Fire Zone. Don Pendleton
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He had only one more bit of intel to gather. It was surprisingly easy to find the manifests for each of the looted vaults. He kept a running inventory in his head as he read the numbers.
When he finished the tally he stood and stared out the doors where the truck had left.
Three-quarters of a ton of gold stolen. Fifteen thousand pounds. Well over ten million dollars.
His strides long and determined, Bolan left the building, found a car that could be hot-wired easily and roared off in pursuit of the thieves. They couldnât be more than a few hours ahead of him. With that much of a load on the narrow, winding road leading down into Boise, they wouldnât be able to match his breakneck pace.
2
The Executioner drove expertly and far too fast for the narrow gravel road. The mining company had maintained the road well, but hitting ninety in the straightaways and only dropping to sixty in the sharp turns took its toll on his acquired car. Every turn left that much more rubber behind and caused an increasingly uneven ride. Before long the punishment he dished out to the car caused the engine to begin sputtering.
He let up on the gas just a little when he saw an eighteen-wheeler lumbering along ahead. He was still miles outside Boise, and a quick mental calculation of the distance traveled told him this could be the stolen gold. Using the engine compression to brake, he took his foot off the accelerator and coasted into a slot directly behind the truck so that he ran in its blind spot only inches away from the bumper. The driver would have seen him approaching and by now had to know something was wrong. If he slammed on the brakes, Bolan would have to act instantly.
Such a sudden stop was what he expected. That was what he would do to try to get rid of the annoying tail he presented if the roles were reversed. But the driver tapped his brakes, sounded his horn and began slowing gradually. Suspecting a trap, the Executioner followed suit until both truck and car were at a dead stop.
He slid the .50-caliber pistol from its holster and got out of the car. Holding the heavy Desert Eagle at his side, he edged around cautiously. The truck driver had already exited the cab, looking madder than hell.
âWhat do you think youâre doing? This ainât a demolition derby!â
The man waved his arms around like a windmill. Bolan didnât see a weapon but recognized the tactic as a diversion. He ducked away, looked under the eighteen-wheeler but saw no one trying to sneak up on him from the other side. He did hear muffled noises from inside the truck.
Whirling back, he lifted his pistol. The sight of the huge bore pointed in his direction caused the driver to gasp. His mouth dropped open. He tried to speak but no words came out, and his flailing arms stopped their wild motion as he held them high above his head.
âWhatâs in the back?â
âIâ¦you a cop?â
âOpen it.â
The driver swallowed hard and shuffled around, keeping an eye on Bolan and the pistol in his hand. With his fist he banged twice on the door and yelled, âMr. Kersey, Iâm openinâ up.â The driver lifted the locking rod and stepped away when the door swung open.
Bolan was prepared for a hail of bullets. He was not expecting a man and several frightened women looking out.
âWhatâs going on?â
âMr. Kersey, he drove up behind and stopped me and stuck that gun in my face andââ
âShut up.â Bolan wanted answers. âWhy are you in the rear of a semi?â
âAre you some kind of police officer?â
âIâm asking, youâre answering.â
âWell, put that damn thing down. My nameâs Jerome Kersey and Iâm the superintendent of the Lucky Nugget Mine. I work for Lassiter Industries andââ
âYouâre all employees?â
âWhoâd you think we were? You ordered us to evacuate, and my staff and I were the last ones out. We had to get into this semi because you said the roads were clogged and didnât want a lot of cars adding to the traffic jam. You are from the State Police, right?â
Jerome Kersey looked around and frowned when he didnât see any marked patrol cars.
âWhatâs going on? I did what you people asked, and now youâre pointing a gun at me!â
âWho told you to evacuate?â
âThe state police.â
Bolanâs mind worked fast. He saw the huddle of men and women behind the mine supervisor and knew these werenât gold thieves. There was no point in asking for ID.
âSorry about this,â he said, holstering his pistol. âWere you told to ship out the gold bullion from the mine?â
âNo, of course not,â Kersey said. âThat was all locked in the storage vaults.â Then his eyes narrowed as he looked hard at Bolan. âWhat are you saying?â
Bolan motioned him out of the truck and to one side where they wouldnât be overheard. He gave the man a quick once-over and saw no suspicious bulges where a gun might be hidden or a knife sheathed.
âI donât have much time, so listen carefully and answer fully,â Bolan said. Kersey started to protest. He was in charge of hundreds of employees and was used to giving orders, not taking them. The look on his tall, dark-haired interrogatorâs face shut him up. He nodded once.
âThe security guards left at the mine are all dead.â
âDead?â
âThe gold has been removed from the storage vaults. I estimate about three-quarters of a ton was taken.â
âI donât have the exact figures, but that would be close.â Kersey had gone white with shock at realizing the magnitude of his loss. Bolan doubted his reaction was from hearing that his guards were dead. The theft of all the gold would be a career-ending event. âWho did it?â
âIâm trying to find out. How long have you been away from the mine?â
âThirty minutes, maybe a little longer.â
This surprised Bolan. The gold thieves were even more expert than he had thought. Kersey and his staff had barely left the mine before the thieves had moved in. With this new information for his timeline, Bolan doubted killing the guards had taken more than five minutes. That meant the thieves had loaded just shy of a ton of gold and transported it before he had arrived. The slice of time allotted