Dedicated to the men of the Secret Services of the United States of America
One
The blood spread thick and scarlet over the fisherman's vest. It was a tidy pool of blood, slowly sloughing down the dead man's chest. He was resting comfortably back against a pine tree, his fishing rod in his hand, waiting for a bite.
The remote mountain stream rushed and sang among ferns and moss-covered boulders. The New Zealand air was crisp and clear, sparkling with the throbbing calls of birds. Nick Carter moved forward silently and set his tackle box and rod on the sloping bank. He squatted in front of the dead man.
The instrument of death was a highly sophisticated poison dart fired from a rifle at great distance. It was a weapon used most often by international agents. The killing had been expertly quiet, performed sometime in the last fifteen minutes. The blood was fresh, warm. The killer had known where to find his target. By now, he would have disappeared.
Carter felt the dead man's pockets and took out the wallet. Jerome Mackenzie, the driver's license said, forty-two years old, height five-eleven, weight one-eighty, address in Wellington. What the license didn't say was that the man was also head of New Zealand's civil air authority.
Carter checked the other pockets, and found cash, coins, a pocketknife, and a toothpick in a silver case. He went through the sack lunch and the tackle box filled with flies and weights. Nothing of any use.
He sat back, rubbing the new beard on his chin. He was on vacation. Some vacation He picked up his gear and walked back to the road.
* * *
The mountain police station was built of timbers, with a long porch that abutted other rough buildings in the small village. Tall trees swayed overhead while villagers shopped and rode jeeps up and down the single paved road. Dogs barked. A sheep in a pen behind the gas station chewed thoughtfully on hay.
Inside the police headquarters, Nick Carter nursed a cup of lukewarm coffee and smiled into the suspicious eyes of the local police chief.
"You're telling me that you came all the way from the United States just talk to Mackenzie?" the chief said.
He had a broad face the color of old leather. Sun and wind had weathered his skin and thinned his patience. He drummed his lingers on the arm of his chair.
"Vacation," Carter said again. "A friend in Washington asked me to look Mackenzie up since I was already here. See whether Mackenzie knew anything about a missing American flyer named Rocky Diamond."
"Rocky Diamond? You expect me to believe a name like that? "
Carter shrugged. The irony of the situation made him smile. He'd used the ruse of being on vacation many times in his work He was N3, Killmaster with AXE, the most secret of all United Stales espionage agencies. The ruse usually worked. But now that he really had time off, this small-town policeman in the hinterlands of New Zealand who had no idea who Carter really was had no intention of believing him.
"That's the name," Carter said. "Check it with Wellington."
He stroked his cheeks, feeling the new beard soft against his fingers. Dammit. He wanted this vacation!
"It's being checked," the police chief growled. "Tourists, deer rustlers, marijuana plantations! I might as well be in Auckland!" He stood and marched to the window. "Laws to wear seat belts and license your dog. Parrots that eat the weather stripping off your car's windshield." Annoyance at acts of government and God flushed the chief's face as if they were directed solely at him. He turned to Carter.
"I only found him," Carter said mildly.
"But how did you know where to find him? Were you planning to kill him too?"
"My friend in Washington," Carter explained. "He was in touch with air authority officials in Wellington."
"And this friend of yours?"
"Sorry. A high government official. Top secret. Can't give you a name."
The police chief grimaced. He hadn't liked it the first time Carter had told him. He liked it less now.
"Seems there are a lot of things you can't tell me," the chief said. He poured hot coffee into his mug and sat again behind his desk. "You say you're a chemical engineer from California on vacation, but that doesn't explain why some big shot in Washington wants you to do a secret job for him. You don't know why this Rocky Diamond is important. You don't know anything about Jerome Mackenzie's murder. What do you know?"
Carter laughed.
"My coffee's cold," he said, and he reached for the pot on the edge of the chief's desk and poured. "Look," he said and leaned back, "I'd like to help, but I've only got a week's vacation. All I want is to fish and work on my beard. As it is, I've lost most of today. That leaves me only four more days, and the trout are biting. You've got my statement. My papers are in order. Why don't you do us both a favor and let me get out of here?"
The chief narrowed his eyes. His face was flushed. He had a murder in his precinct, and not of an ordinary local man. Mackenzie was out-of-district and important. Wellington, the nation's seat of government, would be on the chief's back. But he had no legal reason lo hold Carter. He sighed.
