Chasing Gold

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Chasing Gold Page 5

by David Leadbeater


  The other two gunmen ran hard at Crouch, guns up.

  Their boss didn’t dare move, arms still high in the air. Austin crawled around the front of the car, but had no weapon. Alicia expected him to run foolishly at the man anyway and fired her own gun in his direction, warding him off.

  Russo shot at the two gunmen.

  Crouch ducked. One gunman was wounded in the arm, but kept coming. They grabbed Crouch and heaved him back toward the chopper, where the doors were already open. Alicia started to run now, shooting the injured gunman and watching him fall to the floor, writhing in agony from two bullet wounds. Crouch struggled in the other’s grip, but the man smashed the side of his weapon into Crouch’s temple, stopping any dissent.

  Alicia focused on the gunman.

  Another, having secured the thieves aboard, now leaned out of the chopper and laid down a hail of random gunfire. The bullets scattered far and wide and high in the air, but everyone ducked due to the indiscriminate savagery of it.

  Crouch fell to his knees just once, and screamed out at the top of his voice: “I’ll make it work! Chase the gold! Long way to go. Chase the fucking gold!”

  Alicia sprang up, leaping forward instantly in an effort to reach Crouch. Her gun was firing constantly, and one of her bullets came close to killing her own boss, because it slammed into the man dragging him into the chopper, broke his spine, and sent him tumbling down to the hard asphalt.

  Still, hard, strong hands and arms dragged Crouch into the already rising chopper.

  Russo focused on the pilot, but Alicia pulled his gun down so that its barrel aimed only at the floor. “Don’t,” she said. “You could cause a crash and kill them all.”

  “But…” He let his voice tail off, knowing she was right.

  The chopper rose up, now with Terri Lee and Paul Cutler aboard, with Michael Crouch aboard, and with at least some of the men who’d planned the attack on the Smithsonian and the mall today, quite clearly on board.

  They also had the Star-Spangled Banner, that incredible symbol of American fortitude and freedom, with them.

  Alicia turned to her dejected, heart-broken crew.

  “Get it together,” she said. “This isn’t done yet. Not by a long way.”

  “What can we do?” Caitlyn watched the chopper rise into the night as if seeing her hopes drifting away.

  “We chase that damn helicopter.”

  Austin screeched up in the little car. “Get in!”

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  Alicia’s head slammed into the passenger side window, so eager was she to jump into the car and get going. The chopper still rose above, tilting its nose now as it prepared to veer away.

  “Satnav,” Austin yelled. “Get it up. I can follow more easily if I know what’s coming.”

  Alicia jabbed at the center console. “For reference,” she said. “Nobody says ‘get it up’ to me without the firm expectation of a sarcastic and often devastating comeback.”

  “Understood.”

  Austin jammed his foot on the gas pedal and roared around the supermarket car park, heading for the nearest exit sign. The chopper roared overhead. Caitlyn and Russo, in the back, were still trying to buckle up, constantly falling into each other as Austin wielded the wheel like a manhole cover.

  “Damn,” Caitlyn said. “Drive it with a little finesse, would you?”

  Austin peered ahead. “What’s that?”

  Alicia finally managed to bring the image of the map up. “I’ll explain later. It’s something you usually get in your thirties. Anyways, we’re here.” She jabbed at the screen once more.

  Austin was looking up instead of ahead. “Yeah, but where’d he go?”

  “Just watch the road,” Alicia said. “And the satnav. I see him.”

  She leaned as far forward as she was able, picking out the chopper’s running lights easily in the dark skies. It swooped now over Maine and was heading toward the Washington Channel. “Stay on One,” she said, referring to the road. “It should open out soon.”

  Even as she said it, it did. The wide channel suddenly appeared up ahead. Rows of dimly lit white-painted boats and yachts were moored to the right of their road and the far bank was tree-lined, except for the few houses she could vaguely make out.

  White railings and tall trees formed a makeshift guardrail as they crossed the river, the spike of the Washington Monument illuminated behind them. Alicia could see the helicopter quite clearly as it snaked in the general direction of Highway One, heading clear of the Jefferson Memorial.

