Going Gone, Book 2 of the Irish End Games (25 page)

33

S
arah knelt
in the grass by David's grave. It was a simple mound with a cross. The words,
David Woodson, Loving Husband and Father,
were carved on the wooden cross.

“John wanted to put the dates on himself,” Mike said softly from where he stood behind her.

She touched the grass that edged the grave. The last time she had seen David was in this pasture. It was nearly impossible to believe that he now lay under this sod, the very sod where they'd grazed their goats and horses all summer long.

She wasn't sure what she thought she'd feel when she saw David's grave. Closure of some kind, she supposed. Instead, she felt nothing. It just didn't feel real to her that her animated, handsome husband was here. Not when the sky was so blue, the birds still sang and the trout still jumped in the pond. David was here, but she'd never touch him again. She'd never hear his voice again. She stood up abruptly and dusted the dirt from her jeans.

A wave of irrational anger pierced her. She felt like she wanted to punch something.
Hard.

“You all right, Sarah?”

“As good as I can be,” she said, staring at the simple cross.

“I'll get the dates on it straightaway.”

She shook her head. Poor Mike. So helpless in the face of her agony. Flailing around desperately to come up with
something
that would somehow make a difference or make it all better. She looked at the grave and all she could think was
, David gone, Evvie gone, Papin gone, John gone.

Why am I still here? What possible reason or purpose could that be?

“You all right, Sarah?”

She turned to him and nodded. “Let's go on back. I don't know what I was expecting to see.”

“Would you feel better if he were in the kirkyard? We could do that.”

“No. John's right. This is as good a place as any for his earthly body to rest.”

“I'm just so sorry, Sarah.”

“I know. Thanks.”

A shout off in the distance made Mike turn in that direction. Sarah could see a figure running toward them across the pasture. It was the most direct route from Donovan's Lot but was rarely used because there was no road.

“It's Gavin,” Mike said. He was moving toward the boy before Sarah even registered his words. She grabbed the reins of both horses and led them after Mike. When she reached the two, Gavin was gasping for breath. There was a gash on his forehead and his eyes looked wild. Frightened.

“Slow down, son. What's happened?”

“Da, they took the camp! They came from all sides and when we…it was all I could do…I hated to run but…Da, we have to hurry!”

“Gavin, lad, take a breath. Who's come? What's happened?”

Sarah stood, holding both horses, trying to fight down the panic that was rising up in her throat.

“It's them, Mike,” she said. “It's Denny's gang. They've come for me.”

“Are the women and children safely out at least?”

“They tried but was herded back into the center of camp. The blighters knew about the escape routes. Someone told ‘em where they were.”

Mike cursed. “How many of them are there?”

Gavin shook his head and looked back over his shoulder. “I guess, ten? Maybe more. They were on horseback. And they're armed, Da. They had automatic weapons.”

Mike strode to his bay and pulled out his rifle. He checked the cartridges and handed it to Gavin. “Go to the tree overlooking the wash pond and climb to the top like we practiced.”

Gavin took the gun, but before he could move away Mike grabbed him by the shoulder. “Wait for my signal. Don't just start shooting or they'll pick you off like a sitting duck.”

“Right.”

“Take Mrs. Woodson's horse. We'll double up. Now hurry!”

Sarah handed her reins to Gavin and watched him vault onto Dan's back and swivel him into a gallop back toward the community. She turned to Mike. “What are we going to do?”

“Do you remember exactly where David put the landmines by the goat pond?”

“I think so.”

“Take me to them.” He mounted his big bay and held out his hand to pull her up behind him on the saddle.

They cantered across the pasture with Sarah holding to Mike's waist. Out of the corner of her eye she could see the white cross that marked David's grave. The same people who put him there were back to kill more people she cared about. Somewhere deep inside her, a low, slow fury began to build.

She pointed to the southeast corner of the pond and Mike rode to it. She slid to the ground and ran to the spot where she had last seen the ordinances. She splashed into the soggy lip of the pond and pulled back the rushes. Mike jumped down to search too. She felt every precious second tick by, knowing those monsters were terrorizing the people at the community, the children, Fiona…

She felt a wave of relief that John wasn't there.

“Son of a bitch,” Mike said in frustration and looked at her. She knew he desperately wanted a different answer but she didn't have one for him. She looked at the pond bank, willing herself to see them where they should be. But it was no use.

The landmines were gone.

