Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is
limited. Imagination encircles the world.
—Albert Einstein
A brilliant mind is a remarkable asset only if it belongs to a
good man. It becomes dangerous when the man loses track of what's important in
life. When greed takes hold, a brilliant mind is wasted.
—Mack Bolan
THE
MACK BOLAN
LEGEND
Nothing
less Hum a war could have fashioned the destiny of the man called Mack Bolan.
Bolan earned the Executioner title in the jungle hell of Vietnam.
But
this soldier also wore another name—Sergeant Mercy. He was so tagged because of
the compassion he showed to wounded comrades-in-arms and Vietnamese civilians.
Mack
Bolan's second tour of duty ended prematurely when he was given emergency leave
to return home and bury his family, victims of the Mob. Then he declared a
one-man war against the Mafia.
He
confronted the Families head-on from coast to coast, and soon a hope of victory
began to appear. But Bolan had broken society's every rule. That same society
started gunning for this elusive warrior—to no avail.
So
Bolan was offered amnesty to work within the system against terrorism. This
time, as an employee of Uncle Sam, Bolan became Colonel John Phoenix. With a
command center at Stony Man Farm in Virginia, he and his new allies—Able Team
and Phoenix Force—waged relentless war on a new adversary: the KGB.
But
when his one true love, April Rose, died at the hands of the Soviet terror
machine, Bolan severed all ties with Establishment authority.
Now,
after a lengthy lone-wolf struggle and much soul-searching, the Executioner has
agreed to enter an "arm's-length" alliance with his government once
more, reserving the right to pursue personal missions in his Everlasting War.
Prologue
Could he kill a human being?
Bernard Craker had agonized over the deed for weeks. Could he
really do it? He'd asked himself time and again. Did he actually have the
fortitude it took to murder another human being? Craker honestly couldn't say.
When the momentous day arrived, he pulled into the parking lot at Nanotech,
Incorporated, as nervous as a lab animal about to be experimented on.
Craker's mouth went dry, and his palms broke out in a clammy sweat
as he approached the wide glass doors. He glanced at the receptionist, old Mrs.
Wilson, afraid she'd notice something strange, but she didn't even look up.
Then again, she never had a word of greeting for him, probably because he never
had any for her.
Craker had never been big on the social graces. He spoke only when
spoken to, and then he was always brief and to the point. Some people took that
as being cold and aloof. Craker saw it as being true to his nature. He was,
after all, a scientist, and his time was much too precious to waste in idle
chitchat with morons whose intelligence quotients were barely out of the double
digits.
Craker was always that way. Back in high school
when other kids were involved in sports and dating, he buried
himself in science books and wedded himself to his microscope. Later, in
college, while his peers indulged hi beer parties and chasing hot babes, he
spent every waking moment pursuing an entirely different passion—microbes.
The hidden world of microorganisms had long fascinated him. Ever
since the tender age of ten, when Craker stuck a slide on a microscope his
grandmother had given him for his birthday, he'd been hooked. A whole new world
had opened up, a tiny, invisible world most people ignored.
Not Craker. Discovering the secrets of the micro-verse, as he
liked to call it, consumed him. He scrimped and saved to buy the best
microscope on the market. He read all there was on microbiology and every
related field, absorbing what the top minds distilled like a sponge absorbing
water.
It paid off. Craker graduated from Harvard with the highest
honors. The faculty considered him a wunder-kind, a genius sure to make his
mark. Job offers poured in, some from the most prestigious institutions in the
country.
He picked Nanotech. Not because the pay was better, since to
Craker, money didn't matter. Nor because Nanotech was a premier facility of its
land, with a quality staff and state-of-the-art equipment.
No, Craker chose Nanotech because another member of his
graduating class had done so. He went there specifically to be close to a
certain young woman. And now, as he heard her call his name, Craker stopped and
turned and quirked his mouth in what, for Craker, passed as a warm smile.
"Good morning."
Helen Paisley wore her usual white lab coat. It fit
snugly to her small frame, its plainness complemented by her
short-cropped hair, razor-thin features and the oversize glasses perched on the
tip of her nose. A walking broomstick, as her coworkers liked to tease her, but
to Craker she was a vision of loveliness to rival fabled Helen of Troy.
"Today's the day," Paisley said so only he could hear,
gazing up and down the tiled corridor. "Are you up to it?"
"For you, anything," Craker said.
Paisley gave him an exasperated look. "That's not what I
asked. Can you do what has to be done?"
"Without a doubt." But the truth was, Craker was plagued
by doubts. He'd never killed anyone before. Animals, yes. Microorganisms, yes.
But never another person.
Paisley took his elbow and steered him toward their lab. "If
the results are what we anticipate, we'll have to act fast."
"I know. I just wish...." Craker stopped before he upset
her.
"You wish what?"
"That this wasn't necessary. I like Ted. He's always treated
me decently. And he has a wife and family."
"Bernie, Bernie, Bernie," Paisley said with a sigh.
"How many times must I remind you? It's your process, isn't it? Your
discovery? Do you want Nanotech to have the rights to it? Do you want them to take
all the credit? Reap all the rewards?"
Craker answered without thinking. "The rewards aren't all
that important." He regretted being so rash when her long, red nails bit
deep into his arm.
"Not important?" Paisley yanked him through a swing door
into a short side corridor that was seldom
used. "Don't start!" she hissed, checking to verify they
were alone. "We've been all through this. You can't back out on me."
"I'd never do that," Craker assured her, and if she
caught the tone of total devotion in his voice, she didn't let on. But he was
quite sincere. He adored her, and had since they met in chemistry class, back
in their freshmen days at college.
Nodding, Paisley squeezed his hand, took a deep breath to steady
herself and pulled him back through the door. Their lab was the last room on
the left. As they entered, Ted Proctor beckoned from the rear, where the cages
were kept.
"It worked! It worked! Come see for yourselves!"
Craker couldn't contain his excitement. For the moment he forgot
about the foul deed he had to commit and rushed back. There, on the bottom of a
wire cage, lay a small mound of hair, whiskers and tail that just yesterday had
been a healthy white rat. The grisly puddle quivered as if the rat were still
alive, which Craker knew was impossible.
Proctor beamed like a child at Christmas. "I still can't
believe it! The nanites did everything you claimed they would, Bernie. And it
took only twelve hours. Imagine if you had injected more of them!"
"Which reminds me. I need to check on something."
Pivoting, he walked to the cold-storage unit, which was about the size of a
small freezer. Inside was the tray containing the six culture tubes.
Craker hated to waste one, but speed was essential. Gingerly
removing a vial, he stepped to a table, picked up a syringe and inserted the
needle into the solution.
"What are you doing?" Proctor asked as he walked toward
him. "The test was an unqualified success. We
don't need to run another. I'll call Larson and have him come down
to view the video."
"I'd rather you didn't," Craker said. The syringe was
full. Holding it up, he peered into the barrel containing the amber fluid.
"You should be proud," Proctor said. "I wouldn't be
surprised if you make the cover of Time or Newsweek. Hell, Larson will
probably have you nominated for a Nobel Prize."
He placed his hand on Craker's shoulder. "In another month
the whole world will have heard of your momentous accomplishment."
"No, they won't," Craker said, and plunged the needle
into Ted Proctor's neck.
Chapter 1
Drug dealers were like cockroaches. They deserved to be
exterminated.
Mack Bolan had learned never to let his feelings infringe on his
work. He had a job, he did it. That was it. But there were occasions, such as
this one, when he couldn't help but feel deep personal satisfaction at what he
was about to do.
Below his vantage point on the roof of an old warehouse, a
limousine had pulled into the parking lot. Out stepped a burly driver, two
bodyguards wearing tinted shades and the main man himself, Alfonso Sweet, or
the Sweetman, as he was known on the muggy streets of the Windy City.
The man known as the Executioner reached under his jacket and
pulled a Beretta 93-R machine pistol from its shoulder holster. From an inside
pocket he extracted a sound suppressor, which he quickly attached to the
barrel. A quiet kill was called for, so as not to involve Chicago's finest.
From where Bolan was crouched, he could see Lake Michigan, no more
than half a mile to the east. To the north an airliner was on its final
approach to O'Hare International Airport.
All round, the city bustled with life and activity.
The run-down warehouse district, though, was un-
naturally still, its denizens driven into cooler quarters by the
warmth of the hazy afternoon.
Bolan sighted down the Beretta at Alfonso Sweet The man was
dressed like a flashy pimp, in black pants and a red shirt. A wide-brimmed felt
hat crowned Sweet's slicked black hair. Just as Bolan fixed a bead, Sweet
leaned down, extended an arm into the limo and hauled out the last occupant.
The soldier stiffened. A boy of twelve or so, wearing scruffy
jeans and a faded T-shirt, cringed, afraid Sweet would hit him. But the man
only laughed and shoved the boy toward one of the bodyguards, who gripped the
youngster by the back of the neck and propelled him toward the entrance.
Bolan slowly lowered the Beretta. He couldn't very well cut loose
with the boy in the line of fire. He needed to get closer. Wheeling, he hurried
to the roof access door, opened it, and hastened down a flight of stairs. There
was little light He moved hi the gloom, his soft soles making no sound.
Earlier that day, Bolan had cased the warehouse. It was three
stories high, as long as a battleship and half again as wide. The original
owner had long since gone out of business, and it had stood derelict until the
Sweetman claimed it as a base of operations.
According to the Feds, Alfonso Sweet was the current kingpin of
Chicago's drug trade. Thanks to a widespread network of illicit contacts, Sweet
was fun-neling cocaine and other hard drugs into the city by the ton. Heroin,
crack, downers, the Sweetman was the man to see.
As a result, Sweet now had more money than Midas. And as was
inevitably the case, with all that money came power. The best attorneys. A
judge or
three hi Sweet's hip pocket. A crooked politician thrown in for
good measure. So it was no surprise that when the local police busted Sweet, he
was allowed to walk on a technicality. Or when the Feds arrested him, it was
ruled entrapment.
Alfonso Sweet had a reputation of being untouchable. Invincible.
He was the idol of every street hood, the envy of every wannabe gangster. He
was the man.
So what if Sweet pumped millions of dollars worth of drugs into
Chicago every year? So what if he sold his drugs to minors, boys and girls
barely into then-teens? So what if he turned them into addicts? So what if he
ruined countless lives? Sweet didn't care.
But Mack Bolan did. When his good friend Hal Brognola, director of
the Justice Department's Sensitive Operations Group, had brought Sweet's
activities to his attention, Bolan had known what had to be done. So had
Brognola.
Alfonso Sweet had to be taken down. Legal channels hadn't worked.
Proper procedure had failed. That had left Brognola with the solution of last
resort: the Executioner.
The Everlasting War, Bolan called it. The war to reclaim America's
soul. The war to save untold innocents from vile predators like Sweet who were
immune to the law. But they weren't immune to a 9 mm Parabellum slug to the
brain or heart.
Muted voices reached Bolan's keen ears. At the next landing he
inched open the door, involuntarily wincing when a seldom-used hinge creaked
ever so slightly. Easing through, Bolan catfooted down a murky hall that ended
in the vast belly of the warehouse. Steel girders formed a spiderweb high
overhead. Dusty
crates and boxes were piled high, and a musty scent was in the
air.
Bolan threaded among the crates. They had been left by the
previous owner, and Sweet hadn't gotten around to disposing of them. Only the
section of warehouse nearest the loading bay had been cleared, and it was
there, amid the littered remains of fast food and other trash, that Alfonso
Sweet and his henchmen had taken the boy.
The youngster was seated in a folding chair, his hands gripping
the seat. He was terrified. As well he should be, for angrily pacing in front
of him was Sweet. Both bodyguards were to one side, indifferent. There was no
sign of the driver.
"—in the hell do you think you are, runt?" Sweet was
railing. "Dissin' me hi front of my boys?"
The boy squirmed nervously, then cast an anxious glance toward the
front door.
"Don't even think about it," Sweet declared. "My
men will whack you before you get five feet." Bending abruptly, Sweet
slapped the youngster, hard. "You listening, Deaver? You little
bastard."
Deaver fearfully bobbed his chin. His eyes glistened with
moisture, but he was resisting the urge to cry. "I hear you,
Sweetman."
Sweet drew himself up to his full height. Snickering, he motioned
at his bodyguards. "Do you believe this kid? He has the gall to bad-mouth
me in public. Me!"
"I didn't mean anything," Deaver bleated.
"No?" Sweet said testily.
"Honest. I just don't want any drugs. My mom says they're
bad." When Sweet offered no reply, the boy grew bold and rattled on.
"That's why I told Artie I
didn't want any. That's why I told him to quit pestering me. It
was the drugs, not you."
Sweet sneered in rank contempt. "Lying sack of..."
Leaving the statement unfinished, he placed his hands on his hips. "I
heard what you said, boy. Artie told me all about it. How you told him to go to
hell. How you said that you knew he worked for me, but you didn't care. How I'm
scum."
"I didn't say 'scum,'" Deaver interrupted.
"Oh, that's right, Deaver. What were your exact words
again?" Sweet made a show of scratching his chin. "Now I remember!
'Garbage,' you called me. And you went on and on about how only idiots turn to
drugs. And how no one can make you do something if you don't want to."
The boy coughed lightly. "I just don't want any drugs."
"That's too bad," Sweet said. "Because, you see, I
can't have folks going around bad-mouthing me. Can't have nobodies like you
standing up to me, or anyone who works for me."
"But I didn't do any harm."
"Wrong, boy. You showed backbone. Others might get the idea
they can show backbone, too. Then where would I be?" When Deaver didn't
answer, Sweet grabbed the youngster by the front of his shirt. "I'll tell
you where! Out of business in no time. And I can't let that happen."
"Why—" Deaver licked his lips "—why'd you bring me
here?"
"To make an example of you, boy. An object lesson, as the
cops would say." The drug lord sniffed and stepped back. "By tomorrow
everybody in your school will understand what it means to cross me. And
when Artie or anyone else sells for me, no one will stop
them."
"Are you going to hurt me?" Deaver asked. "I'm just
a kid."
"What the hell does that have to do with anything?"
Sweet asked, and cackled. "For your information, I wasn't much older than
you when I got my start in this business. I ran bags for Lucky Willy. Nickel
and dime, sure, but I had to start somewhere." His tone grew flinty.
"Whether I hurt you or not is up to you."
"How's that?"
"Push for me, boy. You can lend Artie a hand. It'll show your
whole school I'm the man, that I'm in control."
"I can't. My mom wouldn't like it."
"Your ma again. Close to her, are you?"
"She's my mother," Deaver stated, as if that explained
everything.
"A regular momma's boy." Sweet unexpectedly seized the
youth by the shoulders and threw him to the concrete floor. "Well, pay
attention, momma's boy. It doesn't make a difference to me how close you are to
your mother. Keep giving me grief, and you'll be eating your teeth. Or
maybe—" Sweet stopped and smirked, as if struck by an idea "—maybe my
friends and I should pay your high-and-mighty momma a visit."
"No!" Deaver shoved up off the floor and cocked his puny
fists. "Leave her be, you hear me? Leave her be!"
"What if I don't?" Sweet violently shoved the boy buck.
down. "It would serve you right for not respecting me."
Flat on his back, Deaver stared in rising despair at his
tormentor, tears flowing freely now.
"I can see it already," Sweet said sarcastically.
"I'll take your momma on a date. Maybe out to the lake late at night. She
much of a swimmer? Doesn't matter, 'cause when I'm done with her, she'll be
breathing water, permanently." Sweet paused. "You follow me, you
little smart-ass?"
Mack Bolan circled to the right, seeking to get closer. He still
had no idea where the driver was.
"What are you saying?" Deaver asked, aghast.
"Do I have to spell it out?" Sweet swore a blue streak.
"You either do as I say, or I have your mother killed."
Movement near the front of the building caused Bolan to freeze.
The driver had emerged from a small office, carrying a cup of steaming coffee.
The man brought it to Sweet, who accepted the Java with a grunt
"No one stands in my way, kid," the drug lord declared,
and took a sip. "No one." He gestured at the enormous metal door to
the loading dock. "At midnight tonight over a million bucks' worth of cocaine
is due in. A million bucks! Does that give you any idea of who you're dealing
with? Or why it's smarter to go with the plan than buck the man? You understand?"
Bolan couldn't help thinking that Hal Brognola would find news of
the shipment extremely interesting. He continued to circle, keeping a wary eye
on the bodyguards and the driver.
Sweet downed the rest of the coffee in great gulps. "Last
chance, boy," he told Deaver. "What's it going
to be? Will you work for me? Or does your mother need to grow
gills?"
Most boys that age would have given in. They would have been cowed
by the dealer's fury and threats. Young Deaver, though, had more backbone than
most, more grit. Rising, he stated in utmost earnestness, "Lay a finger
on my mom and I'll kin you, if it's the last thing I do."
"Stupid brat," Sweet said, and slugged the boy in the
gut.
One of the beefy bodyguards cackled. The other grinned. Neither
was doing what he was paid to do, which suited Bolan just fine. Hunched low, he
rounded a pile of busted crates and boards. Another thirty feet should do it.
The youngster was on his hands and knees, spittle dribbling over
his lower lip and down his chin.
"Want to threaten me again?" Sweet baited him.
'"Cause I got to tell you, I'm scared silly. About ready to piss my
pants."
That struck the bodyguards as the height of hilarity. Even the
dour driver joined in the mirth.
Amateurs, Bolan reflected. For all their street smarts, all their
city savvy, they were as green as grass, all bluster and hot air. Oh, they'd
squeeze a trigger readily enough, and kill anyone at the snap of Sweet's
fingers. But they weren't anywhere near as deadly as they made themselves out
to be. Luck, more than skill, explained how they had survived as long as they
had, and their string of luck had just run out.
Squatting behind a grimy crate, Bolan adopted a two-handed grip on
the Beretta and prepared to make his move.
Just then, a car horn blared outside, bringing the festivities to
an end.
"Who the hell is that?" Sweet snapped. "Lap Dog, go
take a look."
The stockiest hardcase strutted to the entrance. "It's Rufus
and his crew," he shouted.
"Already?" Sweet said. "They weren't supposed to be
here until midnight."
"Well, it's them, boss," Lap Dog assured him.
The drug lord tossed down the coffee cup and adjusted his hat.
"Don't just stand there, open up." Gripping Deaver by the neck, he
pushed the boy against some boxes. ' 'Listen good, kid. Not one word out of
you. Not one! You so much as sneeze, and your mother is maggot food. Got
me?"
The youngster nodded.
Sweet moved to the left of the huge corrugated metal door as his
three underlings raised it by hoisting a heavy metal chain. Outside were two
vehicles, ordinary sedans. Inside both were four men, all wearing similar
brown leather vests and blue caps.
Their colors. They were members of Los Diablos, a gang based out
of Los Angeles. According to the Feds, their specialty was drug-running.
The cars pulled inside, and the corrugated door clanked down. ";Hola,
amigo! What's happening, Sweetman?" bantered the first man to climb
out, a short slab of muscle sporting a pencil mustache and long sideburns.
Sweet and his visitor exchanged hand signals, then shook. "I
could ask you the same thing, Carlos. What's the deal being eight hours early,
man? Our agreement was midnight."
"Chill, bro," Carlos said. "We had to leave L.A.
in a hurry. The cops were on to us. A snitch got word they were
due to raid, so we loaded up the stuff and split." Smiling, he clapped
Sweet on the back. "I didn't think you'd mind, bro."
"Not at all, bro," Sweet said, mimicking him. "You
wouldn't be much good to me in the slammer."
Carlos crooked a finger, and the rest of his gang climbed out.
"We actually got here about half an hour ago and were waiting down the
street for you to show. When we saw that tall dude let himself in, we figured
you'd be coming soon."
Sweet's brows knit. "What tall dude?"
"The big guy in the trenchcoat. Tough-looking SOB." As
an afterthought, Carlos added, " We saw him up on the roof just before you
arrived."
Bolan's gut tightened into a ball. Backpedaling, he turned to make
himself scarce. But it was too late.
"He's not one of mine." Sweet declared. "That means
we've got uninvited company. Fan out, boys! Find him!"
Bolan ran fast, weaving farther into the maze of crates. He
figured he could elude the searchers and swing around to reach the boy.
Stopping to listen, he happened to look at the floor, at his footprints clearly
etched in the thick dust. Damn, the soldier thought, and hurried on. This was
his own fault, though. He'd been unusually careless in letting the Diablos see
him. Sure, he hadn't known they were out there, but that was no excuse. A
fundamental law of his profession was never take anything for granted. Not
ever.
"Hey!" someone hollered. "Over here! I found some
tracks!"
Halting again, Bolan resorted to a ruse to buy himself time. He
took four steps backward, placing each
foot in corresponding prints he had already made. Then he bounded
to the left, beyond a stack of boxes, and looped around them.
The pounding of shoes and scuffing noises told the soldier gunners
were converging from different directions. He glimpsed one, moving away from
him. Sidling past a crate, he stood stock-still when another figure
materialized, a lanky Diablo armed with a Smith & Wesson Model 4516.
The man was gazing off to the right. Bolan hoped he'd elude
detection, but the very next moment the Diablo swiveled toward him and a
widening of the man's eyes betrayed his discovery. The Smith & Wesson
jerked up but Bolan already had his machine pistol level. All he had to do was
stroke the trigger. A 3-round burst cored the gunner's sternum, and the man
collapsed to the floor.
"Did you hear something?" someone off to the left
shouted.
"No," another answered.
"I did," chimed hi a third.
Bolan was in motion, gliding wide of the body. Soon he had an
unobstructed view of the boy, who hadn't budged. Close by, Sweet and Carlos
were conversing in hushed tones. One of the Sweet's bodyguards and two of
Carlos's goons hadn't joined the hunt, either.
Both cars were unattended, but with the huge corrugated door
down, using either was out of the question.
Sweet cupped a hand to his mouth. "Lap Dog, you hear
me?"
"Yeah, boss," was the reply from deep in the warehouse.
"Take a couple of guys up on the roof. Maybe our visitor is
still up there. Maybe he didn't make those tracks."
"Will do."
Bolan came to a final pair of boxes. He wanted to get the boy's
attention, to signal for Deaver to duck, but the youngster was gazing wistfully
toward the front as if he were considering making a break for it.
Suddenly someone began bawling, "Hey! Hey! Freddie has been
whacked! Over here!"
Carlos and his two goons immediately dashed off to investigate,
leaving Sweet and the lone bodyguard for Bolan to deal with. Rising, the
soldier stepped into the open, firing as he did, his burst spinning the bodyguard.
Dead on his feet, the man fell with a loud thud.
Alfonso Sweet whirled toward Bolan as the Executioner swung the
Beretta into play. Sweet thrust out his hands, his thin lips mouthing the word,
"No!" Astonishment twisted his face as his torso was cored. Blood
spurted, staining his expensive shirt, and he tottered drunkenly. Sinking onto
his knees, he had enough life left to throw back his head and scream.
Deaver was riveted by the tableau. Bolan snagged him on the fly,
grasping the boy's wrist and leading him toward the entrance. Shouts broke out
all over, the gunners yelling back and forth in confusion, wanting to know who
had screamed and why.
Bolan had hopes of making it out unseen, but they were dashed on
the cruel rocks of reality when a gunner materialized out of the murky
ulterior, spotted him, and yelled.
"Sweet is down! The bastard is getting away!"
Gunfire erupted. Hunching as he ran, Bolan pushed Deaver in front
of nun, shielding the boy with his own
body. As more rounds buzzed, he pivoted, returning fire, but the
gunner sought cover and the burst sizzled empty space.
Another Diablo appeared just as Bolan and the youth reached the
door. With rounds chipping the wall mere inches away, Bolan practically flung
the boy through. Again he spun, on the heel of his foot, and this time his
target wasn't as lucky. Three Parabellum slugs stitched the man's face,
dropping him like a rock.
Then Bolan was out the door. He planned to spirit Deaver to
safety—but the boy wasn't there. Glancing both ways, Bolan saw the youngster
sprinting like mad to the east. He started to go after him but was brought up
short by the rasp of car doors being opened.
The soldier faced the parking lot.
A third late-model Ford was parked next to Sweet's limo.
Evidently, Carlos and company had driven from Los Angeles in three vehicles,
not two, and the third had stayed outside while the two cars in which drugs had
been stashed had gone in to be unloaded.
The four Diablos inside weren't simpletons. They realized
something was wrong and popped out of their vehicle with their weapons ready,
one of them snarling in Spanish for Bolan to drop his pistol and raise his
arms.
Cutting to the right, the soldier bolted for the corner of the
warehouse. Autofire chattered, perforating the wall and kicking up stinging
shards of asphalt from the ground at his feet. Without slowing Bolan responded.
He had the satisfaction of seeing one of the Diablos keel over. Then he was at
the corner and racing around it.
Bolan figured Deaver would be all right The
youngster could lose himself in the alleys and side streets
flanking the warehouse and eventually make his way home. With Sweet gone, so
was the threat to Deaver and his mother.
The mission had been accomplished. All Bolan had to do now was to
slip off unseen and he could be on the next jet east. He'd phone Hal Brognola
from the airport, just in case something new had come up.
Belatedly, the soldier saw a side door opening up ahead. He dived
to the right, behind a giant trash bin as a pistol cracked in regular cadence.
Now he had gunners behind him and in front. Bolan sidestepped to
the end of the bin and peered around it A solitary Diablo was cautiously
advancing.
Yells and the drum of pounding shoes rose from the front of the
building.
Bolan had to move. Darting out, he nailed the advancing gunner
before the man's trigger finger could so much as twitch. Then he leaned against
the bin, waiting for the three Diablos who were chasing him to cross his gun
sights. But they had halted at the comer and were talking excitedly.
Bolan scanned the rear of the warehouse, which was bordered by a
seven-foot-high chain-link fence. Climbing over it posed no problem, but
reaching the fence alive did. The Diablos out front would unleash a hailstorm
the instant he stepped into view. And at any moment more gunners might spill
from the side door.
The soldier regretted not bringing his combat black-suit, crammed
with useful items for situations just like this one. Or an M-16 with an attached
grenade launcher. He'd counted on a swift insertion, achieving
his mission and vanishing before Sweet's people could collect
their wits.
So much for his well-laid plans, Bolan wryly reflected. He
surveyed the fence again and spied a hole in the chain link, down low. It might
be wide enough for him to wriggle through. Once beyond, stacks of empty pallets
offered protection.
Tucking at the knees, Bolan girded himself. A few shots to
discourage the Diablos, and he would be off. But as he raised the Beretta in a
two-handed grip and looked out to mark their position, a deep voice boomed
overhead.
"There he is! I see him!"
The soldier glanced up. Lap Dog and a pair of Diablos were at the
edge of the roof, bringing their weapons to bear.
A heartbeat later two more gunners rushed out of the side door.
Chapter 2
Most men would have died then and there. Outflanked and outgunned,
they would have gone down in a blaze of gunfire.
But the Executioner wasn't most men. Mack Bolan had honed his
lethal craft in killing fields from one end of the globe to the other. He'd
engaged in more combat than most men saw in a lifetime. His reflexes were
razor-sharp, his skill second to none. In a crisis he reacted without thinking,
instinctively doing what was needed to survive. He didn't waste precious seconds
thinking about what to do; he automatically did it.
As the pair of gunners rushed from the side door, they ran smack
into bursts from the 93-R. In the blink of an eye they were prone and bloody.
As they hit the ground, Bolan swept the machine pistol toward the
roof and triggered more rounds. Alarmed, Lap Dog and the others scrambled back
from the edge.
Without any hesitation, Bolan dashed toward the side door,
emptying the magazine to discourage the Diablos at the front corner. Barreling
into a narrow hallway, he pressed his back against the wall, dipped a hand into
an inner pocket and palmed a new magazine.
Lap Dog was screeching for the Diablos out front to close in. Down
the hall, muffled sounds stressed how untenable the soldier's position was.
Bolan ejected the spent mag and slapped home the fresh one. The
empty went into the same pocket as he aligned an eye with the inner jamb.
All three Diablos were slinking forward.
Straightening, the soldier took a few deep breaths. Then he
vaulted from concealment, the Beretta slanted almost straight up. The surprise
on the faces of Lap Dog and the other two would have been comical under
different circumstances. Caught flat-footed leaning well out over the roof,
they were drilled through their chests and heads. Both gunners sprawled flat,
but Lap Dog pitched over the rim, uttering a gurgling whine as he dived
headfirst toward the unyielding pavement. The crunch of his impact was almost
loud enough to drown out the next burst from Bolan's Beretta.
The lead Diablo crumpled. His friends showed their true colors by
wheeling to flee. They were swift but not as fast as the 9 mm bullets that
whizzed after them.
Bolan sped toward the fence. He had reduced the opposition by
better than half, but Carlos, two or three Diablos and Sweet's driver were
still unaccounted for. Gaining the fence, he dived to the hole. It was barely
big enough. A last glance back, and Bolan flung himself into the opening as if
fired from a cannon. His trenchcoat snagged on the jagged links, but he freed
it with a tug and crawled on through.
Running on, Bolan put the pallets between himself and warehouse.
He'd done it. Now all that remained was to flag a taxi and head for O'Hare.
The next building was an upholstery business. Workers could be
seen through a large glass window,
a woman mending a rip in a sofa and a man threading a spool.
Neither paid any attention when Bolan walked by, the machine pistol hidden
under his coat.
Traffic was sparse. On a whim he walked eastward, mingling into
the light flow of pedestrians. No one acted concerned about the recent
gunshots. Maybe they were used to it. Or maybe they simply didn't care.
At the intersection, while waiting for the light to change, Bolan
scoured the adjoining street for some sign of Deaver but the boy was nowhere to
be seen. The light turned green, and, the soldier stepped into the crosswalk.
Brownstones lined the thoroughfare, interspersed by small
businesses. Bolan passed a pizza parlor, the aroma of baking pizza enough to
make his stomach growl. Next was a throwback to a previous age, a tailor's. A
little farther on was a deli.
Again Bolan had to wait for a light. Again he sought some trace of
the boy. Looking over his right shoulder, he saw something that sent his hand
rising toward his shoulder rig.
A brown sedan was coming up the street, one exactly like those
driven by the Diablos. As it prowled closer, Bolan recognized the driver. It
was Carlos, driving well below the speed limit. Two other gang members were
with him, leaning out open windows and intently surveying the sidewalks.
Three guesses who they were after, Bolan mused. In his trenchcoat
he stood out like the proverbial sore thumb, but if he took it off he would
expose the holster. Turning left, he ducked into the first doorway he came to.
None too soon. The light had changed. The brown
sedan drove through the intersection, Carlos looking up the
street.
Bolan didn't think he'd been spotted. To play it safe he waited
ten seconds before venturing to the corner. By now the sedan was almost to the
end of the block. At the light, Carlos turned south.
Moving to the curb, Bolan searched in vain for a cab. As the old
saying went, there was never a taxi around when someone needed one. He walked
briskly, checking behind him every few steps to guard against another unwelcome
surprise. At the junction where the Diablos had turned right, he went left.
The traffic soon picked up a little, but all of the Windy City's
cabs seemed to have gone into hibernation. Bolan traveled several blocks
without setting eyes on one. Pausing at another traffic light, he gazed
westward and saw Deaver.
Oblivious to those around him, the boy was leaning against a wall,
openly weeping.
Bolan walked over. As his shadow fell across the youngster, Deaver
looked up in stark panic.
"Remember me?" Bolan said quietly.
Shock glued the boy in place.
"I won't hurt you," the soldier said. "I just
wanted to make sure you were okay."
Sniffling, Deaver unfurled his forearm and brushed it across his
face to wipe away the tears. "You're the one who saved me."
"Can you make it home on your own?" Bolan inquired.
Deaver ignored the question. "Who are you, mister? Why'd you
whack the Sweetman like you did?"
"He had it coming."
The boy nodded. "That's true. My mom says he was the worst
man alive. Pushing those drugs."
"Your mother sounds like an extremely wise woman."
"She's smart," Deaver said, smiling in genuine warmth.
"And she cares for us. Ever since my dad walked out, she's had to work two
jobs to keep food on the table for me and my brothers and sisters. But she
never complains."
"Get on home, son. Tell her she won't need to worry about the
Sweetman anymore." Bolan started to depart, but the youth snagged his
sleeve.
"Look!" The youngster pointed to the west
Alfonso Sweet's driver was prowling up the avenue toward them.
"Quick," Bolan said, and taking Deaver by the hand, he
hastened back around the intersection.
"What'll we do, mister?" the boy asked. "Brick
isn't about to give up. He's like one of those bloodhounds."
"Brick?"
"That's what the Sweetman called him. He's mean, folks say,
real mean. When the Sweetman needed someone hurt, he'd always have Brick do
it."
So Bolan's work wasn't done. The boy wouldn't be safe until Brick
was disposed of, too. "Leave him to me. Right now the important thing is
to get you to safety."
"You taking me home?"
Bolan would like nothing better, but as fate would nave it, he
caught sight of the brown sedan a block off. cruising their way. Carlos, like
Brick, didn't give up easily.
"Stay close," Bolan said, and descended a short flight
of stairs to a small bakery.
"Wow," Deaver declared. "This place smells
good." •<
The fragrant aroma of freshly made loaves, buns and biscuits was
thick. A young couple was at a table eating cinnamon rolls. At the counter a
middle-aged woman was having an order filled. The proprietor, a portly man
whose balding pate was crowned by a white hat, looked up. ,
"Be with you in a minute, sir."
"No rush," Bolan said, stepping to a display case and
pretending to be interested in a selection of pastries.
"Mister!" Deaver whispered, pulling on his arm and
pointing. "He's found us!"
Brick was at the top of the stairs, facing the street, waving
wildly. Carlos had to have made an illegal U-turn because moments later the
sedan screeched to the curb and out slid the Diablos.
Bolan moved to the counter. "Is there a back way out?"
he asked.
The proprietor was scribbling on a pad. "Sure, but it's not
for the general public to use. It's only for deliveries." »
Bolan led the boy around the counter.
"Hey! Didn't you hear me?" the owner said brusquely.
"You can't go back there! It's not allowed."
"Make an exception in our case," Bolan said. A « hallway brought them to a cramped
kitchen. Ovens lined both walls, and a large table filled the middle. Halfway
across, Bolan heard the front door open.
"Where are they?" I
"Where are who?" the proprietor replied.
"Don't play games with me! Where the hell are the tall
bastard and the brat who came hi here?"
