Don Pendleton

The Killing Rule


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I—”

      “Shut your cakehole!” Teeth flew as Lunk swung the light machine gun by the barrel like a cricket bat. The man dropped unconscious and drooling blood. “Bloody hit men.” He tossed the AUG into the river, then helped Lord William into the van as Bolan slid behind the wheel.

      “Bill?”

      “Yes, Cooper?”

      “We’re going to need some men.”

      The baron smiled wearily as Bolan pulled away from Aegis. “Oh, I have a few in mind.”

      CHAPTER SEVEN

      Guernsey

      It had taken two days to get back to Lord William’s manor in the Channel Islands. Bolan had assumed both the British and American embassies were being watched, so they had simply driven to Belgium. At the U.S. Embassy Bolan had used their satellite link to download his PDA into the Farm’s computers. Lunk had started making phone calls. Lord William had rented a French turbo-charged Socata Trinidad aircraft and flown them to the neighboring island of Jersey. From there he had hired a fishing captain he knew to sail them to Guernsey in the dead of night.

      They sat in front of the fire and compared notes and files. Lord William had filled Bolan in on his peer. Lord Ian Parkhurst was a hereditary earl, a senior member of the House of Lords, and sat on the Appellate Committee of Law Lords. As a teenaged lieutenant in World War II he had won two wound stripes and the Victoria Cross in desperate rear guard actions during the terrible withdrawal at Dunkirk. He’d twice been a British ambassador, and he’d been knighted for his philanthropic activities in former British colonies. He was a very wealthy man with international business interests and despite being a Lord he was very active in the liberal British Labor Party. He lent his name, money and political clout to a number of British environmental and political activist groups.

      None of which explained why he’d sent men to kill Lord William in Amsterdam.

      Bolan knew that with a man of Lord Ian’s wealth, influence, title and popularity he could put a smoking gun in his lordship’s hand and still get zero cooperation from MI-5 or any other British law-enforcement agency. Bolan would have to gather the evidence himself. No one would help him, no one would thank him, and indeed he would be resisted all the way if not arrested and deported.

      Most of the news was bad.

      McCarter had phoned from London. Assistant Director Finch had been cordial but had little new information to offer. The barristers of Sylvette MacJory, Ruud Heitinga, Kew Timmer and Guy Diddier had arranged for their clients’ release on bail, and all four had promptly dropped off the face of the planet. MI-5 had no idea of their whereabouts.

      Lord William was wanted for questioning in the Netherlands regarding his role in the firefight at the Aegis offices in Amsterdam. Clive Jennings was wanted for similar questioning. According to Dutch authorities and Interpol, Mr. Jennings’s whereabouts was currently unknown.

      The first thing to come out of the stolen files from Aegis was the current roster. There were 315 men and seven women on it, each with an accompanying personal file. The majority of the contractors were former soldiers in the British and American armed forces with a sprinkling of other nationalities. Most of the active ones were working as VIP protection contractors in Afghanistan and to a lesser extent Iraq and Pakistan. A few were doing similar work in Central and South America, mostly Colombia. Again there was a sprinkling of strange and out-of-the-way destinations but all could be classified as world “trouble spots” where above-average men of above-average martial ability could expect to be paid top dollar for their skills and services.

      That was one of the problems. The mission profiles were not matching up with reality. Ruud Heitinga and Kew Timmer were supposedly in Afghanistan at the moment. According to the files, Guy Diddier and Miss MacJory were currently on jobs in Vietnam.

      The next problem was that neither Lord William nor Lunk knew very many of the men on the list. They’d been out of the game for a decade. Most of the names they did know were on separate inactive and reserve lists of old soldiers like themselves. Nevertheless they knew a few, and Lunk had been making some calls. Lunk swallowed a pint of ale in a gulp. “Well, the good news is Partridge is in and ready for anything. He got hold of Layland and Layland got hold of Lovat. Lovat thinks Thapa might be in, but only if you ask him personal.”

      “Thappy!” Lord William straightened in his chair. “By God, we could use that little bugger!”

      Bolan glanced at files. Alvin Partridge was a fellow Welshman and fellow Royal Marine of Lunk’s. He’d made Mountain Leader Grade 2 in the Mountain and Arctic Warfare Cadre. Nick Lovat had been a corporal in the U.K.’s 5th Airborne Brigade and a sniper. Scott Layland was a former Australian SAS sergeant.

      Bolan paused at the next file. Thapa Pun had been a member of Queen Elizabeth’s own 6th Gurkha Rifles and gone on to join the Gurkha Independent Parachute Company. He’d served on detachment to the Sultan of Brunei, returned to Nepal and then joined the Indian army’s 8th Gorkha Rifles and reached the Indian NCO rank of subedar. He’d been decorated in all three services, and had seen heavy counterinsurgency fighting in Kashmir.

      “Ah, Thappy.” Lord William sighed into his whiskey. “I swear the man has the power to turn himself bloody invisible. We had some trouble in Africa back in the day with some locals. They called themselves revolutionaries, but they were hill bandits, pure and simple. Knew the jungle, though. So Thappy goes walkabout, lurking as is his wont, for a couple of weeks. I swear, it got to the point all he had to do was carve his sign on a tree, and the jungle emptied like a bloody vacuum.”

      Bolan smiled. The “happy warriors” of Nepal had earned a fearsome reputation as jungle fighters in their centuries of service in the British military. Many legends had sprung up around them, many of them specifically about the huge, curved, kukri knife. Rumor had it that once a Gurkha drew his knife it could not be sheathed until it had drawn blood. That wasn’t true, but the Gurkhas themselves had done nothing to discourage it. Throughout British military history, riots and even small unit engagements had ended abruptly or resulted in panicked routs at the sight of Gurkha riflemen drawing their foot-long knives.

      “A wizard with a bloody wok, by God!” Lunk enthused. The giant Welshman’s life seemed to revolve mostly around his stomach. “One always eats well with Thappy about. We’ll be lucky to get him.”

      Bolan was about to take on a knight and lord of the realm with God only knew how many professional mercenaries and the Irish Republican Army in his back pocket. He’d take every Gurkha rifleman he could get.

      “Got hold of Otto.” Lunk shook his head. “He’s back in bloody Nigeria. He says he’ll come, but he’s broke. We’ll have to send him a ticket.”

      Bolan scanned the list. Otto Owu had been born in England of Yoruba parents. He had spent a great deal of time shuttling back and forth between the U.K. and Nigeria before enlisting as a teenager. He had made corporal in the Royal Welch Fusiliers. Bolan noted he’d earned his expert rating in rifle, pistol and light machine gun and had served a tour in Northern Ireland. It also mentioned that he’d currently been spending time as a hunting guide in Africa, which meant he was a tracker. “Is that a problem?”

      Lord William stared into his whiskey. “Well, Cooper…”

      “Bill? Call me Matt.”

      “Matt, do you remember that story about being between fortunes for Clive?”

      Bolan sighed. “You weren’t making it up.”

      “’Fraid not, old boy.” He gestured around the manor. “This bit of sod is just about all I have left. Well, and Lunk. But he’s strictly a volunteer. The rest of the men will come out of loyalty, and face anything, but they’ll expect to see something for their trouble at the end of it.”

      Bolan considered his money belt. “Will a hundred thousand pounds get the ball rolling?”

      The baron waggled his snowy eyebrows gleefully. “You know, it just might.”