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Bolo

Page 6

by Keith Laumer


  “What’s that supposed to buy you?” Mallon rasped.

  “As you said—we need each other. That cut cable proves you can trust me.”

  Mallon smiled. It wasn’t a nice smile. “Safe, were you? Come here.” I walked along with him to the back of the Bolo. A heavy copper wire hung across the rear of the machine, trailing off into the grass in both directions.

  “I’d have burned you at the first move. Even with the cable cut, the armored cover would have carried the full load right into the cockpit with you. But don’t be nervous. I’ve got other jobs for you.” He jabbed the gun muzzle hard into my chest, pushing me back. “Now get moving,” he snarled. “And don’t ever threaten the Baron again.”

  “The years have done more than shrivel your face, Toby,” I said. “They’ve cracked your brain.”

  He laughed, a short bark. “You could be right. What’s sane and what isn’t? I’ve got a vision in my mind—and I’ll make it come true. If that’s insanity, it’s better than what the mob has.”

  Back at the parapet, Mallon turned to me. “I’ve had this campaign planned in detail for years, Jackson. Everything’s ready. We move out in half an hour—before any traitors have time to take word to my enemies. Pig Eye and Dunger will keep you from being lonely while I’m away. When I get back—Well, maybe you’re right about working together.” He gestured and my whiskery friend and his sidekick loomed up. “Watch him,” he said.

  “Genghis Khan is on the march, eh?” I said, “With nothing between you and the goodies but a five-hundred-ton Bolo …”

  “The Lesser Troll …” He raised his hands and made crushing motions, like a man crumbling dry earth. “I’ll trample it under my treads.”

  “You’re confused, Toby. The Bolo has treads. You just have a couple of fallen arches.”

  “It’s the same. I am the Great Troll.” He showed me his teeth and walked away.

  I moved along between Dunger and Pig Eye, toward the lights of the garage.

  “The back entrance again,” I said. “Anyone would think you were ashamed of me.”

  “You need more training, hah?” Dunger rasped. “Hold him, Pig Eye.” He unhooked his club and swung it loosely in his hand, glancing around. We were near the trees by the drive. There was no one in sight except the crews near the Bolo and a group by the front of the palace. Pig Eye gave my arm a twist and shifted his grip to his old favorite strangle hold. I was hoping he would.

  Dunger whipped the club up, and I grabbed Pig Eye’s arm with both hands and leaned forward like a Japanese admiral reporting to the Emperor. Pig Eye went up and over just in time to catch Dunger’s club across the back. They went down together. I went for the club, but Whiskers was faster than he looked. He rolled clear, got to his knees, and laid it across my left arm, just below the shoulder.

  I heard the bone go …

  I was back on my feet, somehow. Pig Eye lay sprawled before me. I heard him whining as though from a great distance. Dunger stood six feet away, the ring of black beard spread in a grin like a hyena smelling dead meat.

  “His back’s broke,” he said. “Hell of a sound he’s making. I been waiting for you; I wanted you to hear it.”

  “I’ve heard it,” I managed. My voice seemed to be coming off a worn sound track. “Surprised … you didn’t work me over … while I was busy with the arm.”

  “Uh-uh. I like a man to know what’s going on when I work him over.” He stepped in, rapped the broken arm lightly with the club. Fiery agony choked a groan off in my throat. I backed a step; he stalked me.

  “Pig Eye wasn’t much, but he was my pal. When I’m through with you, I’ll have to kill him. A man with a broken back’s no use to nobody. His’ll be finished pretty soon now, but not with you. You’ll be around a long time yet; but I’ll get a lot of fun out of you before the Baron gets back.”

  I was under the trees now. I had some wild thoughts about grabbing up a club of my own, but they were just thoughts. Dunger set himself and his eyes dropped to my belly. I didn’t wait for it; I lunged at him. He laughed and stepped back, and the club cracked my head. Not hard; just enough to send me down. I got my legs under me and started to get up—

  There was a hint of motion from the shadows behind Dunger. I shook my head to cover any expression that might have showed, let myself drop back.

  “Get up,” Dunger said. The smile was gone now. He aimed a kick. “Get up—”

  He froze suddenly, then whirled. His hearing must have been as keen as a jungle cat’s; I hadn’t heard a sound.

