DiGeorge tugged frantically at the garage door. There was no telling how many more guys like that one were wandering around his grounds. Beverly Hills had ceased to be a safe place for Julian DiGeorge. There was a better place. He bad to get there—and the sooner the better.
Andromede had fired his first grenade even before Bolan's signal had been completed, and he was reaching for his third reload when he heard Chopper's chattergun go into action. Groups of Maffianos were racing madly about the DiGeorge grounds, shouting curses and instructions. One of them had yelled, "On the wall!—and that was when Chopper cut loose.
Andromede could see the steady muzzle flashes licking out from Chopper's weapon, and the screams and shouts that immediately arose beyond the hedges told of his effect. The Puerto Rican had just fired his fifth round, when he saw that Chopper's muzzle flashes were now beyond the hedges and advancing.
Andromede screamed, "Chopper! Get back! Chopper!"—knowing, even as he did so, that his voice was lost in the explosive confusion of the DiGeorge grounds. He loaded his sixth grenade, leaped to his feet, and ran to the end of the wall. He had Chopper in sight now. The squat Italian was walking slowly but steadily across the grounds, firing from the chest in short bursts and scattering the enemy in a panicky retreat. Andromede could count about twelve men running toward the large house, their backs to Fontenelli—in full flight. He raised his grenadier, sighted beyond the heads of the fleeing enemy, and let it fly. The flame and smoke of the explosion momentarily obscured the landscape directly in front of Fontenelli. He halted and turned back toward Andromede.
"Get back!" Andromede shouted, rising to his toes and frantically waving an arm.
Fontenelli sent a figure-eight burst in Andromede's general direction, then spun about and disappeared into the smoke. Andromede slung his weapon and launched himself into the air. He cleared the hedge and hit the soft ground of the DiGeorge estate with a jarring impact just as all the lights flashed off. He paused to get his bearings, then had just stepped off in the direction Fontenelli had taken, when his radio came alive. He continued a cautious advance and listened to the exchange between Bolan and Schwarz, then stopped stock still at Bolan's "Break off" command. All was silent about him. A vehicle was gunning down the curving driveway, heading out in a squeal of tires. A muted burst of fire that sounded much like Chopper's weapon sounded from the smoky darkness ahead. He moved on, calling out softly for his partner.
"Evade Blues at all cost," Bolan's voice was telling him.
He punched his transmitter button and cried, "I can't find Chopper!"
"Break, Flower! Get the hell out!" Bolan commanded sharply.
"Chopper doesn't have a radio. He don't have the word!" Andromede protested.
"Get... the ... hell... out!"
"Goddammit, goddammit," he said despairingly, then released the transmission switch and yelled, "Chopper! Break off, dammit. Regroup!"
A string of vehicles was whining along the drive now. Andromede wavered, then ran into the smoke.
He found Fontenelli seated on the ground about halfway between the street and the house. He was slumped forward and leaning on his weapon, the muzzle of which was dug into the turf. The front of his nightsuit was warmly wet and sticky, and his eyes stared unseeingly toward the ground. Andromede's quickly exploring fingers found three chest punctures. He laid his friend down alongside his weapon, closed the glazed eyes, and quickly walked away.
Chapter Fifteen
Grand Slam
The Porsche was careening down the hill, Washington behind the wheel, Bolan leaning against the opposite door with the radio in his hand.
That's Bloodbrother, dead ahead," Washington pointed out.
Bolan jerked his head in a nod. "Stay on him," he said; then he spoke into the radio. "Horse! Dump and bail out! You have no chance in that jobby!"
"We got a better idea," Blancanales' voice reported. "We're gonna try a D and D."
"Negative," Bolan snapped. "Jump ship! Let it go!"
"Sorry, Sarge. It's a D and D. Our decision."
"What he talking about?" Washington asked, rolling his eyes toward Bolan. He quickly swung his attention back to his driving chores as the Porsche leaned into a sweeping ninety-degree turn.
"Dummy and Divert," Bolan muttered. "They're trying to lead off the blues."
"Think they can do it?"
Bolan sighed. "I don't know. They're gonna get themselves racked out, that's what. Just might swing the track from everyone else, though." He spoke again into the radio. "Where away, Horse?"
"Route Two and leveling. Gadgets found their new web. Stand by for intel."
"Route Three is maintaining," Zitka advised. Then: "Uh-oh. Trouble at the crossroads."
"Whatisit,Zit?"
"Roadblock! Damn—lookit that! They're running it !"
"Break!"
A brief silence; then: It's Route Three, Junction Two. I am avoiding, resuming track beyond."
Bolan swore under his breath. Washington chuckled and sent the sports car into another squealing turn. "You said tonight's the night, and that's the last thing anyone believed," he told Bolan.
The voice of Gadgets Schwarz came through the radio, speaking in a rapid monotone. "Okay, here's the lay. Containment around periphery. Looks like a hole on Route Four, though. All exits at Routes Two and Three are sealed. Avoid. Run wide on Four. Out."
"Okay, that's great!" Bolan snapped into the radio. "Now, dammit, bail!"
"Negit," Schwarz replied. "D and D is bearing fruit. Will exercise options."
"Roll call!" Bolan commanded.
"Eagle is out and splitting wide on Four," from Bloodbrother Loudelk.
"Track's back on and streaking for skinnytail," said Zitka.
"Comin" 'round the mountain and closing," reported Boom-Boom Hoffower.
"Angling and running for Four," Gunsmoke Harrington sighed.
"I've got Horse in sight," said Flower Child Andromede. "Will cover all possible."
A brief silence followed. Bolan glanced at Washington, punched the transmitter, and barked, "Chopper! Where away?"
"He's away in a lay on the Beverly clay," Andromede reported in a flat voice. "He says spend his pension on the kids in Jersey."
"Confirm!" Bolan snarled.
"He's free, brother, and that's as confirmed as he's going to get."
"Run careful, dammit," Bolan muttered into the radio. The price has already got too high."
Captain Braddock smacked a fist into an open palm and cried, "Get that hole plugged on the Golden State. That's the Route Four they're yakking about!"
The dispatcher waved an excited hand at Braddock and said, "Another gunfight. Pacific Coast and Beverly! The roadblock. Two more cars damaged. I got no nearby units to replace 'em."
Braddock lunged toward the console and quickly surveyed the map set into the glassed top of the desk. "Send these over," he instructed, his index finger circling a flagged area. He moved over to stand in front of an intercom. "Andy, what's the word up there?"
Lieutenant Andy Foster, on the roof with the special intelligence team from the U.S. Navy, responded immediately. "They're scattering like the pieces from an explosion. They've located the new Hardcase net, too, you know."
"Yeah, dammit, I know. I've been listening. What's that stuff about a horse?"
"A rolling control center, we gather. Probably the van."
"Stay on them. Let me know when a definite route of travel can be established." Braddock sighed and turned back to the dispatcher. "Let's swirl south," he said. "Start 'em moving."