  “Stay as close as you can,” Alicia said. “We’re getting lucky at the moment. It’s pretty open here, but that won’t last.”

  “So you can say ‘getting lucky’ to me, but I can’t say anything with a double entendre to you?”

  Alicia looked across as Austin peered hard through the windshield, tongue stuck firmly between his teeth. “That’s right. I’m guessing the last time you got lucky, the circus was in town, right?”

  Austin choked a little, still peering up and to the right. The road opened up even further ahead, flat green lawns dotted here and there with trees. Austin stood on the gas pedal once more, overtaking a late-night slow driver, making the small engine protest with a roar. Alicia made sure her seatbelt was tight, wondering for a moment just how long the kid had been driving.

  “You think they know?” he asked.

  “What, that we’re chasing them?” Russo had his face pressed to the window. “Hard to say.”

  Alicia glanced back at the big man. “Always took you for a window licker, mate. It looks well on you.”

  Russo grunted. Caitlyn leaned across him. “Crouch had all the links to the FBI. He had the mission info. All we can do at this point is try not to lose them.”

  “Inconsiderate bastard,” Alicia murmured. “Getting taken like that.”

  They wound through several more curves in the road, traveling at speed, the tires screeching around the bends. Austin overtook another driver, and received a blast on the horn for his trouble.

  “If they’re not honking, they’re not happy.” Alicia watched the other driver as they passed.

  “Who? Americans?” Russo asked.

  “No. Fools.”

  The wide Potomac came ahead now, a sight to behold, illuminated dimly in the dark. The highway widened to four lanes, the landscape so open that they could clearly see the people sitting in the chopper as it flew across the rolling river.

  “I see Crouch,” Russo said. “In the middle.”

  “Yeah, Cutler and Lee too,” Caitlyn added.

  “They’re staying pretty straight,” Alicia said. “Maybe they don’t know we’re following.”

  The river undulated to either side of the road for what seemed forever, but at the speed they were going was less than a minute. The chopper was painted black, with decals along the side that promised the best city views.

  No doubt stolen, Alicia thought. In another few minutes they were speeding along another blacktop with the Pentagon nestling to the right.

  “Doesn’t look much from ground level.” Alicia peered across.

  “No way will that chopper be allowed to—” As she spoke, Caitlyn suddenly broke off. The chopper veered right over them, avoiding any proximity with the Pentagon, now flying low to their left. Alicia heard its powerful roar as it crossed their path and saw the underside of the body.

  “Keep ’em in sight!” Russo yelled.

  The chopper was still drifting to the left, moving further away.

  Austin swerved over to the left-hand lane, which sent him away from the small flow of traffic and over a bridge, crossing over a network of coiling roads. The landscape was still open, but tall buildings ahead promised a lessening of vision in about five minutes. Austin kept up the pace.

  Buildings rose up on both sides. The chopper threaded through them, following the line of the highway. In front, the road was clear, but Alicia refrained from trying to force the aircraft to land. Too many things coul
d go wrong.

  We can’t follow it all night.

  What else could they do? Crouch had all the FBI contact info and passwords. Without a direct communication to the right people it could take hours to get hold of someone, and previously they hadn’t sounded all that interested even for Crouch.

  Maybe the mall event had finished.

  For now, we chase… chase the…

  “What did Crouch say?” she suddenly asked. “Back there? He shouted something before they took him.”

  Caitlyn nodded. “He said something like: ‘I’ll make it work. Long way to go. Chase the fucking gold!’”

  Alicia pursed her lips. “Any ideas?”

  “Clearly, it’s cryptic,” Caitlyn said, still thrown left and right by the car as Austin overtook a slow vehicle. “But why? Often, he refers to us as the Gold Team. We’re always hunting the gold. It sounds like he overheard something, because he said: ‘long way to go’. Somehow, we have to chase the gold.”

  Alicia let out a sigh. “Maybe he’s the gold, in this case.”

