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No Man's Land

Page 25

by James Axler


  A shadowy form of a tall, lean figure in a long frock coat stood not thirty feet away, bolt upright, his back to him.

  Ryan took a flash sight on the center of that back and triggered a double-tap.

  Impossibly the tall shadow was already moving. It ducked and whirled into a doorway, out of the line of fire.

  Ryan threw himself backward as two lightning shots blasted back at him. He landed on his butt, then scrambled to his feet. He heard the crunch of boots walking on the hardscrabble street with no effort at keeping quiet.

  “I have you now, Cawdor,” Snake Eye said. “If you stand and face me, I’ll make it quick. My word of honor.”

  Fuck that, Ryan thought. The crazy thing was, he reckoned the mercie meant it.

  Not that he intended to do what he was told and find out. He turned and raced back along the street, ducking into a doorway just ahead of another gunshot. This one missed by so little he felt its hot breath on the back of his neck.

  * * *

  LOOKING CAUTIOUSLY AROUND a corner, Snake Eye glimpsed a tall shape in a long coat duck into yet another doorway. He laughed quietly to himself.

  “Enough fun,” he said softly. “Time to end this charade.”

  He walked openly down the street. He was unconcerned that his enemy might pop up and shoot him. He knew for a warm certainty now that he could blast first, before even Ryan Cawdor could loose a round.

  Because he was Snake Eye, and he truly was the best.

  “Let me sweeten the pot, Cawdor,” he called as he strolled slowly toward the doorway into which his quarry had vanished. The buildings on this street block were one-story structures, with flat roofs. He kept alert to the chance his prey might manage to scramble up and pop a shot from a rooftop.

  It wouldn’t make any difference. He held a blaster in either black-taloned hand, and was equally proficient with both.

  “If you stop running and stand and face me, I’ll make it quick for your friends, too,” Snake Eye said. “Don’t think I forgot about your sweet-cheeked little redhead bitch and the rest. I took a contract on all of you, and I always fulfill a contract.”

  He came to the door. “Ready or not...” he began.

  And stepped around into the doorway.

  By the faint moonlight filtering in through door and window he made out the gleam of an eyeball, the curve of a scuffed boot toe. He even could make out the shape of a tall man.

  Unbelievably, his victim was sitting in a chair passively awaiting him. Snake Eye didn’t know whether to be disappointed or impressed: pathetic resignation, or final act of supreme bravado?

  That didn’t matter, either. He didn’t even bother ducking out of the doorway’s fatal funnel. He had tested his opponent’s metal, and was supremely confident he could spot any motion—and blast first.

  “I don’t know what your game is, Ryan Cawdor,” he said, “but it ends now. Stand up on your two feet and face me like a man.”

  Instead the man illuminated his own face with a small flashlight. His face was gaunt and wrinkled. His two eyes were blue, but not the winter-sky blue of Ryan Cawdor’s single orb.

  “Tanner?” Snake Eye said incredulously. “What are you doing here, old man?”

  “Sitting in a chair facing you.”

  Snake Eye laughed incredulously. “Cawdor can’t beat me. Surely you don’t think you’re faster than I am?”

  “Nooo,” Doc said, drawing the word out long. “But that bullet is.”

  Knowledge struck Snake Eye like a hammer made of ice.

  “Shit,” he said, and started to spin.

  Doc was right. Something that seemed to be the size of the Earth slammed into Snake Eye’s back. His vision flamed briefly red.

  Then faded to black.

  * * *

  BY WELL-TRAINED HABIT Ryan worked the bolt action of his Steyr Scout as he rode the recoil. The empty brass bounced with a chiming note on the attic floorboards as he brought his scope back online.

  A good marksman knew when he’d made a good shot. Ryan felt that now.

  He saw what he knew he’d see: a body sprawled in the doorway of the abandoned shop Doc had lured the mercie into.

  It hadn’t been a challenging shot for Ryan. Even with a bum right shoulder that hurt like fire from the recoil of a powerful 7.62 mm cartridge in a light weapon. It had been more of a challenge making his way to this attic above the second floor of a narrow frame house without breaking his neck. But he made it, and gained an unobstructed shot across the low flat roof of a neighboring building to the doorway a street over.

