Savannah Swingsaw

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Authors: Don Pendleton
Tags: Fiction, Action & Adventure, Men's Adventure, det_action, Bolan; Mack (Fictitious character)
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hide, rather than just stamp it on like these others. It was favored by cattle rustlers because it allowed them to change brands so easily. This branding iron has been outlawed in several states." He lowered the iron, stroked the metal.
    Giles took a deep breath. "Oh."
    "How much?" the man asked.
    "Sir?"
    "For the branding irons. All three."
    "Well," Giles drawled, figuring in his head, "lots of history here. Cattle rustlers and all. Worth a lot of money."
    The man with one blue eye and one brown eye opened his wallet, pulled out two crisp hundreddollar bills, laid them on the counter, picked up the irons and walked toward the door.
    Though he figured they might be worth more, something told Giles not to argue this one time. He rubbed the indentation on his forehead where the man had ground the branding iron.
    As he reached the front door, the man glanced at his watch, turned to Giles and asked, "Pay phone?"
    Giles pointed. "Half a block down, next to the grocery store."
    * * *
    Outside in the early morning sun, Zavlin blinked his sensitive eyes and quickly put his sunglasses on. He glanced at his watch again. Still a few minutes before he was due to call in. He was in a good mood, having picked up three additional items for his collection of Western memorabilia. He had perhaps the largest collection of branding irons in the world. On more than one occasion, he'd had the opportunity to actually use his irons, firing them up over coals until they glowed a fierce orange. Then pressing them against the skin of a yelping man, woman or child from whom he had requested information.
    Eventually, they all spoke, begged to answer his questions. There was nothing like the stench of sizzling flesh to persuade a stubborn tongue.
    Zavlin found the public telephone, inserted his coins and began dialing. The voice at the other end was crisp, formal. "Identify, please."
    "The Gamesman."
    "One moment." The line crackled with static for a few seconds.
    Then another voice spoke. "Gamesman?"
    "Yes," Zavlin answered. "I am in position."
    "Strategy change. Your opponent has altered his defense."
    "What do you mean?" Zavlin demanded.
    His control sighed. "A prisoner escaped last night."
    "Who?"
    "No one to concern us. Someone named Damon Blue."
    "Did you run a check?"
    "Of course, Gamesman." The voice was insulted. "Petty criminal. No relationship to your assignment."
    "What is the current status?"
    "Security increased. Lock-down throughout. Some prisoners transferred."
    "The pawn?"
    "He remains. I have some contacts that I can pressure to make sure."
    "No."
    "What?"
    "No," Zavlin repeated, his voice whipping through the wire like an icy wind. "In fact, make certain he is transferred, it does not matter where. Just find out when the transfer will take place. While he is on his way, that is when I shall strike."
    "But the original plan, the one already approved..."
    "Impossible. This Damon Blue has ruined that now. They will be alerted inside. I would have to wait another week for security to ease."
    "That would be too late."
    "Exactly."
    There was a long pause as Zavlin's control went through the motions of making a decision. Zavlin waited patiently, knowing there was only one way to decide, that this pause was only a matter of saving face. A show of false power.
    "Yes, Gamesman. Play as you see fit."
    Zavlin chuckled into the phone, allowing his control to hear him as he hung up. He hurried back to his hotel room to prepare. Control would have the information as to when Dodge Reed would be transferred, undoubtedly this very day.
    By tonight, the boy would be dead.

12
    "We're not feminist vigilantes, Mack," Shawnee said.
    "I didn't say that," Bolan said. The morning sun was bright through the kitchen curtains. The five of them were sitting around the table.
    Shawnee and Belinda were sipping coffee, Lynn and Rita were nibbling on peanut butter and crackers.
    Bolan dug with relish into the bacon-and-onions omelet Belinda had made for him.
    "We're not

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