The Ambushers

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by Donald Hamilton


  Ironically, after the trouble we’d had to find it, the trail into the mountains was unmistakable. Apparently somebody, either von Sachs or some Mexican mining or ranching outfit, had brought in some heavy equipment from the south, which was now the direction of the nearest real road going anywhere. You couldn’t miss where the big truck tires had swung westward. The wind had erased the pattern of the treads, but the depressions remained, leading back into the hills.

  From there it was uphill work, with the little Volkswagen engine screaming in the low gears hour after hour, steadily, except for an occasional stop to roll a boulder out of the way or find a passable route around an immovable obstacle. The afternoon was well along when we finally came within sight of the mouth of Copala Canyon. It was a narrow cleft in a cliff of funny-looking rock that seemed to be pockmarked with holes. I didn’t know enough geology to tell whether they were the gas pockets of an old lava flow or the results of later erosion, and it didn’t really matter. What counted was that there’d be plenty of caves in the stuff big enough for prehistoric Indians to have lived in, which seemed to confirm Catherine’s story.

  I stopped the car where the tracks started across an open valley towards the cliff. I got out and put my glasses on the entrance. No guards or sentries were visible but that didn’t mean they weren’t there. I pulled the car door wide and spoke to Sheila, in the cramped rear seat. Ostensibly she’d been put there because she was the smallest; actually I’d preferred not to have Catherine sitting behind me where I couldn’t see her.

  “Okay, doll,” I said to Sheila. “We’ll take the rifle and ammo, the canteen, and a couple of those big chocolate bars. Also, we’ve got to get all our personal belongings out of this heap. We’ll cache them somewhere. Catherine doesn’t want anything aboard to indicate that she didn’t come alone.”

  Sheila’s small face had a rebellious look, but she’d already made her argument against the plan and been overruled; she decided against further protests. Catherine came around to help, and shortly we had the gear in a pile by the roadside. I took the car keys from my pocket, regarded the blonde girl for a moment, and dropped them into her hand.

  “It’s all yours,” I said.

  “I appreciate your trust,” she said, smiling faintly.

  “Trust, hell,” I said. “Sheila and I have enough food and water here to make civilization on foot without your help, but once you’re in that rat-trap you’ll never get out without us, car or no car. Who’s trusting whom?”

  She didn’t answer. She looked hot and wilted and dusty like the rest of us: it had been a long, rough ride. I reached out and deliberately yanked off the topmost button of her blouse and threw it away.

  “That improves the view,” I said, eyeing her judiciously. “A little brassiere show never hurts. As I recall his record, von Sachs isn’t exactly a monk.”

  Catherine said dryly, “There’s a saying: teach your grandmother to suck eggs. I never really understood it, but I believe it’s appropriate here, Mr. Evans.”

  “Sure. You’re a genius and you don’t need any advice, but don’t forget to muss up your hair some more before you get there. Smear a little dirt on your face, maybe. You’re an Argentine Nazi and you’ve gone through terrible hardships to reach von Sachs and warn him of danger, remember?”

  “I’ll remember.” Her voice was cool.

  “I’ll be along presently to play the supporting role,” I said. “There’s no use trying to write the dialogue in advance. We’ve covered the main points. The rest we’ll have to improvise and hope for the best.”

  “Just so you come,” she said, watching me closely.

  “You’d be in kind of a spot if I didn’t, wouldn’t you?” I grinned. “Well, that’s the chance you take, honey. Once I’m in, I’ll be depending on you, so it comes out even.” I hesitated. There are times when deceit is necessary, but there are also times when a certain amount of honesty, judiciously applied, can create a valuable atmosphere of confidence in the midst of suspicion. I said, “Before you start, let’s put all the cards on the table. You know damn well we can’t get him out of that hole alive, don’t you? Not if he’s got as many men in there as Mrs. Head indicated. We’re going to have trouble enough getting ourselves out afterward, so let’s not kid around any more about taking von Sachs anywhere for trial. It just isn’t practical.”

