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Tin Man

Page 37

by Dale Brown


  "There's only about a dozen suspected labs and

  possible hideouts in Wilton," Chandler said. "You

  going to hit them all?"

  "I was hoping you'd give me a clue."

  "We don't have the foggiest idea," Chandler said.

  That wasn't entirely true. But surveillance was extremely

  difficult because the ranches were so big

  and the houses were so far off the road. "Besides,

  that's Sacramento County, not the city. You got any

  targets in the city?"

  "Why don't you give me a couple?" the intruder

  asked.,

  "Because I'm not sure I want to risk losing my

  badge and my career to,help you," Chandler said. F

  "Giving you information so you can go out and

  commit a crime is conspiracy and aiding and abetting

  . For all I know, this is some kind of elaborate

  setup."

  "You're a little paranoid, aren't you? I'll go out

  and find my own targets. See you in the funny papers

  , Chandler."

  "Wait!" Chandler shouted. Shit, where were

  those guys? "How can I get in contact with

  you?

  "Don't call me-I'll call you."

  Chandler followed the guy to the side door-and

  to his relief, saw headlights turning into the parking

  area. His cops were finally back.

  The Tin Man saw them at the same time, head- I

  ing for the main entrance. Chandler noticed that the

  front door had been smashed in and realized his

  guys saw it too. Within seconds, three of them were

  approaching it with their guns drawn. Two others

  came around to the side door. Chandler raised his

  weapon again. "You're surrounded, mister. Surrender

  right now."

  The intruder raised his hands. "I'm unarmed," he

  said through the electronic mask.

  That's him!" one of the officers shouted. "He's

  the Tin Man! That's the guy who was at the Bobby

  John Club!"

  "Chandler, your officers won't be able to take

  me," the Tin Man said calmly, "and if they open

  fire in here or try to tackle me like they did before,

  someone can get hurt. I'm asking you to call your

  officers off . I won't hurt anyone if they leave me

  alone."

  "Captain, he's a murder suspect," one of the officers

  said. "He's wanted for the murder at the

  Rosalee stakeout-and he put a uniform in the hospital

  too."

  "I know, dammit, I know!" Chandler shouted to

  his men. "But you saw what he can do. Do you

  think it's realistic to think we can take him?"

  The cops were silent. They got the point, recognized

  they'd need a lot more help or a lot more firepower-but

  they didn't want to admit it.

  "Let him go," said Chandler.

  "But Captain-"

  "I said, let him go. We have no choice. Until we

  can figure out how to shut him off, leave him

  alone."

  The cops stood there and listened as the Tin Man

  turned to Chandler. "Thank you, Captain," he said.

  "I do want to work with you, not fight you. You

  need to believe I'm on your side-I'll prove it to

  you. just wait. I'll be in touch."

  Then Tin Man calmly walked outside. They

  watched as he ran northbound across the parking

  lot, leaped over the low one-story buildings, and

  vanished. "Christ Almighty!" said one of the

  shaken officers. "I've never seen anything like that!

  Who the hell is he?"

  Chandler ordered his men back inside headquarters

  and had them write out statements detailing

  everything they knew or had heard about the guy

  they called the Tin Man. While they were at work,

  he slipped back into his office. Holding his broken

  letter opener in his hand, he dialed a toll-free voicemail

  number. He had already checked it out; it was

  a dead phone drop, a computerized voice-mail service

  , paid for with cash with a PO box as the cus-

  tomer's address. He dared not check further-the

  Brit was bound to find out.

  "The subject was just here," Chandler spoke into

  the digital message service. "He says he's found one

  of your hideouts and he's heading your way. I think

  he's heading toward Wilton, sometime soon if not

  tonight. Catch him yourself if you can. And I want

  my money, motherfucker."

  WILTON, CALIFORNIA

  LATER THAT NIGHT

  Neading two-three-zero . . . area's clear . . . go,"

  Jon radioed to Patrick on the secure VHF channel

  . He was in the Hummer command post, a few

  miles from Skywalker's target position, watching

  the blip Patrick made on the screen. The terminal

  in the Hummer showed a composite picture of infrared

  and light-intensified surveillance images

  from the reconnaissance aircraft and the satellite

  tracking data Patrick was sending, and Skywalker's

  live video feed was displayed on the terminal.

  The Skywalker images revealed several patches

  of recently disturbed ground, which could be assumed

  to be land mines planted by the bad guys

  around the Wilton ranch. There had been a lot of

  activity there in recent days, and a variety of vehicles

  moving in and out of the property-much more

  activity than could be properly accounted for. The

  number of individuals varied. Weapons were all

  over the place, and roving patrols kept crisscrossing

  the property. For a ranch that had no animals, no

  crops, and no ranch or farm equipment evident, all

  this was highly suspicious.