"No reason to keep you, I suppose," he admitted. "But stay in the area."
"Glad to." Carter stood and drained his coffee cup. "Plenty of streams around here to keep me occupied."
As he picked up his hat, tackle box, and rod, the front door opened. He walked to the door.
A young patrolman, his face pocked with a lost battle against acne, strode in, a folded piece of paper in his hand.
"Sec you around," Carter told the chief, then started to leave.
"Noel Cash?" the patrolman said to Carter.
"That's right," Carter said, walking out onto the porch.
"Just a minute, sir," the patrolman said politely. He waited until Carter stopped.
Irritation prickled on the hack of Carter's neck.
The patrolman handed the paper to the chief, and the chief read it. He looked up, and for the first time he smiled at Carter.
"Guess I'll have to lock you up," he said with pleasure. He stood, dropping the paper onto his desk. He pulled out a ring of keys. "Telegram says someone from Wellington will be here in an hour to question you."
Carter looked the two men up and down. The chief was heavyset, muscular. The young patrolman soon would be. The eager youth drew the pistol from his belt, pointed it at Carter, and motioned him to the timbered door at the back of the office.
Keeping order in their mountainous region had made them tough and strong. Probably canny, too. But Carter knew that with a few quick karate chops the chief and his junior would be immobile on the floor and Carter would be free.
It was the Killmaster's turn to sigh. He was on vacation. Nothing he could do.
"I'll go quietly," he said, mocking himself.
The chief nodded solemnly, missing the joke, and led Carter into a back hall lined with four cells.
The single occupant, housed in the first cell, snored loudly. The faint aroma of whiskey drifted from his cot.
"Harry won't bother you," the chief said cheerfully and nodded at the sleeping drunk. Now that he could turn Carter over to someone with greater authority, he could be agreeable. "Good-natured sort," he added and unlocked the end cell on the right. "In you go."
Carter walked through and turned. The cell door closed with a clang. The drunk snorted and rolled over. The chief turned the key, locking Carter in. The two police officers walked back into their office, talking, and closed the door.
Carter stood in the center of his small enclosure, surrounded by his long bars and the bars of the other cells. He was trapped in a forest of bars. There were trout streams out there waiting to be fished, and he was locked up. Fat rainbow and brown trout. For a moment he wished he were on assignment. Then at least he could break out of this damned cell.
He threw his gear under the cot and fell on the narrow bed. There was one small window, high up, barred. The afternoon sunlight shone through, making a bright rectangle on the floor sliced with the shadows of more bars.
He folded his hands behind his head and stared at the timbered ceiling. This was what he deserved for doing Hawk a favor. Just a couple of questions, Hawk had said. Nothing big. Shouldn't take much time at all.
He should never have answered the summons of the heat-radiant signal under his skin. He should never have made the telephone call to Hawk's office.
He closed his eyes, thoroughly disgusted. Outside, machinery hummed. People talked, laughed. Children shouted in play. The smell of pines in the fresh mountain air beckoned. The time passed slowly.
He'd chosen New Zealand because it was a quiet nation in international politics. Not like countries in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, or Central America. It was two small islands, shaped like a comma at the bottom of the world: North Island, where he was now, and South Island. Its closest big neighbor nation was Australia, and Antarctica if one considered that frozen multinational continent a country.
The sheep behind the gas station bleated. Dogs barked and birds sang. Jeeps and trucks passed on the road. They were ordinary sounds in a country known for its peacefulness and lack of international intrigue. And this was where Nick Carter, the premier Killmaster, one of the best agents in the world, was jailed.
At last the door from the office opened. The chief sauntered in, followed by a tall woman with flowing chestnut hair. The drunk still snored, lost in his world of dreams.
There he is, the thief announced, his lined face wrinkling even more in an enormous smile. Relief had vastly improved his disposition He gestured grandiosely at Carter and unlocked the cell door. "He's all yours."
"Thanks," the woman said. She had vibrant blue eyes and a long shapely body encased in a light jump suit glued to her curves. She paced into the cell. "I'll interrogate him alone," she told the chief, her gaze fixed on Carter. A small smile played at the corners of her mouth. "Top secret," she explained.
The chief shrugged. "Whatever you say," he said, then locked the door as he left.