From the quaking fear in the owner's voice, Brick had to be
holding a gun to his temple. "Out the back! They just went out the back
way! Please don't hurt anyone! I don't want any trouble!"
Bolan gripped a doorknob and wrenched, but the back door wouldn't
open. It was locked. Drawing the Beretta, he began to elevate a foot when a
hint of movement at the other end of the kitchen brought him around in a
crouch.
"Look out!"
Deaver yelled.
A Diablo was framed in the hallway, his nickel-plated Colt
gleaming in the fluorescent light.
They fired simultaneously.
Bolan felt air fan his ear. His own burst chopped title hood at
the waist. Pivoting before another gang member could intervene, Bolan smashed
his foot into the door, once, twice, three times. With a rending and
splintering of wood it gave way.
Bolan hurtled out, yanking the boy with him. They were now in a
litter-strewed alley, along with half a dozen trash cans. He ran to the right
and saw a taxi go by the alley mouth, too far off for him to hail.
In the bakery a woman screeched hysterically. Glass shattered, and
a man commenced howling in pain.
Deaver was wide-eyed with horror, so scared to death of being
caught he could barely move under his own power. Bolan had to continually pull
on the boy's arm. They were eight or nine yards shy of the street when Brick
came flying out of the bakery and raised a Dan Wesson .44 Magnum howitzer.
Bolan tackled the boy, driving them both to the
ground as the revolver thundered, the booming retort echoing.
Flipping onto his back, Bolan aimed the Beretta, but Brick sprang back into
the bakery.
"We're dead, we're dead, we're dead," Deaver said over
and over, tears streaking his puffy cheeks.
"Not yet we're not," Bolan snapped, and heaved upright
They fled out the alley, nearly stumbling over pedestrians who had stopped cold
on hearing die .44 Magnum revolver. A woman took one look at the Beretta and
screamed. Others tripped over their own feet in their eagerness to get out of
his way.
Bolan's ice-blue eyes narrowed. Firming his hold on the boy's
wrist, he bounded into the avenue, directly into the flow of traffic. His best
chance of eluding Brick and Carlos lay in making it difficult for them to
overtake him and the boy.
Deaver cried out. The woman on the sidewalk wailed louder as an
onrushing station wagon slammed on the brakes and slewed to a lurching halt so
close to Bolan he could have reached out and touched it
Deaver was clinging to Bolan as if he were drowning and Bolan
were his life preserver. The soldier flew to me other sidewalk and turned west.
Sirens shrieked in the distance. The last thing Bolan wanted was
to spend twelve hours under intense police interrogation before Brognola was
able to bail him out
Another alley loomed. Running into it, Bolan set the youngster
down so they could go faster. "Run!" he coaxed
The boy tried gamely, but he was still scared and tired and slowed
them down drastically.
Looping his free arm around Deaver's chest, Bolan carried him. A
Dumpster garbage bin blocked his view of the far end, so it wasn't until he had
passed it mat
be learned the alley was blocked off by a high brick wall.
Thwarted, Bolan spun to retrace his steps but saw Brick across the avenue,
shouldering through a growing crowd.
"Mister?" Deaver said timidly.
Bolan put him down. "Don't be afraid. I'll get us out of
this." A door on their right was locked. So was the next one he tried.
"Mister?" Deaver said more urgently.
"What?" Bolan saw Brick glare balefully at them. It
wouldn't be long before he waded through the onlookers and opened up with the
revolver.
"How about that one?" The boy indicated a shadowed spot
on the left.
Bolan did a double take. In a recessed archway was another door,
partially open. Stenciled on it were the words, Employees Only. A broad but
ill-lit corridor led into the bowels of a skyscraper. "It'll do," he
granted, grinning. "You have eyes like a hawk."
"Thanks," Deaver said, swelling with pride.
Bolan hustled him inside, then closed the door and threw a heavy
bolt someone else had thankfully neglected to. Taking the youngster's hand, he
bolstered the Beretta and double-timed it past rooms filled with mannequins,
cartons and shelves upon shelves of merchandise. "It's a store," he
deduced.
"Harrah's, I think," Deaver said. "The department
store."
Unexpectedly, a man came out of a stockroom, wheeling a boxed TV
on a dolly. "Hey, what are you two doing back here?"
"We need the rest room," Bolan fibbed. "I must have
taken a wrong turn somewhere."
The man glanced at Deaver and smiled. "You sure
did. Turn right at the next comer, then left when you reach the
main floor. The men's room is up front, near the drinking fountain."
"Thank you kindly," Bolan said, ushering the boy along.
"That was slick, mister," the youngster complimented
him. "Real slick." He paused as if uncertain whether to say something
that was on his mind. "Tell me. You're not a drug dealer like the Sweetman
was, are you?"
"No. Why would you think I was?"
"Drugheads whack each other all the time over turf and
things," Deaver said. "Does that mean you're a cop?"
"I'm not a police officer, either."
"Then what are you, exactly?"
Bolan looked down. "Is it important?"
"To me it is, yeah. My mom says there are good and bad people
in this world, and it's the bad folks who go around killing all the time. So
does that mean you're bad?"
The Executioner chose his answer carefully. The question pertained
to the very crux of his existence, to why he did what he did, to what made him
different from a common vigilante. "Most people would call me one of the
good guys, I think. I make it my business to make this world safe for people
like you and your mother."
"You've whacked a lot of people, then? More than just the
Sweetman?"
"A few," Bolan admitted.
"My mom says killing is evil. How can you be good if you
kill?"
Bolan had wrestled with the same issue over the
years, since he first took up his crusade against evil in all its
worldly guises. "If there were a rat in your house, what would your mother
do?"
"Huh? What do rats have to do with anything? My mom hates
rats. They bring disease. And they bite people. If we had a rat, she'd set a
trap."
"She wouldn't try to tame it? Make it a pet?"
Deaver chortled. "You don't know much about rats, do you? The
wild ones can't be tamed. They're too mean. The only thing to do is kill
them."
"Exactly," Bolan said. "And there's no difference
between a rat and the Sweetman. There's no changing mem, no way to stop them
from spreading their filth except by ending their lives."
The boy pondered for a few moments. "I see what you're
saying."
They stepped out into the bright lights of Harrah's, into the
middle of the women's clothing department. Shoppers were everywhere. A young
mother with a child of four or five in tow smiled as they walked by.
"I hardly ever get to come in here," Deaver mentioned.
"Everything costs too much."
Wide glass doors lay dead ahead. Just outside was a taxi waiting
for a fare. Bolan moved a little faster, then abruptly veered into a side
aisle, nearly jerking Deaver off his feet.
"Hey! That hurt! What's the matter?"
The brown Ford had pulled up behind the cab. Out hopped Brick and
the three Diablos. Four abreast, they barreled into the store as if they owned
the place.
The boy had seen them. "Oh, Lord! They're still after us!
What'll we do, mister? What'll we do?" His cries drew the gazes of some of
the shoppers.
Bolan retreated farther down the side aisle, saying,
"Keep it down. They haven't seen us yet." With all the
clothing racks and counters, Bolan figured it should be fairly easy to give
them the slip. Above all else, it was imperative a gunfight be avoided. There
were too many bystanders around. Some were bound to be hurt, or worse.
"Can we make it out the back?" Deaver queried.
"Maybe," Bolan said. It was worth a try. Halting beside
a gleaming marble pillar, he risked a quick look to see what Brick and the
Diablos were up to. They hadn't moved. Brick and Carlos appeared to be arguing.
Ready to sneak off, Bolan tensed when a police car pulled up out front,
alongside the cab.
Two men in blue climbed out and came toward the department store,
their hands on then: side arms. One was older with a bit of a paunch, the other
so fresh-faced he had to be a rookie just out of the academy. They glanced at
the brown sedan, and the older officer said something to his partner.
As yet, Brick and Carlos hadn't noticed them. But another Diablo
did. Gesturing, he shouted, "Cops, man! Cops!"
Brick and Carlos spun. Carlos barked commands in Spanish, and all
three Diablos ran toward the escalator. Brick, however, had the brains of his
namesake. Uttering an oath, he swept the .44 Magnum revolver from under his
jacket and pointed it at the young officer, who threw himself flat on the
sidewalk just as the cannon boomed.
Glass shattered and flew everywhere. Women screamed.
The older officer was out of shape, but he was a pro. His weapon
flashed. In swift succession he banged off three rounds that nailed Brick
dead-on. The
g man staggered, recovered his balance and squeezed off another
shot. Fortunately, he missed.
The younger officer joined the fray, firing twice from his prone
position. Each bored Brick's cranium, spraying gore and bits of skull every
which way.
Both officers charged inside, weapons ready.
Carlos and his friends were almost to the escalator. They produced
their hardware, firing as they ran, forcing the patrolmen to seek cover.
Sheer bedlam ensued. Shrieks and yells punctuated the gunfire as
customers hugged the floor or crouched behind racks. Some sobbed uncontrollably.
One woman had her hands over her ears and was snouting, "No! No! No!"
In all the confusion no one showed any interest in Bolan. Drawing
the Beretta, he held it in front of him, down low where it couldn't be seen.
The escalator was only a dozen paces away. As the Diablos started up, they
poured a hail of lead at the officers.
Bolan waited until the two policemen were returning fire, then he
let loose with three quick bursts. Thanks to the din of the battle, no one
heard the suppressor's cough.
Carlos and the other two Diablos never knew what hit them. Carlos
tumbled down the moving steps to wind up hi a disjointed heap at the bottom.
One of the other gang members dangled half over the side rail.
Clasping Deaver's hand, Bolan took a circuitous route toward the
entrance. No one else was moving yet except the officers, who were warily
approaching the Diablos, their guns extended.
All eyes were on the policemen and the dead men.
Holding the Beretta under his coat, Bolan slipped from the
building and turned right. The taxi driver and
several pedestrians were gaping at the carnage and didn't so much
as glance at him or the boy. In the distance a swarm of sirens keaned like
avenging banshees. Soon police would flood the area, cordoning it off. By then
Bolan would be long gone.
"Let's get you home," he said.
Deaver, to the soldier's surprise, chuckled.
"What's so funny?"
"You are, mister. I saw what you did. Like I said, you're one
slick dude. The slickest I've ever met."
"I'll take that as a compliment."
Chapter 3
Medford, Oregon, was the largest city in the southern half of the
state with a population of more than fifty thousand. It boasted a modern
airport, a large business district and spacious parks. But compared to a
bustling metropolis such as Chicago, and especially from the air, it seemed so
small to Mack Bolan.
The soldier obeyed the flaring overhead light and fastened his
seat belt as the airliner banked to make its approach. He'd caught the first
available flight out of the Windy City after making a call to Hal Brognola in
Washington, D.C., and being patched through to Central Point, Oregon, just up
the interstate from Medford.
Brognola hadn't given Bolan a clue as to why he was needed, but
the soldier knew his friend's tone and manner well enough to sense it was
something big.
Medford's terminal was modest and orderly, a welcome change from
the madhouse at O'Hare. Bolan retrieved his bag and strolled out the automatic
doors into gathering twilight. Brognola had promised to meet him, and as usual
the big Fed was a man of his word.
A black car was at the curb, Brognola himself behind the wheel.
Leaning across the front seat, he pushed the passenger door open. "Welcome
to Oregon. Hop in."
Bolan tossed his duffel into the back, then got in. "Any
repercussions from Chicago?"
"Nothing major," Brognola said, stepping on the gas.
"I've had one of my agents make inquiries. Discreetly, of course. Some
witnesses reported a tall man with dark hair in the company of a child, but the
police don't know how the two of you fit into the general scheme of
things."
"They haven't tracked down the boy?"
"No, he's out of it." Brognola braked at a stop sign.
"From the sound of things, Striker," he said, using Bolan's code
name, "it was a lot closer than you made it out to be."
Bolan shrugged before switching subjects. "So why am I in
Oregon?"
Brognola didn't respond right away. They turned onto Airport Road,
and again at Biddle. Finally he asked, "What do you know about
Nanotechnology?"
"In a nutshell? It's a relatively new science that has to do
with atomic or subatomic matter. Remember Splatterpunk? His enhanced biology
nearly killed me."
Brognola grinned. "How can I forget that juggernaut? Some
are calling Nanotechnology the science for the new millennium. Experts say
we'll be able to restructure the basic buildings blocks of matter, that it will
give us control over the molecules that make up all life."
"So I'm here for a Nanotechnology seminar?"
The big Fed's grin evaporated. "No, you're here to see the
firsthand result of Nanotechnology taken to the extreme." He paused.
"Ever hear of an outfit known as Nanotech, Incorporated?"
"Can't say I have."
"They're one of the leaders in the field, specializing in a
branch known as molecular robotics."
Bolan glanced at the big Fed. "Robots the size of molecules?
The mind boggles."
"The possibilities are endless. Imagine designing artificial
antibodies that can fight any disease. Cancer and strokes would be a thing of
the past. Human life spans would increase by decades." Brognola scowled
when a young couple in a red sports car zoomed by going twenty miles over the
speed limit. "Or imagine being able to manufacture any product almost out
of thin air. Nanotechnology has the potential to reshape human society."
The soldier leaned back.
"Or to destroy it," Brognola went on. "In the wrong
hands, it could be deadly. Any lunatic with a lab could conceivably develop the
means to wipe out civilization. Germ warfare will rise to a whole new level.
Virulent plagues, for instance, could be made to order."
Bolan had an inkling where their talk was going. "Someone has
come up with a tailor-made virus?"
"Not quite, but you're close."
A sign announcing Interstate 5 drew Brognola into the right lane.
Once on it, he resumed. "Nanotech, Incorporated has been working on
various projects for the government Defense related, mostly. Studying how
Nanotechnology can be applied to warfare, that sort of thing." He
increased speed to pass an old blue Blazer. "All under the strictest of
secrecy, you understand. And fairly tight security."
"Fairly?" Bolan said.
"Ordinary precautions were taken. But Eric Larson,
the president of Nanotech, never anticipated something like this
happening."
"Like what?"
"One of the company's top scientists, Bernard Craker, is a
Harvard grad. He, along with two colleagues, Ted Proctor and Helen Paisley,
have been working for months on a hush-hush project. Craker is a wizard at
molecular robotics, at creating artificial molecules to perform specific
functions."
"Nanites, they're called. Or at least that's what I've been
told," Bolan said dryly.
"Right. Anyway, Craker recently made a major breakthrough. He
developed a new nanite unlike any ever conceived. And early this morning he put
it to use."
Brognola would say little else. He wanted Bolan to witness the
result firsthand. Taking the Central Point exit, they followed a winding
secondary road until they came to a five-acre property surrounded by an
electrified fence. A gate guard admitted them without bothering to check their
credentials.
"You call that security?" Bolan remarked.
"I've been here since two this afternoon," Brognola
said. "He knows who I am."
They pulled up in front of the main complex. Two of Brognola's
special agents were stationed at the entrance, and more were inside. An
elderly receptionist, appearing gravely distraught, was on the phone.
"Anything new?" Brognola asked an agent who greeted him.
"No, sir. We've checked every airline, every flight out of
Medford, Eugene and Portland. The same with Sacramento and San Francisco."
"Bus terminals? The train?"
"Negative there, too, sir. Maybe they're traveling under
assumed identifies, in which case they could be anywhere."
"Keep at it," Brognola said. "Unless the earth
opened up and swallowed them, we'll find Cracker and Paisley sooner or
later."
"Yes, sir." The agent motioned. "Mr. Larson is
waiting in the lab, as you requested."
Bolan saw no evidence of Nanotech's staff, other than the harried
receptionist, and mentioned it as he trailed Brognola down a hall.
"They're in the lunchroom for questioning," Brognola
disclosed. "No one is permitted to leave until we're done."
Another federal agent stood guard outside a lab. Brognola nodded
at him, and the man opened the door for them.
"Brace yourself, Striker. Just when you think you've seen
everything, along comes something like this."
Like what? Bolan wondered. Whatever it was, it had Brognola
rattled, and that took a lot. More agents were inside, along with a lanky
fellow in a lab coat who was flipping through pages on a clipboard and a
courtly gentleman hi his mid- to late-forties who wore a neatly pressed suit
that contrasted with his dour expression.
"Mr. Brognola!" the latter exclaimed. "At last! Is
this the man you went to fetch?"
The big Fed nodded but didn't introduce the soldier. "Show
him the remains, if you please, Mr. Larson."
Eric Larson glanced at a white sheet spread over something in the
center of the floor, and blanched. "Me? My ulcer is killing me as it
is."
"I'll do it," offered the fellow with the clipboard. He
held out his hand to Bolan.
"Jim Travers. Exploratory engineering is my field, but Mr.
Larson thought I might be able to glean some clue as to what Bernie Craker was
up to."
Bolan shook his hand without responding. Travers led him to the
sheet, bent and folded it back on itself, revealing a crumpled lab coat, pants
and a pair of shoes. Or such was Bolan's initial impression. But, peering
closer, he saw the clothing had a lumpy quality to it, saw hair visible below
the color. "What—?"
"Allow me," Travers said, and took a ruler from a
pocket. Sliding the tip of it under the front edge of the crumpled lab coat,
which was unbuttoned, he carefully peeled the coat back. "There you go."
It took a full fifteen seconds for what Bolan was seeing to
register. When it did, an icy sensation rippled down his spine. "This
can't be."
"But it is," Hal Brognola said.
The clothes covered a hideous blob, a mass of sandy hair and human
flesh. Below the hairline two green eyes gaped blankly above a collapsed nose
and slit mouth. A pair of arms, resembling punctured inner tubes, lay coiled
around the mass like twin dead snakes. Few other features were distinguishable,
although there were two protruding bumps that Bolan took to be the buttocks.
Eric Larson, averting his eyes, commented, "You're looking at
all that's left of Ted Proctor, one of our top researchers in molecular
robotics."
"What happened to him?" Bolan asked.
Brognola grunted. "The sixty-million-dollar question. Our
best guess is that every bone in his body is gone. Melted away. Or, rather,
eaten."
Bolan tore his gaze from the repulsive remains. "Eaten?"
Insight made him snap his fingers. "Nano-technology. Someone created
something that could do this to a human being?"
Eric Larson nodded. "That someone is Bernie Craker. He was
working on a special project with Proctor and Helen Paisley. Now Proctor is
dead, and the other two are missing."
He waved a hand at Travers. "Cover him, Jim. Please. I'll be
ill if you don't."
The scientist did as he was told.
Brognola sat on the edge of a table and folded his arms.
"Give us another rundown for my friend's benefit."
"Again?" Larson said.
"If you would be so kind."
Frowning, Larson moved to a chair and slumped wearily. "At
approximately 9:15 a.m. our in-house mail boy was making his rounds, dropping
off the mail for each department, when he found Proctor's remains. Once I was
contacted, I followed the protocol in the Department of Defense directives and
phoned Washington. Within the hour Mr. Brognola had called back and informed
me he was on his way."
"Tell him about the project," Brognola urged when Larson
fell quiet
"It's a DOD operation," Larson divulged. "The
wartime application of Nanotechnology. Craker was working on an ultrasecret
form of nanite warfare, a means of incapacitating an enemy efficiently and
swiftly."
"He succeeded, I take it," Bolan said, contemplating
the lump under the white sheet
"Evidently," Larson said bitterly. "The thing is,
we know little more than you now do, I'm afraid."
"How can that be?" Bolan challenged. "Craker works
for you, doesn't he? He was under your supervision."
"In a very broad sense, yes," Larson said. "But I
left the day-to-day operation of the project to him. I grant the same latitude
to every scientist in my employ. All I required were periodic progress
updates."
"You must have some idea," Bolan insisted.
"I've shown Mr. Brognola the updates," Larson responded
defensively. "All we've established is that Craker was on the verge of an
achievement that would rock the scientific world to its very foundation. He was
perfecting a new type of nanite, a self-replicated predatory molecule that
would exceed the DOD's fondest expectations."
Bolan remembered what Brognola had said. "He developed a
molecule that eats human bone?"
"That's my guess," Jim Travers said. "Remember that
old video game, where yellow dots with teeth went around the screen eating the
other dots? Well, the same principle applies here. Only in this case, Cracker
apparently managed to program the molecules to consume calcium. Fascinating,
isn't it?"
"Revolting is more like it," Bolan said.
"Not when you put it in perspective," Travers said.
"It's no worse than any of the chemical warfare agents being employed by
countries all over the globe. Fact is, Craker's method is a definite
improvement."
"Tell that to Proctor."
Eric Larson cleared his throat "We've made a few assumptions
based on what facts we've gleaned. For one thing, whatever Craker created is
incredibly fast-
acting. Proctor was last seen alive at half-past seven this
morning, when he arrived for work. We know that Craker arrived about eight,
then left with Paisley at eight-twenty. Which would indicate that whatever was
injected into Proctor took ten to fifteen minutes, or less, to do that."
"Are you sure it was injected?" Bolan asked. "How
do you know the molecules weren't slipped into Proctor's coffee or a glass of
water?"
It was Travers who answered. "Without being too technical,
suffice it to say the nanites have a symbiotic relationship with the host body.
In other words, they only come to life, and stay alive, when hi the human
bloodstream. The rest of the time they're kept frozen."
"So it's not as if Crater could spray them over a city and
wipe out half the population," Larson said, staring at Brognola.
"Nor, I seriously doubt, will he go around injecting everyone he meets.
Even if he did, the nanites aren't contagious. They don't spread by mere
contact or via an airborne vector."
The big Fed faced Bolan. "Mr. Larson feels I've overreacted
and gone a tad overboard in my security arrangements. He thinks I should open
the gates and let everyone we've already questioned go home."
"They're my employees," Larson said, "my friends. I
resent their being treated as if they're hi a concentration camp."
"Now who's overreacting?" Brognola retorted. "I'm
just trying to get to the bottom of this. A lot of crucial questions need to be
answered. Why did Craker kill Proctor? Where did Craker go afterward? And how
does Helen Paisley fit into the picture?"
Bolan thought of an important aspect no one had brought up.
"Are there more of these nanites?"
Larson bit his lower lip, then said, "We aren't sure. We have
no idea how many Bernie developed. Mrs. Wilson, our receptionist, saw Paisley
and him leave, and seems to recall Bernie was carrying a transport case."
"An insulated metal briefcase," Travers elaborated,
"for the transport of fragile cultures. Heat resistant. Reinforced with
steel bands. Virtually indestructible."
The implication, Bolan realized, was that Craker had taken more of
the predatory molecules with him. "So you're saying he probably has enough
to kill a lot more people. How many? Twenty? Fifty? A hundred?"
Larson and Travers exchanged worried looks. "A transport case
can contain up to six large vials," the latter said. "We can't even
begin to guess how many nanites it takes to do what was done to poor Ted. But
I'd hazard a guess it wouldn't take many. Craker might have enough with him to
kill thousands."
"Possibly hundreds of thousands," Larson said forlornly.
Brognola straightened. "Will you excuse us a moment?"
he said, and beckoned Bolan. Out in the hall he ran his hand over his hair, the
craggy lines in his face deepening. "The most important question of all
is, why did Craker steal his own nanites? I can only mink of one motive."
So could Bolan. "He intends to sell them to the highest
bidder. Certain foreign powers and terrorist organizations would pay a king's
ransom to get then-hands on that transport case."
"We're on the same wavelength," Brognola said. "But
so far we've uncovered no evidence that Craker has tried to flee the
country."
"What do you want from me?" Bolan wasn't an
investigator. His proper place was out in the field.
"I have a motel room registered in your name. Get some rest.
As soon as we hear anything, I'd like for you to be the one who brings in
Craker and Paisley. If they won't come willingly, and my gut instinct tells me
they won't, then take whatever steps are necessary. Make no mistake. Bernie
Craker poses a great threat to this country."
Bolan knew what his friend was thinking. In the wrong hands, the
killer molecules could wreak untold havoc. One prick of a needle and whoever
was infected was doomed. The nanites could be used to commit untraceable
assassinations. Or whoever obtained them might find a way to spread them by
some other vector, as Larson called it. Maybe by adding them to a city's water
supply.
Brognola made it perfectly plain. "If you have to, send
Craker back in a pine box."
helen paisley stood on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean
and giggled like a little girl. She was tingling with joy, happier than she
had been in ages. And she owed it all to the geek she had despised ever since
college.
"Helen?" Bernie Craker said.
She turned, and was reminded once again of how much he looked like
a featherless vulture, with his ugly bony body and beaked nose. "What is
it now?" she asked irritably. From the moment they left Nanotech he had
been griping constantly. Yet another of Ms many flaws; he was too negative
about things.
"Is this wise? I mean, we're still in Oregon. By now
the authorities must be combing the countryside for us."
Paisley laughed in triumph. "Let them! They have no clue
where we are."
"But they're bound to contact every police and sheriff
department in the state. Every law-enforcement officer will be on the lookout
for us."
"So?" Paisley said, growing more annoyed. "Bernie,
have a little faith, will you? Oregon is a big state, with more square miles of
wilderness than practically any other except maybe California and Washington.
We could hide out here forever if need be."
"But—" Craker began.
"No buts about it," she informed him. "I have it
all worked out. All we need to do is lie low until the meeting with Sprague.
Then everything will be fine."
"I don't see why he couldn't have met us sooner."
"What did you expect? For us to hand the case to him at the
main gate? Grow up, Bernie. A man like Sprague isn't about to commit himself
until he's sure we have the goods. Now that we do, the money is on its
way." Paisley's face brightened. "All that wonderful, glorious
money."
"Ten million is a lot," Craker conceded.
"It's a fortune," the woman said. "More than you or
I would earn in a hundred years. Enough for us to live in the lap of luxury for
the rest of our lives."
"Live where?"
Paisley didn't answer. Instead she headed down the wooded path
toward their campsite. A jay squawked at her from a fir tree, a squirrel
chittered on a high branch. She inhaled the dank, tangy sea air and beamed.
"Live where?" Craker repeated.
"You'll see," Paisley said.
"I still can't believe we actually went through with
it," Craker lamented. "I can't believe I let you talk me into
this."
Paisley snickered. He had been putty in her slender hands, as easy
to manipulate as a child. Which, come to think of it, emotionally he still was.
Craker lived in his own little world, withdrawn from the rest of humanity,
aloof in his lofty mental tower. But she couldn't deny he was a verifiable
genius, and thanks to his smarts, she was going to be one of the richest women
on the planet.
To be wealthy had always been Paisley's fondest dream. As a girl
growing up in a lower-class neighborhood in Philadelphia, she had never been
able to have all the clothes she wanted or the toys she desired because her parents
never had enough money. In high school she had been shunned by the elite
cliques, by all those rich girls who had everything fed to them on a silver
spoon.
Paisley still remembered her senior prom when Carly Bannister, the
daughter of an investment banker, had smirked at her and asked if she'd bought
her prom dress at a discount store. Thinking about the insult, even now,
Paisley flushed with anger.
Well, she thought, in a few days no one would ever make fun of her
again for being poor. All her effort, all her years of intense study, of
shaping her brain to be better and sharper than most, had paid off handsomely.
She had never been the richest girl, or the prettiest, or the most
popular, but no one could dispute her intelligence. She had passed all her
classes with flying colors. And in science she had excelled to the point
where she earned a scholarship that enabled her to attend Harvard.
Paisley had chosen Nanotech after graduation simply because she
had never been to the West Coast, and it would be a relief to get as far as
possible from her doting mother and gruff old father.
"Where did you ever come up with this wild idea of yours,
anyway?" Craker said, intruding on her reverie.
"I'll never tell," Paisley said, smiling. She had been
fourteen—or was it fifteen?—when she read an account in a newspaper about a
government worker who sold secrets to a foreign government for hundreds of
thousands of dollars and fled the country. He was never caught, never seen
again. As the years went by, she read other news reports of military and
industrial espionage and been mildly intrigued by the huge payoffs. What if
she had the opportunity to sell valuable information? Would she do it if she
thought she could get away with it?
Obviously, the answer was yes. But Paisley could never have pulled
it off without Bernie Craker and Miles Blatterfeld. She'd met Blatterfeld at a
science convention in New Mexico. An overbearing pudgy man, he had come on to
her at a bar one evening, trying to entice her to his bedroom. He'd also
dropped a few hints here and there, hints that if she ever had information
"others" might be interested in, he was the man to contact. She'd
dismissed him and gone her way, but she never threw out the business card he'd
slipped into her pocket.
A female friend had told her Blatterfeld showed up at all the
conventions and was considered a harmless but persistent nuisance. He worked
for a firm called
Global Intel, which had something to do with communications
systems.
Paisley had forgotten about him and gone on with her life. But
when Craker developed the Piranha Molecule, as he'd dubbed it, she'd remembered
that pudgy little man and his card and how he might—
Suddenly, Paisley became aware that Craker was anxiously whispering
her name. Blinking, she looked up.
Standing by their tent was a man in uniform.
Chapter 4
The three emissaries of death disembarked at Portland
International Airport at eleven that night.
Alexander Sprague wore the most expensive suit money could buy.
Custom made in France, it fit his lithe frame as perfectly as a second skin.
His wavy brown hair hung over penetrating brown eyes. Around his neck was an
elegant gold chain from Spain, on his wrist a gold timepiece from Switzerland,
on three of his fingers gold rings fashioned in Germany. He radiated wealth
and power much like the sun radiated light and heat.
At his heels walked two taller men, equally imposing. In the
forefront was the Albino. His country of origin was as mysterious as the Albino
himself. He had a name but never used it; no one other than Sprague knew his
true identity. A white suit and tie complemented his exceptionally pale skin,
while tinted sunglasses concealed his pink eyes from the world. He moved with a
certain cold stiffness that belied his lethal ability with his hands and feet.
He was a consummate killer.
So was the man behind the Albino. Bartolome Char-ata was wanted by
law-enforcement organizations on four continents. Argentinian by birth, he had
made his mark by ruthlessly eliminating the enemies of a local
drug lord. When the drug lord eventually wound up in prison,
Charata had become a freelance assassin, hiring out to whoever could afford
his escalating fee.
In due course Charata came to the attention of Alexander Sprague,
who recognized exceptional talent when he saw it. Charata agreed to work
exclusively for the death merchant for the princely sum of one million dollars
a year. A pittance to his employer, who routinely averaged one hundred million
in tax-free income.
Charata had raven hair and a swarthy complexion and moved with a
catlike ease that hinted at his enormous strength and extraordinary agility.
By his own count he had slain 111 people, including more than a few women and
children. His handsome, tanned face gave no hint that within the depths of his
being lurked an emotionless monster who took perverse delight in killing.
A rental car awaited mem.
Alexander Sprague had arranged in advance every aspect of their
trip to America, down to the smallest detail. He never left anything to chance.
He was regarded as a devious schemer whose brilliance had enabled him to
successfully elude the long arm of the law for more than two decades. He was
without peer in his chosen trade. And his trade was marketing stolen secrets.
As much as Sprague liked gold, he had learned early on in life
that mere were certain things others were willing to pay more to obtain than
they would for it or any other precious metal. State secrets, classified
documents, industrial and military intelligence, all were much more valuable
than the rarest of minerals.
To his credit, Sprague showed no favoritism. He
bought from anyone and sold to everyone. Nations, ideologies,
political allegiances of every stripe, they meant nothing to him. The whole
world was his marketplace.
Coming to America, though, didn't sit well with him. Sprague had
never liked Americans much. They were so provincial, so dull, so predictable.
Oh, there were a few like himself, men of discretion and influence, but for
the most part the population consisted of well-intentioned, honest folk whose
virtuous natures turned his stomach.
Sprague could never understand people like that. As an abandoned,
starving urchin roaming the streets of Marseilles, he had learned the most
important lesson of his life: always look out for number one. Survival of the
fittest applied to so-called civilized society as well as to the deepest
jungle.
With not one but two Swiss bank accounts containing more money
than some small countries had in their treasuries, with palatial homes and
sprawling estates in France, Spain and Germany, with a fleet of Rolls-Royces
and Mercedeses at his disposal and an art collection that rivaled the Louvre,
Sprague had more than any man could ask for. And yet, he constantly wanted
more.
A tiny voice in the back of Sprague's mind had insistently goaded
him for years to retire. To give up the trade and spend the rest of his life luxuriating
hi the comforts he had amassed. Common sense told him it was the wise thing to
do. But he couldn't bring himself to do it. He liked what he did. The trade was
bis passion, his life. He thrived on the challenges, on the danger.
Coming to America was one of the most dangerous
steps Sprague could take. In Europe he had liaisons in high places
who shielded bun from apprehension. In America he had few contacts but no safe
havens to retreat to should the need arise. In America he was on his own. He
had to rely exclusively on his wits to survive. And he wouldn't have it any
other way.
Charata climbed behind the wheel. The Albino opened the rear door
for Sprague, then got into the front. As the Cadillac wheeled from the
terminal, Sprague took a cellular phone from his jacket and punched a number.
"Blatterfeld? All is well? Good. We'll be mere to pick you up in fifteen
minutes. Be ready."
Sprague gave the Argentinian instructions on bow to reach the
motel where Blatterfeld was waiting.
"If you don't mind my asking, Mr. Sprague," the Albino
said, "why involve that disgusting little weasel?"
"I should think 'swine' a more apt description. But suffice
it to say that Miles brokered this deal, so I have insisted he be on hand for
the exchange. As a precaution, you understand. Never trust anyone, eh?"
"You're taking too great a risk," the Albino said.
"Risk is the essence of existence. And in this instance the
reward justifies the danger. Nanotechnology is the wave of the future. If this
fellow, Craker, has done what Blatterfeld claims, I can resell the Piranha
Molecule for any amount I care to set."
"It will have to be a lot to justify spending ten million
dollars," the Albino said, "plus Blatterfeld's commission."
"The commission is a pittance," the Frenchman said.
"And the ten million is what the Americans
would call a drop in the bucket when I can reap twenty times that
amount in return."
"So much? Really?"
"Customers are always willing to pay more for such a unique
item when they can also acquire the genius behind the item."
The Albino grinned. "I imagine this scientist, Craker, will
be quite surprised when he learns of the deal you have struck Paisley."
Alexander Sprague laughed. "Surprised? He will be shocked.
But then, he should know better. Any man who trusts a woman is asking for
grief."
from six thousand feet up,
the terrain below was an inky black carpet. No one would guess the Citation
chartered by Hal Brognola was flying over Oregon's Coast Range, a nigged belt
of mountains running from north to south.
Bolan consulted his watch and said aloud, "Four in the
morning."
