Authors: Eric Flint
Mike used Jenny’s car, still dug into the embankment, as a stepping stone to climb onto the embankment. When he planted his foot on the peculiar wall, it immediately gave way, showering more dirt on the car. He sprawled awkwardly, cursing under his breath, and dragged himself over the edge.
Once he arose, he gazed down at his tuxedo. Between his recent mishap and the effects of throwing himself onto the pavement when the shooting started, the elegant outfit was looking more than a little scruffy.
The rental company’s not going to be happy with me
, he thought ruefully.
But—
Mike gave Frank a hand climbing up. “Be careful,” he urged. “That wall looks solid because it’s so shiny, but it’s nothing but loose earth.”
Once Frank was atop the wall, he turned to help the others. Mike took the moment to examine his surroundings.
His
new
surroundings. What he saw confirmed his suspicions.
But I think a ticked-off tuxedo rental company is probably the least of my problems.
The “wall” wasn’t a wall of any kind. It was simply the edge of a plain stretching into the distance. Everything about that landscape was wrong. There was no level stretch that size anywhere in northern West Virginia. And the sun—
Frank vocalized the thought. “Mike, what’s happening? Even the damn
sun’s
in the wrong place.” He pointed to the south. “Should be over there.”
Or is that the south?
wondered Mike.
At a guess, I’d say we’re facing north instead of east, like we should be.
He thrust the problem aside. Later. There were more pressing problems to deal with. Much more pressing.
The plain was heavily wooded, but not so much so that Mike couldn’t see one–two–three farmhouses scattered among open fields. One of the farmhouses was not more than a hundred yards away.
Close enough to make out some details . . .
“Jesus,”
hissed Frank.
The two farmhouses in the distance were burning fiercely. The one nearby was not. It was a large and rambling structure. Unlike the wood-frame farmhouses which Mike was familiar with, the construction of this one leaned heavily toward stone. Hand-fitted stone, from what Mike could see. If it weren’t for the fact that the farmhouse had all the signs of current occupancy—that unmistakably ragged-respectable air of a place where people
worked
—Mike would have sworn he was looking at a something out of the Middle Ages.
But he didn’t spend more than two seconds studying the farmhouse itself. The farmhouse was still being “worked,” but not by farmers.
His teeth were clenched. He could sense that Frank, standing next to him, was filled with the same outrage. Mike looked around. All of his miners were on the plain now, standing in a line staring at the scene.
“All right, guys,” he said softly. “I count six of the bastards. May be more inside. Three of them are assaulting that poor woman in the yard. The other three—”
He looked back at the horrendous sight. “Don’t know exactly what they’re doing. I think they’ve got that guy nailed to his door and they’re torturing him.”
Slowly, as softly as possible, Frank levered a round into the chamber of his rifle. Despite its incongruity with the suit he was wearing, the action was quietly murderous. “So what’s the plan?” he demanded.
Mike spoke through tight jaws. “I’m not actually a cop, when you get right down to it. And we haven’t got time anyway to rummage around in Dan’s Cherokee looking for handcuffs.” He glared at the scene of rape and torture. “So to hell with reading these guys their rights.
We’re just going to kill them
.”
“Sounds good to me,” snarled Darryl. “I got no problem with capital punishment. Never did.”
“Me neither,” growled one of the other miners. Tony Adducci, that was, a beefy man in his early forties. Like many of the miners in the area, Tony was of Italian ancestry, as his complexion and features indicated. “None whatsoever.”
Tony, like Mike, was holding a pistol. He reached up with his left hand and quickly removed his tie. Angrily, he thrust it into a pocket. The rest of the miners did likewise with their own. None of them took off their jackets, however. All of them were wearing white shirts and all of them were experienced hunters. Their suit jackets, gray and brown and Navy blue, would make better camouflage. After removing their ties—a bow tie, in Mike’s case—the miners simply loosened the top collar buttons. For the first time in their lives, they would “hunt” in their Sunday best, wearing dress shoes instead of boots.
Mike led the way, working toward the farmhouse through a small grove of trees.
Birch trees
, a part of his mind noted idly.
