The Midas Code tl-2
Page 17
In the narrow space between the two cars, Locke feinted with the flashlight. Pietro dove forward hoping for a killing thrust, but Locke shoved him backward, knocking Pietro against the BMW’s back door, which slammed shut. Pietro swung around. The only thing between him and Locke was the open front door.
Locke rushed forward, the flashlight low, going for the upper cut. Pietro was ready to slash him across the neck as he went by, but before he reached Pietro, Locke struck the window of the open door, sending chunks of safety glass hurtling at Pietro.
Pietro instinctively shielded himself from the flying glass and only realized too late that it was a diversion. While Pietro had his hands up, Locke rushed in and brought the flashlight down like a lumberjack.
Pietro’s world went black.
* * *
Tyler kicked Pietro a couple of times to prove that the Italian wasn’t feigning unconsciousness. Convinced that his hammer blow had worked, Tyler knelt and caught his breath.
In a few seconds his heart rate was below hummingbird speed. He picked up the switchblade and put it in his pocket. The gun was nowhere to be seen, and he had no time to look for it.
Tyler searched Pietro’s pockets, but there were no more guns, just a passport, a wallet, and a key chain with keys to both the BMW and the Ferrari. He was surprised that Cavano shared the keys with anyone. Either she wanted someone else to carry her spare or someone was being a naughty boy and taking the Ferrari out for joyrides when he wasn’t supposed to.
Tyler pocketed the keys and took out his phone to call Grant.
“You got it?”
“Not yet,” Tyler said. “I’ve had a run-in with one of Cavano’s men.”
“She left one down there?” Tyler knew Grant was kicking himself for not warning him, but with the heavily tinted windows there was no way Grant could have known that someone was in the car.
“Doesn’t matter. He’s down for the count, but I think he made a call to her. We may need an alternate exit strategy. And tell Stacy to get out of there before they see her.”
“Crap! It’s too late. They’re in the lobby.”
“I’ll call you back,” Tyler said, and hung up.
He pushed the car forward far enough to get behind it and opened the trunk. He didn’t have time to go through the bags and search for the geolabe. There were five pieces of carry-on luggage inside. The geolabe must be in one of them. He put the flashlight down and swiftly removed the luggage, sliding the cases between the BMW and the Mercedes.
He had just taken out the last case when he saw movement inside the car and heard the glove box open.
Pietro. The blow hadn’t left him incapacitated long enough. Tyler picked up the flashlight, ready to finish the job, when bullets started blasting through the backseat.
He dove under the bumper. In his haste, he hadn’t checked the interior for more pistols, and with the switchblade in his pocket he was the proverbial guy who had brought a knife to a gunfight.
The shots were wild. Pietro was probably woozy from a concussion, but one of the shots would eventually connect. Tyler had only one chance.
With his feet against the wall, he put his back against the bumper. The BMW rolled forward. A bullet creased his shoulder, but Tyler ignored it and heaved with everything he had.
His legs were fully extended when the front wheels fell over the edge. The BMW tilted forward and plunged into the abyss as Pietro screamed from inside. An earsplitting crash echoed through the garage when the car slammed into the concrete floor.
Tyler got up and went to the edge. Five floors below, the BMW had landed on its roof. The air bags hadn’t saved Pietro. His lifeless body poked out of the wreckage, blood pooling around his head.
The empty tray began to lower from its spot at the exit bay. Pietro’s friends were coming for the BMW.
Tyler had to hurry. He unzipped the first bag and rifled through its contents. Nothing but clothes. He did the same with the second, third, and fourth, but came up empty. He tossed each of them into the atrium as he finished with them.
That left the fifth bag. The tray from the exit bay came and lined up to switch itself with the tray the BMW had been on. Tyler picked up the last bag and jumped onto the hood of the Mercedes so that he wouldn’t be crushed as the trays were exchanged. With luck, the empty tray would buy him more time as they tried to figure out why the car was missing.
