Ludlum, Robert – The Janson Directive

Bernardino Mountains visible in the near horizon, dwarfing the small, low-slung

beige-brick buildings. The dark blue outfit the prisoner had been made to wear,

with the white cloth circle attached by Velcro to the center of his chest. The

special chair, with a pan beneath it to catch blood, and head restraints that

were attached loosely to the prisoner’s neck. The pile of sandbags behind, to

absorb the volley and prevent ricochets. Demarest had faced a wall, twenty feet

away—a wall with firing ports for each of the six members of the squad. Six men

with rifles. The wall was what he had protested most about. Demarest had

insisted on execution by firing squad, and his preference had been accommodated.

Yet he also wanted to be able to see his executioners face-to-face: and this

time he had been refused.

Now Janson took another deep breath. “Mesa Grande is where a bad man met a bad

end.”

A bad end, and a defiant one. For on Demarest’s face there had indeed been

defiance—no, more than that: a wrathful indignation—until the volley was loosed,

and the white cloth circle turned bright red with his blood.

Janson had asked to witness the execution, for reasons that remained murky even

to him, and the request had reluctantly been granted. To this day, Janson could

not decide whether he had made the right decision. It no longer mattered: Mesa

Grande, too, was part of who he was. Part of who he had become.

To him, it had represented a moment of requital. A moment of justice to repay

injustice. To others, so it appeared, that moment meant something altogether

different.

Mesa Grande.

Had the monster’s devoted followers gotten together, somehow decided to avenge

his death all these years later? The idea seemed preposterous. That did not,

alas, mean it could be dismissed. Demarest’s Devils: perhaps these veterans were

among the mercenaries that Novak’s enemies had recruited. How better to counter

one disciple of Demarest’s techniques than with another?

Madness!

He knew that Jessie wanted to hear more from him, but he could not bring himself

to speak. All he said was “We need to make an early start tomorrow. Get some

sleep.” And when she placed a hand on his arm, he pulled away.

Turning in, he felt roiled by shadowy ghosts he could never put to rest, however

hard he tried.

In life, Demarest had taken too much of his past; in death, would he now take

his future?

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

It was three decades ago, and it was now. It was in a jungle far away, and it

was here.

Always, the sounds: the mortar fire more distant and muffled than ever before,

for the trail had led them many miles away from the official combat zones.

Immediate proximity made the sounds of mosquitoes and other small stinging

insects louder than the immense blasts of the heavy artillery. Cheap ironies

were as thick on the ground as punji sticks, the sharpened bamboo stakes that

the VC placed in small, concealed holes, awaiting the unwary footfall.

Janson checked his compass once again, verified that the trail had been leading

in the correct direction. The triple-canopy jungle left the ground in permanent

twilight, even when the sun was shining. The six men in his team moved in three

pairs, each spaced a good ways apart, the better to avoid the vulnerability of

clustering in hostile territory. Only he traveled without a partner.

“Maguire,” he radioed, quietly.

He never heard the response. What he heard, instead, was automatic rifle fire,

the overlapping staccato bursts of several ComBloc carbines.

Then he heard the screaming of men—his men—and the barking commands of an enemy

patrol party. He was reaching for his M16 when he felt a blow to the back of his

head. And then he felt nothing at all.

He was at the bottom of a deep, black lake, drifting slowly along the silt like

a carp, and he could stay there forever, swathed in the muddy blackness, cool

and close to motionless, but something began to drag him toward the surface,

away from his comforting and silent underwater world, and the light began to

hurt his eyes, began to sear his skin, even, and he struggled to stay below, but

the forces that drew him up were irresistible, buoyancy dragging him up like a

grappling hook, and he opened his eyes only to see another pair of eyes upon

him, eyes like bore holes. And he knew that his world of water had given way to

a world of pain.

He tried to sit up, and failed—from weakness, he assumed. He tried again, and

realized that he was tied, roped to a litter, rough canvas stretched between two

poles. He was stripped of his trousers and tunic. His head swam and his focus

wavered; he recognized the signs of a head injury, knew there was nothing he

could do about it.

A harsh exchange in Vietnamese. The eyes belonged to an officer, either of the

NVA or the Viet Cong. He was a captive American soldier, and there was clarity

in that. From some distance came the static of a shortwave radio, like a section

of tuneless violins: the volume waxed and waned until he realized that it was

his perception, not the sound, that was shifting, that his consciousness was

zoning in and out. A black-clad soldier brought him rice gruel and spooned it

into his parched mouth. He felt, absurdly, grateful; at the same time, he

realized that he was an asset to them, a potential source of information. To

extract that information was their job; to prevent them from extracting it,

while keeping himself alive, was his. Besides, he knew, amateur interrogators

would sometimes reveal more information than they elicited. He told himself that

he would have to use his powers of concentration … when they returned. Assuming

they ever did.

A bit of the rice gruel caught in his throat, and he realized it was a beetle

that had fallen into the pasty substance. A half smile flickered on the face of

the soldier who fed him—the indignity of feeding a Yank made up for by the

indignity of what he was feeding him—but Janson was past caring.

“Xin loi,” the soldier said, cruel as a jackknife. One of the few Vietnamese

idioms Janson knew: Sorry about that.

Xin loi. Sorry about that: it was the war in a nutshell. Sorry we destroyed the

village in order to save it. Sorry we napalmed your family. Sorry we tortured

those POWs. Sorry about that—a phrase for every occasion. A phrase nobody ever

meant. The world would be a better place if someone could say it and mean it.

Where was he? Some sort of Montagnard hut, was it? Abruptly, a greasy cloth was

wrapped around his head, and he felt himself unroped and dragged down, dragged

under—not to the bottom of the lake, as in his dream, but into a tunnel,

burrowed around and beneath the shallow tree roots of the jungle soil. He was

dragged until he started to crawl, simply to spare his flesh the abrasion. The

tunnel veered one way and then another; it sloped upward and downward and

intersected with others; voices grew muffled and close, then very distant;

smells of tar and kerosene and rot alternated with the fetor of unwashed men.

When he reemerged into the insect symphony of the jungle floor—for it was the

sound of insects that told him he had left the network of tunnels—he was trussed

up again and lifted onto a chair. The cloth around his head was removed, and he

breathed deeply the clammy air. The rope was coarse, the sort of hemp twine used

for tying river sloops to bamboo docks, and it bit into his wrists, his ankles.

Small insects hovered around the fretwork of small cuts and abrasions that

covered his exposed flesh. His T-shirt and underpants—that was all he had been

left with—were encrusted with dirt from the tunnels.

A large-boned man with eyes that looked small beneath his steel-framed glasses

approached him.

“Where … others?” Janson’s mouth was cottony.

“Members of your death squad? Dead. Only you safe.”

“You’re Viet Cong?”

“That is not correct term. We represent Central Committee of the National

Liberation Front.”

“National Liberation Front,” Janson repeated, his cracked lips forming words

only with difficulty.

“Why you not wear dog tags?”

Janson shrugged, prompting an immediate whack with a bamboo stick across the

back of his neck. “Must’ve got lost.”

Two guards stood to either side of the scowling interrogator. They each carried

AK-47s and a link-belt of rounds around their waists; a Makarev 9.5mm pistol

hung just below the ammo belt. One of them had clipped to his belt a U.S. Navy

SEALs combat knife, the six-inch blade gleaming. Janson recognized the scars on

its Tenite handle; it was his.

“You lie!” the interrogator said. His eyes darted toward the man standing behind

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