  Catherine was silent for a second or two. Then she sighed and said reluctantly, “You are right, of course. Just so I can report him dead, that will have to be enough. I will have to disregard my instructions to that extent. I am permitted a certain amount of discretion. Well, I had better go.”

  “Hasta la vista, as we say in this part of the country.”

  “And auf Wiedersehen to you, Mr. Evans.”

  She got into the car and drove off without looking back. I couldn’t help thinking that she’d yielded her point of principle a little too easily. I didn’t kid myself for a moment that I knew everything that went on in her mind. Standing there, watching the VW making its bouncy way across the valley towards the opening in the pockmarked cliff, I felt Sheila come up beside me. She’d been waiting a little distance off, obviously dissociating herself from the whole affair. I turned to look at her.

  “You still no like, eh?”

  She said, “It’s an absolutely crazy plan! You know you can’t trust her!”

  I didn’t like doing it, but it was no time for personal differences. I said deliberately, “She’s a pro. I can trust her to act like a pro, not like a sentimental kid full of likes and dislikes that have nothing to do with the job at hand. You’re out of line, Skinny.”

  Sheila’s face got quite pale. “I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I’m sorry you think my attitude is unprofessional, and I certainly didn’t mean to intrude my childish opinions...!” She stopped and turned abruptly away. After a moment she asked in a choked voice, “Where do you want to hide all this stuff?”

  We hauled our luggage some distance off the trail and concealed it in a mess of brush and boulders after first making sure we weren’t disturbing any rattlesnakes at their afternoon siestas. It looked like that kind of a place. Then, with the rifle and supplies, we hunted up a place where we could climb to the top of the cliff, unseen from the entrance to the canyon. The purpose of the operation was, if possible, to establish a marksman on the canyon rim above von Sachs’ camp: an outside man—or girl—to support the two inside agents at the critical moment.

  The approach reminded me, somehow, of Costa Verde. There was the hostile company, the danger ahead, the rifle banging my back as I climbed and hiked, and the wild, unfamiliar landscape. I found that my leg was giving me much less trouble; otherwise, the only real difference was in the humidity, and in the fact that instead of being accompanied by a score of trained fighting men, I had with me only one small, resentful girl.

  “Well, that should be about it,” I said at last, stopping to catch my breath. “If Gerda Landwehr’s dope was correct, and Catherine transmitted it accurately, and the damn canyon doesn’t wiggle around too much, we should be just about opposite those cliff dwellings. The canyon edge should be right up ahead. Wait here.” I glanced at her. “Go easy on that water. It’s all we have.”

  She gave me a look of annoyance; capped the canteen, and moved over to sit sulkily in the shade of a rock. Well, I hadn’t come down into Mexico for love and affection. I moved ahead slowly toward where the canyon ought to be if I hadn’t lost my bearings completely during the climb. One moment I was looking at what seemed to be just a continuous rocky mountainside, but when I took another step forward, the ground opened up practically at my feet.

  I got down and crawled to the canyon edge and looked at the Caves of Copala as a hostile Indian scout might have, centuries before. But it wasn’t the caves across the way that caught my attention first. It was the thing standing in the cottonwood grove upstream with a camouflage net over it to hide it from aerial observation: a thing that looked like a gigantic .300 Magnum cartridge.


  I’d been wondering just what kind of heavy equipment von Sachs had been dragging up into his mountain stronghold. Now I knew.

  20

  There was a scuffling sound as Sheila crawled up beside me. She was silent for quite a long interval. When she spoke, the antagonism was completely gone from her voice, as if she’d realized at last that this was no time for personal grievances.

  “What is it?” she whispered.

  “You should know,” I said. “You’re the one who spotted it for us in the first place.”

  “Oh,” she said. “That thing. I just saw it come through the village on a trailer. I never saw it set up. But that was over a thousand miles south. How did they get it here?”

  “That,” I said, “is a damn good question.”