With the new tray in place, Tyler got down and opened the final bag. He was aghast when he realized it was just another bag of clothes.
The geolabe wasn’t here. He’d gotten enough of a view of the BMW’s interior to know that the geolabe wasn’t inside. But if it wasn’t in the smashed car below, that left …
The retrieval tray came down a second time, but it didn’t stop at the sixth level. It kept heading to the bottom.
Puzzled by the empty tray and the noise from the crash, Cavano’s men must have inserted the ticket for the other car.
If Tyler didn’t move fast, he’d lose his best chance to get the geolabe, which had to be inside the Ferrari.
THIRTY-FIVE
The TV screens at the guard station in the Boerst lobby were at the front of the desk, so Stacy had positioned herself to the side with her back to the elevators. Her strategy to use the map from the rental-car agency to ask for directions worked to perfection. The guard, a thin blond kid who looked straight out of high school, seemed to be the helpful type, and she was right. In her experience, men liked having a problem to solve, so she had made her predicament as complicated as possible, intentionally flubbing her German for good measure. The guard hadn’t once glanced at the security-camera feeds.
Then the crash had reverberated through the building. The guard had been looking at her map and Stacy had been looking at the video feed when the BMW fell to the bottom of the garage. She feared the worst for Tyler until she saw his familiar form peer over the edge of the chasm. Something had gone dreadfully wrong, and all she could do was delay the guard’s figuring out what had happened long enough for Tyler to get out of there.
The guard’s head snapped up when he heard the noise. Stacy grabbed his arm and pointed outside.
“Did you see that?” she said, and frantically pulled the guard with her to the front door, not giving him a chance to check his screens.
“What happened?” he said.
“I think I saw a car just crash into the building next door.”
As they looked outside for evidence of the accident, her phone buzzed.
The text message from Grant said,
Two of Cavano’s men just passed you. Don’t turn around.
Stacy stiffened. She hadn’t been expecting them down so soon.
“I don’t see it,” the guard said.
“It was a blue car,” Stacy said, her heart pounding at the danger they were all in. “I saw it speed by way too fast. It must have hit a car around the corner. We should go look.”
The guard turned back toward the reception desk. “But I’m not supposed to leave the building—”
“Did you see the car?”
She was debating whether to leave or stay when the elevator dinged. Out of the corner of her eye, she caught sight of Cavano, her long raven hair distinctive. She was with her other bodyguard. If they realized it was Stacy with the guard, they’d be on her in a second.
Cavano and her hulking escort went out the door to the garage.
Stacy held on to the guard’s arm and continued to pepper him with questions, trying to keep him engaged as long as possible. The second he got back to his station, all hell would break loose.
* * *
The empty vehicle tray had already been swapped for the tray with the Ferrari on it, and Tyler was watching his chance of recovering the geolabe being whisked toward the exit. His plan to climb down and get it before leaving through one of the maintenance exits had vanished.
Tyler had to get to the Ferrari before it rose into the exit bay. He ran along the front of the cars, not c
aring if the camera could see him at this point. If the guard even glanced at the camera, he’d sound the alarm when he saw the crushed remains of the BMW.
The Ferrari stopped at the bottom as the system transitioned to lifting the tray. Tyler was still three cars from the end. He pushed the unlock button on the Ferrari’s key fob that he’d taken from Pietro.
The tray rose. With a couple of leaps over the hoods of the last two cars, Tyler banged into the wall. As the Ferrari reached the level below him, he jumped.
His feet barely caught on the edge of the tray, and he thumped into the Ferrari’s rear. He had no time to get into the front boot, the only other possible storage place for the geolabe. He opened the driver’s door and squeezed inside, slamming it behind him. He crouched down across the passenger seat as the Ferrari stopped and waited for the exit bay’s floor to slide aside for the tray to rise up.
He redialed Grant’s number.
“Yeah,” he said.
“Is Stacy with you?” Tyler said.
“No, she’s still in the lobby. If Cavano goes back in, she’ll see Stacy for sure.”
