Hancock didn’t answer.
“That’s what I thought.” Dane shoved the phone into his own pocket then grabbed the flashlight off the altar. He turned to Alex. “Let’s go.”
As they passed between the rows of benches, Alex glanced back into the shadows behind them. “What about him? We can’t just leave him here.”
“Cold blooded murder isn’t my style. Besides, he’s not a threat to us anymore.” He paused at the mouth of the passage leading out of the chapel. Maybe Hancock wasn’t a threat, but how long before his reinforcements arrived? He switched the flashlight off, plunging them into total darkness.
“What are you doing?” hissed Alex.
The darkness was absolute. If anyone was coming down the passage, they were doing so without the aid of artificial light. “Stay close.”
He felt her hand in his and that was good enough.
They reached the mouth of the passage quickly, urged on by the ever brightening sliver of daylight visible ahead. Dane emerged cautiously, sweeping the area with the pistol before coaxing Alex out to join him. As soon as they were out, Dane felt his cell phone vibrate.
“Maddock! Where the hell have you been?” It was Professor and he sounded frantic. “Company’s coming. A van just headed down the driveway five minutes ago. At least two guys, but might be more in the back.”
Dane had left his teammate with their rental car on the main road just outside the manor grounds while he had gone in on foot. Given how little he knew about their enemies, it had seemed prudent to do a little scouting, while leaving Professor behind to provide overwatch. The wisdom of that precaution was now manifest, but Dane hadn’t anticipated losing his cell phone signal when he’d gone underground.
He led Alex away from the cleft, skirting the hillside toward the cover of trees, before responding. “Roger. We’re clear for the moment.”
“We?”
“Me plus one. I rescued a damsel in distress.” He ignored Alex’s eye roll. “Meet us on the road, one klick east of the driveway. Keep your eyes open. I expect company.” He didn’t wait for a reply, but closed the phone and shoved it into his pocket. “Let’s go.”
They ventured deeper into the woods, moving at a right angle away from the trail back to the house, but after about a hundred yards, Dane stopped and held a finger to his lips.
The woods weren’t as absolutely still as the underground chapel had been, but for a moment the only sounds Dane could hear, apart from the thudding of his heart, were the chirp of insects and distant birds, and the creak of tree branches in the breeze. Then he heard voices — soft, hushed tones. Definitely not someone out for a stroll.
He couldn’t make out any words; he didn’t need to. They were being hunted. He took Alex’s hand again and they started running.
Dane tried to construct a mental map of the area, but as they pushed deeper into the woods, it became difficult to know with certainty even what direction they were going. The best he could hope for was to keep more or less to a straight line, easier said than done as they darted between tree trunks.
A burst of electronic music shattered the relative quiet, Hancock’s cell phone in Dane’s pocket! He dug it out, his haste making him all the more fumble-fingered. The ring-tone sounded twice more before he was able to silence it.
“This way!” Their pursuers were no longer bothering to be quiet, and the shout was too close for comfort. The call had not been a coincidence, Hancock had evidently told the pursuers that Dane had his phone, and they had used it to narrow the search.
A series of sharp reports completely shattered the still. Tree branches snapped and exploded above Dane and Alex, showering them with leaves and splinters. Dane threw himself flat, pulling Alex down next to him, but part of him knew that this was exactly what the hunters wanted; pin them down, paralyze them.
More shots. Dane reckoned there were at least three shooters, but he could see no one through the maze of tree trunks.
“We’ve got to move,” he told Alex. “Follow me.”
He didn’t wait for her to question or protest, but sprang to his feet and started running. A look over his shoulder confirmed that she was still with him, and also revealed movement further back. He twisted around without slowing and triggered a single shot from the revolver he’d taken from Hancock. Now their pursuers would know that they weren’t toothless; Dane just hoped he wouldn’t later regret wasting the round on an oak tree.
The woods thinned abruptly and they emerged at the edge of a grassy field. Dane spied the roof of the manor house off to the left, perhaps three hundred yards away. Not an option, he decided. They would never be able to cross that much open ground and there was a good chance that more of Hancock’s cronies would be waiting for them there. He pulled Alex back into the trees and resumed running, keeping the clearing to his left. Somewhere on the far side of that field was the road, where Professor would be waiting. When they had put another hundred yards between themselves and the house, Dane veered back into the open.
They made it halfway, close enough for Dane to distinguish the gray strip of the road, before the shots started again.
“Zigzag!” he shouted without looking back. A bullet crackled through air beside him and brushed through the tall grass. He veered away from it.
The road was close now, maybe fifty yards. Something was moving along it…a car…Professor.
“There! That’s our ride.”
He spun on his heel, saw three figures moving along the tree line, alternately running and gunning. He fired two shots in their direction, watched them scatter, and then turned and sprinted for the road. Alex was already there, tumbling into the back seat of the rented sedan. Dane saw Professor in the driver’s seat — the right hand driver’s seat — and cursed the British for not putting the steering wheels on the correct side. He reached the road and dove across the hood, tumbling to ground on the far side.
A bullet rapped against the fender. Another shattered the rear window.
Using the front end of the sedan for cover, Dane emptied the revolver and then climbed into the passenger seat.
“Go!”
Professor didn’t need any urging. Even before Dane’s door was shut, he pushed the accelerator to the floor and took off, throwing up a rooster tail of dirt and gravel behind them. There were more reports, but none of the shots found the retreating car, and after a few seconds, they were well beyond the range of the shooters. Dane sagged in his seat, breathing deep and savoring the respite.
“You did buy the optional insurance at the rental agency, right?” Professor said with a grin. He glanced over the back of the seat at Alex. “You brought a date? Let me guess; that’s her father and brothers taking pot shots at us.”
“Very funny, but Bones already has dibs on the job of comic relief.”
Professor ignored him. “I’m Pete, but everybody calls me Professor.”
Alex shifted into a seated position and buckled her seatbelt. “Professor of what?”
“Useless trivia, mostly,” Dane said.
“Are you guys military?”
Professor and Dane exchanged a glance. “Former,” lied Dane, “Is it that obvious?”
“I heard you on the phone, ‘one klick east?’ Either you’re military or you’ve watched one too many action movies. So what are you now? You said you found the Nagata Maru; are you fortune hunters or something?”
“Yeah, that’s us. My real name is Indiana Jones. That’s my friend Dirk Pitt behind the wheel.”
“Hey,” protested Professor. “I want to be Indiana Jones. He is a professor, after all.”