by P. W. Child
‘We can’t outrun them,’ Sam thought. ‘All we can do is hope that they have to refuel before we do, because otherwise the moment we run out of petrol, that’s it for us. Over. And I have no idea what’s in store for us if they catch up, but I’m guessing it’s not going to be pretty, whatever it is. Leading these guys a dance isn’t going to look good for us, no matter -’
The world spun. On an empty stretch of road, Alexandr yanked the car around in a reckless 180 degree turn, hoping to gain a bit of distance from the SUV. The front wheel hit a patch of leaked oil. The car whirled round faster, further than Alexandr had intended. He jammed the wheel hard to one side in a desperate attempt to right them, but the windscreen was a blur of movement and he could not slow them down enough.
They burst through the guard rail at the side of the road. Brown and green surrounded them, trees and bushes blurring in the windows, until the scream of crumpling metal and shattering glass filled their ears and the car came to a devastating halt.
Chapter Fifty-Six
“Nina. Nina. Look at me, Nina.”
Dazed, Nina turned her head in the direction of the voice that was talking to her. The air was thick with the smell of impacted car. Her whole body felt stiff and jarred, and her neck ached. She forced herself to focus in spite of the fog of confusion suffusing her brain.
Purdue was next to her. Renata was not there, though Nina could not see where she had gone. She felt Purdue’s cool fingers on her face, touching her eyelids, moving her head. He was asking her questions – whether she could hear him properly, whether she could see clearly, whether she remembered what had happened. She nodded, but that proved to be painful so she made her sluggish tongue shape itself into the right words.
“You appear to be quite well,” Purdue assured her. “The others are safe, but you hit your head. I think you have a minor concussion, it will pass soon enough. But you must listen to me, Nina. These are for you.” He pressed two small tubes into her hand, each made of some kind of hard, resilient plastic and filled with a dark red liquid. “One is for you, the other is for Sam,” he said, speaking slowly and clearly as if he feared that she would not retain the information. “Wait until I am gone, and then you must drink them.”
“What… what are they?”
“Nothing you will be able to taste or feel,” he said. “These are the antidote to something you have already taken. During your time in that house, nanites were introduced into your system via your food and drink. The purpose of these nanites is to allow the Order to track you via GPS, just as they would if you were carrying a tracker dot. That is why they made no special effort to track you while you were in England – they did not have to. They will be able to track you now, unless you swallow this. More nanites, I’m afraid, but these will jam the GPS signal.”
Nina looked at the little vial, trying to picture the tiny machines swarming within it. It could have been colored soda, for all she knew. Nevertheless, she opened one and swallowed its contents.
“Good,” said Purdue, taking the empty vial from her. “Give the other one to Sam as soon as you can, and stay safe. I shall tell Sam and Alexandr that you are safe to be moved.” He turned away, opening the car door.
“Wait!” Nina reached out to stop him, but her seatbelt locked into place and winded her. He turned back to face her and waited for her to catch her breath. “Purdue… thank you.”
“What for?” He seemed genuinely confused.
“For this. For helping me even though… you know. Even though things didn’t work out.” She felt the pink flush beginning to creep across her neck and face.
To her surprise, Purdue laughed softly. He took her hand and kissed it. “Oh, Nina. To think that anyone could be so highly intelligent and at the same time so… dense. You think that this is me accepting defeat? Think again. This is me giving you time. You’ll love me yet, Nina. I am certain of it. And there is no sense of challenge in triumphing over a dead man. When you are ready to leave his bed and return to mine, you will know where to find me. I shall make sure of it.” He leaned in and kissed her. The touch of his lips was light but definite. Then he was gone.
‘Damn you, Purdue,’ she thought, as she sat waiting to be helped out of the car. ‘First you save me and make me feel I should be grateful to you, then you tell me it’s just another manipulation and make me want to hate you. My head is not clear enough for this.’ Slowly, stiffly, she managed to unbuckle the seatbelt and get the door open just in time to see Alexandr and Sam approaching.
Nothing was broken or sprained. Nina had definitely hit her head, but as the fog of confusion began to clear she was certain that she was fine. The two men helped her to get steady on her feet. The car was in a worse state. The tree they had hit was an old, solid oak and the bonnet was completely crumpled.
“The other car spun out too,” said Sam, “but it’s intact. It’s a little way over there. The driver wasn’t so lucky, poor sod. It doesn’t look like he was belted in. He got thrown about pretty badly. He was dead by the time we got to him.”
“Still, one must be positive,” Alexandr said. “At least there is one working vehicle that we can take.”
Sam nodded in agreement. “We should get on our way, just in case there are any more of them after us.” They set off through the trees towards the place where the SUV had thundered to a halt.
“Err… this is where it was, isn’t it?” Sam asked, feeling utterly stupid. He was certain that they were in the right place, but there was no car.
“It is,” said Alexandr. He pointed to the tire marks in the dirt and the battered foliage, then to the corpse of the SUV’s driver which they had partly concealed beneath leaves and grass. “It would appear that the SUV has succeeded in departing without its driver.”
“Where’s Purdue? And… where’s Renata?” Nina asked, and even as she spoke the words she felt her stomach drop and knew that Purdue must have taken the car. They began to search, calling Purdue’s name and hunting through the undergrowth for any sign of him, but there was none. Just tire tracks, a missing car and Nina’s creeping realization that his words to her in the car had been a goodbye that she was just too groggy to recognize.
“Well,” Sam said, once they had made certain that Purdue was nowhere to be found, “I suppose that finally answers the question of where his loyalties lie once and for all. Looks like he’s decided to take Renata back to Bruges and throw his lot in with the Black Sun once and for all.”
“So it would seem,” Alexandr nodded. “Are you two planning to do the same? Or will you join me in Russia and fight against them?”
Nina slipped her hand into Sam’s. “We’ll fight,” she said.
“I think we have to now,” Sam agreed. “There’s got to be a way to bring the Order down. Now… which way to Russia?”
END OF BOOK SIX