Chapter 14

There were only two options open to me: surrender or resist.

Surrendering isn’t normally in my vocabulary.

But how could I resist officers of the law?

Sheriff Aitken was one of the murderous group headed by Robert Huffman, but I couldn’t be sure how far his influence extended to the men and women under his command. In all likelihood, the junior officers were simply good people following orders. To them I’d be a gun-toting fugitive who’d brought violence to their town. They’d be determined to bring me to justice, and if I came out with my guns blazing, I could expect them to return fire.

I didn’t want any good people to die.

To surrender meant coming out empty-handed. In approximately five seconds, I’d be face down on the sidewalk with my hands cuffed behind me. Then straight to a cell. At Aitken’s mercy, I didn’t doubt that some tragic accident would come my way while pent up in a cage. Maybe Larry Bolan would be my first visitor. That’s if Aitken’s trigger finger didn’t slip the second I poked my head out of the motel-room door.

There were only seconds to decide.

The tear gas was launched with the intention of forcing me into their arms. If I didn’t show quickly, they’d be following the gas into the room to take me down while I was coughing and choking on its effects. Shouted commands from outside drifted to me, but I wasn’t listening. They were irrelevant to what would happen next.

The front door was covered, so too would be the bathroom window. No apparent way out. The cops had me cornered and debilitated by their gas.

Unless they’d wrung it out of Kate, they wouldn’t know that I was ex-Special Forces. They couldn’t know that I’d been trained to continue fighting even under extreme duress. Being exposed to tear gas, CS, PAVA, and all manner of non-lethal chemicals and irritants is standard practice for someone with my background.

The gas had filled the room.

Grabbing up my discarded jacket, I tied it round my face as an improvised mask. It didn’t help my eyes, but it took away the acridness tearing at my respiratory system. Then I moved to the cupboard upon which the TV played away to itself and shoved the TV to the floor. The newscaster on the screen didn’t seem aware of the tumble he’d just taken.

Using the TV as a step, I clambered up on to the cupboard. From outside I heard the scuff of feet as the assault began. I thrust upwards, throwing back the service hatch into the loft just as feet pounded towards the building. Men were shouting, identifying themselves, telling me to lay down my weapons. Then I hauled myself into the roof space, rolling sideways so that I could kick the hatch back into place. The sound of it slamming shut was covered by the crash of the room door being smashed off its hinges.

Immediately the shouts of the first officers inside filled the room below, then banging and clattering as they moved through the room bumping into furniture. They’d be wearing gas masks, but they’d still be confused by the smoke. When the living area was cleared they’d move to the bathroom. I came to my feet in the narrow attic space, moving hurriedly to my right. When the motel was built, the expense of fitting out the rooms wasn’t extended to the attic area. No walls had been erected, so I had a free run to the far end of the building. Unsure of what I’d find in the room below, I hauled open the hatch and dropped through the hole into darkness.

The room was vacant. The drapes were open, and I could see the gumball lights from the Sheriff’s Department’s vehicles dancing on the snowflakes drifting by the window. Pulling free my jacket and shucking into it, I moved quickly to the door and opened it an inch. I could see movement at the far end of the block. It wasn’t the kind of take-down you’d see conducted by big city SWAT teams. Three squad cars. A maximum of ten or twelve officers, I calculated. Most of them were in the room or covering the back. There were only two men outside, and only one I was interested in: a short, stocky man in a cop’s uniform standing at the front of a liveried car.

I’d never seen Sheriff Aitken before, or even had a description of him from Larry Bolan, but I knew who the barrel-chested punk was. Like all murdering cowards, he wasn’t about to put himself in the line of fire; not when he had innocents under his command who could be ordered to do so.

It’d be a matter of seconds before they realised how I’d escaped them. Give them another half-minute and they’d be conducting a thorough search of every room in the block.

Never let it be said that Joe Hunter is too rash for his own good. I could run, yes. But running, like surrender, doesn’t sit too well with me. I’m more your go-for-broke kind of guy. Which was the driving force for me throwing open the door and running directly at Sheriff Aitken.

The punk didn’t see me coming. He was too intent on watching the assault on the motel room. His face was a long oval, mouth open in anticipation. He was holding a revolver down by his thigh. Probably the gun he intended using to assassinate me.

