Ahern, Jerry – Survivalist 05 – The Web

in order, summoning up the reserves of strength he would need.

It was that or die.

His left fist worked in the clutch, his right throttled

out, and the Harley started ahead.

With his right thumb he worked the CAR-‘s safety off, then moved his

left hand quickly, securing the dark-lensed aviator-style sunglasses.

He squinted through them as he braked in the middle of the street.

In an inside pocket of his leather jacket were some of his dark tobacco

cigars.

He took one and placed it between his teeth, rolling it into the left

corner of his mouth, unlit.

“Ready,” he whispered to himself.

He throttled the Harley, working through the gears, lowering his frame

across that of the bike, reaching the end of the street, making a sharp

right, then accelerating again. In his mind’s eye he could see the way

he’d entered the town and that was the only way he knew to leave it.

He passed the post office. As he cut another left, into the street angling

past the library, it was a sea of flames.

“Martha,” he rasped, looking away as he gunned the jet black Harley ahead.

Despite it all, he felt a sadness for the woman.

Soviet troops on the right, two of them aflame from the gas fires, three

of them wheeling toward him, started to fire their assault rifles. Rourke

gave the Harley gas then shifted his grip to the CAR-. Firing rapid

two-round semiautomatic bursts, he nailed the nearest of the men, then the

one behind him.

Gunfire from the third man’s assault rifle ripped into the street surface

beside him. Rourke throttled out, cutting a broad arc as he made a hard

right, then angled off the street and into the grassy shoulder paralleling

it, Fires still raged on the far side by the school building. Soviet

troops ran haphazardly about, an officer in their

midst; Rourke spotted him, a tall man, his hat gone, his face

dirt-smudged.

There was an overturned jeep, and though the officer called to his men,

they were scattering. The officer was tugging at something under the jeep.

Rourke sped past, glancing left, seeing a form half under the jeep, the

officer working with a pry bar, trying to get someone out.

Rourke slowed the Harley, cutting a wide arc. The jeep was close to the

fires raging down the center of the street; the grass on the far side of

it was burning.

“Shit,” Rourke rasped, gunning the Harley back toward the jeep.

The officer dropped the pry bar, snatching at a full-flap military holster

on his right hip.

Rourke slowed the bike, stopping, the CAR- pointed straight at the

Russian.

“Shoot me, then. But first help me get this man out; he’s still alive!”

Rourke said nothing. His right thumb flicked the safety of the CAR- on,

and he let down the Harley’s stand, the engine cut off.

He walked toward the Russian, saying, “I’m ill—not as strong as I usually

am. You work the pry bar; I’ll pull him out.”

“Agreed.” The Soviet officer nodded.

The man—a major, Rourke noticed—ieaned against the pry bar. Rourke dropped

to his knees in the street be­side the injured man pinned under the

overturned jeep.

An older man—a senior noncom of some kind. The face, unconscious, was

pleasant-looking.

Rourke grabbed the man’s shoulders, “Now, Major,” Rourke ordered, feeling

the jeep rising slightly beside

him, hearing the groaning as the Soviet officer strained on the pry bar.

Rourke put his own right shoulder to the end of the overturned jeep, then

threw his weight back, sprawling backward into the street with the older

man, getting him clear as the jeep fell.

“I could not hold it anymore!”

Rourke ignored the officer, looking to the older man. “He’s gonna need a

hospital and quick.”

“There are helicopters—cargo helicopters. They can be used for the

wounded.”

“You get him outa here fast,” Rourke rasped. “This whole town’s gonna

blow.”

“What are you doing?” The major’s right hand went out to Rourke’s right

forearm.

Rourke shook it away, then opened the leather case which had Martha

Bogen’s shot kit.

“Morphine,” Rourke rasped. “Relax. Vm a doctor. Put a compression bandage

on that right leg—not a tourniquet unless you want him to lose it.” Rourke

pulled his knife, then cut at the noncom’s sleeves, first the right, then

the left, using one sleeve folded over as a bandage, the second to secure

it to the leg. “Not too tight. Looks like you’ve got somebody to baby-sit

with, Major.” Rourke stood up.

