The sooner he found one, the better.
He was going to have to get rid of this Coonan, too—he hadn’t had time to stop and pick up his expended brass here, and this gun already had two shootings on it, in Alaska and in California. Under better circumstances, he would have dropped the pistol into a lake or ocean after the first time he’d used it, but there simply hadn’t been time. Only a fool would hold on to something that would get him the death penalty if he was caught with it. He had other guns, and as soon as he could get to them, he’d lose this one.
There was an old pickup truck parked on the street half a block ahead of him. That would do. He could break the window, get inside, crack the ignition for a hot-wire, be gone in another two minutes.
He glanced behind him. No sign of pursuit, no men chasing him with guns. Maybe those were the only two. Maybe.
But even as he ran, that part of him that feasted on danger grinned and smacked its chops, looking for more. There was nothing like an adrenaline rush, the immediate sense of danger and possible death. He should be afraid, but what he felt was closer to orgasm than fear. He had the prize, he was on his way, enemies were down. All around him, life was crystalline, razor-sharp, throbbing with triumph.
He lived, they died.
It didn’t get any better than this.
Here was the truck. Try the door—hah! not even locked! He reached up over the visor, just in case—and lo! the keys!
He laughed aloud. No. It couldn’t get any better than this!
He put the gun down on the seat and shoved the key into the ignition slot—
“Going somewhere, Colonel?”
Surprised, Ventura jumped, started to grab the Coonan—
“Don’t! You won’t make it!”
Ventura froze. He looked up.
Standing six feet away, a shotgun aimed at Ventura’s head, was General Jackson “Bull” Smith. Smiling.
This was not in Ventura’s game plan. “General. Odd running into you here.”
“Not odd at all, Luther. Me and a few of the boys have been waiting for you to show up.”
“Those two were yours?”
“They were.”
“Sorry.”
“Don’t worry about it. They deserved what they got—it was a bonehead move, going at you face-on.”
Smith smiled again, and the shotgun didn’t waver a hair. Ventura was looking right down the muzzle. Twelve-gauge, he noted. Modified choke.
“There was a pair of other guys here before us, commie agents, near as we could tell, but they ... went away.”
“I thought there might be. Thanks.”
“Don’t thank me yet. I had a couple other boys tailing you, but you lost ’em after that mess in Los Angeles. Lost your client, too, that’s a real shame. Figured you’d show up here sooner or later.”
“You continue to surprise me, General. How?’
“Because there are better surveillance gadgets than the ones you had in your car at the compound, that’s how. You think because we live up in the woods and stomp around in the bear shit we don’t have access to modem technology? You get a flunking grade for underestimating folks, Luther. Especially your friends. You should have cut me in, instead of trying to bullshit me with that story of yours.”
Ventura smiled and shook his head. “I sit corrected, General. Real impressive work. Not too late to make amends, is it?”
“I’m afraid it is, Colonel, I’m afraid it is.”
When he saw the man with the shotgun point the weapon at Ventura where he sat in the truck he was presumably going to steal, Michaels slid into a front yard and behind a thick-boled Douglas fir tree. He was across the street and they were busy enough with each other that they hadn’t noticed him. Reaching down, he hit the alarm button on his virgil. It would take them a minute or two to react, but he was no longer worried about alerting Ventura.
Now what? Who was this guy? Was he connected to the two dead men at Morrison’s? What the hell was going on?
Michaels was sixty, seventy feet away, and the taser was accurate for fifteen or twenty feet, if you were lucky. But he’d only get one shot and then he’d have to reload, and as John Howard and Julio Fernandez had pointed out to him, the fastest taser reloader in the world could not outpace a handgun with multiple rounds. Net Force computer and management people were supposed to be desk jockeys, they didn’t need guns, that’s what the military arm was for.
If he