by Matthew Dunn
He stopped suddenly as a huge sound came from above him. His heart pounded. He realized the sound was the start of the concert. He could now clearly hear instruments and singing. His heartbeat slowed, and he kept going. The music quieted.
There were more corridors to his left and right. Some had signs and arrows directing him to rehearsal rooms, management offices, changing rooms. Will imagined that before the concert this whole subterranean floor would have been bustling with performers getting ready, officials fretting about schedules and timings, backstage well-wishers, and crews that would move curtains and stage pulleys and manhandle props on and off the stage. But right now the labyrinth of rooms around him seemed empty.
Rapid footsteps suddenly told him that the place was not empty. He looked around quickly, trying to ascertain where the steps were coming from. He decided they were behind him but heading in his direction. He jogged forward and darted left into yet another corridor. He stopped, swiveled, crouched, and wished he still had his gun. The footsteps grew louder, and he realized they belonged to more than one person. Police officers? Secret Service? As the footsteps drew nearer, he bunched his right hand into a fist and waited, briefly wondering what he would do if armed officials found him here. He decided he would have no choice other than to inflict rapid, absolute, but nonlethal pain on them and render them unconscious.
The footsteps were nearly directly in front of him now, and Will clenched his fist tighter, braced his body to move fast, and focused solely on the corridor ahead and the other corridor traversing it. The footsteps slowed. Will got ready.
A woman and a girl appeared at the end of the corridor. Will exhaled slowly and unclenched his fist. The woman had her arms around the girl and seemed to be consoling her. The girl was wearing a black dress and a white blouse and was crying. She carried a flute.
They stopped, and the woman told her, “It’s called stage fright. I used to get it when I was your age. Let’s find you a warm drink and see if you feel like going back out there afterward.”
They walked away from Will’s position, and soon they were gone. He stood upright and looked around. He decided that he was in the wrong place. He decided that the bomber would be hidden someplace where he could not be accidentally found by innocents. He moved on, and the noise of the concert grew louder as he went.
He tried to imagine the layout of a building like this and what it would need to support it and keep it running. He decided that the Metropolitan Opera House would need power generators and air-conditioning and heating units and thick pillars to support its stage and overall structure. He could see that most of those things were not on this floor. He knew that there had to be another floor beneath him and that it would be the perfect place for the bomber to wait while holding Lana captive.
He rubbed his face and desperately tried not to think about Lana, her condition now, and whether she was even still alive. He tried not to think of anything that would hinder his focus and concentration to stop the most terrible event.
Lights flashed to his right, and Will instinctively pushed himself against a wall. The lights were close and moved over floor and ceiling. He knew that they were flashlights, that in a place like this flashlights were unusual and would be carried only by officials who were looking for something. He decided that the officials had to be looking for him and were probably armed. He turned and ran away from them along the corridor he was in. He moved into an area of shadows and looked back down the corridor he’d just covered. He saw two men dressed in windbreakers, jeans, and hiking boots. They were carrying handguns. He couldn’t see their faces clearly, but they were dressed like the Secret Service men he’d spotted outside the opera house. They hadn’t seen him, but he knew that if he stayed where he was, he would be found.
He moved deeper into the shadows, turned into another corridor, jogged silently along it, past empty rooms and other corridors, and stopped. The lights were some distance behind him but had now separated. Will looked at the ceiling above him. Judging by the sounds coming from it, he knew he had to be directly under the stage. He ran along another corridor and estimated that he was close to one of the building’s exterior walls. He looked at every opening and every doorway near him, desperately searching for a route that would take him down to the opera house’s basement.
He ran to the end of the corridor and stopped. A door was before him that had a sign saying MAINTENANCE ONLY. He was about to move to the door when a beam of light struck the floor only a few feet in front of him. He silently moved backward and sidestepped into a corridor on his right. He stood motionless and watched the floor near him. He could still see the flashlight, and it was getting very close. The music above him grew, and Will cursed the noise as it obliterated any chance of his hearing the movement of the men on this floor. He breathed in deeply and tensed his muscles to lunge forward if the man closest to him turned into his corridor. The flashlight moved left and right over the floor and walls. It came closer. Will stayed still.
He saw the gun before he saw the man. It moved slowly across his vision and was almost within arm’s reach. The gun stopped for a moment and then moved forward. The man stepped into view and walked carefully along the corridor. Will pushed himself flush against a wall, even though he knew he would be seen if the man looked hard left in his direction. But the man kept walking and soon disappeared from view.
Will waited for thirty seconds before stepping carefully forward to the edge of the corridor containing the Secret Service man. He lowered himself down so that he was not at eye level and quickly poked his head out into the corridor before pulling it back. The Secret Service man was gone. Will slowly moved out and ran low toward the door for maintenance men.
