Читаем The Enemy Within полностью

The camp itself was a scene straight out of Dante’s Inferno. At least half the barracks and other buildings were ablaze, gutted by rocket-propelled grenades, satchel charges, and cannon fire. Bodies dotted the streets and lawns. Most wore the shapeless fatigues or civilian clothes preferred by the HizbAllah. A few, very few, wore the olive-drab uniforms and green berets of Iran’s Special Forces.

Soldiers combed through the burning compound, hunting for surviving terrorists with a care and precision that Thorn admired. Those moving were always covered by other teams prone and ready to fire. T-72 tanks and BMP-2 infantry fighting vehicles sat at key vantage points, turrets swiveling as the gunners scanned their surroundings for potential threats and new targets Still trotting forward behind the sergeant, Thorn whistled softly to himself. He’d read many reports on the Islamic Republic’s armed forces. None gave them credit for the kind of professionalism he saw displayed here. Striking at first light, Taleh’s handpicked troops had ripped through Manzarieh like a tornado through a Kansas trailer park.

“Come!” The Iranian sergeant pointed toward a small band of officers and NCOs clustered near one of the T-72s. Radio antennas and open map cases signaled the presence of a senior command group.

Thorn easily pinpointed Farhad Kazemi in the gathering. The young captain stood several inches above his companions. His gaze shifted to the shorter, bearded man issuing a rapid-fire string of orders to the assembled officers. At one final word of command they scattered, moving off to rejoin their units. Only Kazemi and the man he’d been watching were left, heads bowed together as they conferred over a map.

His memories jumped more than twenty years into the past in the blink of an eye. Amir Taleh looked older, more care worn, and more serious, but there were still a few visible traces of the young cadet who had befriended an American teenager adrift in a foreign land.

The two Iranians turned at his approach.

Briefly unsure of how to proceed, Thorn fell back on formal military courtesy. He came to attention and snapped off a crisp salute.

Taleh returned his salute just as crisply. Then he broke the tension by smiling and holding out his hand. “Peter! Welcome! It has been too long far too long, my friend! You look well. Soldiering must agree with you.”

Thorn smiled back. Circumstances had changed. Amir Taleh had not. “You don’t look so bad yourself.” He nodded toward the general’s stars on the other man’s shoulders. “Soldiering seems to agree with you even more!”

The Iranian shrugged casually. “God has willed it.” It was the expression his countrymen always used to turn away the bad luck believed to be inherent in a compliment. “Thank you for accepting my invitation, Peter. I know it took courage to make this journey.”

Thorn fought down sudden embarrassment. His earlier concerns about this mission paled in comparison to the very real risks Taleh and his men had just run to smash the Manzarieh training camp. They’d just killed more terrorists in half an hour than Delta Force had taken out in its entire history. “Not much courage. I’ve often wanted to come back to your country.” He glanced down at the Iranian battle dress he wore and smiled ruefully. “I just never thought I’d do it while wearing this uniform.”

Taleh laughed softly. “Well said.” He waved a hand at the shattered, burning compound around them. “Tell me, Peter, what do you think of my little demonstration?” “I’m impressed,” Thorn said flatly. He hesitated only a moment before going on. If Taleh had wanted to meet a smooth-talking diplomat, the Iranian wouldn’t have asked for him. “But frankly, I’m also surprised. Cutting off supplies to the HizbAllah is one thing. Declaring open war on them is another.”

He nodded toward the dead terrorists strewn in every direction. “What you’ve done here can’t be undone. After today, the HizbAllah and the other radical groups will want your head on a pike. No matter what happens between our two countries, you’ve put yourself and your troops awfully far out on a very slender limb.”

“True.” Taleh seemed unworried. “And that is exactly why I wanted you to see this operation. I wanted you to see how deadly serious I am about ending Iran’s connection with these extremists.”

The Iranian shrugged. “Of course, I will not deny that I have my own reasons for destroying the HizbAllah and the others like them. Although I am a good Muslim, the terrorists and their supporters in the Pasdaran and the Parliament have often been my foes. Crushing them strengthens my own position.”

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Александр Алексеевич Зиборов , Гарри Гаррисон , Илья Деревянко , Юрий Валерьевич Ершов , Юрий Ершов

Фантастика / Боевик / Детективы / Самиздат, сетевая литература / Социально-психологическая фантастика