She was Michelle Strange, known in international agent circles as Mike, a top agent of New Zealand intelligence, closely allied with MI6 in London. Since New Zealand had so few agents, they could afford to be picky. With her, they'd gotten both brains and beauty.
Carter watched her from his cot, and grinned.
She threw her shoulder bag to the floor and glared at him.
"You bastard!" she snarled. "How come you're in New Zealand without calling me?"
Two
Michelle Strange vibrated with energy. The flowing chestnut hair that curled at her shoulders bounced angrily. Her hands worked the air as she talked.
"How dare you!" she stormed. "We've been together too many times. You insensitive lout! Where are your manners? If I know you're around, I always call you. Vacation. Ha!"
"Mike…"
Nick Carter rolled off the cot.
"Don't you Mike me!" She stamped her foot.
"Now, Mike," he said with a smile. "I was going to call you. Really."
He reached to stroke her cheek. She slapped his hand away.
"As soon as I got back from fishing," he said and grinned.
"Even when I'm on a job, I call you!"
"You don't want a smelly fisherman," he said. "You want an exciting agent."
She turned her back.
"Who says I want you at all?"
He slid a hand up under the mane of hair and kissed the back of her neck.
"A beard, too," she said. "Yeechh."
Her skin tasted fresh, of perfumed bathwater. He ran his hands down her back, over the rounded hips, up her sides. She squirmed but didn't move away.
"I'm not this easy," she said.
"You're never easy," he said. "Just beautiful. Desirable."
She leaned back.
Carter trailed his fingers around the outlines of her full breasts, then cupped them in his hands. She sighed deep in her throat. He rubbed his thumbs on the nipples. She ground her hips into him. Her head turned, taking in the four cells.
"We're not alone," she said, watching the sleeping drunk who continued to snore peacefully.
Carter turned her around. Her head fell back, the lips parted.
"Do you care?" he asked.
She pulled his head down.
They kissed, her lips hot and moist. He unzipped her jump suit, then leaned away to look at her. The breasts fell out, pink and ripe.
The chief could come any minute," she breathed.
He smiled, men pulled the shoulders of the jump suit down to her feet.
She was stark naked. Not a wisp of underwear. All curves and lines. Pink skin showed a reverse silhouette of a bikini, the rest tanned to honey by the New Zealand summer sun. The breasts swayed. The triangle of chestnut hair where her legs met were soft springy curls.
He slid his hand between the legs. She unzipped his pants and moaned. He felt the hot slippenness of her.
She grabbed him around the waist and pulled him between her legs, arching her back. Blood pounded into his head. She bit his ear.
Gently they began moving together, her hips grinding against him. Her movements became shorter, frenzied, fighting herself.
Until she exploded. Screamed into his shoulder. A muffled animal sound of defeat and triumph.
He picked her up, swollen with desire, and carried her to the cot. She raked her nails over his back, whimpering.
More. She wanted more.
He lay her on the edge, her feet dangling to the floor, and knelt between her legs. She lifted her head, looking at him with startled blue eyes. Eyes glazed into new need.
He pulled her legs up over his shoulders and thrust into her. Hard man, soft woman. She reared up, exploding again. Face twisted. Lips and teeth biting off a scream.
Thunder rolled through him. Rocked him into her until he too exploded in the black heat of victory.
* * *
Petit mort, the little death that man and woman achieve at orgasm. The thought made Carter smile. He lay sweating next to Mike. The little death that brought new life, new vigor. He should have called her.
She stroked his beard.
"It's very short," she observed, studying his jaw.
He chuckled.
"Right now I'm short all over."
She ran her hand down his belly. "Awww…" Damn that woman.
"I think you ought to shave it," she said.
"What??"
She laughed quietly.
The beard, you dope." She lay back, smiling contentedly. "We've got to leave soon. The chief was eager to pass you on to me, but his curiosity will get the best of him eventually."
"You're breaking me out?"
"I've got the authority. The chief will send you off with hugs and kisses."
"He's not my type."
She laughed again. He looked at his fishing gear.
"You like to fish?" he said.
"Stop it, Nick," she said and grinned. "We have to talk business. Then I'll see about getting you out. Now, what s all this about Mackenzie?"
"I don't know any more than what I told the chief."
She looked at him with narrowed eyes. She was changing back to the old Mike. Stiff. Professional. Distrusting. She rolled over him and stood, a suspicious virago with a halo of wild chestnut hair. More beautiful than ever.
