Chapter 34

Rourke's left hand snaked out through the darkness, in his right the A.G.

Russell black chrome Sting IA he'd retrieved from the dead body on the beach.

The left hand grasped a handful of hair, jerking the head under it back, the right hand plunging the knife down into the voicebox to stifle any scream. He pulled the knife, then raked it once ear to ear as the body fell back toward him—just in case.

He'd killed the man to avoid having someone directly at his back.

He stepped out of the shadow of the trees now and into the meager glow of the fire, some hundred yards away still from the ring of crosses.

The wildman who held the torch stood beneath the cross of one of the shore party—Rourke thought vaguely—at the angle he wasn't able to be sure—that it was Corporal Henderson.

It stood to reason—make an example of the leader and burn him first.

Considering what Henderson had done, Rourke had at least a twinge,of desire to let the man die. But that wasn't his way—and he knew it wasn't.

Rourke glanced at the Rolex as he rolled back the cuff of the bomber jacket and the sweater beneath it. It had been five minutes—time enough for Paul to be in position on the far side of the ring of crosses. He discounted any help from Cole completely.

It was time.

Rourke started forward, searching his pockets for the Zippo lighter which bore his initials, finding it, lighting the chewed stump of dark tobacco in the left corner of his mouth.

He put the light away, swinging the CAR-forward. While he'd been up in the rocks, he'd reloaded the spent and partially spent Detonics magazines. Counting the six pack, he had twelve magazines, including the two in the guns—seventy-two rounds. He carried six spare magazines for the CAR-, plus the one already up the well—no loose ammo for these. The Python was at his right hip, -grain JHPs loaded, three speedloaders ready, plus the loose ammo in the dump pouches on his belt.

If it took him one shot per man—and woman— around the crosses and they all stood perfectly still while he shot so there would be no chance of a miss, he'd have plenty of ammo to spare.

Rourke smiled to himself—somehow, he doubted things would work that way.

The CAR-slung cross body under his right arm, he stopped walking, less than twenty-five yards from the nearest cross—the one on which Henderson was hung, the one before which the wildman stood holding the torch.

Rourke balanced the rifle butt against his right hip, pulling the trigger once, firing into the air.

The chanting stopped, the screaming didn't.

The faces of the wildmen and their women turned— toward him.

His voice little above a whisper, Rourke rasped, "You can stop all this or you're dead—your play, guys."

That was something else he doubted would work that way.


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