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The Teeth of the Tiger by Tom Clancy

“For some. Not for all,” Mustafa told his friend. “There are other drugs for that.”

“Those are hateful to God,” Abdullah observed. “Unless a physician administers them.”

“We have friends now who do not think that way.”

“Infidels,” Abdullah almost spat.

“The enemy of your enemy is your friend.”

Abdullah twisted the top off an Evian bottle. “No. You can trust a true friend. Can we trust these men?”

“Only as far as we must,” Mustafa allowed. Mohammed had been careful in his mission brief. These new allies would help them only as a matter of convenience, because they also wished harm to the Great Sa­tan. That was good enough for now. Someday these allies would become enemies, and they’d have to deal with them. But that day had not yet come. He stifled a yawn. Time to get some rest. Tomorrow would be a busy day.

JACK LIVED in a condo in Baltimore, a few blocks from Orioles Park at Camden Yards, where he had season tickets, but which was dark tonight because the Orioles were in Toronto. Not a good cook, he ate out as he usually did, alone this time because he didn’t have a date, which was not as unusual as he might have wished. Finished, he walked back to his condo, switched on his TV, and then thought better of it, went to his computer instead, and logged on to check his e-mail and surf the ‘Net. That’s when he made a note to himself. Sali lived alone as well, and while he often had whores for company, it wasn’t every night. What did he do on the other nights? Log on to his computer? A lot of people did. Did the Brits have a tap on his phone lines? They must. But the file on Sali didn’t include any e-mails . . . why? Something worth checking out.

“WHAT YOU thinking, Aldo?” Dominic asked his brother. ESPN had a baseball game on; the Mariners were playing the Yankees, to the current detriment of the former.

“I’m not sure I like the idea of shooting some poor bastard down on the street, bro.”

“What if you know he’s a bad guy?”

“And what if I whack the wrong guy just because he drives the same kind of car and has the same mustache? What if he leaves a wife and kids behind? Then I’m a fucking murderer—a contract killer, at that. That’s not the sort of thing they taught us at the Basic School, y’know?”

“But if you know he’s a bad guy, then what?” the FBI agent asked.

“Hey, Enzo, that’s not what they trained you to do, either.”

“I know that, but this here’s a different situation. If I know the mutt’s a terrorist, and I know we can’t arrest him, and I know he’s got more plans, then I think I can handle it.”

“Out in the hills, in Afghanistan, you know, our intel wasn’t always gold-plated, man. Sure, I learned to put my own ass on the line, but not some poor other schlub’s.”

“The people you were after over there, who’d they kill?”

“Hey, they were part of an organization that made war on the United States of America. They probably weren’t Boy Scouts. But I never saw any direct evidence of it.”

“What if you had?” Dominic asked.

“But I didn’t.”

“You’re lucky,” Enzo responded, remembering a little girl whose throat had been slashed ear to ear. There was a legal adage that hard cases made for bad law, but the books could not anticipate all the things that people did. Black ink on white paper was a little too dry for the real world sometimes. But he’d always been the passionate one of the two. Brian had always been a touch cooler, like Fonzie on Happy Days. Twins, yes, but fraternal ones. Dominic was more like his father, Italian and passionate. Brian had turned out more like Mom, chillier from a more northerly climate. To an outsider, the differences might have appeared less than trivial, but to the twins themselves it was frequently the subject of jabs and jokes. “When you see it, Brian, when it’s right there in front of you, it sets you off, man. It lights a fire in the gut.”

“Hey, been there, done that, got the T-shirt, okay? I whacked five men all by myself. But it was business, not personal. They tried to am­bush us, but they didn’t read the manual right, and I used fire and ma­neuver to fake ’em out and roll ’em up, just like they taught me to do. It’s not my fault they were inept. They could have surrendered, but they pre­ferred to shoot it out. That was a bad call on their part, but ‘a man should do what he thinks is best.'” His all-time favorite movie was John Wayne’s Hondo.

“Hey, Aldo, I’m not saying you’re a wuss.”

“I know what you’re saying, but, look, I don’t want to turn into one of them, okay?”

“That’s not the mission here, bro. I got my doubts, too, but I’m going to stay around and see how it plays out. We can always kiss it off when­ever we want.”

“I suppose.”

Then Derek Jeter doubled up the middle. Pitchers probably thought of him as a terrorist, didn’t they?

ON THE other side of the building, Pete Alexander was on a secure phone to Columbia, Maryland.

“So, how are they doing?” he heard Sam Granger ask.

Pete sipped at his glass of sherry. “They’re good kids. They both have doubts. The Marine talks openly about it, and the FBI guy keeps his mouth shut about it, but the wheels are turning over slowly.”

“How serious is it?”

“Hard to say. Hey, Sam, we always knew that training would be the hard part. Few Americans want to grow up to be professional killers—at least not the ones we need for this.”

“There was a guy at the Agency who would have fit right in—”

“But he’s too damned old, and you know it,” Alexander countered at once. “Besides, he has his sunset job over across the pond in Wales, and he seems to be comfortable in it.”

“If only . . .”

“If only your aunt had balls, she’d be your uncle,” Pete pointed out. “Selecting candidates is your job. Getting them trained up is mine. These two have the brains and they have the skills. The hard part is tem­perament. I’m working on that. Be patient”

“In the movies, it’s a lot easier.”

“In the movies, everybody is borderline psychopath. Is that who we want on the payroll?”

“I guess not.” There were plenty of psychopaths to be found. Every large police department knew of several. And they’d kill people for modest monetary considerations, or a small quantity of drugs. The problem with such people was that they didn’t take orders well, and they were not very smart. Except in the movies. Where was that little Nikita girl when you really needed her?

“So, we have to deal with good, reliable people who have brains. Such people think, and they do not always think predictably, do they? A guy with a conscience is nice to have, but every so often he’s going to wonder if he’s doing the right thing. Why did you have to send two Catholics? Jews are bad enough. They’re born with guilt—but Catholics learn it all in school.”

“Thank you, Your Holiness,” Granger responded, deadpan.

“Sam, we knew going in that this was not going to be easy. Jesus, you send me a Marine and an FBI agent. Why not a couple of Eagle Scouts, y’know?”

“Okay, Pete. It’s your job. Any idea on timing? There’s some work pil­ing up on us,” Granger observed.

“Maybe a month and I’ll know if they’ll play or not. They will need to know the why in addition to the who, but I always told you that,” Alexander reminded his boss.

“True,” Granger admitted. It really was a lot easier in the movies, wasn’t it? Just let your fingers do the walking to “Assassins R Us” in the Yellow Pages. They had thought about hiring former KGB officers at first. They all had expert training, and all wanted money—the going rate was less than twenty-five thousand dollars per kill, a pittance—but such people would probably report back to Moscow Centre in the hope of being rehired, and The Campus would then become known within the global “black” community. They couldn’t have that.

“What about the new toys?” Pete asked. Sooner or later, he’d have to train the twins with the new tools of the trade.

“Two weeks, they tell me.”

“That long? Hell, Sam, I proposed them nine months ago.”

“It’s not something you get at the local Western Auto. They have to be manufactured from scratch. You know, highly skilled machinists in out-of-the-way places, people who don’t ask questions.”

“I told you, get the guys who do this sort of thing for the Air Force. They’re always making up clever little gadgets.” Like tape recorders that fit in cigarette lighters. Now, that was probably inspired by the movies. And for the really good things, the government almost never had the right people in-house, which was why they employed civilian contrac­tors, who took the money, did the job, and kept their mouths shut because they wanted more such contracts.

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Categories: Clancy, Tom
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