Soviet Specter Read online

Page 16


  “Come on, Johnny,” she said. “I’ll bet you’re handsome.” Bolan could tell she had begun to like the DEA agent after all they’d been through together. But she would get her revenge for the way he had treated her initially one way or another, and teasing him now was as good a way as any.

  Seven reached self-consciously into one of the sacks and pulled out a folded Harris tweed sport coat. “It was on sale,” he said, as if he’d done something wrong.

  “Put it on,” Polyakova encouraged him. “I want to see.”

  The DEA man’s face was redder than ever as he took off his jacket.

  The beautiful Russian woman took the threadbare sport coat and giggled. “I will throw this one away for you, Johnny,” she said. “You should have done that yourself a long time ago.”

  Bolan wouldn’t have guessed it was possible, but the DEA man turned yet a deeper shade of crimson as he stuck his arms into the new coat. “Hey, give me a break,” he said. He pulled several new shirts, a pair of jeans and a pair of corduroy slacks from the other bag and set them on the bed. Then he rolled up the plastic sacks and started to stick them in his suitcase.

  “Wait,” the woman said, frowning down at the crumpled plastic in the DEA man’s hands. “There’s something else in there.”

  Seven looked hesitantly at the beautiful Russian woman, then said, “Oh, what the hell.” He unrolled the sacks, shook them over the bed, and a Harris tweed driving cap fell out. He laughed apprehensively again. “I always kind of liked these things,” he said, then quickly added, “And it was on sale, too.”

  The Russian lifted the cap off the bed and placed it on his head. Her eyebrows lowered as she studied it for a moment, then adjusted it to a slight angle. “You will look dashing, Johnny,” she said, then looked down from the cap to the jacket. “What is remarkable, is that they even go well together.”

  “What is that supposed to—?” the DEA man started to say.

  She interrupted him. “Here,” she said, reaching down to the bed and lifting a cream-colored turtleneck. “Change your shirt.”

  Johnny Seven shrugged.

  Bolan cleared his throat. “If the fashion show is over now,” he said, “we all need to sit down and work out our battle plan.” He walked to the table by the window and took a seat. Polyakova joined him in the same chair she had occupied earlier.

  Seven took off his new jacket, then looked at Polyakova self-consciously before turning his back to her. Bolan saw him suck in his stomach as he stripped off Ontomanov’s tight stripes and pulled the turtleneck over his head before slipping back into his new Harris tweed. Bolan tried not to smile when the DEA man wore the cap to the table.

  But, after all, she had told him he looked dashing. And such words from a woman like Luiza Polyakova held their own kind of power.

  THE SMITH-WILLIAMS Art Gallery was several times larger than Polyakova’s Greenwich Village establishment. In addition to contemporary oil paintings, the building housed rooms devoted to watercolors, sculpture, chalk and charcoal drawings and the work of several well-known photographers. It was located six blocks down George Street on the same side of the street as the Durrants Hotel. Well within walking distance.

  Bolan hailed a cab just the same, directing the driver to take them several miles away—almost to Regent’s Park—before doubling back and arriving at the site from the other direction. The soldier, seated in the back of the taxi with Polyakova, kept an eye on the side-view mirror during the trip, watching for a tail. He saw none.

  Seven stayed in the front seat of the cab as Bolan and Polyakova got out. He would return to the Durrants, then walk back to the art gallery, arriving five to ten minutes after them in order to appear to be alone. Bolan didn’t expect anything to go down on this recon mission, but the DEA agent would serve as backup just in case it did.

  Bolan took the woman’s arm, waiting for one of London’s double-decker buses to pass before escorting her across the street. “You know your lines?” he asked quietly as they approached the glass door leading inside.

  “I think so,” the Russian woman said. She looked up at him and smiled, her green eyes dancing. She had shown more good humor in the past hour than she had the entire time the soldier had known her. Her mood change had begun as soon as he returned the impromptu kiss that had happened shortly after Johnny Seven left on his clothes shopping spree.

  The door was pushed outward by a man wearing a bright red doorman’s uniform, complete with cap and gold braid running down the shoulders. Bolan followed Polyakova into a foyer where they saw a guest book. Going immediately into the roles they had rehearsed only moments earlier, Polyakova said, “I’ll sign us in, sweetheart,” and stepped up to the podium where the book lay open. As instructed, the Russian woman wrote, “Mr. and Mrs. Matt Cooper, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.,” with the gold pen attached with a chain to the stand. She took Bolan’s arm and they stepped into the first room of the gallery.