"We'll arrive in Brookings by four-thirty," the big Fed
commented from his seat across the aisle. "By five we should be at the
campsite."
An hour ago Bolan had been roused from a sound sleep by an
incessant pounding on his door at the motel. One of Brognola's men relayed the
news he had ten minutes to dress and leave for the Medford Airport.
There had been new developments.
The first had been the discovery of Bernard Craker's car. The Chevy
was found abandoned at the Medford Mall. Apparently, Craker and Paisley had
switched vehicles. Since hers was still at Nanotech, they had acquired
another somewhere. Brognola hoped they'd
stolen one, but the Medford police had no reports of any missing
vehicles.
The second development had been the finding of a body at a
campsite along the Oregon coast between Brookings and Gold Beach. A unique
corpse, according to the bulletin released by the Curry County Sheriff's
Department. A "blob," was how they described the remains.
But it was the third development that had Hal Brognola in a funk.
"Are you sure about Sprague?" Bolan asked. "Are
your sources reliable?"
"Oh, I'd rate Interpol as being fairly competent,"
Brognola quipped. "And they obtained their lead from la Surete nationale,
the best France has to offer. There's no doubt whatsoever. Alexander Sprague
and his two bodyguards left Paris under assumed names early yesterday, less
than an hour after Craker and Paisley disappeared from Nanotech."
"And you're convinced Sprague is after the Piranha
Molecule?"
"What else? It's right up his alley. We've learned that after
a short layover in New York, he flew on to Denver and caught a connecting
flight to Portland. He touched down about eleven." Brognola tiredly rubbed
his forehead. "My guess is that a meet has been set up somewhere along the
Oregon coast"
"It could be anywhere," Bolan observed. Finding out
where would be like finding the notorious needle in a haystack.
Brognola smacked the armrest on his seat "We can't let the
Piranha Molecule leave the country! Think of it in the hands of a Saddam
Hussein or a terrorist organization."
"Who's this other guy you mentioned?"
"Miles Blatterfeld? We've had our eyes on him for over a
year. Word is he acts as a middleman, brokering deals with big-time operators
like Sprague. So far he's been too slippery for us. But I find it a remarkable
coincidence that Blatterfeld flew to Portland yesterday afternoon from his home
in New Orleans."
"He didn't use an alias?"
"No, believe it or not. He's a cocky little scumbag who
believes he's too smart to be caught." Brognola removed a notepad from his
jacket and flipped to a page with a folded corner. "He landed at
four-thirty and went directly to his motel. We know he paid for two days in
advance, and that at eleven-thirty last night he told the desk clerk he would
be gone for a while and to hold all his messages. Then the desk clerk saw him
get into a Cadillac and drive off."
"Did the desk clerk happen to note the license plate?"
"No, why should he? But we're running a check with every
rental agency in Portland. Not many rent Caddys." The big Fed closed the
notepad. "Only the best for Alexander Sprague. Always."
"You sound as if you know him," Bolan said.
"Not personally, but I had the chance to nail him once and
blew it."
"That's not like you."
"I was new to the Bureau, less than a year in the field. We'd
received word that a civilian contractor for the Navy was about to sell
classified intel on our nuclear subs. Sprague was the buyer. We caught the contractor
but not him. Missed him by that much." Brognola raised his hand with his
thumb and forefinger a fraction of an inch apart.
Bolan understood. "And it's bothered you ever since."
"Yeah. But you haven't heard the rest of the story. When we
barged into the hotel suite Sprague had taken, we found a note on the end table."
"What did it say?"
"'To whom it may concern'," Brognola quoted, "'Nice
try. Better luck next time.' He knew we were after him and wanted to rub it
in."
"A man with a sense of humor."
"A mastermind, you mean. In his way, Alexander Sprague is
almost as much of a genius as Bernie Craker. This time I'm not letting him slip
through my fingers."
The remainder of their flight was conducted in silence. Bolan,
who had switched his trenchcoat for a lightweight blue windbreaker, used the
time to double-check his weapons. Under his left arm, as always, rode the
Beretta 93-R. Under his right arm was a .44 Magnum Desert Eagle. A spare
20-round magazine for the machine pistol and an extra 10-shot mag for the autoloader
were also nestled under the jacket, at his waist. In addition, Bolan had
strapped a Solingen throwing knife to his right ankle.
Brookings's small airport was lit up like a Christmas tree. The
locals were expecting the Citation. A Curry County deputy was on hand to meet
mem.
"I don't mind telling you," Deputy Tom Saunders
mentioned as he drove them north on Highway 101, 1 'it's the
weirdest damn thing I've seen in fifteen years of police work. The way they had
to scrape him up with shovels. And then how he sort of oozed into the body bag,
like there wasn't a bone in his body."
"Has the victim been identified yet?" Brognola asked.
"Yes, sir," Saunders said. "It was a park ranger by
the name of Howard. I met him once as, I recollect. Nice enough fellow."
Since no one else was on the highway at that hour, the deputy switched on his
high beams. "Howard was making the rounds of the campsites, making sure
everyone had registered like they're supposed to, when it happened."
Brognola perked up. "Registered?"
"Sure. Haven't you ever gone camping at a state park? Campers
have to fill out a little form with their name and license-plate number and
stick it in a drop box. If they don't, they're liable to be booted out"
"Was the drop box at Harris Beach checked?"
"First thing. All the forms matched all the sites. Except
there was no form for campsite seven, which is where Howard's body was
found."
The ride to Harris Beach State Park took no time at all. It was
just outside Brookings, the campsites situated above a rocky bluff overlooking
the vast Pacific. Site seven had been cordoned off with yellow tape. Since the
sheriffs people had already gone over the area with a fine-tooth comb, Brognola
asked to be taken on to the county morgue.
Half an hour of winding, tree-lined highway, at one point over a
bridge that a sign proclaimed was the highest in Oregon, brought them to Gold
Beach.
The morgue was cold, but then, Bolan couldn't recall a morgue
that wasn't. An attendant in his early twenties was dozing in a swivel chair.
Deputy Saunders had to pound on the counter to wake him up.
"Catching up on your beauty sleep, Lester?"
Flustered, the attendant tried to put on a professional
air. "I was just resting my eyes. We usually don't have
visitors at this time of the night."
"We're here to see Ranger Howard," the deputy said,
"or what's left of him."
Lester woke up fast. "You are?" He looked at Brognola
and Bolan as if expecting to be introduced, but when no one did the honors, he
frowned and admitted them. "Right this way, gentlemen. I hope you have
strong stomachs. What you're about to see is enough to make you puke your guts
out."
"Spare us the commentary," Saunders said.
"Excuse me for living," Lester cracked. "Can I help
it if I'm a friendly kind of guy? Some people could stand improvement in that
regard." He shot the officer a withering glance.
It was Nanotech all over again. After Lester pulled out the slab
and lifted the covering sheet, Bolan found himself gazing at another obscene
mound of flesh, glazed eyes and gaping limp mouth. The arms were strands of
rope, the legs twin accordions.
"Watch this," Lester said, and gripped the deceased's
brown hair. By pulling upward, he stretched the flesh as if it were putty,
causing the eyes, nostrils and mouth to assume gruesome proportions, similar to
a painted face on a balloon. "Did you ever see anything so bizarre in
your whole life?"
Bolan went to slap Lester's hand away, but Sanders beat him to it.
"Sometimes, Les, I don't think you have the brains God gave a
turnip. That's another human being you're playing with there."
"I know that," Lester said, but he let go. The flesh
made a squishy noise, like gelatin poured from a bowl,
plopping down to assume its original shapeless contours.
"What could do this to a person?"
Bolan had taken a strong dislike to the man. "Whatever it
is, did you stop to think it might be contagious?"
"It could?" His Adam's apple bobbing, Lester stared at
his palm. "Jeez. And I touched him! Shouldn't I run to the hospital or
something?"
"If you're infected, it's already too late," Bolan said
with a straight face. "In an hour you'll know for sure."
"How?" Lester asked.
"You'll look like him," Bolan said, nodding at the
ranger's remains.
Hal Brognola replaced the sheet. "I've seen enough. Let's
go."
Once outside, Saunders leaned toward the soldier. "Was that
true what you said? About it being contagious?"
"No," Bolan confessed, and the officer burst into a
belly laugh loud enough to wake up half of Gold Beach.
A faint pink tinge banded the eastern horizon, a harbinger of
impending dawn. Birds were breaking into lively chorus, and somewhere a foghorn
blared although there was no sign of any fog rolling in off the ocean.
Before leaving Medford, Brognola had given orders to have
pertinent intel on Alexander Sprague and the two bodyguards faxed to the county
sheriffs office. So Saunders drove them there next. The information was
waiting, and while the big Fed coordinated efforts with the sheriff and made
phone calls to bring in agents from as far north as Seattle and as far south as
Sacramento, Bolan sat on a bench and watched the rosy glow of the
morning sun spread across the emerald Pacific. It was rare for him to have
quiet moments like this, and he appreciated them all the more.
Brognola soon came out. "I'm liable to be tied up here for
another hour or more." He placed a manila folder in the soldier's hand.
"This is everything we have on Sprague. Grab yourself a bite to eat and go
over it."
The big Fed fished a set of keys from his pocket, then pointed at
a beige station wagon in the lot flanking the building. "The sheriff says
we can use that one until my people arrive with a car for me. I didn't have
time to rent one last night." As Bolan moved off, Brognola added with a
grin, "It's the sheriffs personal vehicle, so try not to drive it off a
cliff or anything."
"I'll do my best."
Bolan transferred his duffel from the patrol car to the station
wagon, climbed in and drove down Highway 101, which also served as the town's
main street. The first eating place he saw was called the Gold Egg, or some
such, and was crammed with customers, even at that early hour. He learned why
after he ordered. A mountain of delicious food arrived, scrambled eggs and
thick sausage and pancakes smothered in butter and syrup, more than he could
ever eat at one sitting. He washed it down with cup after cup of steaming black
coffee, while studying the file.
Included were the only known photographs of Sprague, the Albino
and Bartolome Charata. The one of the Albino had been taken from a distance,
through a telephoto lens, and was too fuzzy to provide much
detail. Sprague's and Charata's were clear enough, and Bolan
memorized their features.
The drone of friendly conversation at nearby tables, the good
food, the smiling, warm waitress, filled Bolan with a sense of well-being and
contentment. Usually, he was so caught up in his work that he failed to keep in
mind the reason he did what he did. He was waging his one-man war against the
forces of darkness for the benefit of people just like those around him:
ordinary, decent citizens who had the God-given right to live their lives in
peace.
Bolan finished eating. He slipped a large tip under his plate,
paid at the register and strolled out into the growing warmth of the morning.
Backing the station wagon from its slot, he started down Highway 101 to rejoin
Brognola. Bolan didn't like having to sit around twiddling his thumbs, but
until the Feds uncovered a lead to Craker's whereabouts, there wasn't much he
could do.
As the soldier drove by a grocery store, he noticed two people at
a pay phone in front. Both had their backs to him. One was a pudgy little man,
the other quite tall with striking white hair. He was almost past them when the
taller one turned.
For a fleeting moment Bolan thought he had to be seeing things. It
wasn't possible. In his tremendous surprise he nearly slammed on the brake
pedal but he had the presence of mind not to give himself away.
Since U-turns were illegal there, Bolan pulled into a small gift
shop, waited for a line of cars coming the other way to pass, then headed back
up Highway 101. He held to the speed limit so as not to draw attention and went
past the grocery store again.
There could be no mistake. The tall man with the
white hair and white suit was none other than the Albino,
Alexander Sprague's bodyguard. The pudgy man on the phone, Bolan suspected, had
to be Miles Blatterfeld.
Entering the next parking lot he came to, Bolan stopped and spied
on the pair in the rearview mirror. He still couldn't quite believe his luck.
It seemed so improbable that he had run into some of the very people he was on
the lookout for.
Then again, Bolan recalled that Highway 101 was the only highway
that ran the entire length of the Oregon coast. Anyone coming from Portland had
to take, it if they wanted to reach most coastal points in the shortest amount
of time.
Bolan also had to remember there weren't all that many towns along
the cost, particularly the southern stretch. In a span of more than one hundred
miles, the only towns of any size were Brookings, Gold Beach and Coos Bay, and
even they weren't all that big. The rest were mainly small hamlets and
communities located well off the highway.
So the coincidence wasn't as astounding as Bolan first thought. He
saw Blatterfeld slam down the phone and watched as the pair walked to the rear
of the lot where a dump truck was parked. They went behind it, to another
vehicle. All Bolan could see were the headlights and the grille, which was
enough to convince him it was the Cadillac Sprague had rented.
The soldier debated calling Brognola. The closest pay phone,
though, was the one at the grocery store, and it certainly wouldn't be wise to
use it. He looked up the highway to see if he could spot another.
Calling Brognola was out of the question. The Cad-
iliac was driving from the parking lot. It turned north on the
highway.
Bolan ducked before it passed him. The windows were tinted, so he
couldn't see inside. He let them go a block before stepping on the gas and hung
far enough back to avoid inciting suspicion. Fate had smiled on him. With a
little more luck, if all went well, he might soon recover the Piranha Molecule.
The Cadillac crossed a long bridge over the Rogue River, leaving
Gold Beach behind.
The highway's many twists and turns made it simple for Bolan to
shadow Sprague's vehicle. He wondered if Sprague had already obtained the
transport case from Craker and was returning to Portland to catch a flight out
of the country. Or maybe the wily Frenchman had a boat waiting for him
somewhere.
A few miles farther on the Cadillac suddenly veered onto a gravel
pull-off offering a magnificent vista of the sea. There was nowhere for Bolan
to pull over without being seen, so he had to drive by them. Making the best
of it, he faced straight ahead, and after winding up a hill, he came to a
scenic overlook and cut the wheel.
Jumping out, Bolan ran to a metal rail that prevented the overly
curious from plunging to their deaths. He could see the pull-off but no sign of
the Caddy. Puzzled, he concluded that Sprague had to be going back to Gold
Beach, and gazed southward. But the Cadillac wasn't anywhere along the
half-mile stretch to the next turn.
Concerned he would lose them, Bolan ran toward the station wagon.
He pulled the door open and was swinging inside when the Cadillac cruised past
the overlook, continuing on its way north.
Curbing an urge to race in pursuit, Bolan mentally counted to
thirty, then followed. Several other vehicles had gone by, so there was no
danger of being spotted. He figured he would place a quick call to Brognola
from Coos Bay, the next town. By afternoon the whole affair might well be
wrapped up.
Things were going right for once.
Chapter 5
Alexander Sprague prided himself on his efficiency. He didn't like
it when events didn't unfold as he desired, didn't like having his careful
plans ruined. His trip to America was supposed to proceed according to a strict
timetable. But now everything had gone to hell, and all the time and energy he
had invested in obtaining the new nanotechnology was turning into a monumental
waste. "We had better hear from Bernard Craker soon, Miles, or I will be
disturbed. Most disturbed."
Miles Blatterfeld mopped a handkerchief at beads of perspiration
on his forehead. "You worry too much, Mr. Sprague. If the police had
arrested Craker, there would be some mention on the news. And there hasn't
been."
Sprague stared flatly at the broker. "Has it occurred to you
the authorities might wish to keep it hush-hush, as you Americans say? Craker
could be in custody as we speak."
"When we get to Coos Bay, I'll call my motel in Portland
again. The Paisley woman knows where I'm staying. Sooner or later she'll leave
word on where we can set up a new meet. Wait and see."
"How long would you propose I wait? A day? Two days? A week,
perchance?" Sprague willed himself to
remain calm. It wouldn't do for the loathsome little toad to know
how he felt about Blatterfeld's inept handling of the matter.
"I'll bet we hear something by this evening," Blatterfeld
said. "They're probably lying low. You saw the police ribbons around that
campsite. You heard the newscast a while ago. A park ranger was found dead
there under mysterious circumstances. There must be a connection."
"You think so, do you?" Sprague said, envisioning the
Albino's hands wrapped tight on Blatterfeld's throat.
"Helen Paisley won't let us down. She's too money
hungry."
In mat regard, at least, Sprague had to agree. From what
Blatterfeld had told him, Sprague had the impression Paisley was a cold,
calculating witch who would sell her soul to the devil if the price was right.
Which was fine by Sprague. People like Paisley were easy to deal with. They
didn't suffer pangs of conscience, didn't try to change their minds at the
last minute. Not that he would let her back out if she did. He was committed to
obtaining the Piranha Molecule at all costs.
"They must have had a good reason for killing the
ranger," Blatterfeld prattled on. "Maybe he was on to them."
"In your country do park rangers function the same as
police?"
"Well, no, not to my knowledge," Blatterfeld said.
"I thought they just keep tabs on things like camp fires and catch limits
and the like. But I haven't been camping since I was a kid, so I can't rightly
say."
Alexander Sprague leaned back and tried to admire
the spectacular scenery. He'd always loved the ocean. In France he
owned a luxurious cottage situated on the Atlantic shore, and he made it a
point to visit it two or three times a year to relax, to stroll on the beach
and admire the sunsets.
Setbacks were inevitable, Sprague supposed. Usually, though, his
arrangements were so precise, so flawless, transactions were conducted without
a hitch.
"It's definite, sir," Charata announced abruptly.
"We're being followed."
"We are?" Blatterfeld blurted, and turned to look out
the rear window. "Who by? That old guy in the rusty pickup right behind
us?"
It never ceased to amaze Sprague how many idiots there were in the
world. And how they flaunted their idiocy at every opportunity. "I
sincerely doubt it, Miles. He has enough wrinkles to be your grandfather. Which
one, Bartolome?"
"The station wagon about a quarter of a mile back."
Sprague had to hand it to the Argentinian. Charata was as
sharp-eyed as a hawk and had an uncanny sixth sense for spotting the police and
their ilk. It was Charata who had suggested pulling over a while ago to test
whether they were being tailed.
"I noticed it in Gold Beach and it's been behind us ever
since," the Argentinian said. "When we pulled off the highway it went
by but pulled off farther on. Now it's back again."
"Did you see how many are in it?"
"Just one man. Dark hair. I only had a glimpse."
Blatterfeld mopped his glistening forehead again. "What do we
do, Mr. Sprague?"
"What do you think we will do? We must dispose of him."
"But where there's one cop, there are bound to be more. Maybe
he's not alone. Maybe they're about to close in on us."
"Your fear is showing, Miles," Sprague said sternly.
"Have more faith in me. We have come too far to turn back now. However
many there are, rest assured they will be disposed of."
"And face a murder rap? Isn't that too risky?"
Sprague was growing wearier of the simpleton by the minute.
"Life, Miles, is a series of risks. We never truly know from one day to
the next if we will be alive to greet the next dawn."
Blatterfeld wouldn't let it drop. "But if he's a Fed or a
cop, killing him will bring a swarm of them down on our heads."
"Faith, Miles," Sprague reiterated. "Faith. In a
very short while we will lure our friend in the station wagon into a trap, and
you will witness, firsthand, how truly efficient I am."
"I'd never doubt you, Mr. Sprague," Miles said
unconvincingly. "Not for a minute."
"I can't tell you how much your trust means to me."
the executioner rounded a curve and didn't see the
Cadillac ahead, although the highway ran straight and unobstructed for the
better part of a mile. A turnoff appeared, a sign announcing that on his left
was Humbug Mountain. Why anyone would give a mountain such an odd name was
beyond him. Cutting his speed, he spotted the Cadillac parked along with other
vehicles near a hiking trial.
Four men had climbed out. Besides Blatterfeld and the Albino,
Bolan recognized Alexander Sprague and Charata from the photographs Brognola
had shown him. All four moved toward the trail.
Bolan kept going until he came to a point where it was safe to
make a U-turn. When he pulled off Highway 101, the quartet was gone. Another
sign declared that the trail was known as the Humbug Mountain Trail.
Parking as far from the Caddy as the space allowed, Bolan got out
and warily walked over to it. No one else was around, so he tested the doors.
They were locked. Moving to the trail head, he gazed up its winding length for
sign of his quarry.
It dawned on the soldier that Sprague might be there to meet
Bernie Craker and Helen Paisley, that the deal was about to go down. He could
recover the killer nanites and settle Brognola's decades-old score with Sprague
in one fell swoop.
Loosening both the Beretta and the Desert Eagle in their shoulder
holsters, Bolan walked into the woods. His shoes made no sound on the thick
carpet of pine needles. Other than the chirping of sparrows and the whisper of
the breeze, the forest was as still as a cemetery.
Around a bend came a couple and their three cavorting children.
The husband wore a Mariners cap and had a beer belly. His better half looked
unhappy, and Bolan learned why when he stepped off the narrow trail so they
could pass.
"You'd be smart to head back, mister," the woman
remarked. "It's a long hike to the end, and there isn't much to see once
you get there."
"Pay her no mind," the husband said to Bolan.
"Maude doesn't like to go anywhere unless it's in a car. The
view yonder is terrific."
His wife took exception. "I don't mind a little walking now
and then, but it's a mile to the ocean, if not more. My feet are killing me,
Harold."
They bickered until they were out of sight.
Giant pines hemmed Bolan hi as he moved on. It wasn't long before
another man appeared, dressed in orange shorts and a flowered shut, glasses
perched on the end of his nose.
A field guide to whales and dolphins was clutched in his left
hand. Waving it, the man declared, "I didn't see one! Not one measly
whale!"
"You didn't happen to see four men go by a short while ago,
did you? They're friends of mine. One is an albino."
"Oh, I saw him, sure enough," the man said. "Scary
fellow, if you don't mind my saying so. He wouldn't move off the trail to let
me by until one of the others told him to." With a tiny wave, the man
cheerily moved on, then halted short. "Oh, wait. You mentioned four
friends, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"I only saw three. The Albino, a short guy who must be awful
fond of doughnuts, and another guy in a spiffy suit."
"There wasn't a tall man with dark hair with them? A South
American?"
"Hell, friend, I wouldn't know a South American from a Cuban.
But no, I only saw the three. Maybe your other friend was off in the bushes
somewhere."
"Maybe," Bolan said. Slipping his hand under his jacket,
he gripped the Beretta but didn't draw it in case more hikers came along.
The woods were quiet now. The breeze had died, and no wild
creatures were abroad. Bolan encountered another family on the way back to the
parking area and asked if they had seen men answering the description of
Sprague, Blatterfeld and the Albino. They had, but like the whale
watcher they hadn't seen Charata.
Giant trees grew close to the trail and reared high overhead.
Bolan constantly scanned the lush undergrowth. At each bend he slowed to check
the terrain ahead. He was ready for just about anything.
The attack, when it came, proved him wrong.
Two patriarchs of the forest grew so close to the trail on either
side that they hid whatever lay behind the next turn. Bolan slowed, as usual,
and spied nothing out of the ordinary. Taking a few more steps, he halted and
spun when greenery on his left rustled loudly, the Beretta flashing out as if
endowed with a will of its own.
Bolan knew it was a trick when he heard the crack of a twig behind
him. The Argentinian had thrown a rock or a stick to distract him, and now,
before he could whirl back around, a slender wire whisked down over his head
and around his neck.
It was a garrote, a lethal favorite of assassins when they needed
to kill swiftly and silently. In the hands of an expert, it could kill in under
a minute. And Charata was an expert. For the instant the wire encircled
Bolan's throat, the Argentinian tightened the noose with brutal force, seeking
to sear the wire into Bolan's flesh and choke off his breath.
But Charata had pounced just as the soldier drew the Beretta. The
thin wire not only encircled Bolan's neck, it encircled the machine pistol as
well. Charata's
vicious tug snapped the 93-R against the soldier's throat.
Now Bolan couldn't shoot, but Charata couldn't strangle him.
The wire bit into the sides of Bolan's neck. Even as it did, he whipped
his left hand behind him, seized the killer's wrist, and surged forward at the
waist Bolan hoped to flip Charata over his shoulder, but the Argentinian had
braced himself by planting both feet in a wide stance, and the best Bolan could
do was wrench Charata off balance. Instantly Bolan drove his elbow into the
man's gut, not once but several times, and at the last blow Charata grunted and
the garrote loosened,
Capitalizing, Bolan swept his left leg around the Argentinian's
ankle, hooked it and executed a takedown, throwing himself and Charata
backward. He landed on top and jammed his elbow into Charata's stomach again,
with all his might.
A hiss issued from the killer. Pushing Bolan off, Charata heaved
to his feet, his hand snaking under his jacket.
Bolan wasn't about to let him draw a gun or knife or anything
else. Shoving upward, he rammed his shoulder into Charata's abdomen. The
bodyguard snarled, his fingers closing on his adversary's neck.
Uncoiling like a steel spring, Bolan heaved the Argentinian up
and over. At the apex of his toss, Bolan's foot slipped, and suddenly both of
them were tumbling down a short slope on the other side of the trail.
A small boulder materialized out of nowhere. Bolan twisted to
avoid it but couldn't, the impact knocking the Beretta from his grasp. He
winced as his ribs
spiked with agony. Despite the pain he surged up into a crouch.
Charata, though, had been a shade faster. A foot arced at Bolan's
face and he ducked under it. A hand chopped at his neck, but the soldier
countered with a forearm block.
Bolan saw the cutthroat's other foot rise. Pivoting, he absorbed
the kick on his shoulder, allowing the force to knock him backward on purpose.
Stumbling, he fell onto his back, and as he dropped, he brought the Desert Eagle
into play.
But Charata wasn't there. Taking a single long stride, he executed
an amazing eight-foot leap and bounded over a broad fern. Landing as lightly as
a cat, he plunged into the lush growth.
Bolan rolled up onto his knees, training the Desert Eagle on the
spot where the killer had disappeared. A few leaves were swaying, but other
than that it was as if Charata had faded from existence. Bolan rose, swiv-eling
right and left, alert for the slightest sound. There was none. The combination
of pine needles and moss muffled any noise the Argentinian might make.
The glint of metal drew Bolan to the Beretta. Stooping to snatch
it up, he saw movement off to the left and flattened. Just in time. Silvery
death sped out of the undergrowth. A throwing knife missed the top of Bolan's
head by a quarter of an inch and embedded itself hi the soft soil behind him.
Bolan extended the Desert Eagle, his finger curled around the
trigger. But again there was no target to shoot. Again the Argentinian had
vanished. Shoving the Beretta into its holster, he crept deeper into the
forest. Not so much as a leaf stirred. Squatting, Bolan waited for his
adversary to give himself away.
In Brognola's file it had mentioned the Argentinian was highly
skilled at wilderness survival, a legacy of the years Charata had spent working
for a drug lord. The report noted that Charata was as at home in the wilds as
his associate, the Albino, was at home in any city. They were opposites
attracted by a mutual employer, one whose skills had been honed in the Argentinian
jungle, the other a product of the urban jungle.
The intel hadn't been exaggerated. Only someone with exceptional
skill could melt into nothingness as Charata had done. Someone whose skill
equaled, or possibly surpassed, that of Bolan himself.
The seconds became minutes. Convinced the Argentinian was gone,
Bolan made a beeline for the trail. He came on it unexpectedly, and on a
gray-haired woman using a cane who was so startled she clasped a hand to her
throat and recoiled.
"My word! You scared the living daylights out of me!"
"Sorry," Bolan said, the Desert Eagle behind his back.
"You should know better than to stray off the trail like
that," she scolded, shaking her cane at him. "Every step you take
damages the ecosystem."
Bolan nodded and backed away, toward the ocean.
"Trails are here for a purpose," she declared. ' 'Why,
if every Tom, Dick and Harry traipsed around wherever they wanted, before you
know it all the woodland would be gone."
Bolan was more concerned about Alexander Sprague being gone. When
the woman turned, so did he, tucking the Desert Eagle into his belt and jogging
westward. The trail wound to its highest point, then
descended through shadowed spruce and firs to a precipice hundreds
of feet above the sea. Below, breakers crashed on enormous boulders.
Sprague wasn't there.
Bolstering the Desert Eagle, the soldier raced back up the
mountain. He overtook the environmentalist, who heard him approach and,
ironically enough, stepped off the trail so he could pass.
The closer Bolan drew to the parking area, the faster he ran. He had
a good idea what he would find before he sped from the trail head.
The Cadillac was gone.
Annoyed at himself for not realizing sooner what Sprague was up
to, Bolan hurried to the station wagon. Delving into a pocket, he palmed and
inserted it into the door. As he was about to hop hi, he stiffened.
Both front tires were flat
Two hours later the
Executioner squealed out in a spray of dust and headed north on Highway 101.
It had been a frustrating two hours. First Bolan learned there was
no spare, and no jack to use even if there had been. He had no choice but to
hitch a ride back to Gold Beach. Those he asked all said they were going in the
other direction. Finally, a young couple pulled in and agreed to drive him for
twenty bucks.
Once in Gold Beach Bolan ran into more setbacks. The first gas
station he visited didn't have the equipment to repair tires and none to sell.
The second gas station had only one person on duty, and he couldn't leave. The
third was run by a barrel-chested man who fired up a tow truck, took Bolan to
Humbug Mountain and towed the station wagon back so the tires could be patched
and refilled.
While the soldier waited he put in a call to Hal Brognola and gave
the big Fed an update. Brognola, who was still waiting for Justice Department
personnel to arrive, reported there had been no developments.
When Bolan expressed concern that Sprague already had the Piranha
Molecule and was attempting to flee the country, Brognola commented, "He
can try but it won't be easy. I've doubled security at Portland International
and Seattle-Tacoma. Every departing passenger is being closely checked. I've
put the Coast Guard on alert, and they've increased patrols along the Oregon
coast"
"But what if he's hired a private pilot and flies out of a
small local airport?" Bolan mentioned.
"He'll still need to catch an overseas flight at one of the
international airports, and I'll have all of them covered before too
long." Brognola sounded confident. "He's not giving me the slip this
time, Striker. No way."
The station owner came over to say the vehicle was ready, and
Bolan resumed the chase. He was acting on the assumption that since Alexander
Sprague had been heading north initially, odds were Sprague was still doing so.
Speed-limit signs flashed by, but Bolan ignored them. He had a lot
of lost time to make up for. On the straightaways he pushed the speedometer to
eighty. On the curves his tires screamed in protest.
Coos Bay was the next town. Two towns in one, actually, because
Coos Bay blended into another called North Bend. Between them they boasted a
population of upward of thirty thousand. It was the largest population center
along the entire Oregon coast with buildings six or seven stories high, and
bustling traffic.
It was here, Bolan suspected, he would find Alexander Sprague.
There was an airport larger than the one at Brookings, and a sprawling shipping
port made possible by the best natural harbor for hundreds of miles. In
addition to dozens of ocean-worthy vessels that sailed in and out each day, the
docks were lined with scores upon scores of private craft, some big enough to
travel to Seattle or to Los Angeles.
If Sprague wanted to leave the country, Coos Bay was made to
order. If not, if Sprague didn't have the transport case yet; if a monkey
wrench had been thrown into the works by the park ranger's murder, then Coos
Bay was a perfect spot for Sprague to meet Craker.
Rather than waste fruitless hours running all over the place,
Bolan called the airport and asked if Sprague had chartered an aircraft. The
manager informed him that no one by that name was listed.
Next Bolan flipped to the commercial listings and phoned the boat
charter outfits. None reported anyone remotely resembling Sprague hiring a
boat.
Since his own effort had proved to be of no avail, Bolan rang
Brognola again and gave him an update.
"We all have to wait until something breaks," the big
Fed said. "Rent a room. As soon as I hear anything, I'll let you
know."
Sometimes it seemed as if he spent half his life waiting, Bolan
thought.
"My people have arrived," Brognola disclosed. "I'll
be dispatching them up and down the coast, covering all the bases. We'll draw
a net so tight, not even a mouse could slip through."
Alexander Sprague was smarter than any mouse, but
Bolan didn't bring that up. "What about Craker and his lady
friend?"
"Still no clue. Since they have a tent and camping gear, they
could be anywhere. Off hiding in the woods, most likely."
"So you don't think Sprague has the nanites?"
"Not yet, no. Blatterfeld has been calling his motel in
Portland every half hour or so, asking if there have been any messages. It
sounds to me as if he's frantic to hook up with Craker. If the deal falls
through, it's his butt in the sling. Sprague won't take it too well."
"There's hope, then," Bolan said.
"There's always—" Brognola began, then stopped.
Bolan heard muffled voices, as if the big Fed had placed a hand
over the receiver and was talking to someone else. Out in the harbor a ship was
leaving port. Fishing boats and pleasure crafts sprinkled the bay around it.
"Striker?" Brognola's optimistic tone was gone.
"Bad news?"
"You tell me. I don't know what to make of it. I've just been
informed another body has been found."
"More of Craker's handiwork? Another blob?"
"No. An elderly woman at a place called Humbug Mountain.
Isn't that where you told me Sprague stopped?"
An awful certainty came over the soldier. "Yes."
"Edith Harkness was her name. A retired librarian out of
Eugene. Some hikers found her when their dog started whining and digging at a
pile of leaves."
"How was she killed?" Bolan asked, although he knew.
"They haven't done an autopsy yet, but it says here
strangulation by a wire or rope." Brognola paused. "Sounds to me like
a garrote."
Chapter 6
Approximately sixty-one miles south of Coos Bay lay the hamlet of
Ophir. Euchre Creek Road ran eastward from it, winding deep into the mountains,
into rugged, remote country seldom visited except by hardy campers, hikers and
hunters.
Well off the road, in a clearing screened from the air by
overhanging limbs, Bernie Craker and Helen Paisley had pitched their tent.
Parked close by was their van, which belonged to a friend of Paisley's. They
had propped tree limbs against it as camouflage.
Craker had a small fire going and was on his knees stirring the
chicken soup they were having for supper. He didn't have much of an appetite,
but Paisley insisted they eat. She was in excellent spirits, which amazed him
in light of what she had done. When the tent flap parted and she emerged, as
dazzling as a centerfold in her halter top and shorts, he remarked, "I
still can't believe you did that."
"Did what? Killed that ranger? How many times are you going
to bring it up?"
"You haven't shown any remorse," Craker mentioned.
Unlike himself. The vivid memory of Ted Proctor oozing to the tiled floor like
so much soggy putty haunted his every waking moment.
"Why should I?" she said. "Oh, I know he claimed
he was there to check if we had reserved the campsite. But how do
we know that was the real reason? I think he was stalling, keeping us there
until the police arrived. That's why I injected him with the Piranha
Molecule."
