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The Cold Edge

Page 22

by Trevor Scott


  “May I at least have my GPS?” Jake asked.

  The little man who had Jake’s backpack looked to Petrova for guidance. Petrova nodded, so the spike-haired little guy found the GPS and handed it to Jake.

  Jake turned on his GPS and punched in a series of numbers. “Here we go.” Jake started walking, when he heard the guns click rounds into their chambers. He stopped and turned slowly, finding them all pointing their guns at him. He looked at the GPS and said, “I’m only picking up around five satellites, making this accurate to around fifty feet. That’s a lot of forest to dig up.”

  Victor Petrova lowered the guns of two of his closest men. “I’ll hold the GPS,” he said, and he took it from Jake.

  So far so good, Jake thought.

  “This way,” Petrova said, pointing down the road.

  There were two big Swedes, three little people, four counting Petrova, and Jake. Six to one. Time to even the odds somewhat. Twisting to his right, Jake planted his foot in the knee of the closest Swede, heard a snap, and didn’t wait for the man to hit the ground screaming in pain. Jake had timed his kick just as they were passing a grove of large trees, which he rushed into now. The first couple of bullets hit the trees near his head as Jake weaved behind a huge spruce.

  Petrova yelled at his men not to fire. They still needed Jake alive.

  Jake ran as fast as he could through the thick underbrush, jumped the little stream, and turned to the north to run parallel with the road—though he couldn’t see anything through the forest. He jumped rocks and fallen trees and kept on running. His only problem was being on the wrong side of the road for what he had planned.

  He vectored back toward the road, his pace slowing now to keep down the noise of his progress. He had to believe the other Swede had been sent after him. Petrova’s little men would have a hard time negotiating the forest. They would travel down the road. Jake had to beat them to his spot.

  As Jake got closer to the road, he could see a pair of the little men about a hundred yards back. Petrova had probably sent two one way and the other in the opposite direction. He would remain by the cars, just in case Jake swung back around. But Jake had stopped here for a reason. The road curved to the right here. So at least Petrova would not see him cross. His men might, though.

  Hesitating on the edge of the forest, catching his breath, Jake knew he had to make his break now. Mustering strength, Jake rushed across the road as fast as he could run. Bullets rattled onto the road at his feet, but he didn’t stop. He hit the other side of the road at full speed and flew through the underbrush.

  The next thing he knew, he was on his face in a soggy hole. He had hit a deadfall on his shins, the pain shooting up his legs. Willing himself to his feet, he limped ahead, pain throbbing at both shins.

  He could hear yelling, followed by the sound of cars moving slowly up the road. He should be close, he thought, his pace hampered somewhat by his sore legs. Then he saw the big tree ahead. If he could get there, he could gain the advantage. He was sure of that.

  Getting to the huge tree, Jake found what he was looking for—the plastic trash bag covered with ferns he had broken and placed on top. Keeping his eyes on the road, he ripped the bag open and grasped one of the Walter P99 handguns in 9mm he had gotten aboard the Norwegian Coast Guard ship. He had a full magazine of 16 rounds, plus one in the chamber, and a second magazine of 16, which he shoved into his pocket. Thirty-three rounds. Should be enough. But, considering the number of men following him, he wished he had also left one of the MP5s behind.

  Jake shoved the plastic bag under some moss and slowly stepped back into the thickest section of alders. He was only about twenty yards from the box of gems now. He would get no closer than that.

  When he heard the branch crack, he crouched behind a low spruce. It wouldn’t give him protection, but would give him cover.

  He waited and watched. Sweat dripped down his forehead into his eyes.

  Another slight crunch. Then nothing. Twenty yards?

  Jake could finally see a flash of green. It was the military sweater of the coke-bottle Swede. Aiming carefully, he waited for the man to clear some underbrush. The Swede’s automatic handgun flowed back and forth as if scanning the forest for Jake.

  One more step.

  Aim. Squeeze. Jake’s gun fired and he saw the bullet strike the man in his right shoulder, dropping him to the forest.

