The Ambushers

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by Donald Hamilton


  “Give me a chance to get some circulation back. What about the sentry by the tent?”

  “Asleep. I was friendly. I gave him a beer. With something in it I happened to have along. Like von Sachs. They will sleep until morning, both of them. Your guard would not take a beer, a dutiful man. So he is dead. When they find him, we are betrayed. Now come. I will go first and hold you if you slip. Never mind the big knife.”

  “I want it,” I said. “I have an idea about it.”

  “All right. Give me your belt.”

  She hung the machete about her neck and shoved it around to dangle down her back; then she moved onto the ladder and leaned back so that I could make my way clumsily into the space in front of her, with her arms around me. It felt ridiculous, and embarrassing in more ways than one, being held there by a woman, but my hands and feet still weren’t much use to me. I would have fallen half a dozen times without her support.

  At the bottom, I fumbled my belt back on with tingling fingers, and helped her move the ladder back where it had been. We passed the guard sitting against his rock with his rifle across his knees and his hat over his eyes, motionless, dead. I reminded myself not to underestimate my sexy ally; she wasn’t anybody you wanted to turn your back on. We stopped in a sheltered place among the rocks.

  She bent over to do something to her feet. “These damn sandals!” she whispered. “I might as well be barefoot.”

  She straightened up, and we faced each other briefly in silence. The sky gave enough light that I could see her fairly well. With her blonde hair loose and untidy about her face instead of piled elegantly on her head, without the flashy lipstick and iridescent eye make-up, she was a different person. I was surprised to realize that she was really rather a plain girl.

  “Your little friend,” Catherine murmured. “She is on top of the cliff with the rifle?”

  “Yes.”

  “Can she really shoot?”

  “Don’t worry about Sheila,” I said. “She’ll do her part.”

  “I’m sure she will. For your sake. Because she loves you. It is very touching.”

  “Yeah, touching,” I said. If women knew how they sounded, sniping at each other, we might have to put up with less static of this kind. “I’ll make a deal with you,” I said. “The job has developed ramifications. I’ll fix von Sachs—Sheila and I—if you’ll fix the bird.”

  “Bird? Oh, the missile.” She glanced upstream at the blackness of the cottonwoods. Then she looked at me and smiled. “So that is it. I was wondering if you would really come, when I saw how easily you could shoot him from above. That is why you came?”

  “That’s it,” I said.

  “It is nothing to me,” she said. “It has nothing to do with my job.”

  I said, “I’ve got to sabotage that gadget somehow. Of course Washington would love me to deliver it intact, but they’d rather have it busted than take a chance of losing it again. You take care of it for me and I’ll guarantee von Sachs. You get stubborn and I’ll go for the missile and you can die heroically doing your goddamn job alone.”

  She hesitated; then she moved her shoulders in a resigned way. “All right, but how do you expect me to do it? It is such a big thing—”

  “The truck,” I said. It had taken me a long time to come up with the obvious solution. “I wouldn’t know how to gimmick the bird itself, but the control truck is easy. All you have to do is shoot a hole in the gas tank and light a match. I doubt if they have enough electronic talent in this hole to rig up anything that’ll fire the missile once that console is a mess of melted wire and plastic.” I frowned. “What about the Volkswagen? Who’s got the key?”

  “It’s still in the lock.”

  “Good. Whichever of us is closest makes for it afterward and picks up the other. Sheila’ll be covering us from above, with the rifle. Anything else?”

  She hesitated. “Yes. One thing. We are partners here, Henry Evans. But afterward, one day, you will pay for Max. I do not pretend to forgive you.”

  She turned and went silently back to the tent and slipped inside. I glanced towards the north rim of the canyon. It made me uneasy to know that Sheila’s life, as well as mine, was at the mercy of a woman I had no reason to trust, a woman who’d just made a point of reminding me that she owed me something. But there was nothing to be done about it now.

  I looked at the machete in my hand and felt the edge. It was a bastard weapon really, too long for a knife, too short for a sword. Well, it would do for what I had in mind. I glanced at my watch. The luminous dial read three thirty-five. I sat down to wait.

