Drought (16 page)

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Authors: Graham Masterton

BOOK: Drought
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He waited until they were just over half a mile away from the flyover, and then he lifted off the towel that was covering the two Colt Commandos, and hefted one of them up. He leaned across the front seat and rested the barrel on top of the passenger door, lodging it between the side mirror and the windshield to steady it.

Through the barred window at the side of the bus, he could see the back of one of the guards' heads; and through the rear window he could just see Tyler's hair. He still had a choice. He could drive away, and let Tyler be taken to prison. But he still believed that motto he had always used in Afghanistan, about the worst thing that you can possibly imagine, and he knew that he had to act now, or he would regret it for ever.

He fired two shots in quick succession, and then a five-second burst. The noise of the gun was deafening, because this was one of the old Colt Commandos before they suppressed them. The bullets tore into the rear offside tires, ripping them into blackened shreds, so that they flapped against the road surface like a witch's cloak.

The bus slewed to the left, and then to the right, its remaining tires howling. Martin saw the security guard swivel his head around and stare at him through the bars, his mouth wide open in shock; but then he touched his brakes and swung the Eldorado behind the bus, its long hood softly dipping, and then accelerated again, so that he was coming up on its nearside.

He shifted the sub-machine gun to his left hand, steering with his right. Tucking the butt into his left armpit, he fired another nine or ten ear-splitting rounds into the bus's back tires. A blizzard of torn black rubber burst all around him, thumping against his windshield, while the bus tilted from one side to the other, its steel hubs screeching on the blacktop and showers of sparks cascading from its wheel arches.

It seemed to take forever before the bus stopped careering from side to side. The driver managed to pull it over on to the shoulder, only about twenty yards shy of the off-ramp that led up to the North Alder Avenue flyover. It came to a grating halt, rocking slightly on its ruined suspension, and a large piece of twisted metal chassis dropped on to the ground with a clatter. Martin overtook the bus, parked his Eldorado on the shoulder in front of it, and climbed out, pointing the Colt Commando at the door.

Charlie parked behind it, and walked around to join Martin, holding up the RPG. He was grinning.

‘That was real fancy shooting, Angel,' he called out ‘Haven't had so much goddamned fun in years!'

Traffic was still streaming past them on the freeway, cars and semis and even a tow truck from the Freeway Service Patrol. Martin could see most of their drivers turning their heads to stare at him, but none of them slowed down He had counted on passers-by not wanting to get involved in any situation that could be dangerous, especially if they saw men with large guns. Maybe some of them might call 911, or a trucker might report it on his CB radio, but by the time the police could respond they would be long gone.

Martin walked up to the bus and banged on the door with his fist. ‘Open the door, now, or you're going to get blown to kingdom come!'

Charlie was standing right behind him with the RPG launcher resting on his shoulder, still grinning. One of the security guards said something in a muffled voice, and then the door opened up with a sharp pneumatic hiss.

‘OK, out of there, all of you!' said Martin. ‘And you two guards – if either of you goes for a weapon, believe me, it'll be the last thing you do!'

The bus driver stepped down first, and put his hands on top of his head. He was followed by the two security guards, and then the two white prisoners, and the black prisoner in the woolly hat, and finally by Tyler.

Tyler was wide-eyed and obviously shaken, but at least he had the good sense not to shout out ‘Dad!'

Martin stepped forward, popped the studs on the security guards' holsters, hooked out their pistols with his forefinger and then slung them left-handed into the dry brown scrub at the side of the shoulder. Then he said, ‘Cellphones, too.'

They took out their cells and threw them after their guns. Neither of them spoke, not even to ask him why he had shot out their tires, or what he wanted. One was middle-aged, with a broken nose like a boxer, and no front teeth. The other was much younger, Hispanic, with a shadow of a black moustache and a large mole on his chin. The older one, oddly, looked almost bored, as if he just wanted to get this over with.

‘Tyler,' said Martin, ‘go sit in the car. The rest of you guys, get back in the bus. Stay there, because my friend here is going to keep you covered until I'm gone, and my friend's RPG could punch a hole through an armored personnel carrier, leave alone a bus.'

