Chimera (13 page)

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Authors: Ken Goddard

BOOK: Chimera
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“You said you thought the scene at Yak’s house was rigged,” Preithat reminded.
 
“What did you see that made you suspicious?”

“A couple of things,” Bulatt replied.
 
“First of all, the shoulder holster Boon-Nam was wearing.
 
It wasn’t his; or, at least, I don’t think it was.”

“Why do you say that?”

“I could see a deeply indented buckle mark near the end of the shoulder strap, where the strap would have been buckled for a man with a much bigger chest; but no indentation at all on the strap where it was buckled for Boon-Nam.
 
It was as if the strap had never been buckled in that location before.”

“Will that show up in the lieutenant’s crime scene photo?”

“I hope so,” Bulatt said.
 
“Also, I saw what looked like some gun-oil stains at the shirt and waistband of Boon-Nam’s trousers, right at the spinal area where a man might conceal a small pistol.
 
He could certainly have decided to change pistols — maybe going for some extra firepower — at the last minute; but that doesn’t sound like something a professional assassin would do.
 
I’m guessing, of course; I know very little about the habits of professional assassins, and nothing at all about Boon-Nam.”

“Interesting.”
 
Preithat’s eyes looked deeply thoughtful.
 
“Was there anything else?”

“The fourteen spent casings outside the door,” Bulatt said.
 
“All located more-or-less where you would expect them to fall — after being ejected from the pistol and bouncing off the walls and door of the house — if the shooter was standing on the porch and firing toward the garden; but that would mean the door was shut.”

“Yes?”

“So, according to the lieutenant’s theory, Yak would have had to be flung backwards through at least the screen door by the last bullet — fired by Boon-Nam, presumably — that hit him in the head; but I didn’t see any damage the door.
 
So how did Yak manage to end up dead, and on his back, inside the house?”

“Ah.”

“Which bring us to Boon-Nam’s last shot.”

Preithat cocked his head, waiting.

“It looked to me as if one of the bullets hit Boon-Nam right in the spine, just above his shoulder blades; a perfect place to paralyze a man’s arms and legs, but not necessarily kill him.
 
It would be an easy shot for an expert or experienced marksman, especially if he was using low-velocity ammo or a silencer.”

“But, according to the lieutenant, Yak was not a good shot.”

“So it would seem.”

“Of course, he could have gotten lucky.”
 
Preithat started to shrug, and then blinked in sudden realization.
 
“Oh … no, of course not; because then, as you said, Boon-Nam would have been paralyzed, and not been able to fire the last shot.”

“You see the problem,” Bulatt said.
 
“There was nothing definitive by itself; or, at least, nothing that I could see.
 
But, in total, it was a very curious crime scene.”

“Yes, I do see what you’re saying,” Preithat nodded his head slowly, and then sighed as he glanced over at Colonel Kulawnit who was sitting apart on the opposite side of the transport helicopter, in one of the crew chief seats, staring at nothing.
 
“The colonel is not going to be pleased when he hears this.
 
I think it made some sense to him that his son would be killed by malicious criminals like Yak and Boon-Nam; but if they weren’t the ones, then who?
 
The foreign guides?
 
Their client?
 
Kai and his pirates?”
 
Preithat frowned.

“Perhaps Kai will have an answer for you,” Bulatt suggested.

“Yes.”
 
Preithat nodded, glancing over at Kulawnit again.
 
“That would be a good thing, for all of us.”

 

*
   
*
   
*

 

Tanga Island Cove, Malacca Strait, Thailand

 

Jack Gavin waited patiently in the almost total darkness, watching through the night-vision scope attached to his M4 assault rifle until the two boats — the mini-cig and the single outboard motorboat — approaching the
Avatar
were only a few feet away from the anchored fishing yacht; which coincided nicely with the cautious approach of the other two outboard motorboats heading to shore in the cove below his barricaded position.
 
Then he reached down to the transmitter resting on a rock near his right knee and pressed a button.

Instantly, two dozen flashers — in varying colors of bright red, yellow and green — began to pulse in varying rhythms in the rocks in randomly set positions within a fifty-yard of his position.
 
