The train driver on the other tracks had seen him now, and slammed on his emergency brakes and sounded the horn but he was too close to stop in time. Something told Hawke this wasn’t the sort of scenario that came up too often in the day to day life of a Munich U-Bahn driver, but he wasted no time and hurled himself into the cab as fast as he could, landing with a hefty crunch on the shattered safety glass all over the floor.
He jumped to his feet just in time to see the horrified face of the other train’s driver and then those of the passengers as they flashed past. He paused to give them a wink and a cheery wave and then opened the driver’s door, heading into the main carriage with his gun raised.
In the main hall of the Oktoberfest, Dirk Kruger fired on the police and one of his bullets struck Schmidt in the shoulder and knocked him back as if he’d been punched. He fell down, howling in pain but quickly scuttled away behind one of the upturned beer barrels. He had dropped his weapon and by the look of the bloodstains all over the floor he’d hit an artery. Moments later he died and Holtz ordered a savage onslaught to bring the perpetrators to justice.
But the vicious fire fight didn’t last long. At seven hundred rounds a minute the submachine gun magazines were empty after four seconds if fired on full automatic, and it wasn’t long before things devolved into a desperate fist-fight. Now, in the chaos of the temporary beer halls, the South Africans were heading to the exit in a bid to escape.
Camacho darted after them in pursuit, and immediately felt a heavy blow on the back of his neck that nearly knocked him out. He staggered around and saw one of the younger South Africans. He was pulling his fist back for another go.
The American grabbed the man’s shoulder, spinning him around and then planted a hefty punch in the center of his face. The man tumbled backwards and fell down onto the wet grass. Behind him, Lea and the others were now in pursuit of Kruger, the Van Zyl brothers and the remaining goons but they were already disappearing into the night through another exit behind the bar of an adjoining tent. Kruger slipped through first, but before Willem Van Zyl made his departure he turned and fired blindly all over the tent.
Camacho dived to the floor as Van Zyl continued to fire with the machine pistol, spraying bullets through a line of beer barrels and ripping the tent behind them to shreds. Seconds later great jets of beer burst out of the bullet holes and began spraying high into the air, soaking anyone within their range.
Scarlet rolled behind a long trestle table in the center of the tent, ducking her head down to escape the shower of splinters and lager jets and then leaned around the edge of a chair to fire back. She hit one of the goons in the back but he slipped through the opening after the others who were now all gone.
“Where’d they go?” asked Scarlet.
“Behind the tent,” Camacho replied.
“I think I got one of them,” she said.
Outside the tent, everyone had scattered into the chaos. Kruger quickly found the man Scarlet had shot, but there was no sign of anyone else. He looked at the panicking young man from Pretoria, his face now pale and covered in a thin film of sweat. “What happened to you, Joh?” he snapped. Joh Van Zyl, Willem’s younger brother looked stricken as he pulled a blood-drenched hand out from beneath his jacket.
“I got hit, Dirk… the bitch got me.”
All around them now were the sounds of chaos — police sirens, screaming, helicopter rotors — and Kruger was starting to feel like a trapped hyena.
“I got hit…” he said again, starting to cry with fear. “Please… don’t leave me.”
Kruger curled his lip as he looked at him. “I’m sorry, but I don’t carry dead weight.” He fired three shots into his chest and killed him on the spot. Without a second glance at him he stuffed the gun in his belt and began to retreat. Leaving the bloodbath he had created behind him, he began to pull back into the city to the north of the Theresienwiese, but before he got out of the park, he heard someone calling his name.
“Is that you, Dirk?”
The South African turned to see Willem Van Zyl hiding in the trees just beyond the tents. “Yes.”
“Where’s my brother?” he asked. “Did he escape?”
Kruger planted a heavy, gnarled hand on the treasure hunter’s shoulder. “Sorry my friend, but they got him. He’s dead.”
“Dead?” Van Zyl’s eyes narrowed. “Who killed him?”
“That English bitch — I saw it with my own eyes.”
Van Zyl’s heart filled with rage and he vowed revenge on the Englishwoman. He and his brother were close. They’d grown up together on their father’s farm and life hadn’t been easy but they had always stuck together. No one was going to take him away and get away with it, least of all the same bunch of bastards who were now hunting him like a jackal.
“Come on, you stupid bastard!” Kruger yelled. “We have to get out of here.”
But Van Zyl was starting to look like he had bitten off more than he could chew. “Where?”
“Into the city — lose them in the backstreets. We get a car and then we get out of here — to Salzburg. I have a little turboprop parked up there that we can use to get to Serbia.”
Van Zyl watched the ECHO team through the trees, fanning out and making their way toward them. “What the hell’s in Serbia?”
“Never mind about that, Willem — all you need to know is we’re going there.”
“And where the hell are the Mexicans?” Van Zyl asked, desperately searching the chaos for them.
“Who gives a damn?” Kruger said. “We have the idol. Let’s go.”
Kruger and Van Zyl made their way north through the city, pursued for over a mile by the local police before they finally saw their way out at the north end of Albrechtstrasse. Turning their machine pistol on the enormous glass facia, they blasted a man-size hole in the front of Lamborghini München and made their way inside.
“The Aventador,” Kruger said with a smirk. “Just like my baby back in Cape Town.” He stroked the hood adoringly. “I’ll get the keys.”
Kruger searched the office for the keys while Van Zyl blasted the wheels of the other cars to shreds. Seconds later they were inside the luxury Italian sports car and driving at full speed through the remains of the facia window. He skidded the car out into the street in a dazzling shower of smashed safety glass and burned some serious rubber as he took off out of the city.
Several minutes later Lea Donovan and the rest of the ECHO team plus several shattered police officers lumbered up to the garage. Camacho darted inside the garage and paused for a moment to give a gunmetal-gray Lamborghini Veneno an admiring glance before booting open the internal door and searching the office. He returned and shrugged his shoulders. “Nothing.”
Holtz barked commands into his palm mic and a chopper thundered over their heads but the young Irishwoman knew immediately the chase was over. The Lambo was long gone and would be out of the city in seconds. “They’ve gone.”
She holstered her gun and closed her eyes for a few seconds, praying Hawke and Reaper were having more luck in their pursuit of Silvio Mendoza and Aurora Soto.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Silvio Mendoza had seen The Terminator, and for a second he thought he was reliving the movie in real life when the door at the far end of the carriage slammed opened and a man in black appeared. They were at the front of the U-Bahn train, and sharing the carriage with only two other people, a young couple in business suits. But now someone else was in the carriage, and walking toward them with determination.