Authors: Phillip Hunter
âThey're in that building over there,' Cole said, pointing to the large warehouse at the end of the row. âIt's gonna be hard getting in. The roll door is well secured. There's a couple of windows high up, so we're gonna chuck some petrol bombs in and wait for them to come out. You tooled up?'
I peered through the gloom at the large square shape. The windows were small. Whoever had to throw those petrol bombs would be exposed.
âCall it off,' I said. âIt's what Dunham wants. He's playing you.'
âFuck Dunham.'
âHe's putting you lot against each other. He stands back and sweeps up what's left.'
âFuck him and fuck you. I'm taking these cunts out.'
âIt wasn't the Albanians who shot your place up.'
He looked uncertain, but he was in front of his men.
âYou don't know what you're talking about.'
I looked back where we'd come. That road, more a narrow track, pitted with potholes, a corridor of lock-up garages, quarter of a mile long. Ahead of us, the large building, all corrugated steel and aluminium, no way round, no way through, just a block of metal and a large open forecourt and an eight-foot-high spiked metal fence. The hair on the back of my neck stood up. Cole was walking away from me. I grabbed him.
âWe've got to get out of here.'
His men were looking at us. Cole's voice was low, hard.
âFuck off, Joe. I mean it. If you ain't helping, you're in my fucking way.'
âListen to me, this is wrong. Look at it. You're blocked in. It's a bottle-neck.'
He snatched his arm away from my grasp.
âYou've got Dunham on the brain.'
âIt's a fucking trap.'
âYou fucking mad? We've got the cunts. We've got them.'
âIt's wrong.'
âGet out of my way, Joe.'
âI found your drugs.'
That stopped him.
âWhere?'
âBloke called Laing. He bought them from someone called Doug Whelan. Does that name mean anything to you?'
âNo.'
âIt should. Your nephew used to work with him.'
âCarl? What are you on about?'
âYes, Carl. Think about it; that shoot-up on your house was an amateur job. You think the Albanians would fuck about like that? They'd torch the place. They'd make sure you were home. It was Carl.'
âWhy would he do that?'
âHow do I know? He's ambitious. He got a better offer from Dunham.'
The men heard us. They looked at Cole. They were getting nervous and closing up, into a tighter group, moving closer to the cars. Gibson turned and looked up the way we'd come.
âHe might be right,' he said.
Cole looked down the track and back to the warehouse.
I said, âWho told you the Albanians were here? It was Carl, wasn't it? It was your nephew.'
âHe wouldn't fucking dare.'
âSo where is he?'
âChrist, when you decide to talk, you don't fuck about.'
âTell me it wasn't Carl who told you about the Albanians and I'll help you now.'
Cole's face was grim. He said, âTell me about it.'
âWe haven't got time.'
âTell me about it.'
I needed Cole. If it wasn't for that, I would've dumped him. I said, âI got someone looking for a large amount of heroin that might've hit the streets. Your heroin. Paget had to cash it in and I think he gave it to Dunham in return for protection. Dunham gave it to Carl, or some of it, as a pay-off. Carl used Whelan to unload the dope.'
Cole thought about what I'd told him. He said, âThis Laing character will confirm this?'
âYes. He doesn't want you on his arse.'
âWe've been here twenty minutes. If this was a trap, why haven't they sprung it?'
âI don't know.'
Gibson said, âMaybe they're waiting.'
âFor what?' Cole said.
Gibson looked at me. Cole's men looked at me. Cole said, âFuck.'
The first rounds hit the cars, pocking the windscreens, shattering them, thudding into the metal bodies. We scattered for cover and I saw one man crash to the ground. The shots were coming in from high and Cole's men started returning fire towards the small windows in the warehouse where the blaze of automatic rifles flashed in the night. I had the Makarov in my hand, but from this distance and without being able to sight properly, it was useless.
But there was something wrong with this. Those two, high up, were easy to avoid, easy to outmanoeuvre. Then I heard a sound and turned and knew we were fucked. Two garage doors behind us burst open and men poured out. They were waiting alright.
âBehind,' I shouted.
