Part 40 (1/2)

I rubbed my hand across the top of my head. The b.a.s.t.a.r.d had creased the top of my skull. My stolen glove came away covered in fresh blood to match the dried blood from earlier. ”You sure you got him?”

”Yes. It was one of the Brotherhood. I was a little off center, but with a .338 Lapua, you can be a little off. He won't be shooting back, that's for sure.”

I sure hoped she was right. I keyed the radio. ”Sniper down. Move. Move.” That was two Brothers dead. Through the trees, back the way we came, I could make out Shen and Fajkus, with Antoine hoisted between them. A split second later, two other shapes came running up behind them, Phillips and Roland. ”We'll catch up. Jill will walk you in to her position.”

”Moving,” Shen replied.

”Come on,” I said as I stood up, fully expecting to get shot by some yet unknown danger, and ran over to Svetlana. I squatted down next to her, so that she could clamber onto my back. My muscles ached and burned and I hoisted her up. She wasn't light.

”See? And you wanted me to drop my rifle,” the Russian insisted.

”You were right, that what you need to hear? Now hold on.” Now we had to sprint to the finish. We had to make it through some pretty thick brush, but so did our pursuers. It was a good thing I worked out a lot, because all I wanted to do right about then was curl up in a ball and die. I couldn't ever remember being this tired. Svetlana's bandaged hand was bouncing right in front of my face, and I tried to ignore the missing fingers, and concentrate on my footing, as I half ran, half stumbled forward.

”Lorenzo!” Reaper shouted in my ear. ”Your sniper's back.”

”Impossible!” Svetlana screamed in my good ear. ”I shot him in the chest.”

”Maybe you missed,” I suggested, but from what I knew about the Exodus sniper, I really doubted that.

”No. He must be wearing armor plates,” she spat.

From what I had seen earlier in the compound, I could a.s.sume that the Brother was probably a dead man walking, and it wouldn't make a lick of difference until his heart finally quit beating, d.a.m.n fanatical b.a.s.t.a.r.ds. ”Where, Reaper?”

”He's moving downhill. Wait, there's two of them. One's moving fast, and he's got a short gun with some big drum on it, the other's moving slow, like he's injured, and has an old-fas.h.i.+oned rifle.”

”s.h.i.+t!” I hunched forward so I could run faster. We were heading due north, the other survivors were ahead and slightly to the west. The Brothers were to our northeast, and if they could get ahead of the others or get into a position to slow us down, then we would be overtaken by the soldiers.

Svetlana must have realized the same thing that I was thinking. ”Get me to higher ground.”

LORENZO.

The River ”This is good!” Svetlana yelled in my good ear. ”Put me down.”

I lowered her as gently as possible, which wasn't very gentle considering that I had just sprinted up a rock slope with a hundred and fifty pound woman and her fourteen pound rifle on my back. We had a good view from here, with the river at our back and the forest below us. The Exodus survivors were almost out of the canyon, three quarters of a mile ahead of us. The ma.s.s of slave soldiers was even closer, and would be pa.s.sing below us in the next few minutes. I could already hear s.n.a.t.c.hes of their excited voices on the wind.

Svetlana grimaced as she dragged herself up and braced her Sako across a fallen log. ”There. That's where the Brothers will try to intercept.” She was aiming at another spot along the riverbank, between us and the others. ”They will have to get on top of that hill to get a shot, and then I'll have them.”

”Reaper. Status?” I commanded.

”The Brothers are heading toward the river, a hundred and fifty meters north of you. They're blocking your escape. And you've got a s.h.i.+tload of bad guys about to be on top of you. You've got to get out of there now!”

The sun was coming over the side of the canyon. I could clearly see the path I had to take to reach extraction. My best bet was to head right down the riverbank, right through the Brothers. It was rocky and uneven, and would be treacherous with Svetlana on my back, but it was the only way now.

”Pop these guys, and we've got to go.”

”We don't have time to wait for them. Go through the Brothers, and I'll cover you from here,” she stated.

I turned back to her. ”There's no way I can make it down there and back to get you and still make it.”

She gave me a tired smile. ”I know.”

”Bulls.h.i.+t,” I spat. ”I didn't carry you this far for nothing.”

”Go, Lorenzo. We're out of time.”

I started toward her, then hesitated. She was right. We had to take out the Brothers before they pinned down the others. There was no time to argue. I nodded once, hoisted my rifle, and turned to leave. It was suicide. Suddenly my eyes were burning.

”Wait!” she cried out. I spun, expecting her to have come to her senses. Instead, she had pulled her Makarov and set it on the ground next to her. ”Let me have your grenade.” I pulled the frag that I had found in the Exodus helicopter and pa.s.sed it back to her. She took it in her uninjured hand. and shoved it in the top of her coat. ”I'm not going to let them take me alive. Now hurry, I'll cover you as long as I can. Kill the Brothers.”

