Then a shot came from his right, and there was more screaming, and he ran that way. Three people ran toward him, and then past him, shrinking from his gun. He was halfway down the hall when a man lurched into it, seemed to have a gun, was walking in a predatory way. Lucas shouted, "Drop the gun," and the man pivoted into a gunfighter's stance and Lucas fired and the other man fired at the same time, and Lucas went sideways and hit the wall and landed on his face and the man tumbled back through the doorway and out of sight.
Lucas didn't think he'd hit him and kept his pistol on the door, could hear somebody sobbing. Then a woman began a high-pitched keening and then another. A man lurched from another doorway, a slender man in a hospital gown, nobody Lucas had ever seen, and he seemed confused and Lucas began shouting, "Stay back, stay back," but the man continued walking, stepped in front of the doorway where the shooter had been, and Lucas heard somebody yell, "Hey, Don."
The man pivoted toward the doorway and a shot ripped through him and he staggered and went down and Lucas jumped to his feet and ran softly, half crouched, down to the door.
A half second away from it, he fired a single shot at the in-slanted steel door and then did a quick head-peek inside. He'd hoped that the single shot would have jarred the man on the other side, and it had: Taylor stood there in a combat stance but with the pistol pointed at the other side of the door.
The instant he saw Lucas, he lifted his gun to fire, but Lucas jerked back, felt bullet fragments and maybe pieces of wall tile cut his face, dropped, and came in low. A shot banged the door above his head and he pushed his arm and face low around the door frame, center mass, and fired two quick shots into Taylor's body.
Taylor sagged and struggled to control his weapon and Lucas brought the.45 up and fired a third shot, from three feet away, into Taylor's forehead. Taylor went down, dead.
THERE WAS A DEAD WOMAN inside the room with Taylor, and another woman, apparently shot but still alive, huddling under a bed, whimpering. Lucas turned back to the hallway, looked both ways, pulled his cell phone out of his pocket, found Cale's number, and rang him. Busy. He tried Sloan's, got him.
"Where are you?"
"Just inside, Jesus Christ…"
"Shut up. Listen to me. The Big Three are out and they're armed. They have pistols. I just nailed Taylor. I'm on the second floor, right above the stairway that goes down to the isolation area… You know where I'm talking?"
"Yeah, we're coming that way, me and Jenkins and Shrake…"
"Okay, but Biggie and Chase and Grant are still out there. Be careful, there are guys with guns all over the place. I'm going down to the bottom, down to the isolation unit. Before you come in, tell somebody that there are a couple wounded maybe dead, in this hallway… next floor above the main floor."
"Wait and I'll back you up."
"Can't wait. There are three more guys and they're killing people, we've got to cover as much as we can as fast as we can, we've gotta knock these guys down… gotta knock 'em down, be careful, man, be careful. And tell Beloit before you come in that there's a wounded woman in two ninety. In two ninety."
THEN HE WAS UP and running down the hall, the smell of blood in his nose, with the odor of smoke and human waste and the deafening brenk brenk brenk…
Into the stairwelclass="underline" he nearly shot a man halfway up the second flight, the man jumping with fear as Lucas jerked his.45 at him, Lucas lifting his finger off the trigger at the last possible second when he realized that he didn't know the man, that the man wasn't armed.
The man curled against the wall, his hands cupped at his temples, and Lucas shouted, "Find a room, lock yourself inside," heard a boom from somewhere, then another, couldn't decide where the shots came from, but it felt like they were up again.
He'd thought to go down, but again he went up.
There really wasn't much down below, he realized- not many people. If the Big Three and Grant were determined to do as much damage as possible, they'd be on the first floor, or the second or third. He continued up to three, heard another boom. Peeked down the hallway, saw more people down. Two people crawling along the hallway, two lying motionless. More smoke, thin, veiling. Shouting from the left. Doors banging, another boom.
His phone rang; he wanted to ignore it, but it could be information, He pulled it out, poked the answer button. Sloan. "We can hear shoot-ing above us, we're on the way to three."
"I'm already there. I went up instead of down."
"We're on the front steps…"
"I just came up the back. I'm moving into the hallway, you'll be looking right at me, for Christ's sake, don't shoot me…"
Two more booms and a man screaming and Lucas couldn't wait, a shattering of glass, more glass breaking, more screaming, and then laughter. Lucas ran to the doorway where the sound seemed to be coming from, did a peek: a man was battering at a thick glass window with a plastic chair.
In the dim light, he couldn't see who it was, but he thought it might be Lighter. Lucas shouted, "Hey," and the man turned, and Lucas saw that it wasn't Lighter, that he didn't recognize the man at all. Then he saw movement on his right and pivoted and saw a flash, was hit hard in the left arm, taking in the boom, felt himself falling and jerked two shots in the direction of the flash and crawled back out through the doorway into the hall. There was crouching, combat-style movement dawn the hall and he shouted, "Help!"
Sloan shouted back, "Where are you?"
"Down here. I'm hit."
"Ah, Jesus…"
Sloan ran to him in the dim light; the smell of smoke was stronger now, and Sloan came up, Shrake a step behind.
"How bad?" Sloan asked.
The pain was coming on. "I think my arm's busted. Left arm," Lucas said "There's a guy in there to the right. At least a couple people down. I don't think I hit him when I fired back."
SHRAKE DID A PEEK, then put his left arm through the doorway, with his face, ready to fire. Sloan was cutting at Lucas's sport coat with a jackknife. "Let me see… ah, man, you got a hole. It's not bleeding too bad, but it's right below your biceps, right in the middle."
"Yeah, that's what it feels like," Lucas groaned. "I can feel a piece moving… We gotta take this guy."
"You're out of it," Sloan said.
"I can move okay," Lucas said. He stood up, almost fell, propped himself against the wall. There was smoke now, another fire, the hallways clear except for a man at the far end, dragging a mattress for some reason. "Look: I'll go back down and sit in the stairway, block it off. You guys gotta keep this asshole penned up, or take him. There's somebody in there hurt." "You know who it is?"
"No. Could be Biggie," Lucas said.
"That motherfucker," Sloan said. "You go on. We'll take him."
"Get some more support up here," Shrake said. "Jenkins went off with that crappie cop, they could hear something down on one."
"Cell phone," Lucas said. "I can't use mine… "
"Get your ass down to the stairwell," Sloan said. "We'll take care of this."
JENKINS AND THE game warden, whose name was Deacon, saw the flash of the gunshot and moved slowly down the inside wall of the hallway, closing on the door. They found Chase sitting on the shoulders of a dead man, as though the dead man were a low stool, talking to a woman who had propped herself up against a wall. They could hear Chase's voice before they saw him; a low chatter that continued between the brenk brenk brenk of the alarms. When they got right next to the door, they could hear his voice distinctly, as he talked over the racket around them.