Cole's men swung round as one and let off bursts. I picked off one man and hit the ground as a half dozen bullets hammered into the concrete at my feet. Rounds hailed down on us from ahead and behind. Cole had grabbed a Heckler-Koch MP5 from a bunch in the boot of his car. Now he was standing madly in the middle of the carnage, screaming murder, his knuckles white as he emptied one magazine and dumped it and rammed another home. Gibson was yelling at him to get down. Cole's men returned fire as best they could, but they had no cover aside from the cars, which were getting torn to bits. They were getting pummelled: two dead; another two or three wounded. I looked around for cover.
âThe garages,' I called to Cole.
He looked at me. I pointed to the garages. I was crouched down between the cars, keeping my head down as best I could. The others were spread out between the other cars. I could hear rounds zipping through the air all around, deep droning wasp sounds. I felt the car judder when another burst of automatic fire rocked its frame. They were getting closer. I peered around the car I was behind and saw them, ten, twelve of them, moving forwards slowly, all with autos on full, spare clips taped to the ones they were emptying. When they got thirty yards away, their firepower would be enough to tear us apart. The garage nearest me had two wooden doors, locked by a bar and padlock across the middle. I aimed from five feet away and emptied my magazine at the wood around the lock. The wood broke, but still held. Cole saw what I was doing.
âThe doors,' he shouted.
Gibson got the idea and nudged another man near him. One of Cole's men made a wild bolt for the door and bounced into it and got cut in half. I reloaded. Cole scrambled over to me and levelled his Heckler at the wood around the lock and let go with a burst that cleaned out his magazine and shattered the wood to splinters. Gibson and the other man did the same over their side, breaking through into another garage. Shattered concrete erupted from the ground and hit me in the face. I heard a tyre explode. I looked around the car and saw that the men behind us were closing in, forty yards, thirty-eight. One of the men stopped now and pulled a bag from his back. He fished around inside and when his hand came out it was holding a small dark object. Gibson saw me looking. He looked too.
âGrenade,' he yelled.
The man pulled the pin. Gibson stood first. I stood. Cole stood. We unleashed everything we had at that man. He jigged as the rounds smacked into him. He fell and the grenade trickled out of his hand. One of the others with him dived for it, grabbed it and chucked it towards us. We threw ourselves down. The blast was short of us, but not short enough. It rocked the ground. Debris rained down on us. The car I was behind took the shock and jumped in the air. My ears rang. I crawled around the car and peered through the dust and saw that the attackers had also been staggered by the explosion. They'd hit the dirt and were exposed, but they were too far away to charge. If we'd tried, they would have cut us down. I scrambled over to Gibson and Cole.
âNow,' I said. âGet cover.'
Gibson shouted the order. I grabbed a bag of ammo from the boot of Cole's car and tossed in a couple of Heckler and Kochs. Then I saw the bottles he was going to use as petrol bombs. I gave the bag to Gibson and snatched up the bottles. To Cole, I said, âWhere's the petrol?'
âHuh?'
âYou were going to throw petrol bombs at the warehouse. Where's the petrol?'
He shook his head.
âWe were gonna get it from the cars.'
âNo time now.'
We rushed to the garages either side, Gibson and Cole and another man with me, the rest over the other side. Gibson's bad leg slowed him up, but he managed okay. The enemy had regained their feet now and were figuring out what we were up to.
It was black inside the garage, and we were crowded by something covered in a tarpaulin. Gibson flared up a lighter. The shadows danced around, but we could see the place. It was big enough to house a single car with space to move around it. The walls and ceiling were all made of the same concrete slabs. The object covered with the tarp was smaller than a car.
âWe've trapped ourselves,' Cole's man said, panic rising in his voice.
âIt's cover at least,' Gibson said. He looked at the mass in the middle of the garage. âWhat is this? Can we use it?'
The other bloke lifted the tarp and peered underneath.
âIt's a boat.'
âShit.'
Cole was on his mobile, calling up reinforcements.
âEverything you got,' he said. He dropped the phone into his pocket. âThey won't get here in time.'
He was right.
