General Martin is a hero. He proved his courage in Vietnam. And he paid for it in a POW camp. Now General Keith Martin is missing. Maybe he’s disappeared to have some privacy. And maybe he’s collecting on some old debts...
N-3’s assignment is to find him — at any cost. The trail gets hot when a beautiful Eurasian agent is assigned as Nick’s partner and when the murders of highly-placed North Vietnamese officials turn into an epidemic.
In a kabuki theater in Bangkok, Nick Carter is transformed into a Viet peasant. And in the middle of a sultry Southeast Asia night he parachutes into the countryside near Hanoi. If his disguise fails there’s no return ticket. And if he doesn’t find Keith Martin and stop the assassinations, the Vietnam War will look like a dress rehearsal for the real thing...
* * *
Nick Carter
Prologue
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Epilogue
* * *
Nick Carter
The Asian Mantrap
Dedicated to The Men of the
Secret Services of the
United States of America
A HERO’S REVENGE!
Old soldiers never die — they just disappear. At least that’s what happened to Keith Martin, POW survivor and Vietnam War hero. Is it just a coincidence that high-ranking North Viet officials are being murdered? But why would anyone go back?
N3’s mission is to find out — and if there’s a connection between Martin and the assassinations it’s to be severed... at any cost. Because behind closed doors in Washington nerves are stretched to the breaking point. If these murders aren’t stopped, the U.S. is bound to be blamed. And once again, world peace is in the hands of one man — Nick Carter, Killmaster — in this nerve tingling espionage thriller!
Prologue
The tall, muscular man tossed the butt of a pungent-odored, hand-rolled, brown-papered cigarette on the uneven floor and ground it out with his foot. He looked at himself in the piece of mirror still on the wall of the latrine in the bombed-out building where he had taken refuge. The only light was that of an ivory moon that seeped through gaps in the crumbling walls. He fastened together the tabs of the quilted, choke-collared, black pajama jacket he wore. It was the same as the type worn by most peasant farmers toiling in the fields and rice paddies of Northern Vietnam.
The furtive man concealed his dyed black hair with a snug-fitting beret over which he placed a cone-shaped coolie hat. It was fastened securely with tie strings knotted under his square-jawed chin. His legs were encased in black, snug-fitting stretch pants which were tucked into calf-high combat boots. For his camouflage to be perfect, he would have worn thong sandals on his feet.
From an efficiently organized backpack, the man removed a small, flat tin can. Although his face and hands were already stained to give them a jaundiced appearance, he smeared a coating of black boot polish over the reflective surfaces of his face. He looked at his wristwatch, replaced the shoe polish in his pack and shoved it into a dark corner. The final check in preparation for his departure from his hiding place was a reexamination of his weapons, the most deadly of which was the loaded, eleven-shot Lekoyev 9 mm. machine pistol. He looked over the extra ammunition clip as well before tucking it back into a convenient pocket.
He removed the wedge from under the bottom of the unlocked latrine door, then opened it. He walked noiselessly through shadows caused by shattered walls, twisted girders, and the rubble of broken concrete. At a still-standing corner of the far end of the ruined building, he pulled aside some splintered planking to uncover a bicycle.
The reefer he’d smoked had brought him to a sharp edge. Each movement, every sound, seemed amplified to his tuned-up mind. He was adept at bringing himself up to a carefully calculated personal high. He had no intention of risking a sudden marijuana disintegration by delaying what he had to do.
As he dragged out the bicycle, he felt dampness on the palms of his hands. The last-minute application of water-dissolvent paint he had used to render the bicycle unidentifiable had not yet dried completely.
The disguised interloper used back roads and little-travelled streets to reach his destination. It lay adjacent to a narrow lane flanked on either side by high walls. The hunched-over rider pedaled slowly, his face glistening with perspiration. The sultry atmosphere of a warm, humid day had lingered on long after the sun had set. It was typical of the uncomfortable summer weather found in the North Vietnamese capital city of Hanoi.