  Jake ran through the underbrush toward the Swede. He caught the man as he was trying to pick up his handgun with his left hand, but Jake was too fast, thrusting his foot into the man’s face, knocking him back into spongy moss on his back. Jake collected the man’s gun, an old Glock 19. Also 9mm.

  “You better kill me,” the Swede said.

  “No, Coke bottle, I think I’ll let you live.”

  “You’re fuckin’ dead,” the man growled.

  “You should have been,” Jake said. “This damn gun shoots high and to the left.”

  “Mine’s right on.”

  Really? Jake aimed it at the man, and fired once, shattering the man’s right knee. The Swede screamed loudly, his voice echoing through the dark forest. “You’re right,” Jake said. “It’s right on.”

  Jake left him there screaming. He’d use him for bait. He moved closer to the road and found a hiding spot, lowering himself to the forest floor among high ferns.

  He didn’t have to wait long. Scurrying. Shuffling. Two sets of feet. Ten yards apart. He lay in the cold, wet forest floor and listened carefully. Mosquitoes started to buzz his head, landing on his neck and ears and his exposed hands. He let them bite and tried his best to concentrate on the steps. The crunching forest.

  When they were close, very close, he rose up, a gun in each hand pointed in opposite directions, and fired twice with each gun. One man dropped instantly, the other fired back at him with his submachine gun, peppering the ferns as Jake dropped flat to the ground. Damn it. One gun had fired high and to the left again. He’d need to compensate for that next time. If there’d be a next time.

  He rolled to his side and then crawled through the ferns toward the cover of a larger tree. Bullets kept flying. Then they stopped. He had to change his magazine.

  Jake raised up and saw only the top of the man’s head as he looked down at his rifle, changing the magazine. He aimed low and fired twice. The man dropped with a thud.

  Three down. Three to go.

  Hopping to his feet, Jake ran deeper into the forest. The first bullet hit Jake in his back left shoulder, knocking him from his feet to the ground. The second and third bullets whizzed by his head and blasted into a big pine trunk.

  “I got him,” one of Petrova’s men yelled. The other Swede. “He’s down, boss.”

  “Shut up,” Victor Petrova yelled. Farther back. Perhaps at the road.

  Pain rushed through Jake’s body. His shoulder blade had been hit, the pain running all the way down his arm and back toward his chest. He could still breath, so the bullet hadn’t hit his lung. One good consolation. He rolled behind the large pine and put his hand on the exit wound. The bullet had bounced off his scapula, the exit the size of Jake’s thumb. Blood soaked down his jacket.

  He thought quickly. He had to stop the bleeding fast. The pine. Fresh pine pitch flowed from various spots on the rough bark. Jake scooped some up and shoved it into the bullet hole, the exit wound, and then grasped some more for the entrance wound. It worked. Some blood still seeped around the sap, but that slowed in a few seconds. He rubbed the sappy hand on the bark and then shoved his hand into the moist dirt, removing as much of the sticky stuff as he could.

  Now he concentrated on the task at hand. Three left, he said to himself again. Then, his head against the tree, he listened carefully for any sound out of the ordinary.

  There. A twig snap.

  Jake knew he was toast if he stayed there. A sitting duck. He had to move. Now.

  Rising to his feet, Jake circled around toward the last man he had shot.

  Two shots.
He kept running. Two more shots.

  He stopped suddenly behind a one-foot pine, his gun aimed toward the shots. When the Swede’s gun fired twice more, Jake had him. He shot three times. Heard at least two bullets hitting the man’s torso. He was down.

  Two left. The little man with the white flat-top, and Victor Petrova. He guessed the two of them would be together. Out by the road.

  But first Jake found the last little man he had shot. The man had taken a bullet through the nose, the back of his head with a hole the size of a baseball. Jake took the man’s un-used magazine with thirty rounds of 9mm intact. He shoved the magazine into his back pocket and slipped back into the woods.

  Jake moved closer to the road. He could see one of the Volvos ahead. Just a piece of metal through the trees. The two last men, especially Petrova, would not wander far from his only exit.

  Closer to the road now, Jake slowed his pace.

  “There’s just the two of us left,” Petrova yelled. He was behind the car. “We can split the gems fifty/fifty.”