There was no time for sentiment. I sprinted down the riverbank in the direction of the next high spot, leaping from rock to rock. I kept the stock of my rifle against my shoulder, muzzle swinging wildly back and forth in front of me. I could hear the almost musical noise of the river flowing about twenty feet below. The rocks were slick, and the dirt between them had transformed into clingy mud. There was no way I could have made it with Svetlana in time. That didn't make it any easier.

”The Brothers are almost on top of the hill. Antoine's guys are still vulnerable for at least another minute,” Reaper warned. There was a loud BANG behind me as Svetlana engaged some of the approaching soldiers. I tried to go faster, but my boot streaked out from under me as it hit a damp stone and I fell painfully to the ground. I shoved myself back up and kept going. The bank was on my left, the hill to my front, and the forest to my right.

I was counting on the Brothers being focused on the others and not watching this direction. I was almost to the hill. It was more of a dirt pile, with one side eroded away by the sluggish river. Raising my rifle, I scanned, looking for movement. Something black pa.s.sed between the trees, running upward, his back toward me. I snapped the red dot onto him, led the target for just a split second, and fired. The black shape went down into the weeds. I continued running. I had to get to cover.

The other Brother appeared to my right, materializing out of the shadows, a stubby PPSh in his hands, the muzzle already flas.h.i.+ng. I flung myself face first into the mud as the bullets zipped overhead, tearing up rock chips and dirt around me. I was a dead man.

Then the shooting stopped. I waited for a moment, then popped up, looking for a target, but the Brother was gone.

”Got him!” Svetlana shouted over the radio.

”They're both still moving! I've got one heading north, one low crawling east.” Reaper said. ”Svetlana, you've got about ten soldiers in the open, due south of you.”

”d.a.m.n it,” I spat through a mouth full of mud and I rose and headed for the trees. These sons of b.i.t.c.hes were hard to kill. The one with the PPSh was wounded nearby in the trees, but I had to take out the one with the rifle right the h.e.l.l now.

”Lorenzo, you're on your own. I've got company,” Svetlana stated calmly, then she started hammering that big rifle.

I was in the trees now. There was blood on the bark of a nearby tree, and a splatter trail leading back into the brush. The Brother with the subgun was. .h.i.t bad. Maybe he would just do us a favor and crawl off to die. I picked my way through the woods. It was thick, dark, and tangled with underbrush. I kept heading uphill. I knew I was making too much noise, but I was exhausted, in a hurry, and out of my element.

There was a roar of a high-powered rifle ahead of me, and I instinctively ducked. But the Brother wasn't shooting at me. He was shooting at Shen and Antoine. Somebody screamed over the radio. I flipped my selector to full-auto and charged forward. I saw the Brother as he saw me. He turned, still working the bolt of his old M44. I didn't take any chances. I mashed the trigger and hosed the entire rest of the magazine into him. The Brother went down in a spray of fluids and meat, and tumbled over the side into the river below.

I dropped my spent mag, shoved my last one in, and slammed the bolt closed as I approached the edge. I hung over quickly, just to make sure. The Brother lay broken in a spreading cloud of red, half submerged in a shallow slush of ice. I took my time, aimed, and put a final round through the Brother's skull.

”Lorenzo, last one is coming up-” Reaper started to warn me, but I didn't hear the rest. Something small and black came sailing out of the trees and landed in the mud in front of me. Grenade! No time to think. I stepped back off the edge and plummeted into the river.

The grenade detonated above with a violent concussion. I braced myself to hit the water, but instead of a splash, there was a crunch as I smashed into an ice sheet. It shattered beneath me, and my legs plunged into unbelievable cold. It was shallow, and I hit the gravel bottom way too fast. It was like an electrical shock traveled up my legs as the ice water hit me. I fell over on my side, and then half my body was submerged in the freezing cold. I pulled myself back onto the ice, and rolled into the mud on the bank.

The final Brother appeared over the top, emotionless goggles studying me for a moment. I had to move, my numb legs clumsy beneath me. The PPSh came over the edge and the Brother ripped a long burst, the ice and water billowing up at my side. I jerked my rifle up and fired wildly at him. He disappeared back over the edge.

I stumbled to my feet and started downstream, wading through the water before he decided to toss another grenade. He must have been out, as he hung the subgun over the side and fired another burst. This one was even closer, striking a string of water plumes right past me. A mist hung in the air. I extended my gun and returned fire, the two of us strobing bullets back and forth. I stumbled, sprawled backward on the ice, and broke through again.

The cold was so intense, so invasive, that I almost blacked out. I exploded out of the water, every nerve on fire, my muscles not wanting to respond, and my hands automatically clenching into fists. I thrashed through the ice and the mud, and flopped face first onto the bank, my body s.h.i.+vering uncontrollably.

I forced myself to breath and grabbed my rifle. I was shaking so badly that I couldn't even aim. I just raised it toward the brother and jerked the trigger a few times. I wasn't even close. The empty ACR slipped from my quivering fingers and fell into the water as I struggled to draw my pistol.

”Lorenzo!” Reaper screamed over the radio. ”Hang on!”