For damn sure. The bastard had suckered him with the oldest trick in the books.
But maybe it wasn't too late to pull the fat out of the fire. Maybe, by God, Mr. Smart-ass would find his own fat searing in the flames this time.
"Those trucks!" he screamed. "Get out there and grab them trucks!"
10
Point blank
Bolan was watching from a high point of ground which was several blocks removed from the Lucasi home, following the play there with powerful binoculars.
He had been on station and waiting when Schwarz began his intelligence run in the war-wagon, had watched him pull up to within fifty yards of the target and dismount, open the hood over the engine, step inside the van.
He saw Blancanales, also, another hundred yards or so downrange, inching along in the bread truck.
Bolan spoke into his shoulder-phone to advise, "Pol, the ears are out."
"Roger, I have him in sight," came the instant reply. "How's it look from station Charlie?"
"Peaceful," Bolan said, then: "Whup! Couple just came out the side door. It's ... Lucasi. And the big houseman. Something has their interest."
The focal field of the binoculars covered only the two men and several feet of turf to either side of them.
"I believe they're looking at you, Pol. And … Gadgets! Are you in?"
"I'm here," came a strained reply.
"They've spotted both of you, and I'd say are jumping to conclusions. I can feel their little minds a'whirring. Yep. Yep."
Lucasi's weasel face was sharply etched in the focal field, wondering, worrying, discovering ...
Bolan commanded, "Break off! They're wise. Break now!"
Schwarz protested, "I only drained two banks."
"Got the phone tap?"
"Getting it now."
"Stay with it," Blancanales urged. "I'm covering."
Bolan concurred, though with misgivings. Numbers were all-important in this sort of game. He snapped, "Thirty seconds more, then you haul it I Pol, start your move!"
"Rolling," came the response from Blancanales.
Bolan released the binoculars and reached for his power sniper, the Weatherby Mark V. Using .460 Magnum soft-nose mini-bombs, the big piece gave him better than a thousand yards of kill — much more than he would need for this mission. He fitted his eye to the scope and began reading ranges.
Yeah ... this mission would be just about point-blank.
The Diver sent three of his boys out to intercept the bread truck and another two to check-out the green van, then he sent the remaining palace guard scurrying through the house searching for bugs.
Ben Lucasi ran into the game room to caution everyone there to "keep quiet, stop talking, not a fucking word!" — then he snatched up a double-barrel shotgun and dashed toward the upstairs window where he'd spotted the suspicious-looking package.
He arrived there just in time to see the bread truck picking up speed for a run past the house.
Three of Diver's boys were chasing along beside it, waving pistols and shouting at one another.
A burst of fire from an automatic weapon lanced away from the cab of the truck and the three boys went down sliding in their own blood.
The truck had slowed again, almost coming to a complete halt near the front of the property, and the automatic-weapon fire was sweeping into the house itself as that damned guy down there methodically raked the whole joint. Window glass was breaking and crashing all over; Lucasi could hear yelling and stampeding feet as his visitors sought cover. Above it all, the loud commands of big Diver could be heard as the veteran house captain tried to get his forces deployed against the unexpected assault.
Without even realizing what a foolish thing he was doing, Lucasi shattered his window with the shotgun, leaned out, and let go with both barrels into that bread truck.
The double ba-loom of his own retort was echoed instantly far away by the powerful reports from a big-game piece. Something tore the shotgun out of Lucasi's grasp and sent it spinning to the ground; something else smacked into the window frame a fraction of an inch from his eyes and tore a foot of it away.
Lucasi fell back quickly into the safety of the room, his hands still tingling from the hit on his shotgun, and he knew that he'd come as close to sudden death as he ever wanted to get.
He scrambled down the stairway yelling, "Diver! Diver!"
But the Diver was already outside, leading his pack of triggermen in a hard run across the yard, taking the battle exactly where Mack Bolan probably wanted it.
"Don't go out there!" Lucasi wailed.
Too late.
Another rattling sound from up the street signalled the entrance of a second automatic weapon into the battle, and the rolling cra-acks of that big-game piece were now coming end-to-end, almost sounding as one.
Yeah, Lucasi knew it. It was too damn late now.
Bolan had been watching for a response to Blancanales' stutter-pistol attack, and he saw the shotgun the moment it presented itself outside that upstairs window.
He immediately acquired that target in his cross-hairs and sighed into the squeeze-off, realizing as he did so that he was at least a heartbeat behind the other guy's trigger. His own piece bucked into his shoulder at the same instant that the report from the shotgun reached him; he rode the recoil and hung into the eyepiece for another quick round into the same general target area.
The intense magnification of the big scope provided a field of vision measuring in inches but he saw the shotgun take the hit and spin away, and he had a milli-second glimpse of Ben Lucasi's frightened visage jerking away from a splintering windowframe.
He paused then for an area-evaluation with the binoculars.
Blancanales had abandoned the bread truck. Apparently the shotgun blast had disabled the vehicle.
Two men were in the street, about midway between the house and Schwarz's position with the warwagon. At the moment they seemed to be torn between their original assignment and the obvious need for their presence back at the house.
Bolan barked into the shoulder-phone, "Pol, Gadgets, report!"
Blancanales came in immediately, a bit winded, "I'm grounded, two o'clock from the front of the house, behind the little rock wall."
"I'm done," Gadgets announced calmly. "Get ready, Pol, I'll pick you up."
"Negative!" Bolan commanded. "You do a one-eighty and haul out of there. I'll spring the Politician."
"Too late," Schwarz replied. "Here come the reserves."
Bolan snarled, "It still goes. You break and haul — backwards!"
"Aye aye."
"I'm okay," Blancanales assured everybody.
With his naked eye Bolan could see that the Politician would not be "okay" for long.
A swarm of hardmen were pouring out of the house and making a cautious advance toward the street.
As he was leaning into his eyepiece, he heard the stutter of Schwarz's weapon and got a peripheral glimpse of the two men in the street as they dived for cover. One of them did not dive quite soon enough; Bolan saw him flop and roll, then he sighed into his own targets. Gadgets, he knew, could take care of himself.
As for those guys down there in that yard ... at this range, with this piece, it was almost a shame. Even scrambling, they were sitting ducks.
He was in a tight spot, and the Politician damn well knew it.
The little NATO machine pistol had jammed on him and there was no time to work on it. He had a damn revolver and six lousy rounds between him and about fifteen guys who were moving across that lawn over there.
His closest help was damn near one hundred yards away, and he had been ordereed out of the area.
The Sarge, of course, was laying-in with the big precision piece — and that fact would not prove at all comforting to anyone moving into those cross-hairs.