Then, two seconds later, strings of firecrackers began going off in the area of the flashers.

The effect on the armed eight men coming ashore was instantaneous.
 
Seven of the men scrambled for their rifles and began firing wildly the flashing lights.
 
The eighth man — one of the team leaders, Gavin noted — grabbed his night-scope instead, brought it up to his eyes, and began scanning the rocky promontory overhead.

He had just spotted an odd shape that looked out of place in the rocks high overhead when a single bullet from Gavin’s flash-repressed and moderately silenced rifle tore through his head.
 
His body was still tumbling backwards into the boat when the remaining seven men began falling under the methodical onslaught of Gavin’s rifle.

The effect on the six armed men from the other two boats rapidly approaching the
Avatar
was equally instantaneous.
 
Two of the men from the outboard motorboat leaped up on the bow of the fishing yacht — and immediately tumbled backwards into the water, victims of Lanyard’s similarly equipped rifle — as the min-cigarette boat approaching the stern veered away, made a wide circle, and then began to accelerate in a straight line parallel to the
Avatar
.

 

*
   
*
   
*

 

Approaching Tanga Island Cove

 

The Blackhawk helicopter was less than three nautical miles from Tanga Island when the pilots got the radio call.

“Colonel,” the pilot called on the Blackhawk’s internal radio system, “our resident Ranger on Rawi Island is reporting a gun battle taking place in the Ko Tanga cove between some Malaysian pirates and the men on the
Avatar
.
 
We can see the flashes of gunfire from our position.
 
The Ranger and his constable are approaching the cove in their patrol boat now, and a second boat with three more constables is on the way.
 
What are your orders?”

Colonel Kulawnit unbuckled his seat harness, stood up, and looked out the cockpit window at the distant flickers of light, barely visible through the low clouds.

“Tell them to stay back and observe, and not to engage either side.
 
We’ll be there shortly,” Kulawnit said.
 
He returned to his seat, buckled in, then looked up at Preithat and reached for the selector on his throat mike.

“Kuhn Sat, I want these foreign guides taken into custody alive, if at all possible; but do not risk your men unnecessarily.
 
I have no such concern for Kai and his pirates.
 
They are within our jurisdiction; deal with them as you please.”

“I understand, Colonel,” Preithat acknowledged as Kulawnit turned his attention to Bulatt.

“Khun Ged, I am grateful that you were willing to accompany us on this investigation; your input has been invaluable.
 
But you are not armed, by treaty convention; so I ask you also to please stay back and not to engage these men, if at all possible.
 
I do not wish your life placed at risk.”

“Don’t worry, Khun Prathun, I’ll stay here in the helicopter,” Bulatt said, smiling as he glanced around at Preithat, the six assault rangers, and the two investigator bodyguards who were all busy checking their weapons, ammunition pouches, radios, vests, inflatable life jackets and night-vision gear while the two crew chiefs loaded their 7.65mm machineguns and double-checked their safety harnesses.
 
“I think you have more than enough resources to deal with a few illegal hunting guides.”

 

*
   
*
   
*

 

Tanga Island Cove

 

Lanyard was lining up the dark green cross-hairs of his night-scope on the driver of the mini-cig boat — who had completed his wide circle and was accelerating into a power run along the starboard side of the
Avatar
— when he saw the other occupant, Kai, crouch down into the cockpit, and then jerk back up with his arms and legs to pull a concealed heavy machinegun up into a mount-locked firing position.

“Oh bloody hell!”

Lanyard dove to the deck just as the .50-caliber armor-piercing rounds began ripping through the
Avatar’s
titanium- and Kevlar-lined bridge walls that had been designed to stop much smaller and far-less-lethal projectiles.

Cursing furiously as the half-inch-diameter bullets progressively shredded the
Avatar’s
bridge structure, Lanyard discarded his rifle, grabbed the 25mm M109 payload rifle, tucked the stubby weapon to his chest, and rolled to the rear of the deck just as the .50-caliber bullets began a return sweep, ripping through the Avatar’s main cabin walls directly underneath the bridge as if they were made of tissue paper.

