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    The Nightmare begins

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      Rourke also assumed they were getting cut to pieces from the air.

      The shirt Rourke was holding against Rubenstein's open wound was saturated with

      blood now and Rourke pulled his handkerchief from his pocket and placed it over

      the shirt to absorb more of the blood.

      He looked down to Rubenstein's face—the younger man was pale, the circles under

      his eyes bluish in the harsh light. The pulse was weak and the breathing

      labored.

      Rourke looked up as he heard boots sloshing across the mud toward him. It was

      Natalie, holding a Kalashnikov pattern assault rifle in her right hand, a Soviet

      officer and two enlisted men with her. She stopped, standing in front of Rourke

      where he knelt in the mud, holding Rubenstein. "John—I've identi­fied myself to

      the commander—Captain Machenkov. I had to tell him both of you were my

      prisoners. But don't worry. I'll straighten everything out with Karamatsov. Paul

      will get the best medical care we can give him and you and Paul and I will be

      flown out of here in a few minutes to Galveston where we have a small base

      already operational. I know there's a field hospital there and between what you

      can do and our own doctors, I know Paul will be all right. Don't worry."

      "What now?" Rourke said, looking up at her.

      "I'm going to have to take your guns—the .45s. I told them you were my

      prisoners, but you have saved my life and because of the situation here on the

      ground I'd let you remain armed. It was the best thing I could think of—they

      don't speak English. This officer is a doctor."

      Rourke glanced around the camp. Mentally and physically he shrugged, looking

      back up at Natalie, saying, "I can't move my right hand until we get a better

      bandage worked up for Paul—explain that to the doctor. If you need my guns now,

      you'll have to take them yourself."

      "John—please don't try anything—I know you, remember. And I promised, everything

      will be all right. After Paul is well, you and Paul can leave— with your weapons

      and everything. I've even arranged for your motorcycles to be taken along."

      "You really believe that?" Rourke said in a low whisper.

      "Karamatsov is my husband, John—I really believe you'll go free. He'll do as I

      ask."

      "Mrs. Karamatsov, huh? Any kids?"

      "Don't be funny," she snapped. "No one knows about it—except for you, now."

      With his left hand, Rourke opened his leather jacket, exposing one of the twin

      .45s under his arms. "Go ahead—without the right facilities, Paul's going to

      bleed to death. Go ahead—take them," and Rourke held open his coat. Natalie

      reached down, grasping one of his pistols, her face inches from his.

      She whispered, "There wasn't any other way— believe me."

      Rourke said nothing.

      Chapter Thirty-Nine

      Rourke ran his hands through his hair and stood under the steaming hot water. It

      was the first real shower he had had since the war had started and he was mildly

      surprised that he hadn't contracted head lice or something worse. He had washed

      his hair and his body at least four times and now stood under the steaming

      water, letting it work itself across his aching muscles and joints—he had been

      more tired than he had realized. Rubenstein was in surgery and Natalie had

      convinced Rourke that the doctors would do all they could. Rourke doubted little

      the efficacy of Russian medicine—they had pioneered a great deal since the close

      of World War II and he respected their methods. There was an armed guard

      standing outside the shower room, and after Rourke was finished and dressed, the

      next step would be actually meeting Karamatsov—and then the whole thing would

      start, Rourke knew. He closed his eyes and let the water splash across his face…

      Wearing clean clothes—they had been washed for him—and his boots, he walked

      along the corridor between the four armed uniformed men toward the door at the

      far end. The complex was entirely under­ground, and Rourke supposed it had once

      been used by American forces. Above it was a small air base where the Soviet

      helicopter had landed. After Natalie had given some instructions to the KGB

      squad that had met them on the ground, Rubenstein had been whisked away by

      medics already waiting, and Rourke had been taken below then as well. He had

      been treated well, even given hot food—but all under the eye of armed guards. He

      assumed that by now Natalie had rejoined her husband—he had suspected the

      marriage—and Rourke also assumed that if the girl had been sincere in her

      promise, she had by now realized that it had been a promise she would be unable

      to keep.

      No plan of escape had yet presented itself and Rourke realized he could do

      nothing really until Rubenstein's condition stabilized. He hoped he could stall

      until then, but he doubted it. Karamatsov would assume that he was still active

      with the CIA and act accordingly. Rourke absently wondered if, were the shoe on

      the other foot, he would do any differently.

      The guards stopped, the lead man on the right knocking on the single light gray

      door. Rourke heard something in Russian, then the door opened. Kara­matsov stood

      in the doorway. Rourke had seen the man before. He said, "Major—haven't seen you

      since Latin America—how many years ago?"

      "John Rourke—the middle name is Thomas—you have a wife—"

      Rourke interrupted. "Many men have wives, major." Rourke's eyes were smiling but

      his voice was level, even.

