Betrayal j-2

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Betrayal j-2 Page 12

by Russell Blake


  “How bad is it?”

  “I’ll live,” he hissed. “You?”

  “Same here. You have a gun?”

  “Nope. Too dangerous carrying one in the club.”

  “Good thing I was packing.”

  He nodded. “Still got at least one shooter back there.”

  “I know. In here,” she cried, then ducked down a pedestrian shopping area, the startled strollers backing away from the blood-sodden pair.

  They continued running another two blocks, and then she slowed, taking cover in the shadows of a darkened building.

  “What the hell was that?” Rob asked, gasping for air.

  “Ambush. But question is who?”

  “Lap Pu?”

  “But why?”

  “The kid?”

  “Makes no sense. Could have been because of the money I flashed around, but that didn’t feel like a robbery. More like a hit.”

  Rob frowned. “But if it was a hit, why the amateurs? Why not just gun us down by the car?”

  “Good question. Did you notice that they were all pretty rough-looking? Not city rough. Outdoor rough. Their skin was like leather. I’ve seen that on Bedouins…”

  “What now?”

  She pulled some Kleenex from her purse; after tearing three loose for herself and pressing them against her leg, she handed Rob the packet.

  “We need to get out of here.”

  “I’ll call Edgar,” Rob said, pulling his phone free of his shirt pocket.

  A twinge of anxiety tickled Jet’s stomach, but she couldn’t place what was causing it. She nodded to Rob, and he dialed Edgar’s number. After a few terse sentences, he hung up.

  “There’ll be a car here within ten minutes. White Yaris.”

  “And a doctor?”

  “Already arranged. We’ll go straight there and get patched up.”

  “So now all we need to do is stay alive till help gets here,” Jet said, eyes scanning the dark street. A motorcycle putted by, two locals astride it, laughing together as they bounced down the road.

  When the Yaris pulled to the curb and flashed its lights, they hurried to it and slid in without a word. The driver was rolling away before they’d slammed the doors, his eyes roving in the rearview mirror, on the lookout for threats.

  “Nice shooting back there,” Rob said in a low voice.

  “Not too bad yourself with the Slingblade impression.”

  “What I really want to do is direct.”

  The little car purred along, and Jet stared out through the tinted window, lost in thought. Whoever had attacked them had known exactly where they would be, so it couldn’t have been Lap Pu — they’d gotten there before him, so at best he would have had to follow them.

  The implications weren’t positive.

  Someone knew their every movement.

  Someone who wanted them dead.

  “We’ll dress this and stitch it up, and you’ll be as right as ninepence,” the doctor, a wizened British man, assured her with a nod.

  She winced as he sutured her but didn’t make a sound.

  “Now, then. Let’s take a look at that stab wound, young man” he said, motioning for Jet to get off the exam table.

  “Do you have a sink?” she asked. “I need to rinse out my pants. Blood and all.”

  “Other room. Take your time. All right, then. What have we got here?” he asked Rob, who merely sat on the table and pulled his shirt up.

  The doctor peered at the gash and flushed it out with antiseptic, Rob’s sharp intake of breath hissing as the pain hit.

  “Well, it’s messy, but superficial. A few stitches for you, and the drama will be over. Hold still,” the old man instructed, then blotted the injury with gauze before threading the hooked needle. “You’re lucky I hadn’t polished off the second half of the Balentines I’d started on. As it is, steadies the hand and soothes the spirit.”

  Rob ignored the banter, preferring to suffer the ministrations in silence.

  “There. No worse for wear, I’d say. Just watch for swelling or redness. I’ll give you both a five-day course of antibiotics, purely precautionary, to stave off infection. I dare say you’ll be fine. Do try to avoid getting stabbed or shot, though. Bloody inconvenient to have to open the office near midnight.”

  “Thanks, Doc. I’ll keep that in mind.” Rob began buttoning up his bloodstained shirt.

