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Danny glanced at the map. "That would take us dangerously close to the frontier. There are bound to be mine fields along there."

"Yeah, but not much other traffic, though."

"Maybe some patrols, even that far out."

"You're right. That's why we're going to lay low for a while yet. But we've got to risk moving while there's still some daylight left. I want to reach the Jebel Kharg before it's too dark to scout a way across."

Danny draped the blanket to provide a patch of shade and settled down to wait. She just lay there. Bolan sat propped against a rock. Both of them were conserving their energy for the arduous trek ahead.

"You know, in all that excitement, there was something I didn't tell you about."

"What's that?"

"About my day with Salim Zakir. I've never seen him like that before."

"How was he?"

"Nervous. Real edgy. Something was going on, I'm sure of it." Danny wanted to be more specific but could not quite put her finger on what it was that made her feel so suspicious. "Four times at the museum he was called away to the phone, not the one in the office; took all the calls on his car phone."

Bolan sensed it, too. Maybe it was all those cops on the street that bothered him.

Khurabi was a powder keg ready to blow.

"I think Hassan is getting ready to strike against his brother," he said, "and anyone in a position of power is going to have to choose sides."

"Then Salim will back Harun. You can bet on that. His youngest sister is one of Sheikh Zayoud's wives, a favorite of the king. Those two are very close. Salim was off to see him again when he dropped me at the hotel. Oh yeah, I almost forgot, I gave him that tape."

"Well, if Harun doesn't know what his brother is up to by now, he soon will..." Bolan motioned for her to be absolutely still.

Danny had no idea what had suddenly alerted him, but something out there in the wasteland had triggered an inner alarm.

The warrior quietly levered himself up between the boulders on the far side of the shallow cut.

He signaled for Danny to follow him, reaching back to give her a hand tip. "See them?"

"Where?" Danny saw nothing but mile upon mile of sand and rock.

"Way over there — they're heading south."

Now she could pick out the small dark blobs, seeming to be swimming slowly through the shimmering haze that hovered above the desert floor. How on earth did he know they were out there? "Who are they... a border patrol?"

"I don't think so. Looks like four, maybe five men with camels; a small caravan of some sort."

Danny shaded her eyes and studied the moving figures. "Bedu. A tiny group of nomads still sticking to the traditional ways."

Bolan nodded. In a way he admired them.

Wandering warriors who had made no compromise.

He could understand that, although to most people, even to other more "progressive" Arabs, it was madness. To Bolan it was a madness worthy of respect. "They must know of ancient paths across the mountains. They're too far west to have skirted the Jebel Kharg."

"I thought this was on the edge of the Forbidden Zone."

"I guess those guys don't read signs or maps. They don't need to, they know where they are. Probably heading down to the fishing villages on the coast to do a little trading," said Bolan. He checked his watch and studied the position of the sun for a moment. "Let's get going. If we stick to that old wadi down there, we can go for a couple of miles before we have to break cover."

"Won't they see us?"

"Yes," admitted Bolan. "But if I sensed their presence, then I expect they already know we're here, too."

Danny knew he was right; no one knows the desert better than the nomads. They repacked the Hog and moved cautiously down the wadi, its sides long since worn down to little more than weak crumbling shoulders. There had been no flash floods here for many seasons.

Bolan drove with care, slowing down on the softer patches so as not to churn up a telltale plume of dust. The foothills of the jebel rose sharply in front of them, and the jagged wall of the main escarpment lay just beyond, its granite cliffs streaked with broad black bands of igneous rock. Several times Danny checked over her shoulder, searching for any sign of the desert tribesmen. They had vanished into the desolate landscape back there as silently as they had appeared.

Sometimes glancing at the map folded in a transparent case on Danny's knee, but more often relying on the aerial surveys he had corrunitted to memory and an intuitive feel for the lay of the land, Bolan navigated the sturdy Hog up the unseen trail toward the brooding heights.

Danny wanted to find out more about this man who exerted such a powerful attraction for her. It wasn't that she needed to rehash stale memories of Nam or even to learn his side of the story she'd first heard from Leo Cameron. If you hadn't been there, then there was no point in talking about it; if you had survived that hell, there was little to say, either. You couldn't add glory to it. You couldn't take away the pain.

They had both been there — in it up to their necks.

And that was that. No, she was more interested in what had happened to him after it was all over — although, as was becoming apparent, it was not all over for him. And likely never would be.

But this was not the time or place for personal poking about into the past. They would be lucky simply to survive the present. And wasn't that the way it had been back in Nam? Besides, Mack would tell her what he wanted her to know, when he wanted her to know it... She sensed they had much to share together.

"Which way now?" Bolan posed the problem aloud.

A wedge of' reddish rock split the way ahead into a fork.

"Whichever we pick, you'd better get us under cover fast," replied Danny. "There's a..."

"A spotter plane back there," Bolan calmly finished her observation. "I've had my eye on it for ten minutes. Right now I think they're more interested in those camel riders."

Bolan steered the Jeep to the left, drove for about four hundred yards and stopped in the lee of a huge sandstone block. Within moments they had the vehicle draped with the camouflage mesh, which would give nothing away to a plane flying over.

From this elevation they could look down on the vast plain of the Khurabian desert. A couple of swirling yellow columns — dust devils, several hundred feet high — were moving majestically before the wind, drifting toward the distant coast.

"They'll obliterate any tracks we might have left out there," he commented. "Might even force that plane to return to base."

It was little more than a faintly buzzing speck, dipping and twisting above the plain, like a drowsy summer insect. He checked it through the glasses.

"Must be one of the three spotter planes operated by the KDP, the Khurabian Desert Police. Zayoud's only got a handful of jets in his so-called air force. And his personal Boeing, of course."

"How do you know all this?"

"A friend gave me a rundown on all the forces and hardware at the sheikh's disposal before we left."

"But you talked about choosing sides when the showdown came... so which side are the KDP on right now? Are they staying loyal to Harun, or are they throwing their lot in with Hassan?"

"Good question. We must assume they've gone over to Hassan. I'm not going to wave them down to find out."

Danny still glanced nervously back at the observation craft, trying to keep track of it as it dwindled into the distance, while Bolan fixed his attention on the barrier that loomed in front of them. This giant uplift, the tilted shelf of the Jebel Kharg, almost cut the tiny oil kingdom in two. Aeons ago it had been a solid, continuous obstruction, but over thousands of years it had been scoured by the abrasive sand, split and blistered by the pitiless sun, buffeted by storms, creased by the wind and washed away in places by the infrequent rains.