The Gates of Hell (Matt Drake 3)

Home > Other > The Gates of Hell (Matt Drake 3) > Page 12
The Gates of Hell (Matt Drake 3) Page 12

by David Leadbeater


  He was searching for Claude. Before they had vacated the chopper, they had all been shown a photo of the Blood King’s second-in-charge. Drake knew he would be directing things from behind the scenes with an escape plan worked out. Probably from the house.

  Drake ran now, still scanning the area, firing occasionally. One of the bad guys rose up from behind a hillock and charged at him with a machete. Drake simply dropped his shoulder, let the man’s momentum carry him right over and sent him crashing to the ground. The man grunted. Drake’s boot smashed his jaw. Drake’s other boot stood on the hand clutching the machete.

  The ex-SAS man leveled his gun and fired. And then moved on.

  He didn’t look back. The house was ahead, looming large, the door slightly ajar as if inviting entry. Clearly not the way to go. Drake blasted the windows out as he ran, aiming high. Glass exploded into the house.

  More captives were streaming in from the ranch now. Some stood in the tall grass, simply screaming or looking shell-shocked. As Drake glance at them, he noticed that most of them were sprinting at pace, flying along as if fleeing something.

  And then he saw it, and his blood turned to ice.

  The head, the unbelievably huge head of a Bengal tiger, bounced through the grass in easy pursuit. Drake couldn’t let the tigers catch their prey. He ran toward them.

  Pressed his earpiece. “Tigers in the grass.”

  A flurry of chatter came back. Others had spotted the beasts too. Drake watched one of the animals leap onto the back of a running man. The thing was enormous, savage, and in flight, the perfect image of mayhem and slaughter. Drake forced his legs to go faster.

  Another gigantic head broke the grass a few yards ahead. The tiger was on him, leaping, its face one huge snarl, its teeth bared and already slicked with blood. Drake hit the deck and rolled with every nerve in his body alive and screaming. Never before had he rolled so perfectly. Never before had he risen so quickly and accurately. It was as if the fiercer opponent had brought out the better warrior in him.

  He whipped the gun came around and fired a bullet point-blank into the tiger’s head. The beast fell instantly, shot through the brain.

  Drake didn’t take a breath. He leapt quickly through the grass to help the man he had seen brought down seconds earlier. The tiger was poised above him, roaring, its huge muscles straining and rippling as it dipped its head down to bite.

  Drake shot at it hindquarters, waited for it to turn, and then shot it between the eyes. It landed, all five hundred pounds of it, atop the man it was about to eat.

  Not good, Drake thought. But better than being mauled and eaten alive.

  Screams and shouts blasted through his earpiece. “Fuck me, these bastards are huge!” “Another, Jacko! Another at your six!”

  He studied the surrounds. No signs of tigers, just terrified captives and spooked troops. Drake sprinted back through the grass, ready to take cover if he caught sight of any adversary, but in a matter of seconds, he was back at the house.

  The front windows had been breached. Marines were inside. Drake followed, his wireless Bluetooth beeper marking him as a friendly. As he stepped across the broken sill, he wondered where Claude would have situated himself. Where would he be right now?

  A voice whispered in his ear. “Thought you’d left the party early, Drakey.” Alicia’s silky tones. “At your two.”

  He saw her. Partially hidden by the wall cabinet she was pawing through. Christ, was she checking out his DVD collection?

  Mai was behind her, gun in hand. Drake watched as the Japanese woman raised her weapon and pointed it at Alicia’s head.

  “Mai!” His desperate tones shrieked in their ears.

  Alicia jumped. Mai’s face twitched into a slight smile. “It was a gesture, Drake. I was pointing at the alarm interface, not Alicia. Not yet.”

  “Alarm?” Drake grunted. “We’re already inside.”

  “The grunts seem to think it’s also connected to the big warehouse out back.”

  Alicia stepped back and aimed her gun. “Fuck if I know.” She fired a salvo into the cabinet. Sparks flew.

  Alicia shrugged. “That oughta do it.”