  At four-thirty it was light enough to start the action. I got up and walked openly towards the tent. A man was building up the fire for breakfast. I saw him stop his work, stare at me, glance up at the cave where I was supposed to be, and reach for a rifle leaning against a nearby tree. I stalked up to the front of the tent, kicked the drugged sentry out of the way, and slashed away the canvas door with a stroke of the machete. I then proceeded to say one of the silliest things I ever said.

  “Come on out, Quintana!” I yelled in the quiet dawn. “Come on out and fight like a man!”

  23

  It had seemed reasonable as a theory. Now that I was putting it into practice, it sounded so ridiculous I couldn’t believe it would work. I was taking a long chance on a duelling scar a man had picked up in his hotheaded youth, and on that lifelong preoccupation with honor and edged weapons that went with a certain Teutonic mentality, I hoped.

  “Come out of there!” I shouted. “Cobarde! Schweinhund! Come on out and fight, you slaughterhouse general. What are you stalling for? I suppose you figure if you hide under the bed long enough somebody’ll shoot me and save your yellow hide.”

  It wasn’t exactly brilliant invective, particularly since I had to deliver it more or less in Spanish for the sake of the gathering audience. But they were gathering, that was the important thing. They were peering curiously out of the caves and sliding down the ladders and forming a circle around me and the tent. There were several rifles aimed at me as I stood waving my stolen machete dramatically, and the tough little sergeant had come up behind me with his fancy burp-gun, but nobody’d killed me yet.

  I called, “Okay, you can relax now, Quintana, and stop shaking. Your boys have me covered. Nobody’s going to hurt you. But before you give the word to shoot, let me tell you—”

  I told him, in my clumsy Spanish, how his mother was a drunken whore who got impregnated one night by a garbage-eating mongrel dog while lying unconscious in a Berlin gutter. I elaborated on this concept for a while. Then I described his bastard childhood in detail, and went on to tell how he got the scar on his face from a broken beer bottle wielded by a jealous homosexual companion, since everybody knew the Nazis were all fairies; it was a matter of record.

  I got a little more fluent as I went along, and out of the corner of my eye I’d catch an occasional faint grin of appreciation. Mexico is a land where the art of vituperation is still respected for its own sake. I was doing okay for a mere gringo. It would be a pity to shoot me while I was affording the camp a certain amount of low-quality entertainment.

  One who apparently was not amused, however, was the little sergeant with the machine pistol. I felt his weapon touch me in the back, and I heard the faint click as he released the safety catch.

  “That’s right, amigo,” I said over my shoulder. “That is brave and correct. Shoot me in the back. Save your cowardly chief—”

  A stir made me look towards the tent again. Von Sachs stood there, buckling on the belt with the machete and the .45 automatic. There was a certain amount of saluting among the men, to which he responded with an impatient outward thrust of his hand. He looked hard and tough in the growing light. If he felt any effects from the beer, and the mickey Catherine had slipped him, he didn’t show it.

  “What transpires here?” he demanded in Spanish. “Why is this man loose? Why am I awakened by his crazy bellowing? Disarm him!”


  I stepped forward before anybody could grab me. “That’s right!” I sneered. “That’s the way, Quintana! Take the machete away from the terrible man before he cuts somebody! In a camp of men with firearms he must not be allowed to keep his little knife, it is too dangerous!” I threw back my head and spat in his direction. “You’ve got one of your own, right there on your belt. Why don’t you take mine away from me? Are you afraid?”

  Behind me, the sergeant spoke softly, “Jefe, con permiso—” He was asking for permission to shoot.

  There was a disapproving murmur from the other men. Von Sachs noted it. There were other things on his mind, of course, like the question of how I came to be standing there free and armed. He wasn’t dumb. He glanced quickly towards the tent doorway where Catherine had just appeared, pushing her hair out of her eyes, with her crumpled blouse hanging loose outside her shorts, like an open jacket. Von Sachs spoke quickly, and two men took her by the arms.