  The old man stepped into view, his white hair plastered wet to his skull, his big hands spread. Dunger snarled, jumped in and whipped the club down; I heard it hit. There was a flurry of struggle, then Dunger stumbled back, empty-handed.

  I was on my feet again now. I made a lunge for Dunger as he roared and charged. The club in the old man’s hand rose and fell. Dunger crashed past and into the brush. The old man sat down suddenly, still holding the club. Then he let it fall and lay back. I went toward him and Dunger rushed me from the side. I went down again.

  I was dazed, but not feeling any pain now. Dunger was standing over the old man. I could see the big lean figure lying limply, arms outspread—and a white bone handle, incongruously new and neat against the shabby mackinaw. The club lay on the ground a few feet away. I started crawling for it. It seemed a long way, and it was hard for me to move my legs, but I kept at it. The light rain was falling again now, hardly more than a mist. Far away there were shouts and the sound of engines starting up. Mallon’s convoy moving out. He had won. Dunger had won, too. The old man had tried, but it hadn’t been enough. But if I could reach the club, and swing it just once …

  Dunger was looking down at the old man. He leaned, withdrew the knife, wiped it on his trouser leg, hitching up his pants to tuck it away in its sheath. The club was smooth and heavy under my hand. I got a good grip on it, got to my feet. I waited until Dunger turned, and then I hit him across the top of the skull with everything I had left …

  I thought the old man was dead until he blinked suddenly. His features looked relaxed now, peaceful, the skin like parchment stretched over bone. I took his gnarled old hand and rubbed it. It was as cold as a drowned sailor.

  “You waited for me, old timer?” I said inanely. He moved his head minutely, and looked at me. Then his mouth moved. I leaned close to catch what he was saying. His voice was fainter than lost hope.

  “Mom … told … me … wait for you … She said … you’d … come back some day …”

  I felt my jaw muscles knotting.

  Inside me something broke and flowed away like molten metal. Suddenly my eyes were blurred—and not only with rain. I looked at the old face before me, and for a moment, I seemed to see a ghostly glimpse of another face, a small round face that looked up.

  He was speaking again. I put my head down:

  “Was I … good … boy … Dad?” Then the eyes closed.

  I sat for a long time, looking at the still face. Then I folded the hands on the chest and stood.

  “You were more than a good boy, Timmy,” I said. “You were a good man.”

  9

  My blue suit was soaking wet and splattered with mud, plus a few flecks of what Dunger had used for brains, but it still carried the gold eagles on the shoulders.

  The attendant in the garage didn’t look at my face. The eagles were enough for him. I stalked to a vast black Bentley—a ’90 model, I guessed, from the conservative eighteen-inch tail fins—and jerked the door open. The gauge showed three-quarters full. I opened the glove compartment, rummaged, found nothing. But then it wouldn’t be up front with the chauffeur …

  I pulled open the back door. There was a crude black leather holster riveted against the smooth pale-gray leather, with the butt of a 4-mm showing. There was another one on the opposite door, and a power rifle slung from straps on the back of the driver’s seat.

  Whoever owned the Bentley was overcompensating his insecurit
y. I took a pistol, tossed it onto the front seat, and slid in beside it. The attendant gaped at me as I eased my left arm into my lap and twisted to close the door. I started up. There was a bad knock, but she ran all right. I flipped a switch and cold lances of light speared out into the rain.

  At the last instant, the attendant started forward with his mouth open to say something, but I didn’t wait to hear it. I gunned out into the night, swung into the graveled drive, and headed for the gate. Mallon had had it all his way so far, but maybe it still wasn’t too late …

  Two sentries, looking miserable in shiny black ponchos, stepped out of the guard hut at I pulled up. One peered in at me, then came to a sloppy position of attention and presented arms. I reached for the gas pedal and the second sentry called something. The first man looked startled, then swung the gun down to cover me. I eased a hand toward my pistol, brought it up fast, and fired through the glass. Then the Bentley was roaring off into the dark along the potholed road that led into town. I thought I heard a shot behind me, but I wasn’t sure.

