Manhunter by Chris Ryan (best books to read for beginners txt) ๐
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- Author: Chris Ryan
Read book online ยซManhunter by Chris Ryan (best books to read for beginners txt) ๐ยป. Author - Chris Ryan
Bowman gave them four blasts from the C8. He aimed at a third figure crawling through the next window, squeezed the trigger and got the click. He tossed the weapon aside, ripped the Glock out of the holster and put two shots into the manโs centre mass.
โThatโs it,โ Gregory hollered from the salon. โIโm out. Nothing left! Fall back!โ
Bowman backed out of the dining room. At the rear window, Gregory retrieved a hand grenade from his pocket. He tore the pin out, posted it through the broken pane. Then he ran over to Bowman and the two men retreated towards the corridor. There was a loud bang from outside as the grenade exploded, momentarily scattering the rebels.
Bowman pushed the pressel switch attached to his vest. โWeโre out of ammo,โ he said. โDown to our pistols. Rebels about to breach the back of the stronghold.โ
โEnemies are almost at the front door,โ Casey said over the team radio. โI canโt hold them off! Falling back.โ
Bowman and Gregory ran on. They had only a few seconds before the building was overrun. Seconds to find a secure part of the building to hole up in. Retreating to the basement or the rooftop wasnโt an option. They were too far away. The atrium would be overrun with rebel fighters by the time they got there.
Gregory stopped in front of the door to the private study.
โIn here,โ he said.
They darted into the room. Gregory slammed the door shut, twisted the lock. He shouted to Bowman, and they dragged over a bulky bookcase and wedged it sideways against the jamb. The sounds of splintering glass and wood came from the other side as the rebels tried to gain entry through multiple points along the terrace and the front of the building.
Bowman stepped back. He waited in front of the barricaded door. Pistol in his hand, his clothes caked in sweat and dirt and lead particles. His adrenaline levels were through the roof. Any second now, the enemy was going to storm inside.
And then it will all be over.
โGive us a couple of those,โ Gregory said, pointing to the grenades Bowman was carrying.
Bowman handed them over. โNever thought Iโd die in this shithole,โ he said.
โItโs not over yet.โ Gregory smiled grimly. โWe can still take down as many of these bastards as possible. Letโs give them something to remember us by, eh?โ
Bowman nodded. โIโm ready.โ
They waited.
The crashing noises suddenly cut out.
Bowman stared at the closed door.
โWhat the fuckโs going on?โ he asked after a few seconds.
โListen,โ Gregory said.
Bowman pricked his ears.
At first, he didnโt hear it. Then a sound came from somewhere beyond the walls of the stronghold. A noise that was instantly familiar to any seasoned Hereford operator. The deep throated bark of a Browning .50 calibre machine gun.
โChrist, have they got more hardware coming in?โ Bowman said in despair.
Gregory crinkled his brow. โI didnโt think the rebels had any Brownings.โ
Bowman spoke into his throat mic. โWhatโs going on out there?โ he asked.
Silence.
He tried again. โJohn? Patrick?โ
Still nothing.
Then Webb came over the radio, shouting excitedly, โTheyโre here! Itโs D Squadron! Theyโve arrived!โ
Bowman and Gregory hastily dragged the bookcase away from the door. They paused outside the study for a moment, checking for any sign of the enemy. Then they hastened down the hallway into the salon, Bowman sweeping his eyes left to right as he led the way. Gun smoke hung like a veil over the room. He hurried over to the shattered window, gazed out past the empty terrace at the rear garden.
An armoured vehicle had gone static to the east. Bowman recognised it at once. A Regiment-modified Jackal, rigged up with a fearsome amount of firepower. Twin-mounted GPMGs on the front, a belt-fed MK19 grenade launcher operated by a third man on the back. Twenty soldiers in camo kit and plate armour charged forward on foot while the bloke on the back of the Jackal pumped the grenade launcher. They were engaging the enemy using the tried-and-trusted fighting tactics of 22 SAS. The Jackal providing the heavy support fire, the men on foot sweeping forward in five-man assault groups. The soldiers blasted away with their C8s at the rebels as they bolted towards the rear fence.
Mallet had made contact with D Squadron. Bowman heard the Scot in his earpiece as he talked with the squadron over the open comms system.
โThere are friendlies in the stronghold,โ he was saying. โDo not engage, repeat do not engage.โ
Behind the assault groups, the guy on the MK19 chugged away at the fleeing targets. Grenades churned up the earth, shovelling clumps of loose soil into the air, atomising the few rebels left standing. Within seconds, the ground to the rear of the stronghold had been almost cleared of enemy combatants.
Bowman felt an indescribable sense of relief. โThey made it. Thank fuck.โ
โTheyโll slice through this lot in no time,โ Gregory remarked. โItโll be over in a minute now.โ
โYes.โ
He turned to Gregory. The two men shared a look. Something unspoken passed between them. A bond only those who had stared death in the face could understand.
โCheck on the family,โ Bowman said. โIโll check on the rooftop.โ
They jogged out of the salon. Back down the corridor, past the study, into the atrium. Casey appeared from a separate hallway to the left, a dazed look on her face.
โIs it over?โ she asked in a weak voice.
โIt will be shortly,โ said Bowman. โThe lads in D Squadron are taking over now. Our partโs done.โ
โThank God.โ
She slumped to the floor, as if her tired legs simply couldnโt support her any longer. Bowman left her by the stairs and climbed back up to the roof, his weary muscles making one last effort.
On the rooftop, Mallet was busy giving fire orders to D Squadron. Bowman heard him directing them onto targets from his vantage point high above the action. Webb crouched beside him, a blood-speckled field dressing wrapped around his head. There
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