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The Devil's Highway Page 8
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Andrea met us in the street. She gazed at me levelly; there was no hint of what had transpired the night before in her eyes. Hughes and Ira Greywolf were with her.
“Don’t even think that you two are going out there without us.” She indicated herself and Ira. My suspicions were confirmed that the two were working an angle earlier, then, though an angle I now well understood.
“Who says that we’re going anywhere?” Garrett asked, innocently.
Andrea faced him, her hands on her hips. “Deputy Hughes, here, has a huge crush on me. He told me you were sworn in as an acting Deputy.”
“Andrea!” Hughes said behind her.
“Damn it, Hughes,” Garrett said, shaking his head. Now we all understood Andrea’s mysterious source of inside information.
“You didn’t say it was a secret about Longville’s swearing in, Sheriff,” Hughes said, but he looked pretty embarrassed.
Andrea went on. “My guess is, Sheriff Garrett here deputized you so that you can help arrest any Redemption Army people who come to town to cause trouble, after you go out there and storm their citadel and rescue poor little Brad Caldwell.”
“We haven’t even made any plans yet, let alone one about storming the Compound,” Garrett informed her.
“Well, all right, then, we better get to it,” Andrea stated, matter-of-factly.
Garrett looked at Ira Greywolf. “Now just what do you think you’re doing here, Ira?”
The old man drew himself up to his full height. “Don’t you forget, Sheriff, I’m a decorated combat veteran. I’m sober as a judge, too. Haven’t had a drop in a week.”
“You have my respect as a combat veteran, but Vietnam was a long time ago, Ira,” Garrett began.
“It was my idea to bring him along,” Andrea interjected.
We all turned to look at her again.
“He’s our way in.” She said. “He’s been out there more than anyone who isn’t part of the Redemption Army.”
Ira nodded. “I’ve been out there a dozen times, fixing leaks and doing other plumbing work. They all know me. The first time, a guard followed me around, but not anymore. They hardly pay me any attention.”
Garrett turned on his heel. “Okay, come on. Let’s plan this crazy thing out.”
Two minutes later, we were back in Garrett’s squad room; breakfast had been postponed. I yanked a piece of paper out of the printer and drew a rough map of the compound, based on what I’d seen on my first visit.
“From what I could tell, there’s just the front gate, and the other one at the far rear. It’s too far away to be of use as an exit, which means it looks like we’d have to go in, and come back out, the front. There’s a guard at the front, and I’ve seen that they keep an AK-47 in the guard house. There’s also the matter of the front guard tower. They’ve probably got a sharp-shooter up there. Once somebody gives the hue and cry that we’ve got Brad, we’ll probably be fired on if we try to force our way out.”
Ira nodded. “There must be a hundred locks on that back gate. Beyond that is the shooting range. Lots of old cars out there they use for target practice. Awfully rough going, too. You’d never get through that way.”
“So how do we get out?” Asked Andrea.
“Oh, you’d have to get back out through the front, somehow, or climb the twelve-foot fence that’s around the place. The guard in the tower would pick you off, no problem, if you tried that.”
“If you’re coming back out of the front, you’ll need suppressing fire,” Sheriff Garrett put in.
Ira nodded. “That’s what I’d do.”
“Suppressing what?” Andrea looked at them both. “I know you’re both veterans, but what do you suggest, we call in an air strike?”
Garrett tilted back his cowboy hat and looked very solemn. “After the run-ins folks here in town have had with the Redemptionists, I’ve had to think hard about what I’d do if we had to go out there and arrest Cushman, or one of his people. Those people are heavily armed. You might get in there under some pretense, which is probably the best way in, but once you arrested one of theirs—or, in this case, rescued—it would be getting out that would be the tough part.”
He put a finger on my hastily drawn map. “Here’s the problem, as you’ve pointed out, Roland. The front gate. Once the alarm is sounded, any of us inside would be in big trouble. Cushman’s men would lock down the front gate, and that would seal off your only exit. They’d also put the guard tower on alert, there on the front corner. So you’d be trapped, if they didn’t just shoot you outright. So you’ll have to have someone out here with a rifle, on the bluff, making them keep their heads down while you make your getaway.” He pointed to a blank area, clearly meaning the bluff where he and I had talked the day before.
