Ahern, Jerry – Survivalist 05 – The Web

Ahern, Jerry – Survivalist 05 – The Web

Prologue

John Rourke stood in the rain. He’d landed the Beech-craft because the

plane had been almost out of fuel. As best he’d been able to judge from

the maps, the plane was about twenty-five miles from Chambers and U.S. II

headquarters.

Paul was sitting in the plane, talking to his parents; the pilot had gone

to find some kind of transportation. The radio wasn’t working well, too

much static.

Beside Rourke stood Maj. Natalia Tiemerovna. “The truce will be over soon,

John; it is over now, I think.”

“At least it showed we’re still human beings, didn’t it?” Rourke said

quietly, his left hand cupped over his dark tobacco cigar, his right arm

around Natalia.

“You will go on looking?” she asked.

“Yes.”

“Where do you plan to go?”

“The Carolinas, maybe Georgia by Savannah. She was likely headed that

way.”

“I hope you find her—and the children.”

Rourke looked at the Russian woman. Rain water streamed down her face—and

his. ”Thank you, Natalia.”

The woman smiled, then lowered her eyes. She stood beside Rourke in the

pouring rain.

Chapter one

“I just damned well can’t order my men to fire on Americans to save a

Russian agent, Rourke—no matter how much she’s helped us!”

Rourke glanced at Reed, then snatched aMossberg ATPP riot pump from

one of Reed’s men. “Nobody has to order me,” he whispered, squinting hard

against the sunshine as he tromboned the shotgun and shouldered it.

“Rourke!”

“Leave it!” Rourke ordered, not looking at Reed as the Army Intelligence

captain spoke.

The crowd of men and women-—civilians, mostly— was advancing, rifles,

shotguns, clubs, and knives of every description in their hands. A woman

screamed from the crowd, “Give us that Commie bitch—now!”

Rourke snapped the muzzle of the riot shotgun down fast, firing, pumping,

then firing again, skipping the pellets of double- buck across the tarred

surface of the runway-access road, the pellets at most ricocheting upward

against the shins of the lead ranks of the mob. The mob fell back a few

yards. Rourke worked the tang-mounted safety after tromboning another

round into the chamber, then handed the shotgun to Reed. “That’s

called riot control—ever hear of it?”

Rourke didn’t wait for an answer, extending his hand; Reed took it. “You

didn’t get weather from the tower.”

“That’s all right—couldn’t be hotter up there than it is here.” Rourke

nodded toward the mob. They were advancing again. Reed shouldered the pump

and worked the safety, then fired into the runway surface, the roughly

thirty-caliber pellets skipping toward the rioters. “See—works just great.

About two more times, and the braver ones are gonna figure you’re trying

too hard not to kill ’em—then they’re going to rush you. Let ’em past;

we’ll be airborne.”

“Rourke?”

“Yeah—I know. Good luck.” Rourke nodded fast, then took off in a dead run

behind the dozen or so armed U.S. II troopers and toward the pickup truck.

“He’s gonna make a break for it with the Russian girl!” an angry voice

shouted from the crowd behind him. Rourke hoped the anonymous voice was

right.

He reached the truck, jumping aboard, the door not closed as he worked the

key. The ignition fired; his right fist locked on the floor-mounted

gearshift. His left foot popped the clutch; the dark tobacco cigar moved

across the clenched tight teeth and settled in the left corner of his

mouth as the truck lurched ahead. The truck door slammed itself, the

mirror vibrating as Rourke studied it. The mob had closed with Reed’s men,

closed with them sooner than Rourke had expected, and had passed them.

There was sporadic gunfire, and behind the truck now, Rourke could see the

first ragged ranks of the mob— running after him toward the airfield.

Far ahead, through the cracked glass of the Ford’s windshield, he could

see the light cargo plane, the twin

props still not whirring. Rourke hammered his left fist down hard on the

vintage truck’s horn button, again and again.

He could see a figure—Rubenstein?—running from the starboard wing around

the nose of the aircraft. Natalia would be at the controls. “Shit!”

Rourke stomped the clutch down hard, working the gas pedal as well,

double-clutching as he upshifted, the truck’s gears grinding. The vehicle

bumped, then lurched ahead.

