Home > Crooked River(81)

Crooked River(81)
Author: Douglas Preston ,Lincoln Child

“This is it,” the doctor said.

“Where does it go?”

“It leads through a parking lot, through a gate, and to the road to the river.”

Pendergast turned to Alves-Vettoretto. She shrugged and shook her head. He leaned into the door, opened it a crack, and peered out. Then he pushed it open and gestured for them to follow, weapons raised. As the door opened wide, Coldmoon could hear the wail of sirens grow suddenly louder.

“You don’t need me anymore,” said the doctor, beginning to scurry off.

“Not so fast,” Coldmoon said, grabbing the man and giving him a hard shove. “You’re staying with us.”

They came out into a side parking lot, with rows of jeeps, Humvees, and transport trucks. Rain was falling, blown in gusts, and a flash of lightning lit up the clouds, followed by a distant rumble. Klieg lights from the tower above were roaming over the area. They pressed themselves against the wall of the building as a beam passed.

Pendergast looked at Alves-Vettoretto. “Are you going to be able to do this?”

She nodded mutely.

“Stay close,” said Pendergast. He darted out across an open area and crouched beside a truck as the others followed. Another light passed nearby and Coldmoon could see a line of soldiers moving along the far wall, arms at the ready.

“Where’s the gate?” Pendergast asked the doctor.

“In that far wall,” the doctor replied. “Beyond the big truck, to the right.”

“Is it guarded?”

“Yes, but it’s the least defended gate into the complex.”

“And beyond that?”

“Nothing but a ruined courtyard. Then the road down to the river.”

Pendergast and Coldmoon rose cautiously and peered over the hood of the truck. Through the rain they could see the gate, lit up, manned by four soldiers on high alert. Another patrol, jogging alongside the wall, rounded the corner and they ducked down.

“Beyond that courtyard, how far to the river?” Pendergast asked.

“About a quarter mile.”

Pendergast, crouching, moved alongside the truck, then sprinted across another open area to hunker down behind a Humvee. The rest caught up behind him. The tower lights roamed this way and that. After waiting a moment for the lights to pass, they dashed to another vehicle, and then another, approaching the gate.

Now the patrolling squad of soldiers appeared again, moving through the center of the parking lot, the men spread out with portable spotlights, probing among the dark array of vehicles.

Pendergast gestured for them all to crouch down and wait.

The soldiers wound through the vehicles, every once in a while shining a beam inside or underneath one. They were speaking to each other by radio in low voices, moving swiftly.

As the soldiers neared their hiding place, Coldmoon braced himself; if they were discovered, there would be nothing for it but to engage in a firefight, two against ten. But discovery wasn’t a given—at the rate they were moving, there were many more vehicles than the soldiers could inspect thoroughly. It was a fast sweep.

He held his breath as he heard, through the sound of the rain, the murmuring of the soldiers into their walkie-talkies.

Suddenly, the doctor jumped up, waving his arms and crying out shrilly. “It’s me, Dr. Smith! Don’t shoot, I’m the chief doctor. I have hostages—!”

Two simultaneous bursts of gunfire cut him almost in half, opening him up like a ripe papaya. But the doctor’s treachery had caused the soldiers to pause, giving Coldmoon and Pendergast an opportunity to return fire. They dropped two soldiers before the others dove for cover.

Pendergast skittered around one side of the vehicle and fired again, gunning down one of the soldiers at the checkpoint.

“To the gate!” he shouted, taking Alves-Vettoretto by the arm and hauling her along.

But even as he spoke, a klieg light locked on them, bathing them in brilliant light and blocking their ability to see into the darkness beyond. They dove for cover behind a truck as the soldiers opened fire again, the rounds hammering through the metal above their heads, showering them with chips of paint and bits of canvas.

“If we can get past that gate, there’ll be cover in the woods,” Pendergast said to Coldmoon. “We’ll alternate movements. Lay down suppressing fire while I try to clear the gate. You first, then I’ll take her.” He turned to Alves-Vettoretto. “Are you ready?”

She nodded.

As Coldmoon gathered himself for a dash, Pendergast rose and fired once over the hood at the soldiers, forcing them to take cover again. Coldmoon dashed to the next vehicle, then readied himself to cover Pendergast and Alves-Vettoretto as they made their own dash. The gate was just two vehicles away now, and Coldmoon watched as Pendergast dropped another of its guards.

Coldmoon let loose with several bursts of suppressing fire as Pendergast scurried across, pulling Alves-Vettoretto along as he sprayed the gate with a dozen rounds of his own, dispatching its last two guards. Now all the klieg lights were on them as they crouched by the side of the last truck. It was brighter than day. More soldiers were surely on their way to the firefight.

“Ammo?” Pendergast asked.

He swiftly checked his magazine. “Christ, only one left. You?”

“One also. But the gate is clear.”

Just as he spoke, Coldmoon heard the crackle of a walkie-talkie on the far side of the gate. Shit. And behind them, he could see the soldiers in the parking lot moving toward them, spread out, darting from cover to cover.

“We’re surrounded,” Coldmoon said. “Only two rounds, and the bastards aren’t likely to let us surrender.”

“They’re going to kill us?” Alves-Vettoretto asked.

“What do you think?” said Coldmoon sarcastically.

There was brief moment of silence, a pause, as they stared at each other.

“Well,” said Pendergast, extending his hand. “You’ve been a fine partner.”

“You weren’t half-bad, either.”

They shook hands.

“You won’t tell anyone I said that, I presume?” Pendergast asked.

Despite their situation, Coldmoon laughed. “You wouldn’t have told me that if you thought I’d have a chance to repeat it.”

Another burst of fire tore into the truck they were crouching behind as the soldiers in the parking lot made a coordinated rush. Pendergast said, “Get ready,” and aimed his rifle, not at the approaching soldiers, but at the truck’s gas tank. He fired a round into it.

“What the—?” Coldmoon scrambled back as the truck erupted in fire, ready to blow. Pendergast grabbed Alves-Vettoretto and ran past the smoke and flame through the gate, Coldmoon following, firing his last round into the darkness ahead. As they came out the other side, into the old courtyard, a voice rang out.

“Drop your weapons! Hands up! Now!”

They had practically run into a squad of soldiers stationed just outside the gate, arranged in a semicircle, their weapons aimed squarely at the little group of three. Coldmoon looked around in a panic for a way to escape. Broken walls of weathered stone rose on two sides amid pallets of bricks, long forgotten and covered with kudzu. The gleam of the searchlight cast a ghostly pallor over everything. They were trapped.

“Drop your weapons!” barked the voice. “I won’t ask again!”

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