T
hey rode
as close as they dared before Mike let his horse roam free and then walked the rest of the way to the camp. Mike touched her on the shoulder when they got close and held a finger to his lips.

She knew. The bastards would have sentries posted. As soon as Denny discovered she wasn't in the camp, he'd be waiting for her to make her entrance. She nodded and kept walking. When they were still far enough away not to be able to pick up sounds, Mike stopped. He brought his hands together and gave a birdcall.

Sarah frowned and looked around.

“Gavin?” she whispered.

He looked at her in frustration and what she thought looked very much like burgeoning fear. The sight of it made her stomach roil. “He should be here,” he said in a low voice.

She scanned the treetops but could see nothing. “Could he have mistaken which tree you wanted him in?”

“No. He's trained in this tree for six months.”

“Mike, we can't wait. Trust me, they're hurting people. We need to go.” Sarah gave the trees one last look, hoping to catch sight of the boy, and then walked toward the camp. Mike hurried next to her until they could hear voices from the camp, then he tugged on her sleeve to indicate they should crouch in the bushes.

On her hands and knees, Sarah crept up to the camp until Denny's voice, the words still indistinct, seemed to be the only thing in her ears. Its loud nasal tone rang in the quiet of the early afternoon. When she got close enough to see him, she stopped. Mike bumped into her from behind and she put a hand out to tell him to stay down.

In the center of the camp, Denny stood next to a woman who he held wrapped in his arms. Sarah's eyes swept the crowd that lined the camp center. She was close enough to see the terror on their faces. The men had protective arms around their women and children. Even the camp dogs were quiet. Or had been slain.

Sarah stifled a gasp when Denny turned in her direction.

The woman he held was Fiona. One hand was entangled in her hair. The other held a large double-edged dagger to her bared throat.

34

S
arah was
on her feet and moving toward the center of camp before Mike fully processed what he was seeing. He jerked out an arm to pull her back but it was too late. He got to his feet, his hand on his hunting knife—the only weapon he had—and followed her.

“Stop it!” Sarah screamed as she entered the camp. “Leave her alone!”

A man came out of the bushes and grabbed Mike by the shoulders. With a grunt, he slammed Mike against a tree trunk. He was easily two inches shorter but Mike held up his hands in surrender. The man seized his knife then punched him in the stomach. Fighting for breath with a rasping groan, Mike folded up and sank to his knees, explosions of pain thrumming out from his core.

“Get up, ya bastard,” the man snarled, delivering a vicious kick to Mike's midsection. “I can shoot ya here just as easy.”

Mike forced himself to his feet, looking up in time to see Denny fling Fiona away and lunge for Sarah. Suddenly, a monstrous roar of noise bombarded the camp, hurling a cannonade of excruciating echo and sharp debris. A shower of rock and dirt pummeled the group as the thunderous salvo of sound strafed the camp.

A hut across the camp center collapsed and the jagged sounds of terrified screams mixed with the din of the aftershocks reverberating in the air.

Mike slammed his fist into the man's jaw, following it with a bone-crunching uppercut to the bastard's chin. The thug went down with a grunt and didn't get back up. Mike snatched up the man's gun and dashed toward the camp center, pushing past fleeing women and children.

Were the wankers bombing them?

He walked to the center of the camp—his arm outstretched pointing the gun at Denny. Fiona sat on the ground, stunned by the impact of the explosion. Mike breeched the outer ring of the camp's interior and saw Sarah struggling between two men who held her.

“You've got one minute to clear out,” he bellowed to Denny, who pivoted around to face him. He was disconcertingly confident, Mike thought, for having a gun pointed at his head.

“Really? And how about
you've
got one minute to
live
,” Denny retorted, a malicious grin stretching across his face.

Mike made a quick assessment of the situation. Sarah captured, most of the camp, including the men, fled into the woods—at least a dozen fatigue-clad hoodlums, including one woman, running unchecked, knocking over cook pots and ransacking the tents and huts.

He heard the ominous sounds of multiple guns cocking and chambering their rounds—and all of them pointed at him.

“Drop it, matey,” Denny said. He jerked his head to indicate Fiona on the ground. “I'm afraid I won't give your sister my best performance with you holding a gun on me.”