  Yellow light blew out the vacant doorway and empty windows in a quick flash. The supine body jerked. Doc was doing the wise thing: making sure with a shot from his LeMat.

  Ryan grinned. He felt cold bleakness all the way through to his marrow.

  “You might have been better than me,” he said softly to his definitely chilled enemy. “But definitely not smarter than me.”

  * * *

  IT TOOK BUT A MATTER of minutes for Doc and Ryan to find the entry to the hidden redoubt. Snake Eye had thoughtfully left the corpse of one of the greencoat sentries sprawled before the entry to the storehouse he’d been guarding.

  Those few short minutes seemed endless to Ryan. He could hear the crackle of blasterfire from just outside the ville, knew that his lover and his companions were sorely pressed. Could they possibly hold out long enough?

  They’d have to. Just as he had to do what remained to be done. Just like they always did.

  Doc’s flashlight showed an open trapdoor with another chill lying beside it. He looked at Ryan and raised a brow.

  “We need to know,” Ryan said.

  “Indeed,” Doc agreed.

  Moving past him, Ryan flicked on a flashlight of his own. The beam shone on a concrete floor a story down and revealed a rectangle of darkness to one side—darkness rimmed by the glimmer of vanadium steel. They had found the redoubt, no question.

  But have we found a way out, Ryan wondered, or just a well-stocked rattrap? Maybe it was only a predark stockpile and not a redoubt at all.

  As he’d told Doc, they had to know.

  He descended into the cold and waiting earth.

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  A rider aimed a sawed-off shotgun at Krysty from the back of his rearing horse. She stuck her left hand out and blasted two quick shots from her Smith & Wesson 640. It was a terrible position to shoot from, but the muzzle of the handblaster’s abbreviated barrel was no more than a foot from its target.

  The man bellowed in gut-shot agony. His scattergun emptied both barrels at the sky. He fell over as his horse bolted.

  The Uplander cavalry was all over their little position in their nest of hills like soldier ants. She spotted another Uplander cavalryman leveling a revolver at one of her friends from about thirty feet away. Aiming her Peacemaker hastily with her right hand she fired at him. The heavy soft-lead .45-caliber slug smashed his bearded lower jaw.

  His screams turned to gurgles as blood flooded his throat. He dropped his handblaster to clutch his face with both hands, his horse carrying him away.

  A heavy thud from behind drew Krysty’s attention. Looking over her shoulder as she turned, she saw another soldier looming over her, his cavalry saber upraised. She had no chance to defend against or escape the blow. The keen curved blade swept for her face.

  Something whirred past the left side of Krysty’s face, then something long swung into her field of vision, meeting the saber with a clack and throwing her attacker’s arm out wide. She flung out her left hand and blasted off the three shots remaining in her .38.

  Two shots missed. The third bullet hit his sword shoulder as he fought to recover from having his weapon batted hard.

  The object that had saved her from the sword flashed back into view. She recognized her discarded Winchester longblaster, held by the barrel, as its butt-stock shattered against the soldier’s forehead.

  As he fell away. Krysty waved her arm, def
lecting his eye-rolling chestnut from trampling her as it fled.

  Jak, his white hair dyed pink with blood, leaped on the fallen greencoat with a knife, held ice-pick-style, in one hand. With rattlesnake speed it pumped up and down four or five times as he stabbed the supine man.

  She heard the roar of J.B.’s shotgun somewhere close at hand, saw Mildred go down beneath the flailing hooves of a cavalry horse. Impossibly, she rolled to the side and relative safety before the hooves came hammering down where she had fallen.

  The M-4000 bellowed again. The right side of the rider’s green-plaid flannel erupted into shreds and red spray. He swayed but somehow kept his seat as his horse, too, took off back toward the Uplander Army.

  Krysty had her Peacemaker leveled, hammer cocked, swinging this way and that, seeking targets. Impossibly, she found none. Did we win again? she wondered wildly. Somehow?

  “Aww, shit.”

  She looked around to see Mildred on her knees, clutching a bleeding upper left arm with a hand that still held her ZKR blaster. She was looking south.

  Following her gaze, Krysty realized that all they had won was another few heartbeats of life, because a fresh group of bluecoats was just hitting the bottom of their clump of hills from the south.

  A blaster cracked, its loud authority proclaiming it to be a high-powered modern longblaster.