  “Or the banner?” Caitlyn suggested.

  “I guess it doesn’t matter,” Russo said. “Since they’re both together.”

  “For now,” Alicia said. “For now.”

  Still, the landscape remained relatively open, and the chopper’s flight was easily spotted in the night. It veered even more to the left, but the car went with it, leaving their highway and joining 18th Street and then Bell Street as they tried to keep it in sight. These roads were narrower, more dangerous, but Austin kept the car planted nicely. Concrete structures rose to left and right, hindering visibility enough so that Austin had to switch again and again to track the chopper. The tires complained with every turn, the tailpipe belching out fumes. Alicia held on to the grab handle to help settle her stomach.

  South Clark Street came next, according to the satnav, a road that ran alongside the wider Jefferson. Alicia hoped for a better road, but then the chopper flew right over them, tilting drastically as if the pilot were trying to evade something.

  “Shit, that can’t be good,” Alicia said.

  The chopper veered back, and this time they got a quick glance through the side windows. Crouch had made a move, or Alicia at least thought it was Crouch. She guessed it could as easily be Cutler. The figure was fighting with the mercs in the back, and then she saw him wrap an arm around the pilot’s throat.

  “Get after it!” she cried.

  “I’m trying,” Austin said. “Bloody thing’s all over the place.”

  “That can’t be Crouch.” Russo scrutinized the helicopter as it swing from side to side. “His military training would prevent it. It’s too risky.”

  “Civilian then. Paul Cutler.” Alicia wondered briefly how the thieves had fallen out with their employers. Hopefully, they hadn’t known about the terror event. That would put them firmly in the camp of Crouch’s allies.

  The chopper half-rolled and lost altitude, then swooped right above them, cutting between concrete buildings. Alicia winced as she watched, aware the pilot had little control and could crash at any time.

  “Oh, my God,” Caitlyn said. “It’s going down.”

  A rotor clipped an upright pillar, shearing off. The noise was the stuff of nightmares, a loud crunching clang. Bits of concrete sheared off along with the rotor, which skimmed along the street and ended up embedded, still shuddering, in a shop window. The chopper tilted, its nose scraping the asphalt as the pilot sought to save it. The body came down then, and the whole thing became a skimming receptacle, sparks and road surface thrown up to left and right and showering out behind. The protesting roar of the engine and metal ripping to pieces was tremendous.

  Alicia held onto the grab bar and the car roof, fully alert as Austin drove their car hard in pursuit of the crashing, sliding chopper, flinging the wheel to left and right as he sought to evade torn off bits of steel and glass.

  “Fuck me!” Russo cried. “Back the fuck off, lad!”

  But Austin somehow managed not to hear, playing chicken with the skating aircraft, keeping the car’s front firmly in its wake. A chunk of metal broke the windshield, another made a huge dint in the hood before skipping overhead. The chopper began to turn then, the back end forcing the front around, and they could see through the side windows as they continued the chase.

  Men fought, guns raised. Two shots were fired up through the roof, perforating the metal. The pilot struggled, alone. Alicia could see a spray of blood across the glass, and then a face pressed up against the window.

  “Get ready.”

  The chopper slowed, scraping against the sidewalk curb and shuddering to a halt, smoking, falling apart even as she watched. Austin brought the car alongside with a ninety-degree handbrake turn, tires screeching and rubber burning.

  Alicia flung open the door as glass shattered in the chopper, as flames broke out, and as mercenaries started to drag the thieves and Michael Crouch out into the already devastated street.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Without pause or caution, the mercenaries opened fire. Alicia dived headlong, rolling into a shop entryway as bullets peppered the framework. Russo joined her. Austin and Caitlyn scrambled back behind the car, using it for shelter. Alicia moved further into the entry cubicle so she could see through two sets of windows back out into the street.

  “All present and correct,” she said. “Cutler, Lee, four mercs and Crouch. Oh, and the pilot too.”

  “Let’s get among them,” Russo growled.