  Jake thought back. Had he shot them all? Did he miss-count? No. Still the spike-haired little fellow. But Jake would have to call him out. Make the little man show himself.

  “Why wouldn’t I just take all of them for myself,” Jake yelled. Then he aimed his gun and scanned the area around the car and to both sides. The little guy could be anywhere.

  “You could do that,” Petrova said. “But what about a little professional courtesy? After all, they are rightfully mine. I acquired them in the first place. That was hard work.”

  “Yeah, it’s hard being a murderer and a thief,” Jake said, trying to throw his voice to one side.

  Nothing. Where the hell was that guy?

  Then Jake caught a flash of blond hair to his left. Twenty yards. Maybe more. He crouched down behind a little spruce and waited.

  “Hey, hey. Working for the old Soviet government wasn’t exactly a lucrative venture, Jake. The retirement plan sucks.”

  One more sequence from Jake and the man would fire. He knew that much.

  “Crime does pay,” Jake yelled.

  There. Just as he saw the blond hair, two shots fired toward Jake. He returned fire with five shots and sunk to the ground. He wasn’t sure if he hit anything. Might have. He took the time to reload both guns from the bullets in the MP5 magazine. Now he had 34 rounds to go, plus a handful he shoved into his pocket. He set aside the empty magazine and waited.

  “You still with us Jake?” Petrova yelled.

  “You can’t get rid of me that easily,” Jake said.

  Bullets buzzed by his head, but instead of returning fire, Jake’s focus turned to his left. Something made him turn. As he did, he saw the Swede, coke bottle, dragging his leg, a gun pointed at Jake.

  The two of them fired simultaneously. The Swede missed. Jake didn’t. He hit the man three times. Twice in the chest and once in the mouth. He dropped instantly.

  Okay. Now there were two.

  Jake belly crawled toward the man he had just shot, taking a position behind a larger tree. He would be more protected and might have a better angle on the blond man.

  Petrova yelled at Jake some more, but now Jake didn’t answer. He wanted them to think he was dead. He didn’t have to wait too long. Petrova was getting anxious. Now he switched from English to Russian—giving orders.

  Seconds later, the little blond man stepped lightly from behind a tree. Jake aimed and shot three times. This time the guy was down for good. Jake had seen the bullets strike.

  Just one left. Victor Petrova.

  “Jake, I knew this was going to be fun. You were worth every Krona and Euro.”

  Slowly making his way through the woods, Jake kept his gun aimed toward the car on the road, his steps as quiet as possible. All he could hear was the tiny brook, song birds, and a couple of ravens flying overhead. Probably anxious to get at those dead bodies, Jake guessed.

  Where the hell was that little troll? On the edge of the road now, Jake stopped and waited, his eyes and ears working hard to pick up anything. The pain in his left shoulder made his left arm almost useless.

  Concentrating on the car, Jake noticed the rear window down. He aimed his gun there and took another step. Stop.

  On the road now, he was vulnerable. In the open.

  He saw the barrel clear the top of the window and bullets flew toward him almost immediately.

  Diving to his left while he shot three times, he landed hard on his hip and rolled into the ditch. His bullets struck the rear door.

  Silence.

  He lay in the ditch of water, his gun through the weeds aimed at the car, and saw two little legs under the car. Jake shot twice and the little man’s leg shattered, dropping him to the ground on the other side of the car. The old KGB man fired at Jake until his gun was empty.

  Jake fired at Petrova until his gun locked the bolt back. Then he put in the last magazine and waited, his heart racing out of control.

  He couldn’t see the little man anywhere. Where was his body? That’s assuming Jake had even hit him. But he had to have hit him a second time.

  Using the car as cover, Jake rose up and rounded the front of the car, his gun leading him to his objective. When he got to the front of the car, he finally saw the little Russian in the ditch, his face down in the water.

  Jake moved cautiously toward Petrova, thinking he might have one more ruse left for him. But the man’s gun was laying at his side, and Jake could see blood everywhere. He kicked the man. Nothing. Felt for a pulse. Again, nothing.

  He was dead. Jake rolled the man over, out of the watery ditch. Part of Jake wished the man had lived. He had come to respect his intellect.