âWhat kind of boat?' I said to the bloke.
âYou know, speedboat.'
âOutboard motor?'
âYeah.'
I looked at Cole.
âPetrol,' he said.
I gave the bottles to Gibson to fill up. Then I went up front to the gap in the doors. Outside, the enemy were spread out along the fronts of both rows of garages, moving slowly forward. They were cagey, not sure how to finish us off now that we'd got some cover. One of them opposite saw me and let off a burst that battered the wooden doors. I ducked back. They were all firing now, their rounds ripping up the wood but not getting much further. The wood was thick.
Cole and his other man were at the back of the boat. They'd got the cap off the tank, but they couldn't get the petrol out.
âWe need a tube, something to siphon it out.'
I looked up at the ceiling, five feet above our heads.
âHow much ammo we got?' I said to Gibson.
He looked through the bag and pulled out a dozen magazines.
âFew minutes' worth.'
âThink we can blast a hole in the roof?'
He followed my gaze.
âMaybe. This concrete isn't reinforced. Yeah. Take a lot of fire.'
I turned to Cole. Outside, the sound of gunfire had erupted again. Through the gap in the doors, I could see that some of Cole's other men were trying to make a break for it. They'd gone back to the cars and were in a firefight. I saw something sail through the air.
âGrenade.'
I dived backwards. The blast smashed the doors back, but they took much of the impact. There wasn't much time.
âIs there a fuel line, hydraulics, something like that?' I said.
Cole pulled the tarp back and rooted around.
âGot something.'
âGet that petrol out. Gibson, with me.' To the other bloke, I said, âHold them off as long as you can.'
I left Cole to do what he could with the petrol. The other bloke went up front and peeked out through the gap in the doors. He brought his pistol up and started to fire, aiming carefully. Gibson came over to me and we stood and loaded Hecklers with new mags. We aimed at a spot above and let off a burst. The bullets smacked into the concrete ceiling, dust and chippings fell down onto us, dust filled the garage.
âIt's not enough,' Gibson said. âWe're not getting through.'
âWe use everything,' I said.
Gibson turned to Cole who was ripping tubing from the boat.
âIf we can't get through, that'll be our ammo gone,' Gibson said. âWe'll be sitting ducks.'
Cole looked from Gibson to me. He looked to the bloke at the front of the garage who was taking single aimed shots and ducking for cover.
âAlmost out,' he called over his shoulder.
âWe can't outlast them,' I said. âOne grenade through that door and we're dead.'
âDo it,' Cole said. âKeep a few rounds in your pistols. Use everything else.'
We loaded new magazines.
âOne spot,' I said.
We took aim and fired, letting the magazines empty, holding the Hecklers tight to our shoulders. The gunfire became a constant deafening roar. Debris rained down on us, chips of concrete first, then shards, then lumps. The garage filled with a cloud of dust that filled our throats and noses and eyes. We fitted new magazines into the guns and emptied them, then more magazines. There were only a few left. My ears rang. I was firing blind. Gibson was choking on dust.
âHold it,' I said.
We let the air clear a bit. Cole had a hose to his mouth and was sucking petrol out of the fuel tank. He spat a mouthful of fuel out and stuck the hose into one of the bottles. When the air had cleared some, I looked up. Over us, a small jagged hole gaped in the concrete slab.
âShort bursts,' I said.
I took aim, targeting the sides of the hole. I fired a small burst, breaking away more of the concrete. I emptied the magazine and loaded one more and fired at a point a few inches away from the hole. Gibson saw what I was doing and followed. The Heckler kicked in my hands and I thought I was wasting our ammo, and I didn't care. I kept firing and a foot-square lump of concrete fell and crashed into the boat. My magazine emptied. Gibson was out too. He picked up the ammo bag and threw it aside.
âWe're out,' he said.
We looked up at the hole. It was rough, about two foot by one.
âI'm the only one can fit,' Gibson said. âGet me up.'
âOnce you're up there, those machine guns in the warehouse will be able to spot you. You'll have to move fast. Light the petrol bombs, chuck them and then jump down.' I glanced at his dodgy leg.