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KNIGHT'S REPORTS: 3 Book Set Page 27


  But over the side of the rounded top I go, opposite the Chinook, feet first, my hands flat against the tank, attempting to slow my fall.

  My lucky day … my feet find the inch-and-a-half safety railing that’s about four feet above the rail and protects workers from stepping too close to the car. I’ve stopped sliding, and am now standing on it. I sidestep cautiously to the middle ladder of the tank car, temporarily shielded from the view of the Chinook’s heavy machine gunner.

  The mercs in the Chinook seem to think I’ve fallen off completely, and I’m no longer a threat. The big bird flies over and speeds away.

  I move past the ladder and continue sidestepping carefully, my hands still flat on the tank shell, until I reach the end running-board walkway. From there, I assess my next challenge, an open-top hopper loaded with wood poles.

  After climbing the end ladder of the hopper car, I push up onto the thick steel top cord and step like a tight-rope walker on the six-inch-wide side wall stiffener, probably fifteen feet above the rail bed.

  Finally to the end, I see that I’m nearing the fuel station and the Blackhawk that’s preparing to leave. The hazmat train is moving slowly beside me on the next track over.

  On the tall box car I’m now facing, there’s no ladder extending to the top and no roof walkway. I toss my pry bar onto the car first and then leap, my arms slamming onto the roof, my torso into the end of the car. But I’m able to find purchase enough on the steel, ribbed roof sheet.

  Climbing on top, I recover my buggy bar and limp-sprint toward the end, hoping to make a last bit of big trouble for my adversaries.

  The Blackhawk is lifting, and about to fly over the train. I know I must throw the bar with all my might, using my running speed to help propel my compact javelin to its target: the UH-60’s big windshield.

  The Blackhawk is over the train, nearly 100 feet away when I reach the end of the box, leap and heave the bar. Even though I toss it high, there’s no way the thing will make the distance to the helo’s cockpit.

  Twisting from the force of my pitch, I fall fifteen feet to an empty wood-decked flat.

  I will land on my back.

  But, as I land, I see my throw wasn’t completely without merit. The bar passes into the helo’s rotor path, making contact with at least one of the Blackhawk’s four rotor blades. It shatters one blade, then another one fragments like a breaking icicle, and the helo tips, spins sideways, does a wild cavort, and crashes back into the diesel fuel rack.

  No pain comes in my back from my landing onto the flatcar’s deck. I only see bright lights, both behind my eyes as well as from the conflagration at the fuelling station. Bright white, yellow flames, smoke and then complete darkness.

  * * *

  I awakened in a fog, the familiar clickety-clack of the train wheels on the rail, a soothing sound before the pain from my back, shoulder and foot jarred me to full awareness. Rows of lights appeared above me, flying by. Like a blanket being yanked off, the lights were gone, and I saw the star-filled night sky. I realized the train had just exited the six-mile-long Moffat Tunnel.

  Hope returned. My train had been leaving before the hazmat train. I might be out in front of it. There was still a chance I could stop Thundertrain. But how? And could I stop it without endangering innocent lives?

  The answer came to me after a couple minutes when I was able to roll painfully to my side, crawl to my feet and drop off the low flatcar as the train slowed for a curve and a crossing.

  Before me on the shoulder of a snow-covered road, a fuel truck was stuck in the snow. I’ve driven semi-trailer trucks before. This one didn’t look that stuck.

  I climbed up onto the driver-side cab step and yanked the door open.

  The driver had been eating a late lunch. His eyes mooned at me, his mouth full of sandwich.

  “I’m getting you out,” I told him.

  He gulped down his mouthful. “Thank God,” he said. “I’ve been sitting here for six hours. You with the state?”

  “No,” I told him. “Get out. I’m getting you out of the truck.” I pulled the startled driver from the cab, and he stumbled into the snow. “Sorry — no time to explain. You’d better get out of here. Run. Get as far away as you can. Fast.”

