“Too close… too close,” Jack murmured.
René said, “We don’t even know if he’s in that vehicle, Jack.”
“I know that. If he isn’t and we lose it, that tracker won’t last forever. Beyond fifty miles the signal will be too weak. If he’s still at the lodge…”
René finished his thought. “There’s only one reason Möller would leave Effrem behind.”
Because Möller was finished with him.
And if Effrem was aboard that vehicle it was as a captive, in which case he was still alive, but on borrowed time.
Lose-lose.
Jack stomped on the accelerator. The Toyota’s speedometer swept past 146 kph. The headlights picked out a sign ahead: OKAHANDJA 3 KM.
“The turnoff to the lodge is well before that,” René said. “It’ll come up fast. You might want to start slowing.”
Jack kept his foot on the accelerator. “Get the AKs from the backseat and prep them.” Their best opportunity to ambush the vehicle was before it traded the narrow dirt road for the broad blacktop.
Another sign: D2102 500 M.
Jack let his foot off the accelerator.
René had his face pressed to his window, hand cupped around his eyes. “I see them! Headlights. They’re very close, Jack.”
Jack doused the Land Cruiser’s headlights. “I’m going to have to turn hard right, so hang on. As soon as I come to a stop, open fire on the vehicle’s engine block. Get it stopped, but keep your shots low. I’ll go for the occupants.”
“Jack, hit the brakes!”
“What? Why?”
“I count three pairs of headlights — no, four! It’s a convoy. We can’t handle four at the same time, Jack, you know that! Get us out of sight!”
“Damn it!”
Jack stepped on the brakes. The Land Cruiser started fishtailing. Jack eased right and the tires bumped onto the shoulder.
Ahead, the lead vehicle was coming to a stop, its right blinker flashing in the darkness. It was a Toyota Hilux, Jack saw.
He braked again, jerked the wheel harder right, and pointed the hood toward the drainage ditch. The front tires thumped over a berm, and the nose vaulted upward, then dropped again. Jack braked and the Land Cruiser ground to a halt beside a boulder.
Jack climbed out and, using the boulder as cover, maneuvered until he could see the turnoff. The fourth and final vehicle in the convoy turned onto the highway and sped north into the night.
36
You have to decide, Jack,” René called from the Land Cruiser. “What’s it going to be?”
Jack turned and sprinted back to the Land Cruiser. “The lodge.”
He backed out of the ditch onto the road, then pulled ahead and turned onto the dirt road. Jack covered the ten miles to the airstrip-lodge fork in twenty minutes. Headlights off again, he turned left until he saw the edge of the runway. The Pilatus was still there, wheels chocked and windows dark.
Wherever that convoy was headed, it was either too close to justify the flight or located too far from a landing site.
Jack turned around, made his way back to the fork, and turned toward the lodge. When he reached the cobblestone entrance, Jack said, “Rostock rented out the entire lodge; there’s no staff. Anyone with a gun is fair game.”
“I understand,” said René.
“We’ll check the bungalows first.”
“I’ll follow your lead.”
Jack braked to a stop ten feet before the arch and shut off the engine. René handed him one of the AKs and a pair of magazines. Jack inserted one of them into the AK, cycled the bolt, then made sure the safety was on. They climbed out of the SUV.
With Jack in the lead, they headed through the arch. He pointed right, toward the lobby doors. René nodded and checked the doors. He shook his head. They continued on. When they reached the lawn, Jack pointed across to the line of eight bungalows, then gestured to René and mouthed, Spread right. Twenty feet apart and walking abreast, they crossed the lawn. No lights were visible in the bungalows.
Jack angled toward the one on the far left. René adjusted course to match him, his AK raised and tracking back and forth. When Jack reached the first bungalow’s walkway, René stacked up behind him and gave him an “I’m here” pat on the shoulder, and together they approached the door, then split, one on either side of the door.
Jack crouched, leaned sideways, and peeked through the window. The interior was tidy, with no signs of occupancy. He looked at René and shook his head.
They retraced their steps to the sidewalk and moved on to the next bungalow. Here, too, Jack saw nothing to indicate it had been used recently. At the third and fourth bungalows, same result.
As they approached the fifth bungalow’s walkway, Jack caught a whiff of something in the air. It was the acrid stench of overseared meat. He glanced at René, who tapped his nose, pointed at the bungalow’s front door, and mouthed, Coming from in there.
Jack stopped at the door. His check through the window revealed the bungalow’s interior was in disarray. The beds were unmade and food trays were stacked on the dresser. Beer bottles overflowed the garbage can. In the center of the room was a hard-back chair. Dangling from its front legs was what looked like duct tape.
Jack signaled to René, Going in, and got a nod in return. Jack tried the knob. The door was unlocked. They went through and quickly cleared the bungalow. Jack and René clicked on their flashlights and looked around.
On the floor beside the chair was a bloodstained white towel, and balanced on the closest corner of the dresser was a curling iron. Its chrome surface was splotched with a dark, flaky material.
“It’s charred skin,” René whispered. “Fresh.”
Ah, Christ, Jack thought. “Let’s keep moving.”
At the sidewalk they turned left and headed to the next bungalow.
Jack froze. René followed suit.
Noise.
What was it? A muffled clang, a scraping sound. It was familiar. It took Jack a few more seconds to pigeonhole the noise: a shovel in dirt.
A male voice shouted, “Beeil dich!” Hurry up.
“It’s coming from behind the bungalows,” René whispered.
Jack started running. At the last bungalow, the sidewalk turned left. Jack followed it down a tree-lined path to an oval-shaped dirt parking lot fronted by a split-rail fence. When Jack reached its edge he stopped and dropped into a crouch. The lot’s far edge was made up of overgrown bushes. There was a vehicle in the lot: a black Hilux.
Through the bushes came a flicker of light.
Jack looked at René, who nodded his readiness. They stepped over the fence, crossed the parking lot, and split up, each taking one side of the Hilux. They met at the front bumper.
“I’m done!” a man called. It was ragged and weak, but Jack recognized the voice: Effrem. “If you’re going to do it, just do it! Assholes!”
In German-accented English a voice replied, “Suit yourself. Rolf, get the gas can.”
The bushes rustled. Rolf stepped into view. Dangling from his right hand was a semiauto pistol.
“René, take him,” Jack ordered.
René lifted his AK and put three rounds into the man’s chest. Even as the man fell, Jack sprinted past him and crashed into the bushes. He burst into a small clearing lit by an LED lantern sitting on the ground. The other German stood at the head of a pit. Effrem was in it, stripped to the waist and slick with blood and dirt and sweat.
Jack shot the German in the side, and he stumbled and dropped to his knees. Jack shot him in the side of the head. He toppled over.