Mike pulled the trigger at the same moment a terrible pressure imploded at the back of his head. Seconds later, he realized he had blacked out and was being dragged facedown in the dirt. All his senses were engulfed by an embracing, crushing pain in his head. He felt rivulets of blood streaming down his face as he fought to come fully conscious. He could hear Sarah's voice—hysterically pitched and shrieking—and Fiona's screams. His stomach clenched in a nauseating whirl of motion as strong hands heaved him over onto his back and wrenched him into a sitting position against the porch.

“Oy, Jason! Denny wants him awake.”

The man, Jason, backhanded him hard across the mouth. “Oy! Wake up, ye bogger.”

The woman held a gun to Mike's head. “Come on now, Buck, open those pretty blues. I know you're not gonna want to miss this.”

When he tried to move, the pain became a fusillade of agonizing spasms that migrated from the back of his head to the front. The intensified pitch of Fiona's screams cleared his double vision back into single focus. He tried to get up and felt the gun barrel pressed against his cheek.

“Settle down, big fella,” the woman said. “Your turn's coming. Woulda shot ya before now, but Denny wants everyone alive for the show.”

Mike could see both Fiona and Sarah on their knees, holding each other by the main campfire. The maniac, Denny, was walking in front of them, waving his gun. Although Mike couldn't hear what he was saying, from his body language, it was clear he was gearing up for something. Sarah's back was to Mike, but Fiona's face was visible over her shoulder. Her eyes were squeezed shut and her lips moving in prayer.

Mike surged to his feet with a roar, knocking the woman backward onto the porch steps in the process. He nearly made it as far as the camp center before Denny whirled around and brought his pistol up to take aim. Mike knew there was no way he would reach him before the bugger pulled the trigger.

He tucked his head and charged.

T
he sound
of Angie's scream jerked Sarah out of her cocoon of hopeless inevitability and she twisted around to see Mike, his head bloodied, his eyes unfocused, staggering toward her and Fiona while Denny drew a bead on him.

Sarah closed her eyes, burying her face in Fiona's neck. When she heard the gunshot, she forced herself to look back at the body—Mike's body—on the ground. But what she saw instead didn't make sense.

Mike was still coming.

Had Denny missed? At that range? Had his gun misfired?

Denny, screaming in rage and pain, turned away from Mike's advance. Sarah saw Denny's face contorted in agony as he reached for the handle of the knife protruding from his left thigh where somebody had thrown it.

Mike hit him from behind, knocking the gun from his grip. Sarah pulled free of Fiona and scrambled to her feet as Mike lifted Denny in the air and heaved him onto the campfire.

She had to get that gun.

Denny crawled out of the fire, slapping at the embers on his pant legs and bellowing bloody retribution, his eyes searching the ground for his weapon. When Sarah saw it, lying in the dirt not two steps from where she stood, she lunged for it. But before she could reach it, a tall man wearing rags and rings in his dreadlocks appeared as if from nowhere and scooped it up in one fluid movement. He hefted the weapon in his hand and gave Sarah a large, toothy grin. She staggered backwards in shock.

“Declan!”

Declan turned and shouted to six men who were with him. Together they swarmed the camp, wielding clubs, hammers and hatchets. Sarah ran to Fiona and Mike, who watched the gypsies in stark amazement.

“It's the gypsies!” Sarah said. “The ones I met on the road!”

Mike nodded to indicate he understood, then picked up a large piece of firewood and entered the fray. “Go to the woods!” he shouted.

Sarah grabbed Fiona's hand and ran to the edge of the camp, where she stopped and grabbed up a knife that was on the ground. “You go on, Fi,” she said. “Tell the men to come back and help.”

“You come with me.”

“Just go!” Sarah gave her a hard push and ran back to the camp.

The scene at the center of camp was bedlam. If it weren't for the gypsies looking like a band of rioting homeless people, Sarah wouldn't have been able to tell the good guys apart from the thugs. Even with the gypsies' help, she knew that short-handled knives and pieces of firewood were no match against automatic weapons.

Taken by surprise as the invaders had been, no shots had yet been fired. But that wouldn't last forever.

If they didn't get those automatic weapons away from them soon…

She looked wildly around to find Mike in the melee, or Denny. And she looked for one other. She searched for the one man she knew she had been looking for from the moment she stepped back into camp—the man called Jeff.

When she finally caught a glimpse of him in the same ugly black trainers and filthy jeans he had been wearing in their last encounter, he was standing—gun in hand, talking animatedly to Angie. Sarah's stomach clenched and a vision of that afternoon in the pasture came rushing back to her. She remembered his laughing eyes as he regarded her terror. She remembered how he tricked her into dropping her gun.

