Read Sun of the Sleepless Online

Authors: Patrick Horne

Tags: #Suspense & Thrillers

Sun of the Sleepless (59 page)

Leaving a gap of twenty-five metres between vehicles, first one Land Rover and then another skidded out from the garage, charging up the hill behind the roaring armoured vehicle that preceded them. The convoy powered up the incline, the deep tread of the tyres spraying snow and frozen soil into the air as they laboured to gain some grip and as the lead vehicle was cresting the top of the slope the trailing Land Rover veered to the side of the rough track and slewed heavily to a stop.

Rey immediately leapt out as Akosua dived from the driver's seat and Private Danny Cohen jumped down from the rear flat-bed. Quickly taking up defensive positions, they started to scan the compound and surrounding area, ready to fire on anything that approached, noting that the Jackal had also paused to give them covering fire from its heavy weaponry.

Seeing the vehicles approach, the machine gun team that had been hidden on the hillside broke from their position and started to run, leaving their equipment behind as they darted low across the ground. Their sprint seemed to take an age and Rey glanced over to check their approach, anxious to get moving again.

One of the GPMG team was lagging and he seemed to suddenly stumble as a spray of red liquid was ejected from the side of his head. His companion slowed down just for a moment and turned around, sensing that something had happened behind him. It was all that was needed and a second shot of precision accuracy tore through one ear and straight out the other side.

'Sniper!' Cohen yelled as he focussed intently, looking for targets through the scope of his assault rifle. There was very little chance that they could hit a sharp-shooter hidden at the tree line that faced the farmhouse, but they could at least give some suppressive fire to try and hold down a further shot.

Akosua roved her scope over the grounds, taking note of the smoke and flames that had started to lick from the windows of the farmhouse. Just as they had departed, a couple of Molotov cocktails had been thrown into the downstairs rooms, an effort to hamper any subsequent forensic examination by the authorities.

'Sir!' she breathlessly exclaimed. 'They have Ramsey!'

Rey paused for an instant as the words sunk in, then jerking his rifle to scan the farmhouse with his scope, he suddenly saw two SAS troopers dragging a body between them, out and away from the scorching incineration that was now devouring the whole building.

'They must have managed to do a quick sweep before the fire took hold properly,' Akosua uttered, 'it looks like he is still alive.'

Rey gritted his teeth and agitatedly tightened his grip on his rifle, inwardly swearing to himself. As he homed in on the couple of men dragging and pulling Ramsey's body across the snow away from the inferno that had developed, he saw them drop him to the ground and crouch down. The injured man rolled over, his arm moving up to his head as he lolled about.

'Fuck it!' Rey spat. 'FUCK IT!'

He watched for a moment and then squeezed his trigger, a volley of shots that kicked up the soil and snow about Ramsey's body, sending the troopers diving away for cover. As Cohen and Akosua looked on aghast at the scene through their rifle scopes, they saw the head of their comrade abruptly and violently snapped back as a bullet finally blasted into his forehead.

Cohen tried to say something but nothing came out, Akosua became impassive and simply nodded at the action that Rey had taken.

'Move it!' Rey growled.

Seeing Rey's trailing Land Rover skid away from where it had attempted to pick up the GPMG team, Private Banks revved the engine of the Jackal to move on again. Just as he nosed the big vehicle forwards the ratcheting sound of automatic fire burst from the trees ahead and to the left and right of the track, raking the front armour and drumming across the metalwork.

In order to prevent any breakout via the rear of the farm compound, a detachment of Royal Marines had been called in from HM Naval Base Clyde, the headquarters of the Royal Navy in Scotland just twenty-five miles north-west of Glasgow. The team had set-up an ambush at the crest of the hill and was now intent on stopping the convoy before it could get away into the forest.

