The Libya Connection te-48

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The Libya Connection te-48 Page 12

by Don Pendleton


  "We level the dump," growled Bolan.

  There was a metallic quality to the voice that Grimaldi had never heard before.

  Grimaldi tasted bile trying to rise in his own throat. His knuckles were white around the V/STOL's controls.

  Eve was dead.

  The pilot had always loved that woman. Loved, yeah. The way a brother-in-law digs a sweet sister-in-law.

  "Consider 'em leveled," Grimaldi radioed back.

  He hardly recognized his own voice.

  The Libyan chopper had looped back for more.

  Grimaldi banked around, coming back to where Bolan's Huey held in a stationary hover.

  The pilot of the Libyan chopper no doubt thought he had a good chance at taking them both with one blistering strafe run from north to south with the 40mm booming.

  Grimaldi arced the V/STOL back into an evasive twist, the shrill whistling of the jet more piercing than before in his ears.

  Bolan's voice crackled across the tac net.

  "I've got him, Jack."

  Grimaldi heard the Huey's turret-mounted machine guns crackle a tattoo that ultimately outlasted the hammering of the Libyans' fire. The Soviet-made chopper hurtled through airspace separating Bolan and Grimaldi.

  Jack Grimaldi caught a sudden side view, as the Libyan helicopter thundered past his cockpit, of a man in a bemedaled military uniform, staring out from that chopper over his dead pilot's shoulder with a look of frenzied, panicky realization.

  Colonel Ahmad Shahkhia was pounding his fists against the aircraft's Plexiglas window, screaming something as his chopper went down.

  The explosion of the Libyan copter's fuel tank as it crashed below, out of sight, was only a dull thud sound to Grimaldi's ears.

  Bolan piloted the Huey on a course toward the Aujila oasis installation. Grimaldi flew another tight pattern and came in too.

  The Huey chopper opened fire on the base with its big 40mm cannons on full auto mode as Bolan swooped in.

  Shahkhia's rebel troops down below were sent scattering and falling. Their ranks were decimated by the criss-cross of machine gun and air-to-surface missiles from above.

  Grimaldi delivered hellfire and destruction with the V/STOL's full missile capability: three fast runs interwoven around the Huey's found targets.

  The night shuddered with explosions.

  The two attacking aircraft leveled every standing structure amid pandemonium born of erupting mortar and tossing human bodies and equipment.

  It took Bolan and Grimaldi seven minutes to destroy the Aujila army installation.

  When Bolan appeared to be satisfied, he banked the big Huey gunship off into an easterly flight.

  Grimaldi did the same. They would both land soon and he would take aboard the big guy.

  Eve Aguilar was dead.

  Jack Grimaldi was still trying to absorb that awful fact.

  As the fires of destruction receded away below and behind them, Grimaldi patched himself through to Bolan.

  "Do you read me, Striker?"

  There followed a longer pause than Grimaldi expected.

  Then Bolan responded in that same iced metal voice.

  "I read you, buddy. Thanks. Let's set these babies down. I want to get away from here."

  "Roger. Mack, listen... I don't know what to say. About Eve, I mean. The bastards..."

  "I know how you feel, Jack. It's almost over."

  "Almost?"

  "I thought it would end at Aujila," said Bolan. "That wasn't the last step. It's the next to last step."

  "There's one more hit?"

  "One more hit," acknowledged the grim guy piloting the Huey as the chopper and V/STOL continued their northeasterly flight. "There's a Tripoli address on the pilot's flight pad in this chopper. That's got to mean something. I'm going to find out what."

  Cruising at three thousand feet through the cold Sahara night, Jack Grimaldi thought that if Death had a voice, it would sound exactly like the Executioner when Mack Bolan spoke those words.

  Bolan did not continue the conversation.

  Grimaldi signed off, leaving the big warrior alone with his thoughts.

  All words were empty at a time like this, thought Grimaldi.

  Only the pain inside was real.

  * * *

  Time magazine, in a cover story, had coined him The Most Wanted Fugitive in the World.

