“We’ll be sitting ducks,” someone argued.
“What do you think we are right now?” Vintner said. “Get on and hold tight.”
While his men climbed aboard, he set the timer on the detonator to fifteen seconds, and then scrambled onto the platform himself. Bullets flew over the car as the others shot at them from both directions. He grabbed the lever, counting down the seconds.
The double thud of the blast was milder than expected. As he pushed the brake lever forward, the train didn’t move. Was the bracket still in place? Had he not used enough of a charge?
But then, as the lever reached the full off position, the car began to roll.
More shots rang out, bullets ricocheting off the walls and ceiling. Vintner saw muzzles flash as they raced past several recesses in the wall. Suddenly the tunnel lights came on and the gunfire ceased.
He eased the brakes back on to slow their descent, but the bottom was still coming at them too fast. He yanked harder, and finally their speed slowed enough that the walls rushing by were no longer blurs.
He smiled. It was going to work.
Ten feet farther down the rails, the handle snapped.
Reni had no idea what Vintner was thinking by ordering everyone back onto the platforms. Did he not understand that would get everyone shot? She stayed on the ground where she knew it was safe.
A double pop knocked her into the wall, stunning her. Blinking, she realized the car had started to move. She flailed out at the railing, trying to grab it, but the car was already going too fast. Before she could pull her hand away, one of the support poles whacked it and bent her wrist impossibly backward. She crumpled to her knees, intense pain screaming up and down her arm.
Around her, bullets pinged off the walls, several striking the ground only a few feet away. Needing someplace to hide, but unable to see anything in the darkness, she clutched her injured wrist to her chest and felt around with the other hand for one of the recesses she’d seen earlier.
The wall beside her was solid, so she moved as best she could up the slope, checking again every few feet. Her boot knocked against something lumpy. As she leaned down to see what it was, the overhead lamps came on, and she found herself trapped in a shadowed area between two of the pools of light, hovering over one of Vintner’s dead men. The nearest recess was a good twenty feet away and in the light. No chance she could get there without being seen.
She looked back at the dead man.
Unless…
Tucking in next to the corpse, she arranged herself in a way that she hoped made her look dead, and then, ignoring the pain in her wrist, closed her eyes and waited.
As soon as Ash saw the men climbing back onto the train, he ordered everyone to open fire. They were able to hit several before the car unexpectedly began moving again.
What in God’s name were they thinking? The power was off. Their momentum would only build.
When it was clear his people were wasting bullets, Ash ordered them to stop and flipped the power back on, illuminating the tunnel once more. He, Chloe, and the others watched the train racing down the slope.
“They’re slowing,” Chloe said after a few moments.
“We have to get down there as quickly as we can,” he said. Powell had taken a Resistance team from inside Dream Sky to the bottom as a backup, but now they’d be on the front line. Ash didn’t want to leave them there alone.
As he started over the edge, he heard a distant pop and twisted around to look at the train again. It was once more gaining speed.
“They’re not going to stop in time,” Chloe said.
Ash shook his head. “They’re not going to stop at all.”
Vintner leaned over the side and grabbed at the nub that was all that remained of the handle. It flapped back and forth against the rod, slipping from his fingers several times before he was able to get hold of it. He pulled it with all his strength, hoping he could get even a little bit of traction. The rod moved, but the brakes didn’t engage. So it wasn’t just the handle that had broken. The whole system had failed because it had never been designed to be used like he had used it.
The bottom was coming quickly, and he knew the resulting crash would kill him. The best he could do was face it with honor.
But the crash was not responsible for his death. That job went to a pillar he smashed into as he pulled himself back onto the platform.
It took Ash, Chloe, and the others just under ten minutes to reach the bottom and join Powell and his team.
Only three of those who’d been on the runaway train were alive, though none was likely to last long. The bodies of the dead were badly mangled, making it impossible to tell who’d been killed by the crash and who by gunfire.
“Did you get a count?” Ash asked Powell.
“Sixteen,” he said.
Plus the four who’d been guarding the entrance, and the three bodies along the tracks where the car had stopped, made twenty-three. That was all of them.
Ash walked over to where Robert, Estella, and a few others were checking out the car. It was a tangle of twisted steel plates and broken rods and bent wheels.
“Don’t think we’ll be using that anytime soon,” Ash said.
Robert nodded. “Would be easier to build a new one.”
The loss of the train was unfortunate. Getting everyone out through the hut was going to take a lot longer.
“Ash?” Chloe called from across the room.
When he looked over, she tapped her ear, indicating his radio. He turned it on.
“What’s up?” he asked.
Instead of Chloe answering, it was Sealy’s voice he heard. “I have a little present for you.”
Ash looked up the tunnel. He’d left Sealy and a few others there to watch the entrance. Though Ash could see light at the top, the distance was too far to make out anything.
“What kind of present?”
“Not all the bodies you passed on the way down were dead. Found one trying to slip by us and get outside.”
“Is that right?” Ash said. That was good news. He’d been hoping to keep a few of them alive to question, but he’d thought the crash had eliminated that possibility. “Faster if you bring him overland to the other entrance. I’ll meet you in the control room.”
“Her.”
“I’m sorry?”
“She’s a woman.”
22
Sealy and the woman were already in the control room when Ash and Chloe arrived.
Ash had assumed the prisoner was one of those who’d come with the Project Eden team, but he recognized her from footage Harden had shown him of the Dream Sky security guard who’d escaped.
Once they were settled, Ash said, “Do we have a name yet?”
Harden, sitting at the main control desk, said, “The database identifies her as Reni Barton.”
Ash smiled at the woman. “So, Ms. Barton, I believe you’re part of the security department, correct?”
She stared at him.
“She hasn’t been very forthcoming,” Sealy said.
“I’m sure she’ll change her mind,” Ash said, looking at the woman.
She sneered.
“Remaining silent is definitely an option. If you choose to do that, however, know that we also have options. A whole room full of them down in your barracks. We’ll simply kill you and wake up one of your friends. I’m sure we’ll eventually find someone willing to cooperate.”
“Bullshit,” she said.
Whether or not he was telling the truth didn’t matter. He’d gotten her to speak, which meant he’d already won.