Few events had ever shocked Craker more. When she had whispered to
him to keep the ranger talking while she went into their tent, he'd had no hint
of what she was up to. When she came back out, she'd been smiling and friendly,
her hands clasped behind her back. Neither he nor the poor ranger saw the
syringe she held. Craker remembered her looking around to ensure they weren't
being watched. Then she had walked up close behind the unsuspecting ranger and
thrust the syringe into his neck.
The man had tried to cry out. But Paisley had growled at Craker to
put his hands over the man's mouth and Craker had done so, clamping it fast
while the ranger heaved and struggled for the few seconds it took the nanites
to activate.
Craker had felt the ranger's head deflate, felt the flesh
collapsing in on itself as the bone underneath was devoured. Even now he
shuddered, wiping his palms on his pants as if to cleanse them of the
sensation. "He might have been sincere. We shouldn't have murdered
him."
Paisley's sunny disposition clouded. "Drop it, will you? I
swear, sometimes you can be a royal pain in the ass."
"I'm sorry. I don't mean to be." Upset, Craker set down
the wooden spoon and slumped back, his chin drooping to his chest. In his
estimation it was all going haywire. By now they were supposed to have made the
exchange and be winging their way to Paisley's
mysterious hideaway where they would live out the remainder of
their days in bliss. "I just don't want any harm to befall you. It was one
thing for me to kill Ted. I can live with the thought of my going to prison if
we're caught, but not with you spending your life behind bars. I'd never allow
that. Never."
Paisley sat next to him and draped her arm around his shoulders.
"I'm the one who should apologize. I shouldn't have snapped at you. But I
can't help being a little tense, you know?"
"What do we do next?" Craker was letting her make all
the decisions. She had set up the sale, after all, and only had their best
interests at heart.
"After we eat we'll drive to Ophir and I'll phone Portland.
If Blatterfeld isn't there, I'll tell him to meet us at, say, noon
tomorrow."
"Where?"
"Let me think." Paisley considered for a bit. "It
can't be Brookings. The police are bound to be swarming all over, looking for
us. We could drive back to Gold Beach, but maybe it's better to pick somewhere
farther away. Coos Bay, for instance. It's big enough that we can move about
freely without worrying about the cops."
"Coos Bay, then," Craker said. It hardly mattered to
him. Just so they got rid of the transport case and were paid the ten million
dollars. Then it was off to parts unknown, to paradise with the woman he
adored.
"Ah. You're smiling."
"I can't wait to be with you, Helen. The two of us, together
forever." Craker bent to kiss her and she allowed him to, her lips
pressed tight together. He'd asked her once why she didn't French kiss, and she
had told him she didn't like to.
"Be careful what you ask for in life," Paisley joked.
"You just might get it."
"Spending my life with you will make me the happiest man
alive," he assured her.
"Don't forget the ten million. It can buy a lot more
happiness."
"I don't care about the money. I care about you." Craker
had a thought. "But what if Sprague won't pay us the full amount?"
She lowered her arm. "Why wouldn't he?"
"Out of the original six, we only have four vials left."
"So what?" Paisley dismissed it with a toss of her head.
"Sprague won't mind. He'll understand why I had to kill the ranger. As
long as he gets what he really wants, he'll fork over the ten mil."
Craker didn't understand. "What can he really want besides
the nanites?"
Paisley froze an instant, then uttered a brittle laugh. "What
else, indeed? The vials are all he's interested in, silly."
' 'What will he do with them?''
"Probably sell them to the highest bidder. If I had his
contacts, I'd sell the damn things myself and make a lot more than he's paying
us." A gleam came into the woman's eyes. "I could get twenty million,
maybe, or even thirty."
Sometimes Craker couldn't help wondering if the money was all she
really cared about. But then she would smile at him, and touch him and his
doubts evaporated like dew under the morning sun. She had told him she cared.
What more did he need? He felt a sudden urge to place his hand on her leg, but
didn't. She became upset when he took undue liberties. "Ten
million is more than enough to last the two of us for the rest of
our natural lives."
"It is a lot, isn't it?" Paisley said, and grinned.
the news disturbed Mack Bolan. He couldn't stop thinking
about it for the rest of the afternoon. It made no sense whatsoever for the
Argentinian to have murdered Edith Harkness. Why had Charata deemed it
necessary to garrote a harmless old lady?
Bolan thought about it all the way to the burger joint where he
grabbed a bite to eat. He thought about it during his meal. And it was still
uppermost on his mind when he signed the register at a beachfront motel, the
Seashell Resort.
There had to be a reason, Bolan reflected, as he plopped his
duffel on the bed and moved to the window to open the drapes. Charata was too
much of a professional to kill someone on a whim. It wouldn't sit well with his
employer. Bodies had a way of attracting the authorities.
The question nagged at Bolan, but try as he might, he couldn't
answer it. He attempted to put himself in the Argentinian's shoes, to think
like him. Harkness might have seen Charata come out of the woods. Yet if so, so
what? The woman didn't know him. To her he was just another hiker. Maybe she
had chewed him out, as she had Bolan, for venturing off the trail. But, again,
what difference did that make? Being lectured to was hardly enough cause for
Charata to strangle her.
There had to be something Bolan was missing, some important aspect
he had overlooked. Harkness had seen Sprague on the trail, but that couldn't be
it So had others and nothing happened to them.
That meant Edith Harkness had been singled out
But, again, why? What was so different about her that she deserved
to die?
The riddle defied explanation. Bolan was thinking himself in
circles. He opened the drapes by jerking sharply on the cord, then slide the
balcony door wide and stepped outside. The sun was setting. Seagulls soared
overhead, crying shrilly, begging handouts from several people on different
balconies, above and below him.
The soldier leaned on the rail, his mind racing like a car engine
at Indy. Maybe, he mused, he was looking at it all wrong. Maybe the sequence of
events might supply a clue. He recalled being jumped by Charata, moving up the
trail, then encountering Harkness. While the Argentinian had kept him occupied,
Sprague, Blatterfeld and the Albino had gone back to the parking area, and one of
them, no doubt the pale bodyguard, had punctured the station wagon's tires.
It was strange, though, Bolan noted, that they flattened his
tires before learning whether Charata had finished him off. Perhaps it
had been a precaution on Sprague's part, in the event Charata failed.
Bolan felt he was missing something, though. He recalled going to
the overlook, finding no one there, and running back up the trail, passing
Harkness a second time. It was only a minute or two after he saw her that he
reached the cars.
An electric jolt coursed through him. Why hadn't he seen it
sooner? he chided himself. The Argentinian had killed the teacher after the
tires were flattened, after Alexander Sprague and the others left in the Cadillac.
To what end? For the savage thrill? Out of anger that he'd failed?
An answer sprouted full-blown, so obvious that Bo-
lan couldn't believe he had overlooked it: Charata needed transportation.
He didn't have a car. Sprague had left him stranded on Humbug Mountain. So the
Argentinian killed crusty old Edith Harkness for the keys to her vehicle.
The scenario was logical but it had a flaw. Why would Sprague
desert one of his most trusted underlings? According to the Feds, the pair had
been together for years. Bolan couldn't see Sprague doing so unless they had
agreed to link up later.
The shrill call of a seagull brought Bolan back to the present.
The ocean was swallowing the sun. Twilight was descending.
Bolan placed his elbow on the rail and his chin in his hand. He
almost had it figured out. The only part that still didn't make any sense was
why Charata hadn't gone with Sprague. It was almost as if the Argentinian had
stolen Harkness's car for a specific purpose.
Why did Charata need a car?
The soldier straightened and pivoted toward the sliding glass
door. A slug thudded into the wall beside him, missing his head by mere inches.
Another ripped into the rail he had been leaning on, showering splinters onto
the balcony. Bolan threw himself inside, onto his belly, and eeled over to the
bed to retrieve his duffel. Rummaging inside, he found his binoculars.
There had been no sound, no gun blasts. A suppressor was being
used.
Moving to the right, out of the line of sight of anyone below,
Bolan rose and eased the drapes just far enough to scan the grass and scrub.
The binoculars magnified every blade, every leaf. He started close to
die motel and searched outward until he saw the shooter.
Bartolome Charata was moving toward the beach. He looked both ways
before stepping from cover, cast a last glance at the Seashore Resort and
jogged southward.
Bolan tossed the binoculars on the bed and rushed out He took the
stairs three at a time and ran to the south corner of the building. Angling
into the field, Bolan poured on the speed. The reason Edith Harkness had been
slain was now crystal clear. The Argentinian had wanted her car in order to
shadow him without being caught. All afternoon Charata had to have bided Ms
time, waiting for the perfect chance, the perfect shot. And the plan had very
nearly worked. It was a mike Bolan was still alive.
The notion of the feisty librarian losing her life on his account
angered the soldier. She had done nothing to deserve her ghastly end. She had
simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time and paid a terrible price.
Not that Bolan needed any, but her death gave him added incentive
to bring Sprague and his coldhearted assassins to bay.
The sun was almost gone. Charata had timed his attempt just right.
Under cover of the gathering darkness he could make his escape.
But not if Bolan could help it
The grass was razor thin and nearly as sharp. It slashed Bolan's
hand, cutting a knuckle. He skirted a thorny shrub, vaulted a piece of deadwood
as thick as a telephone pole and started across a sandy tract. It bogged him
down, his feet sinking into the shifting sand with each step, the sand getting
into his shoes.
Bolan spied his prey fifty yards ahead. Charata wore a jacket much
like his own, only the Argentinian's was brown. The collar was up, probably to
make it harder for passersby to identify Charata should they be questioned by
the authorities later on.
Another ten yards and Bolan would be within reliable range. He
slid the Beretta out, removed the sound suppressor from an inner pocket and
quickly attached it
The Argentinian was slanting toward the ocean. At the water's edge
he stopped and turned.
Bolan had begun to slow. A mound of sand offered concealment, and
he dropped as Charata surveyed the field, then hastened on. A gap in the grass
gave the Executioner a clear shot, but he didn't raise the machine pistol.
Turnabout was fair play. Charata had used Hark-ness's car to tail
Bolan to the motel, so it was fitting Bolan use Charata to get to Alexander
Sprague.
The killer bent and picked up a stone. Bolan couldn't guess what
he intended to do with it He watched him cock an arm and throw it into the sea,
hurling it as far as he could, just like a kid would do.
Bolan paralleled the beach for as long as he could, until the
field ended at a row of cabins. Darting from one to the next, he saw the
Argentinian move inland, toward a walkway leading to a small shopping center.
Halfway up, Charata halted to scan the beach. Nodding to himself,
as if satisfied no one was after him, he climbed to the top and paused under a
street lamp that had just come on to light a cigarette. Exhaling a puff of
smoke, he strolled out of sight.
Not wasting a second, Bolan sprinted to the walkway. He raced to
the top, the Beretta under the flap of
his jacket The Argentinian was gone, yet there hadn't been time
for him to drive away. Bolan roved along the row of stores, peering into
each window. In a small cigar shop he spotted Charata buying a
carton of cigarettes. Backing into the door-way of a bridal boutique, Bolan
bided his time. When Charata appeared carrying a brown paper sack and
moved toward a compact car, the soldier swiftly crossed the lot.
Charata gripped the door handle.
"Didn't anyone ever tell you smoking will kill you?"
The Argentinian glanced over his shoulder. If he was the least bit
surprised, he didn't show it. "I thought I hit you, American," he
said in calm, clipped English.
"You thought wrong." Bolan was holding the Beretta at
waist height, the suppressor pointed at the
killer's midsection. "We'll do this by the numbers. No sudden
moves. Do exactly as I tell you."
"Why not shoot me and be done with it? It's what I'd
do."
"Don't talk unless I say you can."
Charata smirked.
"Put the bag on the roof, then lace your fingers behind your
head and spread your legs," Bolan commanded.
After the killer obeyed, Bolan moved in closer, gouging the
Beretta into the base of his spine. One-handed, Bolan frisked him, finding a
Clock 17 fitted
with a stubby sound suppressor in a black leather rig
under the left arm. He tucked it into his belt. He also
and two spare clips. No other guns, no more throw-
ing knives
and no garrote.
"Now take the keys and bag and walk around to the passenger
side," Bolan directed him. He followed several paces behind. Other than a
woman walking her dog and a couple of kids playing tag near the stores, no one
was around.
Charata stopped next to the door.
"Unlock it and slide over to the steering wheel. Do it
slowly, and keep your hands where I can see them."
Mocking him, Charata exaggerated every movement, turning the key
in slow motion, opening the door as if it weighed a ton and easing into the car
as if he were thick molasses oozing from a bottle. Grinning, he gripped the
wheel with both hands.
Bolan got in and tossed the paper bag into the back seat.
"Now start it. And no sudden moves."
"Are we going somewhere?" Charata broke his silence.
"You're taking me to Alexander Sprague."
"You think so, do you?"
"I know so."
The Argentinian snorted. "What makes you believe I would
betray Sprague, American? You insult my integrity."
"I didn't know you had any." Bolan tapped the Beretta.
"But this should be more than enough incentive."
"You are mistaken," Charata said with contempt.
"I'm not afraid to die. And even if I was, I know your country. I know how
your system works. Officers of the law can't go around shooting people. You
must read me my rights. You must take me into custody without harming me. So
you are bluffing."
"You think so, do you?" Bolan mimicked him.
"Am I wrong?"
"Who said I'm an officer of the law?" Bolan raised the
machine pistol. "I'm not. And I'll do whatever it takes to stop Alexander
Sprague from leaving the U.S. with the Piranha Molecule."
"You truly are not a policeman?" Charata showed real
surprise. "Then who are you? Why are you doing this?"
"Who I am is unimportant."
"Are you after the Molecule for yourself? Is that it? Or has
someone else hired you to obtain it?"
Bolan nodded at the ignition. "Start the car."
Charata did so, reluctantly. "I still won't take you to
Sprague. I'm not a turncoat. No threat could ever make me betray him.''
The killer had his right foot near the gas pedal, his left against
the side panel.
Bolan flicked the Beretta's selector switch to single shot and
shot him through the left leg, just above the ankle.
Arching his spine, Charata grit his teeth to keep from crying out.
His brawny hands clamped onto the steering wheel so tightly, his fingers were
white. Gasping, he fought the pain, the shock, then glared. "Damn
you!" he grated. "Damn you to hell!"
"Take me to Sprague or I'll keep shooting," Bolan said.
"Your choice."
Already Charata's pant leg bore a dark stain that was spreading
rapidly. Grimacing, he started to lower a hand toward the wound.
"No, you don't. Keep both hands on the wheel."
The hatred in the Argentinian's dark eyes was boundless. "For
this you will suffer, American. I can kill fast or I can kill slow. Your death
will be the
slowest ever, and before I'm done, you will beg to be put out of
your misery."
"Get moving," Bolan remarked.
Glowering, Charata shifted into gear and drove to the exit.
Gritting his teeth to suppress the torment, he turned left.
"Stick to the speed limit," Bolan ordered. "We
don't want to attract attention."
Charata's brow creased. "You are as wary of the police as I
am. So, plainly, you work outside the law, just as I do." He winced, then
said, "A man like you must have his price. Name it, and it's yours if you
let me go."
"You're trying to buy me off?"
"My employer has been most generous. I have enough money to
retire, but retirement is not for men like us, eh? So how much? A quarter of a
million in your country's currency? Half a million? Let me go my own way and
it's yours."
"Just keep driving."
"Are you crazy, man? How can you turn down my offer? All we
need is a phone. I'll call my bank and have the funds transferred. Then you can
talk to your bank to prove it has been done."
"All I'm interested in is the nanites."
"Ah. I see. Why take a paltry half million when you can sell
the Piranha Molecule for many times as much? But you are in for a surprise,
American. My employer doesn't have it."
"Nice try."
"I'm telling the truth. Things have not gone as Sprague had
planned."
Bolan tended to believe him, and was greatly relieved. Keeping
Craker's creation from falling into the
wrong hands was paramount; ending Sprague's career was secondary.
"Take me to him anyway."
"You didn't hear me?"
When Bolan didn't answer, Charata fell quiet. They were driving
through the business district, and traffic was heavy. It was slow going, with
repeated stops at traffic lights. Meanwhile, the stain on the Argentinian's
leg spread wider and wider.
At the next light Charata looked at him. "I would very much
like to know who you are. Just your first name, if you would."
"I wouldn't"
"You're here to kill Sprague, are you not? You kill for hire
just as I do."
"The light is green."
Charata drove on. "The way you move, the way you fight, I
should have realized the truth sooner. In many ways we are brothers, no?"
"No," Bolan said. "And I told you not to
talk."
"One last thing, then," Charata said. "If you're
like me, you know that when we are hired to do a job, we do it or we die. There
is no middle ground. No turning back once we have given our word. It's what
separates professionals from amateurs."
"Your point?"
"My point is that I'm willing to do whatever it takes to stop
you from harming the man I work for." And with that, the Argentinian spun
the steering wheel and tromped on the gas pedal, ramming the car up over the
curb.
The engine roaring to a crescendo, the vehicle hurtled toward a
plate-glass window.
Chapter 7
The general store in Ophir was a converted log cabin. It smelled
of must and dust, of meat and cheese and chocolate, and many more scents Bernie
Craker couldn't identify. Shelves crammed with items for sale lined every
square foot. Name it, the store had it. Everything from toothpicks and
batteries to hammers and nails.
The proprietor was a kindly old gentleman who greeted them with a
smile when the tiny bell above the front door tinkled. "Howdy, folks. What
can I do for you this fine day?"
Paisley sashayed in ahead of Craker. "We need to use your pay
phone."
"Help yourselves," the old man said, bobbing his
whiskered chin at the front corner. "Is it local or long distance?"
"What business is that of yours?" Paisley snapped.
Craker saw the proprietor was flabbergasted, and the scientist
didn't blame him. His sweetheart had no cause to be so rude.
"Well, young lady, if it's long distance I have plenty of
change should you need it," the man said.
"Oh." Laughing, Paisley responded, "Sorry. I guess
my city manners are showing. I'm not used to people being so friendly."
"Where are you folks from, if you don't mind my
curiosity?"
Paisley was deliberately vague. "Back east."
Craker dogged her to the corner and heard her snicker in amusement.
"Will you look at this? It's an antique rotary phone. I
didn't think the phone company still used these."
The owner overheard her. "They want to put in the Touch-Tone
kind, but I keep turning them down. That phone has been here pretty near as
long as I've owned this place, going on forty years. You could say it's a
fixture."
"Whatever," she said under her breath.
To Craker she whispered, "Keep the old coot occupied so he
doesn't listen in."
The scientist walked to the counter and studied a rack of candy.
"I could go for a snack," he commented.
"You seem a bit peaked," the oldster said. "Are you
feeling all right, son?"
"I've been having trouble sleeping," Craker said. Afraid
the man would pry into why, he justified it by saying, "We're camping up in
the mountains. I'm not used to sleeping on the ground, I guess."
"What you need is a better sleeping bag," the man said.
"I happen to have the best on the market. You'll swear you're sleeping on
a mattress. And it's only a hundred-and-forty-two dollars.''
"Thanks, but I'll stick with the one I have," Craker
said. "We're only going to be up there one more night." That was, if
all went well and Paisley contacted Blatterfeld. She was dialing the number,
her back to them.
The bell over the front door tinkled again. Craker
looked, and his blood grew as cold as a glacier. Into the store
came a state trooper in a crisply pressed uniform and a wide-brimmed hat
tilted at an angle.
"Hello there, Officer Williams," said the owner.
"Hi, Floyd," the trooper returned, sauntering down the
center aisle with his thumbs hooked in his belt. "It's been a while."
"A couple of months, at least," the shopkeeper agreed.
"Having another jelly bean attack?"
Williams chuckled. "How did you guess? Can I help it you have
the tastiest jelly beans this side of the Mississippi?" He reached the
counter and smiled at Craker. "I can wait my turn."
"No, please, you go first," Craker said, his voice
squeaking. A horde of butterflies were fluttering in his stomach and his legs
suddenly felt weak. "I haven't made up my mind yet."
"That your van outside?" the trooper inquired.
"Yes," Craker said, his nervousness mounting.
"Why?"
"Noticed you have a crack hi the windshield. You should get
it fixed before it spreads. They always do. First thing you know, you'll be
driving along and hit a bump or rut and the windshield will shatter. Had that
happen to a couple near Salem once. The husband lost control and crashed into a
tree. Killed the wife."
"We'll be sure to get it fixed."
The shopkeeper had turned and was scooping jelly beans from a
small bin into a paper sack. "I had that happen to me, too, about twenty
years ago. Scared me half to death." He paused. "How many do you
want? A quarter pound? More?"
All three of them heard a scraping noise and looked around. For a
moment Craker couldn't believe his own
eyes. He saw Paisley advancing with a long-handled ax raised high.
But surely he was mistaken, surely she wouldn't do such a thing. Then the ax
whipped down, and the keen edge cleaved into the state trooper's forehead,
splitting it like a watermelon, shearing through flesh and bone clear down to
the nose.
"Dear God in heaven!" the shopkeeper blurted.
Paisley's face was contorted hi a ferocious mask. Craker, stunned,
watched as she wrenched the ax free and Williams slumped to the floor, spurting
scarlet like a fountain. She spun toward the counter, toward the shopkeeper,
whose eyes widened to the size of walnuts. He thrust out both hands.
"No! Please!"
Paisley wasn't to be denied. She swung again, the ax catching him
as he stumbled sideways. It bit deep but not deep enough.
Tottering, the old man clutched at a shelf, scattering merchandise
in a noisy rain. He gaped at Paisley in disbelief. "Please!" he sputtered,
red froth rimming his mouth. "Don't!"
She did. Bracing her legs, she arced the ax into the top of his
skull, finishing what she had started. She left it embedded, letting go of the
polished wood handle as the man crumpled. Breathing heavily, she looked over
the counter at his body, then at the state trooper's, and smiled.
"What have you done?" Craker exclaimed in horror.
"Saved our butts."
"That officer didn't know who we were!" he said shrilly.
"He would have gone on his way none the wiser! You shouldn't have done
it!"
Paisley gave him the same ferocious look she had
given the others. "You're pathetic, do you know that? I'm so
sick and tired of your whining." She grabbed him by the front of his
shirt. "How stupid are you? He knew who we were, all right."
"You're only guessing—" Craker tried to protest and was
shaken so violently his vision briefly blurred.
"Hasn't it sunk in yet? I'm not letting anyone— anyone at
all—stand in the way of my getting that ten million. You say the trooper wasn't
a threat. I say he was. So I took care of him. End of story." Paisley
pulled him toward the door. "Now let's get out of here before someone else
shows up."
"This can't be happening," Craker said. "It just
can't."
"Grow up," she said resentfully. "And try to look
at the bright side for once."
"There's a bright side to murder?"
"I didn't use any of your precious vials, did I? I improvised
this time, and did a damn fine job if I say so myself."
The scientist stared forlornly at the red pool spreading outward
from the trooper. Of all the ways to describe what she had done, "damn
fine job" wasn't one of them. Paisley was changing, becoming more vicious
and coldhearted with every passing hour. Or had she always been that way and he
was merely seeing her true self for the first time?
No, that couldn't be, Craker reflected, shaking his head. She was
still the same marvelous, considerate angel she had always been. The setbacks
were weighing heavily on her shapely shoulders.
"Be thankful I'm with you," Paisley said. "You
wouldn't last an hour on your own."
Craker opened his mouth to point out that he
wouldn't be involved at all if not for her, but he closed it
again. She might take it the wrong way and she was already mad enough.
"Whatever you say, sweet one. Whatever you say."
the EXECUTIONER'S reflexes were second to none, but he had no time to
do anything other than brace both hands against the dashboard before the car
smashed into a store with a resounding din that had to have been heard several
blocks away.
The car bounced wildly. Bolan's head was slammed against the roof,
and for a few seconds pinwheeling points of light danced before his eyes. He
heard screams, shouts, curses. Shaking his head to clear it, he saw a mannequin
in a skirt and blouse loom in front of them. It was plowed under. Suddenly the
car swerved, slamming him against his door.
Simultaneously, Charata's door swung open and the killer dived
out. Landing on his shoulders, he rolled, die momentum carrying him into a rack
of clothes.
Bolan lunged at die steering wheel just as a jewelry counter
appeared, a terror-struck woman riveted in place beside it, her hands at her
throat. Yanking the wheel, he missed her, but he couldn't completely miss the
counter. It dissolved in a barrage of broken glass and wood.
Again the car bounced and lurched. Bolan jammed the brake pedal,
bringing the vehicle to a sliding, screeching stop. Then, throwing the
gearshift into Park, he sprang out. From the look of things, the store
specialized in apparel for ladies, and it was a sheer miracle none of the
customers had been harmed. He rotated toward the last spot he had seen Charata.
"Look out! That man has a gun!"
The Argentinian was gone. Bolan didn't linger, either. To do
otherwise, to try to track the trail of blood from Charata's wound, invited
arrest.
No one tried to stop Bolan as he jogged toward an exit sign at the
rear. Most of the women were cowering on the floor and wouldn't even look at
him, perhaps out of fear he might shoot them.
An empty side street brought the soldier to a busy avenue, which
he crossed. A huge crowd had gathered at the shattered storefront, with more
arriving every second.
Bolan hiked westward, the Beretta wedged into his belt, his jacket
zipped to hide the Glock. He didn't stop until he reached the beach, and then
only long enough to ensure no one was following him. As he walked past the
lobby of the Seashore Resort, the scrawny desk clerk, who wasn't much over
eighteen, came hurrying out.
"Hey! Where have you been, mister?"
"For a walk," Bolan said. "Why?"
"A guy just told me something big is going on downtown. The
cops are all over the place, a whole block is cordoned off, the works. And here
I am, stuck at work. I miss all the good stuff." The clerk gazed longingly
toward the center of Coos Bay. "I was hoping maybe you knew what
happened."
"It will be on the news soon enough," Bolan predicted,
and went up to his room.
Once again Charata had given him the slip, and Bolan liked it
even less now than the first time. His only consolation was that he had learned
Sprague didn't have the Piranha Molecule. News Brognola would be interested in.
He put in a call to Gold Beach and was
told the big Fed had gone out for something to eat and would be
back within the hour.
Bolan left a message for Brognola to call him, then stripped and
treated himself to a shower. He had just finished and was toweling himself off
when the phone jangled.
"You're keeping your usual low profile," were the first
words out of Brognola's mouth. "Reminds me of the time you blew up half of
Tokyo Bay."
"It was one warehouse and a couple of ships," Bolan
corrected him. "How did you hear about Coos Bay so soon?"
"Every chief of police and sheriff along the Oregon coast has
been put on notice to call me if anything out of the ordinary happens,"
Brognola said. "And, silly him, the Coos Bay chief thought that having
someone crash a car through a store window in the middle of downtown
qualified."
"For what it's worth, Charata was to blame," Bolan said.
"I'm all ears. Fill me in."
The soldier shared the essentials, ending with, "So Sprague
and Blatterfeld are definitely somewhere in Coos Bay, waiting to hear from
Craker."
"I'd already gathered as much. I have an agent taking all
the calls at Blatterfeld's hotel in Portland, pretending to work there. He
reported hi a while go and told me Helen Paisley had called and left a message
for Blatterfeld. She's set up a meet for tomorrow at noon."
"Where?"
"At Bayside Park, off Lakeside Drive. Very public, very smart
of her. I told my man in Portland to relay
the message. If we play our cards right, we can bag them all in
one fell swoop."
"How do you want to play it?"
"I was going to call in an army of federal agents and
marshals, but Sprague has a reputation for being able to smell a trap a mile
off. The fewer operatives I use, the better."
"How few?"
"Four agents to take them into custody, with you as backup to
take down anyone who tries to give us the slip. I'm driving up with the agents.
We should be there about midnight."
"Anything else?"
"Just that a minute ago word came down the wire of a state
patrolman discovered dead in a little country store at a place called
Ophir."
"Our third blob?" Bolan speculated.
"Not this one. Someone took an ax to his head. The owner of
the store was also found murdered. It's too soon to tell whether Craker and
Paisley are implicated, but it doesn't match their MO." Brognola sounded
weary. "As for you, you know what you have to do."
"As soon as we hang up. There's a place called the Pacific
Inn a couple of blocks north."
"Got it"
Hanging up, Bolan dressed, packed and slipped past the lobby
without disturbing the desk clerk, who was reading a comic book. Tossing his
bag into the station wagon, he drove to the Pacific Inn and took a ground-floor
room for the night under a different name than he had used at the Seashore
Resort It was a basic precaution on the off chance Charata or the Albino, or
both, paid a visit to the Seashore Resort in the middle of the night.
Bolan called in an order for a large pizza to be delivered and
settled in to catch the late news and an update on the debacle downtown.
Twenty minutes later a knock on his door brought Bolan to his feet
with the Desert Eagle in his right hand. "Who is it?"
"Pizza."
Standing to one side, Bolan carefully turned the knob. A man in a
red shirt and hat gave him a lopsided grin.
"I don't have all night, buddy. I have six more deliveries
to make before my shift is over, and I'm running late."
Bolan stuck the Desert Eagle into the back of his pants and pulled
his wallet from his pocket He stepped out to pay, accepted the warm cardboard
box and sniffed it. The aroma of cheese and Canadian bacon made his mouth
water.
"Hope you enjoy it," the deliveryman said, touching his
cap.
The cool breeze gave Bolan pause. He gazed to the south, beyond a
string of small businesses, beyond the Seashore Resort, toward the south end of
Coos Bay, and Coos Head, where the bay flowed into the sea.
The next moment the night flared as brightly as the sun.
A billowing fireball erupted skyward close by, roiling outward
like a mushroom cloud, and a concussive wave of irresistible force slammed into
Bolan like a battering ram, flinging him against the door. His window and most
others on the side of the inn facing the blast exploded in shards, as did those
of every building in sight.
The deliveryman covered his face with his arms as his windshield
blew out.
With the blast came blistering, scorching heat, so intense Bolan
felt as if the skin on his chest was being burned from his body. He ducked,
dropping the cardboard box, which spilled open.
The fireball rose to its apex, a volcanic mix of orange, red and
yellow, then folded in on itself, contracting on its source—the Seashore
Resort.
Bolan rose, donned a shirt and shoes, and locked his door. Screams
filled the salt air as he sprinted southward. The Resort's roof was gone, as
was half of the north wall. But the true extent of the devastation wasn't
apparent until Bolan passed the last of the smaller buildings adjoining it.
The Seashore Resort was a shambles. A gaping cavity engulfed in
flames was all that remained of dozens of rooms. Only a few at each end had
been spared, but the flames were spreading so rapidly that they, too, would
soon be consumed. Debris was everywhere. So were bodies, and bits of bodies
lying on broken balconies, amid the ruins, and in the parking lot.
It was plain to Bolan that the epicenter of the blast had been in
the vicinity of the room he had vacated. He'd left because he thought Charata
or the Albino might try to put a bullet in his brain in die middle of the
night, but they had gone him one better. They had set off a bomb. With a total
disregard for human life, not caring how many innocents were caught in the
blast, they had blown up the Resort specifically to kill him.
Fury filled the soldier, fury that they would be so barbaric, fury
for all the lives lost, fury that, as in the case of Edith Harkness, he was indirectly
the cause.
The sound of weeping restored Bolan's self-control. A woman in a
tattered robe, bleeding from various wounds, was feebly crawling away from the
flames. Running over, he picked her up and carried her a safe distance, then
ran back to find more survivors. The heat was awful, the flames leaping from
room to room as if alive, devouring all in their path.
Sirens knifed the night, and a police car screeched into the lot A
young officer jumped out, gaped in shock, then recovered his wits and snatched
up the mike to his radio. He yelled for help, for fire engines, for ambulances,
for backup, the works.
No one tried to stop him as he walked away. Bolan had done all he
could. Now it was up to the police and firemen.
The Pacific Inn was lit up like a Christmas tree. Lights glowed in
every window, and faces were pressed against every pane. The balconies were
crammed.
As Bolan opened his door, it bumped something on the floor. He had
forgotten about the pizza. It had long since grown cold. Placing it on the
table, he pried an undamaged piece off the box and sank into a chair. He didn't
bother to switch on the light. He just sat there in the darkness, taking small
bites now and then, eating out of habit, his appetite largely gone. How long he
sat there, he couldn't say. Centuries, it seemed. It had to be past midnight
when a knock came at the door.
"It's open, Hal," Bolan said.
Brognola switched on the light before entering. He glanced at the
pizza, then at Bolan. They had been friends for so long, they knew each other
so well, that Brognola understood without having to be told, as he
proved by saying, "You can't blame yourself, Striker."
"Can't I?"
"Alexander Sprague is responsible. Him, and him alone. His
killers never do anything without his say-so. He had to give the orders."
"It wasn't a little old lady this time," Bolan said.
"I counted ten, maybe eleven bodies, and the count will grow."
Brognola sat in another chair. "You can't let it get to
you."
"Easier said than done."
"Why? Because of Harkness? Because you had talked to her,
liked her? Because that made it personal?"
Bolan propped his cheek on his fist.
"Senseless deaths are part and parcel of our business. These
aren't the first, they won't be the last. But why am I lecturing you? You know
all this just as well as do."
"Every now and then—" Bolan said, but didn't finish.
Brognola did it for him. "Every now and then our inner armor
develops a chink. The mental armor we wear to hold the horror at bay. The armor
that enables us to get on with our lives."
He inspected the pizza, tore off a ragged strip and took a bite.
"Has anyone ever told you that pizza is a lot better when it's hot?"
Despite himself, Bolan felt his inner tension draining away.
"You've never had cold pizza for breakfast? You're depriving yourself of a
culinary treat."
The big Fed got to the point of bis visit. "About tomorrow.
We'll try to take Sprague alive if at an
possible. I don't want a gun battle in the middle of a public park
in broad daylight. Too many bystanders. And enough people have already
died."
"Amen to that."
"I brought a present for you."
"And that would be...?"
"A special rifle. This time you'll be able to make sure no
innocents are harmed. If things go sour, you can take whatever steps are
necessary to put Alexander Sprague and his bodyguards out of commission."
For the first time in hours, Bolan smiled.
Chapter 8
Bayside Park was abuzz with activity and laughter. It covered
fifteen acres, including a tract of woodland, a spacious belt of grass and a
strip of pristine beach. An asphalt path for joggers and bikers wound through
the park, dotted by benches for those who would rather sit than move about. A
playground for children and a gazebo for adults to rest out of the sun
completed the picture.
