Puller counted to three, rolled out, and opened fire with the MP5. It was a feint only. Again, he was aiming at nothing. He was drawing attention. A moment later he drew counterfire. They were totally focused on him.
Carson’s weapon fired twice. One of the shooters went down. Another clutched at his arm and dropped his weapon. Good as out of the fight.
Two down, four to go.
And that was before Mecho struck from the rear.
The two shooters nearest to the big man went down a second later. One with a bullet to the medulla. The other with a knife strike to the heart.
Even with a wounded arm Mecho had more than enough strength to wield a killing blow with the blade.
Four down, two to go.
The two remaining shooters shifted their attention to Mecho.
Now it was Puller’s turn.
He did a zigzag run to the left and then shot back to the right.
He lined up his targets and squeezed off two shots from his M11.
Head shots both.
Kill shots both.
Six down. Zero to go.
But then Puller’s mind went back to the hotel room at the Sierra.
In a millisecond his brain worked through the facts.
Six shooters against four. You had to take out Lampert’s guards. You had to allow for possible losses in that confrontation even with a surprise attack. All the lumps of flesh were dressed in the uniforms of Lampert’s security detail. So no losses there. Six was their full strength.
They had to assume that Puller and company might be here. That meant they would be seriously outgunned when combined with Lampert’s detail.
Puller had to assume that the shooters were from Rojas. And Stiven Rojas was a smart guy. Smart guys did not send underwhelming force.
The millisecond over, Puller reacted.
“Second wave coming,” he called out.
Carson and Mecho instantly moved to cover and took up new firing positions.
Puller slid back and over to Landry. She looked up at him pleadingly. “For Chrissakes, Puller, take the cuffs off and give me a gun. I’ll help fight.”
Puller reloaded and looked over at her. “Don’t think so, Landry. You already tried to kill me once. I’m not into second chances.”
“I’m defenseless here.”
“Nah, you’ve got me. And I’ve got every incentive to keep you alive.”
“What incentive?” she snapped.
He leaned close as he slapped a fresh clip in his MP5. He whispered in her ear, “To make sure you spend the rest of your life in prison.” He set the MP5 on full auto.
“Puller, please,” she sobbed.
He ignored her.
The second wave was about to hit the shore.
And it was going to hit a lot harder than Tropical Storm Danielle had.
But then Puller had an ace up his sleeve. At least he hoped he did.
Otherwise, they were dead.
T
HE SECOND WAVE WAS
far more sophisticated than the first.
That made Puller think that the first wave was just a feint. It had cost them Diaz, reducing their force by twenty-five percent. Losing six guys for that was smart if you had a lot more guys to throw into the battle.
Turns out they did.
Twenty by Puller’s quick count. They moved in hard clusters of four each. They wore body armor and had major firepower, far more than Puller’s MP5. They took up tactical positions that were in the form of a classically designed pincers maneuver.
Puller looked at Carson and she looked back at him.
They both recognized the tactic and they both clearly understood the inevitable outcome it would produce.
Puller lifted his MP5. There was an old Army mentality that his father had taught him.
There is absolutely no shame in going down fighting.
He fired his full thirty-round clip in a sweep at the two clusters in front of him. Two of the men dropped and were not going to rejoin the fight.
Puller reloaded.
He had used thirty rounds to kill two. There were eighteen foes left. He clearly didn’t have enough ammo to kill them all.
They were a smart, well-trained unit, because they deployed their force on one target and brought to bear overwhelming fire on that target.
The car Puller was taking cover behind was riddled and a number
of the rounds passed right through the thin metal and nearly took Puller’s limbs off. He had no choice but to retreat.
Carson laid down fire to allow him to do this and thus she became the next focal point of the enemy force.
Her position was obliterated by the concentrated firepower. She was not so lucky in her retreat. She went down with wounds to both her leg and arm.
Puller did not rush to her side, because that would have kept the enemy guns on her. He fired back from his new position and the counterfire once more swiveled to him.
He ran farther away from Carson’s position, dodging gunfire by running unpredictably. After doing it for years in the Middle East the muscle memory was well established in his limbs. He almost seemed to know where the aim of his opponents was going.
The men confronting him now should have mapped out fire grids and placed rounds in every conceivable path Puller could choose. Then he would be dead.
But they didn’t and he wasn’t.
He made it to safety before turning and firing back with his MP5.
It was only he and Mecho left now. Two against nearly twenty.
But that was about to change.
Puller’s cell phone vibrated. He pulled it out, glanced at the screen.
He thumbed a one-word response.
Now.
General Julie Carson’s orders were about to be executed.
All heads turned as though connected by string to the sounds coming from the north of them.
The MH-60L DAP was basically a modified Black Hawk chopper with major firepower added, including Hellfire antitank missiles, rockets, and 7.62 miniguns. Operated by the Army’s 160th Special Ops Aviation Regiment, nicknamed the “Night Stalkers,” it was a versatile battle platform. Fortunately for Puller, there had been one stationed at Eglin for a joint Army–Air Force exercise. It thundered over the wall and into the Lampert estate. Its 30 mm cannon zeroed in and then lined up on the clusters of men crouched with their weapons waiting to overrun a vastly smaller opponent.