That’s odd too
. Most of his mind was simply wishing that the slender trees provided more concealment. Fortunately, the criminals at the farmhouse were too preoccupied with their crimes to be paying any attention to the area around them.
The miners got within thirty yards of the house without being spotted. They were now squatting down, hidden in the trees at the very edge of the farm yard. The woman being raped was not more than forty feet away. Mike’s eyes shied away from the sight, but his ears still registered her moans.
And the coarse laughs of the men assaulting her. One of them, the man holding her arms to the ground, barked a jeering remark at the man on top of her. The rapist grunted some sort of reply.
Mike couldn’t understand the words, but they sounded German. He’d been stationed in Germany for a year, while he’d been in the Army. But he remembered little of the language beyond the essential phrase,
ein bier, bitte.
“Those guy are
foreigners
,” muttered Darryl. The young man’s face was tight with anger. “
Who do they think they are, coming here and—?
”
Mike made a short, curt gesture, commanding silence. He went back to studying the criminals.
All of them wore that same peculiar armor and those weird helmets, although the men assaulting the woman had removed theirs. The discarded gear was lying on the ground nearby. The men torturing the farmer still had their armor and helmets on, but they had stacked their firearms against the wall of the farmhouse. From a distance, the “rifles” looked like the same kind of weapons carried by the two men killed by the police chief.
The helmets and armor reminded Mike of pictures he had seen of old Spanish conquistadores. The helmets were metal pots, basically, with flanges tapering into points toward the front and back. The armor, if he remembered right, was called a
cuirass
. Steel breast and back plates, tied on with leather strips. Outside of the antique-looking firearms, the only weapons they had in their possession were—
Swords?
Swords?
He looked back at the three men asaulting the woman. They were not wearing swords, but now that Mike knew what to look for he spotted the weapons immediately. The scabbarded blades had been unbuckled and tossed onto the ground near the firearms. Mike had never once in his life considered the practical mechanics of rape, but he could understand why a sword would be awkward. These men, he was suddenly quite certain, were not committing this crime for the first time. There was a relaxed and practiced casualness about their activity.
You are dead men.
The thought was grim, final.
He turned his head and whispered in Frank’s ear. “You’ve got the only rifle. Can you take out the bastards at the door? Don’t forget, they’re wearing armor. Can’t go for a body shot.”
Mike and Frank stared at the three men torturing the farmer. The heavy door of the house had been opened wide and pressed against the wall. The farmer’s wrists were pinned to the door with knives. A man in front of him was digging another knife into the farmer’s thigh, while his two companions shouted at him. The shouts, Mike thought, were some kind of interrogation. It seemed a pointless exercise. The farmer was screaming with pain, oblivious to any questions.
“Forty yards?” Frank snorted. “Don’t worry about it. A .30-caliber slug in the ass will take anybody down.”
Mike nodded. He turned the other way and motioned toward Harry Lefferts. Harry crept up to him.
Mike scowled at the sawed-off double-barreled shotgun in Harry’s hands. “Forget that stupid thing. We’ve got innocent people mixed up with these thugs.” He handed Harry the riot gun he’d taken from the Cherokee. “Use this. It’s loaded with buckshot. The magazine’s full—I already checked. When Frank shoots those guys at the door, you back him up. He’s going to be aiming for their legs, on account of the armor. You finish them off after they’re down.”
Harry nodded. He tucked the sawed-off shotgun under a nearby shrub and took the riot gun. After passing over the additional shotgun shells in his pocket, Mike glanced around at the rest of his men. All of them, like himself, were armed with nothing more than pistols and revolvers.
He decided there was no point in developing any more of a battle plan. Besides—
I can’t bear listening to this any longer.
“Just back me up, guys,” he whispered. To Frank: “Don’t start shooting till I do.”
A second later, Mike rose to his feet and strode out of the trees toward the rapists. He held the revolver in his right hand. His steps were quick, but he was not running. Mike hadn’t boxed professionally in years, but the old training and experience had taken over.
Steady, steady; don’t lose your cool; it’s just another fight.
A stray, whimsical part of his mind told him how foolish he looked, marching toward mayhem in wingtips and a tuxedo, but he ignored it.
