False Front. Don Pendleton
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The Executioner leaned down under the bumper. “Charlie!” he yelled over the cacophony. “You all right?”
“I’m not hit if that’s what you mean!” Latham yelled from beneath the vehicle. “But ‘all right’ might be stretching it a bit. I’ve been—” Yet another barrage of rifle fire drowned out whatever else he had to say.
Bolan had ascertained Latham was unharmed, but that could change at any second. There were still two men with pistols in front of the Cherokee. Still a pair of AK-47s blasting away near the front on the Cherokee’s passenger’s side. To reexamine his battle plan, it was imperative that he find out exactly how many men were still in the fight.
Round after round continued to bombard the Cherokee. Jamming the Desert Eagle into his belt, the Executioner quickly unscrewed the sound suppressor from the Beretta. There were times when you needed a quiet weapon. Other times you wanted noise and confusion. This situation fell into the latter category.
Bolan’s arm snaked around the rear bumper, firing a blind burst of three 9 mm rounds toward the two men still on the passenger’s side. Then, without hesitation, he leaned the other way and triggered the Desert Eagle twice.
Then he stood.
In the fraction of a second during which he was forced to make himself a perfect target, the Executioner saw three bodies on the ground—one he remembered shooting himself, the others evidently fallen to Latham’s Browning. Two other men stood near the corpses. They started to swing their AKs his way as the Executioner’s eyes skirted to the other side of the vehicle.
The two men he had left standing on that side still fired away full-auto. More shots—slower, from pistols—came from behind the parked cars in front of the Cherokee.
Bolan nodded to himself. That had to be where the phony accident victims had taken cover.
Bolan hunkered down behind the Cherokee a half second ahead of a thunderstorm of 7.62 mm rounds that now sailed his way. Dropping to his belly, he saw Latham’s shadowy form still under the car. The Texan turned to look at him as the Executioner squirmed beneath the bumper toward the right rear tire well. Latham lay on his back, the Browning Hi-Power aimed toward the passenger side of the vehicle. As the Executioner moved beneath the Jeep, his head passed within a foot of the Texan’s.
Latham turned to face him in the shadows. “What I was trying to say earlier, before we were so rudely interrupted,” he said, “was that I’ve been better.”
Bolan grinned as he moved in farther beneath the Cherokee. T. J. Hawkins had been right. Latham could definitely keep his cool under fire.
When he’d come as close as he dared to the edge of the vehicle, the Executioner could see two sets of legs from the knees down. Without hesitation, he extended both hands. The man on the right caught a .44 Magnum round in the shin. The man on the left took a 3-round burst of 9 mm rounds in an ankle. Both men fell to the ground, screaming. Mercy rounds from the Beretta ended their suffering.
The Executioner crawled backward again.
“How many left?” Latham whispered as he passed.
“Two to the right,” Bolan whispered back. “And the two guys faking the accident. Behind their cars.”
“I hit one of them on my way down here to this hobbit hole,” Latham said, looking up at the Jeep’s undercarriage. “Don’t think it killed him, though.”
Bolan emerged from beneath the back bumper, his brain taking in the fact that the quantity of return fire from the kidnappers had withered considerably. Part of that, he knew, came from the fact that many of the riflemen had been killed. But there was more to it than just that.
The kidnappers—if that’s what they really were—had outnumbered the Executioner and Latham twelve to one when the gunfight had begun. They’d planned on an easy snatch of two unarmed foreigners if ransom was their game. Or an easy kill if Subing had sent them to assassinate him. But now, regardless of their motives, within sixty seconds or so, they had lost three-quarters of their manpower. That had a way of playing on the mind and they had to be wondering just what kind of men they’d run into. Which, in turn, was causing them to hesitate.
Bolan leaned down beneath the bumper once more. “Roll out on the driver’s side and cover me,” he ordered Latham. “On three. One, two—”
The Executioner rose up as he said, “Three!” stepping out to the side of the Cherokee. The final two men who had emerged from the jungle on his side of the car had indeed been hesitating. But they had obviously made their decision.
They were one step away from returning to the brush when Bolan shot them with a double tap from the Desert Eagle.
In his peripheral vision, Bolan saw Latham standing next to the open driver’s door. The Texan held his Browning in both hands, sending a slow but steady stream of .40-caliber hollowpoint rounds into the parked vehicles. At this distance, the laser sight was unusable in the bright sun, but Latham was proving he could shoot without it.
The Executioner turned away from the road, leaping over the body of a man he’d shot earlier and darting into the leaves and vines. Quickly, while the men behind the vehicles were concentrating on Latham, he made his away through the foliage until he had gone past the point where the cars were parked.
From there, it was easy.
The Executioner saw that Latham had indeed hit one of the men high in the arm. The man had ripped half his shirt off and tied it around the wound in an attempt to staunch the blood. But the makeshift bandage wasn’t working; crimson fluid drained past his elbow and along the limp limb before splattering onto the asphalt.
Bolan flipped the Beretta selector switch to single shot. With plenty of time to use the sight, he lined the weapon up on the injured man and squeezed the trigger.
A lone 9 mm round streaked from the 93-R into the injured man’s temple.
The other man behind the car whipped his face over his shoulder to stare at the Executioner in shock. The reality of what was happening suddenly spread across his face and he tried to turn farther, swinging his pistol around with him. He didn’t make it.
A second 9 mm round entered his open mouth and blew out the back of his skull.
Suddenly what had sounded like a Chinatown fireworks factory exploding became as quiet as a graveyard. Bolan stepped out of the trees and walked forward. Quickly he stopped by each man he passed to be sure none of the bodies would suddenly rise from the grave to shoot again. All were dead.
The Executioner met Latham between the kidnappers’s parked cars and the Cherokee. “We’ve got to clean this place up and hope one of the vehicles still works,” he said, glancing over his shoulder to see the Ford Fairlaine resting on its rims, all four tires blown out. The Chevy had lost only one tire but water dripped from the punctured radiator. When he stepped forward, the distinct odor of gasoline filled the air. Turning back to the Cherokee, he saw that while the body was riddled with holes, all four tires were still intact. Bolan nodded at the vehicle. “See if it still starts,” he ordered Latham. “And while you’re there, grab my sound suppressor off the ground behind the rear bumper.”