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Saffron smiled coldly, and shook her head. ‘You’re living in a dream world.’

‘Really?’ Ethan challenged. ‘Then where did you get the money to buy and activate black-market grenades, the camper, your shotgun and that revolver?’

Saffron didn’t bat an eyelid, but Ethan saw her bedraggled companions look at her with sudden interest.

‘It’s not what you know…’ Saffron said simply, and turned away.

The girl with the dreadlocked hair shot him a venomous glare that looked eerie on someone so young.

‘Get out of here. If you follow us, we’ll shoot.’

Ethan called after Saffron one last time.

‘Where’s Tyler Willis? We know you’ve got something to do with his disappearance.’

Saffron hesitated for a moment, her back to him, and then looked over her shoulder. ‘You call off the police and I’ll tell you where to find Willis.’

Ethan bit his lip for a moment before speaking.

‘They might not listen to me,’ he said. ‘They’ll question Colin Manx and they’ll be searching out here for you by nightfall.’

‘Better than nothing,’ Saffron snapped. ‘You want to find Willis or not?’

Ethan nodded.

‘He sometimes stays with friends in Hilary Falls, downtown Santa Fe. You could try there for information, but I’d hurry if I were you. You’re not the only people looking for Tyler Willis.’

Before Ethan could say anything more, Saffron and her army disappeared over the hillside.

21

HILARY FALLS APARTMENT COMPLEX
SANTA FE
2.15 p.m.

Enrico Zamora drove his squad car to a nondescript block of apartments on the corner of West 42nd.

‘You sure this is the place?’ he asked Ethan, who sat beside him. ‘We searched Willis’s own apartment, came up clean.’

‘Willis hid his research data elsewhere, or so we’ve been told,’ Ethan replied. ‘He must have had a reason for doing that, and our best line of inquiry so far is that he was afraid of becoming a victim of industrial espionage. We need to find out what he was working on, and whether he knew who was after his work.’

Zamora shrugged.

‘I thought that these scientists always published their work in journals?’

‘They do,’ Lopez said from the back seat. ‘But whatever Tyler Willis had, he obviously felt it was valuable enough to be stolen from him. He clearly went to some lengths to protect it.’

‘What about Colin Manx?’ Ethan asked. ‘Anything from him yet?’

‘Detectives are questioning him,’ Zamora said. ‘He’s had nothing much to say except to implicate Saffron Oppenheimer as the ringleader. You believe a word he says, he wasn’t even there.’

Ethan remained silent until Zamora had parked the squad car outside the apartment block.

‘Who lives here?’ he asked as they climbed out.

‘Couple of students, friends of Tyler Willis. No records, clean as a whistle. They’re up at the laboratories right now but they agreed to the search.’

‘Thanks for getting the warrant,’ Lopez said to Zamora as they walked into the block’s foyer and headed for the elevators. ‘We figured it would be easier than just turning up on their doorstep and hoping for the best.’

The elevator doors opened and Ethan watched two men in smart suits walk out. Businessmen, from out of town most likely. One was a towering, barrel-chested man with a drooping Mexican moustache of silvery gray, the other a younger man of perhaps twenty-five. They smiled politely as they stepped out, and Ethan noticed they shared the same strikingly colored eyes, a hazy blue-gray as though they were father and son. Ethan let them out and then walked in, followed by Zamora and Lopez.

The apartment was on the third story. Zamora led the way with a key in his hand lent to him by one of the students. He stopped at the door, slipping the key in and turning it. The door opened, and he moved inside.

Ethan caught the faint odor of unwashed dishes and musty furniture, the hallmark of student digs. The whiff of cigarettes tainted the air in the lounge. Bright sunlight from outside beamed into the lounge, a kitchen off to the left, two bedrooms and a bathroom off to the right. A pile of blankets stacked beside one of the two couches betrayed Willis’s presence.

‘Must’ve been staying here for a while,’ Ethan surmised.

‘There,’ Lopez gestured to a pair of laptop computers sitting on a narrow table beneath the window. ‘The students would have theirs with them at college, wouldn’t they?’

Ethan walked over to the table, looking down at the computers. He opened one, then the other. Both screens had been smashed and liquid, smelling like turpentine, poured into the keyboards, strong enough to dissolve the delicate microchips and hard drives. The smell of stale cigarettes seemed stronger and vaguely familiar as he stared at the computers. He glanced round the lounge and realized he could not see any ashtrays.

‘You smell that?’ he asked, looking at Lopez.

‘Some kind of chemical?’ Lopez guessed.

Ethan turned and moved to open one of the windows to let some fresh air in. As he did so, he looked down and saw a black Chevrolet Impala parked on the opposite side of the street. As Ethan opened the window one of the sedan’s occupants looked up at the apartment and straight into Ethan’s eyes. Even at the distance, Ethan recognized the big man with the silvery moustache in the elevator. They locked gazes for an instant and then the man looked sharply away.

Ethan turned from the window as dread flickered through his mind. Seeing the kitchen door, he dashed across to it. As he burst inside he saw a stove against one wall and heard the rasping hiss of leaking gas coming from somewhere behind it. The acrid stench of some kind of accelerant tainted the air in the kitchen. Ethan looked about desperately but could see nothing. No open bottles, no drenched rags or papers. Just a cat-litter tray in one corner. With the dense gas in the air even the slightest spark could ignite the fuel and the whole apartment would be vaporized. He whirled, shouting out of the kitchen door.

‘Get out now, and get back-up!’

He heard Lopez shout something unintelligible and then a loud burst of gunfire ripped through the apartment, three ragged holes bursting through the kitchen wall in puffs of plaster that showered down over him. He ducked instinctively as the shots zipped overhead and smacked into the opposite wall. Ethan crouched down and ran into the lounge, hurling himself flat onto the carpet, praying all the while that none of the bullets would strike a metal surface and let fly the spark that would kill them all.

Another burst of gunfire punched the air and two bullets smashed through the windows of the apartment, webbed cracks splintering the glass in their wake. Ethan’s first concern was for Lopez, lying flat on her stomach near a large couch, her black hair sprinkled with fragments of plaster.

‘Man down!’ she shouted as another crackle of gunfire whipped through the apartment.

Ethan glimpsed the rounds punching through the walls of the apartment from the hall outside. Automatic fire, three-round bursts. M-16s, probably two of them. He saw Zamora lying on his back, gripping his shoulder, blood spilling thickly onto the carpets. Most of the rounds were being fired high, deliberately it seemed, but Zamora had caught one by chance. Ethan realized that whoever was shooting at them wanted to keep their heads down while starting the fire that would kill them. They probably wouldn’t even have opened fire if Zamora hadn’t gone for the apartment door. They would have let the gas-filled air do its work alone and vaporize the entire room.

In front of him, he saw Zamora roll onto his side and reach down for his pistol.