After the Marines, Lisanne was working as a patrol officer in Virginia when she’d pulled Hendley over on a traffic stop. He’d been extremely impressed with the way she’d handled herself and he’d eventually recruited her to be their director of transportation. She was fluent in Arabic and could get by in Spanish and Mandarin. As DT, she often acted in the same capacity as a one-person Phoenix Raven detail, guarding the Hendley Associates G550 when it was on the ground at various airfields around the world. Clark rolled her into defensive tactics and other scenario-based training exercises with other Campus operatives almost as soon as she’d come aboard. She’d wowed the rest of the team with her fighting skill right from the get-go. More than anything, Clark was impressed with her ability to think under pressure. She was a better-than-average shot on the range, but began to really shine when the Sim rounds came zinging her way. She’d been downrange before and knew all too well what it was like to get shot at.
“Would it make you feel better if you had a gun?” Clark asked.
Lisanne looked up over half a bite of crepe and raised an eyebrow. She was used to him quizzing her all the time. Often calling him Socrates when he only answered her questions with more questions.
“I think it would,” she said. “A little. Though I guess I’d worry about someone bumping into it in a crowd like this and making a scene.”
Clark gave a contemplative nod. He wiped his hands on a handkerchief he took from the hip pocket of his khakis. Few food vendors wanted to cut into their bottom line by providing napkins for free.
“Tell me what you have on you right now,” he said.
“My everyday carry?” Lisanne grinned. “I always enjoy it when Ding has everyone pocket-dump their EDC on the plane.”
“Everyday carry…” Clark shook his head, scoffing a little. “I get a kick out of all the shit people call their
“Agreed,” Lisanne said, wiping her hands on the handkerchief she got from her own pocket.
Clark gave the white rectangle of cloth a nod. “
Lisanne grinned. “Something I can have with me when I’m overseas or in Paducah.”
“Exactly,” Clark said. “The stuff you carry every damned day, rain or shine, wherever you are… That’s a fairly sparse list. There is
Clark tapped the side of his head. “The things you put up here are a hell of a lot more important than what you have in your pocket. If you don’t remember anything else we talk about, remember this: You are the weapon. Anything you carry in your pocket or pick up from your surroundings — gun, knife, mop handle, or broken brick — is nothing more than a tool.”
Lisanne nodded, chewing on the counsel along with the last of her
“That guy you were watching,” she said without moving her head. “He’s back.”
Clark thought of complimenting her for noticing the same European he had, but decided the ultimate compliment would be to let her assume that he knew she’d been up to speed all along. In truth, it didn’t surprise him.
“His buddy on the motorcycle just dropped him off,” she said. “Directly behind you… Looks like he’s locked on to someone in the crowd…” Both hands on the table, she scanned, looking for the European’s target. “Got her. Local girl, maybe fifteen, at your seven o’clock.”
Clark was on his feet in an instant.
“They’re heading this way,” Lisanne said. Fifty feet out.