“Any ideas who we could get to do that?” I asked him.
Garrett smiled. “I was a sharpshooter in the Army. I also do a fair share of hunting. Old Betsy and I can keep them crouching, all right.”
“Old Betsy?”
“That’s his hunting rifle,” Hughes said. “The Sheriff can make a believer out of you at three hundred yards, no problem.” He smiled mischievously. “And I can whip up something that’ll add some real ‘shock and awe’ to this caper.”
“Then what are we waiting for?” Andrea asked.
“Yeah, let’s go get this kid,” Ira put in.
“You know,” I said to everyone, “I’m really starting to like you guys.”
Chapter 13
A few hours later found us on the highway to the Redemption Army compound. Ira had received a call from the compound a day or two before, something about a toilet out of order. He frequently employed helpers on his trips to the compound, so today I was playing that role. Andrea would hide out in a drum in the back, right next to Deputy Hughes’ big surprise.
We drove right up to the gate. There was only one guy on duty today. Luckily, he wasn’t either of the two who’d been manning the gate on my first trip. I’d given the place a good enough once over before, although there will still holes in my knowledge of the compound.
Ira and I were both dressed in Blue coveralls, and I wore a matching cap, pulled low over my eyes. I pretended to doze, arms across my chest as we drove up to the gate, my heart pounding in my chest, but luckily there was only one man on the gate, and it was neither of the two heroes who had gotten a good look at me on my previous visit.
The place had a military look and feel to it, most of it was for show, though.
There was even a patrol on the inside of the fence. The men carried rifles and wore desert camouflage and boonie hats. Some of these guys may have been ex-military, but most were Civvies. The patrol was just walking a path they’d walked before, eyes on the ground in front of them. Amateurs.
The two men on post were little better; they were texting or reading magazines instead of scanning the horizon with binoculars. Standing post properly was a full-time job, and if you hadn’t had post discipline drilled into you in the military, odds were that you wouldn’t take the job as seriously as you needed to. On your average quiet day, I was betting, these militia wannabes wouldn’t be doing too sterling a job on their lookout duties.
One man from the guard shack came directly to the window and told Ira, “You’ll need to go around to that large warehouse. Park in the rear. The trouble’s in a bathroom back there.”
Ira nodded and saluted, for whatever reason, and we were in. I looked behind me; neither of the guards in the shack were visible. I couldn’t see anyone up in the guard tower, either. I reached back and flipped the lid off of Andrea’s hiding place in one of the two 55-gallon drums in the back of the van. “About damned time, it’s stifling in here!” I heard her gasp.
Ira drove slow and easy to the building the guard had indicated. It was behind the infirmary, and that was good, but there was a pretty wide paved space between them, which was not so good.
“So how do we do this?” Ira asked without looking at me.
“
We let Andrea out here. She waits while we cause our little diversion, and everyone comes running. Then she goes into the infirmary for Brad.”
Andrea climbed out of the drum and went to the back. “I just hope that Garrett is as good a shot as he says he is,” she said, before she stepped out the back. She ran over and hid behind the hedges beside the Infirmary’s side door. She’d wait there until Ira and I did our part.
Ira’s job was to keep the van running, while I rolled the other 55-gallon drum out and set up our diversion in the warehouse behind the Infirmary. Deputy Hughes had put together a fertilizer bomb that was designed to make a lot of noise, and a lot of black smoke, but minimal actual damage. We wanted everyone in the compound to come running this way, while we were going the other way, hopefully with Brad Caldwell in tow.
I rolled the drum on its bottom edge until I got it into the warehouse, then pulled the lid off. The drum was three-quarters full of fertilizer, tar, and powdered aluminum, with a thick fuse sticking out of the center, like some overgrown firecracker, which, indeed, it was. Hughes had found the plans on how to make the thing on the Internet. I wondered absently if he was buddies with DesertWolf419. Maybe not.