The first man who spotted him was the one squatting on his heels about three feet from the woman. The man had been simply watching the scene, leering. When Mike’s movement caught his eye, the man turned his head. His eyes widened. He was not more than thirty feet away, turned sideways.
Mike stopped. He crouched slightly, in a firing-range stance, bringing up the revolver. Some part of his mind noted the instant reflexes of the man he was going to kill, and was impressed. No tyro, he. The man was already rising, shouting a warning.
Both hands, firm grip, cock the hammer. Steady, steady. Center of mass. Squeeze the—
As always, the magnum went off with a roar and bucked in Mike’s hand. He watched just long enough to see that the slug had slammed into the man’s turning shoulder and knocked him flat. A split second, no more. The man might still be alive, but he was clearly out of the action.
Mike could hear the flat crack of Frank’s Winchester, and Harry shouting. He ignored the sounds, blocking them out as easily as he had blocked out the roar of the crowd while he was in the ring. He was swiveling, now, ready to take out the man holding the woman’s arms. That one was facing him squarely. Mike could see the man’s mouth gaping wide open, but his face was a blur. The man was still on his knees, but he had released the woman’s arms and was rearing back on his heels.
Just another fight. Cock the hammer—single-shot’s more accurate. Center of mass . . .
Again, the .357 roared. The shot took the man square in the chest, slamming him back as if he’d been run over by a truck. Mike knew he was dead before he hit the ground.
One left, and he’s tangled up in his dropped trousers.
The rapist was shouting something. Again, Mike couldn’t understand the words. Nothing registered except fear. The man was scrambling off the woman. He tried to rise, tripped on his trousers, sprawled on his face.
But he was clear of the woman now. Mike raised the revolver, ready to kill him, but stopped when he saw Dr. Nichols was already there. There was something surgically precise about the way Nichols, from close range, leaned over and shot the man in the back of the head. Once, twice.
So much for that.
Mike turned away, looking to the farmhouse. He could remember, now, hearing several shots from Frank’s rifle.
All three men at the door were lying on the ground. One of them was not moving. He was on his knees, sprawled against the wall of the farmhouse. His buttocks were covered with blood. Mike was certain that he was the first one Frank had shot. For all that he teased Frank about that silly damned lever-action, Frank was both an excellent marksman and one of the most reliable men Mike had ever met. Got his deer every season, usually on the first day. Frank would have shot for the lower spine, just below the cuirass.
Paralyzed, for sure. Probably dead or dying.
The other two were writhing on the ground, screaming, clutching their legs. They didn’t scream or writhe for long. Harry was already there, racing forward. The young miner stopped abruptly, a few feet away. He pumped a shell into the chamber, aimed the shotgun and fired. For all that Harry was obviously in a rage, he hadn’t lost his composure. He aimed for the neck, unprotected by either helmet or armor. The man was almost decapitated. The buckshot sent his helmet bouncing off the farmhouse wall, the straps broken and flailing about.
Harry swiveled. Pump, level, fire. The other man was silent. Unmoving, dead. Blood and brains everywhere. Another helmet sent flying, straps flapping. For good measure—there would be no mercy here—Harry pumped another round, stepped forward, and shot the paralyzed man sprawled against the farmhouse wall. The range was not more than three feet. This time, the helmet stayed on—but only because the man’s head was removed entirely. Blood gushed out of a severed neck, painting the rough stones with gore.
Mike caught a glimpse of motion, somewhere in the darkness within the farmhouse. He ducked.
“
Harry—down! Fire in the hole!
”
Mike’s warning probably saved Harry’s life. The young miner was lunging aside when the gun in the farmhouse went off. The bullet took him in the side and knocked him down, yelping. On the ground, Lefferts clutched his ribs, still yelping. But there was more surprise and outrage in the sound than anything else. Mike was pretty sure the wound was superficial.
“Cover me, Frank!” he yelled, racing to the side of the door. He could hear Frank’s Winchester firing again. He couldn’t see the shots themselves, but knew that Frank would be firing through the door, driving back whoever was inside. In the corner of his eye he saw James Nichols and Tony Adducci leveling their pistols and firing shots into the small windows alongside the farmhouse. He could hear the wooden shutters splintering.