"Дон Пендлтон. Doomsday Disciples ("Палач" #49) " - читать интересную книгу автора Tommy frowned.
"Professional's the word, all right," he answered. "Somebody led those boys around the block and met 'em coming back. They were good - handpicked - but they couldn't measure up." Minh made a sour face. His voice was tight. "Again 'somebody.' Is there any indication of our enemy's identity? His strength?" Tommy shook his head, dejected. "Lester - at the gatehouse - lived long enough to say there was one man in the Caddy with the girl. No way to tell about the ambush. From the looks, it could've been an army." "No." His military mind was circling the problem, probing for solutions. "I do not think an army. If our enemies were certain..." He let the statement trail away, unfinished. Leaning back in his swivel chair, Minh made a steeple of his fingers and focused on them. Calling up the monastic training of his youth, he made his mind a blank, the better to concentrate his full attention on the puzzle. If his enemies were conscious of the plan, if they had evidence to move against him, federal officers would be knocking at the door with arrest warrants. The Americans were formalistic in their dealings with suspicious characters, affording common thugs a battery of rights that often made conviction an impossibility. If police overstepped their bounds, the fact was trumpeted on radio and television, plastered all across the headlines. Frequently, it was the officer who found himself in court. their decadent society, use their precious laws and Constitution to protect himself. A subtle man, he also appreciated irony. But if the girl had not been rescued by police - which she almost certainly had not - then his problem remained unsolved. There were agencies, of course, which handled covert operations for the government. Once again, however, the Americans roped themselves with limitations and restrictions: their CIA could only operate outside the country, and the FBI was strictly a domestic agency, under constant scrutiny from critics in the press. Coordination was a problem, and Occidentals seemed to take a masochistic pleasure in reviewing every foible, every failure of their "secret" agents. The Soviets, of course, had no such weakness, and Minh thought at once of Mitchell Carter. The man himself would not be capable of such a daring rescue, but he could hire professionals, even as he had recruited Tommy Booth and Minh's troop of "elders." It was not beyond the realm of possibility, and yet... Minh frowned as he wrestled with the question of a motive. On the surface, Carter was an ally, but it never paid to underestimate the KGB's duplicity. Minh viewed the Russians with particular contempt. If Americans were greedy pigs, the Soviets were little more than traitors, their epic revolution long degenerated into something like a form of leftist fascism. He could tolerate Carter and the KGB, as his country tolerated Soviet |
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