It was a favorite haunt of Coos Bay's residents. Families on
picnics had spread out blankets and dishes of food. People were throwing
Frisbees, flying kites, playing soccer.
A few, less interested in exercise, were reading books or
magazines. Children scampered all over, hollering and giggling.
Out on the beach men and women were sunning themselves. Kids
played in the surf or built sand castles.
By the Executioner's reckoning, there had to be close to seventy
people in the park, innocents he was determined wouldn't come to harm. On the
local news that morning, the final tally of the Seashore Resort fire was placed
at fourteen dead, twenty-three others hospitalized, seven hi critical
condition.
Mack Bolan was on the flat roof of a one-story util-
ity- shed at the edge of the trees, where he had an elevated view
of most of the park. More importantly, no one could see him. For if they did,
they might be in fear for their lives.
On the roof beside him was the carrying case that had contained
Hal Brognola's "present" Now the present was pressed to Bolan's right
shoulder.
The big Fed had taken into account the conditions under which the
soldier would be working, and had selected a weapon ideally suited for Bolan's
needs. It was a Remington 700, but not standard issue in any respect Instead of
the black synthetic stock the manufactured model came with, this one had a
special McMillan A-2 fiberglass stock, the cream of the crop, similar to the
stocks specifically designed for sniper use by the United States Marine Corps.
An ambidextrous adjustable saddle cheek-piece had been fitted to
the stock for use with night-vision devices. On top of the rifle was a
Bushnell 10 x 40 scope, on die front end a Cherokee bipod for added stability.
But the modification that pleased Bolan the most was the Ciener
suppressor. Custom made, it was second to none in quality and effectiveness.
It reduced the noise of a shot to the level of a whisper, and would prevent a
panic should a firefight break out.
Two boxes of federal .308-caliber ammunition had been provided.
Bolan had already opened one and loaded the rifle. His eye pressed to the
scope, he scanned Bayside Park for the umpteenth time since he had arrived.
The meeting between the renegade scientists and Alexander Sprague
had been set for noon. Bolan had arrived two hours earlier and climbed a ladder
at the rear of the shed when no one was looking. He had
been there ever since. Now it was quarter to twelve, and
Brognola's four Justice Department agents were in place. One was dressed as a
hot dog vendor and was selling food and drink from a stand near the playground.
Another was hi shorts and a sleeveless shirt, lying on a blanket with an open
magazine. The third, a woman, was at a park bench feeding seagulls. That left
the last man, in swimming trunks and an aloha shirt, out on the beach. Between
them, they had the whole park covered.
Brognola was never one to leave anything to chance. So he had
insisted his team wear wires so they could communicate, and asked Bolan to wear
one to keep tabs on what was going down.
Strict silence had been maintained, per Brognola's orders. But now
the tiny earphone in Bolan's ear crackled with the voice of the phony hot dog
vendor.
"This is Agent Burke. I have visual. I repeat, I have visual
on three of the four wolves at the north end of the park. Everyone
acknowledge."
"Jensen, copy," said the female agent on the bench.
"This is Rom," the man on the beach responded. "I
acknowledge."
The guy on the blanket was last. "Agent Sloan. I copy,
too."
Bolan swung the scope toward the north parking lot. A black
Lincoln had pulled up, and Alexander Sprague, the Albino and Miles Blatterfeld
had emerged. The Argentinian wasn't with them, which was disturbing. Sprague
would want both bodyguards by bis side for such an important a meeting. The leg
wound had been worse than Bolan thought it was, or a random element had now
been added to the mix.
Sprague was cautious. He halted at the footpath and
surveyed the park carefully. So did the Albino. Blatterfeld, on
the other hand, was merrily chattering away like a chipmunk, perhaps out of
relief that the deal was about to be completed.
They entered the park, the Albino in the lead, bis white jacket
unbuttoned, his tinted sunglasses constantly roving from side to side, alert
for threats.
Sprague was also looking all around, but for a different reason.
Thanks to the scope, Bolan could see every hair, every wrinkle, on Sprague's
face. And read every emotion. Sprague was looking for Craker and Paisley, and
he was plainly angered when it became apparent they weren't there.
Bolan had been on the lookout for them, too. Brognola had shown
him photos of the pair, so unless they wore disguises, the soldier would have
no problem making them. A check of his watch showed it was seven minutes before
twelve. Still plenty of time.
Alexander Sprague shielded his eyes with a hand and gazed toward
the beach. He frowned, then said something to the Albino. They moved on, and
when they were midway into the park they stopped at an empty bench, Sprague and
Blatterfeld sat down. The Albino took up a post behind it.
Sloan, the agent on the blanket, had shifted so he was facing
them. Holding his magazine so they couldn't see what he was doing, he opened
his backpack and took out a pencil-thin directional microphone hooked to a
portable amplifier in the pack. la another few moments he had the unit
activated and was feeding the input into the earpieces of the special team.
The soldier heard the hiss of static, then Sprague's voice.
"—should have been here by now, Miles. I don't like
this."
"Be patient, Mr. Sprague," Blatterfeld responded.
"Paisley won't let you down. She doesn't want to blow this."
"I sincerely hope so, Miles, for your sake," Sprague
said.
Through the scope Bolan saw something Blatterfeld didn't: Sprague
glancing at the pudgy man hi utter contempt.
"I don't want anything to go wrong, either," Blatterfeld
said. "This is the biggest deal I've ever brokered. It'll put me in the
big time. Once word gets around, people will beg for my services."
"Once word gets around?" Sprague repeated harshly.
"Miles, you continue to disappoint me. I thought I made it clear. Secrecy
is essential. I haven't lasted in this business by shouting what I do from
rooftops."
"No, no, no. You misunderstand. I'd only whisper it in a few
ears here, a few ears there. Gossip will do the rest. My reputation will grow
by leaps and bounds."
"No ears, Miles. Period."
"But Mr. Sprague," Blatterfeld said, "that's not
fair. You know how hard I have to work to get ahead. I go to every damn
scientific and industrial convention and seminar I can, just on the off chance
I'll meet someone willing to spill a secret."
"Life is seldom fair, Miles. Usually, it's the opposite. As
for the rest, you work too hard because you lack discipline and
foresight."
"I was the one who set this up with Paisley," Blatterfeld
said in self-defense.
The Albino spotted them the second they stepped onto the path.
"Here they come, sir," he informed his boss.
Bolan swung around, fixing the scope on Blatterfeld and Sprague.
"At last!" Blatterfeld said, jumping to his feet.
"Let's go meet them and get this over with!"
"Yell a little louder, why don't you?" Sprague clucked
like an irate hen. "Stay calm, Miles. Patience is called for. A man in my
position must never appear too eager."
"But this is a done deal. The amount has been agreed on. What
difference can it make?" Blatterfeld wanted to know.
"Fools rush in, Miles. Fools rush in." Sprague stared at
the broker until Blatterfeld sat back down.
"Hell, what can go wrong at this point?" Blatterfeld
said merrily. "I told you not to fret. I told you she would come through.
And there isn't a cop in sight. You went to all that trouble to have Charata
cover you and you won't even need him."
The Argentinian was there. Bolan raised his head and gave the
entire park the once-over without spotting him. His earphone crackled. Burke,
the special agent in charge, came on.
"Bird's Eye, did you copy that?"
"I copied," Bolan responded.
"Any sign of the fourth wolf?"
"Negative." Bolan peered through the scope, checking
every vehicle in the parking lot. It was crucial Charata be located.
"We can't let that stop us," Roth said. "You hear
me, people? We take them down as planned."
The risk was enormous. Charata would pick off the
Feds unless Bolan could pick off Charata first. He swept the scope
across a hedgerow, then in among the trees, probing every patch of shade, every
bush big enough to conceal a grown man. Nothing unusual aroused his suspicions.
Wherever Charata was, he was well hidden.
Paisley and Craker passed the bench where Jensen sat, still
feeding seagulls. They walked by her without a glance.
Alexander Sprague rose. Miles Blatterfeld took that as his cue to
do likewise, and stepped in front of the secrets' dealer, all teeth and joy.
"Ms. Paisley! What a pleasure to see you again! And this fine
gentleman with you must be Mr. Craker. I can't tell you how glad I am to make
his acquaintance."
Helen Paisley stopped well short of the three men. Ill at ease,
she glanced at the Albino. "What's he doing here? I thought I told you,
Miles. Only Sprague and you. No one else."
Alexander Sprague gestured suavely. "Blame me, not him, mademoiselle.
My friend goes everywhere I do. But had I known it would disturb you, I
would have made an exception in your case."
Paisley bit her lip, then shrugged. "What's done is done.
Let's conclude our business together."
"I would like nothing better," Sprague said.
"Are you ready to deposit the money in my overseas account
as I specified?" Paisley asked.
Bernard Craker looked at her. "Your account? What about the
five million that's to go into mine? Half for you, half for me, remember?"
"Not now, Bernie," Paisley said, shushing him.
To Alexander Sprague, she said, "Did you bring a cellular
phone?"
Sprague waved an arm at a father and son flying a kite.
"Surely you don't expect to do it here and now? I must insist we complete
our transaction in private."
"Not on your life," Paisley said. "No offense, but
how do I know I can trust you?"
Miles Blatterfeld nervously intervened. "My dear Helen, I
assure you Mr. Sprague is reliable. I'd never broker an exchange with someone
who isn't and risk losing my commission."
"The implied insult aside, Ms. Paisley," Sprague said a
trifle indignantly, "you must try to meet me halfway. Bear in mind I'm not
insane. Therefore, I'm not about to give you ten million dollars without
confirming you have held up your end of our arrangement."
"And how do you propose to do that?"
"That's quite simple. By testing the nanites to see if they
do as you claim." Again Sprague waved an arm, encompassing the people all
around them. "Which, you must admit, we can hardly do under the present
circumstances."
"Where, then?" Paisley inquired.
"I went for a ride last night to take in the sights. North of
here, across the bay, there are miles and miles of sand dunes. A spot where we
wouldn't be disturbed."
"Those dunes are part of the Oregon Dunes National Recreation
area," Paisley said. "I've been there before."
Bolan was still searching for Charata. He had covered Bayside
Park from north to south and east to west, without success, and he was running
out of time.
The Feds weren't about to let Sprague and the others leave, and
the second they moved in, Charata would open fire.
Paisley hesitated. "I don't know."
"Consider the other part of our agreement," Sprague
said. "I can hardly do that in public, either, can I?"
"What other part?" Craker asked. "Helen, what is he
talking about? Why do I have the feeling you haven't told me everything?"
"You're imagining things, Bernie," Paisley said.
"What other part?" Craker persisted.
Alexander Sprague took a few steps toward the vehicles. "I'm
sorry, Bernie. This is hardly the time or place to squabble. All your questions
will be answered in due course. Would you like to ride with me or use your own
car?"
"I'm not going anywhere until I get some answers,"
Craker said. "For starters, am I or am I not entitled to half the ten
million?"
Bolan didn't blame the scientist for being upset. It didn't take a
genius to tell something wasn't quite right.
"Of course you are," Paisley said sweetly, placing her
hand on his arm. "Please, Bernie. Bear with me a little longer. You
trust me, don't you?"
"With all my heart and soul."
Peering through the scope, the soldier saw that Craker was gazing
at Paisley in lovelorn devotion. It put everything in a whole new light. He
began to wonder just how much of the theft and murders were Craker's doing and
how much were Paisley's.
"We're agreed, then?" Sprague said. "Bring your
car around and you can follow me to the dunes. I'll wait for you
in the parking lot."
"Give us five minutes," Paisley said.
The moment of truth had arrived. Once again Bolan's earpiece
crackled. "This is Burke. Move in, people. Easy does it. Don't shoot
unless you have to. There are too many civilians."
Sloan rose onto his knees and reached into his backpack. Jensen stopped
feeding the seagulls and moved toward the conspirators. Roth was hurrying from
the beach, while Burke had removed his cap and apron and was moving toward the
asphalt path. He was the farthest away.
"I still can't find Charata," Bolan said into the mouthpiece.
"We should wait and take them at the dunes."
"Negative on that suggestion," Burke responded.
"The Argentinian is bound to show himself any second now. When he does,
take him down."
Bolan would like nothing better but the outcome wasn't preordained.
If he knew where the killer was concealed it would be a different story, but he
had searched the park repeatedly with no result. Charata could be anywhere.
Agents Jensen and Sloan were now close enough to get the ball
rolling. Jensen was ten yards from Craker and Paisley, Sloan about the same
distance from Sprague's bunch. It was Jensen who drew her weapon first, adopted
a Weaver stance, and bawled, "Federal agents! Stop where you are!"
Special Agent Sloan instantly did the same, training his Sig-Sauer
on the big man himself, on Alexander Sprague. "You're surrounded! Do
exactly as we say!"
Agents Burke and Roth were running to the aid of
their companions.
Bolan's eye was glued to the scope. He saw Paisley and Craker
rooted in astonishment. Blatterfeld had automatically thrust his hands into
the air, while the Albino stood as immobile as a statue. And Sprague—he
smiled, but he offered no resistance.
It appeared as if the plan had worked just fine. The Feds had
everything well in hand.
But it was an illusion.
The first shot cracked like a bullwhip, only ten times louder,
rolling across Bayside Park and halting every man, woman and child in their
tracks. Sloan was flung forward as if kicked in the back, his arms flung out.
He stumbled, tried to raise his gun and folded at the knees, the exit wound in
the center of his sternum pouring scarlet.
Bolan could tell the shot came from the north end of the park, but
he couldn't pinpoint the exact location.
The second shot nailed Jensen. She was anxiously glancing right
and left, seeking the shooter, when a heavy-caliber slug smashed into her
chest. It lifted her off her feet and flung her like a rag doll onto her back.
Bolan was desperate to locate Charata. He swept the scope over the
parked vehicles, over the hedgerow. Nothing.
Sprague had turned toward Paisley and Craker. "Come with
me!" he yelled. "You'll never reach your own car! Hurry!"
The pair looked at each another, and Helen Paisley nodded. They
raced toward the other three as Roth, coming from the beach, shouted for them
to freeze.
At a word from Sprague, the Albino entered the
fray. Drawing a pistol, he swung toward Roth and elevated it.
Bolan would be damned if he'd let another agent die. He sighted on
the pale bodyguard's left ear and stroked the trigger. The Remington made a thwip
sound, the blast suppressed by the Ciener. Across the park a large chunk of
the Albino's head flew outward in a spray of blood and bone fragments.
Alexander Sprague hadn't noticed. He was running toward the cars
with Blatterfeld close behind. Paisley and Craker, younger and in better
condition, had almost caught up to them.
But someone else had noticed. Someone who considered the Albino a
friend. In front of the hedgerow a six-foot section of grass was rising,
physically detaching itself from the ground as if in defiance of gravity.
Bolan brought the scope to bear and saw it was Bartolome Charata, clad in
camouflage clothes. The Argentinian had been lying in a shallow trough, no
doubt dug the night before after the section of sod was carefully cut and
peeled back like a banana skin.
No wonder Bolan had been unable to spot him.
Charata had thrown caution aside. The death of the Albino had
incited a savage rage, and straightening, he pointed his rifle toward the
utility shed.
Bolan saw the killer's scope fixed on him. He rolled to the right
a heartbeat ahead of the shot, which whizzed through the space he had occupied.
Special Agent Burke whirled toward the Argentinian and banged off
several swift rounds. In his haste he had to have missed because Charata was
unaffected. The killer responded in kind, a single boom of the rifle
sufficient to fell Burke as if he had been walloped by a sledgehammer.
Only Roth was left, and he did the only prudent tang to do: he
dived onto his stomach and fired from a prone position.
Bolan took aim and squeezed off another shot at Charata just as
the Argentinian moved. The .308 round Kicked up dirt, missing by a hair. Bolan
quickly worked the bolt, smoothly feeding another cartridge into the chamber.
But Charata fired first Bolan rolled again, to the left this time.
Screaming bystanders were streaming toward the trees, toward the beach, toward the cars. A
steady flow passed in front of Roth, blundering into his line of fire. Rom
jumped to his feet but still couldn't get a clear shot.
Charata had shrugged off the sod cover and was sidestepping toward
the parking area, limping, but moving briskly nonetheless.
Bolan brought up the Remington. The split second that the
crosshairs settled squarely on the killer's chest, the soldier pressed his
finger to the trigger. The stock kicked into his shoulder as he fired.
The shot scored. The Argentinian was catapulted backward and
landed on his side, his arms and legs askew.
"You did it!" Bolan's earpiece blared with Roth's voice.
"You bagged the son of a bitch!"
Alexander Sprague and the rest were nearing the Lincoln. Sprague
had glanced at his bodyguard as Charata went down but showed no reaction and didn't
break stride. Almost as if Sprague didn't care, as if the lives of his
bodyguards were of no consequence.
Until he learned the real reason Sprague had been so unconcerned.
Bartolome Charata wasn't dead. Incredibly, rising to his feet, he
swayed slightly, then steadied himself and trained his rifle on the roof of the
utility shed.
Chapter 9
The Executioner flattened as the Argentinian's weapon boomed. He
intended to rise and put another slug into the killer but Charata kept firing,
one shot after another, pinning him down. Five shots. Seven. Ten. Eleven.
The fusillade stopped and Bolan lifted his head. Alexander Sprague
and the others had piled into the Lincoln. Charata was beside it, about to
climb in.
The soldier sighted down the Remington. Before he could shoot,
Charata gained the safety of the vehicle.
Bolan had a clear glimpse of the Argentinian's rifle just before
the door closed and recognized it as a Parker-Hale Model 85, an expensive
marksman's weapon in the same caliber as his Remington. The 85 was manufactured
with McMillan stocks, as well as bipods. In terms of caliber, accuracy and
construction, Bolan's Remington and the Parker-Hale were similar. But in one
regard the 85 had a definite edge—it came with a detachable M-14-type magazine,
with either a 10- or 20-round capacity. Charata had chosen the latter.
In effect, Bolan had been outgunned, beaten at his own realm of
expertise. It was galling to watch the Lincoln zoom from the lot, to know that
despite his
best efforts three good agents were down and might be dead.
Bolan shoved the boxes of .308 ammo into the carrying case, did
the same with the Remington and ripped the case closed. Rather than waste
valuable seconds using the ladder, he moved to the edge of the roof, gauged
the drop and jumped.
Pandemonium ruled Bayside Park. People were still fleeing in
panic, their yells and wails rising to a frenzied chorus.
Bolan raced toward the parking area, resisting the tide of
bystanders who buffeted one another like stampeding livestock. He came to
where Jensen had fallen.
Roth was on his knees next to her, cradling her head in his lap.
Tears brimming his eyes, he said in torment, "She's dead! The bastard
killed her!"
"I'm sorry," Bolan said.
"We were engaged," Roth said, the tears pouring like
rain. "We were going to be married next year."
Bolan gripped the agent's shoulder. "Get on the horn to
Brognola. Tell him what happened. Request medical assistance and backup."
"Married," Roth repeated blankly, overcome by the
enormity of his loss.
The agent would be of no help to anyone if he was swamped by
shock. Bolan shook him, hard. "Agent Roth? Listen up."
"Sir?" Blinking, the young Fed roused himself.
"Did you hear what I just said?" Bolan demanded.
"Get to a phone." When Roth nodded, Bolan held out a hand. "But
first I need your keys."
"My keys?"
"To the car the four of you came in. I need it to
go after Sprague. You were driving, so you must have the
keys."
"Oh. Yes, yes, I do." Mechanically, Roth reached into a
pocket and produced them. Then his hand dipped to Jensen and he stroked her
hair. "She was the sweetest woman who ever lived."
"Call Brognola," Bolan commanded, wishing he could stay.
But he couldn't. Duty came before all else, and his duty lay in recovering the
Piranha Molecule. "Did you hear me?" he asked when the man just knelt
there.
Roth nodded. "I will. I promise. You can count on me. I'm
fine now, sir. Honest."
The young Fed was anything but fine. Still, Bolan had delayed long
enough. He sprinted to the parking lot, glancing back once to see Roth tenderly
lowering Jensen to the ground.
The unmarked sedan was in the last row, near the exit. Bolan
tossed the Remington into the back seat and got in. The Lincoln only had a four
or five minute head start, he figured. He should be able to overtake.
At fifty miles an hour the soldier careened onto the street and
headed north, as they had done. He was playing a long shot, but it was the only
one he had.
Sprague had proposed concluding the deal with Paisley and Craker
at the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area north of the bay. It was possible
Sprague would still go there, since he had no idea the Feds had been
eavesdropping.
If Bolan couldn't catch up, finding them would be a challenge. He
had never been to the recreational area but he had seen it on the map, and if
he remembered correctly, the dunes extended north from Coos Bay for
something like forty miles. A lot of territory for one person to
cover.
The plain truth was that Sprague had done it again. He had
outwitted the Feds and was on the verge of acquiring one of the deadliest
instruments of war ever conceived, a tiny robotic molecule that could shift the
global balance of power.
Bolan drove faster.
bernie craker had never been so miserable in his life. Hunched
over in the Lincoln's back seat, he clutched the transport case and prayed he
made it out of the mess alive. Or, rather, the mess Paisley had gotten him
into.
All that shooting, all those screams, all the blood and gore when
the bodyguard's head was blown half off. It had been terrible. But not, Craker
had to admit, any worse than seeing his beloved bury an ax into those men at
the country store. Through sheer willpower Craker stilled his churning stomach
and sat up straight.
Sprague was at the wheel, driving like a madman. Minutes ago they
had left the environs of Coos Bay and North Bend and crossed the long bridge
over the north end of the bay to Shorewood. Now they were barreling up the
coast highway.
Next to Sprague sat the dark-haired man with the rifle, an aura of
violence about him like an evil halo. The piercing glare he inexplicably
bestowed on Craker was more than mildly frightening.
Paisley was on the scientist's right. Astoundingly, she was
smiling as if she were having a marvelous time. Patting his knee, she
whispered, "Soon, lover! Soon we'll have all that wonderful money!"
How she could think of such a thing at a time like that was beyond
Craker. The ten million had never mattered much to him, and he cared even less
now. He just wanted them to go off somewhere together, to live out the rest of
their lives in mutual bliss. Was that asking too much?
Miles Blatterfeld was by the other door. A nervous wreck, he kept
saying over and over, "Oh God, oh God, oh God." Occasionally he
gnawed at his fingernails and squirmed in his seat.
The east side of the highway was bordered by trees, but the left
side, Craker saw, was an unending series of rolling sand dunes, stretching as
far as the eye could see into the hazy distance. He expected Sprague to pull
off at any moment but the Lincoln sped on, putting mile after mile behind them.
"When are we stopping?" Paisley asked. "I want to
wrap this up and be on my way."
"Be patient, mademoiselle," Sprague said. "I
must ensure we aren't being followed. Another five or ten miles should be
enough."
"Oh God," Blatterfeld resumed his lament. "Oh God,
oh God."
"Will you kindly be quiet, Miles," Sprague said.
"Your whining is starting to grate on my nerves."
"Can you blame me?" Blatterfeld responded. "The
Feds are on to us! They must know all about me, must have a warrant for my
arrest! What am I to do?"
Sprague passed three cars in a row, zipping by them as if they
were standing still. "Surely you realized this might happen one day?"
"Yes, of course. But I never actually thought it would. I
mean, things like this happen to others, not to me. Never to me."
"Denial is a poor substitute for foresight."
They drove in silence for a while, which suited Craker just fine.
He toyed with the idea of backing out of the deal, of telling Sprague he was
sick of the killing and he wanted nothing more to do with any of it, but he
couldn't. Not with Paisley counting on him. Not when the ten million meant so
much to her. For the angel of his dreams he would do anything. Walk on burning
coals. A bed of nails. Anything at all.
A turnoff appeared, no more than a rutted track sprinkled with
tufts of short, dry grass.
Sprague braked, saying, "This is perfect, no other cars in
sight." Cutting the wheel, he pulled off the highway. The track meandered
deep into the dunes, shifting sand on either side. A hundred yards in he
brought the Lincoln to a stop and killed the engine.
"At last," Paisley said.
Sprague pushed his door open. "Everyone out."
Craker was glad to comply. He arched his back and gazed westward,
where the blue of the Pacific contrasted with the light brown of the sand. A
boat was sailing south, a large yacht, possibly. What he wouldn't give to be on
it, Craker thought, to sail off to parts unknown and forget the nightmare he
was involved in.
Sprague moved to the front of the car and placed a foot on the
bumper. "When you are ready, Charata," he said.
The dark man with the rifle had gone to the trunk and was placing
it inside. When he was done he walked around to join his employer.
"Shall we wrap this up, then, everyone?" Sprague said.
Paisley laughed. "Need you ask?"
"First there is the matter of the test I mentioned,"
Sprague reminded her. "To verify I am buying the genuine article."
"How do you propose to conduct this test of yours?"
"Show me how the Piranha Molecule is administered,"
Sprague answered, "and the test will take care of itself."
Paisley turned. "Bernie, you heard the man. Be a dear and
show him how to fill a syringe."
Craker didn't see what good that would do. They needed a test
subject, a cat, maybe, or a dog. But since it would please Paisley, he set the
transport case on the hood, opened it and removed a syringe from a pouch
inside.
Sprague came closer. "Four vials? I thought Miles mentioned
six."
"We had to use two," Craker revealed, and briefly
explained. "But these four are more than enough. With just one you could
replicate as many nanites as you want"
"Fascinating. Truly fascinating."
Craker lifted one of the vials and inserted the needle.
"What do you intend to test this on? Size directly determines the amount,
since the effectiveness of the Piranha Molecule is hi proportion to the weight
to mass ratio of the subject."
"You don't say," Sprague said, grinning. "I will
take your word for it, Mr. Craker.
"But tell me. Does it always take a full vial to kill one
grown man?"
"It shouldn't, no," the scientist said. "I used a
full one at the lab because we had to dispose of Proctor
quickly and quietly. Helen just followed my example with the park
ranger."
"How much, then, exactly?"
"Oh—" Craker considered a moment, then filled the
syringe about one-tenth full. "This is all it should really take."
"That little? May I?" Sprague took the syringe and held
it up to examine the contents. "Who would ever guess to look at it? It
reminds me of ale."
Blatterfeld walked toward them. "All this is well and good,
Mr. Sprague. But what about the money? What about your promise to keep me out
of prison?"
With no warning whatsoever, Sprague jabbed the needle into
Blatterfeld's neck and injected the nanites.
Helen Paisley gasped.
Craker was too stupefied to do anything.
As for Blatterfeld, he jerked back, clapping a hand to his neck,
and stared in disbelief at the now empty syringe in Sprague's hand. "What
have you done?"
"I needed a test subject, Miles. It couldn't be Charata or
Bernie, here. By the process of elimination that left you."
"Nooooooooo!" Blatterfeld cried, staggering as if drunk.
"You can't do this! We had an agreement!"
"The agreement was that you would keep our transaction
secret," Sprague said. "But you have proved to be untrustworthy in
that regard."
"I promised I wouldn't tell anyone!" Blatterfeld
exclaimed in rising terror. Reeling, he pressed a hand to his forehead. "I
feel so weird, so dizzy. No, no, no! Not this! Anything but this!"
Sprague nonchalantly gave the syringe to Craker. "Should it
be taking this long? Nothing is happening."
Then something did. Blatterfeld sobbed as his bones began to be
eaten away. The flesh on the lower right side of his face melted inward as the
jawbone underneath was consumed. Mewing like a kitten, Blatterfeld clutched at
his face, only to scream when his cheek and temple caved in under his touch.
"Do my eyes deceive me?" Alexander Sprague declared.
"This is better than I dared hope!"
Craker was filled with revulsion. Revulsion at the terrible
erosion of Blatterfeld's cranium, revulsion at how happy Sprague was, and, yes,
revulsion at himself for his part in the whole affair. Were it in his power, he
would turn back the clock to that fateful hour when he agreed to Paisley's
scheme and refuse to go along with it.
Blatterfeld was attempting to talk, but the lower half of his face
resembled soggy clay. Groping wildly at thin air, he stumbled and fell onto his
knees. The nanites were multiplying with lightning speed. What was left of his
hair sank as low as his ears, which in turn folded inward from both sides. He
screamed again, or tried to, as the rest of his body was transformed into the
same shapeless blob the others had wound up as. In another minute it was over.
Miles Blatterfeld was gone, a victim of his own greed.
Sprague walked to the blob and poked it with a toe.
"Sensational, Bernie. I dare say I'll earn more for you than I have for
all the secret information I have ever sold combined."
"For me?" Craker said. "Don't you mean for the
Piranha Molecule?"
"Ah. That's right." Sprague glanced at Paisley.
"You haven't told him yet, have you? Would you rather enlighten him or
should I?"
Craker turned to her. "Tell me what? What is he talking
about?"
Paisley looked sheepish, like a little girl whose hand had been
caught in the cookie jar. "Well, you see, lover, things aren't quite the
way they seem. My deal with him isn't what you think it is."
Confusion knifed through the scientist, confusion and then the
dawning of growing horror. "You wouldn't! You couldn't!"
"What can I say?" Paisley's expression said it all.
"Why do you think I've worked so hard to keep the police from getting
their hands on you? I agreed to turn the Piranha Molecule and you over
to Mr. Sprague for the ten million."
"But why me?" Craker shouted.
Alexander Sprague responded. "No other scientist can do what
you have done. As unique as these nanites are, you are even more so. Certain
parties would pay any price for the privilege of picking the secrets in your
brain."
Craker was dumbfounded. His insides felt as if steel claws were
shredding his very soul. Nausea washed over him and he sagged onto the hood in
heart-rending despair. She had betrayed him! The one who meant everything to
him, the woman he adored more than life itself, had literally sold him out, as
if he were a rare lab animal for sale to the highest bidder! In the depths of
misery, he groaned aloud.
"Come, come, Bernie," Sprague said. "Your future is
not as bleak as you think. Cooperate with those who buy you, and they will
reward you handsomely."
Paisley's expression had softened. "I never wanted you to
come to any harm, Bernie. You must believe that"
Craker looked at her. "All this time," he said, his
voice so choked with emotion he didn't recognize it, "you were leading me
on, stringing me along, pretending to care for me so I'd do what you
wanted."
"That's not entirely true," Paisley said defensively.
"You're not too bad. Just not my type."
Sprague interrupted. "Enough maudlin sentiment, if you two
don't mind. Helen, we'll take you to a telephone and conclude our transaction.
Then Bernie and I can leave the country."
"That won't be easy with the Feds after you."
"They are a minor nuisance, no more," Sprague said.
"I have a contingency plan in place for just such an eventuality. Now,
shall we be going?"
Craker couldn't say what made him do what he did next.
Straightening, he held the syringe close to his own neck and declared,
"I'm not going anywhere with anyone! Stay back! Or so help me, I'll bury
this needle!"
Sprague smiled. "You're being juvenile, Bernie. You haven't
refilled it with nanites. So stop bluffing."
"There are a few drops left," Craker said. "It will
take longer, but the result will be the same." Grabbing the case, he edged
toward the driver's door. "I'm leaving. Don't try to stop me."
Charata moved toward him but Sprague gestured. "No! We can't
take the risk. He's much too valuable." Sprague nodded at Paisley.
"But she isn't. Take out your pistol, Bartolome, and aim it at her
head."
The dark-haired killer obeyed, showing no more emotion than would
a rock.
"Now you just hold on!" Paisley exclaimed.
"Shut up!" Sprague focused on Craker.
"Put down the needle and the case, Bernie, or my associate
will splatter her brains all over the sand."
"Which one of us is bluffing now?" Craker challenged.
"Unlike you, my young friend, I never do. So what will it be?
Her life for your own. A fair trade, no?"
"Do you really think I care if you shoot her? After what
she's done?"
"Yes, I do, Bernie. Life is full of sweet ironies. And the
irony here is that you still love her. A lot. I can see it in your eyes."
Craker looked at Paisley, then at the gun Charata held, and his
resolve melted like hot wax. Damn his stupidity, but he did still care! Even
though she had betrayed him, even though she had ground his devotion into the
dust, he still felt as strongly for her as he ever had. He still loved her.
"Time is short, Bernie," Sprague coaxed. "I need to
put my contingency plan into effect if we're to leave the U.S. by tomorrow. So
make up your mind. I'll give you ten seconds." Pausing, he started
counting them down. "Ten, nine, eight, seven—"
Craker wanted to scream in frustration, to rail at the world for
the injustice of it all.
"—six, five, four, three—"
Paisley, Craker saw, was hypnotized by the pistol, her face chalky
with dread.
"—two, one," Sprague counted, then sighed. "All
right. Time for a decision. What is it to be, Bernie? Does she live or
die?"
mack bolan was beginning to think he had lost them. It
had been more than ten minutes since he left Coos
Bay, and he still hadn't caught sight of the Lincoln. Sprague
could have turned off anywhere along the many miles of beachfront that made up
the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area.
The soldier slowed at each turnoff to scan the parking areas, but
he had yet to spot them. He decided to put in a call to Brognola and request an
air search. It would take an hour or so for the Feds to get planes up, but they
could cover a lot more territory a lot faster.
At the next town Bolan would place the call. He rounded a sharp
curve, and suddenly he had to slam on the brakes or rear-end a cement truck
stopped dead in the middle of the road. Poking his head out his window, Bolan
saw a long line of vehicles in front of the truck. Getting out, he moved into
the other lane to try and find out what had caused the traffic jam.
The driver of the cement truck had his door wide open. "Hope
you're not in any hurry, buddy," he called good-naturedly.
"Do you know what's going on?" Bolan asked.
"Some damned road construction is to blame," the driver
groused. "I was just on the CB with a big rig up yonder. Road crews are
tearing up the highway, laying new asphalt, and they only have one lane
open."
"And they have traffic this backed up?"
"You haven't heard the rest," the driver said.
"About twenty minutes ago along came an RV, some joker from out of state.
He ran off the edge and flipped it, blocking the one lane. A tow truck is
supposed to be on its way, but you know how long these things can take."
The man swore. "This will put me way behind schedule."
For Bolan, the tie-up was a blessing in disguise. Sprague couldn't
possibly have gone by before the mishap took place, and must be just ahead.
Climbing into the car, Bolan reached into the back, opened the gun case and
quickly separated the scope from the Remington. Holding it under his jacket, he
walked around to the far side and climbed the slope flanking the highway.
Two more cars had pulled in behind him. They were being filled hi
by the driver of the cement truck.
Bolan climbed thirty feet to a flat boulder from which he could
see clear to the end of the traffic jam. The RV was still across the road. One
by one he checked each vehicle. Not one was a black Lincoln.
