Running Blind by Desmond Bagley

lava flow. A rifle spoke and a bullet sang overhead and then another,

better aimed, struck rock splinters a little to the left. Whoever was

shooting knew his work, but I had him spotted. He was in an upstairs

room and, by the shadowy movement I had seen, he was kneeling at the

window with his head barely showing.

I took aim, not at the window but at the wal below it and a little to

the left. I squeezed the trigger and, through the scope, saw the wood of

the wal planking splinter under the impact. There was a faint cry and a

shift of light at the window, and then I saw the man in ful sight

standing with his hands to his chest. He staggered backwards and vanished.

I had been right – Fleet’s rifle would shoot through the wal s.

I shifted sights to the downstairs rooms and methodical y put a bullet

into the wal alongside every window on the ground floor, just where it

would be natural for a man to wait in cover. Every time I squeezed the

trigger the torn sinews in my hand shrieked in protest and I relieved my

feelings by bel owing at the top of my voice.

I felt Elin tug at my trouser leg. ‘What’s the matter?’ she said worriedly.

‘Don’t hinder the man on the job,’ I said, and dropped back. I took out

the empty magazine. ‘Fil that up – it’s difficult for me.’ These

periods with an empty gun worried me and I wished Fleet had had a spare

clip. To be jumped on by somebody now would be slightly disastrous.

I saw that Elin was coping with reloading the clip with the right

bullets and took a look at the house again.

Someone was wailing over there and there were confused shouts. I had no

doubt that the house was now fil ed with a considerable amount of

consternation; the idea that a bullet can rip through a wal and hit the

man behind it is highly unsettling for the man behind the wal .

‘Here,’ said Elin, and passed me the ful clip of five rounds. I slotted

it into the gun and poked it forward again just in time to see a man

break from the front door and take cover behind the Chevrolet. I could

see his feet through the telescopic sight. The door nearer to me was

swung open and, with a mental apology to Lee Nordlinger, I put a bullet

through the car and through the metal of the opposite door. The feet

moved and the man came into view and I saw it was Ilyich. His hand was

at his neck and blood spurted from between his fingers. He tottered a

few more steps then dropped, rolled over and lay stil .

It was becoming very difficult for me to work the bolt action with my

ruined hand. I said to Elin, ‘Can you crawl over here beside me?’ She

came up on my right side, and I said, ‘Lift up that lever, pull it back,

and ram it forward again. But keep your head down while you’re doing it.’

She operated the bolt while I held the rifle firm with my left hand, and

she cried out as the empty brass case jumped out into her face

unexpectedly. In this dot-and-carry-one manner I put another three

rounds into selected points of the house where I thought they would do

most damage. When Elin put the last round into the breech I took out the

magazine and told her to fil it again.

I felt happier with that one round in the breech as an insurance against

emergency, and settled down to observe the house and to compile an

interim report. I had kil ed three men for certain, wounded another –

the rifleman upstairs – and possibly yet another, judging from the

moaning stil coming from the house. That was five – six if Kennikin was

included. I doubted if there were many more, but that didn’t mean that

more weren’t on their way – someone could have used a telephone.

I wondered if it was Slade who was doing the wailing. I Knew his voice

but it was difficult to tel from that inarticulate and unstructured

sound. I glanced down at Elin. ‘Hurry up!’ I said.

She was fiddling desperately. ‘One of them is stuck.’

‘Do your best.’ Again I peered around the rock in front of me and my eye

was caught by a movement beyond the house. Someone was doing what they

al ought to have done at the start of this action – getting away from

the back of the house. It was only because of the sheer unexpectedness

of the gun power I wielded that they hadn’t done it before – and it was

dangerous because I could be outflanked.

I racked up the telescopic sight to a greater magnification and looked

at the distant figure. It was Slade and he was apparently unhurt except

for his bandaged hand. He was leaping like a bloody chamois from hummock

to hummock at a breakneck speed, his coat tails flying in the breeze and

his arms outstretched to preserve his balance. By the convenient

range-finder system built into the sight I estimated that he was a

little under three hundred yards away and moving farther every second.

I took a deep breath and let it out slowly to steady myself and then

took aim careful y. I was in considerable pain and had difficulty in

controlling the wavering sight. Three times I almost squeezed off the

shot and three times I relaxed the pressure on the trigger because the

sight had drifted off target.

My father bought me my first rifle when I was twelve and, wisely, he

chose a .22 single-shot. When a boy hunts rabbits and hares and knows

that he has only one shot at his disposal then he also knows that the

first and only shot must count, and no finer training in good shooting

habits is possible. Now, again, I had only one shot available and I was

back to my boyhood again, but it was no rabbit I was shooting – more

like a tiger.

It was difficult to concentrate and I felt dizzy and a wash of grey ness

passed momentarily in front of my eyes. I blinked and it cleared away

and Slade stood out preternatural y clearly in the glass. He had begun

to move away at an angle and I led him in the sight and let him run into

the aiming point. There was a roaring of blood in my ears and the

dizziness came again.

My finger painfully took up the final pressure and the butt of the rifle

jolted my shoulder and Slade’s nemesis streaked towards him at 2,000

miles an hour. The distant figure jerked like a marionette with suddenly

cut strings, toppled over, and disappeared from sight.

I rolled over as the roaring in my ears increased. The dizziness built

up again and the recurring waves of greyness turned to black. I saw the

sun glowing redly through the darkness and then I passed out, the last

thing I heard being Elin’s voice crying my name.

HI

‘It was a deception operation,’ said Taggart.

I was lying in a hospital bed in Keflavik and there was a guard on the

door, not so much to keep me imprisoned as to shield me from prying

eyes. I was a potential /cause celebre,/ a /casus bel i/ and al those

other foreign phrases which the leader writers of /The Times/ trot out

so readily in moments of crisis, and al attempts were being made to

keep the situation potential and to prevent it from becoming actual. All

parties concerned wanted the whole thing hushed up, and if the Icelandic

government knew what had been going on they were damned careful not to

say so.

Taggart was with another man, an American, whom he introduced as Arthur

Ryan. I recognized Ryan; the last time I had seen him was through the

sights of Fleet’s rifle -he had been standing beside a helicopter on the

other side of Budarhals ridge.

It was the second time they had come to see me. The first time I was

drowsy with dope and not very coherent, but stil coherent enough to ask

two questions.

‘How’s Elin?’

‘She’s al right,’ said Taggart soothingly. ‘In better shape than you

are, as a matter of fact.’ He told me that the bullet had been a

ricochet and had the force taken out of it; it had just penetrated the

flesh and lodged between her ribs. ‘She’s as right as rain,’ said

Taggart heartily.

I looked at him with dislike but I was too wobbly to push it then. I

said, ‘How did I get here?’

Taggart glanced at Ryan who took a pipe from his pocket, looked at it

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