The bicycle rider coasted to a stop midway along a smooth wall on his right side. He knew what was behind it. Days had been spent studying scale drawings and memorizing every detail of the villa and the landscaped grounds around it. That knowledge was essential to the success of his plan.
The only variable was the assigned guards. One was known to be posted at the driveway gate at the beginning of the twenty-yard graveled lane leading to the residence. The other guard had no assigned station, roaming at will. He could be a problem.
Having assured himself that he was unobserved and oriented with the help of moonlight reflecting off the leaves of a lemon tree growing behind the wall, the dark-clad cyclist dismounted. He carried the bicycle across a shallow drainage ditch that ran between the street and the wall. He deposited his ungainly coolie hat in the depression, then propped the bicycle up against the wall.
He looked up and down the street once more. He was alone. He stripped off the thickly padded jacket with a single, practiced motion. Using the leaning bicycle as an improvised ladder, he stood on the crossbar, then flipped the padded jacket so it fell across the top of the wall. It formed a bridge across the jagged-toothed broken glass imbedded in the cement.
The beret-capped figure went up and over the wall like a panther. As he did, he kicked backward. The bicycle fell flat, its previous telltale silhouette against the wall erased. The stealthy figure dropped lightly between the far side of the wall and the row of hedges growing close to it. The same faint smile that had creased the man’s face any number of times during the planning stage showed again when he looked hard and found the gnarled lemon tree standing exactly in its diagrammed position. The tree would make his exit as simple as his entrance.
The grim-faced man moved to the end of the line of yew shrubs. There he waited and listened; a faint shuffling sound had reached his straining ears.
The crunch of approaching footsteps came from the gravel lane. With a swift, silent motion, the crouching man drew a stiletto-bladed commando knife from his boot. A uniformed Vietnamese soldier came to a halt no more than four feet from where the man was hiding near the end of the yew hedges.
He leaped, encircling the guard’s head with one arm, smothering the mouth and crushing the cigarette inside it while he thrust the knife to the hilt between the second and third ribs.
The Vietnamese gurgled deep in his throat and his knees sagged. The knife-wielder guided the collapsing body to the ground, an arm still clamped solidly over the slack mouth. He withdrew the knife quickly, wiped it on the grass, restored it to his boot, then used both hands to drag the inert figure behind the hedge. There was no need to test it for signs of life.
The intruder had used up an extra thirty seconds of his self-imposed time limit, but he had reduced the hazard during his withdrawal phase by fifty percent. The guard at the front gate might as well have been on the planet Mars.
The infiltrator drew his Russian machine pistol and unlocked the safety. Running forward boldly, he covered the fifteen yards across open ground like a fleeting shadow. In the same manner, he mounted a flight of stone steps that led to a marble-floored veranda. Light streamed from two sets of many-paned French doors which opened into the drawing room and dining room. He eased himself next to the doors on the right and listened.
The gunman had confidence in the intelligence work that had gone into the preparations for this moment. The new Vietnamese government’s Security Minister, Ban Lok Huong, was a methodical man. He liked to listen to light classical music during the early evening. If music came from the drawing room, Huong would be having his pre-dinner aperitif there. If music issued from the dining room, Huong would be seated alone at the head of the table, facing the French doors.
From his position next to the drawing room doors, the man could hear music, but only faintly. With pistol at the ready, he moved to the other set of doors. The strains of a piano concerto were much more distinct.
He counted to five silently, then took a deep breath and burst through the flimsy doors.
Inside, he came to a dead stop.
Strong light reflected from multitudinous teardrop crystals decorating an ornate chandelier that hung low over the huge dining table caused the assassin to blink, but he had his pistol halfway aimed when he saw that — contrary to his information — Minister Ban Lok Huong was not alone.