  He stood at the half-open French windows of the penthouse terrace, overlooking the view of Tripoli by night, and chuckled at the thought of that magazine sobriquet.

  Leonard Jericho had acquired such distinction without ever having killed a man.

  He finished his drink, a very strong whiskey and soda, and moved from the French windows to the portable bar to fix himself another.

  He decided that it might be a good idea to strap on the Walther PPK .380 automatic that was now wrapped in its shoulder holster in the top desk drawer.

  He would feel better, armed.

  Leonard Jericho was a man of precautions. The nature of his business dealings placed him in a vulnerable position relative to various law enforcement agencies, to say nothing of his own business associates, past and present, many of whom thought they would, or could, gain much from his demise.

  All due precautions had been taken, here in Tripoli as everywhere his dealings took him, including a guard out on the terrace and more armed men in the vestibule outside the front door of the penthouse.

  And of course there were those two plastic surgery doubles he had used. There was Carlyle in the Bahamas. Gifford had taken his place at the Aujila rendezvous with Colonel Shahkhia. Jericho trusted no one, least of all treacherous desert rats like the buyer for that virus. Jericho would not be surprised if Shahkhia thought he had some foolproof plan for kidnapping "Leonard Jericho" at the oasis and holding him for billions in ransom. Jericho had chosen not to give Shahkhia the opportunity. He sent Gifford instead.

  But there had been no word from the Aujila base!

  Leonard Jericho sensed that something had gone wrong.

  At this moment, he was awaiting word that his car had been brought around to the Tripoli safehouse from which The Most Wanted Fugitive in the World had been operating under the guise of an anonymous U.S. oil-company lackey.

  He walked to the desk across the room and opened a drawer to reveal the leathered, small automatic... when he heard a peculiar sound from beyond the French windows to the terrace.

  Jericho fisted his palm around the Walther's butt and started to yank the automatic from its holster as he looked up toward the windows.

  When he did look up, the feel of that gun butt in his hand was the last physical sensation he experienced.

  A figure in combat black hulked into the room from the terrace. The intruder's presence filled the penthouse like a jungle lord suddenly unleashed amid lesser beings. The man was heavy with armament. But at the moment, all he held in a one-handed grip was a long stainless steel AutoMag that was drawing a bead on the area between Leonard Jericho's eyes.

  Jericho instinctively yanked the automatic from its leather, his senses short-circuiting with panic.

  The .44 in the big man's fist belched fire in a strong grip.

  And in his final microsecond of existence, Leonard Jericho had a crystalized curiosity. Would death be as powerful as the orgasm he had emptied into the Puerto Rican bitch last night on his private plane while Santos had done things to her with his knife?

  Everything turned black with a hot splash that was no real pain at all.

  * * *

  They found Jericho's body minutes later, well after his executioner was gone. The skull was blown open. The top half of it was tilted at a crazy angle against the bar with brains staining the expensive carpet.

  The real Leonard Jericho was dead.

  Epilogue

  From Mack Bo/an's private journal:

  A part of me died tonight.

  The hurt is so bad that I can barely force myself to write these words. But I must write while
the emotions are hot. These words are my grief.

  The real Leonard Jericho is dead. His Libya connection has been destroyed. The Strain-7 virus is on its way back to the States, and so am I. And maybe, just maybe, the score has been settled for Eve Aguilar.

  But the lady is still dead.

  And gone forever.

  And the only damn thing that keeps me going and caring at all right now is the knowledge that Big Eve didn't stop until they stopped her. She gave it all to the good fight. Everything.

  Big Eve died for our sins.

  For the evolutionary process.

  Goodbye, lady.

  I will carry you with me wherever the good fight takes me.

  You meant plenty in life.

  Your memory means something now too, by God;

  Live on, Evita. Wherever you are.

  It does matter.

  It does.

  FB2 document info

  Document ID: 9c747059-cc65-465a-bd55-e3e4719b79ce

  Document version: 1

  Document creation date: 2005-01-21

  Created using: FB Tools software

  OCR Source: OCR Binwiped

  Document authors :

  Денис

  Document history:

  v 1.0 — создание fb2 OCR Денис

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