  The room reminded Bolan of Polyakova’s own business back in New York. Paintings covered the walls, and more stood on easels in staggered rows throughout the area. The Russian took Bolan’s hand and pointed toward a painting to their right. “Look, darling,” she said excitedly. “I think that’s a Fielding. You know how you love his work. Let’s go see.” She led him down the row of pictures.

  They stopped in front of the painting to which she had pointed. The soldier pretended to study it as he scanned the room with his peripheral vision. A few minutes later he saw Seven, complete in new sport coat and cap, enter the gallery and begin browsing through the easels. There were perhaps two dozen other men and at least that many women viewing the oil works. But none of them matched the description of the man Gregor had sent them to kill.

  It was an interesting story Gregor had told Bolan, and in doing so he had probably revealed more about the Russians’ overall drug-smuggling operation than he’d realized. The setup in London was similar to the one in New York. A Rabashka-type character—Gregor had revealed no names, of course—accompanied the shipments from Moscow, where they were received at this gallery by the owner, Raymond Smith-Williams. Smith-Williams took possession, and then the “Ontomanov” of England—whoever he might be—arrived to cull out the stolen paintings and heroin. There was a major difference here, however. Unlike Polyakova, Smith-Williams was a willing participant in the smuggling operation. In fact, he had been skimming dope off the shipments for some time now. According to Gregor, the last load of heroin secreted in the picture frames had tested ninety-eight percent pure before leaving Moscow. But after it had passed through Smith-Williams’s hands that percentage had dropped to seventy-five.

  Which was why Gregor and the man in Moscow had decided it was time for Raymond Smith-Williams to die.

  “Do you like it?” Polyakova asked, still looking at the painting. He had told her to say those words.

  Now the Executioner answered with the words the art expert had told him to say. “It’s not his best,” Bolan said. “He seems to have diverted from his usual use of color.”

  Polyakova squeezed his hand. When he glanced down at the woman, her emerald eyes were dancing once more, and it looked as if she was trying not to laugh. Reaching up, she cupped a soft hand around the back of his neck and stood on her tiptoes as if to kiss him on the cheek. She did kiss him on the cheek, but while she was there she also whispered, “That sounded good. But this role doesn’t really fit you.” She was grinning impishly again when she lowered herself back down.

  The woman led him on through the gallery, making a comment here, a statement there, and Bolan recited a few things she had taught him to say. But overall, he had to agree with her. The role of art critic didn’t seem to fit at all. He knew it wouldn’t last for long, however, and he continued to look interested as they made their way through the sculpture room across the hall and then to the photography exhibit at the rear of the building. Occasionally he would catch a glimpse of a Harris tweed sport coat and driving cap, and know Seven was
pretending to study the paintings just as he was.

  The Executioner hadn’t yet decided whether this short undercover shift was leading toward an enemy capture or was simply an intelligence-gathering mission. It would depend on several things, not the least of which was how many people were around when they finally found Smith-Williams. In any eventuality, Bolan intended to follow through with Gregor’s wish that he terminate the drug-dealing gallery owner. As a knowing participant, the man was just as responsible for the death and horror the white powder brought on as Gregor and the man behind him in Moscow. So he would kill the art dealer as he’d been instructed to do. But not until he had pumped the man for information that would lead him both to Gregor and the big man in Moscow.

  They left the photography room and entered an area filled with watercolors. Bolan stared at a still life of a floral arrangement. Polyakova had held his hand the entire time they’d been in the gallery, tugging him gently when she felt it was time that a knowledgeable art expert grew bored and moved on. Now he felt her pull again, and they walked around a corner to another row. Bolan stopped in his tracks as a slender man with his eyes down on a bundle of papers hurried down the aisle, not looking up until he’d already run straight into the Executioner.

  “Oh, my!” the man said as he finally looked up. Bolan saw that he wore an ascot and a thin David Niven mustache. “Dear me, my apologies,” Raymond Smith-Williams said, brushing some imaginary dust off the yacht club insignia on his navy blue blazer. “Clumsy of me.”

  Bolan smiled and shook his head. “My fault,” he replied.