Loftus hastily swivelled the big 12.7mm heavy machine gun on its turret and blasted rounds in reply, sweeping the area in bursts of fire. Private Wilson cast aside the RPG launcher and threw a couple of fragmentation grenades into the tree line watching them blow funnels of debris into the air just as the first Land Rover caught up and swerved around the body of the Jackal, its occupants leaning out and joining in the melee as best they could.

Cruising up to the top of the hill, Akosua punched the 4x4 forwards as it rapidly became apparent that a situation was developing up ahead.

'Pull up alongside the Jackal,' commanded Rey, 'we have to keep moving or we'll have those helos back onto us, we're sitting ducks here!'

She skidded the heavy car around the hastily drawn up vehicles that effectively blocked the track and beeped madly on the horn to attract some attention. Loftus looked over and saw Rey waving that they should move forwards and he immediately took the hint.

'RPG into the trees on the left!' he bellowed to Wilson, who ducked down to retrieve the rocket launcher at her feet.

Loftus fired a sustained volley into the trees on the right hand side of the track, the withering cascade of shells ensuring that the Royal Marines could only duck and seek cover, providing an opportunity for Wilson to fire off an anti-personnel grenade to subdue their oppressors even further.

'Go!' Rey yelled at Akosua as the explosion threw up a massive spray of snow and dirt, although she needed no instruction to grab the opportunity to move forwards.

The convoy accelerated forwards again, lumping and bumping through the line of fire that was supposed to have contained them, although no-one had foreseen the presence of such heavy weaponry.

'Who the hell provided the slime on this?' Captain Lewis growled over his intercom, referring to the intelligence that had been supplied to him. 'I want them stopped before they can get to the road, take them out now!'

As the track progressed, the trees grew denser but the speeding vehicles kept pushing their way forwards, leaves and spindly branches whipping at the sides of the cars and whacking into the much bigger Jackal as it barged through.

As they eventually neared the tree line that marked the southern perimeter of the forest, Rey leaned out and signalled for them to slow down and stop.

All three vehicles skidded to a halt next to each other, and Rey quickly shouted up to Loftus.

'The helos are above us, tracking us, the canopy is too thick for them to get us here but as soon as we're out in the open they'll try to take us out. We'll go first and provide a target for them, I want you to follow up and take them down, fire everything you've got into them.'

Loftus nodded and grinned.

'Cohen!' Rey called through his side window back to the flat-bed of the 4x4. 'You'd better get out, this could turn nasty.'

The Private clambered out and banged the side of the cab as a mark of finality, nodding as Rey caught his eye.

Rey buckled himself into his full harness safety belt and just jerked his head at Akosua; she set her face into an expression of grim determination and abruptly engaged the clutch to make the car jerk forwards toward the strip of light that marked the edge of the forest and the beginning of the open terrain beyond.

As they accelerated clear of the tree line a helicopter immediately swooped in and took a line behind the 4x4. Bouncing over the rough ground, Akosua was aiming for a road that ran west to east and which offered a clear route to their agreed fall-back position. Although she could see the helicopter intermittently bobbing about in the door mirror as it weaved after them, she was aware of the faint hiss of a rocket being launched before she saw the rapidly approaching smoke trail catching up with them.

Akosua tried to swerve the 4x4 but the steering wheel was suddenly wrenched from her grasp as the vehicle bucked and then jumped, rotating onto its side before it crashed down and skidded to a halt in the snow. Although both occupants remained strapped into their seats, they took a dazed moment to grasp the reality of their current situation, finally understanding that they had been hit.

Rey's moment of comprehension was broken by the cracking thud of heavy machine gun fire and he realised that Loftus was hammering their attacker. A sudden explosion marked a turning point in the aural battle as the whine of an engine became the predominant sound, the waxing and waning of the Doppler effect on the sound of the rotor blades illustrating that the helicopter was flying a wholly irregular flight path.

Now hanging from her seat closet to the ground, Akosua groaned and slapped the heel of her hand against the release catch of her safety harness, immediately dropping before she had a chance to support her weight against the inevitable pull of gravity.