      As if he hadn't taken note of Rourke's comment, Karamatsov continued, "Yes—a

      wife and two chil­dren—a boy and girl, if I remember your file cor­rectly. I see

      you are still active in the Central Intelligence Agency."

      "Where do you see that, major?"

      "Let us talk inside." As the guards started into the office, Karamatsov waved

      them away, saying in Russian, "He cannot escape—wait at the end of the

      corridor." Then, turning to Rourke, he said in English, "You speak our language,

      don't you?"

      "You know I do," Rourke said, his voice sound­ing tired to himself.

      "Yes, I know—come in." And Karamatsov stepped aside and Rourke walked into the

      office. There was a dirty ring on the wall behind the desk at the far end of the

      long, low-ceilinged room—Rourke assumed there had been an air force or other

      military insignia on the wall, taken down after the neutron bombing of the area

      had killed most of the resistance and the Soviets had occupied the facility. As

      the helicopter carrying himself and Rubenstein and the girl had swept over

      Galveston coming into the base, the sun was already up, and Rourke had seen much

      of the real estate below them generally intact, but no signs of life, the trees

      and other plant life dead—even the grass brown and withered.

      He saw Natalie sitting on a soft chair by the wall flanking Karamatsov's desk.

      She looked at him and smiled. Rourke sat down in the chair opposite Karamatsov's

      desk and waited, hearing the soft footsteps of the KGB officer coming across the

      carpet behind him, then seeing the major circling the desk. Karamatsov stood

      behind the desk for a moment, smiling, then sat down, saying, "So—I understand

      you saved Natalia's life—you and the injured one— Rubens
    tein. He's a Jew, isn't

      he?"

      "I thought you were a communist, not a Nazi."

      "We have found Jews to be troublemakers in the past—I was only curious. We as

      yet have located nothing about him in our data banks. He is new to your agency?"

      Rourke started to answer, but Natalie cut him off. "Vladmir—stop it! I have told

      you—Rourke no longer works for the CIA and Rubenstein is just a magazine editor

      who fell in with John after their plane crashed."

      "Then what about this?" and Karamatsov ham­mered his fist down on the desk,

      Rourke's identity card revealing the reserve connection with the CIA in his

      hand, the same card Rourke had shown on the airplane before he had taken over

      the controls after the pilots had been blinded the night of the war.

      "You know they have a reserve list," the girl said.

      "That is easy for you to say, Natalia—you are tired, this man saved your life,

      you have both undergone a great deal together. But I will handle this!"

      Rourke reached across onto the end of Karamatsov's desk, opened a small wooden

      box there and saw cigars inside. He took one, unbidden, and then reached for the

      desk lighter. As Karamatsov reached toward his hand, Rourke eyed the man and

      Kara­matsov drew his hand away. The KGB major said, "You apparently were given

      to understand by Captain Tiemerovna that you would be released after the Jew was

      treated by our doctors. You will not be released, of course, as I'm sure you

      realized. But, you will have the opportunity of assuring your continued safety

      and good treatment, simply by telling us everything you know about the remaining

      strength of the CIA in your country, all that you have learned in your travels

      since the purported crashing of your commercial jet—everything. If you do this,

      you will remain alive and be treated fairly. Otherwise, I need not be specific.

      We are both men of the world."

      Rourke studied the tip of his cigar, saying to Karamatsov, "No, I didn't believe

      her—but I'm glad she believed herself. I'm no longer in the CIA, haven't been

      for a long time. And if I were, I wouldn't tell you anything anyway—you want

      information, get out the guys with the pentathol and the hypos, then you can

      find out I don't know a damned thing. If you want to know what I saw after the

      plane crashed, I'll tell you—it's no military secret. Every town we passed was

      either abandoned or knocked off by the brigand gangs—like the people your troops

      grabbed back on the plateau when they picked us up. At least you guys did

      somethin' right."

      "He's right," Natalie said, her voice sounding low and cold to Rourke.

      "Then I will tell you some things, Rourke—your president committed—he is dead.

      You have a new president—Samuel Chambers. We captured him less than an hour

      before you arrived here. He is resting comfortably under guard in this same

      complex. I will give you time to rest as well—while the surgery is completed on

      your fellow agent. Then—"

      "He is not my fellow agent," Rourke almost hissed, hammering his right fist down

      on the edge of Karamatsov's desk.

      Karamatsov leaned back, a smile crossing his lips, saying, "Rourke—I remember

      when we met in Latin America. You were so confident, so good at what you

      did—even Natalia commented about it. I understand from what she has reported to

      me that your talents have remained undiminished. If you now show the

      intelligence you did then, you will make a decision— a decision for life, rather

      than death. Natalia tells me you still entertain the hopes that your wife and

      children survived the bombing. As well you should. I will propose to you

      something that you may wish to consider.

      "If you show what you are really made of, if you are the man of wisdom Natalia

      has told me of," Kara­matsov went on," you will not only survive—you can become

      one of us. We will help you to find your family if they still survive. You can

      have a position of prominence in the new order—"

      Rourke interrupted him. "You sound like a Gestapo officer from The Late Show or

      something. Bite my ass."

