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Bolan was glad he had wounded the gunner when he had. He didn't want bullets flying around here where innocent people could be hurt.

People yelled and screamed at the speedboats as they rocketed past, wanting to know what was going on.

Bolan didn't blame them for their curiosity, but wished they would get out of sight, under cover.

He eyeballed his quarry as they raced past a barge loaded with refuse. He swung out to follow, momentarily losing sight of the Mafia speedboat.

It popped up again directly in front of him.

Coming straight at him!

He palmed the wheel and swung his boat hard to starboard.

The refuse barge loomed dangerously close.

Through the speedboat's windshield Bolan saw the face of the Mafia pilot, contorted with rage.

The guy had gotten tired of running, obviously.

Someone on the barge yelled, "Look out!"

Bolan missed the barge by inches, popping through the narrow opening between the barge and the oncoming speedboat.

He craned his neck and looked over his shoulder.

The gunmen kept going, headed back toward Lake Michigan.

Bolan whipped his boat into a turn and whizzed back past the barge, ignoring the shouted questions from the sanitation workers on board.

The air bit colder heading back toward open water again, and the high-pitched keening of his boat's engine on open throttle rattled his eardrums as the wind played roughly with his hair.

The chase had returned almost to that point where the river split into two channels.

This time he would catch them in the straightaway.

They were out of the marina area again, both boats pouring on the speed.

Bolan glanced toward the shore. He saw the flashing lights of police cars up and down the streets lining the river.

The other speedboat was some seventy-five yards ahead of him, just passing the Sun-Times building.

Ahead of it, coming their way, was a cruiser bearing the insignia of the Chicago Police Department on its bow and an angrily flashing light splashing the night.

A bullhorn-amplified voice boomed out over the river.

"You there! In the speedboats! Slow down and heave to! This is the police! I repeat, heave to!"

Neither boat slowed down.

Bolan kept the throttle pushed up as far as it would go. He slipped Big Thunder back into its holster and returned both hands to the wheel for some tricky maneuvering he figured was coming up.

Suddenly, the gunman that Bolan had wounded in the shoulder pulled himself up into a sitting position. The whole left side of his body was covered with blood, but he managed to lift his right arm. He held a gun in that fist.

"Dammit, no!" Bolan gritted.

The gunman opened fire on the police cruiser, the report of his pistol sounding small and ineffectual.

Cops in flak jackets lined the railing of the oncoming cop cruiser. They dived for cover as the bullets from the hood's pistol whistled around them. They carried automatic weapons and settled into firing positions in a matter of moments.

They opened up, sending a volley toward the mobsters.

Bolan saw the windshield of the other speedboat shatter under the barrage of autofire from the cruiser.

He throttled down.

Death spewed across that other speedboat; the pilot was flung back against his seat before slumping forward over the controls.

The gunman tried to rise against the tide of lead, then abruptly fell to the side against the gunwale before his body tumbled overboard into the water, disappearing into the oily filth of the choppy river.

The boat veered sharply toward the north shore, the weight of the pilot's body no doubt turning the wheel.

Its speed didn't slacken as it headed for the river's edge.

Bolan slowed his craft slightly to observe from a hundred yards away.

The runaway vessel raced full tilt into a vacant pier, plowing into the pilings, bursting apart with all the destructive force of a detonating bomb. The gas tank blew and fire and fury slashed the air, throwing everything into harsh red and orange illumination, hurling flaming debris, shards of wood and broken human body parts high into the air.

Grim-faced, Bolan watched the pieces of boat and human meat come pelting back down.

There would be no answers there.

The thought raced through Bolan's mind as he watched the fiery wreckage of boat and pier.

Emergency vehicles converged on the crash site from all directions.

The amplified voice from the police cruiser stabbed out in Bolan's direction next.

"You in the other boat! Stay where you are! Stand up and raise your hands or we will fire on you!"

Glancing up and down both sides of this stretch of river, he confirmed that police cars were almost everywhere.

The police vessel was between him and the lake.

He heard a loud siren from another direction. He swung his head around to check it out.

Another police craft, identical to the first, was advancing on him rapidly, this one from the direction of the river's split.

They had him boxed in.

He spun the wheel hard, slamming up on the throttle.

His boat swung in a tight turn, heading now toward the river's edge, toward lighted streets and skyscrapers piercing the night sky, his eyes scanning both directions for some sort of break in the police lines.

There did not appear to be any, but his hellground experience as a specialist in infiltration and penetration had taught him there was always a crack to slip through, all you had to do was find it.

He steered the boat to an unlighted dock with a paved walkway leading up to a large office building on Wacker Drive. He leaped out of the craft.

Uniformed officers came running toward him from both directions, yelling at him to halt.

He plucked a smoke grenade from the combat webbing on the blacksuit and tossed it into their midst.

The knot of cops flattened when they saw the object flying toward them.

The grenade spewed out its thick smoke as it bounced across the ground.

Bolan swung the other way, jogging almost directly toward another group of officers who started spreading out in different directions for cover when they saw the big man in black loping toward them.

The cop in the lead stopped in his tracks and swung up his service revolver.

"Stop!"

Bolan's heart was trip-hammering against his rib cage. He heard coughing behind him. He glanced over his shoulder without slowing his pace.

Several policemen from the first group staggered out of the smoke cloud, coughing, rubbing at their eyes.

One of those cops unleashed a shot at Bolan.

The slug screamed close by over his head.

Too close.

One of the second group of officers took a nosedive as he heard the bullet whipping by, even though it didn't hit anything.

"Dammit, hold your fire!" The strident command came from the cop who had ordered Bolan to freeze. "You might hit one of our guys!"

Bolan had been counting on this.

He sprinted for a nearby office building, its many windows dark at this hour except for the lobby and back entrance onto the terrace fronting the river.

The walls of this skyscraper were smoked glass, with a double door in the middle of the first floor.

Bolan headed for the parking lot on the far side of the building.

If he could get hold of a car...

He heard the police pounding after him.

The night was alive with shouts and movement, the occasional innocent bystander scurrying out of his way. The sounds of more sirens barreled toward him from all sides beyond the building.

This time they had him boxed in tighter than along Lakeshore Drive.

These would be some of the same men, he reasoned, and they would be out in full force, for blood...

* * *

He gained the parking lot with those cops no more than seventy-five yards behind him.

Mack Bolan looked around wildly. The odds were against him finding an unlocked vehicle. He ducked between two cars and crouch-walked along the row of autos until he came to the last car. It was parked closest to the wall that bordered the lot.