Three feet away, the leader held onto his gun as Jenny tried to twist it away. She held her feet, stood her ground, but needed both hands to counter his strength. He wrenched viciously once, twice, and she staggered away, tripping as her right heel smacked against a hidden rock. Shocked at herself, she tumbled headlong to the ground, ending up on her front and then frantically twisting her body sideways.
The leader smiled. He took a moment to check his weapon and then point the short barrel at her, catching her gaze as he did so.
“Not quite up to it, hey girly. Now lie there for a minute. Perfect.”
Jenny threw the heavy rock she had tumbled over and watched it fly straight and true, striking him a glancing blow on the forehead. The leader cursed and wiped away blood. Jenny was up on her feet, head down; the knowledge that this was a fight to the death written clearly all over her face. She ran hard, legs pumping.
She was always going to be too late, but that didn’t dampen her willpower.
The leader brought his gun up once more, finger itching on the trigger. He squeezed.
Then Bell slammed into him, crying out, bearing him to the ground. The shot flew high into the air. Jenny bounded after them, slipping around Bell and elbowing the leader so hard his eyes rolled. Twice more, and he was finished.
Jenny took his rifle. Lauren stood a few feet away with the other. They both looked at Bell.
“Any ideas where this tracker is hidden?” Jenny asked. “I mean, thanks for the help and all, but we really should cut that bad boy out.”
Bell stared at Lauren. “There was one day,” he said. “No, two days. Oh, shit, it’s either in my shoulder or my upper front thigh or my back. They all hurt now and again. Your choice.”
Jenny smiled with grim determination. “Don’t you worry,” she said with a lilt to her voice. “We’ll find that sucker if it kill us.”
The knives came out.
CHAPTER FORTY ONE
Drake and Alicia finally gained the top of the slope to find themselves inside a churning world of spitting sand and debris. As one they knelt and surveyed what they could of the nightmare scene.
From here, the gaggle of mercenaries could be seen still guarding the area around the cliff edge where the galleon sat below. Together, they huddled, rifles pointed from their dark bulk, a deadly final stand. Bodies littered the area all around them.
Drake saw many prone soldiers, some not moving, others just biding their time. The battle had hit a stalemate, it seemed, as mercenaries blindly carried out their orders to protect the galleon at all costs. Drake and Alicia crawled through the eddying sand dunes until they saw a bulk they recognized.
“Dahl.”
The big Swede turned his head. “Where the hell have you two been?”
“Shagging,” Drake said bluntly. “Why are you pinned down like this?”
“Oh, because we sent out for pizza and it’s bloody late. Why the hell do you think?”
Drake studied the land ahead. It was almost completely flat. “This as close as you can get?”
“Yup.”
Kinimaka shuffled over. “Man, I think there’s a way over to the side. You see the ridge—” he pointed east, where the edge ran away. “We could hug the underside.”
Hayden nodded. “Yorgi agrees. It’s possible.”
Drake allowed the smile to sweep across his face. The team was back. “Then what are we waiting for? Let’s do it.”
Careful not to bring attention to his aches and pains and the blood that coated his face, he crabbed away from the area and into the sand wall. Dahl was already regarding him weirdly, but that wasn’t exactly unusual. Alicia stayed close. Once the team had moved far enough east they headed back toward the ridge, out of sight of the mercenaries. Yorgi stepped ahead and paused at the brink of the valley.
They came up to stand all around him, gazing down. “That’s a bitch of a long way down,” Smyth growled softly. “One misstep and you’re rolling forever.”
“Not forever,” Alicia said. “Believe me.”
Drake sent his questing gaze to the right where the galleon still jutted from the cliff face. The deck was dusted now with several deposits of sand and the mercenaries defending it all looked bored. Most of them weren’t even staring up anymore, for their own good, they simply sat on the deck. The fury of the storm could not reach them but flurries of sand still rained down.
Yorgi indicated the bit of ridge that curled underneath the top part, a narrow horizontal mound, incomplete in three areas. It had been formed by piles of sand drifting over the top and collecting underneath, dangerous but for the most part offering some nice concealment.
Kinimaka grunted. “Not as big as it looks.”
Hayden nudged him. “You can always stay behind.”
“Mahalo, but that ain’t happening and you know it.”
Drake watched Yorgi fall to his knees and curl into the narrow channel before following suit. Alicia and then the others dropped inside. Slowly, the team crawled under the ridge toward the band of mercenaries, sheltered from the storm and prying eyes, clinging to the malleable side wall and hoping the sand didn’t collapse beneath them.
“Well, if we go,” Hayden said. “We all go together.”
“I can live with that,” Dahl said.
“Depends on who lands on top of you,” Alicia shot back. “I’m baggsying Yorgi — the boy/girl/man.”
“It is disrespectful.” Yorgi stopped, turned and faced her. “To call me such.”
“And baggsying?” Dahl asked. “What is that?”
“Keep going,” Drake said. “Alicia’s sorry, Yorgi. She can’t help herself and thinks you can easily pass for all three. Dahl, baggsying means to unofficially reserve something for yourself.”
In short order the crowd of mercenaries became visible and all talk ceased. Pot shots were being taken by the military but the stalemate was still in force. Walls of sand still howled from horizon to horizon. Yorgi slowed to less than a crawl.
Close enough, Drake signaled. Ready?
They were and action was called for. Drake and Alicia rose as one, hulking ghosts in the center of the storm, surrounded by roiling sand spouts, and threw grenades into the mercenary mass. Men reared away from the apparition, shocked into self-preservation. Dahl towered behind them and Kinimaka behind him, and more grenades were tossed.
Then the ghosts threw themselves flat on the floor.
Explosions louder than the blasting storm rocked the area, making the ground shake beneath their bodies. Screams started up a split second later. Drake was up and running from a standing start like a sprinter, hitting two surviving mercs before they knew what was happening. One fell with a broken neck, the other struggled and then went down with a shot to the face. Dahl passed him and then the others, all engaging the mercenary mass in close combat battle. Alicia grappled with one man on the very edge of the cliff, the pair locking fingers and swaying from side to side. Both tried to use the other’s weight against them, both tried judo throws, but to no avail. Drake saw Alicia wilt a little — the battles today had taken so much out of her — and ran over to help, but by the time he arrived Alicia had broken her opponent’s grip and booted him down the slope. They watched as he bounced twice and then struck the deck of the ship, splintering wooden planks.
“Shiver me timbers,” Drake said.
“Don’t be a knob.” Alicia shook her head, spun and engaged the next opponent.
Another grenade went off toward the back of the group. Bodies spun and flew away, some disappearing down the slope, others falling to the piled sand. Even rocks flew through the air, and the remains of stunted trees, the debris striking indiscriminately. Kinimaka lurched as he was hit by the remains of a bush, the prickly stalk latching onto the side of his head.