  Hayden, closely followed by Kinimaka, came back into the room. “Barn is shut tight. Signs of booby traps. Tech boys are working on it now.”

  Drake smelled the wrongness of it all. “And yet we stroll in here so easily? This—”

  At that moment there was a commotion at the top of the stairs and the sound of someone descending. Fast. Drake raised the gun and glanced up.

  And froze in shock.

  One of Claude’s men was coming down the stairs, slowly, one arm locked around the throat of a female captive. The other arm had a Desert Eagle pointed at her head.

  But that wasn’t the extent of Drake’s shock. The sinking feeling came when he recognized the female. It was Kate Harrison, the daughter of Gates’ ex-aid. The man who had been partly to blame for Kennedy’s death.

  This was his daughter. Still alive.

  Claude’s man jammed the gun hard against her temple, making her screw her eyes up in pain. But she did not cry out. Drake, along with a dozen others in the room, leveled their guns at the man.

  And still it felt wrong to Drake. Why the hell was this guy upstairs with one captive? It almost seemed as if—

  “Go back!” the man screamed, eyes pin-balling wildly in every direction. Sweat ran from him in thick droplets. The way he half-carried, half-pushed the woman meant all his weight was on his back foot. The woman, to her credit, wasn’t making it easy for him.

  Drake calculated that the pressure on the trigger was already half way there. “Move away! Let us out!” The man heaved her down another step. The special forces soldiers moved alright, but only to slightly more advantageous positions.

  “I’m warning you, assholes.” The sweaty man breathed heavily. “Get out of the fucking way.”

  And this time Drake could see he meant it. There was a desperate look in his eyes, something that Drake recognized. This man had lost everything. Whatever he was doing, whatever he had done, had been done under terrible coercion.

  “Back!” the man screamed again and roughly pushed the woman down another step. The arm around her neck was a rod of iron. He kept every part of his body behind her so as not to present a target. At one time he had been a soldier, most likely a good one.

  Drake and his colleagues saw the wisdom of retreat. They gave the man a bit more room. He moved down a few more steps. Drake caught Mai’s gaze. She gave a slight shake of her head. She knew too. This wasn’t right. This was. . .

  A diversion. Of the most atrocious kind. Claude, no doubt under the order of Kovalenko, was using this man to distract them. Archetypal Blood King behavior. There could be a bomb in the house. The real prize, Claude, was probably making good his escape from the barn.

  Drake waited, perfectly poised. Every nerve in his body stilled. He lined up the shot. His breathing stopped. His mind went blank. Now there was nothing, not the rigidly tense room full of soldiers, not the terrified hostage, not even the house and the valet that surrounded it.

  Just a millimetre. A crosshair. Less than an inch of target. One move. That’s all he needed. And stillness was all he knew. Then the man pushed Kate Harrison down another step, and in that split second of movement, his left eye peered around the woman’s skull.

  Drake burst it apart with one shot.

  The man whipped back, collided with the wall, and slithered past the shrieking woman. He landed with a bang, headfirst, gun clattering behind him, and then they saw his vest, his stomach.

  Kate Harrison screamed, “He’s wearing a bomb!”

  Drake leapt forward, but Mai and a big marine were already leaping over the side of the staircase. The marine grabbed Kate Harrison. Mai leapt past the dead mercenary. Her head swiveled at the vest, at the readout.

  “Eight seconds!”

  Everyone ran for the window. Everyone except Drake. The Englishman sprinted fa
rther into the house, darting down the narrow hallway toward the kitchen, praying that someone had left the back door open. This way he would be closer to Claude when the bomb went off. This way, he stood a chance.

  Through the hallway. Three seconds gone. Into the kitchen. A quick look around. Two more seconds. The back door—closed.

  Time up.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  Drake opened fire even as he heard the initial explosion. It would take a second or two to reach him. The kitchen door shattered under multiple impacts. Drake ran straight at it, firing all the time. He didn’t slow, just hit it shoulder first and tumbled out into the air.

  The explosion zoomed after him like a striking snake. A tongue of fire blasted out of the door and the windows, exploding up into the sky. Drake was rolling. The fire’s breath touched him for an instant and then receded.

