But there was no sign of the Russians. The emplacement was out of sight around the bend. Nothing moved among the rocks at the edge of the ancient lava flow. No bird flew, no vegetation stirred in the wind, even the lowering clouds appeared stationary.
For Bolan there was only one course of action he must take out his adversaries one by one. But first he had to know where they were. Before they could become targets for the Executioner's hellfire attacks they had to show themselves.
He decided to draw their fire.
Above the rock shelf, weathered by frost, eroded by millennia of freezing storms, the strata were soft. He broke off a chunk and lobbed it out beyond the ledge to tumble down a shaley slope and splash into the river.
It was the oldest trick in the book.
And it didn't work.
There were no more revealing shots.
Nobody plunged down among the boulders to check whether Bolan had missed his footing on the slope. Bolan waited.
There was silence, except for the chuckle of the stream.
The sky darkened, then scattered drops of rain began to fall. Soon the light would thicken into the Icelandic dusk.
Prone on his shelf, the warrior breathed shallowly, every nerve alert for the slither of a foot brushing rock, the click of a cocking hammer, the telltale rattle of a stone.
He heard nothing.
Then suddenly there came a bellow, a harsh voice distorted by a bullhorn.
"Bolan! We know you are there! Come out and surrender and no harm will come to you. Our superiors only wish to ask you some questions. Give yourself up and you will be fairly treated as a prisoner."
Bolan smiled grimly. Fair treatment?
Oh, sure with every imaginable kind of torture they could think of.
"Be sensible, Bolan," the amplified voice continued when he made no reply. "If you do not show yourself we shall come in with grenades."
Bolan replied in Russian. "I am waiting come and get me!"
There was no further communication from the bullhorn.
Soon afterward, he heard the distant drone of the airplane. He had been expecting it. It didn't bother him. The kayak was beneath the overhang, invisible from the air; Bolan's neoprene wet suit was almost the same color as the basalt. Lying facedown he would be indistinguishable from the rocky background.
It was the same light plane that had checked him out above the sinkhole, he saw from the corner of his eye. The pilot made perhaps a dozen passes over the oxbow and the surrounding wilderness. He flew up and down the course of the river.
Evidently he saw nothing and his radio reports to the emplacement were negative, because there was no reaction from the hidden gunmen. Soon the plane vanished in the darkening sky to the north.
The rain fell more heavily, dimpling the surface of the river. Wind moaned through crevices in the lava massifs.
Bolan was shivering, the insulating layer of moisture inside his wet suit chilled by inactivity.
When it was dark, he clambered down to the pool, ate and drank, and then made some changes to the loading of the kayak.
He stowed a spare paddle, a two-piece model assembled with an aluminum sleeve and a set screw, in the stern compartment. He snapped the spray skirt in place around the coaming, wedged each of the paddle halves under the belt that normally fit around his waist and then propped them up so that the skirt rose above the level of the deck. He bulked out the tentlike silhouette with PVC sacks from the two storage compartments and laid the one-piece paddle across the foredeck.
Bolan hoped the mock-up could fool watchers unbelieving here was a boater in the cockpit, hunched up to avoid detection.
Because he had to end this stalemate pretty damned quick as soon as full daylight returned, he was certain there would be a chopper loaded with reinforcements over head.
Pushing the kayak in front of him, he waded out into the center of the river.
The water reached almost to his armpits; the pull of the current was strong enough to make it hard keeping on his feet.
He shoved the boat away and moved toward the opposite bank, his silenced Beretta held above the surface.
The kayak was carried downstream, gathering speed as the oxbow approached.
Bolan was taking two chances that the current would dump the canoe in still water at the far end of the oxbow, where he could recover it; secondly that the snipers would fire at what they figured for a man and not the boat, so that damage would be minimal.
The bow of the kayak angled in to the curve.
Bolan heard a shout over the patter of rain on the water. He raised the Beretta, finger curled around the trigger, left hand grasping the foregrip.
Pinpoints of flame flickered high among the boulders. Three single shots came in quick succession. The rifleman was hiding above, behind the shelf on the same side of the river as the overhang.
Had been hiding.
Bolan triggered two bursts before the echoes of the first shot died away, aiming below and fractionally to the left of the rifle's muzzle-flash. The 9 mm skull busters smashed through the killer's rib cage and fisted his life away while two of his own slugs were puncturing the kayak's spray skirt.
His third shot went into the sky as he was flung back lifeless among the rocks.
Bolan lifted his feet and allowed the buoyancy of his life jacket to carry him after the kayak.
He approached the curve fifty yards behind the canoe.
Fire spit down on the craft from the bluff on the outer edge of the oxbow.
And this time the hardman had allowed the long hours of waiting to sap his concentration. He was silhouetted against the almost dark sky.
Bolan drifted against a rock that showed above the surface of the water.
His feet touched ground. He hauled himself out of the river and sighted the 93-R.
The guy was reloading. He had only a 3-shot rifle. Probably a Husqvarna .358 Express. Very long range. Dead accurate. Hyperhigh muzzle velocity that gave the 150-grain slugs an almost flat trajectory and huge knockdown power.
Providing you hit something.
Bolan mowed him down. But not before the gumnan had made his play. The executioner must have stirred foam from the surface as he landed. Two shots splatted into the water in front of him; a third caromed off the rock into the night.
By this time the rifleman was on his way. A stream of death had hosed across his chest. The gun splashed into the river; the shooter landed on his back across a narrow crescent of shingle that the current had deposited on the inside of the bend.
Bolan submerged again and swam over there. The guy was dead, open eyes dulled in the northern twilight, his torso black with blood. Two plastic grenades were slipped to his web belt.
Bolan unfastened one and went back into the water.
He swam now, openly, a fast crawl that churned the water, and accelerated by the current, brought him rapidly to the apex of the oxbow.
The Beretta, together with Big Thunder and the grenade, was belted to his waist in a waterproof sack.
His kayak had been carried around the bend and was now within range of the last Russian beneath the tarp. The guy opened up with his SMG short, sharp bursts that ripped out with shattering force and stitched the gloom with points of flame.
The kayak appeared to shudder from the force of the shells. It spun, heeled over, righted itself and headed stern first for the opposite bank.
Bolan was below the emplacement, waist high in the stream, the PVC sack unzippered. His right hand dipped in, came out holding the grenade. He pulled the pin. His arm swung back.
As the gunner got wise to the fact that the kayak was pilotless either that or he had two enemies to deal with! Bolan uncoiled and pitched.
The grenade streaked through the air, hit the stony rampart and bounced in under the tarp.