Don Pendleton

Terror Trail


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THE FIRST shots over the phone, then silence as Samir’s cell hit the ground and shattered.

       He considered the implications. Taking it to the worst conclusion, he saw his cover blown, too. Which left him with a single option. He needed to get out before they came for him. That was a given. If Samir had been taken down Lang would be next.

       Taj?

       Hand of Allah.

       So Ariq Taj was a cop in the Yemeni police force. Lang experienced momentary surprise. Being a local cop would give Taj access to intelligence files and the ability to send information to Hand of Allah. Lang might have been surprised at the revelation, but he had been too long in the CIA to be shocked.

       Lang had never divulged his real reason for being in Yemen. His cover as a dealer in local antiquities had hidden his CIA affiliation. The same with Samir. They were dealer and assistant. And that had lasted for Lang’s entire time in the region. So where had it gone wrong? What had given Taj his connection? He admitted Samir, or even himself, might have made a slip. Enough for Taj to draw his own conclusions.

       Lang and Samir had been trying to track down Hand of Allah and their training camp. Perhaps their covert investigations had been exposed. Perhaps through Jahir inadvertently. Now it seemed the roles had been reversed and Hand of Allah had tracked him.

       Son of a bitch.

       He considered his options.

       There were no options.

       No options at all.

       He had to get clear. He was one man. With no backup. If Samir was dead there was nothing Lang could do. Not now. He needed to place himself on some safe ground, with the Agency behind him. Then they could put out feelers. Try to find out what had happened to Samir. If he was still alive, Hand of Allah would use him as leverage in some kind of propaganda exercise. The radical Muslim groups never wasted an opportunity. They would parade Samir in front of their cameras. Put on a show painting themselves as beleaguered freedom fighters and threatening to publicly execute Samir as a puppet of the Great Satan. The Islamic terrorists were nothing if not relentlessly predictable.

       So Lang needed to get out of Yemen and take it from there, because Hand of Allah would want him for the same reasons they would want Samir.

       To show him off. A CIA agent would be one hell of a prize exhibit.

       He took a breath. He didn’t panic. It wasn’t in his makeup.

       He made his way to the small, dusty office in back. There was an old iron safe where he kept his briefcase. The case held his passport and identity papers. There was also a substantial amount of U.S. dollars. He took the case and placed it on his desk. Next to it was his CIA-issue laptop, a powerful machine. Lang powered it up and logged on the local internet. He tapped in the code that would link him to Langley through a series of remote servers that fed into a satellite system. Once he had his connection, Lang downloaded the hard drive’s content to the CIA master databank. The data listed his latest reports and observations. When the download was complete Lang sent an email to his department chief, letting him know what had happened and requesting a retrieval operation. The email was answered within a couple of minutes. There was also a link to a CIA procedure that would, when initiated, strip out the laptop’s contents. It would wipe the hard drive and then enter a virus to virtually kill the machine. Lang hit the key and saw the program start to work.

       He took out his phone, deleted all call logs and numbers. He opened the phone and took out the chip card, snapping it in two and crushing it under foot. He had a clean cell phone in his desk. He kept it charged, though he had never used it. It was single-use burn phone. Untraceable. Right now it was his connection to Langley if he tapped in the number carried in his head.

       He wasn’t sure what made him pause, turning his head to pick up the noise from the yard at the rear of the warehouse.

       Then it hit him.

       There was no noise.

       It had been the absence of sound that had drawn his attention.

       Lang made his way through the shadowed warehouse and out the rickety rear door.

       When Lang stepped outside, the utter silence struck him as odd. There should have been a labor crew noisily filling the rear yard.

       But the yard was deserted. Only a faint misting of dust hung in the air, showing where the crew had hastily departed. To his right was the crude metal brazier where the crew hung their large tea kettles. Lang could smell the brewing tea. Saw the enamel mugs scattered across the dusty ground, spilled liquid soaking into the parched earth.

       He slid his right hand under his jacket, reaching for his holstered pistol. It was then he heard a faint whisper of sound behind him and felt the undeniable pressure of a weapon’s muzzle grind against his spine.

       “Not a wise thing to do, Mr. Lang.”

       Lang took his hand away from his pistol. He held both hands away from his body, offering no resistance.

       “I know you.”

       “Yes. Ariq Taj, Mr. Lang. To be precise, Inspector Ariq Taj, Yemeni police.”

       Taj moved around to face Lang. As he did another weapon was pressed against the American’s spine.

       “What has happened to Samir?” Lang asked.

       Taj shifted from one foot to the other, shrugging his skinny shoulders. He was overly thin, his clothes hanging loosely from his bony frame.

       “He has joined all the other traitors who betray our cause,” he said.

       “Son of a bitch,” Lang said. “You call him a traitor.”

       Taj actually smirked, like a schoolboy in on a joke.

       “Of course. He worked for you, Mr. Lang of the CIA.” He saw the recognition in the American’s eyes. “Oh, yes, we knew. Do you think we of Hand of Allah are just ignorant Muslims? That we know nothing?”

       For a moment Lang forgot about the gun pressed to his spine. He lunged forward, toward Taj, but the man was faster. His right hand swept up from where it was partially hidden. He was holding a large stainless-steel .357 Magnum Desert Eagle. The weapon looked too large for his slim hand. He slammed the heavy pistol across the side of Lang’s face, flaying the cheek open to the bone. The blow was brutal, dropping Lang to his knees. Blood welled up from the deep gash, streaming down Lang’s cheek and dripping from his chin. With a soft, almost gleeful exclamation, Taj lashed out with his booted foot, crushing Lang’s nose and causing more blood to gush.

       Taj turned and swept his arm to draw in more of his team, who had been waiting at the far side of the yard. They descended on the dazed American. Rough hands hauled his arms behind him and his wrists were lashed together with coarse rope. He was seized by the arms and dragged out of the yard to one of a pair of waiting SUVs. Lang was manhandled to the lead vehicle and flung inside. A black cloth hood was yanked down over Lang’s head.

       One of Taj’s men held up Lang’s laptop. Taj nodded.

       “I am sure he has wiped the memory. Bring it anyway. Anything else in the office?”

       “His safe was open. It was empty. His briefcase has money and papers in it.”

       “Then let us go. Lang wanted to find our camp. We will show him.”

       The crew piled into the SUVs and they moved off.

       A few minutes later the warehouse was demolished by an explosion. Flames engulfed the wrecked building, thick smoke rising above the surrounding rooftops.

      CHAPTER EIGHT

      Lang had no idea how long they had been traveling. The foul-smelling hood over his head left him in total darkness. His injuries had caused him considerable pain, and in addition to those, his captors had punched and kicked him into near unconsciousness. He lay now on the floor of the SUV, aware of his predicament. Taj and his Islamic thugs were in full control.