      Karamatsov stood, his face livid, his voice quaking with rage, "You speak to me

      this—"

      Rourke, his voice barely above the level of a whisper, said, "I'd chew you up

      and spit you out if those guards weren't out there, Karamatsov. And I'll tell

      you this. You'd better make sure your people keep a good eye on me, or kill me

      right now, or you're gonna wind up with the prettiest widow in the KGB." And

      Rourke glanced toward Natalie, watched her face, emotionless, watched her hands

      bunching into nervous-looking little fists.

      Karamatsov pushed a buzzer on his desk and in seconds the door behind Rourke

      opened and Rourke could hear the guards coming. He didn't turn around. In

      Russian, Karamatsov, his voice still unsteady, rasped, "Take this man out and

      secure him in the rooms on the lower level—watch him!"

      Rourke smiled, standing. He set the burning cigar down on the desk, stubbing it

      on the blotter and letting it lie there. "Get out," Karamatsov growled in

      English.

      Chapter Forty

      Captain Reed sucked on the empty pipe in his mouth, glanced one more time over

      the shoulder of the radio operator and turned on his heel and started through

      the doorway. He strode down the narrow basement hallway and up the stairs two at

      a time to the main floor of the house. He could hear through the open doors to

      the library the voice of Colonel Darlington, calm, collected, and the raving of

      Randan Soames, the paramilitary commander. Soames was shouting, "Over a hundred

      of my men were killed by them gawd-damned commie bastards, colonel—and you want

      me to calm down!"

      Reed knocked on the door, then entered without waiting to be bidden to do so.

      Soames was starting to speak and Reed cut him off. "Colonel—I just checked down

      in the radio room personally. The frequency for the Harrier is open, and if

      Lieutenant Brennan were aboard, he'd be picking us up—I ordered a shutdown on

      that frequency. I figured the Russians could try and use it as long as we keep

      it open to get a fix on us. I think they got Brennan and captured the

      president."

      Soames was still talking, as if, Reed thought, what he had just said had no

      meaning. "They got more than a hundred of my boys while they was attackin' this

      gang of renegades up on some damned plateau out there in the middle of the night

      in a gawd-damned rainstorm. Just come down in their heli­copters nice as they

      pleased like they owned the whole damned place."

      "They do, for now at least," Colonel Darlington said, knitting his fingers

      together and glancing to Reed.

      Reed said to Soames, "Sir—haven't you heard what I said? I mean, the loss of

      your men is important, it's terrible—but they must have nailed President

      Chambers, when he landed in Galveston!"

      "We can get a new president," Soames said quietly,

      "No—we can get this one back," Darlington said. "I've been considering this, and

      I think Captain Reed and the others would agree with me. It's time we showed the

      Russians we can still fight. According to what's left of military intelligence

      in the Galveston a
    rea, the Russians have taken over one of our top secret air

      bases down there—I worked there for a time. The underground complex is hardened

      and would have protected anyone inside from a neutron air burst. They would have

      been trapped there until the Russians landed and by then it would have been too

      late. That air base is probably being used by the Russians right now—probably

      where they have Chambers. Probably got a couple hundred of our airmen imprisoned

      there too—wouldn't have had the time to get 'em out to a detention center, or

      the equipment free to do it with."

      "You want to make a strike, sir?" Reed stuffed tobacco into his pipe and looked

      at Darlington.

      "What do you think captain—your boys on the ground, some of my people in the air

      in some more of those Harriers—could we do it? Get in and get Chambers out,

      maybe free our boys—hurt the Russians a little and let 'em know we're still

      alive and kicking? Soames' men could back you up—he's got the numbers on his

      side there."

      "We could land about seventy-five miles from there, then push in."

      "Closer than that—I can get you within twenty miles of the base. You want to try

      it—they're your men. Reed?"

      Reed looked at the air force colonel and nodded, striking a match to his pipe.

      Soames was still muttering about the "gawd-damned commies."

      Chapter Forty-One

      Rourke heard a knock on the door of the small two-bunk room he was locked in,

      then the door opened and Natalie was standing there. She was wearing a

      long-sleeved white blouse, a black pleated skirt and low-heeled shoes, her hair

      styled, make-up—it was hard for Rourke to remember the way she had looked back

      on the plateau—the mud stained jeans, the wet hair plastered to her face. And

      she hadn't looked vastly different, just drier, in Karamatsov's office— Rourke

      checked his watch—three hours earlier. "May I come in, John?" she asked.

      "You run the place, I don't—come ahead, "Rourke told her, standing up as she

      entered the room.

      "I thought I'd let you know—they got Paul out of surgery and they're holding him

      in what you'd call intensive care—but he's fine. No major damage to the

      intestines or whatever—I don't know a lot about anatomy. They've got a tube in

     


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