'Are you hurt?' Rey asked as he looked about the cabin for a hand hold to pull himself up by.

'Yes, I'm bloody hurt!' Akosua moaned irritably, groaning as she manoeuvred herself to plant her feet on the driver's door and actually stand up in the cabin.

'Seriously?' Rey asked anxiously.

'No,' she exhaled dourly, 'but I feel like I've been kicked in the backside by a horse.'

'Come on,' Rey chided, 'you climb out first and then I can get out.'

Akosua and Rey exited their overturned vehicle and bundled into the back of the remaining Land Rover that had hastily pulled up, lumping down onto the bench seat before they could take a good look around at the remnants of the crew.

'Where is everybody?' Akosua blurted out before she caught herself, suddenly realising what the implication was.

Private Joanna Moore coughed and leaned forwards.

'Banks, Wilson and Stiles are in with Sergeant Loftus, although I think that Stiles may have been hit. Carlton was driving us but he was killed when we had the fire-fight at the hill. Corporal Hunt had to let him out when she took over. I don't know about the others.'

'Hurst and Ball were hit as they tried to join up with us,' Rey said in a low voice. 'Sniper fire. We lost Ramsey at the farm.'

Akosua looked sharply at him but said nothing.

In spite of the noise of the engine revving loudly as the Land Rover bounded over the last of the rough ground to the road, a silence descended upon the cabin as it became apparent that they had lost four or five team members.

 'I suppose that considering the circumstances, we should count ourselves lucky,' Moore offered.

Rey nodded but looked earnest.

'It isn't over yet.'

The diminished convoy of two vehicles raced west along the tarmac of the road, leading them to a T-Junction where they turned sharply south, the picturesque view over Loch Nell all but ignored in the hasty bid to get out of the area as quickly as possible. Driving for half a kilometre on the smooth surface, the Land Rover and Jackal abruptly veered off onto rough ground for a short cut and started heading directly west.

Captain Lewis was faced with a stark reality; he had already lost two helicopters to rocket propelled grenades and although the crews had sustained no injuries during the attacks or their subsequent emergency landings, he could not risk another confrontation. The terrorists were now approaching the edges of the suburban areas of Oban itself and if they choose to head north they would be right into the town itself within a matter of minutes. A group of terrorists escaping was one thing, but an army helicopter crashing onto a local housing estate was a completely different ball game.

Inside, he was fuming that the intelligence he had been provided with made no mention of the possibility of such significant weaponry or resistance. Even with the extra precautions he had taken in - calling in a Royal Marine detachment - their preparations had been overtaken by the reality of events.

He had ordered the remaining helo to follow the two remaining vehicles from a close distance and had contacted his superiors, suggesting that a Typhoon FGR4 air-strike be launched from RAF Leuchars near to Dundee, assuring a direct hit and an end to the fiasco that was developing.

As it was, he was still waiting for a confirmation - it was not just the army top brass that was involved in the decision making process. He was aware that COBRA, the facility housing the Civil Contingencies Committee had been involved and it was inevitable that a delay would be introduced to their tactical decision making ability.

'Vehicles have entered a large forested area approximately one click south-west of Soroba, two clicks from the west coast,' reported the pilot of the helicopter to Captain Lewis through his intercom. 'They have stopped and appear to be digging in, they've deployed smoke and I cannot see them now, they may be making a last stand as they have nowhere else to go. You can't miss them, just follow the smoke.'

Captain Lewis grinned tightly and allowed himself to imagine that his luck may have just changed.

'Converge on last known location, take all appropriate measures to kill or capture targets.'

In spite of his order, it was a foregone conclusion that all of the terrorists would be killed. The opportunity to take even one prisoner had long since passed and especially since they had clearly demonstrated their own intentions when they had shot one of their own as he was being dragged from the burning farmhouse. The terrorists would probably commit suicide before they allowed themselves to be caught alive.

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