I pulled a lighter from my coveralls and lit the fuse. According to Hughes, the thick twist of coated material was a sixty to seventy second fuse. I hoped he was right. I walked back out to the van and got in.
“Let’s go,” I said to Ira.
We pulled up behind the infirmary. Andrea had already gone in, and had wedged the double doors open for good measure.
“Stay here and keep her running,” I told Ira. I got out and raced to the building. I ran down the hallway and took the turn, just in time to meet Andrea doing a tug of war with the stern woman I’d met on my previous visit. Brad Caldwell was between them. Each had hold of one of his arms.
“Brad, my name’s Roland Longville, I’ve been hired by your parents to get you out of here.” He heard me, all right, but he only nodded vaguely, his head rolling.
“They’ve got him shot up with some kind of sedative.”
“You’re not taking him anywhere!” The woman yelled, holding on to Brad’s arm, following us down the hall. We came to the double doors. The woman opened her mouth to admonish us anew, but just then Deputy Hughes’ bomb went off. It was like the end of the world.
The shock from the blast nearly knocked us down. Then for a full second, everyone was bathed in an orange glow. The woman, mouth still open, turned and went back down the hall on a dead run. I turned in time to see thick, evil-looking black smoke start boiling out of the stricken warehouse. Considerable pieces of the front paneling were hanging off the side near where I’d placed the bomb.
“Let’s get the hell of here!” Ira yelled.
I couldn’t have agreed more. I opened the rear doors and helped Brad and Andrea inside, then got in, myself. Ira stomped the gas and we shot towards the gate. People were running past us toward the source of the explosion. I looked back. The thick smoke was expanding; it was impenetrable around the warehouse and the infirmary.
“I sure hope those bastards have some firefighting equipment,” Ira quipped.
We were coming up fast on the gate. I could see that one of the men was out of the guard shack, heading towards us. I saw his eyes widen as he saw us coming, perhaps suspecting the explosion and our presence here were related. He lifted his hands, palms outward. He obviously wanted us to stop, but he wasn’t armed.
The gate was down, but it was one of those yellow and black striped wooden gates. “Run through it.” I told Ira. He grinned and let out a war whoop worthy of his ancestors. The gate shattered with a mighty crack, and we were through.
I looked into my passenger-side mirror and watched the guard shack rapidly receding in the distance. Inside, the rattled young soldier-wannabe was fumbling to get his AK-47 shouldered, but Sheriff Garrett was on the job. Old Betsy spoke from the bluff two hundred yards away, and the glass in the guard shack blew to bits. A second later, the windows shattered in the nearby guard tower. The sheriff’s barrage kept the compound’s automatic weapons silent.
Ira put the pedal to the floor, and we were off and running. Just fifteen miles of open desert highway between us and the safety of Delgado.
Chapter 14
Ira drove, and Andrea and I scanned the horizon behind us for pursuers. The bomb had worked better than I could have hoped for; the reduced visibility had effectively confused most of the people in the compound.
As if reading my thoughts, Ira cracked, “All of that damned smoke, I pretty near lost my way to the gate.” He cackled at his own joke.
“Hughes did a hell of a job on that bomb, all right,” Andrea commented from the back.
“How’s Brad doing?” I asked Andrea, who held a very groggy Brad Caldwell in her arms.
“My guess is they have him shot up with some kind of sedative. Looks like they’ve been keeping him doped up, probably to prevent him from escaping. We need to get him to a doctor and find out what they did to him.”
“Garrett’s pulling out onto the highway up ahead,” Ira informed us.
That was good, at least. Garrett put the lights and the siren on, leading us back towards Delgado. Ira closed in behind him, and we were speeding along, an end to the whole sorry ordeal perhaps close at hand, when we saw the white van coming rapidly at us from the other direction.
“Those are Redemption Army boys!” Ira yelled.
The van shot past us at such a high speed that it took the driver thirty seconds to slow, stop, and start to turn around. I looked ahead. Garrett was also slowing. He slid to a stop and got out of his four-wheel drive.
