Tim tensed, dread locking the breath in his lungs.
Bowrick glanced over at him, their eyes holding for a moment, then he slid the gun into his jeans, sat back on his heels, and looked at Tim expectantly.
Tim gathered some cord from one of the wood stacks and double-bound Mitchell’s wrists behind his back, then his ankles. One of Mitchell’s eyes stared up at him, a glossy animal organ, all pupil. Tim’s first blow had broken his cheek badly; the skin sucked in beneath the eye like a drape pulled to an open window. Tim was gentle with the gag. He patted Mitchell down, pulling the car keys from his pocket.
Bowrick sat with his elbows resting on his knees, watching Tim work. He spoke in a harsh whisper. “Where’s the guy they want to kill?”
Tim pointed at the trunk of the Lincoln.
“Why don’t we get him out of there?”
Keeping his eyes on the monument, Tim crossed to Bowrick, lowering his voice so Mitchell couldn’t hear. “Can’t have him making noise. And he’s unpredictable-we don’t want him running around right now.” He tossed Bowrick the keys. “Get the hostage clear. Don’t open the trunk, don’t talk to him. Neutral it down the hill, nice and quiet. The metal stacks’ll block you from view part of the way down. Don’t turn on the car until you’re through the gate, then drive a few blocks, park somewhere out of sight, and stay alert. Keep the cell phone on. If you haven’t heard from me in an hour, split, call Deputy Jowalski at the U.S. Marshals Service, and explain the mess I dragged you into. And this time don’t come back, even if it is to save my ass.”
Bowrick nodded, slid into the driver’s seat, and pulled the door gently shut. The Lincoln began the solemn downhill roll, tires crackling softly on the dirt path, brake lights glowing in the night.
Tim sat for a moment and mopped the blood from his forehead. One of Mitchell’s blows had opened up a seam just at his hairline; he’d have a scar on the left to match the rifle-butt wound from Kandahar. Another punch had struck his shoulder near the bullet-fragment wound; it had already swelled up. His torso felt like a nerve-filled skin bag holding rocks and razor blades. After a few moments the rush of blood into his eyes slowed, and he stood up, fighting off light-headedness.
He retrieved Betty and the Stork’s phone and dialed Robert’s number again. Betty sourced the ring to the same branch, hidden from view by the scaffolding.
Same gruff voice. “Robert.”
Tim hung up. He circled the monument to the far side. If there was gunplay, Robert would have a tactical advantage firing down on him; there was no harder shot than one directly up.
The scaffolding made for easy climbing. Leaving Betty behind, Tim worked his way up as silently as he could, minding every creak and shift. When possible he climbed the metal branches, as they gave off less noise than the wood. Every few moments he’d pause and strain his ears, listening for Robert’s movement, but the wind, especially as he got higher, drowned out most noise-a factor that also worked to his advantage. Metal plates were missing here and there, dark, empty gaps looking in on the hollow tree interior.
About fifty feet off the ground, he paused, leaning against the cool metal of the trunk, drawing a deep breath, and hooking his fingers into a few of the monument’s myriad holes designed to beam out the spotlight’s glow. From this angle he had a clear view of the dirt path. The Lincoln drifted silently through the gate. He saw the lights blink on as the engine turned over, and then it pulled away.
Tim inched his way up, hugging metal and wood, drawing a few splinters. He wound up on the platform supporting the branch opposite Robert’s, about three feet lower. Crouching on a knee, he withdrew the Stork’s phone from his pocket and dialed again. The phone’s chirping ring sounded clear and loud, just on the far side of the trunk. Tim kept the call active, sliding the Stork’s Nextel into his pocket. Double-handing his Smith amp; Wesson, he drew back to the far edge of his platform so he could get three steps of a running start.
He timed two deep breaths, then thundered into his run. The trunk brushed his shoulder as he leaped, shoving off the platform hard and flying across a five-foot break of open air. Beneath him the drop stretched down seventy feet, broken only by metal branches and wooden crossbeams.
He hit the edge of the opposing platform and rolled evenly across his back, popping to a high-kneel shooting stance, one knee down, one up, the thrust of the gun an extension of both elbow-locked arms.
About six feet off the platform, dangling from a noose looped over the scaffolding above, was Robert’s Nextel. Ringing. It swayed gently, rocked by Tim’s hard landing on the platform.
He felt his insides go slack, the rush of panic. Keeping both hands firmly on the. 357, he shuffled two steps, careful not to trip over a stray two-by-four, and peered over the platform’s edge. On the ground Robert sprinted across the plateau, directly at the monument, sliding a curved Gurkha knife back into a hip sheath. He was coming from the direction of the parked car and the stacks of metal. Tim knew before he raised his eyes that next he’d see Mitchell, staggering twenty yards behind Robert, working the freshly cut cord from around his wrists. Though Mitchell moved unevenly, dizzied from Tim’s blows, his shoulders were firmed with rage, his legs moving in short, punching steps.
What alarmed Tim even more was that Mitchell had his black det bag looped over one shoulder.
Tim glanced down, trying to spot Robert again, but he had already disappeared underfoot. Before he had time to formulate a single coherent thought aside from the slapping awareness of how badly he’d been fooled, a reverberating clank announced the spotlight’s activation. Blinding light filled the core of the tree, shot in thin beams from the holes of the trunk and branches. A gap between metal plates below threw light up against the bottom of the platform; it streamed around the sides like a gold, twinkling river.
Squinting against the brightness, Tim glanced over the edge of the platform and saw Robert stepping slowly backward, peering up at him through the scope of a McMillan. 308.
A bullet cracked through wood, zinging past Tim’s head and embedding in a beam overhead. Tim threw himself flat against the platform. A second bullet punched through the platform inches from his face, throwing a spray of splinters past his cheek. He rolled toward the trunk, splitting beams of light. Two more shots penetrated the platform inches from his spinning body and ricocheted off wood and metal. Tim froze near the trunk.
The ping of metal and then the slapped-meat sound of slug smacking skin. Tim’s leg jerked as he heard the delayed report, and he cried out, more from shock than pain. His mouth cottoned instantly. Beams of light shot out from the tree branches all around him and through the bullet-riddled platform, one ray an inch off his nose, another just in front of the bend of his elbow; two he sensed rising between the split of his legs. He lay still, realizing that his movement made him detectable as he crossed over the fingers of light, making them blink out.
His thigh throbbed, numb and painless. He estimated that the bullet had entered just north of his right knee. When he heard movement down below, he risked rolling his head over to glance through one of the platform holes.
Robert, head down, chambered another round. In a clear stretch of plateau about twenty yards from the monument, Mitchell was on a knee, pulling blocks of C4 from his det bag. From this distance the blood staining his face looked like oil.