Still cursing, Lanyard came up to one knee, shouldered the fifty-pound rifle, and sent a pair of 25mm explosive armor-piercing rounds streaking into the engine compartment of Kai’s racing boat.
 
The detonations blew apart the port-side engine and ripped the port-side drive shaft loose, skewing the boat sideways and catapulting Kai and his driver into the water.

Shaking off the recoil effects of the rapid two-round volley, Lanyard stood up and quickly sent a third AP explosive round into the engine of the outboard motorboat hovering near the
Avatar’s
bow — shredding the engine cowling and killing the two cowering occupants — and then instinctively swung around and sent the last two rounds in the M109’s magazine arcing across the water and into the engine compartment of the Forestry Division patrol boat that suddenly appeared, accelerating past the western edge of the island at flank speed with searchlights sweeping.

The explosive impact of the two AP projectiles inside the confined space of the patrol boat’s small engine compartment brought the coastal vessel to a surging halt, cutting off all power to the single propeller shaft and the two glaring searchlights in the process; but not before their final sweep revealed Kai pulling himself into the smoking cockpit of the mini-cig boat and fumbling for the .50-caliber machine gun.

Too busy to curse now, Lanyard tossed aside the spare magazine of armor-piercing rounds he’d instinctively pulled out of the blue-striped ammo box, grabbed instead the single magazine of anti-personnel rounds, slammed the heavy box magazine into the M109, pulled back on the arming bolt, thumbed the weapon’s computerized BORS ranging system to the new ammo, and came up to one knee with the payload rifle already on his shoulder.

He triggered the first anti-personnel round at the moment Kai — visibly stunned and bleeding profusely, but still furiously intent on destroying the fishing yacht and anyone on board — was bringing the .50-caliber machinegun around to bear again on the
Avatar’s
bridge.

The ‘slow-velocity’ 1-inch-diameter bullet, electronically controlled by the M109’s optical ranging system, detonated against the breach of the .50-caliber weapon into hundreds of extremely-high-energy fragments, dislodging the heavy machinegun from its mount and literally vaporizing Kai’s upper torso — just as the blinding searchlights from a rapidly approaching Blackhawk helicopter switched on, illuminating the
Avatar
and flaring-out Lanyard’s night-vision goggles.

Reacting instinctively, Lanyard flipped his recycling night-goggles up and away from his eyes, winced against the searing glare of the searchlights, and fired the M109 twice in the general direction of the hovering helicopter.

 

*
   
*
   
*

 

Distracted by the barrage of AK-47 rounds ricocheting off rocks in a fifty-foot radius around his position, and only vaguely aware of the big-caliber firestorm that had erupted on the far side of the distant
Avatar
, Jack Gavin was having a much easier time with his assignment.

In the time it took Quince Lanyard to empty the first magazine of M109 explosive rounds into the three approaching boats, dodging nearly a hundred .50-caliber bullets in the process, Gavin had dispatched seven of Kai’s wildly-firing assault team.
 
He was waiting for the last pirate — a grizzled older man with enough common sense to take cover when he saw or heard the effects of Gavin’s first few shots — to make a run for one of the boats when he heard the M109 fire again; and then saw the searchlight from a rapidly approaching Blackhawk helicopter suddenly light up the
Avatar
.

Gavin cursed as he reached down, grabbed a small rock, and threw it in the approximate location where he thought the last of Kai’s pirates was hiding.
 
He waited until the old man broke away from his hiding place in a desperate run for the water, dropped him with a pair of shots to the chest and head, and then raised the rifle and began firing at the Blackhawk just as the two anti-personnel rounds from Lanyard’s M109 detonated against the left side of the helicopter’s armored windshield.

Not designed to penetrate armored glass, the high-energy metal fragments simply scarred and blackened the Blackhawk’s windshield; shredding and disabling, instead, the unarmored searchlight mounted beneath the transport helicopter’s nose.
 
But the pilots reacted instinctively, and understandably, by wrenching the Blackhawk away from the unexpected flack.

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