He had to smile.
"Cut the crap. Nick," she snapped. "What the hell's going on?" She picked up her clothes.
"Far as I can tell, it's a civil air authority matter."
"Don't give me any of that CAA garbage. AXE doesn't work on CAA matters."
"Never has before."
"You're lying to me. I know it. What does AXE want in New Zealand?"
She stepped into her jump suit, wriggled it up around her hips, and tucked in the flushed breasts.
"I'm the only AXE operative here," he said, still smiling. "All I want's my vacation. Can you get some time off too?"
She glared at him. The blue eyes flashed. She zipped up the jump suit.
"Mackenzie was killed by an expert, and for some damned big reason," she said. "We don't have sophisticated killers like that in New Zealand."
"Investigating that sounds more like your job than mine."
"Not if AXE killed him."
"That means you think I killed him."
He gathered his clothes, threw them on the cot, and began to dress. The drunk writhed on his cot and snorted.
"Wha'zit?" Harry the drunk said, batting the air. He sat up abruptly, punching imaginary demons. "Goddamnit all! Bloody thieves!" He opened his eyes and looked around.
Carter buttoned his shirt.
"What about Mackenzie himself?" Carter asked Mike quietly. "Maybe he knew something he shouldn't."
"I miss anything?" the drunk asked, watching Carter and Mike with bleary eyes. "Sorry if I disturbed you," he slurred.
Carter laughed.
"You didn't bother us a bit. Have a good nap?"
Harry rubbed his eyes and swung his legs over the edge of the cot.
"Ohhhh," he groaned, sinking back.
"You bastard," Mike hissed at Carter. "I want to know what's going on! What did you want Mackenzie for?"
"Like I told the chief," Carter said. "I was asked to do a favor, to find out from the man whether he had any information about a missing American flyer. A real maverick. Rocky Diamond."
She stared hard at him and finally nodded.
"Chief Merritt!" she shouted at the office door. "I'm finished!"
She picked up her shoulder bag, and Carter gathered his fishing gear. The sky showed gray with silvery clouds through the small cell window. It was dusk. Mountain night would fall quickly. Carter would get some sleep and be out at daybreak to fish. He could already smell the moist morning air, hear the jump-splash of the trout.
The chief strode down the hallway toward them, keys in hand.
"Hey. Marshal," the drunk called, sitting up again. "Time to let me out?"
"Not yet, Harry," the chief said and smiled. "Get a good meal. Spend the night."
The drunk nodded thoughtfully from his cot.
"You ready?" Chief Merritt asked Mike.
"Right."
The chief unlocked the cell, and she walked through, Carter following. She grabbed the barred door and slammed it shut in his face.
"Mike!"
"He's lying through his teeth," she told the chief. "Hold him for the inquest, and watch him closely!"
She stalked down the hall. The drunk stood up and stumbled to the wall of bars. He grabbed two bars, steadied himself, and watched her.
"Bloody good-looking broad," he observed.
"Dammit, Mike!" Carter shouted.
The chief glanced at Carter, his weatherbeaten face amused. Then he remembered that he still had Carter, alias Noel Cash, on his hands. He frowned, locked the cell, and stuffed the keys in his pocket.
"Wait!" he called to Mike. "I'll get the door for you!"
He ran ahead to open the office door for Mike, an important government official from Wellington with the two best legs he'd ever seen.
She glanced over her shoulder so that Chief Marshal Merritt couldn't see. She grinned wickedly at Carter, stuck out her tongue, and disappeared into the office. She wouldn't be back. The chief closed the door behind them.
Carter dropped his gear and flopped back on the cot.
"She yours?" the drunk wanted to know. "I mean, if I'd had one like that…" He paused, remembering. "It'll enough to make a man stop the drink," he decided.
The bomb exploded in a burst of light and heat.
The impact thundered through the jail. The outside wall of the cell between Carter and the drunk blasted open. Timbers, big pieces of wood, and splinters slashed through the air. The cots rattled and jumped. One toilet flushed spontaneously.
Part of the wall in Harry the drunk's cell disintegrated in the explosion He held onto his bars and looked reflectively back at the gaping hole. It wasn't that he particularly wanted to be free. But when the opportunity was provided on a silver platter, no one should ignore it. He ran toward the hole on wobbly legs.