“Tell her to leave through the front door in fifteen seconds.”
“Okay.” He and Grant had known each other long enough for Grant not to waste time asking why.
“And, no matter what you see, stay where you are.”
“But Cavano—” Grant wouldn’t like that request, but Tyler hung up before he could hear more.
The Ferrari began rising again and stopped in the exit bay. As the doors opened, Tyler sat up and started the engine.
Right in front of him were the three bodyguards and Cavano, who stared at Tyler in disbelief.
* * *
When Sal had left to find out what the surprise was, Cavano suspected Pietro was attempting to get one of the other bodyguards to switch places with him.
But a few minutes after he’d gone, Sal called to say that the BMW was missing and that they couldn’t get hold of Pietro. Cavano wondered if Pietro had left his post and taken the BMW for a drive, but she realized that he couldn’t have exited the garage on his own. Retrieving the car could be done only from outside the garage. Perhaps the computer system had directed the tray to the wrong spot in the garage, but a nagging feeling told her that something was wrong, so she instructed Sal to retrieve the Ferrari to make sure it was still there.
As Cavano hurried from the elevator to the garage exit, she had barely registered the sight of the guard speaking to a woman at the front door, their backs to her.
She was standing in front of the bay with Sal and the other two bodyguards when the Ferrari arrived, seemingly intact. But as the doors opened, she was stunned to see Tyler Locke sit up in the seat of her car and start it up.
Before any of them could react, Locke gunned the engine and smoked tires out of the bay, sending the four of them diving to avoid being run over.
Cavano had thought the whole business with Locke was a sideshow until this moment. Now she realized how important that device must be to him if he was willing to take this kind of risk to get it back.
As she pushed herself to her feet, Cavano vowed again that Orr and Locke would not beat her to the Midas treasure. She ran out into the street and saw her new Ferrari screech to a halt. The woman the guard had been talking to burst through the doors and ran to the Ferrari.
“Get in,” Locke yelled through the open passenger window.
At the Ferrari’s door, Stacy Benedict turned and locked eyes with Cavano, who was momentarily frozen with rage.
Benedict jumped in, and the Ferrari took off.
An alarm went off in the Boerst building, but Cavano ignored it. She had to get her car back, and the BMW was nowhere to be found.
Cavano could hijack a car driving by, but it would never be able to keep up with the Ferrari. Then she remembered the exotic car dealership, the same one that had brokered her purchase of the Ferrari.
She whirled around and saw the truck delivering cars for the dealership. Two were already parked on the street, a yellow Lamborghini Gallardo and a black Pagani Zonda. Both of them were supercars at least the equal of her 458 Italia.
Cavano waved to her men and pointed at the cars.
“Let’s go!” she yelled.
A salesman from the car dealership was inspecting the cars. Cavano ran to the driver’s door of the Zonda and opened it.
The salesman started yelling in German.
“What are you doing?”
Sal jumped into the passenger seat of the Zonda, while the other two took the Lamborghini. The keys were still in both cars.
The Lamborghini took off after Locke, leaving the salesman screaming at them.
Cavano started the Zonda and revved the twelve cylinders to the redline.
“Tell your boss Gia Cavano just bought these cars,” she said to the salesman through the open window in her passable German.
The salesman sputtered in amazement, but Cavano didn’t wait to hear his response. She threw the Zonda into gear and laid down a patch of rubber twenty yards long.
THIRTY-SIX
With a yellow Lamborghini in the rearview mirror, Tyler knew his escape wasn’t over. It had to be the one he’d seen as he exited the garage, which meant that Cavano wasn’t giving up on her Ferrari that easily.
He had hoped to find a good place to ditch the car and make their escape on foot into Munich’s U-Bahn subway, but the rush-hour traffic had slowed them enough to allow their pursuers to catch up. Because he and Stacy were unarmed, a footrace would be suicidal. And going to the police wasn’t an option after trashing the garage, killing a man, and stealing a car.
