For twenty years, Marcus had lived the policy of never negotiating with terrorists. If he tried to save Lonnie by giving in, thousands could die from the terrorist’s weapon of mass destruction.
The road suddenly opened wider as a broad shoulder expanded on both sides of the pavement. The patrol car on the left lunged forward with a burst of speed until he was parallel to the truck. The trooper attempted to slam sideways into the driver’s side front wheel. Before he made contact, the driver of the truck tapped the brakes. The sudden deceleration suddenly put the patrol car several feet in front of him.
Once the patrol car’s rear wheel was directly in front of the corner of the truck, the terrorist slammed hard to the left, smashing just behind the wheel well and sending the cruiser into an uncontrolled high-speed spin across the frozen pavement.
As the troopers vehicle spun three-quarters of a turn, the truck driver moved over to the left lane. He punched the accelerator again, this time smashing the front driver’s side fender hard enough to send the vehicle into a fresh spin. The Crown Victoria careened into the second patrol car that was still following. The two steel framed vehicles slammed into each other with a loud crash, impacting at a combined speed of nearly one hundred miles per hour. Glass and metal fragments shot through the air, some snapping violently against Marcus’s windshield and the side of the car. The light bar atop one spun through the air like a helicopter blade. It smashed into the rear of Marcus’s cruiser as he zipped past on the shoulder.
The two vehicles ground to a halt in a screech of metal on metal. Neither trooper moved to get out. Marcus radioed back to let the others know what happened and followed on with the pursuit.
At the junction of the Parks and the Sunshine Cutoff in the small town of Sunshine, the two remaining troopers from that post maintained the roadblock that had been set up while the others responded to the north when the suspect had been spotted.
Shin saw the flashing lights as he approached the intersection. The troopers were dragging a length of spike strips out of the back of a car and across the lane when they saw him coming and ran behind their vehicles, weapons in hand.
Marcus felt relief. Finally, they might stop this guy.
The roadblock almost completely covered the entrance to the Sunshine Cutoff — almost. In the left corner of the intersection, there was just enough shoulder to squeeze the truck through. The driver yanked hard to the left twenty feet before hitting the tire-puncturing spikes that would have ended his escape in an explosion of high-speed rubber.
The shoulder was just barely wide enough. The corner of the truck slammed into the tail-end of one of the patrol cars. The impact lifted the car off the ground as the truck plowed through.
He headed west on Sunshine Cutoff, toward the Talkeetna River. Marcus stayed in close pursuit.
Chapter 45
Trooper Wyatt had just begun to awaken from the initial blow when she was jolted by the impact of the collision with the blockade. She smacked the side of her head into the dashboard. A moan of pain escaped her as they roared past the last barricade.
Shin had not heard her moan in the commotion. His focus was on two things: the intensity of this chase, and the excruciating pain in his face, hands, and legs. His frostbitten flesh thawed rapidly in the heated cab of the truck. Every part of his body that had been touched by the minus sixty-five air had been mostly stiff and numb when he entered the truck. The nerve endings and blood vessels that were frozen solid twenty minutes earlier had awoken to a horrible new reality.
The pain of being warm was a thousand times worse than the pain of freezing.
Lieutenant Shin could barely see through eyelids that screamed every time he blinked. His hands felt as though they would explode from the searing agony of destroyed nerve endings that kept trying to inform his brain of the death of his fingers and flesh. Partially operating muscles in his hands and arms were still submitting to his will. With every move he made, his mind shouted curses to the sky.
The road he had turned onto was a newly constructed access road for the local residents who lived on homesteads on the west side of the Talkeetna River. It was a well-maintained sixteen-mile stretch of pavement. It ran toward the river for the first two miles, then turned south and paralleled the river until reconnecting with the Parks. A local heavy equipment company owner who lived at one end plowed it in winter, keeping it clear and the driving easy.
Shin planned to shake the tail, kill whoever it was, if necessary, and return to the highway. He glanced in the mirror. A single trooper cruiser followed close behind him. No more voices chattered on the radio. The troopers had switched frequencies to keep their communication out of his hearing.
Lieutenant Shin Chun Soo alone was the last hope of the People’s Republic of Korea to bring the hated American empire to its knees. He would show them what a truly devoted communist could do. He would show them the power of Juche, the power of one man. No country, no people, and certainly no god could stop a man who desired to win as deeply as did Lieutenant Shin Chun Soo.
He neared the intersection with the highway. Earlier in the year, he had visited a big farmhouse nearby while on a reconnaissance mission. Shin would turn into the circular driveway and try to get the driver of the police cruiser stuck in the snow as he headed back to the road with his four-wheel drive.
The North Korean commando slowed to make the turn. A sudden movement flashed from the passenger side. Shin turned to see a gun. The woman trooper he had thought unconscious pointed her weapon up at him. He jerked his head back just as a blinding flash of light erupted from it. The shot thundered in the confined space. A bullet whipped past his nose and smashed the window next to him. Frozen air rushed in to touch his already painful face.
Shin grabbed at the hand that held the pistol and yanked hard. His grip was unexpectedly weak. The fingers that wrapped around the barrel burned with searing pain as he contacted the metal and met with resistance.
Lonnie Wyatt kicked up at him with one leg. She smashed the heel of her boot into his right knee. The heavy rubber tread made contact with the frostbitten flesh. Shin screamed in pain as the dead, thawed flesh tore open.
Shin turned in rage and grabbed her flailing leg, pulling her with all his might. As he pulled, the rotting flesh of his middle finger split at the knuckle and peeled from the appendage like an over-ripe tomato skin. The avulsed flesh slid toward the tip, where it bunched up in a bloody mess. Flashing white lines shot across his eyes as the shredded nerve endings sent emergency messages to his brain.
He retracted his hand. Wyatt pulled back and again tried to aim with her pistol. Shin pushed the pain out of his mind and grabbed the weapon from his own lap. His forearm was in mid-swing, bringing the weapon around to shoot the crazed woman, when the truck slammed to a stop. The air bag, which had not deployed in all the collisions with the patrol cars earlier, finally exploded in his face. His weapon arm was pinned between the bag and his own chest
Shin fired his pistol into the bag. It deflated like a burst balloon. Lonnie had banged against the glove box again. Cross-eyed and in a swirl of dizziness, she frantically tried to find the pistol that had fallen from her grip in the crash.
The North Korean lieutenant worked to free his pistol hand from the binding air bag. He wanted to be rid of the woman. The gun in the deflated bag and would not let him bring it around toward her. The pain in his hand and arm convinced him to give up and get out of the truck instead.