‘Whatever you say, buddy,' said the older security guard. ‘I'm not risking my neck for some punk kid, believe me.'

The three inmates climbed back on to the bus, followed by the driver and the younger security guard, with the older security guard taking up the rear, his hands still held on top of his head. Martin backed toward his car, keeping his sub-machine gun lifted, but when he reached it and opened up the driver's door, he tossed the gun on to the back seat.

He climbed in and started up the engine, turning around to wave goodbye to Charlie. Charlie was still keeping the bus covered, the RPG mounted on his right shoulder, his left hand holding the pistol grip. The older security guard was now mounting the steps into the bus, taking both hands off the top of his head so that he could grasp the rails. Charlie turned to Martin and called out, ‘Mission accomplished, Angel!
Yee
-ha! You did it again, man! Just like the old days!'

Suddenly, though, the older security guard used his grip on the rails to push himself backward, and jump down on to the tarmac. He rolled over, underneath the bus, so that he was out of Charlie's line of sight. Charlie stepped to the left, ducking down to see where the security guard was hiding himself. Martin shouted out, ‘
Charlie
!
Watch out
!' and immediately reached down for the second Colt Commando, which Tyler had taken off the passenger seat and laid in the footwell.

He lifted up the Colt and opened his door, but even before he could climb back out of the driver's seat the older security guard appeared from underneath the front bumper of the bus. He was lying on his side, grimacing, and he was holding a small-caliber pistol in both hands. Martin thought:
hideaway gun, shit, why didn't I think of checking his ankles
?

He raised the sub-machine gun but everything seemed to be happening in slow motion. Charlie must have seen the security guard's pistol because he teetered sideways and backward and with that forty-pound rocket launcher on his shoulder, he began to lose his balance, especially since he only had one arm. As he did so, the security guard fired three shots at him, and then another two shots in Martin's direction. With a hollow bang, one of them hit the trunk of Martin's car, but the other missed, even though Martin heard it whizz past his ear.

Charlie, however, was staggering further and further backward, with the rocket launcher tilting upward, and then downward.

Martin fired two loud shots at the security guard under the bus, but the security guard had disappeared again, like a rat disappearing under a baseboard, and he wasn't at all sure that he had hit him.

‘
Charlie
!' he yelled, and started to run toward him.

The rocket launcher was pointing down toward the ground now, and it looked as if Charlie was trying to disentangle himself from the shoulder strap. But his index finger must have been caught in the trigger guard, because he was tugging at it furiously, and as he did so one of the grenades went off. Within a split second of each other, there was a sharp whoosh as the projectile ignited, and then a devastating explosion as it hit the ground.

The world was turned inside-out. Martin heard nothing at all, and saw nothing but blinding white light. He was hurled backward against his car, jarring his shoulder against the trunk and knocking his forehead against the sharply angled tail lights.

He lay on the ground, staring at the tarmac in close-up, and the inside of his head was singing and singing and wouldn't stop. Very faintly, he heard Tyler's voice saying ‘Dad! Dad, are you OK? Dad! Can you hear me? Dad!'

He raised his head a little and saw the scuffed-up toes of Tyler's blue-and-white sneakers. Then he managed to raise it a little more, to see that Tyler was crouching down next to him, his eyes wide with worry.

Gradually, he managed to drag himself into a sitting position. There was a crater in the tarmac where Charlie's grenade had exploded, with smoke still rising from it. The force of the explosion had blown the windshield and all of the windows out of the bus and forced the whole vehicle sideways, so that its front wheels were up on the scrubby embankment and its rear end was sticking out into the right-hand lane of the freeway. Martin couldn't see any of its passengers.

He couldn't see Charlie, either. He looked around, his head still singing and bright green after images still swimming in front of his eyes, but there was no sign of Charlie anywhere. It was only when he looked down at his own clothes, and at the back of his car, that he began to realize what had happened. His khaki chinos and his white shirt were finely sprayed with blood, and so was his car. The blast from the grenade had been so powerful that Charlie had been vaporized.