The Soviet officer’s right hand moved and Rourke started for his rifle,

but the hand was extending toward him.

Rourke took it.

“I should arrest you—or have you shot.”

“That last part”—Rourke smiled—”I was kinda thinkin the same thing

myself. But I’ll pass on it.”

Rourke loosed the Soviet major’s hand and turned to walk away. There was a

chance the man would pull a gun

and shoot; Rourke decided he wasn’t going to count it a possibiiiiy.

He stepped aboard the Harley, gunning the engine to life, Setting up the

kick stand.

The major was looking to his injured sergeant.

Rourke gunned the Harley ahead. . . .

He was at the end of the town now. Only the road leading up into the

mountains and out of the valley was ahead.

Explosions rocked the ground under and around him, and behind him there

was a growing fire storm, already edging into the wooded area around the

town.

He looked at the town one more time—Bevington, Kentucky. “Sad,” he

murmured, then started the Harley up ahead.

The road was steep going; rock slides were starting to his right, his

attention focusing there as he steered the Harley around boulders that had

already strewn the road.

Overhead, above the thundering of the explosions and the hissing roar of

the fire storm behind him, he heard a sound—familiar. He glanced

skyward—helicopters.

“That’s what I get for being a good Samaritan,” he rasped, shaking his

head. But he didn’t blame the major, or the injured sergeant. Like most

things in life, he thought, gunning the Harley on, the exhaust ripping

under him and behind him, there was no one to blame.

The helicopters were clearly after him; he didn’t know why. Maybe the KGB,

he thought—but why had they been in Bevington, Kentucky, to begin with?

He swung the CAR- around, the safety off. There was a sharp bend in the

road and Rourke took it at speed, cutting a sharp left onto the shoulder

because half the

width of (he road was strewn with boulders. There was a rumbling sound to

his left and Rourke looked that way— a rock slide, shale and boulders

skidding down for as far as he could see, a rock slide paralleling the

roadway.

“Shit,” he rasped, glancing up at the helicopters. There was a chattering

sound; he didn’t have to look again. Machine-gun fire.

The road dipped, Rourke accelerating into the grade. The rock slide was

coming inexorably closer, closer. The area to his right was heavily

wooded; fire swept through it.

Rourke skidded the bike hard left, then right, avoiding a deer that ran

from the flaming forest on his right. He accelerated, the rock slide still

coming.

Machine-gun fire tore into the road beneath him, bullets ricocheting off

the rocks to his left.

The road took a fast cut left and Rourke arced the Harley into it. As he

hit the straightaway, he twisted in the Harley’s saddle, the CAR-—stock

retracted— pointing skyward at the nearest of the helicopters. He let off

a fast semiauto burst—six shots in all. The helicopter pilot pulled up.

Rourke let the rifle drop to his side on the sling, then throttled out the

Harley, the rim of the valley in sight, perhaps a mile ahead.

Gravel and smaller rocks were pelting at him, hammer­ing against the road

surface, their effect almost indis­tinguishable from the machine-gun fire

from the choppers above. The fire on his right was up to the road­side,

and the trees flanking the road on his right were torches, columns of

fire; the heat from them scorched at his skin as he drove his machine

upward—toward the rim of the valley.

Massive boulders were falling now. Rourke steered the bike around them as

they impacted on the road before him. A tree, still a mass of flames,

fell; Rourke gunned the Harley full throttle, his body low over the

handle­bars, as he passed under it, burning branches and chips of bark

spraying his hands, his face, his clothing.

Rourke squinted back, beyond the burning tree trunk and skyward. The

helicopters were still coming.

He cut the Harley sharp left, taking the grade that would take him to the

rim, boulders rolling across the road before him now, missing him by

inches, the Harley’s exhaust like a cannon, like a trumpet, strident,

tearing at his eardrums, the wind of the slipstream lashing at him, hot

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