The soldier lowered the scope and pondered. Evidently Sprague had
pulled off farther back. Even if Sprague had completed the deal and now had the
Piranha. Molecule, he was bound to continue north, away from Coos Bay
and the hornet's nest of law-enforcement activity he had stirred up.
All Bolan had to do was wait for the roadblock to be cleared, then
find a spot where he could watch the highway without being seen and wait. The
Lincoln would come along, and he could shadow them to their destination.
There was still hope.
Chapter 10
The Executioner learned from his mistakes. The first time he had
tailed Alexander Sprague, someone caught on although he had taken every
precaution. He suspected one of the bodyguards, probably the Argentinian.
So now, when the Lincoln passed him late that afternoon, he
waited twice as long before he pulled out in pursuit.
For three-quarters of an hour Bolan had been parked behind a
myrtle wood gift shop, only the front end of his car poking out, just enough
for him to see the highway. Anyone coming from the south wouldn't spot him
unless they looked back.
There was a pay phone at the front of the shop, but as tempted as
Bolan was to call Brognola, the phone was in plain view of the highway. He
opted not to chance it.
The call could wait.
Then the Lincoln went by. Unlike the Cadillac, its windows weren't
tinted. Bolan saw Charata at the wheel and Sprague beside him. In the back seat
were Helen Paisley and Bernie Craker. Craker was gazing toward the gift shop,
looking out-and-out miserable.
Miles Blatterfeld, however, was missing. Bolan didn't know what to
make of it. Possibly the pudgy
little man had received his commission and gone his own way. The
soldier didn't give him any more thought. In the scheme of things Blatterfeld was
smalltime, his days of brokering secrets over. The Feds would track him down
soon enough.
Bolan was more interested in where Sprague was headed. It was
unlikely to be Portland, since Sprague was bound to suspect the airports were
being watched. Seattle was the next major metropolis but the same applied. Nor
could Bolan see Sprague trying to cross into Canada. The checkpoint personnel
would be on alert.
That left escape by sea, either down to California or perhaps
Mexico. For someone as devious as Sprague, slipping through the federal cordon
would be child's play.
The Lincoln stuck to the speed limit, doing nothing to draw
attention. The highway meandered through the mountains toward Tillamook. On a
hunch Bolan checked the glove compartment and found a book on Oregon. According
to it, about twenty-two thousand people called Tillamook home. No airport was
listed, but the town was located near Tillamook Bay. While not a major port,
there were plenty of docks and boat ramps.
If Alexander Sprague needed an out-of-the-way spot to charter a
boat to take him out to sea, it was perfect.
Consequently, Bolan wasn't surprised when the Lincoln slowed as it
neared Tillamook. Soon it turned, not toward the docks, but at a seafood
restaurant. Sprague was smiling when he got out and handed the transport case
to Charata, who had switched his camouflage clothes for a jacket and pants.
Paisley and Craker shuffled inside as if they were walking to
their doom.
Sprague picked a table affording a view of the bay, and which
provided Bolan a view of the fugitives from a gas station two blocks away.
Hunched in his seat so only his eyes were above the dashboard,
Bolan watched them through the scope. Sprague joked and laughed with the
waitress. The transport case was on the floor between his legs.
Bolan stared at it. The Piranha Molecule was so close, yet there
was nothing he could do, not when the restaurant was packed with patrons.
Alexander Sprague savored his meal, ordering a bottle of wine to
go with it. Almost as if he were celebrating. And why not? He had the nanites.
He had eluded the authorities. To Sprague's way of thinking, he had every
reason to rejoice.
Twilight shrouded the misty bay when the four of them came back
out, Charata as wary as a jaguar. They rode north, slowly, Sprague leaning out
to read the street signs, apparently seeking a specific address.
A narrow side street took the Lincoln toward Tillamook Bay. Bolan
didn't dare pull onto it until they had stopped at one of several long docks
lined with boats of all shapes and sizes.
A row of untidy wooden buildings lined the adjacent shore. Sprague's
party disappeared into one of them.
Bolan turned onto the side street, and parked. To keep from being
spotted, he pulled his collar high and walked toward the docks. A sign
identified the establishment Sprague was visiting as Salmon Brothers, Ltd.
Under the name was the banner No Charter Too Big Or Too Small.
Rather than walk past the front window, Bolan went around,
thinking he could approach from the rear. But the back walls were mere yards from
the bay, the water much too deep to wade through. He either swam, or he tried
another tactic.
As Bolan stood there above small lapping waves, his hair fanned by
a stiff salt breeze, he heard familiar voices. Venturing to the comer, he saw
Sprague and the others had climbed into the Lincoln. Instantly, he turned his
back, hoping they wouldn't see him. The Lincoln drove off in the other
direction.
Bolan ran to his car and gave chase. They didn't go far, though,
less than half a mile to a motel.
Once Bolan was sure Sprague had checked in, he drove back to the
waterfront.
He was taking a gamble, but it couldn't be helped. His hands
thrust into his pockets, he strolled into Salmon Brothers.
The place smelled of fish. Old anchors and boat wheels decorated
the plank walls, and fishing gear lined wide shelves. Behind the rough-hewn
counter stood a ruddy-complexioned man with a bushy red beard and a big belly,
reading a local paper. He gave the soldier a cursory glance.
"What can I do for you, mate? My name is Garvey."
Bolan adopted a friendly smile. "I was supposed to meet a
friend of mine here about ten minutes ago. I guess he's running late,
too." Bolan leaned on the counter. "We're chartering a boat."
"This friend have a name?"
"Sprague. Alexander Sprague," Bolan said. "He
should be here any minute."
The man lowered the newspaper. "Been here and gone. I'm
afraid you've missed him."
"I did?" Bolan rapped on the countertop as if annoyed
at himself. "I knew I shouldn't have stopped to gas up my car, but I was
running on fumes." He saw no evidence of a register or a logbook.
"Mind telling me what time we're sailing out tomorrow? And which
dock?"
"Give me a minute," Garvey said. "Mike Renfrew, the
owner, handled the charter, not me. I'll go get him." The man pushed through
an inner door.
Bolan was more than happy to wait. Once he learned where and when,
it was all over. He noticed a huge fish mounted on the right wall, a salmon
almost as long as he was tall.
The door swung open. Out came Garvey, along with a broad-shouldered
man in a flannel shirt and a smaller guy with dark, beady eyes, punched cheeks,
and a thin, jutting jaw, much like a ferret's.
"This is Mike Renfrew," Garvey said, pointing at the
small guy.
They came around the counter, trying to be casual, but they were
terrible actors. Bolan pivoted, facing them.
"So you're a friend of Mr. Sprague's?" Renfrew asked,
stalling while the other two moved to either side.
"Yes. I need to know about the boat he chartered," Bolan
said, playing along.
Renfrew placed his hands on his hips. "Well, mister,
normally I'd oblige. But Mr. Sprague is a real particular fellow. He warned me
someone might pry into bis personal business, and he paid me extra to deal with
him."
Bolan tried to defuse the situation. "Do you have any idea
who Sprague is or what he's involved in?" "Unlike you, I don't go
sticking my nose where it's not wanted," Renfrew said. "I never ask
questions of my clients. And I never repeat what they tell me on their own.
Which is why everyone knows they can trust me."
"So if I told you Sprague is wanted by the FBI, it wouldn't
make a difference?"
"All that matters to me is the five thousand dollars he paid
me in advance, and the ten I'll get when I've taken him where he wants to
go." Renfrew nodded at his cronies, who sidled forward.
"You're making a mistake." It sounded corny, even to
Bolan, but he would rather avoid a conflict if he could.
Renfrew snorted. "Maybe I am, maybe I'm not. It won't be the
first, and it sure as hell won't be the last." He balled his fists.
"Enough chitchat. Let's do as Mr. Sprague requested, fellas."
In a concerted rush they pounced. Bolan sidestepped just as
Renfrew leaped at his shins to tackle him. Instead, Renfrew's head cracked
loudly on the counter, and squealing loudly, he plopped onto his belly.
The other two were bigger and heavier and much more cautious. Like
prizefighters testing for an opening, they waded in. Garvey flicked an
uppercut that Bolan countered, but in so doing he exposed his ribs and paid for
it when the other's iron knuckles grazed them.
In the meantime, Renfrew pushed backward and rolled onto his feet.
Rubbing his head, he snarled, "Get this son of a bitch, boys!"
Again the other two men came at the soldier. The
one in the flannel shirt had some boxing skill and delivered a
series of jabs, which Bolan avoided. As he did, though, Garvey threw a cross
that clipped his cheek. It stung more than anything. Spinning, the soldier
landed a ringing left that rocked Garvey backward.
"Get him, damn it!" Renfrew railed.
The bruiser in the flannel shirt tried. He glided in close, his
knobby fists hammering. Bolan absorbed a punch to the ear, to the neck, to the
shoulder. Then he launched a hook that knocked the man against a shelf.
Renfrew's anger skyrocketed. "What's the matter with you,
Dennis? Getting soft?" He glanced at Garvey. "And you, Garvey! There
used to be a time you could take any man on the docks!"
"I still can," Garvey said, and charged Bolan, his arms
held wide to grapple rather than hit.
These weren't seasoned fighters; they were barroom brawlers.
Ruffians who had busted a few heads in their time and now had an exaggerated
sense of their own ability. Bolan set them straight. He sank a right fist into
Garvey's gut, making him double over, before following through with a
devastating left. Then Bolan dropped the one called Dennis with another solid
combination.
That left Renfrew, whose ferret features twitched in dismay
as the soldier moved toward him. "Hold on there, mister! You don't want to
mess with me!"
"Is that a fact?" Bolan responded, and when Renfrew
tried to run toward the inner door, Bolan executed a roundhouse kick that
flattened him.
"Now I want some answers," Bolan said, gripping Renfrew
by the neck and hauling him upright. "Tell
me about Sprague. Where does he want to go? When are you supposed
to leave?"
Renfrew sputtered and kicked, but he was helpless to resist. When
Bolan shoved him against the wall, it loosened his tongue. Coughing and
wheezing, he said, "Enough, mister, enough! You're choking me."
"You're stalling," Bolan warned.
"Okay! Okay!" Renfrew was turning red. Leaning back, he
rubbed his throat. "The guy you're after wants my fastest boat ready to
leave port tomorrow at 10:00 a.m."
"Where to?"
Renfrew glared at the soldier, then gazed at the two prone figures
on the floor. Dennis was unconscious, but Garvey was stirring. "South. All
the way to San Diego. From there, he mentioned something about taking a train.
That's all I know. I swear to God."
Bolan believed him. "Who else is going along?"
"He booked passage for himself, a dark-haired, mean-looking
character, whose name I didn't catch, and one other guy. A nerdy type who
didn't say one word the whole time they were here."
"Bernie Craker?"
"I don't know. They never told me. I swear."
"What about the woman who was with them?" Bolan probed.
"Helen Paisley?"
"Hold it! I'm having trouble breathing!" Renfrew
declared. Suddenly he began coughing loudly and pounded his chest as if he were
choking.
Bolan saw no reason for it. Then, in a twinkling, he grasped the
truth and started to whirl but the gambit had worked. There was a swishing
noise and a heavy mesh object fell across his head and shoulder, covering him,
constricting like a python as he fought it
"Good work, Lem!" Renfrew whooped.
Lem Carson came into view. He was a bald fisherman with crooked
teeth. Grinning like a fiend, he declared, "I heard the ruckus and came
running."
The more Bolan struggled, the more the mesh tightened. While
Renfrew had distracted him, Carson had entered from the back room and tossed a
weighted fishing net over him. Bolan tried to take a stride, to throw it off,
but the lower portion enfolded his legs, hindering his movement, and he pitched
onto his stomach.
Garvey was rising, rubbing his chin. Dennis's eyelids were
fluttering.
"How quick the tide turns, eh, mister?" Renfrew said,
chortling. "Now it's my turn to ask the questions. Who the hell are you
and what do you want with Sprague?"
Bolan lay quiet and still. Struggling further would only entangle
him worse.
"Didn't you hear the boss?" Garvey growled. His heavy
boot smashed down onto a shoulder blade.
"I'd answer, if I were you," Renfrew taunted.
Unwilling to give them the satisfaction, Bolan endured half a dozen
kicks, the worst to his knee and hip.
Garvey was breathing heavily when he stopped. "Tough guy,
huh?" he rasped. "Well, I'm just getting warmed up."
"Enough for now," Renfrew said. "I don't want him
all bruised up in case another drowning accident is called for." He
glanced toward the entrance. "Drag him into the back before someone shows
up and we have some explaining to do."
Garvey, Carson and Dennis did the honors.
The room was musty and dank, filled with tackle boating equipment.
They roughly dumped Bolan in a corner. No one bothered to frisk him. Maybe they
thought that with his arms pinned to his sides he was totally helpless.
As the husky fishermen moved away, Renfrew came in. "What to
do, what to do? That's the fifteen-thousand-dollar question." Plucking at
his wispy mustache, he scrutinized Bolan through the netting. ' 'Know what I
think? I think you're a cop. And I hate cops."
"So we should dispose of him," Garvey proposed.
Renfrew shifted the net to further scrutinize Bolan. "I could
phone Sprague and ask him who you are. But if you're the law, he might make
himself scarce. And I can't have that. I need the money he's paying."
Garvey muttered something, then declared, "So kill the
scumbag already and be done with it."
"Some people have the patience of a hooker on speed,"
Renfrew joked. Sobering, he poked Bolan with a finger. "But he has a
point. Whether you're a cop or not, I can't very well let you live."
Renfrew pried at the net, confirming it was wrapped fast. "I'll bet you
didn't know, mister, that more people drown in Tillamook Bay than anywhere else
along the Oregon coast. Can you guess why?"
Renfrew, Garvey and Carson thought the jest was hilarious. Dennis
was too busy rubbing his sore jaw to do much laughing.
"We have it down to a science," Renfrew gloated.
"We'll take you a couple miles out and drop the net in. Not deep. Just
enough to do the job. Then we'll haul you back up, bring you into shore and
dump you on a beach where your body is bound to be found. The
coroner will rule it an accidental drowning because there won't be
any evidence of foul play. It never fails."
Carson cackled, the tip of his tongue jutting between his crooked
teeth. "Eleven times now! The last was some gal we picked up hitchhiking.
Had our fun and then were done." He cackled some more. "Before that
it was a joker who tried to stiff us on money he owed for drugs we ferried from
Frisco."
Garvey slapped Carson's arm. "Tell him everything there is to
know about us, why don't you? Idiot."
"What did I do?" Carson responded.
Bolan had inadvertently walked into a nest of vipers. These men
weren't an ordinary charter-boat crew. They were vicious, hardened criminals.
He should've expected it, should've known a man like Sprague would deal with others
of his kind. The beasts that preyed on society tended to work together for
their mutual benefit.
Dennis came over, dabbing at his split lip with a dirty rag.
"I think we should find out who tiu's bozo is, Mike. Check his
wallet."
"Later, after he's taken his little dunk," Renfrew said.
"Until then, don't touch the net. He's wrapped up nice and tight."
"What time will we take him out?" Dennis inquired.
"Oh, about midnight or so, when no one will notice."
Rising, Renfrew moved toward the door. "Now let's go. Time to close up
shop and go meet the Mex about the shipment. Garvey, you stay and guard our
friend."
The door closed, muffling their voices.
Bolan shifted onto his left side. He attempted to
move his right arm but couldn't. The net encased him like a steel
cocoon. It didn't reek of fish so he gathered it was new, never before used.
Rolling onto his back, Bolan sought to rise but his legs would
barely bend. He could, however, bend a little at the waist. Not much, but
enough to raise his upper body high enough to prop himself against the wall so
he could take stock.
The folds of the net overlapped, but with some ingenuity Bolan
felt he could untangle them enough to suit his purpose. Looking around, he saw
a stool and a trash can, neither of which would be of any help. None of the
fishing and boating gear looked to be of any use, either. Then, as he tried to
rotate his head to scan the other side of the room, he spied the end of a nail
jutting from the wall, down low, about ten feet away.
Flattening on his stomach, Bolan wriggled toward it. He had to
hunch his back like a caterpillar and propel himself by thrusting with his
hips. His knees gave added leverage. It was slow going, but he finally reached
the spot and twisted around so his right leg was next to the nail.
A noise hi the outer room froze Bolan in place. He waited,
listening. The door didn't open.
Pressing his leg against the nail, the soldier tried to snag the
net. He had to do it several times before he succeeded. Tugging, he worked to
loosen the folds, but the nail slipped loose. Undaunted, Bolan tried again.
When the nail caught hold, he swung both legs outward, only to be brought up
short. The net wouldn't give.
A muscle in his calf was cramping, but Bolan didn't care. He swung
his legs once more and was rewarded
when the bottom edge of the net parted ever-so-slightly.
Bolan persisted, repeatedly tugging at the nail. Bit by gradual
bit he loosened the mesh. Not enough for him to cast it off, but enough that in
half an hour he could move his hands a few inches.
That would have to do. Bolan had risked discovery long enough.
Jerking the net off the nail, he wriggled back to the corner before Garvey
thought to check on him. It proved to be a wise move. Hardly had he assumed
his original position than the door opened, framing Garvey's bearded visage.
"Behaving yourself, I see," the cutthroat said.
"Smart man. Act up and I guarantee you'll regret it."
The door closed. Bolan immediately propped the upper half of his
body against the wall and worked his hands as low as they could go. He
attempted to tuck his legs to his chest but couldn't. So down he went, onto his
left side again, and doubled over as much as the constricting net allowed.
Now came the truly hard part. Bolan had to free his right hand. Or
at least free it enough to reach the sheath strapped to his ankle. He forced
his fingers lower, sliding them along his leg where resistance wasn't as great.
Stray strands kept getting in the way, impeding him, and he pried them off.
His hand passed his knee. He was making headway, but the strain
was taking a toll. His shoulder throbbed, his muscles ached.
Suddenly the door crashed open.
Bolan imitated stone as Garvey walked in, thumbs hooked in his
wide brown leather belt.
"I had a feeling you were up to something and figured I'd
better check," the bruiser announced. He
gave the upper part of the net a few tugs, which wrapped it
tighter around Bolan's head and shoulders. "Still trussed up like a hog
for the slaughter. Good." Garvey turned to go. "Just don't get any
ideas. I'll be checking back every now and then."
As soon as the door closed, Bolan forced his right hand lower yet.
Agony racked his arm, but it was a small price to pay, given the alternative.
It might have been fifteen minutes, it might have been thirty.
Bolan couldn't see his watch. But finally the tips of his fingers slid out from
under the lower edge of the net. He hiked his pant leg, raising it high enough
to expose the sheath and the Solingen throwing knife. Made in Germany, it had
the distinction of being one of the finest money could buy. It was also honed
to the sharpness of a razor.
Palming the smooth metal hilt, Bolan lowered his pants back over
the sheath, then applied the Solingen to the netting.
The strands were tough, more like wire than thread. Cutting
required concentration. A strand parted, and thus encouraged, Bolan sliced at
the next. And the next. He was making headway, but at the rate he was going it
would be well past midnight before he gained his freedom. By then the smugglers
would dump him in the Pacific.
So intent was he on what he was doing that he didn't realize the door
had opened again until Garvey's bull voice boomed.
"What the hell are you doing over there?"
Chapter 11
The Executioner covered the Solingen with his hand and wrist and
wrapped his fingers around his foreleg so the throwing knife wouldn't be jostled
loose, just in case Garvey got rough.
"I saw you doing something but I couldn't tell what."
The red-bearded man bent and tugged at the net as he had done before.
Bolan said nothing.
"Renfrew calls me a worrywart, says I'm too damn
cautious," Garvey remarked. "But between you and me, I'd rather be
cautious than dead." He reached lower to tug at the bottom part.
"Any chance I can have a drink of water?" Bolan asked.
Garvey looked at him instead of the fishing net. "What am I
supposed to do? Feed a straw through to you? Forget it, mister. I'm not the
charitable type. You'll get plenty to drink when we drop you in the
ocean."
"No last request for the condemned?" Bolan bantered.
Anything to keep Garvey from spying the severed strands.
"Oh, sure. Why don't I bring you a three-course meal while
I'm at it? Steak with all the trimmings, maybe? Soup and salad too? And a
gallon of beer to
wash it all down? How would that be?" Garvey moved to a
workbench on the other side of the room. "Dream on."
Bolan waited for the man to leave so he could resume cutting. But
Garvey sat on a stool and picked up a large spinning reel with tangled line.
"See this?" Garvey held it up. "I love it. Have
ever since I was a kid." Garvey then went on to tell about all the big
ones he had caught over the years: a fifteen-pound bass in a pond, a
forty-one-pound salmon in the Rogue River and a twenty-two-foot shark he caught
once, off the coast of Baja California.
Bolan couldn't care less. He lay perfectly still while his captor
rattled on and on about how fishing was the greatest pastime since sex, and how
Garvey looked forward to one day owning his own fishing boat.
Mercifully, Garvey shut up after that. But he didn't leave. He
toiled at the bench for a long time, untangling and repairing reels and rods.
Bolan looked up when the stool scraped back from the bench.
"Well, look at this? How times flies. It's close to eleven
and I still have to do the inventory out front. That Renfrew is a stickler for
making the books look legit." Garvey put down a bait-casting reel he had
been working on, and left.
Bolan resumed slicing, working harder and faster than before, all
too aware of the precious seconds ticking by. He had an hour, maybe less.
Diligently, he cut and cut, parting more strands, but it wasn't enough, nowhere
near enough, when voices alerted him time had run out.
Into the back came Renfrew and his crew. They had
been drinking and reeked of alcohol. "Did he give you any
trouble?"
"Not a lick," Garvey said. "Fact is, we had a long
talk about fishing."
Renfrew hunkered in front of the net. "Like fish, do you,
mister? Good. Because you're about to see some up close and personal."
Carson, as was his habit, cackled.
"Do I get the boat fired up?" Dennis asked.
Renfrew rasped. "Of course you do! Go start the Jolly
Roger, moron, or I'll dump you overboard with mis joker." Renfrew
patted the mesh. "Like that name, the Jolly Roger? I got it from a
book I started to read when I was in grade school. It had something to do with
pirates."
Garvey walked to a large storage box and removed a folded blue
canvas tarp. "Let's get the package ready to go, Lem."
Bolan watched them unfold the tarp and spread it flat. Next they
took hold of his shoulders and legs and deposited him at one end.
"A last word to the wise," Mike Renfrew said.
"Don't try to call out. I'll be right beside you, and if you do, I'll
stick this in you." From under his windbreaker he drew a long, slender
blade. "It's for gutting fish, but it guts people just as easily."
Garvey and Carson began rolling Bolan toward the other end of the
tarp, wrapping it around him as they went. Darkness swallowed him. By tilting
his neck Bolan could see a circle of light and part of Dennis's foot.
"There!" Garvey declared. "That should do it. Say
the word, boss, and we'll lug him out."
"Just remember, all of you, that the Coast Guard
has been snooping around the bay," Renfrew said. "So we
play this by the numbers."
"What if they board us?" Carson asked.
"Why should they? They never have before. But if they do,
smile and welcome them aboard. As far as they're concerned, we're a first-rate
charter outfit, and we want to keep things that way."
"But if they board us, this guy might act up to get their
attention," Carson said, kicking the tarp.
"Then be ready to slit his throat if I say so," Renfrew
directed. "Any other questions?"
No one had any. Bolan was hoisted off the floor and carried
outdoors. A whiff of sea air seeped in, along with the hiss of surf and the
creak of the dock. He heard music, a radio, maybe, playing on one of the docked
boat.
The tarp rose, dipped, slanted. Bolan was being transferred onto
the Jolly Roger. One of the men tripped, jostling him. Then he was
unceremoniously dropped, his elbow and shin lancing with pain.
"Make a little more noise, why don't you?" Renfrew
needled his crew.
"He's a big guy," Carson complained. "Heavier than
most."
"Or you're just scrawnier than most," Renfrew countered,
and the rest chuckled.
Footsteps receded, followed by the sounds of the crew preparing to
get the Jolly Roger underway. Bolan renewed his assault on the net,
cutting tirelessly, even though he couldn't see what he was doing. He had to
rely on touch alone to tell when a strand was severed so he could move on to
the next. And he had to do it quietly or risk being found out.
A metallic roar kicked the craft to life, immensely
powerful twin engines, from the sound of things, just the sort of
boat smugglers favored.
Renfrew hollered for the anchor to be hoisted. After a lot of
clanking the Jolly Roger eased from the dock, and once it was in the
clear, whoever was at the helm opened the throttle.
Bolan registered all this while cutting. He was making progress.
He could move his hand a little now, from side to side. But it
wasn't enough.
The stomping of boots preceded a slap on the canvas.
"You still in there, bozo?" Carson joked.
Careful not to brush against the tarp, Bolan continued to cut His
fingers hurt but he couldn't stop, not with the stakes so high. They hadn't
said how far out they were taking him. Maybe he had twenty minutes. Maybe he
only had five.
Carson wasn't pleased with having to baby-sit him. "It's just
you and me for a while," he grumbled.
The Jolly Roger was gaining speed. Choppy waves caused the
bow to rise and fall in rhythmic cadence.
Bolan cut, and cut some more. He could move his entire forearm,
but that was all.
Carson sniffed the air. "We have a storm coming in," he
said. "I can smell them from miles out. It'll hit about dawn
tomorrow."
Talkative little man, Bolan mused, as he continued cutting.
"Do you have a family, mister?" Carson asked. "A
wife and brats somewhere? It won't make a difference if you did, but I think
about those things sometimes. That gal we offed a while back, the hitchhiker,
she bawled her brains out, begging us not to kill her, say-
ing as how she had a mother and two younger sisters. As if that
was worth a damn to us."
"You like to kill, do you?" Bolan said to cover the
sound he made shifting his arm to cut at a new spot
"What was that?" Carson said, surprised the soldier had
said something. "Oh. It doesn't much matter. I can live with it or I can
live without it. But I don't shed tears over it neither. Killing a person is no
different than shooting a mongrel or butchering a hog. It's just dying. And we
all got to go someday."
"You just hurry some people along, is that it?" Bolan
exerted more strength, unconcerned when he scraped the canvas.
"More or less, yeah," Carson answered. "If you ask
me, killing folks is a great way to solve problems. Someone gives you grief,
you kill him. Problem solved."
"Who the hell are you talking to?"
Bolan stopped. Renfrew had joined them.
"Um, this here fella," Carson said, sounding
embarrassed.
"Telling him your life story, are you?"
"No. Just about offing people—"
Bolan heard a smack.
"Ow!" Carson squawked. "What did you do that
for?"
Renfrew was furious. "Could it be because you're a royal pain
in the butt? Because you're as dumb as a brick?" He smacked the other
smuggler again. "Not another word, you hear? Or so help me, I'll chop you
into bits and feed you to the sharks."
Carson had learned his lesson. He didn't say anything else, not
until fifteen minutes later when the roar of the two diesels was reduced to a
throaty purr. Kick-
ing on the tarp, he commented, "You awake in there, mister?
We're almost there. Now's the time to practice your breathing exercises."
Bolan was still cutting. He couldn't say how many strands had been
sliced, or whether it would do him any good. But he had tried his best, and in
his book, mat counted most. He cut some more as the craft looped in a circle
and slowed. Others approached. Hands fumbled at the canvas. He was pushed, prodded,
kicked, the tarp unraveling under him. Rolling clear, he bumped into the
bulkhead.
All the lights except those on the control console had been turned
off in case another boat passed by, no one would witness what was about to
occur.
Four inky shapes came toward him.
"Ready for that swim I was telling you about?" Renfrew
mocked. "I'd lend you a wet suit, but why bother? You won't live long
enough to get any use out of it"
Bolan glanced down at himself. In the darkness it was impossible
to tell how much of the net had been cut. He held himself rigid as two men slid
their hands under his shoulders and Garvey wrapped his brawny arms around his
legs.
Renfrew stepped to the gunwale. "Now remember, boys, that net
cost money, so we can't let it sink." He took a coiled rope from a sliding
compartment. "We'll do this the usual way."
Bolan tensed. He hadn't counted on being tied. But mat's exactly
what Renfrew did, looping the rope around his ankles twice and fashioning a
bowline knot.
"The longest anyone has ever held their breath is two and a
half minutes," Garvey told the Executioner. "Think you can top
that?"
Gripping the knife, Bolan glanced over the side but couldn't see a
thing.
"Here we go," Renfrew said. "On my mark."
Garvey, Dennis and Carson stepped closer to the gunwale and
commenced swinging Bolan back and forth, each swing a little farther over the
edge. But they didn't let go, not yet.
"Now!" the chief smuggler declared.
The cutthroats heaved.
Bolan sailed out and over the briny deep, taking a deep breath as
he did. They had thrown him headfirst, but as he arced through the air he
flipped around so his feet were underneath him. His legs cleaved the surface
and he went down. A cold, clammy wetness spread up his body but he had more
important problems besides hypothermia.
As Bolan sank he thrust both arms against the net His life hung in
the balance as it mushroomed outward. Had he cut enough? If not, he would be
helpless, his arms pinned as he slowly sank to the end of the rope. He felt
rather than saw the fishing net partially unravel, and his legs were abruptly
free.
But not his ankles.
Groping at the mesh, Bolan pushed off the folds, regaining the use
of both arms. He was sinking faster than the net was, and had it not been for
his bound ankles, he could have slipped out from under it
Giving another push, Bolan tucked down, extending his right hand
to clutch at the bowline knot. He jabbed the tip of the blade into it and slashed
upward. The rope gave but not enough. Again he slashed, feeling water hi his
ears, in his nose.
Light played over the sea directly above him. The smugglers wanted
to be sure the net was finishing bun
off. By now it resembled a giant jellyfish and they immediately
knew something was wrong.
Someone yanked on the rope to pull Bolan up. He hadn't severed the
knot yet and couldn't resist the pull. Violently upended, he felt water gush
farther up his nostrils. He was bitterly cold, the salt water stinging his eyes
unmercifully.
Like a fish snared at the end of fishing line, Bolan was hauled
straight up—toward the net. If he became entangled again, death would be the
result.
Marshaling his energy, Bolan bent and attacked the knot a second
time. His legs were a blur in the gloom, and when he slashed he couldn't say
with certainty whether he would cut the rope or his own flesh. Then, suddenly,
his ankles were free. The rope kept rising but he didn't
Treading water, Bolan turned toward the boat, dived under it and
swam toward the far side hi clean, broad strokes. His lungs were in torment. He
needed to take a breath, needed to desperately, but he willed himself to swim,
to hold out until he rose through the murk and broke the surface niches from
the hull.
Bolan's first impulse was to suck in air but doing so would alert
the cutthroats. Covering his mouth, he breathed through his fingers to lessen
the noise.
Overhead, confusion reigned.
"What the hell?" Mike Renfrew blurted. "He's not
tied to the rope!"
"Maybe it slipped off," Carson suggested.
"No! Take a closer look," Garvey said. "That thing
has been cut! He skunked us! He had a knife the whole time!"
That wasn't all Bolan had. From under his jacket
he drew the Desert Eagle as he held on to the side of the boat.
"Where can he be?" Dennis declared. "I can't see a
thing down there!"
"Get another spotlight!" Renfrew ordered. "He has
to be around here somewhere. Dennis, go to the bow. Lem, check starboard. Give
a holler if either of you see so much as a ripple."
"What about me?" Garvey said.
"Climb up on the platform. Use the big gun if you have
to."
"Someone might hear."
"I don't give a damn!" Renfrew responded. "If he
gets away we're done for. They'll throw us in prison and throw away the key. Life
sentences, with no chance of parole. Is that what you want? To spend the rest
of your days in the slammer?"
Bolan was covered with goose bumps, and it was all he could do not
to let his teeth chatter. His soaked clothes clung to him, weighing him down.
The running lights came back on and spotlights played across the ocean. He
pressed flush against the boat as a shadow moved along the gunwale.
"Maybe he drowned anyway," Carson called out
"And maybe the tooth fairy is real," Renfrew barked.
"Keep looking!"
Carson appeared right above Bolan, gazing farther out. "I
don't see him back here!" he hollered. The buck-toothed smuggler looked to
the right to the left, and stepped back out of sight. Never once had he thought
to look straight down.
Bolan paddled to the middle of the stern, reached up and grasped
the gunwale. Exercising great care, he raised himself high enough to peer over
the top.
Carson was to starboard, scouring the ocean. Dennis, armed with a
pistol, was doing the same over to port. Up at the control console sat Renfrew.
Even higher, on the tuna tower platform, was Garvey, with an M-60 machine gun
braced on a rail.
Bolan ducked again as Carson turned. He had to take the four of
them down quickly. Bunching his shoulder muscles, he pumped upward, hooked an
elbow over the gunwale and leveled the Desert Eagle.
Carson had his foot on the fighting chair and was tying a
shoelace. Astonishment rendered him momentarily speechless. Then he bawled,
"Here he is! Back here!"
Dennis spun, elevating his pistol. It wasn't quite high enough
when Bolan fired twice, the twin booms punching the cutthroat backward.
The Executioner started to pull himself up onto the boat. He took
aim at Garvey, but the red-bearded gunner had whipped around. Another moment,
and the M-60 thundered. Bolan dropped below the gunwale as rounds chewed into
the stern and churned the sea around him into a froth.
"Damn you, Garvey!" Renfrew bellowed. "Watch what
you're doing or you'll put holes hi the bottom!"
Bolan swam to the left. Past the corner was a pair of rod holders.
Lunging, he gripped hold of one and hitched upward to try to shoot the big
gunner.
Again the M-60 cut loose. At a cyclic rate of 600 .rounds per
minute, it sprayed a swarm of lead.
The only thing that saved Bolan was Garvey's reluctance to put
more holes in the Jolly Roger. Hugging the hull, the soldier weathered
the hailstorm. When it ended, he reversed direction, swimming back around the
stern to the starboard side.
"Where is he?" Garvey shouted. "Where did he
go?"
"Lem, take a look!" Renfrew commanded.
From somewhere near the cabin, Carson responded, "Not on your
life! He killed Dennis! I don't reckon to be next!"
"You coward!"
Carson wasn't phased. "I'd rather be yellow man dead any day
of the week. You've got a gun. If you're so all-fired eager to peek over the
side, be my guest"
Renfrew swore luridly. "When this is over, you'll pay! You
hear me!"