Several cars had stopped on the freeway now, and more of them had slowed right down to a crawl. A large Peterbilt semi had pulled up behind Charlie's truck and the driver was climbing down from his cab.

Tyler said, ‘Dad – I think the police are coming!'

‘What?'

‘I can hear sirens. I think they're getting closer!'

Martin listened intently, cupping his hand to his ear, but all he could hear was that persistent singing. ‘OK,' he said, ‘I think we need to get ourselves out of here, and fast. Come on.'

‘Dad – we can't!'

‘No “can't” about it, Tyler. We have to. This whole country is going to hell in a handcart and we'll be going with it unless we go now.'

‘Dad—!'

Martin bent down and picked up his Colt Commando. He threw it back into his car with a clatter and then opened the passenger door and pushed Tyler inside.

The truck driver was approaching them now, and he called out, ‘Hey! What happened here, fella? What's going on? Hey, there's blood all over!'

Martin didn't answer him, but climbed behind the wheel, started the engine, and accelerated up the off-ramp with rubber smoke billowing behind him. Once he reached the top of the ramp, he turned left with a screaming chorus of tires, crossed the flyover and headed south.

Tyler was looking at him, white-faced and bewildered. ‘Why did you do that, Dad? That man was blown up! Who was he? Was he with you?'

Martin kept his foot flat on the floor and blasted his horn as a panel van tried to pull out in front of him.

‘That man was Charlie Bonaduce. He and I served in the Second Marine Expeditionary Brigade in Afghanistan together. He lost an arm to a roadside bomb.'

He swerved in and out of a slow-crawling line of cars, and then he said, ‘Charlie said that his life wasn't worth living any more and he wanted to blow his brains out, but he didn't because it would make a mess, and his maid would have to clear it up.'

He slewed left into Baseline Avenue, running a red light and provoking a furious fusillade of horn-blowing from other drivers.

‘
Asshole
!' screamed one of them.

Martin ignored him. He turned to Tyler and said, ‘Seems like Charlie found a way round that particular problem.'

THIRTEEN

H
e kept his foot down and didn't stop for anything – not red lights nor yield signs nor traffic snarl-ups. At the intersection with Mount Vernon Avenue he avoided a long line of cars waiting to turn left by swerving into the exit of Walgreens parking lot and careering out again through the entrance.

‘
Dad
,' said Tyler, gripping his armrests tightly to stop himself being thrown from side to side.

‘Sorry, Tyler, I don't mean to scare you but things are getting critical, and a whole lot sooner than anybody's prepared to admit.'

‘Dad, I didn't shoot Mr Alvarez and like I told you that Big Puppet made me do what I did to Maria. He would have
killed
her if I hadn't, he would have shot her right in front of me. She'll tell the judge that, I know she will. Mr Lemos said they would have let me out on bail, for definite.'

‘Listen, I know that,' said Martin. ‘But this afternoon they're going to cut off the water supply to West Valley Detention Center, just like they've cut it off to all off the poorer districts downtown. Come on, Tyler, prison is bad enough as it is. Can you imagine being locked up in a place like that without being able to take a shower or flush the john or even have a drink of water? You're talking hell on Earth.'

‘Are you serious? They're going to cut off the water? They can't do that!'

‘They can and they're going to. Not only that – I don't think they have any intention of turning it back on again, not until this drought is over, and when
that
will be, God alone knows. They keep talking about rotating the water rationing from one neighborhood to the next but that's B.S.'

‘How do you know that?'

‘I have it on good authority from someone on the Governor's special drought team. It's survival of the wealthiest, dude. Welcome to the wonderful world of the haves and the have-nots, and the way things are going, the have-nots are
never
going to have it. Look up ahead of us. See all that smoke downtown? That's a water riot. That's people who haven't been able to have a drink of water or wash for two days.'

‘I heard the cops talking about it in the police station. Even some of them were saying that you can't blame people for protesting if they don't have any water.'

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