He carefully shut the door behind him and saw stairs heading down. He took them, and with every step the sounds from the concert above him grew quieter. He reached the subbasement and now more than ever wished he were armed. He looked around him and knew that this was a perfect place to hide Lana. And he knew that it was also a perfect place for Megiddo’s bomber to wait and detonate his bombs ahead of schedule if anything happened.
The area around him had large, square metal vents jutting out of its roof and traveling at head height through space before reentering the roof at different points. Big generators were positioned nearby, humming in a low drone. He saw thick steel pillars that reached from floor to ceiling and assumed they supported the opera house’s stage and everything on it. He saw wall-mounted fixtures and occasional ceiling fixtures, but the light here was even dimmer than that on the floor above. He looked back up the staircase and wondered if the Secret Service men would soon open the door and search this basement. He looked around the vast area before him and wondered if there were other routes into this place. He decided that there had to be other entrances, that the Secret Service men could use any of those routes to find him here, and that they would know every inch of the place.
He checked his watch. It was now 8:20 P.M.
He walked forward, occasionally ducking his head to avoid the vents, and scoured the area to his left and right and ahead of him. But the place was a tangled mess of big machinery, narrow spaces, and dark recesses, and he could barely see beyond a few yards ahead of him. The hum of the generators was everywhere, and the concert could hardly be heard.
He walked faster and moved into an area that contained instrument panels, with switches and levers and warnings about voltage. He brushed a hand over one of the panels and saw that it was covered with fine dust and had therefore clearly not been touched for a few days. He moved on through an area containing dozens of thin pipes at floor level. He stepped over them into an area that was clear of anything at floor level, and as he did so, he heard a clunk of metal behind him. He spun around and saw that the metallic sound had come from one of the pipes. Whatever was coursing through it was causing it to vibrate and bang against an adjacent pipe. He turned to move forward.
The
n he felt a hard object against the back of his head.
He stood frozen. He heard feet scuffing the floor. The object pressed harder against his head. He knew it had to be the muzzle of a gun and that the gun could belong to Megiddo’s bomber, but he also knew that it more likely belonged to one of the two Secret Service men who were searching for a man who had been desperate to enter the opera house. He wondered whether to spin around, grab the muzzle, simultaneously grab the hand holding the gun, and twist both so that he was in possession of the weapon. He could do the movement in under four-fifths of a second. But if the gun belonged to a Secret Service man, his colleague could be with him, and that man would shoot Will before he could complete the movement. He turned slowly.
Lana was before him. She was holding the gun.
Will frowned, looked to her left and right to see if some hidden person was pointing a gun at her to make her do what she was doing, saw nothing, and looked back at her. He felt totally confused. He felt as if nothing made sense.
“What are you doing?” Will said the words slowly, and they did not seem like his own.
Lana stared at him. Her expression was cold. She looked unharmed and strong. She looked in command of herself.
“What are you doing? What’s going on?”
Lana shook her head slowly. “If you are here, then he is dead.”
Will’s heart pounded. Confusion overwhelmed him. “What is going on?” He could smell Lana’s perfume, feel her presence, and see her beauty. But he could also see that she had death in her eyes and that she wanted to kill him.
“You have been such a fool, Will Cochrane.”
She used my real name.
She smiled. “Such a fool.”
“Megiddo told you my real name?”
“I always knew your real name.”
Will felt an immediate sense of nausea and anger. “You’ve been working with Megiddo all along?”
She no longer smiled. “Ever since I met him all those years ago. From the beginning to the end.”
Will shook his head in disbelief.
Lana waved the muzzle of the gun a little before steadying it toward Will’s head. “You’ve been tricked by us all. Tricked by Megiddo, me, and . . . all of us.”
Will narrowed his eyes as a realization struck him. “All of you, including the man who introduced your name to me.”
Lana nodded. “Harry as well.” She widened her eyes. “I have always loved Megiddo, and he has always loved me. I had to be here to complete his masterpiece because you killed all his other soldiers.” She smiled. “I came here to trigger the bombs if someone like you tried to stop our attack from happening.”
Will’s mind raced with questions and confusion. There was so much he didn’t understand about what was happening, but he also knew he had no time to find answers to these questions. “How can you detonate the bombs?”
Lana patted a breast pocket. “I have a number programmed into my cell phone. If I call that number, the bombs receive my signal and detonate ahead of their preprogrammed time of nine P.M.”
Will checked his watch. It was 8:45 P.M.
He desperately tried to think. “You will have another number in your phone. A number that if called will stop the bombs from going off at nine P.M. A number that was to be called only in the event that the concert was postponed to another day or called off.”
Lana narrowed her eyes. “That number will never be called, because I have everything I need in the concert hall—the premiers’ wives and the thousands of children.”
Will shook his head. “Surely you don’t want this atrocity to happen? Surely you don’t want their deaths?”