  Without breaking stride, he was up and running again. Bruised and battered, but terribly determined, he dashed for the big barn. The first thing he saw were dead bodies. Four of them. The techs Hayden had left behind to gain entry. He stopped by them, checked each one for signs of life.

  No pulse and no bullet wounds. Were the damn walls electrified?

  In another moment it didn’t matter. The front of the barn exploded, shards of timber and tongues of fire shooting out in a spectacular detonation. Drake hit the deck. He heard an engine roar and looked up just in time to see a yellow blur blast through the shattered doors and fly powerfully down the makeshift driveway.

  Drake jumped up. It was probably heading for a hidden chopper, plane, or some other bloody booby trap. He couldn’t wait for backup. He ran into the half-demolished barn and looked around. He shook his head in disbelief. The deep shine of polished supercar glimmered in every direction.

  Choosing the nearest, Drake wasted valuable seconds looking for a key and then saw a set of them hanging outside an interior office. The Aston Martin Vanquish started with a key and power button combination, which though unfamiliar to Drake, spiked his adrenalin when the crazy roar of the engine kicked in.

  The Aston Martin shot out of the barn with a squeal of tires. Drake aimed it in the direction of what he hoped was Claude’s speeding car. If this was another round of misdirection, Drake was fucked. As might be the whole of Hawaii. They desperately needed to capture the Blood King’s second-in-command.

  Out of the corner of his eye, Drake spied Alicia skidding to a stop. He didn’t wait. In his rearview, he saw her run purposefully into the barn. Jesus, this could get messy.

  The yellow blur ahead began to look like a high-end supercar, something reminiscent of the old Porsche Le Mans winning coupes. Near to the ground, it hugged the curves of the road, bouncing like it ran on springs. Unfit for the rough terrain, but then the makeshift road became fully paved a few miles up.

  Drake gunned the Vanquish, setting his weapon carefully on the seat behind him and listening to the Bluetooth squawks hopping around his brain. The operation at the ranch was still in full swing. Hostages were being recovered. Some were dead. Several pockets of Claude’s men were still holed up in strategic positions, pinning the authorities down. And there were still half-a-dozen tigers prowling around causing mayhem.

  The gap between the Aston Martin and the Porsche closed to nothing. The English car was far superior on the bumpy road. Drake nudged up right behind it, contemplating pulling alongside when, in his rearview mirror, he saw another supercar closing in.

  Alicia, at the wheel of an old Dodge Viper. Trust her to go for something with muscle.

  The three cars blasted across the rough terrain, hugging the bends and slewing back out onto the long straights. Gravel and dirt plumed around and behind them. Drake saw the paved road coming up and made a decision. They wanted Claude alive, but first they had to catch him. He was very careful to keep listening to the earpiece chatter just in case someone broadcast they had caught Claude, but the longer this chase went on, the more confident Drake became that the man in front was the Blood King’s second.

  Drake picked up the gun and blew out the Aston’s windshield. After a moment of dangerous skidding, he regained control and fired a second burst at the fleeing Porsche. Bullets strafed its rear end.

  The car barely slowed. It flew onto the new road. Drake opened fire as the Le Mans racer accelerated, bullet casings littering the leather seat beside him. It was time to aim for the tires.

  But right then one of the choppers blasted past them all, two figures hanging out of the open doors. The chopper swung round ahead of the Porsche and hovered sideways. Warning shots dug chunks out of the road in front of it. Drake shook his head in disbelief when a hand came out of the driver’s window and started shooting up at the helicopter.

  Instantly, simultaneously, he took his foot off the accelerator and his hands off the wheel, took aim, and loosed a shot of ambition, skill, and recklessness. Alicia’s Viper slammed into his own car. Drake regained control, but saw the gun fly out through the windshield.

  But his crazy shot worked. He shot the fleeing driver through the elbow and now the car was slowing. Stopping. Drake brought the Aston to a crunching halt, jumped out and ran swiftly to the Porsche’s passenger door, pausing to pick up his gun and keeping his sights leveled at the figure’s head the whole time.

