'"Poor Zek'?" Cal said. "You couldn't stand the guy. You made his life hell."
Miller looked at him. Was that a hint of sadness in those cold eyes?
"Yeah, I guess I did. Maybe I shouldn't have let it get so personal with him. But none of that matters now. What does matter is he's dead, killed in the line of duty. That can't go unanswered."
Cal didn't like the sound of this.
"You're not thinking—"
Miller nodded. "We go in and finish the job. We owe it to Zek." He looked around.
The surrounding yeniceri nodded, their expressions grim.
"You mean go back to the city? And leave this place unguarded? That's crazy!" Cal closed his eyes for a couple of seconds to compose his thoughts. "Doesn't it strike you as odd for whoever killed Zek to taunt us by leaving that kind of note? Like maybe it's an attempt to get us so riled up we do something stupid—like what you're suggesting."
"I'm not saying we all go. Just me and a few others."
"We're shorthanded as it is!"
"I'll do it alone if I have to, but some extra eyes and legs would help shorten the trip."
Hursey said, "I'm in."
Jolliff: "Me too."
Miller's buddies—no surprise there.
"Count me in too," said Gold.
"Oh no," Cal said, pointing at Gold. "I've got to draw the line there. We need you for the computers."
With Kenlo's death, Gold had taken over the computer chores.
"Portman knows as much as I do. I'm going."
Discipline… organization… chain of command… all gone to hell. No wonder the Otherness was winning. But Cal could see from Gold's set features that he'd be wasting his time arguing.
"All right then, but absolutely no more. As it is, this leaves us with only eight."
"But only for a little while." Miller glanced at his watch. "We catch the noon ferry, we can be in the city by seven, eight o'clock. We'll hit the hospital in the wee hours and be back in time for the first ferry out in the morning. Besides, this place is a cinch to guard. It's a security wet dream."
"And if you're ambushed like Zek?"
Miller's steely eyes hardened further. "Let him try. In fact, I hope he does. Taking down Zek is one thing. Taking me and these guys down is something else entirely. Best-case scenario: We finish the job and get some payback for Zek along the way. Hurt one of us, you hurt us all. Blood demands blood, right?"
Cal shook his head. "And worst case: You end up like those guys back in the Home and—"
"Speaking of our fallen brothers, what did that note mean by 'the collection is eight and growing'?"
"Shit!" Hursey said. "He went back and got the hearts!"
Miller nodded. "First thing we do we get to the city is check." He slammed a fist down on an end table, almost upsetting it. "Knew we shouldn't have left them!"
Cal looked around at Hursey, Jolliff, and Gold. "You realize, don't you, that some of you won't be coming back."
"You don't know that," Miller said.
"If you get out of the hospital after you've done your work—and to do that you'll probably have to kill a few innocent security folks who're only doing their jobs—you'll be the target of a citywide manhunt."
"We'll run the getaway just like we ran it yesterday. After we do the car switches, we can be out of the city and on Ninety-five in no time. No problem."
Cal didn't buy that for a nanosecond, but the message was clear: He'd been overruled.
Still, something didn't sit right. Killing Zeklos… cutting out his heart… pinning the note to him… it almost seemed specifically designed to set Miller off. Was someone setting a trap for him?
The uneasiness nagged at him.
4
Jack knew the yeniceri would send someone—more than one someone, most likely—to take up where Zeklos had failed. Knew he'd have to face them but didn't want to do it in the hospital.
So he'd done what he could to draw them to the warehouse first. It made sense for them to stop off in Red Hook to get their act together and wait until the wee hours before making their move anyway. But he'd used Zeklos to give them added impetus to check the place out.
He still needed a little insurance at the hospital end, so he'd called the chief of security. He told him a terrorist group had targeted someone in the trauma unit and he'd better pass everybody heading that way through a metal detector. The terrorists would be wearing sunglasses—sunglasses, at night, indoors, during the winter. Got it? Stop anyone wearing sunglasses in the hospital.
And then he'd hung up.
On the off chance the yeniceri tried the hospital first, the heightened security would chase them back Home to work out another plan of attack.
Just where he wanted them. Because he'd made some alterations in the warehouse.
So now he was back in his old spot down around the corner and next to the park, sitting in the dark, watching, waiting, and having trouble keeping his eyes open.
He got out, walked through the park and back again. The frigid air revived him a little. He woke up the laptop Russ Tuit had lent him. It had some sort of little card with an antenna plugged into its side. Three windows lit on the screen, each taking a video feed from one of the warehouse levels. Nothing to see yet since all the lights were out, but it still amazed him how easy this had been to set up.
Russ had told him what software and hardware he needed, then he'd rigged the computer to receive signals from the wireless spy eyes Jack had bought. After that, Jack let himself into the warehouse and installed the eyes in upper corners of the first and third levels, plus the O's office.
Using the materials he'd secured from Abe, he made a few other modifications while he was there.
Now the waiting.
At 7:52 a black Suburban rolled to a stop in front of the warehouse. When Jack recognized Miller's hulking form step out, he tightened his fists.
Yes!
He'd worked hard on the Zeklos note, phrasing it so that Miller would have to respond. The big guy had sent someone less competent to clean up after him, and now that guy was dead. The note and missing heart had left Miller no choice but to come back and finish the job himself.
Then three more men stepped out. The glow from the nearby streetlight glinted off their sunglasses.
Four yeniceri in all. Looked like they weren't taking any chances this time. No problem. He'd prepared for a crowd.
Jack felt his pulse pick up.
Show time.
He grabbed the small, battery-powered FM transmitter, lowered his window, and placed it on the car roof. He closed the window on the wire of the attached microphone and readied himself to start talking.
5
Miller brought up the rear as the group approached the Home door—check that: former Home.
He wasn't looking forward to seeing the remains of his fallen brothers again, especially with their hearts missing, but even without the Heir's note they'd have been stopping here—the team needed a break from the road before they began hunting up cars to steal.
They'd made good time on 95, and during the long trip they'd batted around various ways to get this done.
The timing was clear: halfway through the late shift—say, two or three a.m.—when patients were quiet and staff was minimal.
The big question was how. Miller had decided on a direct approach and, since nobody could come up with anything better, that was the way it would go down. He'd pose as a family member and learn the location of the trauma unit. When he was allowed in for a visit he'd use his silenced H-K and put one cyanide-tipped nine into each. Then he'd run like mad.
He'd be on his own getting out of the hospital, but after that—what?
They kept coming back to their tried-and-true escape sequence—same as they'd used after the hit on the woman and the kid. Gold would have a car idling outside the ER. Miller would jump in, Hursey and Jolliff would run interference in their wake. A few minutes later they'd all be back in the Suburban and on their way to Hyannis.