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Detroit Combat

Page 14

by Randy Wayne White


  Hawker held his chest and rolled his head experimentally. “I don’t doubt it, Lester, but I’m in no mood for lectures. Besides, I’m out of the picture now. You people invited me in to give me a … what did you call it? Yeah, a screen test. Well, I just blew the screen test. So, if you don’t mind, I’ll just turn in my temporary security pass and head on back to my hotel. I think maybe soaking in a hot tub for three or four hours may make me feel well enough to get on a plane back to Florida.”

  “Just like that? What about the people who pulled so many strings to get you this far?”

  “You said it was a pass-or-fail test.”

  “That’s right.”

  “And one of your motorized hit ladies has just turned me into a statistic. A clean kill if I ever saw one.”

  “Nice back somersault you did too. Were you ever a gymnast?”

  “Just full of jokes, aren’t you?” Hawker began to dust off his jeans, then stopped suddenly. “Hey, wait a minute—why are you stalling? You don’t have to kill me now, do you? I mean, I came in here to your secret training installation and you showed me around, but now I’ve messed up the routine by failing your little test. What do you people do with outsiders who’ve seen too much?”

  “Aside from poke their eyes out with hot sticks, you mean?”

  “Come on, Lester, it’s a legitimate question.”

  “Then I’ll give you a legitimate answer—but let’s wait until after your evaluation.”

  Hawker looked at him with suspicion. “Why is it this is the first I’ve heard of any kind of evaluation?”

  Lester Rehfuss smiled. “Don’t you read the papers? It’s because the CIA is just plain sneaky.”

  Hawker shrugged and picked up the Colt .44, which lay several yards away where it had landed in the dirt. He clicked open the cylinder and began to eject the live round before he stopped and smiled wryly at Rehfuss. “Maybe I shouldn’t unload this thing?”

  “Do what you want, James. But slapping a loaded revolver down on the table isn’t going to make the man chairing your evaluation look any more kindly on you.”

  “Oh? And who’s that?”

  The smile faded from Rehfuss’s face. “Admiral Percival, my boss.”

  “Admiral?”

  “Unless you’re one of the two or three people in this whole world he actually likes, then he’s Max Percival. But you don’t have to worry about that, James. The admiral isn’t going to like you. He isn’t going to like you one little bit.…”

  Hawker followed Lester Rehfuss back down the dirt street, past the movie-set house facades and past the empty tanker truck. Children’s voices no longer floated from the nursery school—the reel-to-reel tape inside had been switched off. Up and down the street, CIA technicians were already busy replacing the plastic heads and trunks of the mannequins Hawker had “killed.” The mannequins were fixed on steel tracks for mobility, and thick black cables ran from their laser guns to an unseen source of power.

  The vigilante rubbed his chest thoughtfully. The firefight test had been lifelike, all right. He hoped he was never asked to try it again.

  The complex was located on the south side of Washington, D.C., not far from Bolling Air Force Base and the Naval Research Lab. Its entire ten acres was encircled by high military fencing, and camouflage netting covered the open areas. James Hawker had come here every day for the last three days. He had been interviewed by a dozen men whose last names he never knew. He had been asked searching questions by men in white smocks who he assumed were psychiatrists. He had been given a bank of written tests far more demanding than any he had ever taken in college or at the police academy in Chicago.

  And why?

  Because his friend and associate, Jacob Montgomery Hayes, one of the wealthiest men in the world, had sent a messenger to Hawker’s newly acquired fish shack on the west coast of Florida asking him to fly to Washington, D.C., immediately.

  No explanations were offered. And, from Hayes—a man Hawker respected and admired—none were required.

  Hawker caught the first flight from Miami to Washington International.

  Lester Rehfuss met him at the airport, showed him to his hotel, and finally gave him a short briefing on the terrorist bombings. That was on a Monday. Rehfuss told him that seven civilian houses, apparently at random, had been bombed by a person or persons unknown. Because the bombing of the Rutledge home was the most recent—it had occurred only three days before—Rehfuss went into greater detail about it. So far, twenty-seven innocent, unsuspecting men, women, and children had been murdered.

  The only survivor was Luke Rutledge, age sixteen, and he was now catatonic, so psychologically disturbed that he could not speak.

  Hawker tried to pry more information out of Rehfuss. Had he been ordered to Washington to help? Who was behind it? How could anyone be sure the bombings were random? Didn’t there have to be some pattern behind it?

  Rehfuss refused to answer. All he told Hawker was that he might be able to help, but first they had to be sure he was capable. Would Hawker submit to any tests asked of him?