  “Hold the treacherous slut while I dispose of her accomplice!” He swung back to face me. “So you still wish to die quickly, Mr. Evans. But if I were stupid enough to fight you, I would disappoint you. I would cut you to pieces very slowly.”

  I grinned scornfully. “You scare me! You and that scar. If it wasn’t a beer bottle, it’s where you dove through a plate glass window because you were frightened by an American bomb five blocks away.”

  He hesitated. He knew he was being suckered; he knew he’d be a damn fool to risk everything he’d worked for on the outcome of a crazy duel. And still, there was the matter of a Prussian aristocrat’s honor. I’d questioned his courage, I’d cast doubts on the honorable origins of the betraying scar he’d retained through the years of flight and hiding where a sensible man would long since have had it removed by plastic surgery. There was that, and there was the waiting attitude of the men.

  The sergeant with the machine pistol spoke quickly behind me: “Jefe no! Let me shoot him now!”

  For answer, von Sachs grabbed his machete by the hilt and pulled it clear. There wasn’t any polite on-guard stuff. He just came for me. Suddenly he was all over me, and he was good. It was all I could do to parry the flashing blade coming at me from all sides.

  His men surged aside as I retreated. There were murmurs of approval and gasps of disappointment. It was a weapon they all knew, but they’d probably never seen it used by men who’d trained with foils and sabers. At that, von Sachs had the advantage. He’d learned his stuff with a real weapon. Padded and masked, he’d swung a blade weighing several pounds, sometimes dull for practice, but sometimes, as his face attested, honed and deadly.

  I’d done my work with the modern fencing saber, a whippy toy not much heavier than a foil, employing a dainty technique that has little to do with blood and death. As a matter of fact, if you hit hard enough to sting your opponent through his thin canvas jacket, you’re scolded for being unsportsmanlike. On the other hand, I did know quite a bit about knives, and I’d done some work with the Japanese fighting stick, a closely related weapon.

  He kept coming in, but not as fast as before, and I managed to break up his attack at last and come back at him with a straight-armed lunge that seemed to take him by surprise. He even looked a little disapproving as he beat the point aside and retaliated with a slashing cut to the head, which I parried. I knew I’d learned something, but there wasn’t time to analyze it.

  I’d weathered the first rush. He’d lost some of his steam, and it was time to think of strategy. It wasn’t up to me to skewer him, anyway. I was just the decoy. I started angling my retreat towards the creek bed, well within rifle range of Sheila’s position on the north rim.

  We were sweating now. The scar was a livid streak on von Sachs’ flushed face. I saw Catherine behind him, still held between her guards. That wasn’t good, but maybe they’d release her when the shooting started. I didn’t look at the canyon wall behind me. Sheila would be there. She’d have been there since the first hint of dawn. I could sense the loaded rifle up there, waiting. I could feel the crosshairs tracking von Sachs as he moved closer, advancing as I retreated.

  It made me feel kind of cheap. The man was sincerely trying to kill me in fair fight, and I was just setting him up for a bullet. Well, it’s not a chivalrous age, nor is mine an honorable profession. I wasn’t about to risk turning loose a wild man with an army and a nuclear missile because of some boyish notions of fair play.

  I had it pretty well figured out now. I had to immobilize him for a moment, to make him a stationary target; and I had to get myself completely out of the way so that the chance of my lunging into the bullet wouldn’t make Sheila nervous and hasty. I let von Sachs drive me back towards a spot where the almost dry creek bed had a six-foot bank undercut by past floods. I gave ground slowly until I felt the bank start to give; then I let out a despairing cry and jumped back and down, falling in soft sand. That got me out of the line of fire. Six feet above me, von Sachs came to a halt, panting.

  He stood there, catching his breath, a beautiful target. I knew a certain regret as I waited for the shot. Good swordsmen are hard to find these days. The regret faded as the shot didn’t come.