  I took the river road south of town, pounding at reckless speed over the ruined blacktop, gaining on the lights of Mallon’s horde paralleling me a mile to the north. A quarter mile from the perimeter fence, the Bentley broke a spring and skidded into a ditch.

  I sat for a moment taking deep breaths to drive back the compulsive drowsiness that was sliding down over my eyes like a visor. My arm throbbed like a cauterized stump. I needed a few minutes’ rest …

  A sound brought me awake like an old maid smelling cigar smoke in the bedroom: the rise and fall of heavy engines in convoy. Mallon was coming up at flank speed.

  I got out of the car and headed off along the road at a trot, holding my broken arm with my good one to ease the jarring pain. My chances had been as slim as a gambler’s wallet all along, but if Mallon beat me to the objective, they dropped to nothing.

  The eastern sky had taken on a faint gray tinge, against which I could make out the silhouetted gateposts and the dead floodlights a hundred yards ahead.

  The roar of engines was getting louder. There were other sounds, too: a few shouts, the chatter of a 9-mm, the boom! of something heavier, and once a long-drawn whoosh! of falling masonry. With his new toy, Mallon was dozing his way through the men and buildings that got in his way.

  I reached the gate, picked my way over fallen wire mesh, then headed for the Primary Site.

  I couldn’t run now. The broken slabs tilted crazily, in no pattern. I slipped, stumbled, but kept my feet. Behind me, headlights threw shadows across the slabs. It wouldn’t be long now before someone in Mallon’s task force spotted me and opened up with the guns—

  The whoop! whoop! WHOOP! of the guardian Bolo cut across the field.

  Across the broken concrete I saw the two red eyes flash, sweeping my way. I looked toward the gate. A massed rank of vehicles stood in a battalion front just beyond the old perimeter fence, engines idling, ranged for a hundred yards on either side of a wide gap at the gate. I looked for the high silhouette of Mallon’s Bolo, and saw it far off down the avenue, picked out in red, white, and green navigation lights, a jeweled dreadnaught. A glaring Cyclopean eye at the top darted a blue-white cone of light ahead, swept over the waiting escort, outlined me like a set-shifter caught onstage by the rising curtain.

  The whoop! whoop! sounded again; the automated sentry Bolo was bearing down on me along the dancing lane of light.

  I grabbed at the plastic disk in my pocket as though holding it in my hand would somehow heighten its potency. I didn’t know if the Lesser Troll was programmed to exempt me from destruction or not; and there was only one way to find out.

  It wasn’t too late to turn around and run for it. Mallon might shoot—or he might not. I could convince him that he needed me, that together we could grab twice as much loot. And then, when he died—

  I wasn’t really considering it; it was the kind of thought that flashes through a man’s mind like heat lightning when time slows in the instant of crisis. It was hard to be brave with broken bone ends grating, but what I had to do didn’t take courage. I was a small, soft, human grub, stepped on but still moving, caught on the harsh plain of broken concrete between the clash of chrome-steel titans. But I knew which direction to take.

  The Lesser Troll rushed toward me in a roll of thunder and I went to meet it.

  It stopped twenty yards from me, loomed massive as a cliff. Its heavy guns were dead, I knew. Without them it was no more dangerous than a farmer with a shotgun—

  But against me a shotgun was enough.

  The slab under me trembled as if in anticipation. I squinted against the dull red I-R beams that pivoted to hold me, waiting while the Troll considered. Then the guns elevated, pointed over my head like a benediction. The Bolo knew me.

  The guns traversed fractionally. I looked back toward the enemy line, saw the Great Troll coming up now, closing the gap, towering over its waiting escort like a planet among moons. And the guns of the Lesser Troll tracked it as it came—the empty guns that for twenty years had held Mallon’s scavengers at bay.

  The noise of engines was deafening now. The waiting line moved restlessly, pulverizing old concrete under churning treads. I didn’t realize I was being fired on until I saw chips fly to my left and heard the howl of ricochets.

  It was time to move. I scrambled for the Bolo, snorted at the stink of hot oil and ozone, found the rusted handholds, and pulled myself up—

  Bullets spanged off metal above me. Someone was trying for me with a power rifle.