"Forget him!" Garvey yelled down. "Train all the
spotlights aft and keep your eyes peeled!"
"I've got a better idea," Renfrew said
Bolan was swimming along the hull when the twin engines roared to
life. Kicking upward, he grabbed for the gunwale just as the boat surged
forward. Swaying wildly, he nearly lost his hold.
Renfrew was laughing. "That should do it! When I bring her
around, blast the bastard to kingdom come."
"Will do!" Garvey said.
The Jolly Roger looped hi a circle, men slowed to a crawl.
Her four spotlights played over the spot where she had just been.
"I don't see him!" Garvey fumed.
"He has to be there," Renfrew replied. "Maybe he
dived to hide from us. If so, he'll be coming up any second, so be ready!"
Bolan came up, all right, but not hi the way they expected.
Throwing himself up over the gunwale, he flipped into the cockpit and rolled
toward the fighting chair, the only cover other than a bait freezer.
Rising into a crouch behind the fighting chair, Bolan banged a
shot at the upper deck.
Renfrew ducked behind the helm seat.
Up on the tuna tower Garvey had trained the M-60 at the chair but
he didn't fire. Angered, he set the machine gun down, slipped a hand under his
baggy shirt and drew a Taurus .380.
The pistol cracked three times, the slugs whizzing by Bolan's
head. The killers bad him pinned down, and unless he got out of there, they'd
nail him.
"Give it up, mister!" Renfrew demanded. "You can't
beat both of us! Toss down your gun and we won't fire! I promise!"
Bolan didn't trust the man. Peeking past the seat, he saw Renfrew
gesture at Garvey and whisper something. Garvey nodded, abruptly turned and
started down the metal ladder. They were up to something, a flanking maneuver,
maybe.
This whole time, Carson had cowered near the bulkhead within a
few steps of a sliding door, making no move to help his friends.
That door interested Bolan. Galvanizing into motion, he darted
toward it.
Carson squealed, thinking he was doomed, and flung his hands into
the air. "Don't shoot me! Please!"
For a man who took perverse delight in the deaths of others,
Carson couldn't stand the thought of his own. But Bolan didn't fire. The weasel
might prove useful later.
Shoving the sliding door open, nearly ripping it off its casing,
Bolan dashed down a narrow hallway and entered the first room he came to. He
hunkered next to the jamb.
Renfrew and Carson became embroiled in a heated dispute. There was
the sound of a blow, and of someone falling to the deck.
"You hear me in there, mister?" Renfrew shouted.
Bolan glanced around the room. It contained furniture and a
coffeemaker. Nothing that could be of any use.
"We've got you trapped! There's no way out! Why not make this
easy on yourself and give up?"
Bolan didn't answer, not when it would tell them exactly where he
was.
Renfrew was the persistent sort. "You've got more luck than
ten men, but your string has played out. Come on out, damn it, while you still
can!"
All Bolan wanted was one shot, one clear shot. He stared at the
sliding door, his finger on the Desert Eagle's trigger.
"Suit yourself, then," Renfrew said. "But if you
think you can get the better of us, you have another think coming. You're in
for a nasty surprise."
Chapter 12
The Executioner didn't know what was in store, but he'd go down
fighting. On deck he had noticed several large storage lockers, so the
smugglers could have any type of weapon at their disposal.
Shadows flitted across the end of the hallway. Renfrew and Garvey
were putting their plan into effect. A hand flashed, and from it arced a metal
canister mat thudded to a sliding halt and activated with a serpentine hiss.
Smoke spewed, spreading swiftly, roiling forward and aft.
Bolan backed away as thick gray smoke filled the doorway.
The smugglers were trying to drive him out into the open so they
could pick him off, but Bolan wasn't about to accommodate mem. He moved to a
closet barely wide enough for him to fit in. Removing a bucket and broom and
two rain slickers, he slid inside and closed the thin door. Wisps of acrid
smoke pursued him, but not enough to fill his lungs and incapacitate him.
Bolan had a strong hunch what the smugglers would try next. Soon
there was stealthy movement, the pad of shoes on polished wood, and whispers.
"—is he? I swore he came in here."
"We'll try the next room."
The last voice was Renfrew's. Bolan inhaled deeply and cracked the
door. Vague figures moved in the midst of the writhing smoke, their faces
distorted by the gas masks they wore.
"There he is!" The larger of the figures twirled toward
him.
Bolan banged off two shots. Garvey jolted backward, and
tottering, the bruiser was enveloped by the cloud. In the same instant Bolan
hurled himself at the floor. The room was filled with semiauto fire from the
vicinity of the hallway as the closet he had vacated was riddled. So were the
adjoining walls.
"Did I get him?" Renfrew asked, but Garvey didn't
respond.
Bolan snaked forward. He bumped into a prone form, the red beard
identifying who it was. Fingers flying, Bolan stripped off Garvey's gas mask
and put it on, adjusting the straps to fit snug. It was an old Army-surplus
model, bulky and grotesque by modern standards, but it served its purpose. He
could breath again, and his eyes stopped stinging.
"Garvey?" Renfrew called.
Bolan fired at the sound, three swift shots that elicited a yelp
and then an answering firestorm from Renfrew's SMG. An Ingram MAC-10, Bolan
thought, his cheek to the floor as 9 mm wasps buzzed above him.
The magazine emptied, and in the ensuring silence Bolan heard
Renfrew moving aft.
Rising, the soldier crept to the hallway. He couldn't see his hand
in front of his face, let alone the sliding door. His back to the wall, Bolan
moved closer. A gust of night breeze dispersed some of the clinging smoke, but
not enough to show him where Renfrew had gone.
Anxious moments passed, then Bolan stiffened. The
engines were revving. He broke into a run as the Jolly Roger lurched
and then steadied, gaining speed.
Carson lay sprawled in the cockpit, unconscious.
Stepping over him, Bolan turned. Renfrew was at the console, and
as Bolan looked on, he shoved both throttles to the max. As if launched into
space, the bow of the Jolly Roger rose out of the water. Bolan would
have fallen had he not grabbed hold of the freezer.
They were headed inland.
Bolan stepped to the ladder and climbed toward the flying bridge.
Renfrew was hunched over the console, the MAC-10 slung over a shoulder, and
didn't notice him until he was almost to the top. Pointing the Desert Eagle,
Bolan said, "Put down the Ingram and you'll get to live."
"I wish." Renfrew laughed, men coughed, scarlet drops
spilling over his chin. "You got me good. I won't last another hour."
"Step away from the console," Bolan directed him.
"Don't mind if I do," Renfrew said, smirking. At that he
snatched up the MAC-10 and spun.
The Desert Eagle bucked, the slug dissolving Renfrew's right eye
and exiting the top of his cranium. Sagging against the seat, Renfrew jerked
convulsively for a few seconds, the SMG clattering at his feet.
Bolan climbed the rest of the way and sat down. He placed the
Desert Eagle on the console, then throttled back to a safe cruising speed. Even
though he was in open ocean, submerged boulders or other obstacles might lie
ahead. With no charts to guide him, he had to feel his way into shore.
A groan reminded Bolan he wasn't the only one still alive.
"Mike? Garvey? Where are you guys? Did you get him?"
Bolan let Carson learn the truth for himself. He looked over his
shoulder as the smuggler came up the ladder.
The sight of Renfrew stopped Carson in mortal fright.
"Keep coming," Bolan instructed.
"Whatever you say, mister." Obeying, Carson sank onto
the bench seat. He was the picture of depression. "I know better than to
buck you." He wrung his hands. "You've ruined everything, you know
that? We had a good thing going in Tillamook until you came along."
"Can you take this boat in?"
"What kind of dumb question is that? I know these waters like
I the back of my hand."
"Change seats," Bolan said, stepping aside.
Reluctantly, the smuggler took the wheel. "What happens when
we get there? You fixing to kill me like you have everyone else? Or will you
throw me in jail?" He paused. "Who are you, anyway? A Fed?"
"No."
"Then what the hell was this all about?" Carson quizzed
him. "If you're not the law, why were you butting your nose into our
business?"
"Blame the man who chartered your boat for tomorrow."
"That Sprague character? What does he have to do with
it?"
"Quiet." The soldier had thinking to do. Fate had given
him a means of turning the tables on the wily Frenchman, of taking Sprague and
Charata by surprise and recovering the Piranha Molecule with a minimum of
bloodshed and little risk to bystanders.
It was an opportunity he couldn't pass up.
"YOU'RE despicable,"
Helen Paisley said to Alexander Sprague. "We had an agreement and
you broke it. So much for your word!"
"You'll still receive your money, my dear," the merchant
assured her. "Think of this as a temporary delay."
Bernie Craker was tired of Paisley's complaints, tired of
Sprague's glib attitude, and just plain tired. It was past one in the morning,
but he couldn't sleep. He was too worried.
In nine hours they were going on board a chartered boat to take
the first leg of a long journey mat would end in Europe. And when it ended, so
would his freedom, maybe his very life.
"You don't need me anymore," Paisley was griping.
"Call Switzerland and have the funds transferred so I can be on my
way."
"I would like nothing better," Sprague said. "But
if you were to leave, Mr. Craker might take it into his head to do something
rash. I can't allow that."
"So I'm just as much your prisoner as he is," Paisley
said.
"Hardly. You are a means to an end. Once we arrive in
France, you can do whatever you wish. No strings attached."
"Wonderful," Paisley said dryly.
Craker shifted away from them, draping his arm over the back of
the sofa. In doing so he inadvertently faced the bodyguard, Charata, who
earlier had dragged a chair over by the bolted door and was cleaning a shiny
pistol with oil and a cloth. The South American glanced at him with eyes as
flat and cold as a reptile's. Uncomfortable, Craker shifted back around.
"And you, Bernie," Alexander Sprague said. "It's
not healthy to go so long without food. I must insist you eat
something in the morning."
"Can I help it if I have no appetite?" the scientist
countered. The transport case was on the floor by Sprague's chair. It never
left his side, even when he went to the bathroom.
"That will change once you realize things aren't as bad as
you make them out to be, my young friend."
"No, they're worse," Craker said, and didn't share in
Sprague's amusement at his remark. He felt empty, drained of emotion. Paisley's
betrayal was eating at him like acid, destroying every shred of happiness, of
hope, in his being, destroying his very zest for life. He would just as soon
put Charata's gun to his head and pull the trigger. Life was no longer worth
living.
"Think of the service you have done humankind," Sprague
mentioned. "Think of the legacy you will leave."
"Service?"
"You have elevated warfare to a whole new level. Your tiny
molecule is more efficient than any weapon short of the nuclear bomb."
Some legacy, Craker thought, and grew more despondent than ever.
Why hadn't he realized the truth sooner? he wondered. Why hadn't he seen
Paisley for what she really was and refused to go along with her crazy scheme?
The answer was obvious enough. It was a little thing called love.
Craker had never loved anyone like he did Paisley. Since the
moment he set eyes on her in college, he'd been hopelessly smitten. She was
beauty personified. And not only that, she was smart, too, her keen intellect
a perfect match for his. Or so he had imagined. So he had deluded himself.
Craker looked at the transport case again. Maybe he was being too
harsh. The real cause of his woes, the real culprit, was the Piranha Molecule.
If he hadn't created the damn nanites, Paisley wouldn't have wanted to get rich
by selling them. She would still be working at his side back at Nanotech.
Hatred pulsed through Craker, hatred of the breakthrough he had
made. It would be better for everyone if the Piranha Molecule were destroyed.
Paisley would come to her senses, Sprague would be left empty-handed, and the
world would be a much safer place in which to live.
Craker knew just how to do it, too. All he had to do was take the
vials out of the special case. The robotic molecule was extremely fragile.
Once unfrozen, it could only exist in the human body. Without a host, the
nanites would break apart into their component elements.
Somehow, Craker had to get the case away from Sprague. But how,
exactly, when Sprague hovered over it like a mother hen? He heard his name mentioned
and derailed his train of thought for the time being.
"I trust you will be on your best behavior tomorrow,"
Sprague said. "Don't try anything on the way to the docks. Or once we are
on board. In two days we will be in San Diego, well outside the Federal dragnet.
From there, it should be smooth sailing. Pardon the pun."
"I'll behave," Craker said, but he had made up his mind
to wait his chance and destroy the vials. Come what may.
Craker only hoped Paisley would forgive him.
the executioner was crouched behind the counter at Salmon
Brothers, Ltd. He held the Beretta in a two-handed grip, the muzzle trained on
Lem Carson, who stood a yard away trying to act casual and composed, but
failing miserably.
"I can't do this, I tell you," the smuggler objected. '
"They'll see right through me. Next thing I know, that tall devil will gun
me down before you can get off a shot."
"Calm down," Bolan cautioned. "Just stand there and
smile. Once they're all inside, leave the rest to me."
"Gladly." Carson flipped through a boating magazine he
had taken off a rack. "My whole life has been like this, one mess after
another.
Suddenly, Carson tensed. "Someone's at the door!" Poised
to run, he changed his mind when Bolan rapped the suppressor against his knee.
"All right, all right. I get the message."
"I thought you claimed someone was out there," Bolan
said when no one came in.
"A damn gull flew past and I mistook its shadow for a
person," Carson explained.
The clock on the wall indicated it was five minutes to ten.
"You won't have to wait much longer," Bolan noted.
"The least you could do is give me a gun to protect
myself," Carson said. "Even a knife would do."
"No."
If there was one thing Bolan had learned about Alexander Sprague,
it was that the man was punctual. He edged to the end of the counter to scan
the street The sky was overcast, but the rain that had been falling all morning
had ended. A pickup was driving past.
"If they kill me, my death will be on your head," Carson
said.
"I can live with it," Bolan responded. He also had to live
with the knowledge that if things went wrong, he had only himself to blame for
not having anyone to back him up. He hadn't called in the Feds, hadn't phoned
Brognola.
The debacle at Bayside Park was the main reason. Three special
agents had gone down, and the soldier didn't want others to share their fate.
Another factor also entered the picture—Bolan wanted to be the one
who brought Bartolome Charata to bay. He was taking it much too personally, he
knew, but the Argentinian had eluded him twice and he would be damned if
Charata would do so a third time.
An engine growled toward the shop.
"Hey!" Carson exclaimed. "I remember that car from
yesterday! Isn't that them?"
It was. The Lincoln was two blocks away, creeping along slowly.
Bolan crouched before they could spot him.
The smuggler had gone as white as a sheet and broke out in a
sweat.
"Act natural!" Bolan ordered.
"I'll try," Carson squeaked.
"Tell me what they're doing," Bolan prodded, thinking it
would take the man's mind off his fear.
"You just saw, didn't you? They're playing it safe, is what.
Coming on real slow. The spooky guy is driving. You ask me, they'll never fall
for this little trick of yours."
"Have they pulled up yet?"
"No. If anything, they're driving slower. The tall
guy is checking the street. Looking for cops, I guess."
Carson glanced at the door to the back room.
"Stay right where you are," Bolan warned.
"You're violating my rights, you know that? You can't make me
stand here if I don't want to. I have half a mind to—" Stopping, Carson
gripped the edge of the counter. "Oh, Lordy. He's looking at me now."
''Don't let him see your mouth move. It might make him
suspicious."
Carson's lips compressed into a thin line, but he wasn't capable
of shutting up for long. "They're parking right out front The spooky guy
is getting out He's going around to open the door for fancy pants. Now it's the
geek and the woman. Man, does she look ticked. The geek just said something to
her, but she ignored him."
Bolan could see it all in his mind's eye.
"Here they come. Sprague is in the lead, carrying a metal
briefcase. The female and the geek are next Spooky is bringing up the rear.
There's a bit of a bulge under his right arm. A pistol, maybe." Carson
uttered a tiny whine. "As soon as you pop up, mister, I'm hitting the
floor."
"Be friendly," Bolan said. "Get them to come all
the way over to the counter."
"Want me to give them manicures and shine their shoes while
I'm at it?" Carson retorted, then adopted a sickly smile as the front door
opened. "Howdy, there, folks!"
"Who are you?" Alexander Sprague asked.
"Lem Carson. Don't you remember? I was in the shop yesterday
when you were talking to my boss."
"Where is Mr. Renfrew? It was my understanding he would be
here to meet me personally."
"He told me to tell you he'd be right back," Carson lied
glibly. "A group of fishermen chartering one of our boats had a problem of
some kind, and he ran down the dock to talk to them."
Bolan saw that the smuggler had calmed enough to pull off the
deception. He waited for the signal they had agreed to earlier, for Carson to
close the magazine. It would be his cue that Sprague and Charata were right in
front of the counter.
"How many boats do you have?" the Frenchman inquired.
' Tour. The best of the bunch, the fastest, is the Jolly Roger.
That's the one Mr. Renfrew is taking you down to California in. It can
outrun just about anything on the high seas. Even a Coast Guard cutter, if need
be."
"Hopefully, though, the need won't arise," Sprague said.
"It's best if we avoid entanglements with the authorities."
"Hell, mister, avoiding the law is what we do best."
"So I was informed. Your employer has a sterling reputation.
It's why I contacted him in the first place."
It was obvious to Bolan that Sprague was close to the counter.
Since Carson hadn't given the signal, Charata wasn't.
"How did you hear about us, anyhow?" Carson asked.
"If you don't mind me being a little nosy, that is."
"I have a few friends in America, men who, like myself,
operate beyond the confines of the law. One of them did some checking for me,
and learned that Salmon Brothers specializes in clandestine activities."
Bolan couldn't wait forever for the signal. Sprague might look
behind the counter, or one of the others
might stray into view. He wished he had some idea of where Charata
was.
As if the smuggler could read minds, Carson said, "How about
some coffee, Mr. Sprague? Or would your tall friend over there by the front
window like some? It wouldn't be a bother. I've got a pot in the back."
"No, thank you," Sprague said.
"Maybe the lady or the other fella would like some?"
Carson pressed.
"No, I said."
It struck Bolan that maybe Carson was conniving to make a break
for it. The back room had no door to the outside, but there was a window. All
the smuggler had to do was climb out and make himself scarce.
"I was only trying to be helpful."
"What would help me most right now is for your employer to
show up. This delay is most inconvenient. I wanted to get underway as quickly
as possible."
"He should be here soon."
Bolan slowly shifted to face the end of the counter. Time to
spring his surprise. He tensed his legs, then saw Helen Paisley step to the
wall a dozen feet away. She was studying the huge mounted salmon. All she had
to do was glance to her left and she would spot him, and maybe shout a warning.
"Perhaps you could phone Mr. Renfrew?" Sprague asked.
"Sorry, but he doesn't have a cellular phone," Carson
said. "Give him another couple of minutes. That's all it should
take."
Helen Paisley was still admiring the salmon. Bolan watched her,
waiting for her to turn her back so he
could make his presence known. Suddenly, though, the front door
opened. Someone else had entered.
"Carson, you crusty sea dog!" a man declared merrily.
"Since when does Mike let you work the front counter?"
Lem Carson looked fit to faint. "George Ward, as I live and
breathe! Haven't seen you in a month of Sundays."
The newcomer tromped over. "Been busy. It's the height of the
season, ain't it? Once winter sets in and things quiet down, I'll get together
with Mike and you and toss down some brews."
"Pardon me," Alexander Sprague interjected, "but
what was that you said about Mr. Carson and the front counter?"
"Oh, nothing much. It's just that Lem, here, can't make
change. He can't count past ten without taking off his socks." Ward
laughed boisterously. "Lem always screws up. So his boss never lets him
work out front here. Although I guess that's not true anymore."
"It's not," Carson quickly said.
"Where is Mike, anyhow?" George Ward asked. "I
didn't see him down on the dock just now, and I wanted to ask him about all
that shooting."
"Shooting?" both Carson and Alexander Sprague said
simultaneously.
"Yeah. I was coming back late last night from a trip to
Seattle when I heard a lot of guns going off," Ward revealed.
"Sounded like a damn war, so I got out my binoculars. South of me I saw a
boat and I started toward it, but she took off out of there like a bat out of
hell."
"What does that have to do with Mike?" Carson asked a
tad nervously.
"I didn't get a good look at the other boat, mind you,"
Ward said, "but I thought it might have been the Jolly Roger. It
had her lines, her speed."
"You don't say." The remark came from Alexander
Sprague.
"It couldn't have been," Carson said. "I know for a
fact the Jolly Roger never weighed anchor last night. It had to have
been someone else."
Bolan wished Ward would leave so he could spring his trap. He
glanced at Carson, who had the look of a scared rabbit about to bolt, then at
Helen Paisley. If she was done admiring the fish and had walked off, he would
chance making his move.
But Paisley was still there.
And she was staring straight at him.
Chapter 13
The Executioner saw Helen Paisley put a hand to her chest in
alarm. She tilted her head as if to shout, but seemed to catch herself at the
last instant. Composing herself, she turned back to the salmon on the wall,
acting as if she hadn't seen him. Why she kept quiet was a mystery.
Bolan tried to recall if she had set eyes on him before. She
might have, at Bayside Park during all the confusion. So it was possible she
assumed he was a Fed, there to take Sprague into custody. But why would she
want Sprague caught when he was paying her ten million dollars for the Piranha
Molecule?
Ward was leaving. "Tell Mike I stopped by, will you, Lem? Ask
him if he knows who was doing all that shooting."
"Okay," Carson said.
The moment the door closed, Sprague's hand shot across the counter
and seized the scrawny smuggler by the shirt. "You'll tell me the truth,
and you'll do it quickly."
Carson started to reach for the Frenchman's wrist but thought
better of the idea. "I don't know what you're talking about, mister!"
Then Carson did the most foolish thing he could have done. Twisting, he
looked down at Bolan and silently mouthed the words, "Help
me!"
"Charata!"
The cry exploded from Sprague as Bolan heaved to his feet. He
thought the bodyguard was by the front window and pointed the Beretta toward
it. Unfortunately, Charata had moved toward the north wall, closer to Helen
Paisley.
The Argentinian's right hand streaked out from under his jacket
holding another Glock. He fired from the hip, cowboy style.
Bolan dropped behind the counter again as the room rocked to the
din of artificial thunder. Slivers flew like needles in a gale, stinging his cheek,
his neck. Looking up, he saw Sprague shove Carson against the wall.
Yipping like a kicked dog, Carson turned toward the door to the
back room. He took one long stride, and was knocked sideways. A hole had
appeared in his temple. Carson clutched at the wall, doing an ungainly
pirouette, as he sank to the floor, his wide, blank eyes fixed on the soldier.
Paisley was shouting, "No! No! Let me go!"
Bolan shifted to the right and popped back up.
Charata had an arm around the woman's throat and was hauling her
toward the entrance, his pistol pressed to her head. Sprague was backing away
from the counter as calmly as if he were the only person there, while over in
the far corner Bernie Craker stood transfixed by surprise.
"Shoot us and the woman dies!" Sprague shouted at the
soldier.
Until a minute ago, Bolan couldn't care less what happened to her.
Paisley had been the one who set up the whole deal. She was more to blame than
Craker,
and if she died, well, she had it coming. But she'd kept her mouth
shut when she spotted him, and hadn't warned Sprague or Charata. Thai gave
Bolan pause.
"Outside, Bartolome! Now!" Sprague was supremely
confident, as always. "You, too, Bernie! Come along!"
George Ward picked that fateful juncture to venture back inside. A
burly man in a T-shirt, dungarees and a blue sailor's cap, he pushed the door
open and blurted, "Did I just hear gunfire?"
Charata shot him. A snap of the wrist and the deed was done. As
Ward tottered out and fell across the sidewalk, the Argentinian bounded toward
the doorway, bent low, using Helen Paisley as a living shield.
Bolan aimed the Beretta, but he didn't squeeze the trigger. No
matter how much he felt she might deserve it, he couldn't gun her down in cold
blood.
Paisley was paralyzed by the Glock. She offered no resistance as
the bodyguard brutally yanked her through the doorway.
Sprague stopped on the threshold. "Bernie! Didn't you hear
me?"
"Mr. Sprague!" Charata called. "Look!"
People were running from all directions. Heads were poking out
windows and doors were opening up and down the block. Soon a crowd would converge,
filling the street, hemming in the Lincoln. If Sprague was to get out of there,
he had to leave right that second. Scowling, he snapped at Craker, "Be at
Peg Leg Pete's in one hour!" Then he dashed for the car.
Bolan ran around the counter and bounded to the front, seeking a
clear shot
Charata had already shoved Paisley inside and was at the wheel,
gunning the engine. He flung the pas-
senger door open and the Frenchman slid in. With a squeal of
burning rubber the Lincoln peeled out.
"What's going on?" hollered a man jogging down the
street.
"Stay back!" Bolan shouted. "Call the police! Two
men have been shot!" Darting inside, he almost collided with Bernie
Craker, who was on his way out "Hold it! Where do you think you're
going?"
"They took Helen!"
"And the Piranha Molecule," Bolan said. "Sprague's
won. He'll find some other way out of the country and be long gone before we
can track him down."
"No, he won't," Craker said. "He won't go anywhere
without me."
"You?"
A commotion outside showed the good citizens of Tillamook hadn't
heeded Bolan's advice. More than a dozen men and women were clustered around
George Ward, with more arriving every second. Soon it would be the police.
"We need to talk, but not here," Bolan said, sliding the
Beretta into its holster. He led the scientist into the back room, to the
window. Warped by age and rain, it resisted when he pushed on the rail, but
only for a few moments. Sliding it up, he leaned out. The coast was clear.
Bolan and Craker slipped from the building and hurried east,
Bolan watching the scientist closely in case he tried to make a run for it.
"Where are you taking me?" the scientist asked.
"I have a car nearby."
By now the crowd had grown. Bolan stayed on the
far side of the street, his chin tucked to his chest, averting
his face so no one would recognize nun.
The sedan was where he had parked it, past the next intersection
and down a side street They got in and Bolan headed south. In the rearview
mirror he saw a police car race toward Salmon Brothers, its lights flashing.
"You're a Federal officer, aren't you?" Bernie Craker
said. "I saw you at Coos Bay when those others were shot. You were
running across the park."
"I'm trying to stop Sprague," Bolan said, and let it go
at that.
"That makes two of us."
Bolan gave him a sharp glance. "Don't play me for a fool. I
know you agreed to sell the Piranha Molecule. I know you killed a coworker. And
a park ranger down near Brookings." Bolan turned left, merging onto a
busier thoroughfare. "Now you're trying to tell me you've changed your
mind?"
"It's not all of a sudden," Craker said. "I'm the
one who was played for a fool, by Sprague and the woman I trusted with my
life."
"I'm listening."
For the next half an hour, while the soldier drove at random
around Tillamook, the scientist detailed all he had been through. Craker left
nothing out. He admitted his guilt in the killing of Ted Proctor. When he
related the deaths of the ranger, the state patrolman and the store owner,
genuine horror tinged his voice. The anguish on his face when he explained how
Helen Paisley had betrayed him, how she had included him as part of her deal
with Alexander Sprague, was equally real.
Bolan was convinced Craker was telling the truth.
"So that's what you meant when you said Sprague won't leave
the country without you."
"Exactly. He wants me as much as he does the nanites. Maybe
even more. He'll do whatever it takes to get me back in his clutches."
"I won't let that happen," Bolan promised.
"You're forgetting. Sprague has Helen. And he knows I won't
let her come to any harm."
"You still love her, don't you? Even after all she's
done?"
Craker sighed. "Stupid of me, isn't it? But I do. I love her
with all my heart and soul." He bowed his head in sorrow. "I've tried
not to. I've tried telling myself she isn't worth it, that I would be better
off rid of her. But I can't lie to myself." Craker paused. "Have you
ever been in love?"
"Yes."
"Then you must know how I feel."
Bolan did, indeed. Some time back he had lost a woman he'd loved
dearly, a woman as precious to him as Helen Paisley was to Craker. Checking his
wrist-watch, he said, "Let's head for the motel. Sprague told us to be
there in one hour."
"I should go alone," Craker said. "I'm all he
wants."
"From here on out you're not leaving my side," Bolan
said. "With a little luck we can recover the nanites and save
Paisley."
It was Craker's turn to glance around sharply. "Why are you
doing this? Why are you helping me?"
"Are you complaining?"
"No, no, not at all. It's just that I thought you'd arrest me
and throw me into jail. I can't thank you enough."
"Save your gratitude. Even if we come out on top, Paisley and
you will stand trial. There's no way around it"
"I gave my word to Helen she wouldn't spend any time behind
bars."
"After all that she's done?" Bolan shook his head.
"She's looking at serious time. It will depend on the judge, and whether
the federal prosecutor recommends leniency. I'll let them know what she did
back mere, but it won't count for much, I'm afraid."
"What did she do?"
Bolan shared how Paisley had spotted him but hadn't alerted
Sprague. "Have you any idea why?"
"No. Unless she's had a change of heart." Craker beamed
at the idea. "I bet that's it! She's come to her senses."
"Or she's worried she'll end up like Blatterfeld," Bolan
mentioned. "Once she's outlived her usefulness, Sprague just might have
her killed."
Peg Leg Pete's was quiet under the midday sun. Few vehicles were
in the parking lot. No one was using the pool. Most of the previous night's
lodgers had checked out and it would be hours before a new batch of travelers
stopped over.
Bolan didn't see the Lincoln. Loosening the Beretta and the Desert
Eagle in their respective holsters, he climbed out. "Take it nice and
slow," he said when Craker started to rush in. "It could be a
trap."
"I'm sorry," Craker apologized. "I'm worried about
Helen."
The plush lobby was empty. A bored desk clerk working at a
computer welcomed the break in his routine. "Hello, gentlemen. What can I
do for you?"
Craker spoke before Bolan could. "I stayed here
last night with the Sprague party in room 12. We checked out this
morning, but I think Mr. Sprague might have checked back in and I need to see
him."
"Sprague, you say?" The clerk snapped his fingers.
"Oh, wait. I had a phone call from him about half an hour ago. Are you
Bernard Craker?"
"Yes."
"He left a message for you, sir." The clerk removed a
folded slip of paper from a row of mail slots. "Here you go."
Bolan peered over Craker's shoulder. It was a phone number, to a
pay phone somewhere in Tillamook would be Bolan's guess. "Allow me,"
he said, taking the paper and crossing the lobby to a booth. Sliding the door
open, he fished in his pocket for change, fed it into the slot and punched the
appropriate buttons.
On the very first ring Alexander Sprague answered. "Bernie!
Right on time, too. I knew I could count on you. Especially since you care so
much for a mutual acquaintance of ours."
"This isn't Craker."
A pause at the other end of the line ended with a sinister
chortle. "So, the mystery man, I presume? The one who has been badgering
me for days."
"And who won't rest until you've been put out of business,
permanently."
"Threats are the brainchild of the immature," Sprague
stated. "Three times now you have tried to catch me. Three times you have
failed. Spare yourself further shame and let me wrap up my affairs in
peace."
"This won't be over until you're in handcuffs or dead,"
Bolan said matter-of-factly.
More silence at the other end. Then Sprague asked,
"Who are you, American? Why do you plague me so?"
Bolan answered the questions with one of his own. "Do you
know the death toll from that explosion at the Seashore Resort now stands at
sixteen?"
"What's your point? That I am a hideous monster who must be
disposed of at all costs?" Sprague couldn't hide his irritation.
"Enough of this nonsense. Put Bernie on."
"You'll deal with me from here on out."
"Unacceptable. You'll try to delay me, to ensnare me. I must
insist that I speak to Craker."
"Insist all you want."
A venomous hiss was an accurate gauge of how angry Sprague had
become. "Then Ms. Paisley's life will be on your conscience. Unless you
give the phone to Bernie right this instant, I'll allow my associate to
strangle her."
The associate had to be Charata, and Bolan had no doubt at all the
killer would enjoy carrying the order out. He looked at Craker, waiting
anxiously for word of his beloved, and gave him the phone. "He wants to
talk to you."
The scientist placed the receiver to his ear. "This is
Bernie... What's that?... Hey, you can't blame me. I didn't know he was waiting
for you at Salmon Brothers... No... No... Of course I will. Where?"
Bolan deduced that Sprague was instructing Craker where to meet
him.
"I'll be there. But I want to speak to her, now... Like hell.
For all I know you've killed her. I need to be sure."
The change that came over Craker a moment later was remarkable. He
positively glowed with love for
the woman who had come on the line. "Helen?" he said
softly, nearly breaking into tears. "Have they hurt you?"
The soldier moved several yards off to allow them a small degree
of privacy. The scientist's devotion was touching, if misplaced. Bolan almost
felt sorry for him. Almost. Devotion was no excuse for murder. It was no excuse
for deceit and betrayal.
Still, Bolan would do what he could to save Helen Paisley.
Craker hung up. He was smiling, beaming at the world, the happiest
man alive. "She said she was sorry!"
"Did she?"
"Yes! Helen told me that I was right all along. She never
should've tried to sell the Piranha Molecule."
"You think she was sincere?"
Craker arched his eyebrows. "Of course! What a ridiculous
question. She's had a change of heart, just like I said. Now it's up to me to
save her from those vermin."
"Up to us, you mean," Bolan said. "When and where
are you supposed to meet them?"
"He told me not to tell you. I'm to go alone or she'll die.
If Sprague sees anyone following me, he'll give her to that animal, Charata."
Craker walked toward the glass doors. "I'm sorry. Honestly I am. But I
can't let you come."
Bolan moved hi front of him, blocking his way. "I'm the only
hope you have, Bernie. Unless you work with me, Sprague will have you and the
vials, and at some point down the road he'll have Helen Paisley killed
anyway."
"If I take you with me she'll die that much
sooner!" Craker said it so loudly the desk clerk looked up
from the computer screen.
"I'll do my best to keep her safe," Bolan pledged.
Craker was in the grip of great inner turmoil. "If things
don't work out—" choked by emotion, he had trouble talking "—if it
all goes wrong and something happens...do me a favor, will you? Kill Alexander
Sprague. Hunt him down to the ends of the earth, if need be. Just don't let us
die in vain."
"Sprague's days are numbered, no matter what."
"Good." Craker smiled thinly. "It's nice to know
that something good will come out of this awful mess."
"Tell me. What were his instructions?"
"I'm supposed to give you the slip. Either take your car,
steal one, or rent one. An hour from now I'm to drive north on Highway 101.
Before I get to Garibaldi, there's a turnoff I'm to take."
