“Annie,” Higgins sighed. “You don’t understand. What he said…”
“About some diabolical secret society? Puppet masters pulling our strings? It’s complete bollocks and you know it.”
“Annie, I was there that night. I know what he’s talking about.”
“Yes, you were there. You know that Nick isn’t part of some conspiracy.”
“For twenty years, I’ve tried to understand what happened. None of it ever made any sense until today. As crazy as it sounds, what Leeds said…it fits. Why we were there, why we got captured, and how we escaped. We were in…” Higgins’ breath seemed to catch in his throat, and when he tried to continue, he had to force the words past clenched teeth. “In the goddamned Republican Guard torture chamber, and Kismet just walked us right out; like Daniel in the lion’s den.”
Annie’s retort died on her lips as she saw the pain of reliving the memory twist her father’s features. When she spoke again, it was in a more subdued tone. “Nick wasn’t responsible, dad. Even if everything Leeds said is true, he’s not a bad man.”
“I know, Annie girl.”
“So, we’re going to tell Leeds to sod off, right?”
Higgins stared at her for several seconds before slowly nodding an affirmative.
Almost a hundred yards away, Dr. John Leeds listened intently to the exchange. He couldn’t make out all the nuances — the tripod-mounted Detect Ear parabolic microphone wasn’t that discriminating — but the amplified audio feed, in conjunction with his visual observations, courtesy of a pair of Minox 10X44 binoculars, was sufficient to tell the tale. For just a few moments, he thought perhaps he had succeeded in winning the father over, but it seemed the daughter’s passionate defense of Kismet was going to prove insurmountable. Perhaps with more time and persuasion, he might be able to…
He lowered the binoculars as one of his hirelings approached. The man was a mercenary, some acquaintance of MacKay’s; Leeds found the whole arrangement rather distasteful. He didn’t trust people whose loyalties could be bought or traded. Still, hirelings had their uses.
The man proffered a bundle of papers. “Ian told me to bring this to you.”
Leeds took it without comment and began thumbing through the pages. He committed the words of the letters — the first from Henry Fortune himself, and the second from Joseph King — to memory. Then he saw that the remaining papers were phone and address listings for every Joseph King in the greater Charleston area. Leeds breathed an ancient Sumerian curse.
“There’s nothing here we didn’t already know.”
“Maybe you shouldn’t have been so quick to get rid of Kismet,” observed Elisabeth. The actress stood a few steps away, smoking a cigarette.
Leeds cast a baleful glance in her direction, but did not comment. The mercenary stared back at him, expressionless.
Leeds sighed. “I believe we may safely assume that Kismet doesn’t, or I should say didn’t, know anything more than this. Which reminds me…” He unclipped a Motorola Talkabout from his belt and keyed the send button. “Ian, report.”
There was a long silence at the other end, and then finally a burst of squelch, followed by a terse: “It’s done.”
Leeds smiled and keyed the walkie-talkie. “Excellent. I’m sending two more your way.”
Kismet turned his feet outward and managed to hook his toes on the chute’s angled side-guards. His death-slide stopped mere inches from the spinning feeder wheel; he thought he could feel the molded steel teeth tickling his hair.
MacKay’s grin fell a notch when he saw that Kismet had stopped moving. His puzzlement lasted only a moment, but it was enough. As the big man grabbed Kismet’s ankles, preparing to shake him loose, Kismet levered his torso forward, sitting up, and thrust his arms out as far as he could reach. His hamstrings screamed as he folded his body almost in half, but he fought through the agony and found something to hang onto: MacKay’s ears.
The silver-toothed killer howled in agony as Kismet’s nails dug into his flesh. As MacKay tried to bat his hands away, Kismet wrenched his body sideways, rolling up and over the side-guard.
As he hit the ground alongside the chipper, he caught a glimpse of movement and instinctively rolled away, under the chute, narrowly avoiding a swipe from the chainsaw. He kept rolling, and for a fleeting moment, was hidden from view. It was an opportunity he dared not waste.
The chipper was mounted on a dual-wheeled trailer rig, and Kismet made good use of the twin tires as a stepladder. He scrambled onto the top of the chipper engine cowling, and hurled himself, feet first, at the man with the chainsaw.
His feet connected squarely with the man, one to the jaw and one squarely in the chest, catching him completely unaware. The idling chainsaw fell from his grasp as the double-kick knocked him senseless. Kismet pushed off from the stricken man, tucking and rolling to soften the blow of his own landing, and was on his feet again, dodging behind the chipper before MacKay and his remaining comrade knew what was happening. He paused there to catch his breath, and then ducked his head around the corner to see where the next attack would come from.
He didn’t see the gun in the hand of the phony driver until the man triggered a shot. He jumped back, startled, and collided with MacKay. Even though the big man had been intent on flanking him, Kismet’s abrupt retreat caught him off guard, and for a moment, both men simply regarded each other without moving. Then MacKay threw a wild punch that missed Kismet and connected instead with the chipper’s housing. Kismet seized the advantage and planted a foot in MacKay’s chest, but his foe stood firm. Instead of sending MacKay reeling backward, it was Kismet himself that rebounded back, landing on his back, out in the open. Reasoning that he stood a better chance against MacKay than against a bullet, he scrambled for cover behind the chipper once more, and right into MacKay’s grasp.
The big man got one hand around Kismet’s throat, and suddenly that was the only thing that mattered. Even as he fought the chokehold, Kismet felt MacKay dragging him again toward the chute.
“Put that damn thing away,” MacKay bellowed. “And give me a hand.”
Darkness was falling over Kismet’s eyes. He tried tearing MacKay’s hand from his throat, tried also kicking at the man who was choking the life out him, but couldn’t tell if he was making contact. His extremities no longer felt connected to his body.
What seemed like only an instant later, he felt the stranglehold loosen just a little, and in that moment felt the hard rollers of the chipper chute beneath him. Frantic, he blindly thrust arms and legs out, hooking them awkwardly over the side-guard, knowing full well that he was mere inches from being ground into sausage.
“Damn it,” MacKay muttered. He still held Kismet by the throat, but the grip was tentative, as if fearful that he might get pulled in along with his victim.
A small engine revved off to his right, obscured by the hovering darkness and he heard the carriage driver shout: “I’ll cut him up.”
Kismet reacted instantly, instinctively. He threw his weight to the left, rolling up and over the side-guard. He felt MacKay’s grip tighten, but the big man was too slow by a fraction of a second. Kismet hung on the edge of the slanted steel guard, his mass pulling him one way and only the hand around his throat held him back from a fall.