And she remembered what happened next.

Without even knowing she was doing it, Sarah moved toward him. Two other gang members joined Angie and Jeff, and Sarah watched as Angie pointed to the camp exit that led to the grain storage area where the community kept their food and seed supply.

So it was true. They know every point of entry to the camp, and every weakness.

Jeff nodded and then, with the two other men, ran in the direction Angie had pointed.

Sarah couldn't let them do whatever they intended on doing.

She couldn't let David's killer get away.

Sarah skirted the worst of the hand-to-hand fighting by jumping on porch fronts and over collapsed tents to reach the exit where the men had gone. Most of the men from Donovan's Lot, and even some of the women, had returned to help fight. It wouldn't matter, though, if they couldn't disarm Denny's thugs before they started shooting.

The exit Jeff and his group slipped through was just a gap between two large tents, but before Sarah could reach it the thunderous rumble of a second explosion erupted, knocking her off her feet. This time, large stones and rocks flew through the air. Sarah crawled behind one of the short stonewalls that lined a section of the camp's perimeter and covered her head with her arms.

A gypsy fighter lay stunned next to a jagged boulder, a thin line of blood creeping down his face. When she saw the smoking rubble strewn around the camp—the fighters momentarily dazed or running for cover—she realized that the explosion must have come from somewhere near the cairn.

As Sarah stood up, she saw the bloody stump of a leg with the foot still attached lying inches from where she had crouched.

The foot was still wearing a black trainer.

T
he sound
of the explosion seemed to come seconds after Mike felt the ground jerk away beneath his feet. He released the man he'd been grappling with and the body fell limply to the ground like a discarded rag doll, Mike's knife embedded in his ribs.

Mike jerked the knife out and lurched to his feet. Two of the camp tents by the main fire had been flattened and their canvas was now flapping wildly. He tried to find Sarah but all he could see were the small groups of grappling men.

And then he saw Denny. His leg was crudely tied with a piece of shirtsleeve that was already sodden red and he was attempting to pick himself up from the last blast.

Mike watched in disbelief as Denny aimed his gun at a scrum of men wrestling on the ground near the fire and, insanely, fired into the midst of them. Someone howled and the other three jerked away and separated.

The psycho had shot his own man.

Mike grabbed up the automatic rifle from the man whose neck he had just broken and tossed it to the big gypsy, Declan, as he ran past. “Find Sarah!” he yelled. Declan nodded and reversed course, running through the growing smoke that was starting to envelop the camp and quickly disappeared.

“Correy!” Mike bellowed as he crossed the camp toward him. “Drop your gun, arsehole and call your men off.” He watched Denny face him, his face creased with rage and frustration.

“You sorry Irish bastard!” Denny shrieked. “I'll have her and then my men will have her—”

Mike reached him and backhanded him before Denny could get his gun aimed, knocking it out of his hand. Denny lunged at him, grasping Mike's head in his hands and smashing his own hard into his forehead.

Mike crumpled to his knees, his eyesight gone to black, his head a blinding monument of agony. He reached, unseeing, for Denny's face as he went down, trying to pull the bastard down with him.

“I'll gut you like the fish you smell like, you country shite,” Denny snarled, panting. Mike felt Denny's fingers working to pry Mike's knife from his hand. When that happened, it would be all over.

Blindly, Mike released the knife to him, then grasped Denny's head tightly between his hands—and wrenched.

A
woman's
strangled scream jerked Sarah's attention away from the piece of bloody leg. Angie stood not twenty feet from her, staring at the wreckage the bomb had created. Behind her, three of Denny's men stood with their automatic rifles to their shoulders. They were aiming into the crowd of gypsy fighters.

Angie shifted her gaze from the smoking rocks and body parts to Sarah. They locked eyes. Sarah saw the ugly stub of a gun appear in Angie's hand.

Angie took aim and Sarah dove for cover.

She heard the shot but felt no impact. She tried to protect her head with her arms, but heard no other shot fired. Sarah peeked out from under her arms in time to see Angie drop to her knees, her hands clutching a gaping wound in her stomach. Gore poured from the wound, pumping the bloody life force from her body.

When Sarah snapped her head around to see where the shot had come from, she saw Declan standing behind her, the rifle he'd shot Angie with still to his shoulder. He adjusted his stance and aimed his rifle at the three gunmen standing behind Angie.

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