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Hurley didn’t offer a reply.

“How does a man of your considerable though twisted talents sire such a stupid child?”

Rapp looked up, only half listening to the insults. His focus was on a beautiful 9mm suppressed Beretta. Radih kept waving the gun back and forth, sticking it in Hurley’s face and then pointing it at Rapp’s head. Rapp followed it like a te

Rapp made his move. He’d sawed most of the way through the tape around his wrists while he was back in the holding cell. Now, not sure the tape would break, he went for a two-handed grab around the barrel of the gun. His hands clamped down on the steel while the gun was still swinging Rapp’s way. Rapp stood, driving the gun straight up so a misfire wouldn’t bury itself in Hurley’s chest. At the top, he pivoted to his left, bringing the gun up and over the top of his head, before pulling it back down on the other side, effectively putting Radih in an arm bar. In this position the Palestinian couldn’t move unless he let go of the gun. Rapp delivered a quick knee strike to Radih’s face, and a bullet spat harmlessly into the cinderblock wall.

Having dazed him, Rapp ripped the gun free. He swung the pistol back, cracking Radih across the forehead with the heavy metal grip. The blow sent him to the floor. Rapp tried to wrench his wrists free of the remaining duct tape but it caught. The other two men were finally starting to move. Hurley, realizing that one of the men might yell for help, started screaming at the top of his lungs as if he were being beaten. Rapp took a step back to get a better angle and yanked again, but the last bit of tape held, so he flipped the gun up in the air and caught the grip with both hands. The man on his left was no more than four feet away when he fired the gun twice, hitting him both times in the chest. The man collapsed at Rapp’s feet.

Rapp swung the gun around on the other man, who was caught between the door and Hurley. He was never going to make it, so he stopped and put his hands up in the air.

“Shoot him,” Hurley ordered in a raspy voice.

Rapp squeezed the trigger and buried a bullet in the man’s forehead.

“Get me down … quick,” Hurley hissed.

“What about him?” Rapp asked, pointing the gun at Radih, who was showing signs of life.

“Get me down first.”

Rapp ripped through the last bit of tape while he ran over to the wall and untied the makeshift pulley. Hurley dropped the short distance to the floor, landing on his feet. He wavered for a second and then caught his balance.

“Give me that gun,” Hurley ordered, “and check the right thigh pocket of that second one you shot. He should have a knife.”

Rapp placed the gun in Hurley’s hands and went off to search for the knife.

Hurley walked over to Radih, whose arms were starting to flop around as if he was waking up from a deep sleep. Hurley stomped on his stomach, and the Palestinian’s eyes popped open. Hurley bent over and pressed the suppressor against Radih’s chest. Looking into his eyes, he said, “You should have killed me when you had the chance, you piece of shit.” Hurley pulled the trigger.

CHAPTER 65

TWO of the sedans pulled into the hangar and three more stopped just outside. All of the doors opened at roughly the same time and a dozen well-armed men fa

Ivanov looked at the commander with extreme disappointment.

Mughniyah approached with a confident grin on his face. Four of his bodyguards trailed a few paces back. “Mikhail, welcome to Beirut.”

“I would hardly call this a welcome.”

“You will have to excuse all of this, but I am not in a good mood today.”

“And why is that?”

“Because I just found out that you have been scheming behind my back yet again.”

“What are you talking about?”

“You will notice that our Iraqi and Iranian friends are not here.”

“Why?” Sayyed asked, alarmed by the news.

“Because I found out that Mikhail had made a deal with them. Didn’t you, Mikhail?”

Ivanov tried to laugh the question away as if it was a harmless maneuver.





Mughniyah turned his attention back to Sayyed and said, “He set the ceiling at five million. The others were going to bow out and let him win.”

“What did you do with them?” Sayyed asked.

“For the moment they are my guests. I will decide if I am going to kill them later.”

Ivanov clasped his hands together and laughed. Mughniyah was proving to be much smarter than he had given him credit for. “You have outsmarted me, Imad. That does not happen very often. Would you like me to leave, or would you like to discuss business? Negotiate some terms, perhaps?”

“I will negotiate nothing with you. I am going to name a price and you are going to pay it.”

“Really?” Ivanov said. “And what if I decide I don’t like your price?”

“Then we will have a big problem.”

Ivanov nodded as if he found the game amusing.

“Before we get to that, though, I need you to return all of the money you took from our Swiss bank accounts.”

“Money that I took!” Ivanov’s eyes nearly bulged out of his head. “I did no such thing.”

“I think you did.”

“As a matter of fact I want my money back from you.”

“Your money?”

“Yes, my money.” Ivanov’s face was blazing red. “The money that you took. You don’t think I suspected you at once? You never liked Sharif. You did nothing but complain about his prices. You called him a rat and a traitor to the cause for charging his inflated prices.”

“I did not kill Sharif,” Mughniyah denied flatly.

“And why should I believe you?”

“Because I am a man of honor. Someone who fights for what he believes in … not a thief like you.”

“Honor! This is beautiful. You, of all people, speak of honor. Imad Mughniyah, the hijacker of civilian airliners, the kidnapper of professors, the man who shells entire neighborhoods filled with women and children. You speak of honor. That is laughable.” Ivanov literally spat the last word at his accuser.

Mughniyah reached for his gun, but the Spetsnaz commander beat him to the draw and pointed the barrel of his Markov pistol at the side of Mughniyah’s head. All of a sudden it appeared as if everyone had a gun. Slides were being racked and hammers cocked.

“Enough,” Sayyed shouted. “Your disdain for each other has blinded your judgment.”

“And you are a fool,” Mughniyah yelled.

Sayyed approached him, and in a voice loud enough for only Mughniyah to hear said, “And you are broke. How are you going to pay all of your men next week and the week after that? Get control of your hot temper and let me handle this.” Speaking to the group, he then said, “Everyone, lower your weapons.” He motioned with his hands and repeated himself two more times until finally all of the weapons were either holstered or pointed in a safe direction.

“I know that Imad did not steal the money, and I do not think that Mikhail did so either.”

“How can you know?” Mughniyah angrily asked.

“Tell me. Why would he come here today if he had stolen our money?”

While Mughniyah pondered that question, Shvets stepped forward. “I can assure you that my boss had nothing to do with the stolen funds. I visited Herr Dorfman’s boss in Hamburg last week. More than fifty million dollars was stolen. It appears we were not the only targets.” Shvets wanted to get out here with his life, so he quickly added, “We are following several leads, including one that the money was stolen by an organized crime element out of Prague.”