  “No, no. You can’t go out like that. Here, let me see if I have a spare in the closet. I’m sure I do. If not, at least an exam coat.” The doctor opened an en suite door and rummaged around before emerging with a gaudy Hawaiian print rayon shirt with dancing dogs cavorting all over it. “Ah. One of my favorites. I’ll be sorry to see it go. Wear it in good health. World’s going to the dogs, and so forth…”

  He handed it to Rob, who eyed it skeptically before pulling off his more conservative one. Jet returned wearing her jeans as he donned the dog shirt and strained to button it across the chest. The result was absurd, and when he faced the mirror, he joined Jet in laughing at his reflection.

  “Looks brilliant, young man. Magic, really,” the doctor said without a trace of a smile.

  “I wonder if they make a set of matching pants?” Rob remarked drily.

  Their business with the doctor concluded, they descended the stairs to the street, where the Yaris was parked out front, the driver napping behind the wheel.

  Rob pounded on the window. “Come on, wake up, you lazy…”

  “Run,” Jet whispered and then spun, tearing back up the stairs.

  Rob stood by the car for a second, unsure of what was happening, and then ducked and darted for the front door just as a shot gouged a chunk of plaster out of the entry foyer wall by his head. He was a third of the way up the stairs when the glass door behind him exploded, showering him with tiny glittering shards. He scrambled the rest of the way to the landing and heard the sound of running footsteps from the street below, then darted down the hall to where Jet had sprinted for the doctor’s office. He was just through the door and twisting the deadbolt shut when rounds thudded into the steel. The doctor gaped around, panicked.

  “Is there another way out of here?” Jet asked in a low voice.

  He nodded, pointing. “Back exit. What on earth is going on here?”

  “Come with us. It’s not safe. They killed the driver,” Jet explained, then threw the back door open. A raw concrete landing led to another metal door that was bolted shut. She caught Rob’s eye.

  “They tracked us here. Go down the back stairs. I’ll be with you in a second.”

  The front door groaned on its hinges as the attackers threw their weight against it. Rob nodded, grabbed the doctor by the arm, and led him to the rear stairs. Jet dashed to the drawers and opened them, finding what she wanted in the second one. She grabbed some gauze, a small plastic bottle and the paper-sheathed disposable scalpel and then ran for the stairwell, where she could hear Rob and the doctor clumping down to the ground level.

  If they were lucky, they would have a minute or two before their pursuers began looking for another way in. Her only hope was that it wasn’t a large team. If it was, they were screwed.

  Rob and the doctor were waiting at the bottom of the stairs.

  She thrust the scalpel at the doctor.

  “Quick. You need to cut this thing out. Now.” She unbuttoned her top and slid a sleeve off, pointing to the spot where the chip had been imbedded just a few days earlier.

  “What am I cutting out?” he asked, hands shaking as he fumbled with the paper wrapper.

  “A microchip. Tiny. But you have about twenty seconds to get it or we’re all dead.”

  She gritted her teeth as he sliced her flesh open over the small bump and probed around with the sharp tip of the blade until he extracted the shiny silver disk. Thick, red blood dripped from the incision, but she ignored it.

  “Blot it and glue it. Rob. Take this chip, and throw it back up the stairs.”

  The doctor wiped away t
he blood, then squirted Dermabond into the incision and pressed the two sides together. He took his hand away ten seconds later, and she clenched the wound, applying pressure.

  “Get ready to run,” she whispered to the doctor, who nodded. She pulled her blouse back on and buttoned it, the gash now sealed tight.

  When Rob returned, she opened the rear door, peering into the half dark of the service way that ran along the backs of the buildings. There was no sign of life.

  A crash echoed from upstairs — the attackers had knocked the doctor’s front door down.

  “Now,” she said and bolted, Rob and the old man trailing her.

  As they neared the end of the block, the hulking outline of a construction project loomed on her left — an older building that was being renovated. A chain-link fence circled it, but there looked like enough room at the gate for her to squeeze in.