  The broken arm hung at my side like a fence post nailed to my shoulder, but I wasn’t aware of the pain now. The hatch stood open half an inch. I grabbed the lever, strained; it swung wide. No lights came up to meet me. With the port cracked, they’d burned out long ago. I dropped down inside, wriggled through the narrow crawl space into the cockpit. It was smaller than the Mark III—and it was occupied.

  In the faint green light from the panel, the dead man crouched over the controls, one desiccated hand in a shriveled black glove clutching the control bar. He wore a GI weather suit and a white crash helmet, and one foot was twisted nearly backward, caught behind a jack lever.

  The leg had been broken before he died. He must have jammed the foot and twisted it so that the pain would hold off the sleep that had come at last. I leaned forward to see the face. The blackened and mummified features showed only the familiar anonymity of death, but the bushy reddish mustache was enough.

  “Hello, Mac,” I said. “Sorry to keep you waiting; I got held up.”

  I wedged myself into the copilot’s seat, flipped the I-R screen switch. The eight-inch panel glowed, showed me the enemy Bolo trampling through the fence three hundred yards away, then moving onto the ramp, dragging a length of rusty chain-link like a bridal train behind it.

  I put my hand on the control bar. “I’ll take it now, Mac.” I moved the bar, and the dead man’s hand moved with it.

  “Okay, Mac,” I said. “We’ll do it together.”

  I hit the switches, canceling the preset response pattern. It had done its job for eighty years, but now it was time to crank in a little human strategy.

  My Bolo rocked slightly under a hit and I heard the tread shields drop down. The chair bucked under me as Mallon moved in, pouring in the fire.

  Beside me Mac nodded patiently. It was old stuff to him. I watched the tracers on the screen. Hosing me down with contact exploders probably gave Mallon a lot of satisfaction, but it couldn’t hurt me. It would be a different story when he tired of the game and tried the heavy stuff.

  I threw in the drive, backed rapidly. Mallon’s tracers followed for a few yards, then cut off abruptly. I pivoted, flipped on my polyarcs, raced for the position I had selected across the field, then swung to face Mallon as he moved toward me. It had been a long time since he had handled the controls of a Bolo; he was rusty, relying on his automatics. I had no heavy rifles, but my popguns were okay. I homed my 4-mm solid-slug cann
on on Mallon’s polyarc, pressed the FIRE button.

  There was a scream from the high-velocity-feed magazine. The blue-white light flared and went out. The Bolo’s defense could handle anything short of an H-bomb, pick a missile out of the stratosphere fifty miles away, devastate a county with one round from its mortars—but my BB gun at point-blank range had poked out its eye.

  I switched everything off and sat silent, waiting. Mallon had come to a dead stop. I could picture him staring at the dark screens, slapping levers, and cursing. He would be confused, wondering what had happened. With his lights gone, he’d be on radar now—not very sensitive at this range, not too conscious of detail …

  I watched my panel. An amber warning light winked. Mallon’s radar was locked on me.

  He moved forward again, then stopped; he was having trouble making up his mind. I flipped a key to drop a padded shock frame in place and braced myself. Mallon would be getting mad now.

  Crimson danger lights flared on the board and I rocked under the recoil as my interceptors flashed out to meet Mallon’s C-S C’s and detonate them in incandescent rendezvous over the scarred concrete between us. My screens went white, then dropped back to secondary brilliance, flashing stark black-and-white. My ears hummed like trapped hornets.

  The sudden silence was like a vault door closing.

  I sagged back, feeling like Quasimodo after a wild ride on the bells. The screens blinked bright again, and I watched Mallon, sitting motionless now in his near blindness. On his radar screen I would show as a blurred hill; he would be wondering why I hadn’t returned his fire, why I hadn’t turned and run, why … why …

  He lurched and started toward me. I waited, then eased back, slowly. He accelerated, closing in to come to grips at a range where even the split microsecond response of my defenses would be too slow to hold off his fire. And I backed, letting him gain, but not too fast …

  Mallon couldn’t wait.

  He opened up, throwing a mixed bombardment from his 9-mm’s, his infinite repeaters, and his C-S C’s. I held on, fighting the battering frame, watching the screens. The gap closed; a hundred yards, ninety, eighty.

 

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