  Krysty’s heart jumped into her throat. She recognized that weapon, as she did the voice of the man who had just fired it in the air for everybody’s attention.

  “Listen up, everybody!” Ryan shouted. “All of you—both sides.”

  “Ryan?” Mildred said. “Are you out of your mind?”

  By the moonlight he was plainly visible, a few steps south of the dilapidated huddle of Heartbreak, waving his Steyr Scout over his head with both hands in lieu of a white flag.

  “We found the redoubt,” he shouted. “It’s right here. The thing you’re looking for.”

  “Ryan!” Krysty yelled. “Don’t tell them!”

  “Find anyway,” Jak said. He stood at her side looking as if somebody had dumped a bucket of blood over his head.

  “It’s what you care about, right? Not us. But you can waste time trying to chill us while the other side goes for the loot! Make your choice.”

  “He is,” Mildred said. “He is out of his mind.”

  “Crazy like a fox, girl,” J.B. said. He had his pack on his back and a huge grin on his face as he handed Mildred her own backpack. “Get ready to move.”

  The bluecoat cavalry was milling around at the foot of the hill, looking from the companions, to their own lines, and back again in confusion.

  Somebody handed her her own backpack. She shouldered it without looking around.

  “It’s all just waiting for you,” Ryan called to the rival armies. “Are you going to grab it? Or let the other side have it?”

  “Kill the outlanders!” a voice roared from the Uplander camp.

  Krysty looked east. The new Alliance Army commander, Colonel Turnbull, was rearing his horse out in front of his own lines and waving his sword. “I command you, take the hill!”

  She saw his body jerk. He swayed, then he slumped to the grass as the sound of three quick blaster shots reached her ears.

  “Seize the treasure, you fools!” a woman yelled.

  In the front of the Uplander lines, Krysty saw Jessie Rae Siebert, her pertly pretty face distorted by passion. At her side stood a greencoat officer with long pale locks and a goatee, holding his own blaster muzzle-high in the air.

  “For the Alliance, and you Baron!” the blond man roared. “Go!”

  “Run for it!” another voice cried.

  Ryan.

  “We’re good,” Krysty heard J.B. say. “Go.”

  Cheering hoarsely the two armies surged toward each other as Krysty joined her companions scrambling down the hill toward Ryan. He had his longblaster held across his chest, now, ready to respond to threats, but not threatening anybody.

  Shots popped as they reached the flat. Krysty’s teeth clenched, and she anticipated the slam of bullets at any second. Or the sight of one of her friends going down—especially J.B. and Mildred, laboring under the weight of double packs.

  But no shots seemed to come their way. No bullets moaned past or kicked up divots of turf as they pounded toward the ruined ville, though screams and shouts had joined the deafening thunder of blasterfire.

  The two armies had thoughts only for the hidden treasure, and the only thing that really stood between them and it.

  Their lifelong blood enemies.

  Krysty glanced back once over her shoulder as she approached Ryan, who continued to wait alertly, just in time to see the two masses of men and horses crash into each other behind her and begin to fight like packs of rabid dogs.

  * * *

  RYAN STOOD outside the mat-trans unit with his backpack riding his shoulders, ignoring the pain that caused him. His longblaster was still ready. He would be the last inside, wouldn’t budge until all of his companions were safely ready to jump.

  And miraculously, they all were, though they were dinged, gashed and battered.

  J.B. flashed him a fast grin as he limped past. “We beat the Devil at his own game again, didn’t we, Ryan?”

  “That we did, my friend,” he said. “That we did.”

  Ricky and Jak went in just ahead of Ryan. Holding himself upright by the sheer iron of his will, he joined his companions.

  “So,” Ricky Morales said, his eyes huge in a face that was scarcely recognizable behind a mask of grime and blood, “who do you think’ll win up there?”

  “Who cares?” Ryan grunted, as he closed the door to the mat-trans unit and hurried to sit beside Krysty.

  As the disks in the floor began to glow and a fine mist started to envelop his companions, Ryan realized that they had barely cheated death this time.

  He hoped that they’d jump to somewhere peaceful, somewhere they could bide awhile.

  Ryan figured it was time they caught a break.

  * * * * *

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  ISBN: 9781459245167

  Copyright © 2012 by Worldwide Library

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  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental. This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

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