  “No, no,” Smith-Williams said. “My mistake. Had my mind on other things, I suppose. Business, you know.”

  “Ah,” Bolan said. “You must be Mr. Smith-Williams.”

  The Briton beamed. “Yes indeed,” he said. “At your service. Yank…pardon me, no offense meant. American, are you?”

  Bolan laughed. “‘Yank’ doesn’t offend me,” he said. “And yes, I’m afraid I’m about as ‘red white and blue baseball and apple pie’ as they come.” He extended his hand and said, “Matt Cooper.”

  Smith-Williams shook his hand limply, then dropped it, reaching up to smooth his mustache. “No wonder ‘Yank’ doesn’t offend you, then,” he said dryly.

  Bolan looked at him curiously.

  “Baseball, old man!” Smith-Williams said. “Yanks! Babe Ruth. Perhaps my connection was too vague.”

  “No,” Bolan answered. “I’m just a little slow sometimes.” He let go of Polyakova’s hand and slipped his arm around her shoulders. “I can be a little rude, too, I guess. Mr. Smith-Williams, meet my wife, Ivanna.”

  Raymond Smith-Williams looked at Polyakova, and she looked at him. The man was hers for the asking.

  “It’s a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Smith-Williams,” she said, holding out her hand.

  The art dealer cleared his throat and took her hand. “Charmed, my dear.” He leaned forward to kiss her hand, doing his best to camouflage his gaze at her breasts as a mere hitch in the normal path a pair of eyes would take between the face and hand. It was a gallant, and refined attempt, but it failed miserably. Looking back up, Smith-Williams said, “I do not detect even a hint of Yank in your voice, Mrs. Cooper. Russian?”

  “Yes.”

  “Ah.” Smith-Williams smiled. “I have many Russian friends myself, men I have met through business since the borders opened up.”

  Bolan smiled at him pleasantly.

  Smith-Williams stopped, closed his eyes dramatically and held up a hand. “But enough of my foolishness. Are you enjoying your visit to my humble collection?”

  “Very much,” Bolan said.

  “And what, in particular, has caught your interest?” Smith-Williams asked. “Perhaps I could—”

  Polyakova stepped in to save him. “We both simply love Fielding,” she said. “You have a rather unusual piece of his. My husband was particularly impressed with the two Perez-Riverte oils near the front. Matt says he studied under Dali. I don’t believe him.”

  “No,” said Smith-Williams sadly. “I’m afraid your husband is correct. If you look closely, you can see the influence.” He turned back to Bolan with a new respect in his eyes.

  The soldier shrugged modestly.

  “Is there anything in particular I could help you with?” Smith-Williams asked them both. Then, before either could answer, his arm shot up to his face and he said, “Oh, dear. Silly of me. I was enjoying this conversation so much I’ve forgotten I have a customer waiting on me.”

  “That’s quite all right,” Bolan said. “We have other business we have to attend to, as well. But we are interested in both the Fielding and the Perez-Rivertes. Tell me, do you ever make appointments after regular hours?”

  “Rarely,” the Briton replied. Then he smiled and looked at Polyakova. “But for the two of you, I must make an exception.” He glanced at his wrist again, then added, “Would nine tonight suit you?”

  “Fine,” Bolan answered.

  “Marvelous,” Polyakova said, smiling.

  “Then we’ll see you here, then.” With a final smile, Raymond Smith-Williams spun on his heels and disappeared through the forest of easels.

  Polyakova looked up at Bolan. “Ready, darling? We wouldn’t want to be late for the ballet.”

  THEY HAD BEEN BACK at the Durrants less than ten minutes when the window exploded.

  Polyakova, sitting in the chair she had laid claim to earlier, screamed at the top of her lungs and dived for the floor. Bolan had been sitting on the bed, studying a London city map. He fell over the beautiful Russian woman, shielding her body with his as he jerked the Desert Eagle from his hip. Seven came sprinting out of the bathroom wearing half a face of shaving cream, a disposable razor in one hand and his SIG-Sauer in the other.

  “Down!” the Executioner commanded, and the DEA agent fell forward onto the carpet.

  The second shot sailed through the window over their heads, drilling into the mattress and scorching the bedspread and sheets. By the time the third shot sounded, Bolan had identified the weapon as a .308. The rounds sounded more like they had come from an assault rifle than a tightly locked bolt action.