“Ira, pull over behind the Sheriff!” Andrea told the old man, who was looking at both of us with worry in his eyes.
“What are they going to do?” Ira asked me.
I grimaced and pulled out my Colt .45 automatic. “Stay here!” I shouted to everyone, and got out, and walked towards the oncoming van. I halted and stood in the road, gun up, braced and ready.
The van came slowly towards us, then stopped on the road, fifty feet from where I stood. I cast a glance behind me. Garrett was out of his vehicle, walking slowly down the road, holding his .30-06. He was already sighted in on the van. The people in the van could clearly see him, and were probably heatedly discussing their options. Suddenly, the side door slid back, and two men leapt out, carrying automatic weapons. One of them immediately developed a large red hole in his chest, an instant before the sullen thump of the .30-06 whined past me. The man never heard the shot that killed him.
I pointed my Colt .45 at the other man, from a steady two-handed stance, and shook my head. He brought his gun up, anyway, and I sent three rounds his way, aiming carefully, not willing to risk being on the receiving end of a burst from that automatic. One round caught him in the left arm, not bad shooting with a pistol at that range, but not a killing shot, either. He yowled and dropped the weapon, and someone dragged him back inside the van.
They’d had enough, apparently; two men were down, and Garrett and I were still standing. The driver started backing away, slowly, zigging and zagging, then whipped the van around and headed back towards the compound. Behind me I heard the bolt of the Sheriff’s rifle slam home. Garrett was thinking of disabling the van. I was thinking we had no time to take prisoners.
“There’s no time!” I turned and called out to Garrett. “We have Brad, but he’s been given some kind of drug. Let them go!”
“All right! Then let’s get the hell out of here, and back to Delgado!” Garrett called back, already running toward his vehicle. I ran back and pulled the Redemption Army man’s body from the road, and collected the two submachine guns. As I crawled back into the van I caught Ira’s eye.
“Quite a bit of excitement for these parts. Just your average day, back in ‘Nam,” he said to me, and chuckled. He started the engine and we got moving.
“What was it like?” I asked him. “Your service in Vietnam?”
Ira shrugged. “Was sitting in the living room with my dad when they called out my draft number. It was the Marines for me. That was the middle of 1967. By late 1968, I ended up in a place called Khe Sanh. Ever heard of it?”
I nodded. I’d heard of it, all right.
“Surrounded by Viet Cong, man. There I am, just a snot-nosed kid off the reservation. Me and some other Marines are squatted down, listening to the lieutenant give us a briefing during some shelling, when suddenly a mortar shell comes down right in the middle of our huddle. Blew everybody to kingdom come, except me. Turns out my outfit was fresh out of junior officers. Next thing I know, I’m the lieutenant in our platoon. Not exactly what I was asking for. No one wants to be the next Ninety-Day Wonder. Those guys didn’t last long.”
“You made it, though.”
Ira nodded. After a second, he said, “Yeah, I guess I did. Sometimes I wished I hadn’t, though.” After that he fell silent.
I didn’t know what to say to that. I’d been in a combat zone or two in my time, both as an M.P. and as a civilian policeman and detective, and now, here in West Texas. Every hell is different, but the same.
I glanced back at Brad. He still looked pretty out of it. Suddenly it all felt absurd. I wanted to laugh at the futility of what I did every day, trying to find people lost in the chaos, trying to reach down to those who willingly plunged into the abyss, and pull them back to safety and light and sanity.
Sometimes I really wondered just what in the hell I was trying to prove, and to whom. But then, as always, I took a deep breath and pulled myself together. I wouldn’t quit, couldn’t quit, because what I was doing was the right thing, after all. More than that, though, it was because I was just Roland Longville, private detective, and that is all that I really knew how to do.
Chapter 15
Garrett had a doctor waiting on us by the time we got back into Delgado. He was an old country doctor, Ira’s age or better. He fussed and grumbled, but eventually pronounced that Brad would be all right in short order. He gave him a stimulant shot and ambled away. Brad started coming out of his daze a little while later.