State Of War. Don Pendleton

State Of War - Don Pendleton


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      “Clear.”

      Savacool crouched beside the kitchen island cradling an M-4 carbine.

      Bolan tapped an icon on his phone. “Bear, I need satellite on my position, stat.”

      “I thought you’d gone dark on the Savacool family estate?”

      “Stat, Bear.”

      “One second. Checking available satellites. Have one with window. Nonessential shore surveillance. Assuming priority...now.” Kurtzman’s voice rose in instant alarm. “Striker! Be advised! You are surrounded!”

      “Show me.” Bolan’s screen filled with an overhead thermal image of Great-Aunt Savacool’s manse. It was surrounded by what looked like between thirty and forty individuals. They formed an arc, cutting off the house from the road. The river behind blocked any escape out the back.

      Bolan’s eyes narrowed. “Show me my car.”

      The satellite zoomed on the hood of the Town Car. Cocosino’s crocodile graffito glowed like a neon sign. Kaino glowered beneath his goggles. “Jesus, when Cocosino tagged your car, Coop, he really tagged your car.”

      Savacool risked a peek over the kitchen island and out the window. She didn’t have any NVGs, but it was a clear night. The ancient and poorly dispersed streetlights threw small islands of yellow light. The huge, spreading live oaks threw pools of blackness. She popped down grimacing in the dark of the kitchen. “It’s like Night of the Living Dead out there.”

      Bolan rose and took a quick look. In his NVGs the world was lit in green and gray. Savacool wasn’t far off the mark. Dozens of figures were literally shambling toward the house. However, the walking dead didn’t usually carry bats, knives and other improvised hand weapons. They also didn’t usually have a universal uniform of a black hoodie.

      Even for Bolan the smell was starting to become overpowering.

      Savacool clicked off the safety on her carbine.

      Bolan shook his head. “No.”

      Savacool was appalled. “No? What do you mean, no?”

      “They’re junkies.”

      Kaino quietly exploded. “So fucking what? I’m with Cool! We cut our way to the car and—”

      Glass shattered outside and fire spread across the hood of Bolan’s ride.

      “Oh, that’s just grand!” Kaino snarled.

      Bolan read his opponent’s mind. “He wants us to start shooting.”

      “I want to start shooting!”

      “These people are krokodil junkies. I suspect he gave them all a nice fat fix hours ago and bused them in while they were flying high. Now they’re coming down and they’re hurting for it, and the price of free fixes for life is our heads.”

      Savacool’s voice was quiet but firm. “Cooper, that is the sickest thing I have ever heard, and I feel for those poor souls outside, but I am not going to be dragged down and torn apart by rotting junkies.”

      Another Molotov looped through the air. It fell just short of the porch and broke on the flagstones.

      Kaino spoke through clenched teeth. “Coop, they’re going to burn us out!”

      “Cocosino wants a massacre, and while it’s going on he’s waiting to take his shot.”

      Savacool gave Bolan a desperate plan. “Tell me you have a plan.”

      “I do.”

      “What’s that?”

      “I’m going out there.”

      The FBI agent and the Miami-Dade master sergeant spoke in unison. “What the fuck!”

      “Cool, you’re going onto the porch with your rifle. Cocosino is camouflaged, just another skell in an army of them. When he takes his shot at me, you take him down. Kaino, you’re going to defend the porch. I suspect some of these guys are going to get past me.”

      “And if I’m not allowed to shoot, how am I supposed to do that?”

      “Unless someone shoots at you, you’re doing it with your fists.”

      “Jesus!”

      “We’re out of time.” Bolan shrugged into his vest. He wished he had a full raid suit of rip stop material gloves and a helmet. He belted his Beretta to his thigh and cinched the retaining strap so it couldn’t be taken from him in a clinch. “Let’s go.”

      Bolan strode out the front door and marched down the steps.

      One of the junkies in the oncoming crowd screamed. “Get him!” He let loose with a tee-ball. The hate stick revolved through the air. Bolan turned his body slightly to avoid it and marched straight up to the hater. Up close the soldier saw sunken eyes and cheeks. He sent his fist crashing into the emaciated face. The junkie flew back five feet and fell like a broken scarecrow. Several junkies moaned. Others clutched themselves more tightly than their weapons. Many were already shivering from withdrawal. Bolan cracked his knuckles and regarded the crowd by the light of his burning Lincoln. “Who’s next?”

      Fear rippled through the swaying crowd and fought addiction on nearly equal terms.

      “Kill him!” a woman in the crowd shrieked like a harpy. “Kill him and we get all we want!”

      The cry was like the crack of a whip. Addiction won the battle. The junkies released their individual fears and gave themselves over to their need. “Kill him!”

      The crowd surged.

      “Get out of there!” Kaino roared.

      Bolan waded in. His fists became battering rams, his fingertips spears and the edges of his hands blunt axes. The soldier went for disabling strikes. He kept his kicks low so he couldn’t be taken off his feet, breaking clavicles and jaws. When he threw a kick, a junkie lost a knee or an ankle. Bolan didn’t whirl like a dervish. He moved through the crowd like a juggernaut. The attackers were weak, malnourished and, by the smell, carrying soon-to-be lethally infected wounds. They had two advantages, and those were numbers and abject desperation that had turned into bloodlust.

      A rock thudded into Bolan’s left shoulder. A bandaged hand missing a finger clawed across the lenses of Bolan’s NVGs and left a swathe of rotting infection across them. Bolan grabbed the stick-thin wrist and shattered the elbow behind it. He ripped the half pound of contaminated gear from his head and threw it into a screaming face.

      “Kill him! Kill him!”

      Bolan felt his gorge rise, and not just from the stench of rotting flesh. This might well have been the worst attack anyone ever had ever perpetrated on him. Cocosino had recruited an army of rotting junkies willing to kill and burn for one more fix and bused them into West Miami. Given what Bolan knew about krokodil addiction, killing them might have been a kindness.

      A .44 Magnum gun went off like a bomb in the crowd, and Bolan staggered as he took a sledgehammer blow low in his left floating ribs.

      “Kill him!”

      “Cooper!”

      An emaciated arm wrapped around Bolan’s throat and squeezed with chemically fueled strength. The krokodil zombies were only a few steps away from the living dead. They could hardly feel pain beyond the agony of their addiction, but they still had to breathe. Bolan rammed his elbow into his assailant’s guts. Fetid breath blasted out of degraded lungs. The grip around Bolan’s neck loosened and he took a step forward to give himself room. He swung again backward, and this time snapped his arm straight. The Executioner’s fist slammed up into his assailant’s groin. It was the one place where no drug could make a man invulnerable. The croc-zombie slimed off Bolan’s back vomiting. The soldier suddenly had a few feet of breathing room.

      A figure indistinguishable from the other ghouls raised


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