  Chapter 18

  Kick in the Caboose

  11:30 PM MST

  Doc sat in the caboose, waiting for any opportunity to fight. He’d had enough.

  With his mouth gagged, hands and feet bound tightly and a fabric bag over his head, he could do little but listen and hope to somehow seize a fraction of a second and gain the upper hand.

  It would be impossible. It would be a miracle.

  Before he rammed the hazmat train two nights ago, he’d jumped and was lucky to land in a deep drift. Ol’ Windy and her two remote locomotives had collided with an LP gas tanker eleven cars from the end of the train. They hit with such force that the snow blower consist had driven the LP tanker about fifty feet up a snow-covered slope before it exploded, raining down fiery pieces of steel.

  That was the last thing Doc remembered before being awakened by three men in white camouflage and carrying assault rifles. When the LP gas tanker had been forcefully separated from the rest of the train, it caused the entire train to automatically set its emergency brakes. It had also created a fair-size avalanche from the rocky slope above it that did considerable to douse the huge flames that erupted from the tank car. All the ice and snow had also made even the idea of re-railing and coupling back into the last ten tankers, impossible.

  Once the train’s brake system air pressure was restored on what remained of the hazmat train, it moved on with Doc tied up in the lead locomotive’s toilet. After they made Slaughterhouse Yards, he was transferred to where he was now, the caboose that had been added to the hazmat train.

  Doc had no idea how long he’d been left alone inside the caboose. But try as he may, he was unable to even budge from his seat on the caboose’s side bench. From outside he’d heard explosions, gunfire, helicopters, and excited, loud voices.

  He had to think that somehow, his son Ethan was involved, and he prayed his boy was okay. The police were one thing. The FBI another. The National Guard something different, as well. But Ethan — he was something altogether different. In a fight against overwhelming odds, if Doc was ever in the position to have the choice of a squad of any of the aforementioned groups or Ethan by himself, Doc would have always picked his son.

  When Doc heard the rear door of the caboose open and what sounded like a troupe of people come shuffling in, he hoped an opportunity was about to present itself.

  When the commotion settled, a woman’s voice said, “All right. Listen to me. You are being held captive. You will not be harmed as long as everyone cooperates and this day goes our way. We are not terrorists. We are contractors. We work for pay. We do not want to kill unless we are paid to do it. We have not been paid to harm you. That said, if you get in the way of our jobs — of getting paid, do not expect to live long.

  “Your arms are tightly bound. Two of my men are coming around now to bind your legs, as well. If you need to use the toilet, you might as well do it in your pants. It will be several hours before you’re released, and that’s if we are allowed to complete our job as planned. You will not be released until our job is done.”

  Doc felt the woman’s presence in front of him. “Your woman and your two grandchildren are here and safe, along with Sites and several other hostages. They will not be harmed unless your son does not cooperate.”

  Doc tried to yell to the woman to go straight to Hell, but the words came out in a strangled mumble.

  “That’s not what we need, right now. You see, your son’s creating trouble for us. He’ll never stop us, don’t get me wrong. But he is complicating things enough to where he’s about to get a bunch of innocent people killed — including you and your grandkids. You see, we have other hostages. We don’t need you except to use to convince your son to get out of our way. If using you t
o stop him doesn’t work, you are just more of the problem, and are unnecessary. Now do you understand?”

  Doc didn’t move or make a sound this time.

  “Good. Now, if I can get him to talk with you, do you think you can convince him that what he’s doing is futile, and that the lives of you, your woman and his own children are a stake?”

  This could be his chance. Doc never lied. He absolutely hated those who did. It was the principal of the thing. He’d always said that if someone put a gun to his head and threatened to put a bullet in his brain if he couldn’t say the sky was yellow instead of blue, he’d rather they pulled the trigger.

  But the gun was not to his head, alone. It was to his Mary’s head. It was to his dear grandchildren’s heads.