  “Can you make it?” she asked Rob and the winded physician.

  “We’ll have to.”

  Jet went first and slid into the gap, clutching her purse as she beckoned them to follow. “Hurry.”

  Rob went next, his dog shirt tearing as he struggled to get through. He finally made it, then held out his hand for the doctor.

  “Come on. Now.”

  The old man wedged himself into the gap and then stopped, his white exam coat snagged by the raw wire jutting from the fence.

  “Tear it. Let’s go,” Rob urged, as his eyes swiveled down the alley.

  Three men toting assault rifles emerged from the doctor’s building, gun barrels sweeping the street.

  The doctor gasped at the sight of the gunmen and renewed his efforts to get free, but the only thing he accomplished was to make the fence rattle, drawing the gunmen’s attention.

  The night exploded with the stutter of automatic weapons, and the doctor’s body jerked spasmodically as a succession of white-hot rounds tore through him. Rob ducked back into the building where Jet was waiting and shook his head.

  She turned and mounted the concrete steps to the second floor. It was gutted, empty except for a workbench, with no place to hide, so she continued to the next level, Rob behind her.

  They heard their pursuers trying to pry the doctor’s corpse from where it blocked the gate, and then another blast of gunfire shattered the night as one of the men shot the padlock off.

  Jet pointed at a far window and then broke for it. Peering over the edge, she calculated the distance to the next building and then backed away from the empty aperture before hurling herself through it feet first.

  She landed in a pile of broken glass. She’d kicked through the window and was lying on the floor of a darkened office.

  “Jump,” she hissed at Rob, who was still standing in the other building, then she sprang to her feet and took off into the space beyond, looking for an exit or something that could be used as a weapon.

  Rob pounded after her and found her at a stairwell.

  “They’re right behind us,” he rasped.

  “I know. If we go down, we run the risk that one of them stayed on the street.”

  “So what do we do?”

  She cocked her head and pointed.

  “We go up.”

  Chapter 17

  A crashing sound reverberated through the empty building from below as the gunmen leapt across the chasm and landed on the glass. Jet and Rob took care to climb the stairs to the roof as silently as possible, hoping that their pursuers would think they had made the predictable choice and had gone down to the ground level.

  The door to the roof was old and rusting from years of exposure to the salt air and the elements. Jet listened, finger held to her lips, for sounds from two stories below and was rewarded by a door opening and then footsteps moving stealthily down the concrete stairs. When they had faded, she shouldered the roof door open.

  The rusty hinges springing wide sounded like a grenade detonating to her ear.

  A door slammed beneath them, and the clump of boots ascended steadily from below.

  She reached into her purse and withdrew the phone she’d gotten from Edgar and keyed the sequence that would convert it into a gun.

  “Go see if there’s a fire escape or a building we can jump to,” she whispered. “I have three shots in this thing, and it should stall them when I start shooting. But that will only last so long. If we don’t get off this roof, we’re dead.”

  He took off across the roof as she held the door ajar. Three yards of range wasn’t ideal, but maybe she wouldn’t need that much.

  She sensed rather than heard the lead man, and a second after his gun barrel came into view, she depressed the fire button, and the little phoned popped like a small pistol, the shell bouncing to the side through a sliding port. She heard a grunt of surprised pain and then gunfire filled the stairwell. Jet threw the door shut, allowing the fire to ricochet back on the shooters. Hopefully at least one stray would hit them, further adding to the sense that she was shooting back. She knew from experience that things could get weird fast in a firefight, and perceptions could play tricks on you. That was her only bet at this point.

  “Over here!” Rob called. “There’s a building next to us we can get to. It’s a story lower, but I think we can make it.”

  Jet leapt to her feet and ran to him, took one glance over the side, and then backed up and tore off at full speed in the direction of the edge.

  Jet seemed to hang suspended in the air for a few seconds, then she hit the roof of the next building, rolled to absorb the impact, and sprang to her feet.

