Counterpoint
Counterpoint
John
Day
This novel is entirely a work of
fiction.
The names, characters, and
incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination.
Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or
localities is entirely coincidental.
http://johnday.webplus.net/
This book is licensed for your personal
enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other
people. If you would like to share this book with another person,
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Thank you for respecting the hard
work of this author.
Copyright ©
2014 John Day
All rights
reserved.
Smashwords Edition
Smashwords
ISBN: 9781311166395
Chapter - The start of it
all.
It was early morning in Caserta, just
north of Naples. The air was fresh and still, the sun already
warming the air, and casting a green light through the tall trees,
around the clearing.
Just out of sight of a small side road,
the tension was mounting; the exchange of drugs and €2,000,000 was
under way.
Tim had already cocked the machine
pistol before he left his car, now he glided silently out from
behind the buyers van. He had circled behind the group of six young
men, three of his and three of the buyers. Before they saw him, he
opened fire, scything through the six of them before they could
shoot back.
Snapping out the used clip and fitting
a full one, he studied the crumpled bodies.
No one moved.
Without glancing up, he raised his free
hand and beckoned to the red Fiat approaching him, 100 metres away.
Carla, a pretty, 26 year old blond, floored the accelerator and the
car darted towards Tim, tyres squealing and smoking as they clawed
the tarmac. Seconds later, it skidded to a halt; Carla opened the
driver’s door and popped the boot lid. Tim tossed the canvas bags
of heroin and money into the boot, and slammed the lid shut.
As he ran to the open driver’s door,
Carla slid over into the passenger seat. A shot rang out; a bullet
starred the windscreen, and penetrated just above the steering
wheel.
“Ah!” She screamed.
If she had not moved when she did, the
bullet would have smashed into the base of her throat. The bullet
passed out through the door opening, as Tim ran into it. He was gut
shot.
The sledgehammer impact of the bullet,
was not enough to overcome Tim’s onward rush, to get into the car.
He doubled up and fell in. Carla pulled him in towards her, and
eased him upright in his seat. Stunned at the sight of the blood,
oozing from between his fingers as he clasped the wound, she
suddenly realized what had happened.
Another two shots rang out; both hit
the bodywork.
Tim let out a cry of rage; grabbing the
steering wheel with one hand and gear lever in the other. Revving
hard, the car shot forward towards the gunman.
Mortally wounded, one of the six men
had recovered enough, to take revenge for the double cross, and
fired at the driver’s position, in the hope of a hit.
The accelerating car hit the bodies
with a violent lurch; the frantically scrabbling tyres clawed and
tore at clothing and flesh. Tim enjoyed the bumping, slithering
crunching sound as the car tore into and over the corpses.
The gunman had tried to get up, and out
of the way of the car, but it hit him full in the face, throwing
him backward and under the car.
Carla braced herself until the ride
smoothed out, and looked tensely at Tim. How long could he control
the speeding car, and how could she help him?
Tim’s face was fixed in a wild grimace;
staring ahead, he was unaware of anything thing except escape. He
had lost all reason, and was heading on a road, leading to town,
instead of into the mountains, as planned.
A hidden police car waiting for early
morning speeders lurched into motion. Tim’s Fiat took a tight right
hand bend, tyres squealing in a barely controlled four-wheeled
drift, in front of it.
Carla had just noticed the police car
and shouted a warning to Tim. He did not hear her. He was starting
to go into shock now, and was losing consciousness. The Fiat
swerved from one side of the road to the other. In Tim’s hands, a
crash was only seconds away, and arrest would certainly follow.
Carla grabbed the steering wheel and
regained directional control; however, the car was still
accelerating. Tim slumped against the door in a faint, his foot
pressed hard on the accelerator. Carla reached for the ignition
switch on the side of the steering column, and turned it off.
Immediately the Fiat lost speed.
Steering with one hand, she reached
across and opened the driver’s door slightly. The air tearing past
the door prevented it from fully opening. Carla knew she had to
push Tim out, somehow. It had to be when the car was taking a sharp
bend, and centrifugal force would help throw him out.
Regulating the road speed by switching
the ignition on and off, and steering with the other hand, Carla
could only wait for the right moment. The police car was gaining
ground rapidly, so time was running out, fast!
Carla approached a large roundabout at
the edge of town; it was just what she needed. She deliberately
took the roundabout in the wrong direction, drifting across into
the oncoming lane.
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