  Bolan raised his head right after the fourth shot, pinpointing the source as the roof of one of the buildings on the other side of the alley. Night had fallen over the city hours earlier, but in the lights atop the tall structure behind them he could make out the silhouette of a man. He was standing at the lip of the roof, his weapon resting on the short safety wall running along the side. But now that all three of them were below the windowsill and out of sight, he had stopped firing.

  The Executioner looked past the man and saw a huge water tank directly behind him on the roof. At the top of the tank, on the far side, he could just see the top of a steel handrail. It glowed in the lights a good twenty feet higher than the roof itself, and meant a ladder led up the tank on the other side.

  Suddenly the sniper rose and sprinted away, serpentining toward the tank. Bolan rose and fired two quick .44 Magnum rounds, but the man zigzagged just as Bolan pulled the trigger both times. Before he could fire again, the sniper had ducked behind the water tank.

  The Executioner knew why. Twenty feet higher in the air, the man would have a better angle to shoot down through their window. He grabbed Polyakova and jerked her to her feet. Without a word she followed. “Come on, Johnny!” the Executioner said as he raced by where the DEA man lay on the floor. “He’s moving higher!”

  Seven leaped to his feet with a speed and grace that contradicted his size and age.

  Bolan couldn’t be sure exactly how wide the sniper’s field of fire would be when he reached the top of the water tank, but the safe thing to do was get Polyakova out of the room altogether. Once in the hall, they would be out of sight completely and have at least two walls between them and the powerful .308 rounds.

  The Executioner had already opened the door to the hall when the warning bell went off in his head. But by then it was too late.
Suddenly he was staring down the barrel of a Degtyarev PPD-40. The man he had seen earlier enter the room across the hall—the man who had carried the large suitcases—stood just outside his room down the hall. The stock of the submachine gun was pressed into his shoulder.

  A half-dozen 7.62 mm rounds erupted from the 71-round drum of the Soviet weapon. The wooden frame around the door splintered, sending sharp scraps of wood through the air as Bolan slammed Polyakova back into the hotel room. She fell back against Seven, who had been sprinting along behind them, and the two came to a standstill just inside the doorway. Bolan heard another explosion from the rear of the room, and another .308 slug zipped through the window to drill through the closet next to where he stood. Wrapping his arms around both Polyakova and Seven, he shoved them both into the bathroom and drew the Desert Eagle.

  The 7.62 rounds from the hallway had stopped momentarily, and the Executioner dropped to one knee. Slowly he peered around the corner of the room. He had barely gotten his eye around the corner when another burst of fire drove him back again. He fell to a sitting position against the wall as the rounds cut through the open door, slicing off the top hinge. The door fell forward at an angle, jamming against what was left of the frame.

  To his side, the Executioner saw Seven crawl out of the bathroom back toward the middle of the room. Two rounds sailed over his head before he could hide behind the bed. He reached up, grabbing the viola case and pulling it down on top of him, then instinctively rolled into a fetal position against the wall at the head of the bed. He was just in time, as several .308 rounds ripped through the mattress, box springs and pillows at the exact spot where he’d ducked. Feathers filled the air as if a tornado had gone through a chicken farm.

  Bolan knew what the DEA man was doing and let him do it. He took a deep breath. He was about to lean back into the hall and fire when another stream of Soviet rounds sent the bottom hinge spinning off into the hallway. The bullet-ridden door fell to the ground, wobbling back and forth from one edge to the other until it finally settled into the carpet.

 

