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CHAPTER THREE

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Waziristan territory, Pakistan

Crouched behind a line of boulders, Bolan panned his binoculars over the village of mud huts and sized up his adversaries. His breath escaped in white wisps and needles of cold plunged through the fabric of his combat black-suit and into the skin underneath. Three men, two carrying AK-47s, the third an Uzi, acted as sentries for the gateway leading into the walled village.

Craters and shattered stone from past wars dotted the landscape that lay between Bolan and al-Shoud’s stronghold. Bolan watched as one of the men fired up a cigarette, the lighter washing his face in a flickering orange glow. Another sentry, apparently the ranking member, cursed his comrade and swatted him on the arm. The stricken man groused but dropped the cigarette, stomped it under a booted heel and stalked off into the darkness.

A handful of tattered tents stood next to the mud huts and behind it all stood a large, featureless building of concrete brick. No fires for cooking or warmth burned. All the structures, except for the brick building, stood dark. Like Bolan, the three men clung to shadows, occasionally glancing at a dirt road that wound its way into the camp, as if they expected someone.

Bolan had kept the camp under surveillance for hours, but hadn’t yet found anything of substance. If Kinsey was alive—and Bolan wanted to believe she was—it was going to take an intense search to find her.

The Executioner felt the hairs on the back of his neck prickle. Deepening his crouch, he turned and cast a wary glance. A fourth sentry, this man a good three inches taller than Bolan, walked the road heading to the camp. As he marched, the man scanned the area around him, his gun muzzle following the line of his gaze. Bolan’s breath caught in his throat as the sentry’s eyes settled on his darkened form.

The gaze lingered for a moment. The warrior felt his grip on the Beretta harden and his finger curl around the trigger. The man’s next move would determine his fate. To Bolan’s relief, the guard turned his gaze back on the camp and kept moving toward it.

During his hike up the mountain, Bolan had counted three guards and had left all three standing. That had been by design. He knew the events earlier in Islamabad would have al-Shoud’s fighters on edge as it was, ready to strike at the slightest provocation. And leaving a trail of dead bodies in his wake would only prematurely alarm the Executioner’s opponents and give them time to fortify their positions. However, the strategy also forced him to watch his back more carefully than usual.

The guard hurried up the trail and stopped when he reached the others. Bolan heard the muffled tones of the man’s voice but couldn’t distinguish his words. The terrorist warriors nodded their heads as the man spoke, and at least two broke into smiles and clapped one another on the shoulder.

“Striker?” It was Jack Grimaldi.

Bolan keyed his headset. “Go.”

“Spotters caught a chopper coming your way. ETA is seven minutes.”

“You sure it’s coming here?”

“Anything’s possible, but it’s a safe bet. The craft has no visible markings and only minimal exterior lighting. I checked and it’s definitely not one of ours. It could be weapons smugglers or terrorists not associated with al-Shoud. But my gut says you’re about to get visitors.”

“Clear,” Bolan said. “May be the break we’ve been looking for.”

“Understood. What have you got there?”

“Four guards, all armed,” Bolan said. “Three more roaming the grounds. Unknown on how many inside. You ready to swoop if I need you?”

“Right. You said you wanted a fast taxi ride, so here I sit. Just me, a combat chopper, and a strike team of two dozen special ops soldiers who, by the way, are getting a little impatient.”

“Tell them to stand fast,” Bolan said. “They’re here for mop-up, nothing else. This is a situation where the fewer guns we have, the better off we’ll be.”

Grimaldi whistled. “I’m sure that message will play well. If you hear gunshots, you’ll know what happened. Any sign of our lady fair yet?”

“Negative.”

“Al-Shoud?”

“Same.”

“Think she’s still alive?”

“Hard to say. If she is, al-Shoud knows where to find her. Regardless, he and I are going to have a heart-to-heart.”

“My guess is he’s going to do most of the talking.”

“Most likely.”

“Stay hard, Striker.”

“Always.”

Bolan heard the thrumming of helicopter blades in the distance. The guards returned to view and began turning on halogen spotlights, illuminating a flat area that Bolan guessed served as a landing pad.

Within less than a minute the helicopter, a Russian-made Mi-17, swooped in overhead. The whine of its engines pierced the silence. As it settled to earth, rotor wash seized snow, dirt and small stones, and flung them into the guards’ eyes, forcing them to wrap their forearms over their faces. White cones of light emanated from the craft’s bottom as it lit up the makeshift helipad. Bolan slipped deeper under cover to avoid detection and waited for the chopper to land.

A side door slid open and a big Caucasian with thick blond hair stepped from the craft. His booted feet sank several inches into the snow, but he still covered the ground in confident, graceful strides. Camouflage battle fatigues and a rumpled field jacket covered his bulky frame. A Colt Commando hung from a strap looped over his right shoulder.