  Doc didn’t hear the woman anymore. He heard no voices, no explosions, he couldn’t hear the banging together of couplers, or the accelerating and humming of the big diesels switch engines in the distance.

  A few minutes later, the caboose jolted and he felt motion. He tried time and again to get lose, to push the gag out of his mouth with his tongue, to twist his hands free. At least fifteen minutes passed before he heard booted feet come to his side and the fabric bag was yanked from his head. A bearded man in white camo utilities grabbed his gag. The guy wrestled it out of Doc’s mouth and let it fall below his chin.

  “You’d better say the right thing,” he said, with an odd sort of English accent. No, it was South African. “Your family’s lives are dependent on what you tell your son.”

  The bearded man held a walkie-talkie radio in front of Doc’s face.

  “Damn it, man,” Doc croaked. “Give me some water. I can’t talk to him …,” he swallowed in a parched throat, “… like this. He’ll think you’ve been beating me up.”

  The bearded South African pulled out a canteen and held it to Doc’s mouth and poured.

  Doc gagged and shook his head. “Come on. I’m an old man. Cut these ties and let me hold the damn thing. I won’t go anywhere. My feet are bound.”

  “No.”

  “Were your orders to have me talk?”

  He didn’t answer.

  “And did those orders say anything about not letting me use my hands so that I could drink and sound like I’ve not been abused?”

  The guy set the canteen and the radio down. He pulled out a KA-BAR knife from his waist belt, placed the blade under the zip tie holding Doc’s proffered hands, and sliced it in one quick move.

  Just as quickly, Doc shot up, standing, launching from the bench seat, his head crashing into the man’s chin.

  Doc stood over the man and gazed down at him.

  “Hot damn!” he said. “Ethan would be proud!”

  It was a knockout punch.

  He rubbed his head, thinking the big-headed bastard’s chin should have been cushioned a little by the beard, but he sure couldn’t tell it.

  “Damn. Being a hero hurts.”

  In two minutes, Doc had the man’s knife, his own feet cut loose, and his mercenary guard bound and gagged in the same manner he had been. He cut loose the other captives, eight in all; two women besides Mary, four kids including his own grandkids, and John Sites.

  Doc Knight’d had enough. It was time to move.

  He went to the head end of the caboose, opened the door and stepped outside. He recognized the town they were passing through as Winter Park. They’d be going through the Moffat Tunnel and be only a few miles out of Denver suburbs.

  Doc stepped across the couplers to the white tank car in front of him, then knelt down and turned the cutout cock closed on the brake pipe air hose. He stepped back over to the caboose and did the same thing on the way car’s brake pipe. After moving to the right side of the end platform, he stepped down the caboose steps and pulled up on the uncoupling lever. The caboose separated from the train with a small pop. He went to the wheeled handbrake, spun it tight and the car slowly came to a stop.

  * * *

  After rocking the truck, working the steering wheel and doing a considerable amount of cussing, I finally drove the fuel truck off the shoulder where it had been stuck.

  My cell rang and I put on the brake, hoping somehow it would be good news. Since the phone rang, it meant service had been restored, at least to some extent on this side of the mountains — the front range.

  As I answered, I noticed my cell phone battery was nearly dead.

  “Ethan, we’re okay!” It was Doc.

  “Dad,” I gasped, “where are you?”

  “In the caboose. I cut us loose from the hazmat train.”

  “The kids? Mary?”

  “We’re all okay. And looks like John Sites will pull through if we get him to the emergency room soon. They let my Mary bandage him up while they flew them in. John still needs surgery, but he’s stable. Between what John’s told me and from what I’ve been hearing, you’ve been kicking some butt out there. Glad you’re on the case, son. But, as if you didn’t know it, these bastards mean business — so watch your ass.”

  “Where exactly are you?”

  “Just outside Winter Park — but listen, Ethan. We’ve got some folks here that say they’re being used as hostages for leverage. A lady here with two kids about Amy and Dusty’s ages says her husband is the pilot of that Chinook.”