    Wild Card Read onlineWild CardWarrior's Edge Read onlineWarrior's EdgeBlood Vortex Read onlineBlood VortexLethal Vengeance Read onlineLethal VengeanceKilling Kings Read onlineKilling KingsCold Fury Read onlineCold FuryRighteous Fear Read onlineRighteous FearCyberthreat Read onlineCyberthreatStealth Assassin Read onlineStealth AssassinCritical Exposure Read onlineCritical ExposureMiami Massacre te-4 Read onlineMiami Massacre te-4Terrible Tuesday Read onlineTerrible TuesdayDying Art Read onlineDying ArtJungle Hunt Read onlineJungle HuntSicilian Slaughter Read onlineSicilian SlaughterThrow Down Read onlineThrow DownMiami Massacre Read onlineMiami MassacreSudden Death Read onlineSudden DeathPanic in Philly Read onlinePanic in PhillySavage Fire Read onlineSavage FireNightmare in New York te-7 Read onlineNightmare in New York te-7Omega Cult Read onlineOmega CultSabotage Read onlineSabotageViral Siege Read onlineViral SiegeWar Tactic Read onlineWar TacticThunder Down Under Read onlineThunder Down UnderHaitian Hit Read onlineHaitian HitThe Hostaged Island at-2 Read onlineThe Hostaged Island at-2Fireburst Read onlineFireburstThe Killing Urge Read onlineThe Killing UrgeAssault Read onlineAssaultAshes To Ashes: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective Read onlineAshes To Ashes: Ashton Ford, Psychic DetectiveFlight 741 Read onlineFlight 741Eternal Triangle Read onlineEternal TriangleFrontier Fury Read onlineFrontier FuryMeltdown te-97 Read onlineMeltdown te-97Chicago Wipeout Read onlineChicago WipeoutCommand Strike Read onlineCommand StrikeNightmare Army Read onlineNightmare ArmyIvory Wave Read onlineIvory WaveCombat Machines Read onlineCombat MachinesSilent Threat Read onlineSilent ThreatResurrection Day Read onlineResurrection DayPerilous Cargo Read onlinePerilous CargoSyrian Rescue Read onlineSyrian RescueArizona Ambush te-31 Read onlineArizona Ambush te-31Siege Read onlineSiegeLine of Honor Read onlineLine of HonorLethal Risk Read onlineLethal RiskBlood Testament te-100 Read onlineBlood Testament te-100Soviet Specter Read onlineSoviet SpecterArizona Ambush Read onlineArizona AmbushFatal Prescription Read onlineFatal PrescriptionDeep Recon Read onlineDeep ReconBorder Sweep Read onlineBorder SweepLife to Life Read onlineLife to LifeBallistic Read onlineBallisticHellbinder Read onlineHellbinderTime to Time: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective (Ashton Ford Series Book 6) Read onlineTime to Time: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective (Ashton Ford Series Book 6)The Violent Streets te-41 Read onlineThe Violent Streets te-41The Libya Connection te-48 Read onlineThe Libya Connection te-48Cartel Clash Read onlineCartel ClashWhipsaw te-144 Read onlineWhipsaw te-144Blood Rites Read onlineBlood RitesTriangle of Terror Read onlineTriangle of TerrorBetrayed Read onlineBetrayedSan Diego Siege Read onlineSan Diego SiegeDeath Minus Zero Read onlineDeath Minus ZeroArctic Kill Read onlineArctic KillMind to Mind: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective Read onlineMind to Mind: Ashton Ford, Psychic DetectiveBlood Heat Zero te-90 Read onlineBlood Heat Zero te-90Dead Man's Tale Read onlineDead Man's TaleSunscream te-85 Read onlineSunscream te-85Ice Wolf Read onlineIce WolfDeadly Contact Read onlineDeadly ContactThe Cartel Hit Read onlineThe Cartel HitTower of Terror at-1 Read onlineTower of Terror at-1Conflict Zone Read onlineConflict ZonePatriot Strike Read onlinePatriot StrikePoint Blank Read onlinePoint BlankRogue Force Read onlineRogue ForcePatriot Play Read onlinePatriot PlayCold Judgment Read onlineCold JudgmentContagion Option Read onlineContagion OptionSicilian Slaughter te-16 Read onlineSicilian Slaughter te-16Dragon Key Read onlineDragon KeyTerminal Velocity Read onlineTerminal VelocityVegas Vendetta Read onlineVegas VendettaAshes To Ashes Read onlineAshes To AshesBlood of the Lion Read onlineBlood of the LionBallistic Force Read onlineBallistic ForceDesperate Cargo Read onlineDesperate CargoDetroit Deathwatch te-19 Read onlineDetroit Deathwatch te-19Nightmare in New York Read