He turned and his big hands reached inside the aircraft and almost immediately connected with something. Grinning, the man pulled Jennifer Kinsey, an olive-drab field jacket draped over her designer suit, hands bound in front of her by steel handcuffs, out of the craft. As she kicked out to get her footing, the man dropped her into the snow. As she glared at him, he shook his head and laughed.

Bolan studied her through the binoculars. A bruise swelled under her left eye, and she wore a couple of small cuts on her cheeks. But she was alive. For now, Bolan considered that enough.

For now. Soon she’d be free. Or Bolan would be dead. He wasn’t going home empty-handed.

The large man reached down, gathered the fabric of her coat collar in his hand and yanked her to her feet. Bolan saw a satisfied grin play on the man’s lips as he brought her erect and shoved her forward, causing her to stumble. The guards neither laughed nor made a move to stop the rough treatment. Four men all dressed similarly to the big man and brandishing assault rifles stepped from the chopper. They followed Kinsey and her tormenter inside.

Bolan keyed the headset. “Ace?”

“Go, Striker.”

“She’s here.”

“Roger that. You going in?”

“Right. Standby. I’ll call for a pickup.”

Grimaldi acknowledged the radio traffic. Bolan killed the connection. The warrior sheathed the Beretta and unlimbered the sound-suppressed Heckler & Koch MP-5. Bolan came to his feet and, using rocks strewed about the terrain for cover, closed in on the village.

The crunch of hard-packed snow crushed underfoot reached Bolan’s ears. He whirled, spotted a fifth gunner crouched next to a boulder. The man already had locked Bolan in his sights. The Executioner lunged left and crashed into the ground, the icy snow yielding under his weight. Flame blossomed from the sentry’s weapon and bullets pounded the area around Bolan. Small geysers of snow erupted from the ground as rounds chewed a path toward Bolan.

Taking aim, Bolan stroked the H&K’s trigger. The initial burst sailed inches past his target’s head. The guard held his ground and laid down another withering hail of gunfire. Correcting his own aim, Bolan fired two more bursts from the SMG. The rounds drilled into the man’s belly, causing him to stiffen and stagger back before he collapsed to the ground.

Shadows loomed behind Bolan and in the absence of gunfire, he heard more assailants crossing the snow toward him. The Executioner rolled into a prone position, propping himself up on his elbows and clutching the MP-5 in both hands. He tapped out a short burst that chewed into the man’s chest and stomach. Caught by the 9 mm stingers, the man staggered back and his body went limp. Dropping his weapon, he fell to his knees, pitched face-first into the snow.

More autofire flashed around Bolan. Bullets tore at the smooth, snowy surfaces and sparked off exposed rocks. He was on his feet and running for another position. He switched his weapon to full-auto and laid down a sustained salvo for cover as he ran.

He caught motion to his right, whirled and spied a pair of shooters trying to acquire him as a target. Orange muzzle-flashes burst from their weapons and lead sizzled the air around Bolan, lancing between his legs and passing close to his ears and shoulders.

As grim as hell, the warrior brought around his MP-5 and unloaded a burst at the nearest man. The leaden storm ripped ragged holes in the man’s chest, shaking him like a leaf in the wind. As the first shooter fell, Bolan whirled toward the second. Having seen his comrade fall, the man redoubled his own efforts, emptying his rifle in a sustained assault on Bolan.

The Executioner snap-aimed the subgun and loosed a murderous gale of autofire. The onslaught pounded the man’s center mass and drove his battered corpse to the ground. Smoke curled from the MP-5’s barrel, mixing with the clouds formed by Bolan’s frozen breath.

The big American snapped a new magazine into the weapon. Legs pumping, he surged toward the encampment, dropping two more gunners as he continued his death march. More gunfire blazed a trail toward him, forcing the warrior to thrust himself beneath a wooden donkey cart. A shower of hellfire pounded into the ancient vehicle, creating a spray of splinters. Bullets tunneled into the ground around him.

The warrior plucked a frag grenade from his web gear and rolled from under the cart. Popping up from behind it, he spotted two of the shooters—a pair of Caucasians in camouflage fatigues—laying down a relentless hail of lead. Yanking the grenade’s pin, Bolan heaved the weapon toward the shooters and dropped back under cover.

An orange blast erupted, punctuated with a hellish chorus of agonized screams. Bolan was up and running again, this time beating a path for the helicopter.

A pilot stepped into view, pistol raised in front of him. Bolan’s subgun came to life, stitching the guy from left hip to right shoulder. The bullets’ impact thrust the man back into the chopper, knocking him from view. Grabbing a thermite grenade from his gear, Bolan activated the bomb and tossed it inside the craft. As a second followed in right after the first, Bolan wheeled and put some distance between him and the chopper. Reaching a line of rocks, he vaulted, hit the ground hard and launched into a side roll.

The dual grenades ignited one right after the other. Roiling clouds of flame erupted and ripped through the craft. Within a heartbeat, the fire ignited the craft’s fuel tanks and blew it into a supernova of flame, glass shards and twisted metal.