  The thruster jump was a little long, but it placed

  Patrick between two rings of disturbed earth. They

  had no way of knowing whether he had landed far

  enough away from whatever was under there to be

  safe, but the farther away, the better. Patrick

  scanned the area with his low-light vision sensors.

  He was about five hundred yards from the house,

  where all the activity now seemed to be. "Can't see

  that roving patrol anymore," he radioed.

  "The nearest patrol is to the east, about two hundred

  yards," Jon radioed back. "You're right in between

  two rows of something. You should be able to

  clear the inner row with the next jump. Turn left,

  head one-eight-zero, area's . . ."

  Jon's report was cut off by a burst of heavy automatic

  gunfire. A row of bullets ripped into the

  ground a few feet from where Patrick was standing.

  He hit his thrusters and leaped toward the ranch

  house just before the next bullets hit. "Shit, Jon,"

  Patrick radioed as he landed. "Felt like a fifty-cal

  that time."

  "Gunfire's coming from a ditch bearing one-fivefive

  , range about seventy-five yards," Jon reported.

  "The gun must be hidden in a culvert or under a

  building." He couldn't see the gun or the shooter

  from the Skywalker images, but the blasts looked

  like bright sparkles, and the red-hot bullets were

  visible as they plowed into the earth.

  Patrick turned to his left and leaped. The machine<
br />
  gun tried to track him in midair, so he was

  able to identify the location of the nest perfectly. It

  was hidden in a large culvert that ran across a ditch.

  He landed right on the road over the culvert, then

  started running down the road toward the house.

  Seconds later, a huge explosion split the night. He

  had left an explosive charge on the road over the

  culvert, blowing the concrete bridge and the machine

  gunners underneath it into the mud.

  "Wait, Patrick!" ion radioed. "The road!

  But he was too late. Before Patrick could make the

  leap toward the house, he stepped on a mine planted

  in the road. The explosion blew him six feet into

  the air, swerving around and flopping like a rag doll

  caught in a twister. He landed hard and awkwardly,

  and lay there motionless.

  "Patrick! Do you read me?" Silence. Jon zoomed

  the Skywalker cameras in and had a clear view of

  Patrick lying on the ground, still not moving. Moments

  later, two jeeps headed from the house across

  the meadow toward him. "Patrick! Two vehicles approaching

  ! Can you hear me? Patrick!" Silence. "If

  you can hear me, Patrick, wake up!" Jon screamed.

  "They'll be on you in thirty seconds!"

  Wearing night-vision goggles, three German soldiers

  dismounted when they were fifty feet from

  where they thought Patrick lay and approached on

  foot. At thirty feet they deactivated their imageintensifiers

  so the muzzle-flash of their guns

  wouldn't blind them, and fired at the intruder. Then

  they reactivated their night-vision optics and advanced

  on him-but no one was there.

  A horn beeped behind them. They turned, found

  themselves staring into the full-bright headlights of

  one of the jeeps, and ripped off their goggles in pain.

  One of them swore, leveled his machine pistol, and

  fired at the headlights. It took almost an entire clip

  to shoot them out.

  "You missed me!" shouted an eerie electronic

  voice. The shooter swung his submachine gun left

  to track the voice.

  "Nein! Nein!" came a shout-but too late. The

  gunman, still blinded, opened fire across the area

  where the voice had come from and cut down both

  his fellow soldiers.

  Patrick checked his suit's systems-running perfectly

  so far, although power levels had been cut in

  half after the land mine. "Down to three hours already

  ," he radioed.

  "Thank God you're okay," Masters answered. "I

  copy that. Do you want to withdraw and get a full

  recharge? I can watch the area and let you know if

  anyone tries to escape."

  "No, let's press on," Patrick said. "I'll try to conserve

  power every chance I get."

  nside the ranch house, the two remaining guards

  heard and saw the gunfire but could not raise their

  comrades on the radio. "Patrouille zwei, berichten

  !" one of them called. "What is your status?

  Have you terminated the intruder? Patrol Two, report!"

  "Here's one heading back," said the other lookout

  . "Patrol Three is heading back!" A jeep was racing

  back across the meadow, bumping through the

  furrows. Then he shouted, "Wo wollen die hin?"

  The jeep was headed straight for the ranch house at

  top speed. "It's him! It's the intruder! Open fire!"

  The guards raked the jeep with their submachine

  guns. A tire exploded and the vehicle swerved momentarily

  , then kept on its collision course. One of

  the guards leveled an antitank rocket launcher at it.

  It exploded, flipped over, and hit one of the outbuildings

  near the house.

  "Where is he?" There was no sign of life in the

  vehicle and a quick survey of the house and grounds

  showed they were clear as well. "We'd better radio

  the lieutenant," said one of the guards as he removed

  the spent magazine and retrieved a fresh one

  from his ammo pouch. At that moment a helmeted

  figure flew at them, body-tackling them like a

  rocket-powered battering ram. In seconds they were

  disarmed by hammering blows that felt like steel

  batons, cracking fingers and wrists.