Aitken was blind to my approach, but not so the deputy who was standing aiming a shotgun over the open door of his squad car. He caught my rush in his peripheral vision and his face swung my way. Surprised, he couldn’t make immediate sense of the man running towards him, but his eyes blinked in astonishment at the guns I held in my hands. It took his brain a second or so to recognise the danger, to fire commands to the hands holding the shotgun. In that time I’d crossed most of the distance between us and brought up my SIG.

I fired before he did.

I aimed directly for his central mass and hit him dead centre.

The man dropped behind the car door and he stayed down.

That pleased me. It meant that I wouldn’t have to kill the poor sap. I’d purposefully fired into his bullet-proof vest. The Kevlar would have stopped the bullet, but not the impact which had knocked the wind and the senses out of him.

I didn’t stop my forward rush, only angled it towards Sheriff Aitken.

Now he was aware of me.

He turned, bringing up his revolver.

He was wearing a vest as well, but he deserved something a little more lethal. The only thing stopping me unloading a full clip into his head was that I needed him alive. He couldn’t tell me where Kate was if I left him steaming in the frigid parking lot.

Aitken didn’t have such qualms. All he was interested in was having me dead at his feet. My mad charge was all the justification he required to put me down. Who would challenge the killing when it was so obviously self-defence? With me dead, Kate would follow. Then they could get back to finding Imogen Ballard and put an end to this hiccup in Huffman’s plans.

Aitken fired.

Only I was dropping under his line of fire, skidding like I was headed for first base. The snow helped my crazy attack, allowed me to slide the ten feet that separated us. Instead of stepping aside, Aitken was too intent on shooting at me. He tried to track me with his gun, but my movement was faster than his ability to follow it. Then my feet slammed into his shins and Sheriff Aitken sprawled over the top of me, his revolver sliding away into darkness. His body was on top of mine but only for as long as it took me to swing him over and on to his back. I came up from the floor with one knee on his chest and the Magnum under his chin. My SIG was squared on the door to my motel room.

The shots fired had alerted those within the room. I saw a man in a gas mask and vest come out of the cloud of tear gas pouring out the open door. He had a pump-action shotgun and it was aimed at me.

Good guy or bad, I wasn’t going to let him take off my head. I shot him in his left leg and he collapsed in agony.

‘The next man out of that room dies!’ I roared at the top of my lungs. To add validity to my threat, I fired a couple of rounds into the room — careful to keep the bullets above their heads.

‘Get up,’ I said to Aitken. ‘Now!’

Aitken scrambled up, showing me his empty hands. ‘Easy now, son. I’m unarmed.’

‘I’m not your son,’ I snarled at him. ‘Now get in the car. You drive.’

‘You’re making a big mistake…’

I cracked him round the side of his face with the barrel of the Magnum. ‘The only mistake is that you’re still alive, asshole. Now get the hell in the car before I decide to put things right.’

Aitken didn’t need telling twice. He bustled into his squad car even as I clambered in the back. There was mesh between us, but it didn’t mean a thing when I was armed.

‘Drive,’ I shouted.

‘Where?’ he asked as he reversed away from the other parked cars. I saw the man I’d shot in the chest rolling on to his knees and was gratified to see that he appeared unharmed.

‘Away from here. And don’t try to lead me into a trap. I’m not an idiot, Aitken. Try to set me up and I’ll do to you what the Bolans did to the real sheriff.’

At my words, I saw his head shrink into his thick shoulders.

‘Yeah, I know all about that. And everything else you’ve got going with Huffman.’ Behind us the deputies were racing for their vehicles, planning on giving pursuit. ‘Get on the radio, Aitken. Tell them to back off or I swear to God I’ll kill you.’

Aitken was quick to comply. He also drove like he intended outrunning the storm that was growing stronger around us.

‘Take us out of town,’ I ordered.

‘Where?’

‘I’ll know it when we get there.’

‘What happens then?’

‘That depends on whether you’ve harmed Kate or not.’

‘I haven’t. I swear to you she’s fine.’

‘So maybe I’ll let you live, Aitken,’ I said, ‘if you tell me where she is.’

‘I’ll tell you! She’s with Huffman.’

‘Where?’

‘I don’t know.’

I drew back the hammer on the Magnum. The double click was ominous.

Aitken cringed. ‘I swear to you… Jesus… I don’t know where he took her.’

‘Think.’ Tapping the Magnum on the wire mesh, I warned him, ‘You’ve got until I tell you to stop. You don’t come up with where she’s at, well, Aitken, that’ll mean you’ve outlived your usefulness.’

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