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The Teeth of the Tiger by Tom Clancy

“So, nothing will come of this, you figure?” Granger asked, knowing the answer.

“Mossad will look around, tell its troops to stay awake, and that’ll work for a month or two, and then most of them will settle down to their normal routines. Same with other services. Mainly, the Israelis will try to figure how their guy got fingered. Hard to speculate on that with the information at hand. Probably something simple. Usually is. Maybe he recruited the wrong guy and it bit him, maybe their ciphers got cracked—a bribed cipher clerk at the embassy, for example—maybe somebody talked to the wrong guy at the wrong cocktail party. The pos­sibilities are pretty wide, Sam. It only takes one little slip to get a guy killed out there, and the best of us can make that sort of error.”

“Something to put in the manual about what to do on the street, and what not to do.” He’d done his own street time, of course, but mainly in libraries and banks, rooting around for information so dry as to make dust look moist, and finding the occasional diamond in a pile of it. He’d always maintained a cover and stuck to it until it had become as real to him as his birthday.

“Unless some other spook craps out on the street somewhere,” Rounds observed. “Then we’ll know if there really is a ghost out there.”

THE AVIANCA flight from Mexico touched down at Cartagena five minutes early. He’d flown Austrian Air to London Heathrow, and then a British Airways flight to Mexico City before taking Colombia’s flag carrier to the South American country. It was an old American Boe­ing, but he was not one to worry about the safety of air travel. The world had far greater dangers. At the hotel, he opened his bag to retrieve his day planner, took a walk outside, and spotted a public phone to make his call.

“Please tell Pablo that Miguel is here . . . Gracias.” And with that he walked to a cantina for a drink. The local beer wasn’t all that bad, Mo­hammed found. Though it was contrary to his religious beliefs, he had to fit in to this environment, and here everybody drank alcohol. After sitting for fifteen minutes, he walked back to his hotel, scanning twice for a tail, which he did not see. So, if he was being shadowed, it was by experts, and there was little defense against that, not in a foreign city where everyone spoke Spanish and no one knew the direction to Mecca. He was traveling on a British passport that said his name was Nigel Hawkins of London. There was indeed a flat at the indicated address. That would protect him even from a routine police stop, but no cover legend went forever, and if it came to that . . . then it came to that. You could not live your life in fear of the unknown. You made your plans, took the necessary precautions, and then you played the game.

It was interesting. The Spanish were ancient enemies of Islam, and this country was composed mostly of the children of Spain. But there were people in this country who loathed America almost as much as he did—only almost, because America was to them a source of vast income for their cocaine . . . as America was a source of vast income for the oil of his homeland. His own personal net worth was in the hundreds of millions of American dollars, stored in various banks around the world, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, and most recently, the Bahamas. He could af­ford his own private plane, of course, but that would be too easy to iden­tify, and, he was sure, too easy to shoot down over water. Mohammed was contemptuous of America, but he was not blind to her power. Too many good men had gone unexpectedly to Paradise for forgetting that. It was hardly a bad destiny, but his work was among the living, not the dead.

“HEY, CAPTAIN.”

Brian Caruso turned to see James Hardesty It wasn’t even seven in the morning. He’d just finished leading his short company of Marines through their morning routine of exercise and the three-mile run, and like all his men he’d worked up a good sweat in the process. He’d dis­missed his people to their showers, and was on his way back to his quar­ters when he’d encountered Hardesty. But before he could say anything, a more familiar voice called.

“Skipper?” the captain turned to see Gunnery Sergeant Sullivan, his senior NCO.

“Yeah, Gunny. The people looked pretty sharp this morning.”

“Yes, sir. You didn’t work us too hard. Good of you, sir,” the E-7 observed.

“How did Corporal Ward do?” Which was why Brian hadn’t worked them too hard. Ward had said he was ready to get back into the swing, but he was still coming off some nasty wounds.

“He’s puffing some, but he didn’t cave on us. Corpsman Randall is keeping an eye on the lad for us. You know, for a squid, he isn’t too bad,” the gunny allowed. Marines are typically fairly solicitous to their Navy corpsmen, especially the ones tough enough to play in the weeds with Force Recon.

“Sooner or later the SEALs are going to invite him out to Coronado.”

“True enough, Skipper, and then we’re gonna have to break in a new squid.”

“What you need, Gunny?” Caruso asked.

“Sir—oh, he’s here. Hey, Mr. Hardesty. Just heard you were down to see the boss. Beg pardon, Captain.”

“No problem. See you in an hour, Gunny.”

“Aye, aye, sir.” Sullivan saluted smartly and headed back to the bar­racks.

“He’s a pretty good NCO,” Hardesty thought aloud.

“Big time,” Caruso agreed. “Guys like him run the Corps. They just tolerate people like me.”

“How’s about some breakfast, Cap’n?”

“Need a shower first, but sure.”

“What’s on the agenda?”

“Today’s class work is on comms, to make sure we can all call in air and artillery support.”

“Don’t they know that?” Hardesty asked in surprise.

“You know how a baseball team does batting practice before every game, with the batting coach around? They all know how to swing a bat, right?”

“Gotcha.” The reason they were called fundamentals was because they really were fundamental. And these Marines, like ballplayers, wouldn’t object to the day’s lesson. One trip into the tall weeds had taught them all how important the fundamentals were.

It was a short walk to Caruso’s quarters. Hardesty helped himself to some coffee and a newspaper, while the young officer showered. The coffee was pretty good for a single man’s making. The paper, as usual, didn’t tell him much he didn’t already know, except for late sports scores, but the comics were always good for a laugh.

“Ready for breakfast?” the youngster asked, all cleaned up.

“How’s the food here?” Hardesty stood.

“Well, kinda hard to screw up breakfast, isn’t it?”

“True enough. Lead on, Captain.” Together they drove the mile or so to the Consolidated Mess in Caruso’s C-class Mercedes. The car marked him as a single man, to Hardesty’s relief.

“I didn’t expect to see you again for a while,” Caruso said, from be­hind the wheel.

“Or at all?” the former Special Forces officer asked lightly.

“That, too, yes, sir.”

“You passed the exam.”

It was enough to turn his head. “What exam was that, sir?”

“I didn’t think you’d notice,” Hardesty observed with a chuckle.

“Well, sir, you have succeeded in confusing me this morning.” Which, Captain Caruso was sure, was part of today’s plan.

“There’s an old saying: ‘If you’re not confused, you’re misin­formed.'”

“That sounds a little ominous,” Captain Caruso said, turning right into the parking lot.

“It can be.” He got out and followed the officer toward the building. It was a large single-story building full of hungry Marines. The cafe­teria line had racks and trays of the usual American breakfast foods, Frosted Flakes to bacon and eggs. And even some—

“You can try the bagels, but they aren’t all that good, sir,” Caruso warned as he got two English muffins and real butter. He was clearly too young to worry about cholesterol and the other difficulties that came with increasing years. Hardesty got himself a box of Cheerios, because he had gotten that old, rather to his annoyance, along with low-fat milk and non-sugar sweetener. The coffee mugs were large, and the seating permitted a surprising amount of anonymity, though there had to be four hundred people in here, of various ranks from corporal to full-bull colonel. His host steered him to a table in a crowd of young sergeants.

“Okay, Mr. Hardesty, what can I do for you?”

“Number one, I know you have security clearances, up to TS, right?”

“Yes, sir. Some compartmented stuff, but that doesn’t concern you at all.”

“Probably,” Hardesty conceded. “Okay, what we’re about to discuss goes a little higher than that. You cannot repeat this to anyone at all. Are we clear on that?”

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