  I studied the scene below. The caverns across the way had been elaborated by ancient masons working with rocks and mud mortar until they formed a kind of apartment complex in the face of the canyon wall, reached by crude wooden ladders. Men were obviously living up there now, perhaps for the first time in centuries. Below the cave dwellings, out in the open, was a tent, a campfire, a few men, a couple of pickup trucks, and a blue Volkswagen sedan. There was no sign of a blonde woman in shorts, and at the moment I wasn’t interested except to note that she’d made it. At least the car had.

  All the stuff in the clearing looked innocent enough for a scientific expedition. A plane flying over would spot nothing out of the ordinary. But there was the missile concealed among the trees upstream; and downstream, before the canyon narrowed again, in another bunch of cottonwoods, was a mass of vehicles disguised by matte camouflage paint. I could make out some vintage jeeps and six-by-six Army trucks, apparently old war-surplus stuff picked up somewhere at a bargain. Down there, also, was the chunky six-wheeled trailer that hauled and controlled the missile, with its antennas and oversized cab.

  It wasn’t very impressive, aside from the bird. Say at most a couple of hundred armed men and enough vehicles to transport them as far as the beat-up equipment could be made to run. Say, up in the States, small welcoming committees of people like those we’d investigated in Tucson: a surly unemployed mechanic who liked his beer, a knife-packing young pachuco, the fading former mistress of a former Nazi butcher-boy. On the face of it, always discounting the bird, you could hardly call it a menacing display of power.

  But there was always the bird—and not only the bird but the fact that they’d got it here. There must have been a ship involved, a difficult embarkation and landing, and countless impossible miles at night over back roads and no roads at all, always under threat of discovery. Guile and bluff and incredible labor were represented by that missile standing in the cottonwoods. People who could accomplish that weren’t to be dismissed easily.

  “In case they didn’t tell you in Washington or you weren’t in a condition to listen closely,” I said, “it’s a misplaced Russian toy known as the Rudovic III. It has a nuclear warhead and a twelve-hundred-mile range. That gives it a choice, from here, of any big U.S. city from Los Angeles, California, to Houston, Texas. Maybe farther. My geography is a little sketchy. And controlling this pleasant gadget is our scar-faced ex-Nazi general, with his pocketsized army and his dreams of greatness, past and future.”

  “Did you know you were going to find it here?”

  “No,” I admitted. “Costa Verde reported it missing, but we didn’t know whether to believe the report or not. President Avila might have hid it out for his own use and lied about it. I confess I didn’t think of the possibility that von Sachs could have grabbed it.”

  “I suppose—” Sheila hesitated. “I suppose we have to do something about it.”

  I grimaced. “Well, we could just pop Heinrich from up here and beat it, leaving Catherine to the wolves and the firecracker to whoever wants it. It’s a real temptation, now that I look at the setup. I didn’t know it was going to be this pretty, like a target range, when I agreed to join our blonde friend inside.”

  Sheila said in a tentative voice, “Catherine would desert us in an instant if she saw anything to be gained by it.”

  “I know,” I said. “It’s just that damn Roman candle that keeps me honest. I caught hell for leaving it once, way down in Central America. This close to the U.S. I’ve got no choice. I’ve got to put it out of commission somehow, before some irresponsible jerk down there goes and pushes the wrong button. Come on, let’s move back a bit, and get the operation lined up.”

  In the shade of a boulder well back from the rim I took a sparing drink from the canteen and slipped the rifle off. The leather sling hadn’t done my burns any good, and I couldn’t help remembering who’d given them to me. It wouldn’t really have hurt my conscience greatly to leave Catherine down there in the hands of von Sachs. It was just as well, I guess, that I no longer had a choice.

  I pulled the bolt out of the gun, checked the barrel, shoved five shells into the magazine, loaded one into the chamber, and handed the weapon to Sheila along with two boxes of ammunition.

  “There you are, Skinny,” I said. “You have forty rounds to play with. Well, you fired one back up the road. Thirty-nine.”

