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The Teeth of the Tiger by Tom Clancy

“To break the law and get away with it?”

Dominic shook his head. “I had this talk with Gus Werner. No, not to break the law, but just once to be the law. To be God’s Own Avenging Sword, was the way he put it—to strike down the guilty without lawyers and other bullshit to get in the way, to see justice done all by yourself. It doesn’t happen very often, they say, but, you know, I got to do it down in Alabama, and it felt pretty good. You just have to be sure you’re bag­ging the right mutt.”

“How can you be sure?” Aldo asked.

“If you’re not, you back off the mission. They can’t hang you for not committing murder, bro.”

“So, it is murder?”

“Not if the mutt has it coming, it isn’t.” It was an aesthetic point, but an important one to someone who had already committed murder un­der the shelter of the law, and had had no bad dreams about it.

“IMMEDIATELY?”

“Yes. How many men do we have already?” Mohammed asked.

“Sixteen.”

“Ah.” Mohammed took a sip of a fine French white from the Loire Valley. His guest was drinking Perrier and lemon. “Their language skills?”

“Sufficient, we think.”

“Excellent. Tell them to make preparations to travel. We’ll fly them in to Mexico. There they will meet with our new friends, and travel to America. And once there, they can do their work.”

“Insh’Allah,” he observed. God willing.

“Yes, God willing,” Mohammed said in English, reminding his guest of what language he should be using.

They were in a sidewalk restaurant overlooking the river, off to one side, with no one nearby. Both men spoke normally, two well-dressed men over a friendly dinner, not huddled or conspiratorial in their de­meanor. This took some amount of concentration, since some degree of conspiratorial posture came naturally to what they were doing. But neither of them was a stranger to such meetings.

“So, how was it to kill the Jew in Rome?”

“It was very satisfactory, Ibrahim, to feel his body go slack as I cut his spine, and then the surprised look on his face.”

Ibrahim smiled broadly. It wasn’t every day they got to kill a Mossad officer, much less a Station Chief. The Israelis would always be their most hated enemies, if not the most dangerous. “God was good to us that day.”

The Greengold mission had been a recreational exercise for Mo­hammed. It hadn’t even been strictly necessary. Setting up the meet and feeding the Israeli juicy information had been . . . fun. Not terribly dif­ficult, even. Though it would not soon be repeated. No, Mossad would not let any of its officers do anything without overwatch for sometime. They were not fools, and they did learn from their mistakes. But killing a tiger had satisfactions all its own. A pity he had no pelt. But where would he hang it? He had no fixed home anymore, only a collection of safe houses that might or might not be totally safe. But you couldn’t worry about everything. You’d never get anything done. Mohammed and his colleagues didn’t fear death, only failure. And they had no plans to fail.

“I need the meeting arrangements and so forth. I can take care of travel. Arms will be provided by our new friends?”

A nod. “Correct ”

“And how will our warriors enter America?”

“That is for our friends to handle. But you will send in a group of three at first, to make sure the arrangements are satisfactorily secure.”

“Of course.” They knew all about operational security. There had been many lessons, none of them gentle. Members of his organization peopled many prisons around the world, those who were unlucky enough to have avoided death. That was a problem, one which his orga­nization had never been able to fix. To die in action, that was noble and courageous. To be caught by a policeman like a common criminal was ignoble and humiliating, but somehow his men found it preferable to die without accomplishing a mission. And Western prisons were not all that terrible for many of his colleagues. Confining, perhaps, but at least the food was regular, and Western nations did not violate their die­tary rules.

These nations were so weak and foolish regarding their enemies, they showed mercy to those who gave them none in return. But that was not Mohammed’s fault.

“DAMN,” Jack said. It was his first day on the “black” side of the house. His training in high finance had gone very rapidly, due to his up­bringing. His grandfather Muller had taught him well during his infre­quent visits to the family home. He and Jack’s father were civil to each other, but Grandpa Joe thought real men worked in the trading business rather than in the dirty world of politics—though he had to admit, of course, that his son-in-law had worked out fairly well in Washington. But the money he could have made on Wall Street . . . why would any man turn away from that? Muller had never said that to Little Jack, of course, but his opinion was clear enough. In any case, Jack could have gotten an entry-level job in any of the large houses, and probably worked up the line pretty fast from there. But what mattered to him now was that he had skipped through the financial side of The Campus and was now in the Operations Department—it wasn’t actually named that, but that’s what it was called by its members. “They’re that good?”

“What’s that, Jack?”

“NSA intercept” He handed the sheet across. Tony Wills read it. The intercept had identified a known associate of terrorists—exactly what function he performed was not known yet, but he’d been posi­tively identified from voiceprint analysis.

“It’s the digital phones. They generate a very clean signal, easy for the voiceprint computer to ID the voices. I see they haven’t ID’d the other guy.” Wills handed the sheet back.

The nature of the conversation was innocuous, so much so that one might wonder why the call had been placed. But some people just liked to chat on the phone. And, maybe, they were talking in code, discussing biological warfare, or a campaign to set bombs in Jerusalem. Perhaps. More likely they were just passing the time. There was a lot of that in Saudi Arabia. What impressed Jack was that the call had been picked up and read in real time.

“Well, you know how digital phones work, right? They’re always broadcasting the HERE I AM signal to the local cell, and every phone has its unique addressing code. Once we identify that code, it’s just a matter of listening in when the phone rings, or the phone holder makes a call. Similarly we can ID the number and phone of the inbound caller. The hard part is to get the identity in the first place. Now they have another phone ident for the computer to monitor.”

“How many phones do they keep track of?” Jack asked.

“Just over a hundred thousand, and that’s just in Southwest Asia. Nearly all of them are dry holes, except for the one in ten thousand that counts—and sometimes they can show real results,” Wills told him.

“So, to bag a cold call, a computer listens in and keys on ‘hot’ words?”

“Hot words and hot names. Unfortunately, so many people are named Mohammed over there—it’s the most popular given name in the world. A lot of them go by patronymics or nicknames. Another prob­lem is that there’s a big market in cloned phones—they clone them in Europe, mainly London, where most of the phones have the interna­tional software. Or a guy can get six or seven phones and use them once each before tossing them. They’re not dumb. They can get overconfi­dent, though. Some of them end up telling us a lot of things, and occa­sionally it’s useful. It all goes in the big NSA/CIA book, to which we have access on our terminals.”

“Okay, who’s this guy?”

“His name is Uda bin Sali. Rich family, close friends of the king. The big daddy’s a very senior Saudi banker. He has eleven sons and nine daughters. Four wives, a man of commendable vigor. Not a bad guy, supposedly, but he’s a little too doting with his kids. Gives them money instead of attention, like a Hollywood big shot. Uda here discovered Ai­lah in a big way back in his late teens, and he’s on the extreme right of the Wahabi branch of Sunni Islam. Doesn’t like us very much. This boy we keep track of. He might be a gateway into their banking arrange­ments. His CIA file has a picture. He’s about twenty-seven, five-eight, slender build, neatly trimmed beard. Flies to London a lot. Likes the ladies he can purchase by the hour. Not married yet. That’s unusual, but if he’s gay he conceals it well. The Brits have gotten girls into his bed. They report that he’s vigorous, about what you’d expect for his age, and fairly inventive.”

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