"Stop!" Carter yelled at him. "You don't know what's out there!"
Carter's cell walls and bars were intact. The darkening night spilled shadows through the gap at the side of the jail. Outside, pines wavered, charcoal and black. "Harry, stop!"
But Harry ran out. He never looked back over his shoulder. It was the principle of the thing.
Instantly the rifle shots rang out, punctuating the village's stunned silence. The first bullet entered the left lobe of Harry's lung and exited through his back. The second bullet caught him as he stumbled with surprise at the pain. It entered the top of his cranium and blew the back of his head off.
Three
The second explosion occurred almost instantly. It shattered the wall of the cell across from Nick Carter. Carter dropped to the floor. Shouts and curses filled the air. Gunfire streaked through the night. It was the two policemen, villagers… and who else?
The office door burst open. Hair flying, Mike Strange hit the light switch and ran down the short hall in the gloom. The young policeman, his pocked face contorted with fear and worry, ran with her.
"It's about time," Carter said.
"What the hell's happening around here?" she demanded.
"Don't really know." He smiled. "I'm on vacation, remember?"
"Vacation! Ha!" Mike said, handing him a.45. "Get in there!" she ordered the policeman.
As she unlocked Carter's cell, the young man unlocked and slipped into Harry's cell. The drunk lay outside, bloody, spread out like a rag doll. The bright light of a full moon glowed on his corpse.
Bullets sang through the hole in the drunk's cell wall. Carter and Mike dropped to the floor. The policeman fell flat, his forehead grazed by a bullet. Determined, shaking, he aimed and fired into the night.
"I can't see anything!" the young man said, shooting again.
Bullets ricocheted in the enclosure and bounced off the bars.
"Watch for their fire!" Carter told him from the floor. "You'll sec the streaks of light."
Carter and Mike crawled to the cell opposite the drunk's where the second wall had been blasted open.
This thing work?" Carter asked, pulling the trigger. It kicked in his hand, the bullet going harmlessly into the ground. It was a good gun, but not as good as Wilhelmina, his 9mm Luger.
"It'd better." Mike said." Watch for the whites of their eyes!"
"You've been seeing too much television," Carter chuckled, then he concentrated on one of the darting shadows that weaved among the pines.
He squeezed the trigger. The figure's arms flew up, and the body keeled over backward.
Gunfire spattered from the side of the building, aimed at the shadowy movements in the trees.
"Chief Merritt?" Carter asked.
Mike nodded and fired. The figure in the distance doubled over and limped off.
"The chief's around the corner with a deputized friend," she said.
"Looks like about a dozen out there," Carter mused, watching for a target.
"We're outnumbered. We got a few, though,"
Quietly the two agents concentrated on their work as the hot stench of gunfire slowly filled the jailhouse. They waited for the movements or telltale streaks of gunfire that would give them targets. Bullets occasionally whistled over their heads. They shot in return, often missing as the attackers disappeared behind trees and deep into shadows. The pine branches sang in a growing breeze, the eerie sound whining between the cracks of gunfire. Each pause between bullets lengthened. Tension thickened the air.
"It's too quiet," Mike whispered at last. "They're planning something."
Suddenly a burst of gunfire came from the young policeman behind them.
They're coming!" he yelled, firing again and again.
Mike bolted.
"Come on!" she shouted at Carter.
Carter started to rise but thought better of it and dropped flat again.
"You go!"
She ran through the jail and flattened herself down next to the policeman. Carefully choosing her shots, she fired. It didn't sound like a major attack.
Carter slid to the side of the hole, his body hidden behind the ragged remains of the cell wall. He counted the seconds. If it was going to happen, it would be soon.
His sharp eyes studied the wavering darkness. Nothing. They were a gutsy group, the attackers. And they'd come prepared in dark clothing that blended with the night. They had accurate weapons, and there was something — or someone — in the jail that they wanted. Dead. They weren't fools. Carter couldn't believe that they would be so stupid as to…
Then he saw them. Four, spread out. Creeping toward what they hoped was an abandoned entrance. Then, with no bullets coming at them, they ran, confident, a coalescing juggernaut. The group on the other side of the jail that Mike and the young policeman fired at were a diversion. This small group before Carter was the one that expected to conquer the jail.
With the remarkably rapid reflexes mat the Killmaster was legendary for — and that he hoped would keep him from getting killed — he leaned out beyond the ragged edge of the wall.
