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He leaned over the seat and gave her a kiss on the cheek, dropping the vial beside her. She turned her head, acknowledging the trust he was placing in her, and kept turning until their lips met. After a moment, and another shot sounding in the woods, he broke contact and put the two tablets to his lips.

“I hope this works,” he said, before popping them and crunching them between his teeth. “And if I forget who you are, it’s nothing personal.”

“I love you,” she said.

“I know. And I’m sorry I gave you hell about sneaking the Halcyon. You were doing it to save me.”

I was doing it to save both of us.

She squeezed his hand. “Protect Wendy and Roland. We need them.”

He pulled away. “Doesn’t it seem convenient? They invite us up here, and suddenly it’s a survivalist showdown? But I think the feds jumped the gun. Right, Mr. Vice President?”

Forsyth remained silent, his head down and eyes closed as if he was praying. As Mark closed the door and headed for the woods, he jerked alert.

“You should do your husband a favor and kill him now, while his back is turned and he still trusts you,” Forsyth said to her. His eyes were bright with secret, inner knowledge-or manic delusion.

“You’re crazy.”

“We all are. But I saw God in the Monkey House, Dr. Morgan. And I don’t mean a presence, a feeling, a theory. I mean God. And He gave me a purpose.”

“Come on, Wallace. You were dosed with Seethe. We all freaked out that night. It was a chemical reaction and nothing more.”

She was only half listening, watching Mark through the front windshield. He waved from the edge of the woods and then slipped between the dark trees.

“Don’t you believe in destiny and prophecy?” Forsyth said.

“I believe in science.”

“Then here’s some science for you.”

Before she could stop him, Wallace grabbed the vial from the seat. “We knew Darrell Silver was refining Halcyon, but we didn’t know where he’d hidden it. I apologize for using you as bait, but he wouldn’t trust us. Especially when he started playing with Seethe.”

“Seethe was destroyed.”

“Silver is a genius. He was able to fill in the gaps and extrapolate it from Halcyon, just like Sebastian Briggs did. He claims he gave Seethe an upgrade, like he told you. But you didn’t believe him.” He held the vial up as if it were the sacramental chalice at a communion. “But I guess we’ll find out soon enough.”

His words finally dawned at her. “Wait. You’re saying that’s not Halcyon?”

He looked at the vial. “‘And the fifth angel poured out his vial upon the seat of the beast; and his kingdom was full of darkness; and they gnawed their tongues for pain.’”

She struggled to keep the semiautomatic pointed away from Forsyth’s face, because her finger begged to wrap around the trigger. “Mark just took three doses of Seethe?”

Wallace Forsyth grinned, and God wasn’t behind those wicked, twisted lips. Only darkness.

CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

Gundersson had been prepared for the unexpected.

It was part of his training, and Harding had warned him that he was walking on quicksand. Somebody wanted Wendy and Roland, and after Wendy had told him the Morgans were on their way, he figured the odds of all hell breaking loose had increased exponentially. But the preemptive strike caught him by surprise.

Just the way Wendy had the night before.

She stood over her husband, swinging the frying pan nonchalantly at her side as if she were on her way to cook some bacon. Her eyes were vacant and hollow, staring past the wall as if heeding some unspoken command.

Gundersson was familiar with that expression, because he’d seen it in the firelight as they’d coupled. She’d been ravenous, almost frightening in her passion, as if she wanted not just to seduce him but to consume him.

What in the holy hell did Briggs plant in your head?

“Did you kill him?” Gundersson asked her, glancing at the prone body before returning to his surveillance. He’d seen shadows in the underbrush, but he couldn’t tell if the attackers were paramilitary or regular field agents of some kind.

“I just made him hurt,” she said. “Like he hurt my painting.”

Her gaze went to the chair, and Gundersson followed it. The painting was hidden behind the chair, leaning against the wall. He’d heard of people dying for their art, but killing for it?

“Keep your head down,” he said. “These guys are pros.”

“I thought you were a pro, too.”

For all her sexual prowess, Gundersson found he didn’t like her very much. She’d drained him dry and he still felt hollow, and the first twitch of guilt stirred in his gut. They had used each other, and now he was relieved he hadn’t told her everything.

But you told her you’d help her. Those goddamned black, inscrutable eyes just pulled it right out of you.

Gundersson saw movement and he fired one round through the shattered window. He wasn’t aiming to kill yet. He needed to know what he was up against. There was a possibility-a slim one-that these guys were on Gundersson’s team.

Crouching, he hurried across the short expanse of the main room to check the rear of the cabin. The chickens squawked and clucked, unsettled by the noise.

If they’re pros, they should have hit Roland on the porch. Something’s not right here. Unless they just wanted to scare him, and it’s me they really want out of the way.

Shifting his Glock to his left hand, he fished his Sectera from his pocket and hit the stored number for Harding’s desk.

Harding answered on the second ring. “Gundy. I was just about to call you.”

“I’m under fire, Chief.”

“Damn. Are you hit?”

“Flesh wound. I’m okay but I’m pinned down.”

“Secure?”

“Inside a cabin. There are at least two of them, maybe three. They have automatic weapons.”

Harding didn’t bother pointing out their range advantage over a handgun. “The closest backup is in Asheville. Two hours. Can you hold out?”

“Maybe. But I’ve got some civilians to babysit.”

“That’s what I was going to call you about. Roland Doyle’s name came up in connection with a murder in Cincinnati. It was right around the time of that Monkey House business. He was on the suspect list at one point but for some reason he was cleared before he was ever questioned.”

“Somebody’s got a long reach.”

“And it looks like they’ve reached you.”

Wendy pulled the painting from behind the chair and was looking at it-into it-as if divining the future in its frantic swirls and zigzags. Gundersson’s mind drifted to the tangling of their limbs by the fire, how she violently flung her body against his in disregard of her frail form.

“Gundy?” Harding’s voice came as if across a vast gulf, but it was enough to remind Gundersson of his situation.

“Doyle’s down. I don’t have anyone to watch my back.” Gundersson was relieved Wendy had put down the cast-iron pan before retrieving the painting. Roland’s revolver lay on the carpet near the sofa, and Wendy hadn’t even looked at it.

“This is what they want,” Wendy said.

“What?”

“What’s going on?” Harding demanded over the satcom link.

“Did you find out who’s after these guys?” Gundersson said in response.

“Best guess is it’s an inside job.”

“CIA? Fuck.”

“I’m still backtracking. But don’t forget, somebody put you there for a reason.”

“Yeah,” Gundersson said. “You did. To get my ass shot off.”

“Maybe you didn’t get the job done the way they wanted.”

“You’re all heart, Chief.” Gundersson shifted to the side window, making sure the view was clear. Roland let out a low groan but didn’t move.

“They wanted these drugs and thought you could get them the easy way, and then they could just intercept it. Now it looks like you’re part of the problem, not the solution.”

“What do you expect at my pay grade? I’m just goddamned dumb enough to do the right thing.”