Bolan took the blitz up a notch and beat a path for the brick building. The MP-5 held in front of him at shoulder level, he weaved a path through the cluster of huts. He detected no signs of life from within, no cooking odors or fires, no noise.

The source had claimed the place was filled with innocents, but Bolan had seen no evidence to support this. He considered that a stroke of luck.

He flattened himself against one of the huts and peered inside. He saw blankets, dishes, utensils, radios and a laptop scattered around, but no people. He checked two more structures and found the same.

Bolan edged along another of the small houses, bringing himself within a few yards of the concrete-block building where he’d seen Stone take the woman.

A shadow from above overtook the Executioner. Raising his weapon, he spun just in time to see a large, robed man—apparently one of al-Shoud’s fighters—leap from a roof and fall toward him.

The man dropped into Bolan, wrapped his arms around the warrior’s midsection and took him to the ground. The attacker straddled him and sent a fist rocketing for Bolan’s face. The soldier rolled with the blow, letting it graze his cheek but mitigating the damage. Bolan tried to swing the MP-5 around so he could drill his adversary, but found his arm held fast in the other man’s grip.

Bolan’s left arm struck out hard, burying a fist into the guy’s soft belly, once, then twice, each blow driven hard into the man’s diaphragm. Breath exploded from the man’s lungs and his grip on Bolan’s wrist loosened. The soldier pressed his wrist against his opponent’s thumb until the Executioner’s gun hand slipped free. With lightning-fast movements, he cracked the man in the jaw with the MP-5 and sent him sprawling.

His appetite for hand-to-hand combat spoiled, the man grabbed for a pistol. Bolan’s MP-5 coughed out a trio of bullets that struck the man in the throat and robbed him of any remaining fight.

Bolan reached the brick structure and flattened himself against the wall, taking a moment to familiarize himself with the single-story structure layout. Kurtzman had told him that it had popped up within the last year, supposedly as part of an aid project for the village. The cover story was that it was to serve as a school and a community shelter.

Bolan dropped the MP-5 and fisted the Beretta and the Desert Eagle. He glided along the building’s edge until he came within yards of a door. He heard the click of a door latch and, a moment later, the steel door opened. A woman half walked, half stumbled out, a baby clutched to her. A bearded man, his red hair trimmed into a crew cut, stood behind her, his forearm wrapped around her throat as he used her for a human shield. She clutched a bundle to her bosom—a baby.

From behind his human shield, the man aimed an autoloading pistol at Bolan. The soldier’s eyes darted around as he sought a decent shot with Beretta.

He saw nothing.

JENNIFER KINSEY WINCED as Jon Stone hit her square between the shoulder blades. The blow launched her into a room that resembled a makeshift command center, with a bank of television monitors, computers and other high-tech equipment.

Kinsey felt Stone behind her before he touched her. When he did make contact, it was painful. He drove a fist into her kidneys, driving her to her knees. Grabbing a fistful of her hair, he forced her back to her feet.

Stone took a few steps forward, wheeled and pinned her under his cold stare. He nodded over his shoulder at the security monitors as they conveyed the carnage unfolding outside. A big man had waded into the middle of Stone and al-Shoud’s gunners and, from what Kinsey saw, had unleashed hell on them.

“Friend of yours?” Stone asked.

Kinsey shrugged. “Maybe. Does he scare you?”

Stone’s lip curled into a sneer. “Nobody scares me, honey. You should know that.”

“James Lee must have scared you. Or you wouldn’t have killed him.”

“Lee was a paper pusher. Killing him was just business.”

“Business for who?”

“Get it straight—I ask the questions, you answer.”

Kinsey’s eyes narrowed. “Simple rules for a simple man.”

“You know, for a lady, you got some real clangers. Who knows you saw me?”

“Everyone.”

“Care to elaborate?”

“No.”

Stone stepped forward, crowding Kinsey. She felt her heart slam in her chest and her lips go dry as he did. He pressed his Glock to her forehead, used it to sweep aside a lock of her hair. The muzzle left a cold trail on the skin it touched. Despite her bravado, Kinsey was scared. Stone was a sociopath and he’d kill her without remorse. Her only lever, the only thing keeping her alive, was information.

That and Stone’s propensity toward underestimating women.

Kinsey was a trained agent. She could hold her own against any man. Stone knew this about her but chose to bind her hands in front of her, leaving her in a position to strike out at him.

More motion flashed on the television monitors. A glance told Kinsey that the lone warrior had blazed through the exterior guards and was making his way through al-Shoud’s compound.

“You tried to contact someone. Who was it?”

Kinsey shook her head. “No one.”

His moves a blur, he cracked her once in the jaw. Her head snapped back hard and a coppery taste filled her mouth.

Blood.

Son of a bitch.

Point Of Betrayal

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