He aimed at the figure coming from his blind spot, and fired.
The body flew back into nothingness.
Carter ducked back.
Three bullets bit into the wall around Carter's head. Splinters flew. He jumped up and came out from a new spot. Bullets pummeled the spot where he'd been.
Quickly he aimed and fired twice.
Two more fell, as dark as coal against the black ground shadows.
A bullet sang into the wall, then another. Wood dust stung his eyes and he closed them, waiting for the soothing tears.
"What's going on?" Mike shouted from behind.
Carter knelt. He heard the feet pounding, light, but a heavy body that couldn't disguise its mass.
"Slay where you are!" Carter called back to Mike.
"They're hidden!" Mike said. "We can't get any of them. It's like shooting at ghosts'"
The attacker lunged through the door.
Carter's eyes flew open, his vision blurry. His eyes burned like fire.
The gun was a wavering black stick in the attacker s hand.
Carter rolled into the legs.
The gun came down, slicing the air.
Carter leaped up.
Armed for the belly, kicked.
Missed, smashed the gun across the cell.
"Get out of the way, Nick!" Mike yelled, worried. "I can't get a clear shot!"
The big hands slashed toward Carter's neck. He saw the hands clearly. Thick hands with broad fingers accustomed to heavy work.
Carter reared back and smashed his elbow into the attacker's chest.
Ribs cracked. The attacker grunted and stepped aside.
Carter pulled back a fist that had power enough to flatten a gorilla. This man he'd take alive, then question.
The shot rang out.
"No!" Mike shouted. "Nick had him!"
The attacker's belly erupted. A volcano of blood spewed out. The blackened face of the attacker looked down at himself, stunned. Suddenly the jail and surroundings were quiet. He seemed to listen to the silence, then he pitched forward onto his knees, wobbled, and lifted a foot to stand. Helplessly Carter watched. The man was already dead. At last he acknowledged his end. He sank onto the floor in a sea of blood.
"Dammit, Perry," Mike complained sadly to the young policeman. "We could've questioned him."
Behind Mike the full moon hung fat and low on the horizon, illuminating an irregular patch inside the jail where she stood glaring at the young man.
The policeman named Perry looked at her blankly. He wiped the palm of one hand on his pant leg, over and over, while the other nervously tapped the barrel of his gun against the other leg. It had been his first gun battle. He'd be jumpy for days.
Mike sighed, then patted his back.
"It's too late now," she said. "Forget it."
Carter walked to her. Perry stared at him, miserable.
"The others disappear?" Carter asked.
She nodded. "Just stopped. They didn't get what they wanted."
"I'd better check outside," he said. "Come on. Perry. Let's see what we can find."
The young man stared at him, the pocks deep on his face in the gloom.
"When you're scared, it's better to do something," Carter said kindly. "You've got a bullet burn on your forehead. You've already been wounded. The worst is over. Don't you want to know where your chief is?"
The youth's eyebrows suddenly shot up. He crossed the room in long strides and exited through the hole in the jail wall where Carter had been.
Carter smiled briefly.
I'll be back," he told Mike, leaving her to check the dead attacker on the jail floor.
He slipped past poor Harry and into the fresh night. The smell of gun smoke tainted the mountain air. Slowly the birds began to sing again. The tall firs swayed overhead with the sinning wind.
Silently padding, gun safely in his hand, Carter moved around the perimeter of cleared land behind the rough jailhouse. Pine needles brushed his cheek. Dried duff softened the ground beneath his feet. He quickly found where the attackers had hidden during the last diversion. A thick log was piled high with branches. Behind it, grass was matted, duff kicked into piles where bodies had sprawled to fire at Mike and Perry.
He walked on, listening for human sounds in the forest. Altogether he found seven dead bodies, some close to the woods, others near the jail. They were dressed in black jump suits. Caucasians, their laces blackened for camouflage. All carried new Soviet 5 45mm AK-74 Kalashnikov assault rifles, smaller caliber versions of the traditional 7.62mm AK-47 model. The new models were light, tough, and easy to shoot, ideal for the Russian style of fighting that called for bursts of sustained fire rather than carefully aimed shots.
He returned to the jail. The lights were on once more. Villagers moved quietly toward the building, hesitant, not talking. Some earned hunting rifles.