Extreme Justice. Don Pendleton

Extreme Justice - Don Pendleton


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Whether Favor testified or not, his chances of survival on the street—or anywhere outside protective custody—were slim to none.

      “Why should he help you, then?”

      “It’s my job to persuade him,” Bolan answered.

      “And may I ask how you intend to do that?”

      Bolan frowned, making his right-hand turn, dodging a motorcyclist who seemed to think lane markers were an optical illusion. His answer was curt and to the point.

      “I’ll let him flip a coin.”

      “I’m sorry?”

      “Give the man a choice,” Bolan elaborated. “He can deal with me right now, or with someone else’s shooters down the line.”

      “I see. And if he’s not persuaded by your logic?”

      “Favor’s coming with me one way or another,” Bolan said. “This time next week, he’ll be in New York City, on a witness stand.”

      “What happens if you take him all that way and he refuses to cooperate in court?”

      “Somebody else’s problem,” Bolan answered. “My job is finished on delivery.”

      They rode in silence for a time, then Bolan saw the sign and said, “Fifth Avenue.”

      “Go west,” Herrera said. “His house will be the third one on our left.”

      Bolan followed her directions, thankful that the major rush of traffic was behind them. Fifth Avenue was quiet by comparison, with stately homes on either side.

      Here’s money, Bolan thought as he counted houses on the left.

      “You see it, yes?” she asked. “Just there, the brick and stone.”

      “I see it,” Bolan said. “And he’s got company.”

      GIL FAVOR DIDN’T SIMPLYlike his privacy. He craved it, needed to be left alone the same way that he needed food, water and oxygen. It was the best—perhaps the only—way for him to stay alive.

      Throughout his forty-seven years, no single interaction with the other members of his species had left Favor with a sense of what his fellow humans called fulfillment. Granted, he was happy while stealing and spending someone else’s hard-earned money, even found release with prostitutes who idolized him for an hour with the meter running.

      But as far as anything resembling a normal life?

      Not even close.

      That was to be expected now, given the circumstances of his present situation. He had millions of dollars in a bank account the U.S. government could never crack, lived well beyond the reach of federal warrants and didn’t really mind being a man without a country in his middle age.

      He was about to pour himself another after-dinner brandy when the first alarm chimed softly. Nothing to get overwrought about, beyond the fact that any chime at all meant trespassers outside his home.

      Now what the hell?

      Favor had never been a violent man—well, almost never. He had earned the bulk of his ill-gotten gains by cooking the books and washing blood money for heavy-duty predators, skimming off a portion for himself when the distractions of a thug’s life blinded him to what was happening beneath his very nose.

      Still, the survival reflex was as strong within Gil Favor as in any other human being who had lived by wits and guile for the majority of his or her life.

      A second, louder chime told Favor that his uninvited guests were drawing closer to the house, along the driveway from the street outside. He wasn’t expecting any deliveries, but his mind still offered innocent suggestions for the visit.

      Fat chance, however.

      In four years and counting in his minipalace, he’d never had a salesman on his doorstep. No neighbors visited without an invitation, and he hadn’t issued any.

      That meant trouble was coming, one way or another.

      Favor set down his brandy snifter, rose from his recliner and retrieved the sawed-off shotgun from its hidden cubbyhole beside the liquor cabinet. The first cartridge was rock salt, for a wake-up call; the four that followed it were triple-aught buckshot.

      “You should’ve picked another house,” Gil Favor muttered as he left his study, moving briskly toward the parlor and front door.

      THE OCCUPANTS OF TWO CARS were unloading near the mansion’s broad front porch as Bolan passed the driveway, counting heads. He saw no uniforms, no proper suits that would’ve indicated plainclothes officers.

      “They’re not police,” he said.

      “What, then?” Blanca Herrera asked. “Maybe he has a dinner party.”

      “Doubtful,” Bolan said. “You saw them, right? They don’t fit with the neighborhood.”

      “He is a fugitive from justice,” she reminded him. “Why would his friends be chosen from the social register?”

      “Good point.”

      But Bolan knew Gil Favor wasn’t one for making friends. And if he did, the self-made billionaire would handpick those who best served his camouflage of affluent respectability.

      “Why are you stopping?”

      “I just want to check this out,” Bolan explained. “If they’re sitting down to surf and turf, we’ll wait and tag him after they go home.”

      “And if it’s something else?” Herrera asked. “What then?”

      He nosed the Ford into an alley two doors down from Favor’s driveway, switching off the lights and engine. “Then I intervene,” he said.

      “Against eight men?”

      “I’ll do my best.”

      She scrambled out to join him in the darkness, while he was extracting hardware from the larger of two duffel bags on the backseat.

      “You can’t be serious!”

      “I’ve left the keys,” he told her. “If it gets too raucous, or I’m not back here in fifteen minutes tops, clear out.”

      Herrera gnawed her lower lip, then said, “I’m coming with you.”

      “No, you’re not.”

      “How will you stop me?”

      He pinned her with a glare that made her take a slow step backward. “This is my part of the deal,” he said. “You got me here. Now step aside and let me work.”

      “I’m fully trained,” she challenged.

      “Not for this.”

      “How would you know?”

      He fought an urge to squeeze her slender neck just hard enough to break her grip on consciousness for twenty minutes, give or take. But what might happen if he left her in the car that way?

      “All right,” he said through gritted teeth. “You asked for it.”

      Her smile was fleeting but triumphant. Bolan wondered if she would live to regret her rash choice.

      Already armed with a Beretta Model 92, snug in its armpit rig, Bolan retrieved a classic Uzi submachine gun from his duffel bag of lethal gear, spent three seconds attaching a suppressor to its threaded muzzle, filled his pockets with spare magazines to feed the SMG and clipped a flash-bang grenade to his belt.

      His overanxious sidekick wore some kind of smallish pistol tucked inside her waistband. From his quick glimpse of its grip and the extended magazine, Bolan surmised either an HK4 or Walther PPK. She didn’t ask for anything more powerful as he prepared to leave the car, and Bolan hoped that she would have the sense to simply stay out of harm’s way.

      Assuming


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