On either side of the table were a man and a woman, Caucasians, who stared at the intruder in blank shock. A thin-necked Vietnamese woman in traditional national dress was seated with her back to him. The gunman froze momentarily, totally surprised. Huong, formerly General in charge of all military security and prisoner-of-war confinements during the Vietnam War, was supposed to be alone. Who were these people? His hesitancy had already given three of them the chance to identify him, despite his disguise.
He had an impulse to flee, but at that instant the chunky figure of Minister Huong, who was facing the intruder, rose to his feet. Huong’s sudden movement was like that of the pop-up silhouette target on a firing range where the gunman had practiced to react against this very contingency.
Suddenly calm, he leveled his weapon and sprayed the minister with a short, accurate burst. Huong had just started to dive under the table when the slugs caught him in the chest. He fell forward heavily onto the table.
The killer fired continuously, raking the table from right to left. The chatter of the pistol hardly missed a beat as he removed the empty clip and inserted the second loaded one. The Vietnamese woman’s head dropped to one side suddenly, the muscles and arteries in her neck severed. The pallid European in a tailored dinner jacket remained sitting upright, but his head sank slowly as if to contemplate the stitching of blood welling and spreading on his shirt front.
The woman across the table from him was halfway to her feet with her mouth open to scream when the deadly bullets stifled her. A single whistling gasp escaped her before blood gushed from her throat and she was flung loosely upon the chair from which she had risen, at once painting its needlepoint a bright crimson.
The man wearing the black-smudged face and combat boots stared hard beyond the smoking muzzle of his weapon at the collapsed figure of the chubby Vietnamese who should have been his only target. One of the man’s hands spasmed and seized the tablecloth, following which the lifeless body of Minister Huong slid to the floor, dragging silver, china, and exquisite crystal wine goblets from the table with a tremendous crash.
The intruder elevated the automatic pistol and fired two short bursts into the chain supporting the heavy crystal chandelier. It crashed down onto the elaborate floral centerpiece in the middle of the table and a curtain of darkness descended upon the grisly scene.
Fifteen seconds later, the retreating dark figure swarmed up the lemon tree, swung from its overhanging branch, and was over the wall with the shredded peasant jacket in his hands. The hot-barreled machine pistol was safely secured. Both coolie hat and bicycle were retrieved. It was all he could do to hold back his urge to pedal away at sprint speed. But he restrained himself and was almost a mile away before any positive reaction occurred.
He began sweating again, but this time from more than the warm night. He evaluated his mission: nothing had gone wrong except that the old goat hadn’t been alone; but four go as easily as one at close range. Besides, the Vietnamese woman and the two Europeans were in the way of the assignment.
He wondered who the two Caucasians were.
Neither one had had a chance to speak.
And now they never would, which was all to the good.
Dead men tell no tales.
Besides, he told himself again, they were in the way of a mission he’d vowed to carry out to the very end, no matter what the cost.
One
I had no idea why I was sent to the conference room adjacent to the secretary of the army’s office on the second floor of the Pentagon Building. The glitter of silver stars and rainbows of ribbons on the uniforms of the officers waiting with me were impressive. I was the only civilian present.
The five men clustered together were generals — the two and three star kind. All of us were expecting the imminent arrival of four-star General Harold Jarrett, the U.S. Army Chief of Staff.
None of the assembled officers spoke to me. The two that kept glancing at me from across the room seemed more than curious about my presence. Their looks were dark and openly wary. It was pretty clear that I was not particularly welcome.
I kept to one corner of the carpeted, well-lit room. Its most prominent feature was a huge walnut table large enough to accomodate a twenty-member committee with ease. Through the window next to me, I could see across the sluggish Potomac River in the foreground. Beyond it, to the left, the pillars of the Lincoln Memorial were dazzling white in the bright morning sunshine. On the right, the rounded dome of the Jefferson Memorial reminded me of a smooth mushroom cap. In the distance between the two marble structures was the clean, slender obelisk of the Washington Monument.