  Hawker consented on the spot.

  It wasn’t until the next day he learned that Lester Rehfuss was with the CIA.

  Hawker followed Rehfuss out of the firefight test area past a line of big corrugated steel and brick buildings. The doors on all of them warned ABSOLUTELY NO ADMITTANCE WITHOUT CLEARANCE!

  Each door was guarded by a brace of Marines in battle dress.

  For the first time Hawker realized he had actually seen very little of the complex in his three days there.

  He wondered why he was being allowed to see more.

  A modern paved street ran along the stretch of buildings, but the only vehicles there were either jeeps or unmarked government cars in bland colors.

  Rehfuss stopped at a white-brick three-story house that looked like the solid old residence of a small-town doctor.

  “This is it,” he said.

  “Shouldn’t I change clothes? Wash up? Practice my Morse code?”

  “Smart ass.” He tossed Hawker the sport jacket he had been carrying for him. “Put this on—at least try to cover up that cannon you’ve got strapped under your arm. Like I said, the admiral isn’t going to like you much as it is.”

  Two Marines challenged their approach. Hawker had become used to the extreme security measures. They studied his Pliofilmed ID carefully, then they watched as first Rehfuss, then Hawker, touched their thumbs to the photoelectric eye after first inserting their IDs into the gray steel box beside the entrance.

  The computers would match their thumb prints against those on the IDs and those in the computer’s files.

  Almost immediately the doors swung open. The Marines did a salute arms as they went inside.

  Hawker had never been inside the building before. Unlike most of the office complexes, this one lacked the stark military atmosphere of gray steel desks and bare linoleum floors. There was carpeting and soft neon lighting. In each office vestibule serious-looking women wearing ID badges worked at desktop computers.

  “So where are we headed, oh, leader?” Hawker asked.

  Rehfuss stopped at the elevator and touched the button. “Do you like movies?”

  “What kind of movies?”

  “New movies.”

  Hawker shook his head. “Impossible. They stopped making movies when Cary Grant and John Wayne and David Niven left the business. Now they just make long TV programs. The male actors all go to the same hairstylist, and the female performers confuse bitchiness with acting. And if you can’t tell, no, I don’t like them.”

  “Don’t speak too quickly. We have one today you may like.”

  “Does it have a happy ending?”

  “Almost.”

  “Then don’t expect a glowing review.”

  Still another Marine ushered them into a darkened room where a cement floor sloped toward a screen the size of a picture window: a movie room. The seating area was small, though, only about tw
enty plush chairs. Between the seating area and the screen the floor flattened abruptly, and there was a large table.

  From the back of the room Hawker could see that five people sat in the front row. He couldn’t see their faces.

  Rehfuss took a seat midway down, and Hawker sat beside him. “Trying to humor me before I get my evaluation?”

  “If I were trying to humor you, I’d have brought popcorn,” Rehfuss said wryly. “Shut up and watch.”

  From the front row an older man with white hair and an anvil jaw turned slightly. “Is the applicant with you, Agent Rehfuss?”

  “He is, Admiral.”

  In a louder voice, the admiral said, “Roll the film, then.”

  Without any sign of a projector being switched on, the screen was suddenly illuminated. Hawker was surprised to see himself standing in the dirt street of the firefight range, just closing the cylinder of his Colt .44 magnum. On the right side of the screen digits measuring minutes, seconds, and hundredths of seconds timed him.

  The film was in color.

  James Hawker settled back and watched with interest. Why not? This would be like being favored with a preview of the way he knew he would someday die.…

  Buy Terror in D.C. Now!

  About the Author

  Randy Wayne White was born in Ashland, Ohio, in 1950. Best known for his series featuring retired NSA agent Doc Ford, he has published over twenty crime fiction and nonfiction adventure books. White began writing fiction while working as a fishing guide in Florida, where most of his books are set. His earlier writings include the Hawker series, which he published under the pen name Carl Ramm. White has received several awards for his fiction, and his novels have been featured on the New York Times bestseller list. He was a monthly columnist for Outside magazine and has contributed to several other publications, as well as lectured throughout the United States and travelled extensively. White currently lives on Pine Island in South Florida, and remains an active member of the community through his involvement with local civic affairs as well as the restaurant Doc Ford’s Sanibel Rum Bar and Grill.

  All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 1985 by Dell Publishing Co., Inc.

  Cover design by Andy Ross

  ISBN: 978-1-5040-2456-3

  This edition published in 2015 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

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