  "Wo ist der Major?" the intruder demanded. "Wo

  ist der Engldnder?"

  "Go to hell!"

  Patrick heard Jon Masters's voice through his radio

  . "Hey, I've got several vehicles heading this

  way, heading east on Grant Line, moving fast!

  How's it coming?"

  "These guys aren't talking," Patrick radioed

  back. "There're a lot of weapons here, including a

  rocket launcher-I'll bet they match some of those

  used in the Sacramento Live! shootout. Can you

  reach the sheriff's department?"

  "Already called," Jon reported. "I'm going to

  change position, get farther to the west away from

  these newcomers. Let me know if you find anything

  . I'll signal you when you'll have visitors."

  Patrick secured the guards with nylon handcuffs

  and began to search the ranch area. He hit pay dirt

  right away. "Jon, I got something," he radioed. "The

  barn is full of chemicals. Barrels of it. Ether, acetone

  , thionyl chloride, phosphorous-3-iodide--oh

  shit, tanks of hydrogen gas, enough to blow half the

  county sky-high, You better warn the sheriff's

  department to bring a HAZMAT crew out herethere's

  enough poisonous stuff here to kill ten thousand

  people."

  "Copy," Masters responded. "On the way."

  Patrick swung around at a sound off to his left.

  To his astonishment a scrawny little man carrying a

  nylon gym bag was running as fast as he could down

  the long main driveway toward Grant Line Road.

  Patrick caught up with him with a single thruster

  jump.

  "Jeez!" the man yelped. "Who the hell are you?"

  "I'm the one who's putting you out of business,"

  Patrick said, yanking away the nylon bag. "Who are

  YOUVI

  "Nobody!" the little man shouted. "Let me go!"

  Patrick rapped him once on his bony chest, and

  the guy screeched and hit the ground. "I said, who

  are you?"

  "You broke my chest!" the man whimpered.

  "I'll break your head if you don't answer me!"

  "I'm Bennie Reynolds." The man struggled to his

  feet despite the pain and cried, "We've got to get out

  of here! "

  "What are you doing here?"

  "I work here. I work for Townsend and the Aryan

  Brigade. Listen, there's no time . . ."

  "Townsend?" said Patrick. Christ, the pieces

  were finally starting to fit together. "The British

  terrorist? You mean Gregory Townsend, the weapons

  dealer?"

  "I told you who, asshole." The guy was sounding

  panicky. "Jesus, we've got to get out of here! The

  barn has been booby-trapped!"

  "What?"

  "Don't ask questions, stupid-just run!" Patrick

  didn't hesitate. He grabbed Reynolds and hit his

  thrusters. Even though the guy didn'
t weigh very

  much, the leap was only seventy or eighty feet. But

  it was a spectacular ride for the drug-cooker.

  "Hol-ee shit!" he cackled. "Awe-some! You can

  flyvi

  It would take several seconds for the thrusters to

  recharge. "Okay, now talk," Patrick demanded.

  "Where is Townsend? Where's the Major?"

  "They bugged out maybe twenty minutes ago,"

  Reynolds said. "I don't know where they were

  headed. You went into the barn, didn't you?"

  "Yes."

  "Then we're dead unless we can get at least a

  mile away from here," Reynolds said. "For sure you

  tripped a switch. Townsend has that barn boobytrapped

  seven ways to Sunday. Hit those jets and

  let's get the hell out of here!"

  "Can't quite yet," Patrick said. They started

  down the road as fast as Patrick could half-carry,

  half-drag Reynolds. He switched over to his secure

  channel: "Jon, we're on the move," he said. "I've got

  one prisoner."

  "Copy," Jon replied. "I'm heading toward you."

  Patrick called up the GPS tracking device on

  Jon's location and saw he was around a mile and a

  half away. He grabbed Reynolds, turned in the direction

  of the Hummer, and hit the thrusters . . .

  . . . and just as he was about to touch down

  from the first eighty-foot leap, a massive explosion

  erupted behind them. A delayed-action bomb exploded

  inside the barn, rupturing the hydrogen

  tanks and sending up a huge cloud of fire.

  They were lifted off the ground by the shock

  wave and thrown another hundred feet. The concussion

  from the blast landed them across Grant Line

  Road in a shallow cow pond and covered them with

  eighteen inches of muddy water, just as the whitehot

  fireball rolled over them like a tsunami. The

  fireball vaporized the six-acre pond, turning it into a

  blackened hole-but as the water vaporized it

  sucked away enough of the heat from the fireball to

  keep the two of them from instantaneous incineration

  .

  Then the suit's environmental system kicked in,

  and-barely-kept enough of the residual heat away

  from Patrick's skin to prevent his being burned. But

  he could not protect Reynolds. He covered him

  with his body as best he could, but when the fireball

  rolled over them Bennie's clothes burst into flames,

  the hair on his head turned into white ash, and his

 

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