  “Throw your weapon out! Do it!”

  “Can’t,” came the reply. “You shot my arm to fuck, you dumb grunt.”

  The chopper hovered ahead, rotors blasting as its thunderous engine made the very ground shake.

  Alicia advanced and shot out the Porsche’s side mirror. As a team they swung around from left and right, both covering the man behind the wheel.

  Despite the man’s grimace of agony, Drake recognized him from the photo. It was Claude.

  Time to pay.

  *****

  Ben Blake jumped in shock when his mobile started to ring. Mimicking Drake, he had also switched to Evanescence. Amy Lee’s chilling vocals on the track “Lost in Paradise” firmly matched everyone’s mood of the moment.

  The screen read International. The call wouldn’t be from a member of his family. But, in light of the National Archives operation, it could be from any number of government offices.

  “Yes?”

  “Ben Blake?”

  Fear scratched his spine with sharp fingers. “Who’s this?”

  “Tell me.” The voice was cultured, English and fully assured. “Right now. Do I speak to Ben Blake?”

  Karin came over to him, reading the dread in his face. “Yes.”

  “Good. Well done. Was that so hard? My name is Daniel Belmonte.”

  Ben almost dropped the phone. “What? How the hell did you—”

  A stream of refined guffaws stopped him. “Relax. Just relax, my friend. I’m surprised, to say the least, that Alicia Myles and your lady friend haven’t mentioned my… prowess.”

  Ben gaped, unable to speak. Karin was mouthing the words, the thief? From London? That’s him?

  Ben’s face said it all.

  “Cat got your tongue, Mr. Blake? Maybe you should put your lovely sister on. How is Karin?”

  The mention of his sister’s name galvanized him a little. “Where did you get my number?”

  “Don’t patronize me. Do you really think it would take two hours to complete the simple operation you asked of me? Or have I spent the last forty minutes learning a little about my… benefactors? Hmm? Take your time with that one, Blakey.”

  “I know nothing about you,” Ben said defensively. “You were suggested by—” He paused. “By—”

  “Your girlfriend? I’m sure I was. She knows me rather well.”

  “And Alicia?” Karin shouted, trying to unbalance the man. They were both so surprised and so green it hadn’t even occurred to them to alert the CIA yet.

  There was a moment’s silence. “That girl actually scares me, truth be told.”

  Ben’s brain stared to function. “Mr. Belmonte, the item you were asked to copy is very valuable. So
valuable—”

  “I understand that. It was written by Captain Cook and one of his men. Cook made more discoveries in his three voyages than any man in history.”

  “I don’t mean historical value,” Ben snapped. “I mean it might save lives. Now. Today.”

  “Really?” Belmonte sounded genuinely interested. “Please tell.”

  “I can’t.” Ben started to feel a little desperate. “Please. Help us.”

  “It’s already on your email,” Belmonte said. “But I wouldn’t be the man I am if I didn’t show you my worth, now would I? Enjoy.”

  Belmonte ended the call. Ben threw the mobile on the table and clicked away on the computer for a few seconds.

  The missing pages from Cooks logs came right up in full, glorious color.

  “The levels of hell,” Ben read aloud. “Cook only got to the fifth level and then turned back. My God, do you hear that, Karin? Even Captain Cook didn’t get past the fifth level. It’s… it’s…”

  “A massive trap system.” Karin was speed reading over his shoulder, photographic memory working overtime. “The biggest and most insane trap system ever imagined.”

  “And if it’s that big, that dangerous and elaborate…” Ben turned to her. “Imagine the enormity and significance of the wonder that it leads to.”

  “Beyond belief,” Karin said and read on.

  *****

  Drake dragged Claude out of the shot-up car and deposited him roughly in the road. His screams of pain rent the air, piercing even the roar of the chopper.

  “Fools! You will never stop this. He always wins. Fuck, my goddamn arm hurts, you bastard!”

  Drake placed his machine gun at arm’s length and knelt on Claude’s chest. “Just a few questions, mate. Then the medics will pump you full of some really good shit. Where is Kovalenko? Is he here?”

 

‹ Prev