,” Bolan ordered. He followed the command with the jab of the muzzle into the guard’s back, prodding him in the direction of the sofa. He returned his attention to the guy behind the desk. “You running this operation?”
At first the guy didn’t make a response and Bolan began to wonder if he spoke English. Finally, he replied, “Yes.”
The Executioner thought he detected a slight Southern accent in the man’s voice, but other than that this one didn’t possess any striking features. Something about him didn’t seem quite right, but Bolan couldn’t exactly put his finger on what it was. Maybe the way he held himself or the look in his eyes or just a simple calm with which he carried himself. Whatever the case, it seemed plainly obvious that barring his initial surprise, he didn’t seem overly concerned. Bolan detected the unusual way in which the man sized them up.
“It would seem,” the man said as he was careful to keep his hands in view, “that you are under the mistaken impression you have us at a disadvantage.”
“You mean I don’t?” Bolan quipped. He waved the MP-5 K. “Seems to me this gives me the advantage.”
“Don’t believe for a moment that brandishing a weapon necessarily puts you in a position of authority, neither does it grant you automatic consideration. In fact, I’ve had a weapon pointed at me many times before…and yet here I am, still alive.”
“I’m not really interested in killing you,” Bolan replied. “If that were the case you’d be dead already. The only thing I’m here for is information, and if you give it to me, then I’ll leave here and nobody else needs to die.”
“You’re saying you’ve already taken the life of one of my men?”
“Two men. And only because they left me no choice.”
“That is unfortunate,” the man replied.
“And why’s that?”
“Because you will not leave here alive.”
“Who are you exactly and why are you here?”
“You don’t think after admitting to killing two of my men that I’m going to answer any of your questions. If you do, you are crazier than I anticipated.”
Bolan considered the statement a moment before replying. “It sounds like you were expecting me.”
The man inclined his head slightly. “Very perceptive.”
“An educated guess,” Bolan said with a smile that lacked any warmth. “But the joke’s on you, since I had already considered the possibility this was nothing more than a trap. You see, I came prepared for a fight.”
As if on cue, the door burst open and a fresh torrent of gunmen—about a half dozen all told—fanned out and trained an assortment of machine pistols on the Executioner’s position.
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