  As I listened to Doc, I dismantled the Beretta 9mm I’d gotten from Big Deal. I opened the truck cab door enough to put the gun’s bent slide into the jam beside one of the hinges, and I pulled on the door, springing against it. After a couple of attempts, it looked as if the slide might be straight enough to work.

  Doc continued, “Another lady says her husband’s the copilot. They’re telling me their men were coerced into flying the helicopter for those mercenaries. But since the guys’ families are safe and sound, if we can get word to them, maybe they’ll help do what they can to stop those bastards.”

  “Do the men have cell phones?” I asked as a reassembled the gun.

  “They took them away when they took their families.”

  “What are the men’s names?”

  “Boss Grimes and Ted Newman. Both National Guard captains. Grimes is the pilot.”

  “Okay, Dad,” I said, and I pulled the Beretta’s slide back. I allowed the slide to snap back into place, racking a 9mm cartridge into the chamber. I hoped the gun would work — hoped holding onto the thing when it was jammed was worth the pain and the large bruise I was sure was just above my sacrum from when I fell onto the flatcar with the Beretta under the back of my belt. “You sure you’re okay?”

  “Yeah, we’re okay, but you know what, son?”

  “What Dad?”

  “They killed The Boys,” Doc said, a crack in his voice. “John said they mowed The Boys down, shot ‘em like they was nothing.”

  I took a deep breath. The Boys were Docs dogs. He loved them as much as anything he’d ever had, apart from his human family. I was sure he would have given his own life for theirs — he loved them that much.

  “I know, Dad. I saw them.”

  “Well, you don’t worry none about us, son. Just stay safe, but stop those bastards!”

  I thought for a moment. “Dad, what’s Captain Grimes’ lucky number?”

  “What?”

  “Ask his wife. What’s his lucky number?”

  After a couple seconds, he said, “Six.”

  I ended the call and speed-dialed Judge Hammer.

  Chapter 19

  Mama Lo’s Lei Laid Low

  Mama Lo answered as usual. “Mama’s Lei’s awaitin’ for you, hon!”

  I knew whenever she talked to me about her “lei” she always meant “lay”. In her heart, the always jovial Mama Lo seemed to have a warm spot for me — and a warm spot in another part of her body for me, as well.

  “Listen, Mama. I need your help.”

  “Ah, E Z, hon, my day’s more better, already — you a callin’ me! Anything for you, tall, dark an’ handsome.”

  “I don’t have any idea whose side
the Judge is on. I don’t care, right now. But I need you to be on my side for the next ten minutes. I’m a mile or two from the east entrance to Moffat Tunnel —”

  “I know where you are, honey. You’re one-point-four miles from the tunnel, to be ‘xact. Knew that from your last call. I got you triangulated. By the way — so glad those cute kids o’yours an’ your sweet daddy’s okay.” She paused. “My understandin’ of your little world’s gotten a lot more better since they got cell service back up in that area.”

  I could have been pissed that she’d been eavesdropping from thousands of miles away. But I wasn’t. I’d only met this woman once, but from my many conversations with Mama Lo, I knew that she sees data, piecing it together in her mind, like I would pictures. She not only reads the numbers, information and digital symbols, but they actually form images in her head as naturally as looking at a photo. When the data is dynamic, to her it’s like watching a movie. She’s brilliant. She’s a genius.

  She is legally blind.

  I imagined the large Hawaiian woman sitting at a wide bank of computer screens, her thick glasses making her look like some kind of large, bug-eyed Japanese Beetle — she loves wearing jade green kimonos with large pink and yellow hibiscuses.

  “I’m in a fuel truck near a small railroad maintenance facility of some type.”

  “Wait a minute … yeah. I see you. Wave toward their office building. The UP railroad has a security camera on a light pole about 200 feet in front of you.”

  “Geez!”

  “We ain’t talked in a while, hon. Been pretty borin’ around here without you callin’ — more worser’n you can ‘magine. An’ you done forgot how good I was.”