Lana smiled. “They will die, you will die, and I will be with Megiddo again. I will be happy when the bombs destroy everything around us.”
Will felt sick. The woman before him was a woman he did not know. Lana meant what she said. If she had any heart, it was a heart that cared for nothing other than Megiddo. He decided that his only hope now depended upon her believing a lie. He shook his head. “Lana, it is you who’s been the fool. Megiddo never loved you.”
She glared at him. “You know nothing about the love we had for each other.”
Will shook his head again. “I came here expecting to find you tied up and a bomber holding a gun to your head.”
Lana sniggered. “That is what Megiddo wanted you to expect.”
Will nodded. “He did. Even when he was on his knees and I had a gun pointed at his head, even when he knew he was about to die, he knew that there was nothing I could do to stop his attack.” Will frowned. “So why would he describe the bomber in the opera house as a naïve and gullible pawn whose death would be as trivial as the deaths of the children? Why would he say that when he had no need to say such a thing to me?”
Lana frowned. “You’re lying.”
Will shook his head. “I’m not, but the comment he made was unnecessary. If Megiddo loved you, he would just have kept his mouth shut about his views of the bomber. Or maybe he would have used a more positive description. But he had absolutely no need to be disparaging about the bomber unless”—he nodded sadly—“unless he wanted me to truly know the magnitude of his strategy. He wanted me to know how he had manipulated every single person around him. Every person, including the man or woman who was going to detonate his bombs.”
Lana shook her head, but doubt clearly showed on her face. “He . . . he loved me. He always loved me.”
Will checked his watch. It was 8:52 P.M. His heart was hammering, but he kept his voice calm. “Think about it, Lana. He lived his life solely to outwit others.”
“You know nothing about him!” Lana spat. “He loved his work, but he also loved me.”
Will spoke forcefully. “He has always used you, and he is using you now. That is why he described you as a naïve and gullible pawn. And I agree with his description, because that’s precisely what you are!”
The generators near them seemed to hum louder. Pipes rattled and hissed. Vents groaned. The music from the concert above them sounded distant but was still audible.
A tear ran down one of Lana’s cheeks. “I love him.”
“But he never loved you.”
Her gun moved slightly.
Will watched her. “Lana, I loved you. But he had no love for anything other than his work.”
Lana looked away for a moment. When she looked back at Will, she had tears rolling down both cheeks. She spoke with a weak and trembling voice. “Then I have indeed been the fool.”
Will smiled with a look of sympathy, even though he felt anything but sympathy for the woman in front of him. “We have both been fools. And victims.”
She took a step back and leaned against a vent. She was breathing rapidly, and Will wondered if she was starting to hyperventilate. She shook her head, cursing. She lowered her gun and held it by her side. She looked around the basement and up at the ceiling. She shook her head some more and banged the butt of her handgun against the vent. She looked at Will. “What . . . what should I do?”
Will took a step toward her. “You must do something to show Megiddo that you are no longer a fool. You must do something to show him that you are no longer his pawn. You must do the one thing that will hurt him the most. You must call the number to disarm the bombs.”
Lana shook her head, and tears now streamed down her face.
“Lana, if you die here, you will never be with him. You will have died for nothing. Everyone here will have died for nothing.”
Lana again banged her gun on the vent and muttered, “Oh, dear God.” She looked at Will. “He told me he loved me. He showed me he loved me.”
“He did that so you would be here.”
Lana looked up at the ceiling and screamed, “A fucking pawn?”
She lowered her head and began breathing slower. She closed her eyes.
She rubbed the back of her gun-carrying hand against her face. She looked at Will.
“Call the number.” Will looked at the time. It was 8:57 P.M.
She reached into her breast pocket and pulled out her cell phone. She looked at it. For a long time. She frowned. Then she looked at Will before looking back at the cell phone.
It was now 8:59 P.M.
“We have no time, Lana!” Will’s heart was racing.
She breathed in slowly. She pressed numbers into the phone. She held it to her ear. She waited a moment, then nodded. She dropped her arm to her side, still clutching the phone. She began weeping and shaking.
“Are the bombs disarmed?”
Lana wrapped her arms around her body and shook violently with emotion.
Will shouted, “Lana, are they disarmed?”
Lana inhaled slowly, and her body steadied. “They are. They’re safe.”
Will checked his watch. It was 9:00 P.M. He looked around, waited, counted seconds, could barely hear the concert, but life was clearly continuing in the building. He sighed and looked at Lana.
Her gun was pointing at him. She rubbed tears away from her face and breathed loudly. She shrugged. “So it’s over now.”
“Put the gun down, Lana.”
She shook her head.
“Put the gun down, Lana.”
Lana huffed. “You’ll put me in a prison cell for the rest of my life.”
“Lana, put the gun down! You’ve disarmed the bombs. That will go in your favor.”
Lana shook her head again.