  She said, “Eric—”

  I said, “The range is point-blank about two thirds of the way across the canyon, but you can’t reach the tent or the campfire with hundred per cent accuracy so don’t try. You know the man; you’ve studied the photographs. No matter what happens—I repeat, no matter what happens—don’t fire a shot until you can take care of him with absolute certainty. That’s your job. Once he’s down and you’re sure of him, you’re on your own. But I’m counting on you to take out von Sachs the minute he wanders close enough. I’ll steer him within range if I can. Or Catherine will. It depends on how things work out down there.”

  “And how are you going to—”

  “Never mind me, for the moment. After you’ve made the touch, after von Sachs is taken care of, you can use the rest of the ammo as the spirit moves you. Cover us as well as you can, but don’t hang around too long. Get out before you’re cut off up here. If we make it clear, we’ll be waiting for you below, where we cached the suitcases. With a car if we can manage.”

  “And—” She paused. “And if you’re not there?”

  “Don’t wait around for us,” I said. “You’ve got most of a gallon of water and enough nourishment to keep you going. Walk due east until you hit the Antelope Wells road, but don’t try to get back up to the border, it’s much too far. Turn south when you reach the road. There are some little Mexican towns farther down. Or somebody’ll come along and give you a lift. Just make sure they’re okay before you let them see you. It’ll be a long, hot, dusty hike, it may take several days even, but you can make it if you go easy on the water.”

  She gave a funny little laugh. “You’re being awfully silly. Do you really think I’d go off without you. I’m not Catherine, you know.”

  I said evenly, “The standing orders expressly forbid an agent’s risking his life to rescue the captured, succor the wounded, or bury the dead, unless the success of the mission is involved. Here it won’t be. We’ll either get our work done in the first few minutes after the action starts, or we won’t. You’ve got farther to go than we have, over rougher terrain. If we’re not waiting at the cache by the time you reach it, we’re just not coming, that’s all. Being a heroine will get you nothing. Just keep on going.” I rose and glanced at my watch: “Well, I’d better start back. I don’t want to have to scramble down that cliff in the dark. This would be a hell of a time to break a leg.”

  “Eric.”

  “Yes?”

  Sheila leaned the gun against the boulder and rose to face me. “Be careful,” she said, looking up. “Please be careful, darling. And if you say ‘sure’ again, the way you did the last time we separated, up the road, I’ll slap your face.”

  I looked down at her for a moment. Her short hair was tousled, her shirt and pants were dusty, and her small face was pink from the sun: sh
e looked like a kid after an active summer picnic.

  I grinned at her. “Sure,” I said. “I’ll be careful, Skinny. Sure.”

  She made a face and brought her hand up threateningly. I caught her by the wrist. It was a mistake, touching her. I’d been trying very hard to keep everything on a business basis, to think of her simply as one of the human resources with which I had to accomplish a certain task.

  That I’d once found her helpless in the jungle, that I’d carried her, cared for her, and later stuck my neck out for her officially, and made love to her unofficially, was strictly beside the point down here. Or so I tried to tell myself, but suddenly I found myself holding her and kissing her possessively, which was a hell of a way for an agent to behave within sight of the target.

  “For God’s sake!” I said at last, rather breathlessly. “What a hell of a time for necking. We’d better cut it out before I forget all about important things like homicide and sabotage.”

  She held onto me as I tried to step back. “Would that be so bad?” She was smiling mischievously. “You wouldn’t have to forget very long. Just a few minutes.”

  “You’re a shameless wench,” I said.

  “You told me that before.”

  “I don’t go for women in pants. They don’t do a thing for me,” I said firmly. At least I hoped it was firmly. “And I’ve got to get down that damn cliff before dark. I’ve got a date with a blonde.”

  “I know.” She grimaced. “You! Tearing a button off her blouse so you could admire her breasts. Who did you think you were fooling?”

  I said, “Oh, is that what was eating you?”

  “Yes, I’m jealous,” she breathed. “She makes me feel plain and scrawny. I know it’s stupid, but I can’t help it. Eric.”

 

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