  Alicia ducked low and raced back out into the street, firing twice. One bullet hit the burning wreckage of the helicopter; the second flew past a merc’s head. The enemy group were running ahead of the wreckage now, using the flaming bulk of it as a shield.

  Alicia and Russo started to sprint.

  Caitlyn’s voice reached them just in time. “No! It’s gonna explode, you—”

  The rest was lost as Alicia ducked behind the nearest parked car, again taking the skin off her exposed arms as she hit the ground and skidded to a halt. Russo stumbled over her, sprawling, and coming down like a felled rhino. The chopper detonated loudly, flames licking in all directions, washing right over the car they hid behind. Alicia felt the heat, and saw the flames reflected in the shop window just before the glass was shattered by metal fragments.

  She took only a moment to raise her head, saw the enemy group still racing away down the now debris-littered street.

  “C’mon, Russo. Get moving.”

  “I’m trying.”

  “Get your leg off… fuck… you’re harder to move than a dead cow.”

  Russo finally dragged himself clear of her legs and climbed to his feet. “Now they’re desperate.”

  Alicia moved to see past the burning wreckage. Their enemies were collectively running, limping and dragging themselves away, herding their captives between them at gunpoint. Some were bleeding, some just looked angry.

  “Cops are on their way,” Caitlyn said. “And ironically, that’s a bad thing now. It’d take hours to explain all this, by which time Crouch would be gone.”

  Alicia swore at their new situation. “Bollocks.”

  They moved out carefully, skirting the wreckage and keeping to the opposite sidewalk. Some random shots were fired ahead for no apparent reason, but Alicia thought it might be to keep any gawkers at bay. It was a fraught, reckless run as they tried to close the gap but keep safe at the same time. Russo fired once, winging an enemy, but then had to duck below a brick wall as two others turned, knelt and opened fire.

  Bullets filled the street, slamming into concrete, brick and glass. Windows shattered. Hell rained down on the Gold Team for half a minute. Alicia cried out in frustration, knowing what was happening but unable to do anything about it.

  Cautiously, she peered out. “They have a car.”

  Screeching tires punctuated her sentence and then Russo and she were running into the middle of the street. Now she could see all the twitching curtains and even one pe
rson standing in plain sight in his window, not caring about his safety. Russo kept running, head down as if trying to catch up with the vehicle. Alicia assumed he was trying to get the number plate.

  “Here.” Austin made a beeline for the nearest car, a storm-gray Nissan SUV, then apparently thought better of it and headed for an older American car. “Easier to hotwire,” he said by way of explanation.

  Alicia yanked open the passenger door. “Where the hell did Crouch find you, boy?”

  “Well, it wasn’t rowing club.”

  “Yeah, I figured that.”

  “Thanks very much.”

  “He needed a petty thief and we got you?”

  “Think about it.” Austin started the car with a twist of wires, then slammed the gearstick into drive. “Almost every job you do, every quest you guys undertake, what’s the one thing you need but never have?”

  Alicia snapped her seatbelt into place. “Well, there’s an interesting question,” she said, hanging on as Austin checked Russo and Caitlyn were ready and then screeched off in hot pursuit. “I mean — are we talking equipment? Weapons? Tech stuff?” She paused. “Toys?”

  Austin coughed loudly. “I’m a driver.”

  “Wow.” Alicia made use of the time by checking her handgun. The trouble with taking guns off dead mercs was the lack of spare ammo. “That’s… great.”

  “Not just a driver,” Austin affirmed. “A driver. I can grand theft any auto, hotwire any vehicle, and drive better than Lewis Hamilton.”

  “Dude,” Alicia laughed. “You’re like… ten.”

  “I was driving before I was ten,” Austin told them. “I mean, check out my name for starters. It’s an English car manufacturer. My parents wanted a racing driver and started me young on their farm.”

  “What went wrong?” Russo asked, cheek squashed up against the glass as Austin took a sharp bend.

  “Fell in with the wrong crowd,” Austin admitted more quietly. “My dad died. We lost the farm. Mum ended up in an East End bedsit. We needed the dosh.”

 

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