  “Come on. Do it!” she yelled at him, and a moment later, Rob sailed into space, tucking and rolling in the same manner when he landed. The shooting from the stairwell had stopped, so Jet guessed that the gunmen had either figured out that she was no longer there, or had sprayed so many slugs into the space that the ricochets had laid waste to them and they were lying wounded or dead on the stairs.

  “Look. There’s a fire escape,” Jet said, moving to a ladder that extended from the building’s edge below. “It looks solid. I’m going down.”

  She swung her leg over and dropped below the roofline. Rob trotted to the edge and followed her, but just as his head was dipping out of sight, he saw two men with rifles on the roof of the other building.

  “Slide down. Fast as you can. They’re on the roof. It will only be a few seconds before they’re here shooting down at us.”

  Jet was still two stories above the street and, after weighing her options, kicked in the window of a second-story office and climbed in.

  “We can make it to the street once they follow us inside,” she said as he hung on the ladder outside the window.

  “No. Let’s split up. That will make them do the same thing, or it will allow one of us to get away clean.”

  “No-”

  But by the time she had shaken her head, he was gone.

  Jet heard his soles drop to the ground a few moments later and then the sound of running. She didn’t wait to see if he would make it. Since he had made the decision to go his separate way, she owed it to both of them to do whatever it took to escape.

  Then the shooting started.

  She froze, then made an instantaneous decision. If the gunmen split up, that meant only one would come after her. And there were few fights she couldn’t win one-on-one. Even if both of them came, if she could pick her environment, they were as good as dead.

  The ladder creaked as the two men lowered themselves, weapons hanging over their shoulders. One man’s leg was bleeding from where a stray round had hit him, but he was still pushing himself even as crimson drops leached from the wound and fell to the sidewalk below. The lower man made a hand signal as he reached the broken window and then unstrapped his rifle, leading with it as he strained with his leg for the ledge. He winced with effort as he pulled himself into the darkened room, peering around warily.

  His partner followed him in, and they exchanged a glance in the gloom, both men straining for the slightest sound in spi
te of their ears ringing from the gunfire. A ricochet had killed their companion in the stairwell so they were being especially cautious, their mission having been a disaster so far.

  The lead man pointed to the doorway with two fingers. The other man nodded before stepping over the glass and inching cautiously towards it. Sirens keened in the far distance, and they knew that they were now on borrowed time. Even in Bangkok, the police would show up for a full-on gun battle.

  Once through the door, there was almost no light, so they waited a few seconds for their eyes to adjust. A scraping came from further in the depths of the offices. The lead man pointed at the light switch. His partner shook his head. Light would make them sitting ducks. Right now they had the same darkness to contend with as their adversary.

  They moved down the hall, pushing doors open with their gun barrels, ready for anything, and then the noise became clearer. Rhythmic. Like a machine of some sort.

  From the next office down.

  The lead man tapped his temple with his hand and pointed at the door. A bead of sweat rolled down his face and crept into his eye, causing him to blink the burn away. His partner stood by the side of the doorjamb and eased the knob to the right, then threw it open and rolled into the room.

  An old copy machine was churning away, its internal scanning arm clattering each time it fulfilled its journey across the screen and hit the carriage-stop. The lead man followed his partner into the room, gun at the ready, but the machine was the only occupant.

  The sirens grew louder. It wouldn’t be long.

  Somehow their target had gotten away.

  And now they were faced with an impossible choice. Keep searching the building and face certain arrest, or escape to fight another day but have to report back that they had failed in their mission.

  The second gunman turned to look at his partner for guidance.

  From downstairs, a door slammed, confirming their worst suspicions. They were now alone in the building, their quarry gone, leaving them to the police.

  The lead man lifted a cell phone to his ear and murmured a few words into it, instructing the car to circle around and pick them up in the alley. Hopefully, they would be able to outrun the police. If not, they would have to fight it out. Capture was not an option.

 

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