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The Teeth of the Tiger by Tom Clancy

“What do you mean?” Sam responded. “They” had to be the Caruso brothers, of course.

“I mean they do not have much in the way of intelligence support,” the former Senator pointed out.

“Well, we’ve never really thought about that, have we?”

“Exactly.” Hendley leaned back in his chair. “In a sense, they’re oper­ating naked. Neither one has much in the way of intelligence experience. What if they hit the wrong guy? Okay, they probably won’t get bagged doing it, but it won’t help their morale, either. I remember a Mafia guy, in the Atlanta Federal Pen, I think. He killed some poor bastard he thought was trying to kill him, but it was the wrong guy, and he came unglued as a result. Sang like a canary. That’s how we got our first big break on the Mafia and how it was organized, remember?”

“Oh, yeah, it was a Mafia soldier named Joe Valachi, yeah, but he was a criminal, remember?”

“And Brian and Dominic are good guys. So, guilt could hit them worse. Maybe some intel backup is a good idea.”

Granger was surprised at the suggestion. “I can see the need for bet­ter intelligence evaluation, and this ‘virtual office’ stuff has its limita­tions, I admit. They can’t ask questions, like, but if they have one, they can still e-mail us for advice­—”

“Which they haven’t done,” Hendley pointed out.

“Gerry, they’re only two steps into the mission. It’s not time to panic yet, y’know? These are two very bright and very capable young officers. That’s why we picked them. They know how to think on their own, and that’s precisely what we want in our operations people.”

“We’re not just making assumptions, we’re launching assumptions into the future. You think that’s a good idea?” Hendley had learned how to pursue ideas on Capitol Hill, and he was deadly effective at it.

“Assumptions are always a bad thing. I know that, Gerry. But so are complications. How do we know we’re sending the right guy? What if it just adds a level of uncertainty? Do we want to do that?” Hendley, thought Granger, was suffering from the deadliest congressional disease. It was too easy to oversight something to death.

“What I’m saying is that it’s a good idea to have somebody out there who thinks a little different, who takes a different kind of approach to the data that goes out there. The Caruso boys are pretty good. I know that. But they are inexperienced. The important thing is to have a differ­ent brain out there to take a different view of the facts and the situation.”

Granger felt himself being backed into a corner. “Okay, look, I can see the logic of that, but it’s a level of complication that we don’t need.”

“Okay, so look at it this way­—what if they see something for which they are not prepared? In that case, they need a second­—whatever you call it­—opinion of the data at hand. That will make them less likely to make a mistake in the field. The one thing that bothers me is that they make a mistake, and it’s a fatal mistake for some poor schlub, and that the error affects the way they carry out their missions in the future. Guilt, remorse, and maybe then they start talking about it, okay? Can we com­pletely discount that?”

“No, maybe not entirely, but it also means that we just add an addi­tional element to the equation that can say no when a yes is the right way to go. Saying no is something anybody can do. It isn’t necessarily right. You can take caution too far.”

“I don’t think so.”

“Fine. So, who do you want to send?” Granger asked.

“Let’s think about it. Ought to be­—has to be somebody they know and trust . . .” His voice trailed off.

Hendley had made his operations chief nervous. He had an idea fixed in his head, and Hendley knew all too well that he was the head of The Campus, and that within this building his word was law, and there was nobody to appeal it to. So, if Granger was to select a name for this no­tional job, it had to be somebody who would not screw everything up.

THE AUTOBAHN was superbly, even brilliantly, engineered. Dominic found himself wondering who’d set it up. Then he thought that the road looked as though it had been there for a long time. And it linked Germany and Austria . . . maybe Hitler himself had ordered this road built? Wasn’t that a hoot? In any case, there was no speed limit here, and the Porsche’s six-cylinder engine was purring like a stalking tiger on the scent of some warm meat. And the German drivers were amazingly polite. All you had to do was flash your lights, and they hustled out of your way as though having received a divine edict. Definitely unlike America, where some little old lady in her overage Pinto was in the far-left lane because she was left-handed and liked holding up the maniacs in their Corvettes. The Bonneville Salt Flats could scarcely have been more fun.

For his part, Brian was doing his best not to cringe. He closed his eyes occasionally, thinking back to nap-of-the-earth flying in the Recon Marines through mountain passes in the Sierra Nevada, often enough in CH-46 helicopters older than he was. They hadn’t killed him. This probably wouldn’t either, and, as a Marine officer, he wasn’t allowed to show fear or weakness. And it was exciting. Rather like riding in a roller coaster without the safety bar across the seat. But he saw that Enzo was having the time of his life, and he consoled himself with the fact that his seat belt was attached, and that this little German car was probably engineered by the same design crew that had done the Tiger tank. Getting through the mountains was the scariest part, and when they entered farm coun­try, the land got flatter and the road straighter, thanks be to God.

“The hills are alive with the sound of myoosikkkk,” Dominic sang, horribly.

“If you sing like that in church, God’ll strike your ass dead,” Brian warned, pulling out the city maps for the approach to Wien, as Vienna was known to its citizens.

And the city streets were a rat warren. The capital of Austria­­—Osterreich­—predated the Roman legions, with no street straight for a longer distance than would be needed by a legion to parade past its tri­bunus militaris on the emperor’s birthday. The map showed inner and outer ring roads, which probably marked the former site of medieval walls­—the Turks had come here more than once hoping to add Austria to their empire, but that trinket of military history had not been part of the official Marine Corps reading list. A largely Catholic country, be­cause the ruling House of Hapsburg had been so, it had not kept the Austrians from exterminating its prominent and prosperous Jewish mi­nority after Hitler had subsumed Osterreich into the Greater German Reich. That had been after the Anschluss plebiscite of 1938. Hitler had been born here, not in Germany as widely believed, and the Austrians had repaid that loyalty with some of their own, becoming more Nazi­fied than Hitler himself, or so objective history reported, not necessarily the Austrians’ now. It was the one country in the world where The Sound of Music had fallen flat at the box office, maybe because the movie had been uncomplimentary toward the Nazi party.

For all that, Vienna looked like what it was, a former imperial city with wide, tree-lined boulevards and classical architecture, and remarkably well-turned-out citizens. Brian navigated them to the Hotel Imperial on Kartner Ring, a building that looked to be an adjunct to the well-known Schonbrunn Palace.

“You have to admit they put us up in nice places, Aldo,” Dominic observed.

It was even more impressive inside, with gilt plaster and lacquered woodwork, every segment of which appeared to have been installed by master craftsmen imported from Renaissance Florence. The lobby was not spacious, but the reception desk was impossible to miss, manned as it was by people wearing clothing that marked them as hotel staff as surely as a Marine in dress blues.

“Goad day,” the concierge said in greeting. “Your name is Caruso?”

“Correct,” Dominic said, surprised at the concierge’s ESP “You should have a reservation for my brother and myself?”

“Yes, sir,” the concierge replied with enthusiastic subordination. His English might have been learned at Harvard. “Two connecting rooms, overlooking the street.”

“Excellent.” Dominic fished out his American Express black card and handed it across.

“Thank you.”

“Any messages for us?” Dominic asked.

“No, sir,” the concierge assured him.

“Can you have the valet attend to our car? It’s rented. We’re’ not sure if we’ll be keeping it or not.”

“Of course, sir.”

“Thank you. Can we see our rooms?”

“Yes. You are on the first floor­—excuse me, the second floor, as you say in America. Franz,” he called.

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