Some of the men pointed their guns at the chopper. When two of them stupidly fired at the aircraft, Puller thought to himself,
Wrong move.
He lay flat on the ground, his hands over his ears.
The 30 mm cannon opened up. It could lay down compact fields of fire at over six hundred rounds per minute. It created what the Army termed a nonsurvivable event. In less than ten seconds nearly twenty mostly obliterated men lay on the ground.
The chopper landed and Puller raced to it after laying his MP5 down. The last thing he wanted was a 30 mm cannon pointed at him.
The door of the chopper slid open.
“We need a medic,” shouted Puller over the whine of the blades. “Got a one-star with gunshot wounds.”
After grabbing bags of equipment a doctor and a medic jumped off the chopper and followed Puller over to where Carson lay.
Her face was white but she was conscious.
Puller knelt down next to her as the doc and medic prepared their equipment. He gripped Carson’s hand as they hooked up bags of blood and saline and stuck IV lines into her.
She opened her eyes and looked up at Puller.
“You’re bleeding,” she said, reaching out slowly and touching his arm.
“Lot of that going around.”
“Am I going to make it?” she asked.
Both slugs were still in her. She’d lost too much blood. She was pale and weak and when Puller glanced at the doctor he looked grim.
But Puller looked at her straight in the eye, squeezed her hand, and said, “You’re going to make it.”
The human spirit was the strongest medicine on earth. And sometimes all it needed was a little encouragement to pull off a miracle. Puller had seen it countless times on the battlefield, and even been the recipient of such positive words when an IED had nearly ended his life in Iraq.
You’re going to make it
. Sometimes that was all it took.
She squeezed his hand back and closed her eyes as the painkiller the doctor administered took effect.
Puller stood and jogged back over to where Landry sat on the ground, her hands still secured behind her.
“Don’t forget our deal, Puller,” she said. “I delivered you Lampert.”
“Yeah. You can console yourself with that fact when you’re eighty years old and still in prison. And I don’t think they have paddleboards there.” He motioned to a soldier heading over to them, and flashed his creds and badge.
Puller said, “Sergeant, this woman is a prisoner of the United States Army until she can be turned over to local authorities.”
“Yes, sir.”
The sergeant trained his weapon on Landry.
Puller heard a noise.
He turned, at first thinking Lampert had reappeared and was trying to make a getaway.
But it wasn’t Lampert. It was Mecho.
He was running hard and already near the dock that led down to the beach.
Puller set off at a dead run.
He knew exactly what the man was going after.
Peter J. Lampert.
And so was Puller.
L
AMPERT HAD RUN AS
hard as he could. It wasn’t easy with his cuffed hands behind his back. He was in decent shape, but not combat fit. He’d never fired a weapon in his life. He hired others to do that for him. He had never before had to run for his life.
He was paying for that now.
The sounds of the gunfire had stopped. All Lampert heard now was the breakers on the beach.
His boat was docked about a quarter mile out.
He would live to fight another day.
It just wouldn’t be in this country.
That was okay. He was getting tired of living here anyway.
He pressed his forearm against a stitch in his side and kept his feet pointed toward the dock.
His twenty-foot tender was out there.
He could see his yacht from here.
He believed he could manage to pilot the boat out to the yacht. If Landry could make it all the way out to the oil platform in a tropical storm, he could make it out to the yacht in calmer seas.
He had a knife on board that he could use to cut the plasticuffs off. Then it was a straight shot out. The tender was sturdy and the waves were diminishing as the winds died down. Yeah, he could make it.
He was almost at the dock when he saw it.
At first he didn’t register what it was.
But then it hit him.
He was looking at the conning tower of a submarine.
Rojas’s sub. He had mentioned it during the meeting on his yacht. It could hold lots of people.
So that was how the gunmen had made it to his estate. They had come by sub.
Now taking the boat was problematic. What if they came after him? The seas were still rough. If the sub struck the tender, capsized it, and he went into the drink? He would drown.
He stopped, still pressing at the dull ache in his side. He should have exercised more. The problem was his main form of working out was sex. Somehow it didn’t prepare you for long runs over uneven terrain.
He looked around desperately for another way out.
If not the boat, what?
The road out of his estate was not an option. Even now he could hear sirens in the air. He walked slowly along, parallel to the beach, thinking hard.
There had to be some way.
Maybe he should just chance the boat. It would be more maneuverable than a sub, wouldn’t it?
The fact was he didn’t know. But he couldn’t think of a viable alternative.
Then, as he watched, the sub started to sink into the water. It turned and, its tower still visible, rapidly made its way back out to sea.
Maybe they had heard the sirens too, way out there. Or maybe they just assumed that things had gone badly and they had better retreat.
Whatever the reason, Lampert now had his window of opportunity.
Lady Lucky
had a steel hull. It could take the pounding of the ocean. He had crossed the Atlantic in it before. Once he reached international waters he would feel much safer. It would take time for Landry and the others to talk to the police. Warrants would have to be issued. Police would have to be sent out. By that time Lampert could be very far away.