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‘I was watching you earlier. I know you saw the bottle of whiskey.’ Archer didn’t respond. ‘When you’ve got no-one and you live in a place like this, you sure as hell need something to take your mind off it. That’s why I started drinking. But I took it out on my boy. He didn’t deserve that. He hated it up here, and blamed it on me. His Dad still called and saw him every now then. He never did with me. Somehow it ended up all being my fault.’

‘So where’s your son?’

‘When he was eighteen he packed his things and left. The last time we spoke, he told me he never wanted to see me again. He said I’d ruined his life.’

She blinked, the fear and emotion of the day threatening to overwhelm her.

‘He hates me.’

‘I doubt that,’ Archer said. ‘When was the last time you called him?’

‘Two years. He lives in Pittsburgh. I kept trying but he wouldn’t answer so I gave up.’

‘When we make it out of here, try him again.’

‘He won’t pick up.’

‘I bet he will. He might even be watching this on the television and thinking about you right now. I bet he misses you as much as you miss him.’

She paused.

When we make it out of here? You make it sound like a certainty.’

He nodded.

‘We’re not dying in here. Not tonight.’

She sniffed, and wiped her eyes. ‘You seem so sure.’ Pause. ‘It shouldn’t take something like this to make me call him.’

‘If there’s anything positive to come out of this, maybe that’s what it is.’

There was a pause; the police lights down below continued to flash through the curtains. The lighting in the apartment was low. They could hear murmuring from next door, but other than that the room was quiet.

‘What’s his name?’ Archer asked.

‘Peter.’

He went to reply but stopped. She noticed.

‘What?’

Archer didn’t move.

‘What’s wrong?’

He’d frozen.

‘Listen.’

Helen paused.

She heard something too.

‘What the hell is that?’

Two floors down, the main group was almost twenty strong, men with money and violence on their minds. They were moving down 6, smashing their way into every apartment, searching for the group, kicking doors open and rampaging through rooms like a whirlwind of violence. They were armed with an assortment of handguns and knives; several had bats. A couple of them would only need their bare hands. On the 5th floor, two of them had stumbled upon the smoky scene of the first exchange between the balaclava-clad men and the group they were hunting. One of them had stolen Foster’s.44 and his badge which he was carrying almost as a cruel irony. His buddy had taken the Glock.

Pockets of them were searching the rooms, trying to get the jump on each other and find the group first, working at an increasingly frenzied pace, determined to get their hands on the money and more than willing to kill for it.

A deadly, fired-up mob, working their way up the building floor by floor.

Apartment by apartment.

Upstairs, Archer and Helen were listening, trying to make sense of what they were hearing. Faint noise was coming from below, what sounded like thudding, thumping and shouting.

It was getting increasingly louder.

‘What the hell is that?’ Helen said quietly.

The door to the sitting room opened. Vargas appeared, Isabel holding her hand. ‘What’s that noise?’

Suddenly, Archer realised what it was. The two women saw it dawn on his face. ‘Oh shit.’

‘What?’

‘We need to move! Now!’

He raced into the sitting room, followed by the others. Carson was on the couch, doped up, still staring at the ceiling with his mouth open. Slinging the M4A1 over his shoulder, Archer ran over to him, and reached behind him to pull him up, the wounded Marshal limp from the drugs in his bloodstream.

‘Barlow, help me out,’ Archer said. ‘We need to move upstairs now!’

Barlow didn’t respond.

‘Barlow? Let’s go. There’re people com-’

He turned. Across the room, Barlow still had his pistol in his hand.

But it was aimed at Vargas, Helen and Isabel.

TWENTY SIX

Archer didn’t react at first. Disbelief accounted for that.

Then his hand slid for the USP in his belt.

‘No, you don’t,’ Barlow said, swinging his pistol towards him. ‘Toss it to the carpet. And the rifle. Now. One move from you Vargas and he dies.’

Archer stayed where he was, his hand inches from the pistol, looking at Barlow.

‘What the hell are you doing?’ he asked quietly.

‘Toss the guns,’ Barlow said. ‘Or you die.’

Archer stared into his eyes for a moment. They were wide, but in control. Knowing he had no other option, he reached around and took the USP from the back of his waistband. He had no choice. A man doesn’t have many when a loaded gun is aimed straight at him.

He threw it to the carpet, the weapon landing with a thud.

‘And the rifle.’

Archer loosened it off his shoulders and placed it down carefully, the assault rifle joining the USP, never taking his eyes off Barlow, who stared back impassively. He then pointed his weapon at the women.

‘You too, Vargas,’ he said. ‘The rifle and the pistol.’

‘Jared, what the hell are you doing?’

‘Toss the weapons.’

After a brief pause, Vargas complied. Barlow shifted his weapon back to Archer, beckoning him to move.

‘Join the others, pretty boy.’

With no alternative, Archer walked over towards the other side of the room, Barlow taking a step back so he was out of arm’s reach as Archer passed. Vargas had Isabel behind her back, protecting her. It didn’t matter though. With four unarmed people against a loaded USP, there was only going to be one winner. Through the floor, they could all hear the sound of the smashing and shouting.

It was getting louder.

It was getting nearer.

Watching Barlow closely, Archer shifted the weight to the balls of his feet, slowly, ready to pounce on him and try to knock the USP from his hand. He couldn’t shoot all four of them that quickly; it would take him time to work the trigger and aim. Barlow saw what he was doing and aimed the gun straight at him.

‘Don’t even think about it,’ he said. ‘Or you’ll be the first to die.’

‘It was you,’ Vargas said to Barlow. ‘The ambush on the street. That’s how they knew. You tipped them off.’

‘Yes. It was me.’

‘You son of a bitch.’

‘You think I had a choice?’

‘There’s always a choice.’

‘These people aren’t who you think they are.’

Pause.

‘How much do we make a year, Alice? Forty five grand? Before tax? And for this? You’ve been doing this for weeks. I’ve been doing this for years with no reward. You should see the amount they offered me. I couldn’t say no. Putting my life on the line every day for this shit? No; not anymore.’

‘You son of a bitch,’ Vargas repeated, keeping Isabel behind her.

‘I’m not going to die here. If I take you all out, they’ll leave me be.’ He focused on Vargas. ‘I didn’t want it to come to this, Alice. Really. I thought this would have been ended sooner.’

They all heard the noise of the mob getting even closer.

They were now on this corridor.

‘It was supposed to be smooth as clockwork out there on the street,’ Barlow said. ‘No-one else was meant to get hurt. Especially not Jack.’

‘And Foster. You killed him, Barlow.’

‘Bullshit.’

‘It’s your fault. You may as well have pulled the trigger yourself.’

‘Shut your mouth!’ he screamed. He shifted his gaze to Archer. ‘You had to stick your nose in and screw it up. You’re going to die for that, asshole. I hope it was worth it.’

Archer didn’t reply. He’d slid a hand behind him very slowly while Barlow had been distracted by Vargas.