onlineNightmare in New YorkKillpath Read onlineKillpathExecutioner 056 - Island Deathtrap Read onlineExecutioner 056 - Island DeathtrapBattle Cry Read onlineBattle CryDon Pendleton - Civil War II Read onlineDon Pendleton - Civil War IICopp In The Dark, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series) Read onlineCopp In The Dark, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)China Crisis (Stony Man) Read onlineChina Crisis (Stony Man)Code of Dishonor Read onlineCode of DishonorFirebase Seattle Read onlineFirebase SeattleHard Targets Read onlineHard TargetsDomination Bid Read onlineDomination BidKill Squad Read onlineKill SquadSlayground Read onlineSlaygroundPoison Justice Read onlinePoison JusticeSuicide Highway Read onlineSuicide HighwayCopp In Deep, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series) Read onlineCopp In Deep, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)Prairie Fire Read onlinePrairie FireNinja Assault Read onlineNinja AssaultDeath Metal Read onlineDeath MetalBlood Run Read onlineBlood RunDoomsday Disciples te-49 Read onlineDoomsday Disciples te-49Breakout Read onlineBreakoutCaribbean Kill te-10 Read onlineCaribbean Kill te-10Fire Eaters Read onlineFire EatersHawaiian Hellground Read onlineHawaiian HellgroundBaltimore Trackdown te-88 Read onlineBaltimore Trackdown te-88Threat Factor Read onlineThreat FactorDon Pendleton's Science Fiction Collection, 3 Books Box Set, (The Guns of Terra 10; The Godmakers; The Olympians) Read onlineDon Pendleton's Science Fiction Collection, 3 Books Box Set, (The Guns of Terra 10; The Godmakers; The Olympians)Satan’s Sabbath Read onlineSatan’s SabbathAssault on Soho te-6 Read onlineAssault on Soho te-6Copp In Shock, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series) Read onlineCopp In Shock, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)California Hit te-11 Read onlineCalifornia Hit te-11Chicago Wipe-Out te-8 Read onlineChicago Wipe-Out te-8Copp For Hire, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series) Read onlineCopp For Hire, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)Point Position Read onlinePoint PositionFriday’s Feast Read onlineFriday’s FeastExit Code Read onlineExit CodeNight's Reckoning Read onlineNight's ReckoningNew Orleans Knockout Read onlineNew Orleans KnockoutWashington I.O.U. Read onlineWashington I.O.U.California Hit Read onlineCalifornia HitBlood Vendetta Read onlineBlood VendettaDay of Mourning te-62 Read onlineDay of Mourning te-62Lethal Payload Read onlineLethal PayloadBoston Blitz Read onlineBoston BlitzKnockdown Read onlineKnockdownBlood Sport te-46 Read onlineBlood Sport te-46Council of Kings te-79 Read onlineCouncil of Kings te-79Terrorist Dispatch (Executioner) Read onlineTerrorist Dispatch (Executioner)Silent Running Read onlineSilent RunningDeath Squad Read onlineDeath SquadDeadly Salvage Read onlineDeadly SalvageOceans of Fire Read onlineOceans of FireTeheran Wipeout Read onlineTeheran WipeoutBorder Offensive Read onlineBorder OffensiveDevil's Horn Read onlineDevil's HornDeath Run Read onlineDeath RunContinental Contract Read onlineContinental ContractSavage Deadlock Read onlineSavage DeadlockEye to Eye: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective Read onlineEye to Eye: Ashton Ford, Psychic DetectiveRevolution Device Read onlineRevolution DeviceHeart to Heart: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective Read onlineHeart to Heart: Ashton Ford, Psychic DetectiveApocalypse Ark Read onlineApocalypse ArkTexas Storm Read onlineTexas StormMaximum Chaos Read onlineMaximum ChaosSensor Sweep Read onlineSensor SweepColorado Kill-Zone Read onlineColorado Kill-ZoneSan Diego Siege te-14 Read onlineSan Diego Siege te-14Tennessee Smash Read onlineTennessee SmashDesert Impact Read onlineDesert ImpactFire in the Sky Read onlineFire in the SkyWednesday’s Wrath Read onlineWednesday’s WrathSuper Bolan - 001 - Stony Man Doctrine Read onlineSuper Bolan - 001 - Stony Man DoctrineChain Reaction Read onlineChain ReactionPacific Creed Read onlinePacific CreedDeath List Read onlineDeath