I reached into my jacket pocket for my cigarettes. They are custom-blended to my taste by a tobacconist who embosses the initials N.C. in gold on the filter tips. My action was interrupted by the arrival of General Jarrett. The tall, gray-haired man’s entry caused the others in the room to stiffen slightly. He waved a hand toward the conference table. “Be seated, gentlemen. This matter should be dispensed with quickly.”
The lesser generals scrambled for chairs, automatically seating themselves in protocol position determined by rank. An efficient-looking, middle-aged woman carrying a stenotype machine placed herself strategically near the head of the table. I put away my cigarettes and moved to a chair at the far end. The army chief nodded to me, either approving my choice to segregate myself or tacitly acknowledging my presence. I had met him once; I wondered if he remembered me.
General Jarrett dispensed with the formalities of calling a meeting to order. He got right to the heart of things. “Gentlemen, I see no alternative but to postpone once more the scheduled meeting of the Strategic Options Board. Without the full panel, we cannot function and — as you can see — General Martin is absent. Continued attempts to bring him in attendance have been fruitless. The board can no longer put off fulfilling its obligations. This third false start in the space of ten days is intolerable. I must ask that we take steps to have a replacement appointed to assume General Martin’s duties on this panel.”
The bald, full-faced lieutenant general sitting on Jarrett’s right glanced down the table toward me. “Go ahead, Sam,” the chief said. “Mr. Carter is here at my express invitation.”
The general whose silent question had been answered was Samuel Bromley, a crusty old West Pointer who was still so shot in the butt with discipline that it was rumored he slept at attention. He and Jarrett were always at odds. Open hostility over strong opposing views erupted between them frequently. “Martin knew we were scheduled to convene on Tuesday,” growled Bromley. “Because of him we’re way behind. An’ his leave was up six days ago. I’m beginning to get pressure from Congress. We all are.”
“We don’t need a re-hash, Sam,” General Jarrett replied. “We have to make a decision — right now — whether Martin’s going to be accomodated or removed.” His alert eyes speared the two-star general sitting closest to me. “How about it, Jack; have you been able to get any sort of lead on on him?”
“Not a thing, sir,” was his answer. “We checked his leave address in ’Frisco three times. Nothing. A dead end.”
“That’s not like Keith Martin,” injected another voice. The speaker was a stout man whose thick eyebrows shaded small eyes imbedded in a fat-cheeked face. “I don’t like the sound of this at all. Men like Martin don’t just up and disappear. Aside from his being needed on the S.O.B., I think we’ve got a personal responsibility to investigate further. He isn’t your run-of-the-mill general officer, you know.”
I knew that. And millions of Americans knew it too. Keith Martin was a well-publicized hero of the Vietnam War. He was one of the few who remained in prominence even after his capture. What was it — three and a half years as a POW? Hard years for any man. When released, they were barely human: weak with sickness and hunger; the wounded badly in need of medical care. All faced emotional adjustments, some needing extended therapy before they could return to normal life in a peacetime society.
I’ve been thrown in jails, confined in grubby, despicable places and treated harshly by guards when a field operation’s gone sour. But I never have had to endure the prolonged mistreatment suffered by those hapless POWs. Still, I felt a distant kinship with those who had led dismal lives in Hanoi’s miserable prison camps. Or those who died there.
Martin was one who survived. Once released, he was not backward about telling how tough it was. He came home with the rank of colonel and used his position to stand up and speak out for the less articulate POWs. Too outspoken for some, he was immediately gagged and taken out of the public limelight. A short time later, however, his career progress continued but with considerable less fanfare.
“We don’t want to be too hasty about this,” cautioned a lean ramrod of a man on Jarrett’s left. “Keith Martin’s too well-known on the Washington scene for us not to try to cover up his absence for as long as possible. If the White House isn’t making a stir about it, maybe we should hold off a little longer. We’re damn lucky to have a man like Martin on the presidential staff where he can exert the kind of influence we need.”
