She looked at him, a haze in her eyes.
He smiled at her. “Just relax. You’re going to be fine. The ambulance is on its way.”
“What happened?”
“Someone will explain it to you soon enough. For now, you’ve been shot and I want you to lie still.”
“I’ve…I’ve been shot?” Her eyes widened.
“Yes, but it’s not fatal. You’re going to pull through just fine.”
“How would you know?”
“Because I’ve been shot plenty of times,” he said with a chuckle, pouring on the charm. “I just know. Will you trust me?”
“I guess,” she whispered, smiling at him a little before she passed out again.
Schwarz sighed.
“Gadgets!” called a familiar voice.
He turned toward the entrance in time to see Lyons and Blancanales enter the club, weapons drawn and held at the ready.
“Over here,” he reported tiredly.
They quickly rushed to his aid.
“You hit?” Lyons asked.
He shook his head, then pointed at his patient. “She took an in-and-out in the leg, but I’ve controlled the bleeding. She’s got some shock, but I think she’ll be okay.”
Blancanales helped him to his feet as Lyons quickly scanned the room. His eyes came to rest on the terrorist. “Is she dead?”
Gadgets scowled with a negative shake of his head. “Dreamland. She nearly impaled me with this, though.” He held up the knife.
Blancanales gingerly took the knife from him and whistled. “Looks like she was planning on some Schwarz-ka-bobs.”
“Very funny,” the electronic expert deadpanned.
SHE CALLED HERSELF Magdalene Darmid from Israel, but a quick fingerprint analysis said she was Deborah Babbit from Kansas. Able Team settled on the second name as the most believable.
“Although she’s got a great accent going there,” Carl Lyons told them just before they entered the interrogation room.
Because she’d lied, they decided a hard approach was the best kind.
Blancanales started. “Listen, Deborah—”
“My name is not Deborah!” She was irritated because everyone coming into and out of the room in the last hour had been saying “Hi, Deborah” and “Would you like something to drink, Deborah?” and “Deborah, that’s such a pretty name.” Needless to say, that had her frazzled and angered enough to tell the Able Team commando where to stick it.
“You’re not making things easy on yourself,” Lyons warned her when she tried to spit on Blancanales. He easily sidestepped the offense, which only seemed to anger her more.
“I’d listen to him,” Schwarz added, jabbing a thumb at Lyons.
Lyons’s voice went quiet. “Maybe that beating you threw her wasn’t good enough, Deputy Black.”
Schwarz looked at him straight-faced a moment, then said, “Maybe you’re right. Maybe I need to do a more thorough job.”
“Now that you mention it, your work has been sloppy lately,” Lyons replied with a curt nod.
“Hey…wait a minute.” Blancanales raised his hands in mock innocence and said, “She’s now under the protective custody of the U.S. Marshals Service. You two can’t just start beating the hell out of her. We’ll all lose our jobs!”
“Calm down,” Lyons replied, waving at him casually as if he had it all under control.
“Yeah, really,” Schwarz jumped in. “What are you getting all backed up about? She just killed a bunch of innocent people. You think we should give a shit about her? Who’s going to complain?”
Lyons stepped forward and grabbed the woman by the throat, transforming her smug look into one of terror. “I’m sure after some neck-wringing we’ll put her into a spirit of cooperation.”
The woman managed to emit a squeal of outrage and pain before Lyons closed her trachea with one squeeze, immediately depriving her of oxygen. With her arms cuffed behind her, she had no way to defend herself. She tried to kick at him, but the proximity of her chair to the table made the attack ineffective. A moment later it stopped being an act of defiance and started to become an act of desperation. Her lips began to turn blue and her ears reddened.
Blancanales stepped forward and cracked a fist down on the brachial-cephalic nerve area of Lyons’s arm. The blow looked real enough, although Blancanales insured he was actually an inch off the actual nerve bundle. Lyons let go of Babbit’s throat with a mock yelp. The hulking Ironman turned on the Politician, but it was Schwarz who got in between them.
“Knock it off!” he said, trying to sound like the voice of reason.
“Yeah, but did you see what that fu—”
“I said, knock it off!”
The room went silent as Schwarz and Lyons squared off on each other for nearly a full two minutes. It was finally Blancanales with his calm voice and lax demeanor who became the voice of reason.
“Hey, we shouldn’t be fighting with each other,” he said. He pointed to Babbit and said, “She’s our enemy.”
“Yeah,” the two men chorused.
Blancanales turned back to Babbit and said, “What you have just seen is a test. This is only a test. If this had been an actual emergency, I would have just let him strangle you to death. Now, do you want talk to us? Or should we just skip the formalities, take you out into a public square and shoot you dead?”
“You’re crazy! All of you are fucking crazy!” She began to scream and shout additional obscenities. “You can’t just take me out and kill me!”
“Well, actually, we can,” Lyons said. “You see, you’re not an American. You’re a foreigner who has entered this country and committed a terrorist act. Under the new laws enacted by the Homeland Security Act, the things you and your friends did today are considered crimes against humanity and acts of war, and as such that means you are subject to the rules of war.”
“He’s right,” Schwarz said. “You have no rights as a civilian, since you’re not a citizen of this country.”
“In fact, you’re not even in the country legally,” Blancanales added.
That did it.
“Yes, I am! I am! My name is Deborah Babbit. I live in Kansas City, and I went to high school at Monroe High and I can tell you anything about my life you want. But I’m an American citizen and you can’t execute me!”
“We couldn’t execute you anyway,” Lyons said with a shrug, and started to walk toward the door, Schwarz on his tail. “Summary execution of a POW is a violation of Geneva Convention rules.”