ListRebel Force Read onlineRebel ForceSavannah Swingsaw te-74 Read onlineSavannah Swingsaw te-74Heart to Heart Read onlineHeart to HeartShadow Search Read onlineShadow SearchThermal Thursday Read onlineThermal ThursdayBattle Mask te-3 Read onlineBattle Mask te-3Rogue Assault Read onlineRogue AssaultBlind Justice Read onlineBlind JusticeCold Fusion Read onlineCold FusionNigeria Meltdown Read onlineNigeria MeltdownBacklash Read onlineBacklashMoscow Massacre Read onlineMoscow MassacreSt. Louis Showdown Read onlineSt. Louis ShowdownAnvil of Hell Read onlineAnvil of HellLife to Life: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective Read onlineLife to Life: Ashton Ford, Psychic DetectiveAmazon Impunity Read onlineAmazon ImpunityRun to Ground te-106 Read onlineRun to Ground te-106Save the Children te-94 Read onlineSave the Children te-94Detroit Deathwatch Read onlineDetroit DeathwatchShadow Hunt Read onlineShadow HuntTerror Ballot Read onlineTerror BallotStand Down Read onlineStand DownDixie Convoy Read onlineDixie ConvoyVendetta in Venice Read onlineVendetta in VeniceWar Against the Mafia Read onlineWar Against the MafiaAssassin's Tripwire Read onlineAssassin's TripwireAppointment in Kabul te-73 Read onlineAppointment in Kabul te-73The Chameleon Factor Read onlineThe Chameleon FactorPirate Offensive Read onlinePirate OffensivePrison Code Read onlinePrison CodeFirebase Seattle te-21 Read onlineFirebase Seattle te-21Ground Zero Read onlineGround ZeroAssassin's Code Read onlineAssassin's CodePerilous Skies (Stony Man) Read onlinePerilous Skies (Stony Man)Toxic Terrain Read onlineToxic TerrainCanadian Crisis Read onlineCanadian CrisisExecutioner 057 - Flesh Wounds Read onlineExecutioner 057 - Flesh WoundsUncut Terror Read onlineUncut TerrorWar Everlasting (Superbolan) Read onlineWar Everlasting (Superbolan)Nuclear Reaction Read onlineNuclear ReactionCapital Offensive (Stony Man) Read onlineCapital Offensive (Stony Man)Beirut Payback te-67 Read onlineBeirut Payback te-67Monday’s Mob Read onlineMonday’s MobBlood Dues te-71 Read onlineBlood Dues te-71Dead Easy Read onlineDead EasyTexas Showdown at-3 Read onlineTexas Showdown at-3Sold for Slaughter Read onlineSold for SlaughterOrbiting Omega Read onlineOrbiting OmegaCopp On Ice, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series) Read onlineCopp On Ice, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)Rebel Blast Read onlineRebel BlastBlowout Read onlineBlowoutKilling Trade Read onlineKilling TradeAssault on Soho Read onlineAssault on SohoSeason of Slaughter Read onlineSeason of SlaughterCollision Course Read onlineCollision CourseShock Waves Read onlineShock WavesContinental Contract te-5 Read onlineContinental Contract te-5Dead Reckoning Read onlineDead ReckoningEnemies Within Read onlineEnemies WithinAgent of Peril Read onlineAgent of PerilDeath Has a Name Read onlineDeath Has a NameVegas Vendetta te-9 Read onlineVegas Vendetta te-9The Fiery Cross Read onlineThe Fiery CrossCleveland Pipeline Read onlineCleveland PipelineArmed Response Read onlineArmed ResponseMercy Mission Read onlineMercy MissionTiger War te-61 Read onlineTiger War te-61Renegade Agent te-47 Read onlineRenegade Agent te-47Damage Radius Read onlineDamage RadiusEye to Eye Read onlineEye to EyeAcapulco Rampage Read onlineAcapulco RampageSkysweeper Read onlineSkysweeperThe Iranian Hit te-42 Read onlineThe Iranian Hit te-42Death Gamble Read onlineDeath GambleRebel Trade Read onlineRebel TradePredator Paradise Read onlinePredator ParadiseBattle Mask Read onlineBattle MaskPulse Point Read onlinePulse PointMissouri Deathwatch Read onlineMissouri DeathwatchBlood Tide Read onlineBlood TideMissile Intercept Read onlineMissile InterceptJersey Guns Read onlineJersey GunsHostile Force Read onlineHostile ForceThe Bone Yard te-75 Read onlineThe Bone Yard te-75Twisted Path te-121 Read onlineTwisted Path te-121Mind to Mind Read onlineMind to MindCopp On Fire, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp, Private Eye Series) Read onlineCopp On Fire, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp, Private Eye Series)