This time he knew the gunman would follow Flor to the airport, that there would be yet another death. In the dream, he leaned against a row of lockers and scanned the crowd.
He saw Flor as she approached the metal detector at the entrance to the waiting area. She was beautiful. Not sick, not crazy, not violent. Just a totally beautiful woman. She joined the group of travelers already in the line. She was last. Lyons watched. From time to time she craned her neck to look through a huge plate-glass window at the planes on the tarmac.
Lyons could see the runway area through the window. The brightly painted Ecuatoriana Airlines jet looked like a Chinese paper bird in his dream. He saw the fuel attendant remove the nozzle of the hose from the plane's fueling port.
Then it was Flor's turn to go through the detector. Once Flor left the departure area, she would be safe.
The gunshot thundered in the confines of the glassed-in corridor. The slug lifted Flor onto her toes.
Even in death she was spectacular. Her exquisitely sculpted calves stood out fiercely as she rose on tiptoe. Thigh muscles strained against white cotton walking shorts. Well-shaped buttocks clenched.
Lyons watched her back arch slightly, her arms upraised as purse, passport, documents flew out of her hands.
Then she crumpled to the floor. He rushed from cover, panning his revolver across the hallway.
Nothing moved. People lay flat the entire length of the corridor. Slowly he let his arm fall as he stepped backward to where Flor lay.
She was lying on her side on the grooved rubber mat of the departure-lounge entrance.
Lyons knelt beside the inert form. He turned the body onto its back. He looked at her fine Hispanic features. He saw her full lips, cherry red with blood, touched with a hint of a smile.
Something slammed into his gut so hard that Lyons thought he was hit. Then he recognized the pain for what it was.
Lyons, awake now, moaned to think of Flor. The woman was the only person with whom he had shared his soul. Lyons hurt inside for his mother also, dead for ten years. She had known nothing of the good life, nor had she expected it. Lyons cried inside for his drunken father who achieved with his loins what he had failed to achieve in a wayward and vagrant life, and thus presented Carl to the world.
Finally, Lyons wept for himself, the lonely adolescent, the sad teenager who closely guarded his every step upward, afraid it would be taken away from him. He did everything right, followed all the rules. That was why he had become a policeman.
Lyons remembered target practice at the LAPD training academy, the first day in the shooting booth when he thought he'd blown his chance to become a cop and make something of himself.
As the dummy popped up before him, he started shooting at the head. For a fleeting instant he saw his father's face on the cardboard cutout. Lyons kept squeezing the trigger until there were no bullets left in the pistol. He continued to squeeze the trigger, again and again, until the weapons instructor tapped him on the shoulder and told him to quit it.
From that day, he understood the degree to which he must contain the rage within him.
As a member of Able Team he had demonstrated on occasion a volcanic nature that made his two colleagues shake their heads. Now he struggled to relax and empty his mind in a land far from home where once again he had acted like a raging storm.
One battle was over. But the battle within him would never be done.
Epilogue
The military jet warmed up outside the hangar as the Americans shook hands with a small group of people.
Leo Turrin, his head wrapped in bandages again to conceal his identity during the drive from London, looked forward to the bandages' removal on the plane, though they would have to go back on before he disembarked.
"Right to the last you fed lies to Shillelagh, Mr. Sticker!" Lieutenant Colonel Carlton shouted above the whine of the aircraft's turbines. "You held out. You're a tough bugger! I have a souvenir for you, my friend."
Leo accepted the odd device from the colonel. It looked like one-half of a telephone receiver. "What the hell is this?"
"Turn on the switch, hold the large part to your throat, and whisper."
"Like this? Oh, shit!" he exclaimed, in the distorted electronic voice that had tormented him in that room.
"It's used by people who have lost the use of their own voice," the colonel said. "That's how she managed to protect her identity for so long she dealt with most of her contacts over the telephone."
Minutes later, the Americans gave a final wave to their British colleagues and boarded the waiting aircraft.
The Air Force jet hammered through clouds. The green checkerboard grid of the British countryside had ended abruptly as a meandering white ribbon of foam marked the start of the English Channel.
The plane streaked on a course due southeast.
Only two men on the aircraft knew their destination: the pilot and Leo Turrin.
Turrin had just finished his report on the Windsor Castle hit to Stony Man Farm. Now he pondered the information given in exchange.
The destination data he had passed on to the pilot. Behind him he heard the lighthearted banter of the men of Able Team.
He understood the relief the warriors felt at wrapping up this foreign mission successfully. He wondered if the men could stand the strain of their next ordeal. Turrin did not envy the trio as he thought of the hostile terrain of the Hindu Kush.
Who in hell was The Dragon?
White House liaison Hal Brognola, usually an eloquent man, had begun hedging and stuttering as he gave Turrin the mission data from the Farm. He had sounded preoccupied. Turrin was especially puzzled when the head Fed said Stony Man was having a bit of trouble.
Leo was certain it was nothing that the gang at Stony Man Farm could not handle.
At their first refueling stop in Rome, Turrin would inform the men of Hal's phone call. Then he'd switch to a commercial jet for Washington.
The three Stony specialists would continue to New Delhi. There they'd meet with the contact man for a briefing on this next hit. Brognola's words rang in Turrin's ears: "Leo, I'm sorry to put Able Team on the spot, but we're after a man called The Dragon who runs a show from a fortress in the Hindu Kush. If Carl and the guys can stop him, then we'll cut off the arms supply to nearly every terrorist group there is. That's all I can say for now, except that I trust your discretion about when you choose to tell them."
"Hey, Leo, get your head out of the clouds and c'mon over here!" Turrin twisted in his seat to see Gadgets Schwarz waving him over.
The men were crowded around a tired Carl Lyons. The tall blond man, fatigue showing on his face, held a rectangular box.
"Okay, let's see what she gave us," Schwarz said.
"She? Who?" asked Leo.
"She sent us this," Lyons said, lifting the box.
"For cryin' out loud, Carl, who?" grated Leo. "What's in it? Open it up."
Lyons spoke as he removed the box top and revealed tissue paper within. "The queen got them from the estate of the old Earl of Kintail you remember that kid? Well, his father was a pilot during the Battle of Britain. It was a custom. The aces collected these from their dead comrades and treasured them. A way of honoring their courage, I guess."
"So what's in the damn box?" Leo seethed.
Lyons opened the tissue paper. He held up four silk scarves.
"For a queen," Lyons said, looking around at his friends, "that woman is a real prince."
A bonus for Able Team readers:
Early Fire
Deep background on Able Team's mentor, featuring Mack Bolan in Vietnam