"Why does he want you to wait another hour?" Bolan
wondered aloud. As eager as Sprague was to get his hands on the scientist, it
was peculiar. Unless Sprague needed the extra time to lay a trap in the
eventuality Craker didn't go alone. As usual, the Frenchman was thinking
ahead, anticipating what his enemies would do and taking appropriate
countermea-sures. "We shouldn't wait. We have to leave now."
"What? Why?"
"If we can reach the place where you're to meet him before he
does, I can pick them off when they arrive."
"No."
"It's the one thing Sprague won't expect," Bolan pointed
out. "For once, we'll have the element of surprise on our side."
"I don't care," Craker said. "It increases the danger
to Helen, and I won't allow it."
The desk clerk was staring at them, Bolan noticed. "Let's go
outside," he said, and once they had, he tried again. "You say that
saving her is all that matters. Yet you're throwing away a golden opportunity
to do just that."
"Sprague's exact words were, and I quote, 'If you don't do
exactly as I've told you, if you try to deceive me in any respect, your woman
dies in the most horrible agony you can imagine. My associate is a master at
torture. He will do things to her that would make you sick to your
stomach."' Craker locked eyes with the soldier. "If she were the
woman you loved, would you risk it?"
Bolan gazed toward the bay, at seagulls gliding car-efreely on the
wind. "One hour it is, then."
the coast highway hugged the shoreline after it left
Tillamook, affording scenic vistas of the ocean, but neither the Executioner
nor the scientist were in any mood to appreciate them. A sign let them know
Garibaldi was a few miles ahead, but before they reached it, they came to a
secondary road angling to the northeast, off into lush wilderness.
"The Miami River Road," Craker read. "This is it
Turn here."
The change in scenery was drastic, from open highway to a narrow
ribbon paralleling the winding Miami River. Thick woodland flanked it They saw
fishermen here and there, and a few hardy hikers. The deeper into the
wilderness they went, though, the fewer people they encountered, until hi due
course they had the road all to themselves.
"How far do we go?" Bolan asked.
"Sprague didn't say. I'm to look for a white towel tied to a
tree."
Swiped from a motel, Bolan figured. They drove steadily on without
spotting the marker.
The tension took a toll on Craker. He chewed on his lower lip,
while nervously tapping on the dashboard and constantly twisting in his seat.
"Maybe we missed it," he finally declared.
"We didn't."
"Maybe they didn't tie it tight enough and it fell off. We
should turn around and double-check."
"We'll keep going."
Craker regarded him a moment. "I wish I was more like you.
Confident, decisive, forceful. My whole life, I've been too timid for my own
good. I admit it. I've tried to change, to become more sure of myself, but I
just don't seem to have what it takes."
"We do what we can," Bolan said, concentrating on the
endless phalanx of trees on either side.
"That's just it. I could live to be a thousand and never be
like you. I could never do what you do for a living."
"I could never create nanites. So we're even."
Craker laughed. ' 'Hardly. I'm not talking about specialized
skills, about knowledge we gain from education. I'm talking about what makes
us who we are. Our personality, if you will. Our very nature."
"We're all different." Rounding a sharp curve, Bolan
had to brake to avoid hitting a large doe. The animal casually sauntered to
the other side, and with a flick of its tail, bounded into the vegetation.
"One of life's many inequities," Craker com-
mented. "Some men are born lions, some are born mice."
That wasn't entirely true, Bolan reflected. Natural ability
helped, but the main factors were temperament and training. Someone could be
anything he wanted if he was willing to work hard enough at it, to train and
educate himself to acquire the skills he needed.
Before Bolan could say as much to the scientist, they rounded
another bend and a spot of white appeared.
"There! There! Do you see it?"
Bolan slowed from twenty miles an hour to five. The stretch of
roadway was deserted. Towering trees cast it in gloomy shade. A perfect site
for an ambush, he noted, as he angled onto the shoulder and came to a stop.
Craker jumped out. "This is the place!" he declared
happily, scooting to the white towel and grasping it as if it were a trophy he
had won.
No other vehicles were in sight. Bolan guessed that Sprague had
parked the Lincoln up past the next turn, concealing it just off the road.
That's what he would have done if the situation was reversed. Reaching into the
back seat, he unzipped the rifle case and took out the Remington, the scope and
a box of shells.
"Is that the same gun you had at Bayside Park?" Craker
asked as the soldier got out.
Nodding, Bolan attached the scope. Then he loaded the rifle,
worked the bolt to feed a cartridge into the chamber and straightened.
"Let's go."
Chapter 14
The Executioner was a shadow among shadows. Low to the ground, he
glided westward as silently as a specter. The forest around him was eerily
still. No birds chirped, no squirrels chattered, not even an insect buzzed. It
was as if all the wildlife were holding its collective breath, waiting for
violence to erupt.
Craker was forty feet ahead. The scientist plowed through the
brush with all the stealth of a cow, stopping every dozen yards to call out,
"Sprague? Sprague? Where are you?"
The secrets dealer didn't answer. Sprague was being his usual wary
self, lying low until sure Craker had come alone. Or was there more to it?
Bolan speculated. Did Sprague have something up his sleeve, as it were?
Craker stopped again and cupped his hands to his mouth. "Damn
it, Sprague! I'm here, just like you wanted! Where the hell are you? Where's
Helen?"
"Keep walking, Bernie!"
The shout came from a great distance off. Bolan saw Craker break
into a run, and frowned. They had agreed he should hold to a slow walk.
Otherwise, they might become separated. Increasing his own speed, Bolan tried
to keep the lovestruck fool in sight. At the same time he continually scanned
the undergrowth for
sign of Charata, The Argentinian was out there somewhere, a human
predator waiting to pounce.
"Where are you, Sprague?" Craker yelled.
The woods were thinning, which Bolan didn't like. The heavy brush
gave way to high grass. More boulders appeared than trees. Bolan darted from
one to the next, zigzagging to make himself a more difficult target
Craker was running flat-out now, widening the gap between them.
"Helen? Helen? Can you hear me?"
A high, serrated ridge sliced across the terrain like a giant saw.
Its slope was steep, and there was little cover. Bolan halted behind a boulder,
unwilling to expose himself. Craker, though, was sprinting toward the top as
if he were taking part in the Boston marathon.
The soldier's every instinct told him this was where Sprague would
spring his trap. It was ideal for a sniper. Charata would have a clear view of
the ridge from any of half a dozen points.
Hefting the Remington, Bolan moved on. The short hairs at his nape
prickled as he crossed open space to a small bush.
"Helen? Helen?" Craker was puffing and panting but
forging higher hi search of his sweetheart.
Bolan spotted her first. Paisley had been tied to a stunted tree
near the top, her wrists and ankles bound, a gag over her mouth. She was gazing
wide-eyed at Craker, who had yet to realize she was there. Tugging at the
ropes, she shook her head, as if to warn him off, and it was her frenzied
movement that caught Craker's eye and stopped him hi his tracks.
"Helen! There you are!"
Paisley struggled harder, arcing her body, uttering muffled cries.
"Hold on!" Craker cried, renewing his ascent, his legs
flying. "I'll have you free in a jiffy!" But a clod of dirt rolled
out from under him and he tripped. His gaze glued to Paisley, he scrambled
higher on his hands and knees.
Bolan started to go around the bush. Suddenly, there was a
whizzing noise and a tiny limb beside his cheek flew against his face.
Flattening, he swiveled, with no idea where the suppressed shot came from. The
tall grass obstructed his vision. All he could see were the tops of the trees.
"Hang on, Helen!"
The soldier crawled to the right, toward an isolated boulder. He
barely moved the stems, yet it was enough for Charata. Three slugs tore into
the soil just inches from his body. Bolan fought an urge to rise and bang off
an answering shot.
A new element was added to the mix when Alexander Sprague called
out from up on the ridge. "We meet again, mystery man! I knew you wouldn't
let Bernie come alone. But it would be better for you if he had, eh?"
Bolan didn't respond. Instead he carefully parted the grass and
crabbed forward. Again gunfire thudded into the earth next to him, and this
time when they stopped, Bolan pushed up into a crouch and covered the final
twenty feet to the boulder in a rush.
As the soldier dropped behind it stony chips zinged the air.
Charata missed by a hair.
Bolan was temporarily safe, but he was pinned down. He couldn't
lift his head a fraction above the boulder without having it blown off.
Twisting, he glanced up the slope to see how Craker was faring.
The scientist had reached Paisley and wrapped his
arms around her, hugging her as if afraid to let her go. He was
beside himself with joy. She, on the other hand, was frantically bobbing her
head and mouthing muted sounds in a desperate effort to get him to untie her.
A throaty chuckle came from a thicket to the left of the tree.
"How touching, Bernie! What a sentimentalist you are!"
Craker spun, his bony fists clenched. "Sprague! Show
yourself! I dare you!"
"Oh, please, Bernie," Sprague chided. "Credit me
with more maturity, will you? While my associate attends to your ally, you may
free your lady. But don't attempt to flee. I have given Charata orders to shoot
her if you do."
Bolan faced the tree line. The two scientists would be all right
as long as they did what Sprague wanted. He could concentrate on the
Argentinian. Sliding the Remington outward, he aligned his eye to the scope.
Pines, firs and deciduous trees came into clear focus. Bolan
slowly roved the scope from right to left and from the bottoms of the trees to
their tops. The grass swayed but didn't draw more fire. Charata had guessed
what he was up to and was playing it cagey.
Bolan remembered the camouflage clothing the killer wore at
Bayside Park. He searched for any unusual pattern, any patch of greenery that
seemed out of place. As good as camouflage suits were, they didn't render the
wearer invisible. Only hard to see unless a person knew what to look for.
Sprague had turned his attention from the two scientists.
"Mystery man! Can you see me?"
Bolan didn't bother to look up. He was scanning the lower limbs of
a large oak. Something about them
wasn't quite right, but he couldn't pinpoint what it was.
"I can see you!" Sprague called down. "I see you
trying to find my bodyguard! Would you like to know where he is?"
It wasn't the limbs, Bolan realized, it was the leaves. A clump of
them seemed thicker than they should be.
"Bartolome!" Sprague bawled. "The American is to
the right of the boulder!"
Damn! Bolan mentally swore, and rolled to the left Even as he did,
the earth was pockmarked by five or six rounds, one after the other. Bolan
extended the rifle again, toward the same tree, but before he could look
through the scope, Sprague hollered to the Argentinian.
"Now he is to the left of it!"
Bolan flipped directly behind the boulder a split-second ahead of
the scorching lead mat thudded into the ground where he had just been. Rolling
onto his back, he scoured the thicket above for the Frenchman.
Sprague laughed long and loud. "What is the matter,
American? You seem a trifle upset But I warned you, did I not? I told you to
stay out of this. Too bad you are as stubborn as most Americans."
Slanting the Remington upward, Bolan squeezed the trigger. He
fired at where he thought Sprague's voice was coming from, and he had to have
pegged it right because a string of lusty French oaths resulted. When next
Sprague called down to nun, he had changed position.
"Clever, mystery man. Very clever. But you only delay the
inevitable."
As much as Bolan hated to admit it Sprague was
right. He had to find better cover or eventually Charata would
nail him. Fifteen yards to the right were two more boulders, both about waist
high and twice as wide as the one he was behind. They'd offer excellent
protection.
Lying prone, Bolan peered through the scope at the large oak. The
batch of leaves was different. They were no longer as thick as they had been.
So it had been Charata, after all, and he was changing position.
In an instant Bolan was upright and racing toward those boulders.
He was halfway there when a slug zipped by him and zinged off one of the rocks.
Bending, Bolan weaved like a tight end going for a goal. He heard Sprague bellow
for the Argentinian to shoot
Charata tried to drop him, squeezing off three more shots in swift
succession, but Bolan flung himself behind the twin boulders unscathed.
Sprague was beside himself. He railed at his bodyguard, saying,
"What is wrong with you, Bartolome? Are you losing your edge? There was a
time when you never missed. If you can't do what I pay you for, I'll find
someone who can."
The criticism, Bolan reflected, could work to his advantage. The
Argentinian might want to prove to his boss that he still had what it took to
get the job done. And an overeager shooter was one who made mistakes.
Bolan leaned against the left-hand boulder and slid the Remington
through the space between them. He panned the rifle back and forth but no
movement registered anywhere in the vegetation.
Sprague, oddly enough, had fallen silent. Bolan glanced toward the
top, wondering if the clever
Frenchman was up to something, but all he saw was Craker
feverishly untying Helen Paisley.
Applying his eye to the scope once again, Bolan shifted his
attention to the boulder field. He divided it into grids and swept one after
the other. Just when he had about convinced himself that Charata had to still
be in the trees, he glimpsed a leg sliding behind a horseshoe-shaped outcropping.
With the superb patience of a seasoned sniper, Bo-lan waited for
the Argentinian to show himself. Any part of Charata would do, an arm, a leg,
but preferably the head. He studied the outer edges of the outcropping, one
side and then the other. As a result, he almost missed a hint of motion down
low, at the base.
Charata had extended the Parker-Hale Model 85 through a cleft at
the bottom. The suppressor and part of the barrel were visible, as was a vague
semicircle of shadow that might be Charata's forehead.
Bolan centered the scope's crosshairs on that half circle, held
his breath to steady his ami and fired. He saw the Argentinian's rifle jerk,
saw it slide back from sight. Had he done it? Had he inflicted a mortal wound?
The answer wasn't long in coming.
High-caliber rounds spanged above Bolan's head. Chips and shards
rained, some getting into his eyes, causing them to water. Blinking to clear
them, he pulled back from the opening.
Charata was still alive, still as deadly as ever.
it was the single greatest moment of Bernie Craker's entire
life. The moment when Helen Paisley held him to her breast, kissed him on the
cheek, and said, "I'm sorry. So sorry. Can you ever forgive me?"
"A silly question," Craker said, grinning. "I'd forgive
anything you did." And he would. He adored her that much.
Paisley blinked, then examined his features as if she had never
seen them before. "I've brought so much grief down on our heads. All
because I wanted to get rich quick. And now look at us."
"There's hope yet," Craker said. "That man down
there is on our side. He promised to help."
"Can he keep us out of prison?" Paisley asked sadly.
"After what I've done, they'll toss me into a cell and throw away the
key."
"I told you before," Craker reminded her. "I'll do
whatever it takes to keep that from happening."
Paisley hugged him again, and Craker luxuriated in the warmth of
her body and the scent of her hair. He would give anything, including his very
soul, if only that special moment would last forever and ever.
Reality intruded in the form of Alexander Sprague, holding the
transport case in one hand and a silver-plated pistol in the other. "How
romantic! But I must ask the two of you to stand and put your hands in the air.
Please."
Craker had been so overwhelmed by Paisley's tenderness that he
had completely forgotten about the Frenchman. "What do you want now?"
"Your indulgence. Kindly rise and move a little lower so your
friend down below can see you better."
Paisley obeyed, her arms overhead. Craker followed. "What
good will this do you?" he asked.
"All the good in the world, my young friend. I'll give the
mystery man, as I call him, a choice. He either surrenders his weapon or I'll
shoot both of you."
"He'll never do it. The Piranha Molecule is all he's
interested in."
"Let us pray, for your sake, that you're wrong."
bolan was ranging the scope over the jagged outcropping for
the tenth time when he was hailed from on high. Turning, he took in the
situation at a glance.
"Drop your rifle and step out," Alexander Sprague
shouted. "I trust I need not stress the consequences if you refuse."
Craker and Paisley were shoulder to shoulder, the woman so
frightened she was quaking, Craker's chin jutting in defiance. "Don't do
it!" he hollered. "Kill the son of a bitch!"
Bolan would like nothing better, but Sprague was behind them, only
part of the left side of his chest and his leg visible.
"I'll give you ten seconds," the Frenchman yelled.
"Ten seconds to decide the fate of two people. Choose wisely."
Bolan didn't need ten. He didn't need five. Whipping up the
Remington, he snapped the McMillan stock to his shoulder. It was a difficult
shot, what with the elevation and the angle and the fact he had to shoot between
Craker and Paisley, who were inches apart But Bolan never hesitated. He
stroked the trigger cleanly, smoothly, and fifty-two yards up the ridge Sprague
hurtled backward, crashing onto his back, motionless.
An enraged howl rose from the outcropping. Bolan raised up to
look, then dropped down as Bartolome Charata unleashed a steady stream of
heavy-caliber vengeance, firing shot after shot, emptying the Parker-Hale's
20-round magazine in a burst of raw fury.
Chips of stone pelted the soldier's head and shoulders. When it
stopped, Bolan hiked up the Remington again, but Charata was nowhere to be
seen. Thinking the killer had gone behind the outcropping, Bolan bided his
time, his finger on the trigger.
A minute elapsed. Something moved at the periphery of the lens,
and Bolan pivoted to find that the Argentinian had shifted positions once more
and was rising from behind a boulder fifteen feet to the right of the
outcropping.
For an instant they trained their scopes on each other.
Bolan wrenched aside as Charata fired. The slug tugged at his
jacket, ripping the material. He took hasty aim, but the Argentinian was gone.
Kneeling, Bolan stuck a finger into the wide slit, noting how close the bullet
had come. Another inch and it would have shattered his bone and rendered his
arm useless.
The soldier glanced back up the slope. Sprague was still on his
back, his limbs flung out. Craker and Paisley had sought cover behind the
stunted tree and were holding each other. She appeared to be weeping.
Bolan began to replace the spent cartridges. He considered
changing positions, but he'd need to cross a lot of open space to reach the
next available cover. It was smarter for him to stay.
"Gringo!"
Bolan was stunned. To have the bodyguard call out to him was
unprofessional, and if there was one thing that could be said about the
Argentinian, he was a pro at his lethal craft.
The Executioner didn't answer.
"For killing Senor Sprague, yours will be a slow death!"
Bolan focused the scope on the boulder screening the killer but
didn't spot him. He did glimpse the suppressor attached to the end of the
Parker-Hale's barrel when it jutted into view. But only for a moment. The rifle
was promptly pulled back, as if Charata were going to fire but had changed his
mind.
For the longest time nothing happened. The Argentinian didn't
show himself, didn't call out. Bolan paid particular attention to the high
grass surrounding Charata's hiding place but saw no evidence the bodyguard
tried to crawl to a new vantage point.
A quarter of an hour passed. Up on the ridge, the two scientists
had leaned against the tree, Craker's arm around Paisley. Both had their eyes
closed, and Paisley's cheek rested on his chest. Craker was smiling in
contentment.
Bolan came to the conclusion that either Charata was playing a
waiting game, seeking to lure him into making a mistake, or else the
Argentinian was no longer behind the boulder.
Craker would be able to tell, but Bolan couldn't get his
attention. Although he waved his arm again and again, the lovesick scientist
never looked down.
Another tense fifteen minutes dragged by. Bolan never spied his
adversary. Lifting his head, he saw that Craker was gazing at him. Quickly he
pointed toward the boulder where Charata was concealed and then crooked his
forearms, his hands outstretched.
Craker understood. Nodding, he looked and looked, and after a
while signaled that he saw no sign of the killer.
Just as Bolan had suspected. Gripping the Remington, he crawled
to the left, off toward a mound of rocks and gravel. Exercising extreme
caution, he trav-
eled five yards, then ten. He was almost there when a warning cry
from Craker pierced the air.
"Look out! He's in the trees, ready to shoot! The trees! The
trees!"
Instantly Bolan thrust himself up and sprinted forward. As he
rose, a slug spewed a miniature dirt geyser where his head had just been. He
veered to one side, then to the other, as more slugs plowed into the earth.
Taking a long stride, Bolan leaped. He cleared the top of the
mound and landed hard on his shoulder. Tumbling to the bottom, he surged onto
his knees and swung toward the forest. But he didn't get off a shot. A slug
ripped into the mound, kicking dust in his face, forcing him to duck.
Bolan lay there a minute, wiping at his eyes. Then he inched to
the right, slid the Remington along the side of the mound and hunted for
Charata. The Argentinian was uncanny. How he had reached the tree line unseen,
Bolan would never know.
"He's moved!" Craker shouted. "I don't know where
he is now!"
Bolan broke his silence to yell a warning. "Stay down! He
might try to pick off the two of you!" With Sprague gone, the killer had
no reason to keep them alive.
Craker immediately pulled Paisley to the base of the tree trunk.
The breeze had died. Not a twig, not a pine needle, stirred
anywhere in the woods. Bolan swept the entire tree line once, and when he
couldn't spot Charata, he examined one tree at a time, one shadow at a time.
Bolan resisted a rising sense of frustration. The killer proved
elusive. Finally he saw movement. He
tensed expectantly, but it was only a solitary jay flitting from
tree to tree.
There was no trace of Charata. He lowered the lens to the bottom
but saw only brush. He was about to look elsewhere when a rippling motion
caught his eye. Riveted, he saw a patch of weeds bend to the passage of an
unseen form.
Bolan settled the crosshairs on the center of those weeds and
stroked the trigger. The weeds thrashed violently, and out of them heaved
Bartolome Charata, a brawny hand clasped to his ribs.
Bolan had scored! He aimed at Charata's head, but the killer
dodged behind the tree. The Executioner hoped the Argentinian would show himself
again, but no such luck. When it became apparent more waiting was in order,
Bolan replaced the cartridge he had ejected.
Minute after tense minute. Few men could take the strain of the
sustained wait, but Bolan was used to it. He had trained as a sniper, had honed
his marksmanship—and bis patience—to the ultimate degree. He could wait
forever.
Bernie Craker, however, couldn't. "How much longer?" he
hollered. "I want to get this over with!"
The scientist wasn't the only one. It made no sense to Bolan for
Craker to be in any great hurry, since the scientists were going straight to
the Feds—whether they wanted to go or not. Their change of heart was
commendable, but they had murdered four people. They still had to answer for
their crimes.
Suddenly Craker cried out, and Helen Paisley screamed. Both threw
themselves onto their bellies, Craker covering her with his own body. Slugs were
striking the stunted tree, pockmarking the trunk, send-
ing shards flying. Charata had gotten around to disposing of
them, but the angle was such that his shots were too high.
Bolan scoured the vegetation. He was roving the scope at ground
level when a foot appeared at the top of the lens. It was dangling from a low
limb on which Charata was roosting. Bolan could see the Parker-Hale's barrel
and Charata's fingers on the fore-end, but not Charata's head or body. Not a
vital organ.
So Bolan focused on the dangling foot, aligning the crosshairs
with the Argentinian's ankle. He fired, the recoil kicking against his
shoulder. He saw the ankle explode in a bloody spray of shattered bone.
The killer involuntarily reached down to clutch at himself. For a
moment Charata's swarthy features and raven hair were in plain sight.
Recognizing the mistake he had made, Charata glanced up, directly toward Bolan.
The Executioner held the crosshairs squarely on Charata's
forehead. Again he stroked the trigger.
Traveling at a rate of close to three thousand feet per second,
the .308 slug ripped through the Argentinian's skull from front to back,
tearing through flesh and bone as if they were papier-mache. Charata jerked as
the rear of his cranium splattered the tree and undergrowth, then gravity took
over and he toppled, sprawling in a lifeless pile.
Bolan slowly stood. It was over.
The Executioner cradled the Remington and turned toward the
slope. All that remained was the mopping up. He'd contact Brognola, turn over
the two scientists and the Piranha Molecule to the Feds, and head for Stony Man
for some well-deserved rest.
Bernie Craker and Helen Paisley had risen and stepped out from
behind the tree. Craker had his arm around Paisley, who had stopped crying but
looked miserable.
Bolan headed toward them. He needed to take possession of the
transport case. While he was at it, he would confirm Alexander Sprague was
dead.
Some brush blocked the soldier's view of the body. Climbing on
past, he shielded his eyes from the sun's bright glare and looked for the body.
Only it wasn't there. Bolan hurried higher, raking the slope, telling himself
it couldn't be. He was sure he had shot the Frenchman through the chest, and if
it hadn't been a fatal wound, it should have been severe enough to prevent
Sprague from going very far.
Craker and Paisley were descending, the woman leaning on her
companion's shoulder.
"Where's Sprague?" Bolan called up. More to the point he
asked, "Where's the case with the vials?"
The two scientists stopped, stunned. Craker let go
of Paisley and ran over to the spot where Sprague had fallen.
"How can this be? I saw him go down!" Stooping, he touched several
moist, scarlet drops. "Here's some blood! You definitely hit him!"
Bolan already knew that. Sprinting the rest of the way, he
examined the soil himself. Scuff marks and handprints told the story. While he
had been occupied with Charata and while the scientists had cowered by the
tree, Alexander Sprague revived and crawled to the thicket, dragging the metal
case with him. Once there, Sprague had risen and shuffled to the south, around
the thicket and into a gully that slashed the ridge from top to bottom.
"Damn," the soldier swore.
There was no telling how much of a lead Sprague had. Maybe half an
hour, maybe more. And he was heading for Miami River Road.
"Do your best to keep up with me," Bolan instructed the
scientists, and to keep them in line, he added, "Don't try anything. I'll
find you." He didn't think Craker would attempt to run off, but he
wouldn't put it past Paisley.
Breaking into a ran, Bolan went after the Frenchman, guided by
random tracks and drops of blood. The footprints showed that Sprague had gained
strength the farther he went After a while Sprague had stopped staggering and
strode along at a brisk walk, stopping occasionally, perhaps to catch his
breath. Apparently, though, the wound wasn't anywhere near as serious as Bolan
had imagined.
The soldier ran as fast as he could. He was worried he would be
too late, that Sprague would be long gone, that all his effort would have been
for nothing. The metallic rasp of a car door being opened fueled him
with hope and made him run faster. Hurtling through the
undergrowth, Bolan saw asphalt ahead. A second later he spied the Lincoln.
Sprague was leaning against it, breathing heavily, one hand on the
door handle. In his other hand was the transport case. A wide red stain marked
the left side of his chest.
Bolan didn't shout a warning. He didn't ask the Frenchman to drop
the case and raise his arms. Stopping cold, he snapped the Remington to his
shoulder and fixed a quick bead on Sprague's sternum.
Just as Bolan fired, the Frenchman moved. The slug meant for
Sprague's heart nicked his side instead. Jarred against the Lincoln, he lost
his hold on the case.
As Bolan worked the bolt, he saw Sprague glance down at the
transport case, then into the woods, at him.
Self-preservation and greed were pitted against each other and
self-preservation won. Sprague threw himself inside, slammed the door and bent
low, below the window.
Bolan burst forward as the engine growled to life. He was only ten
yards from the road when the Lincoln sped off to the north, swerving
erratically for thirty or forty feet before steadying. Bolan brought up the Remington,
ready to shoot at the back of Sprague's head, at a tuft of hair, at anything,
but the wily Frenchman didn't rise high enough.
Another few seconds and the car took a curve, its tires
screeching, and was gone.
Bolan shifted to run to the sedan, but caught himself. He
couldn't give chase. The vials and the scientists were more important. Picking
up the transport case, he waited for Craker and Paisley to catch up. They were
panting hard, nearly out of breath.
"He got away?" Craker said in dismay.
"He thinks he has," Bolan said. There would be a
reckoning, though. Bolan wouldn't rest until Alexander Sprague was found.
"What now?" Paisley asked.
"My car is isn't far. Start walking."
Wrapping her arms around herself, Paisley hiked southward in
despair. "I can't stand the thought of prison," she mournfully
remarked.
Craker tenderly touched her shoulder. "Remember my promise?
I'll find a way out for us. Wait and see."
"Quit deluding yourself," Paisley said testily.
"Once we're taken into custody, that will be that It'll be goodbye,
Bernie. Maybe hi twenty or thirty years, after we've served our time, you can
look me up and we'll have a drink together."
"I couldn't live with the thought of being separated,"
Craker said.
Paisley began to cry. Only a few tears and sniffles at first, but
harder as they neared the sedan. When they halted, she squatted, buried her
face in her forearms and wept uncontrollably.
Craker stood beside her, wringing his hands.
Bolan walked past mem, set the transport case on the hood and
opened the door. Leaning inside, he slid the Remington into the rifle case,
shoved in the box of ammo and zipped the case shut Then, leaning against the
passenger door, he turned.
The transport case was no longer on the hood. It was on the
ground, open. Bernie Craker had a syringe in his hand, and as the soldier
looked on, the scientist jabbed the needle into Helen Paisley's nape.
"No!" Bolan cried, springing toward them.
Craker yanked the half-empty syringe out as Paisley
began to rise. Whirling, he flicked it toward the soldier, not
really trying to stab him, only to keep him at bay.
Bolan halted in midstride. One nick was all it might take to put
him in an early grave. "Put it down!" he commanded, drawing the
Beretta.
Craker smiled. "I'm sorry, but I can't." Reversing his
grip, Craker buried the needle hi his own neck. Then, grunting, he wrenched it
out again, cast the syringe aside and took a single step to bring his foot
crashing down on the vials in the transport case, crunching them into shards.
"Oh God!" Helen Paisley wailed, overcome by sheer
terror. "You didn't, Bernie! Please tell me you didn't!"
Love radiated from Craker's eyes. "You'll never spend a day
behind bars, just like I promised."
"No! No! No!" Paisley screamed, and went on screaming as
her face oozed inward, folding in on itself like a deflating basketball. She
tried to speak but her lips were no more than floppy flaps of flesh. All that
came out were pathetic whines and whimpers. Her left eye sank into her cheek,
then both cheeks melted away.
Craker continued to smile. "Thank you," he said to Bolan
a second before the transformation commenced. His features lost all semblance
of humanity.
Side by side, they fell. Side by side they quivered and rippled as
the Piranha Molecules devoured their bones. Soon they were identical blobs,
distinguished only by the clothes they had worn and the color of their hair.
Bolan walked over. All the vials were broken, the
nanites destroyed. Craker had taken the secret of their creation
with him. The Piranha Molecule was no more.
Two months later.
A storm had rolled in off
the Atlantic Ocean and the day was cold and overcast. A steady drizzle pelted
the windshield of the rented Volvo Mack Bolan was driving southward along the
major highway to Bordeaux. He turned off at La Rochelle and followed a narrow,
winding road toward the coast.
In spite of the rain the scenery was beautiful. Any other
occasion, and Bolan might have been in a better frame of mind to appreciate it.
The Aquitanian Lowlands, as they were called, consisted of rolling plains,
pines forests, and, along the shore, fine beaches. Vineyards were a staple.
France's famous wine industry depended on them for a goodly share of the
country's annual production.
Bolan picked up the map from the seat beside him and consulted the
route that had been highlighted by a yellow marker. Another couples of miles
would do it
A lovely Frenchwoman on a bicycle appeared, her head bent low
against the rain. She smiled and waved as if he were her neighbor, and he
returned the favor.
Bolan almost missed the cutoff. Bordered by cypress trees, it was
well hidden, and had he not been looking for it, he would have driven by. The
road narrowed even more, and was barely wide enough for his vehicle, let alone
two. When a car came the other way, as happened twice, he had to pull over to let
them pass.
There were few houses, fewer people. Bolan soon came to a stretch
of dunes, steered in among them a short distance and parked. Climbing out, he
walked to the trunk. Inside was a long brown case, which he slung over a
shoulder.
It was only a quarter of a mile to the ocean. Standing at the
water's edge, Bolan gazed out over the choppy waves, then looked south. He had
the beach all to himself until he spotted a dwelling ahead.
Venturing into the dunes again, Bolan climbed to the top of one of
the highest A panoramic view of the sea, the shoreline, and the quaint cottage
spread before him. Fog hung off the coast, awaiting nightfall when it would
crawl inland.
Kneeling, the soldier opened the brown case. Inside was a
Weatherby Mark V Safari Grade big game rifle. One of Bolan's personal
favorites, the Weatherby was as reliable and accurate as any gun ever made.
Sliding out the rifle, Bolan loaded it. The rain couldn't be
helped. Later he would dry and clean the rifle from muzzle to stock.
Removing the caps on both ends of the telescope sight, Bolan
studied the cottage. It had three, maybe four rooms, modest by any standard,
hardly the sort of place a person would expect to find one of the wealthiest
men in Europe.
A light glowed in a window. Bolan adjusted the scope and saw a
sofa and a cabinet. A shadow drifted across the pane, but he couldn't see who
caused it
Bolan had deliberately arrived early. He didn't want to leave
anything to chance. To keep the rifle from getting wetter than it already was,
he draped the brown leather case over it. Then, pulling his jacket up over
his head, Bolan crossed his arms and rested his chin on his wrist.
As the drops pattered the sand hi a ceaseless barrage, Bolan was
reminded of another rainy day nearly eight weeks ago, in Oregon. He had stood
hi a cemetery watching as Bernard Craker's coffin was lowered into the ground.
No one else was there. Because no one else knew.
The Feds had shipped a different, sealed, coffin back east to
Craker's relatives. The powers that be didn't want the truth getting out,
didn't want it to become public knowledge that science was capable of creating
vile monsters like the Piranha Molecule. So Craker's family was never told the
truth. The Feds told them a fabricated story about how he'd died in a tragic
lab accident. The same with Paisley, who was buried beside Craker.
Bolan couldn't rightly say what spurred him to attend the burial.
Maybe because he'd felt sorry for Craker.
No one was pleased with how the affair ended. Hal Brognola regretted
the loss of valuable new Nanotechnology years ahead of its time. The president
of Nanotech had been upset by the loss of potential revenue to his firm. No
one, it seemed, was particularly saddened by Craker's and Paisley's deaths.
They got what they deserved.
Now, as the rain along the coast of France slackened, Bolan gave
a toss of his head to dispel the memory, unzipped his jacket and stuck his
hands underneath to wipe them dry on his shut.
The crash of the surf droned on and on.
At length the door opened. A shadowy figure, pull-
ing the collar of his raincoat up to his ears, stepped into the
open.
Bolan slid the leather case off the Weatherby. Wiping a few
raindrops from the scope, he molded it to his eye. The magnified image showed
every wrinkle, every hair. The man's face bore the same arrogant, cruel lines
Bolan had memorized.
Alexander Sprague stared out to sea, then inhaled deeply and
smiled in total contentment. He thought he was safe. He was wrong.
Bolan had the mastermind dead to rights, but he didn't fire. Not
yet. He waited to see which direction Sprague would walk. When the Frenchman
turned to the north, toward the dunes, toward him, Bolan smiled.
The Executioner was primed to shoot, his trigger finger was
curled. But he let Alexander Sprague come closer, steadily closer. So close
that when Bolan suddenly stood with the Weatherby tucked to his shoulder, the
Frenchman glanced up in alarm. Sprague recognized him immediately.
Then, and only then, did the crack of the big game rifle rumble
off across the beach like thunder.