  Seconds later, Jake thought he heard a helicopter coming from the southwest. He sat down on the ground and wished like hell he had a beer or something stronger. Now the pain in his shoulder brought a chill to him as he sunk lower to the ground. What was that swishing sound?

  ●

  The helo swooped around a couple of times, Kjersti and crew checking the area for any sign of danger. One car sat down the road, possibly empty. Kjersti set the chopper down and dropped off Toni and Colonel Reed there and then took off toward the second car.

  Anna had spotted two men near that second car, and one, she thought, might have been Jake. The jacket looked the same. But both men were down and that bothered and concerned her.

  When Kjersti set the Bell down near the second car, Anna was the first out, running toward the car, her gun out and her eyes scanning the area. But she went only one place—toward the one she thought was Jake.

  She rounded the car and saw him near the ditch, his body slumped over in the grass. She rushed to Jake now, dropping her gun to the ground as she picked up Jake’s head and set it in her lap. His bristly face was covered with blood splatter from where a bullet had struck his shoulder. His clothes were wet and dirty, full of pine pitch. She pried the 9mm handgun from his right hand and started to cry. God, don’t take him from me. Not now.

  Sobbing, she whispered to him, “Jake. It’s Anna. Wake up, lover.” She kissed him on the lips, hoping to bring him to life.

  Time seemed to linger in a strange tempo of nothingness, the only sound now of birds chirping and trees slowly swaying in a light breeze.

  “Wake up, Jake,” she said louder. “You’ve got to wake up. I can’t do this alone.”

  Kjersti came over and checked the man in the ditch. “It’s Victor Petrova,” she said to Anna. “He’s dead.”

  Jake yawned first and then his eyes opened slowly. “They’re all dead,” he muttered. “What took you guys so long? I left enough bread crumbs.”

  Anna kissed him again on the lips and then hugged him tightly.

  “Oww,” Jake said. “Watch the shoulder.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  They both heard someone running up the road and they turned to see Colonel Reed and Toni Contardo.

  “What the hell are you two doing here?” Jake said.
r />   But neither of them said a word. They just stopped and stood about ten feet back, both with a look of uncertainty on their faces.

  “The Agency sent Toni with the scientists,” Anna explained.

  “I’m sorry, Jake,” Colonel Reed finally said.

  Jake shook his head. “No problem, colonel. That little troll is dead. He had people running all over for him. We just got caught up in his grand scheme.”

  Anna tried to help Jake to his feet. When she couldn’t do it alone, Kjersti helped her. Together they got Jake up and the three of them struggled toward the helo. Toni and Colonel Reed followed closely behind.

  After sitting against the chopper for a minute, drinking a full bottle of water, Jake stood on his own and took in a deep breath, stretching his muscles like a cat getting up from a nap.

  “I’ve gotta get something,” Jake said. “And I need to do it alone.”

  They all let him pass, and he wandered up the road about a hundred yards before scooting into the woods. About two minutes later, he came out carrying a metal box in his left arm like a baby.

  He walked up to them smiling. “Now we can go.”

  Anna said, “What about the bodies? How do we explain them?”

  Kjersti said, “I’ll take care of that. But first we need to get Jake out of the country and to a doctor.”

  Now Toni spoke up for the first time. “One of the scientists is a medical doctor. He can patch Jake up on the Agency Gulfstream. Where do you want to go?”

  Jake shrugged his only good shoulder—the one with the box of gems. “Back to Austria.”

  “What happens to those?” Colonel Reed asked, his eyes on the metal box.

  “Jake taught me an American idiom,” Anna said. “Finders keepers?”

  “She’s right,” Toni said. “They were found by Jake. And since he’s not affiliated with any government agency, he has the right to keep them.”

  Jake smiled. “Colonel, do you still work for the Agency?”

  “Not officially,” Colonel Reed said.

  “Then you’ll get some of this,” Jake said. “So will the families of our two officers who died in the Arctic in eighty-six—Steve Olson and John Korkala. Let’s go. No offense, Kjersti, but I think I’ve seen enough of Norway for a while.”

 

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