“Oh, my God!” Stacy shouted above the roar of the engine. “You’re bleeding!” She took off her sweater and pressed it against his arm.
Tyler winced. In the escape he’d forgotten about the gunshot wound, but now the pain in his shoulder howled.
“I’ll be fine,” he said through gritted teeth.
“It looks like you got shot! Are you hit anywhere else?”
“I don’t think so.”
“I saw a wrecked car in the garage. What the hell happened? Why are we in Cavano’s car?”
“Had a little trouble getting into the BMW. Pietro surprised me.”
The traffic slowed ahead, so Tyler cranked the wheel to the right, turning onto a street called Steinsdorfstrasse that ran alongside the river. Stacy squealed as he weaved through the traffic, occasionally zooming into the oncoming lane when he saw an opening.
Now she’d get an idea of what it had been like for him on the horse. Using the paddle shifters, Tyler had complete control, as if he were part of the car. Stacy, on the other hand, looked distinctly unhappy as she struggled to keep from getting thrown back and forth.
“Put your seat belt on,” Tyler said. “This could get dicey.”
She snapped the belt into place. “Dicier than this?”
“Could be.”
Tyler couldn’t put any distance between them and the Lamborghini, which had now been joined by a black Pagani Zonda.
“Did you get the geolabe?” Stacy asked.
“It’s got to be in the front boot.”
“Where are we going?”
He had to get out of these narrow streets. They could corner him if he ran into a traffic jam.
A blue sign flashed by depicting a highway overpass and an arrow toward 95.
The autobahn. The sleek sports cars following them were a match for the Ferrari. Outrunning them would be next to impossible, but the open highway was better than a city traffic jam.
He gave Stacy his phone.
“Call Grant and tell him to head this way.”
“But he’ll never catch us.”
“Just tell him that we’re getting onto the 95.”
As she dialed, Tyler thought about the evidence he’d left behind in the garage. Now he was glad he’d worn the gloves. If he had been successful in keeping his face out of sight of the cameras, there would be nothin
g leading back to him.
Of course, none of that would matter if Cavano and her men caught up with them.
He passed through an intersection just as the light turned red, but that didn’t deter the Zonda and the Lamborghini. Horns honking, they blew through.
The Ferrari’s gas gauge read more than half full. Cavano must have filled up before she arrived in Munich, which sparked a brainstorm for how to get out of this mess.
Tyler’s plan was simple. At high speed, these cars all gulped fuel at a prodigious rate. Because the Lambo and the Zonda were being delivered to a dealer, Tyler was sure that they had only a token amount of gas in their tanks. If he could stay ahead of them long enough, they would run out before he did. Then he could leisurely plan a place to rendezvous with Grant.
On the phone, Stacy said, “No, he’s busy trying to kill us. Where are you … On the road? … Thank God.” To Tyler, she said, “He got the Audi. The police got there just after he took off. He says Cavano’s driving the Zonda, and she looked pissed.”
Tyler wasn’t surprised. He’d be pissed, too, if someone had stolen his $250,000 supercar.
Stacy told Grant they were about to get on the 95. “What then?” she said to Tyler.
“Tell him to take the autobahn south, and we’ll call him back when we can.”
While she did that, Tyler swung onto E54, the highway leading to the autobahn. He couldn’t get above eighty miles an hour as he constantly squirted through tiny spots between cars, much to the annoyance of the Germans he passed, who were used to the rigid law of cars passing only on the left.
The honking horns behind him meant that Cavano and the other car were using the same tactics, and they were gaining ground.
A minute later, a sign said one kilometer to 95.
The traffic in the left-turn lane leading onto the autobahn was backed up and at a standstill.
“Don’t stop!” Stacy yelled.
“I’m not.”
When Tyler reached the intersection, he stood on the brakes, throwing him and Stacy against their straining seat belts. With a flick of the wheel, he veered left from the middle lane and charged past a turning truck, eliciting another scream from Stacy.