The Lamborghini again squealed away, smoke emitting from under its tires, drifting up toward the lines of overhanging trees. Park Lane switched from three lanes to four. Drake pulled the shift-paddles once more, quickly revving and switching the Jag through two howling gear changes, reaching fourth in just a few seconds. Even the Lamborghini wasn’t getting away, and the Range Rovers were somewhat slower. The vehicle’s speed and instant response was violent, pinning Drake and Mai back into their seats.
Down Park Lane they raced, the famous Forstner car showroom zipping by. Without warning the three mercenary vehicles swung sharp left. Drake reacted instantly but still only just managed to make the turn, burning rubber.
Mai lost her grip on the leather covered door handle, the seat belt just stopping her from ending up in his lap.
Drake spotted the big red ‘C’ painted on the road. “Bloody hell! We’re heading into a congestion charge area.”
“You’re worried about that? Really?”
“I’m a taxpayer. Of course the congestion charge worries me.”
Drake threaded the needle between a parked lorry with orange lights across the top of its cab and an overloaded skip with a plastic-wrapped pallet sitting next to it. Plaster puffed in his wake, making it harder for Dahl to see. More buildings obscured by scaffolding stuck out like eyesores to either side.
“Guess the recession’s well and truly over.” Drake hadn’t yet seen a city street where some kind of work wasn’t being carried out.
“Just concentrate.” Mai was focused ahead. “Drive.”
The Lamborghini veered right, a harsh maneuver that made its back end drift. Drake stamped on the brakes in anticipation. As he did so the driver of the orange supercar aimed a gun out of his own window.
“Oh, bollocks!”
The merc only managed one shot due to speed and velocity but that shot was stupidly accurate. It smashed into Drake’s side mirror, breaking it and sending it through his side window. Grimly, he hung on, covered in glass and plastic, hair whipped by the sudden gust of wind.
“Unholster your gun,” he said. “But don’t fire unless you’re doubly sure nobody’s around.”
“At 4:30 a.m.?” Mai took her weapon out. “Even the Tower’s ghosts will be asleep.”
Drake flicked the F-type to the right again, heading back toward Park Lane by the side of the Aston Martin showroom. At the top end a line of trees marked the road. Two Range Rovers and four supercars roared past the corner, wheels scrabbling for purchase, engines roaring like angry monsters, smoke streaming and trailing around them in swirling plumes. The Grosvenor was next, its black painted sign flashing past, its doorman staring after them and shaking his head.
“Seen it all,” Mai commented.
Drake nodded. “Park Lane ain’t no stranger to the supercar prowl or odd race,” he said. “Try walking down here at the weekend.”
Flags flashed by, fluttering, clinging to the sides of the hotel. The Dorchester with its wide curved frontage came next just before a set of lights turned to red. The mercs completely ignored the signal, ploughing through. Drake saw a black taxi ambling up toward the crossroads and floored it.
“Damned if we’re gonna lose these freaks!”
The cab came to a sudden halt, horn blaring. Drake, Dahl and Hayden shot through as the sounds of sirens at last began to split the night behind them. Ahead, the road and path widened as Park Lane met Hyde Park Corner. Ordinarily these roads were clogged with red buses, black cabs and tourists, but tonight they were mercifully clear. Drake saw the elephant at Achilles Way, perfectly balanced on the end of its trunk; a square green signpost that mentioned Knightsbridge flashed by too fast; and then the magnificent Wellington Arch — a sculpture showing the angel of peace descending onto the chariot of war — reared up ahead like an ancient vision.
Drake flung the F-type around Hyde Park Corner, hitting the apex and letting the back end glide the whole way around the enormous roundabout, straightening the front end as he almost brushed the Aventador’s rear and the main arch itself flashed by. The SLS was right behind him, the Aston Martin almost touching the Mercedes’ flank as they all passed two inches in front of a bus stop that read Hyde Park Corner. Drake flicked the Jag to the left, down the long straight of Grosvenor Terrace, trying to intimidate the Lamborghini into making a mistake.
Drake’s phone rang. Mai jabbed at the speakerphone. “What?”
“Let me past!” Dahl’s voice boomed. “I’m the better driver.”
“You mean you’ll take more chances,” Drake hit back.
“We can’t risk losing them,” Hayden chimed in, joining the link.
Drake stamped on the brake as the outlandish Aventador swung into a side road, piercing the district of Belgravia like a vivid blade. Dahl shot past, missing the maneuver and then Hayden was suddenly on Drake’s tail.
“Dickhead,” Drake muttered.
Dahl swore loudly.
Drake pursued the mercs once more, passing dozens of buildings that all looked the same — white stone lower floors and drab brown uppers. Drake thought it might be the dreariest street in the capitol until he spun around another corner and crossed an intersection. Flagpoles jutted out from the sides of several buildings, each one a different color.
“Upper Belgravia.” Drake said. “We’re in embassy territory.”
Around the wide, tree-lined square they shrieked, the Aventador shooting in front of the Range Rovers. Drake felt a quick rush of concern as the back window flipped open and the rear tailgate banged down.
Two men lay in the back of the vehicle, rifles nestled along their shoulders.
“Evade!” Drake screamed, knowing the phone channel was still open. He swerved left, accelerating rapidly to help narrow down the angle. Dahl trod on the brakes, front end dipping. Hayden swung her Aston Martin among several parked cars and vans, narrowly missing a collision. Bullets clanked off their bodywork and struck railings and lampposts, a parking meter and a pair of Renault Twingos. Belgrave Square echoed to the sound of double volleys, its prosperous peace shattered for the night.
Drake nursed the F-type back into position, wary now of the Range Rover but still able to keep it in his sights. The procession cut down West Halkin Street, the first Range Rover taking out one of the inverted-arrow keep-left signs, Dahl destroying the other.
Up Lowndes Street and Hayden was suddenly on the phone. “I know where they’re going. Knightsbridge Green. It’s the only known plague pit around here.”
“Can we get there before them?” Dahl asked.
“Can we risk you guessing wrong?” Drake worried.
Hayden stayed firm. “We may not beat them, but we can take a better route,” she said. “Follow us and get ready to fight. Things are about to get rough.”
Drake snorted “About to?”
Dahl sniffed. “Stop crying and get out of my bloody way.”
Drake nodded at Mai. “Whatever weapons we have, get them ready.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Drake slowed as Hayden slammed on the brakes.
“Knightsbridge is a built up area,” he said through the speakerphone. “Maybe one of these bloody hotels was built on top of the pit. Or Harrods.”
“It wasn’t.”
“How can you be so sure?”
“Because it’s the one they’re heading for! Think about it, London’s practically a charnel city, built on centuries-old bodies. If they’re heading for this one it must be accessible, otherwise why not choose another? It also has to be viable, for whatever reason. The Pythians wouldn’t have pushed the ‘go’ button without being sure.”