He glanced to his left—something, a sixth sense, making him do it. Hearing

anything aver the roar of his truck’s engine, the gunfire, and the shouts

of the mob from behind was impossible. From his left were coming two

pickup trucks, armed men in the hacks of each vehicle—rifles, shotguns,

handguns, axes—and blood in their collective eye.

He shook his head, almost in disbelief. Three days earlier, Natalia had

been rescuing their wives and babies, putting them aboard the planes of

the evacuation fleet in Florida. But now—none of that mattered. She was

Russian, and the Russians had started World War III, destroyed much of the

United States, invaded American shores. Natalia was Russian. It didn’t

matter who she was, just what. Rourke felt the corners of his mouth

downturning. “Ignorant bastards!” Rourke snarled as he glanced again at

the two pickup trucks. They were closing fast, gunfire now being leveled

at him from the beds of the trucks. The West Coast mirror on the

right-hand side of the vintage Ford pickup he drove shattered under the

impact of a slug.

Rourke reached under his left armpit, snatching at one of the twin

Detonics stainless .s he carried in the

double Alessi shoulder rig. He aimed the pistol as his thumb cocked the

hammer, then turned his face away from the passenger-side window, firing,

as the shattering outward of the passenger-side glass and the roar of the

-grain JHP in the confined space all came together to make his ears

ring. He looked toward the passenger side; the nearest of the two trucks

swung away. He fired the Detonics again; this time, the glass of his

borrowed truck not partially deflecting the bullet, his bullet hammered

into the front windshield of the nearest of the pursuers.

Rourke glanced to his left, seeing behind him through the driverVside

window the pursuing mob. The mob split, a wing of it running diagonally

from the access road toward the field, to cut him off or to reach the

airplane ahead of him—he couldn’t be sure which.

Rourke glanced to his right. A wooden fence was all that separated him

from the grassy area leading toward the field. He cut the wheel hard

right, the cocked and locked Detonics secured under his right thigh as he

aimed the pickup truck toward the fence. One of the pursuing trucks, the

one with the shot-out windshield, was coming for him broadside. Rourke

grabbed up the Detonics again, firing. The pursuing truck swerved hard

right through the wooden fence, almost in perfect simul­taneity with the

truck Rourke drove.

Behind him now, Rourke could see the second truck, coming up fast as it

punched through the fence. Some of the fence slats, caught up in its front

bumper, broke away as the truck, a Chevy, bounced and jarred across the

uneven ground. Rourke upped the safety on his Detonics again, hammering

down the gas pedal and shifting down into third, releasing the pedal and

stomping the accelera­tor as he made the change. The Ford slowed, but took

the

bumps better. There were perhaps a thousand yards to go toward the

airfield tarmac itself.

The pickup with the shot-out windshield was com­ing—fast, too fast for

control. The riflemen and shot-gunners, bouncing visibly in the bed as the

truck slowed, fired. Rifle bullets and shotgun slugs pinged uselessly off

the body of Rourke’s truck.

Rourke fired the Detonics . again, really at nothing, since aimed fire

was useless with the truck he drove bouncing and jarring as it did. But

this time the pickup truck, a Dodge, didn’t fall back.

“Hell,” Rourke rasped, stomping the clutch, running the gas pedal hard

down as he upshifted, easing the gas pressure, then increasing it again.

The Ford lurched ahead.

In the rear-view mirror, Rourke could see the Chevy— almost even with the

rear end of his truck now, a man leaning out of its passenger-side door,

jumping. Rourke tried swerving away in time, but was boxed in.

The man, a pistol in his right hand now, was unsteadily standing in the

bed of Rourke’s pickup. Rourke tried cutting the wheel hard right, to

throw the man off, but the Dodge with the shattered windshield was

flanking him, fenders touching, boxing him in again. Rourke cut the wheel

hard left, but the second pickup, the Chevy, had blocked him there as welL

The man standing shakily behind him was raising his pistol, to fire

through the rear window. “Try this,” Rourke snapped, stomping hard on the

brakes. The pickup truck lurched to a ragged halt; the man’s pistol

discharged, the man himself sailing forward, disappearing from Rourke’s

view over the cab of the pickup and reappearing crashing onto the hood.

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