“Yeah,” snarled Bromley. “He’s got a fast act going, but he won’t be giving any encores if we can’t find the son-of-a-bitch. He’s an upstart kid trying to make out like pushy George Custer did until some smart Sioux cut him down to size. I don’t care if Martin is the president’s fair-haired lad; I say we dump him and bring Clyde Burkhardt onto the board in his place.”
General Jarrett’s response surprised everyone, including me. “Do I hear an objection?” he snapped. Before any could be offered he brought his balled fist down hard on the table top. “Done!” he rapped and rose to his feet with alacrity that belied his sixty-one years. It was pretty evident that, with statutory retirement only a few months away, Jarrett didn’t give a damn who sat on the board. He controlled it with an iron hand anyway.
The other generals sprang to their feet. They stood, waiting for the chief of staff to leave the room. The stenographer did. Jarrett held back. He bobbed his head, dismissing the other members of the board. I moved with them.
General Jarrett extended his hand to block my way when I stepped up to pass around him. “You didn’t get much out of that, did you, Mr. Carter?” He did remember me.
I knew I wouldn’t have been monitoring a five-minute, high-level Pentagon conference unless it had significant overtones of interest for the man who had sent me to it. “I presume I heard what my boss wanted me to hear, General.”
My boss is David Hawk, the no-nonsense director and operations chief of AXE, a clandestine intelligence organization with no official charter. Hawk manipulates the obscure, worldwide activities of AXE as deftly as an exacting maestro conducts a well-rehearsed symphony. My employment with AXE had been going on long enough for me to have accumulated enviable seniority, a few scars — none disfiguring — and immense respect for David Hawk. Seniority in AXE is in no way related to length of service. It is more closely associated with survival. I’d reached the point at which Hawk altered my personnel jacket to carry the coded designation of N3. Only field operatives can quality for ‘N’ status. It has never been revealed to me how many N agents AXE has or who N1 and N2 are... or were. I suspect that both of them are dead. In this business, only the desk types can look forward to certain retirement.
“I wouldn’t want you to carry back the wrong impression, Mr. Carter.” Jarrett’s voice was crisp and solemn. “General Martin has his detractors — men of sincere purpose — who cannot accept radical departures from long-standing tradition. In some cases, these very senior officers view Martin as a threat — not to themselves, but to a disciplined establishment.
“Martin is young, daring, and forward. He is a combat-hardened officer, having proved himself under fire and deserving of the rapid promotions he has received. That his family has wealth and wields considerable political clout had nothing to do with his remarkable career progress. In many respects he takes after his uncle, Senator Steadier, whose tough, hawkish stand during the Vietnamese conflict was hotly challenged by Martin. Nevertheless, Keith willingly served his country, fought with outstanding bravery, and was honored for it. Oddly enough, when he was to be presented with the Distinguished Service Cross at an award ceremony conducted at Letterman Army Hospital upon his return from Southeast Asia, Martin refused to accept it from his stepfather who, as you might know, is a retired lieutenant general. Are you familiar with that background?”
“Not in detail, General.”
“I don’t have time to educate you. I’m mentioning this much only to convey to you that General Martin remains something of an enigma to many people. And to ask you to inform Mr. Hawk that he has my complete confidence. Any steps he undertakes in this matter will be both prudent and speedy, I’m sure.”
General Jarrett didn’t give me a chance to confirm that that was the only way Hawk would tackle any assignment. He spun about and strode away.
I was left by myself in the big, quiet room.
There was a lonely, eerie atmosphere about it.
The meeting had been opened and adjourned in such a hurried, ominous manner, I felt that much had been left unsaid.
There must be a reason why General Keith Martin refused to attend a crucial meeting of the Strategic Options Board. I wondered if his truancy had been ordered by the White House.
If the president was involved in prolonging Martin’s absence, some very peculiar skullduggery was going on.
That didn’t seem likely. The whole thing could be a foot-dragging trick by the unpredictable Keith Martin.