  It was hard to keep from turning my head to look back and up at the rim. Something was wrong up there, terribly wrong, but there wasn’t much chance of my seeing the answer from below. I got up slowly, while men crowded to the creek bank on either side of von Sachs, and still the Nazi stood there, machete in hand, and still nothing happened.

  It became obvious that nothing was going to happen, presumably because something had already happened to the rifle on the rim or to the small girl behind it.

  Catherine’s guards had dragged her up to the edge of the wash. Her face told me nothing, but I remembered that she’d wanted von Sachs alive. She’d also said, One day you will pay for Max. I do not forgive you.

  She was a clever girl. She must have made a deal with somebody; she must have figured out a different solution to her problem, one that gave her revenge as well as success. What it was didn’t really matter. Whatever she’d done, or had done, to Sheila, there wasn’t much I could do about it at the moment. I could do something about von Sachs, however. She was welcome to him after I got through with him.

  “Come on down, grandpa,” I called, shaking my machete. “What are you waiting for, the boys to bring a ladder?”

  He didn’t like the implied sneer at his age. He jumped, going to one knee in the sand. I gave him a break, I let him get to his feet. Then I moved in to kill him.

  24

  I almost got him with my first real lunge, and I saw again that little start of surprise and disapproval as he escaped the point with a wild parry that left him open for a cut to the shoulder or face that I passed up. I didn’t want to chop him to bits, I just wanted to finish him; and I had the answer now.

  It was very simple. He’d never used the point or had it used against him. They fight for the scars and the honor over there; and there’s no honor in a scar that starts at the front of the chest and comes out behind. They fight for blood only, not for death. The edge is sharp but the point is blunt. The idea that a man with a cutting weapon in his hand might use it for sticking, too, was not part of his experience. It had probably been outlawed by the rules he’d fought under, to keep them from losing too many students.

  I was afraid I’d tipped him off, and I contented myself with slashing and chopping for a while, carrying the fight to him. The sand made it tough for both of us, but his legs were older than mine. He fought cunningly and defensively, however, giving ground upstream past the cottonwoods and the missile, sparing himself for another major effort. Then it came, and he drove me back with a flashing attack, turned, and ran for the bank, shelving here.

  He held that rise for a minute or two. I couldn’t drive him off it, but I could work my way upstream to where there was no longer any bank to amount to anything. There were no shots from above. There was no sign of life at the top of the cliff. I should have left her in Tucson
, I thought. She’d be safe now.

  Von Sachs almost took my head off with a savage cut. The parry jarred the machete in my hand. It was no time for regrets. We were in the cottonwoods, fighting at the base of the Rudovic III, slugging it out with ancient tools and techniques in the shadow of the weapon of the future.

  He was tiring. I had him now, and I looked towards Catherine so she’d know I was making her a present of him. If I’d had any doubts of her treachery—whatever the details might be—the fact that she was standing alone, unguarded, but making no effort to run for the truck as we’d arranged, would have convicted her. Her guards had forgotten all about her, seeing their jefe driven back. The men watching were all silent now. There would be a kind of sigh when a weapon failed to reach the mark, that was all.

  I went in for the head, let von Sachs break up my attack, and gave him an opening. He was slow in taking advantage of it, but he came along nicely at last, and I teased him by retreating, and still he came, and I let myself falter as if my foot had slipped. I let my weapon swing wide as I caught myself. I heard the sigh of the men, and I saw the light come back into the German’s eyes, and his machete made a whistling sound as he changed his attack from left to right to take advantage of the unguarded side.

  In the middle of his cutover, while his hand was still high, I lunged, driving the point in hard and straight. He was coming to meet it. The blade went in clean and didn’t stop until the hilt was against his shirt.

  I heard the groan of the men. I saw von Sachs’ face change and die. The machete dropped from his hand. I braced myself and pulled my own weapon free. As he fell towards me, I caught him and got the pistol from his holster left-handed. Then I was standing at the base of the missile with the bloody machete in one hand and the cocked automatic in the other, facing the leaderless army that had been going to conquer an empire, for all the world like Errol Flynn playing Custer’s Last Stand, or something.

 

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