One Way sa-5
Page 23
‘We’re staying,’ Knight said.
‘What more can we do, brother?’ Bishop replied. ‘We’ve torn this place apart looking for her.’
Frustrated, Calvin looked around the lobby. He knew Bishop was right.
‘Let’s cut our losses and get the hell out of here while we still can,’ Bishop said.
King didn’t respond. His eyes settled on the black holdalls they’d brought with them, full of equipment, dumped in the corner of the lobby. His breathing slowed.
Then the solution came to him, like clouds parting to reveal sunlight. It had been staring him in the face the entire time. It was something he and his team should have done the moment they’d arrived. The others noticed the change in his demeanour.
‘Boss?’ Knight asked.
He turned and smiled.
‘What is it?’ Knight asked.
King looked at Bishop
‘You’re right. I think it’s time we got the hell out of here. We’re leaving.’
FORTY
With Carson watching Isabel and weapons close to hand, Vargas was patching Archer up for the second time that evening. This time however, they were in the kitchen, beside the table near the window. Although they were on the east side, the curtains were still drawn, memories of how Foster and Barlow had died still vivid in their minds. Archer had pulled up the lower portion of his shirt, Vargas cleaning the wound the best she could. Unlike the superficial cut to his arm, the glass had buried itself deeper here. And unlike the previous apartment they’d taken cover in, there was no first aid kit in the bathroom. Vargas was having to improvise.
‘What was it?’ she asked.
‘Piece of glass. Got it from the laundry room when the grenade went off.’
‘Why didn’t you say?’
‘Why didn’t you tell me what this was really about earlier?’
She looked up at him, concern on her face.
‘It went deep, Archer. I need to clean it.’
She rummaged through the cupboards and drawers, searching for anything she could use. No luck; she pulled open the fridge and paused. Reaching inside, she drew out a small bottle of vodka, half-full. She unscrewed the top, taking a quick sniff, then re-joined him.
‘This is going to sting.’
He nodded apprehensively and she poured some directly over the wound. His teeth clenched like he was being electrocuted, grunting in pain, his body tensing up. It was one of the most painful things he’d ever experienced; he felt like he was going to pass out. She covered the wound with a relatively clean towel she’d found in a drawer by the sink. The alcohol was still burning into the wound, killing any bacteria, and Archer took slow breaths, trying to work through the pain.
‘Guess this counts as a third date,’ he said through gritted teeth.
She chuckled, shaking her head. ‘You got a girlfriend?’
‘No.’
‘I’m surprised.’
‘I’m not. I’m like a revolving door. People come and go. No-one stays.’
‘I have.’
He looked over at her and found himself smiling. He’d only known her for a few hours, but she had a point. He decided not to mention that she hadn’t had a choice.
He took over holding the cloth to the wound, and she withdrew. She wiped her hands on another towel then tossed it to one side and took a seat near him. They sat there in momentary silence, the curtains drawn, the lights low. The wound on his torso burned like hell. Archer looked over at her. She was sweaty and tired, blood and dirt all over her white shirt and dark jeans. Her hair was hanging down, jet black, covering the stained rivulet of blood coming from her right earlobe. She still looked great. Using the moment of quiet, she took her Glock from her holster and pulled back the slide. Withdrawing the magazine, she laid the weapon on the table and started popping bullets out onto her lap, counting ammunition. Holding the cloth to the wound on his torso, he watched her work.
She paused and looked up at him, thinking.
‘You ever think of doing something else?’ she asked.
‘What, other than being a cop.’
She nodded.
‘I don’t know how to do anything else. For better or for worse.’ He paused. ‘What about you?’
‘I’m a US Marshal now. Once the trial is over, that isn’t going to change.’
He nodded.
‘You know, ninety nine per cent of people wouldn’t have intervened on the street,’ she said. ‘They would have stayed low, taking cover, looking after themselves.’
‘That’s not who I am.’
Pause.
‘Most people switch on the news and see that something bad happened to a good person. Maybe they were mugged. Maybe they were shot or stabbed. They see those things and think how unfair it is. How unlucky that person was.’ He looked down. ‘But it’s always been more than that to me. It always will be. I see something like that and it really pisses me off. It makes my blood boil.’
He glanced up at her.
‘That’s what I felt when I saw those guys coming for you on the street. That’s what I felt when the mob were heading for the apartment. That’s what I felt when they took Isabel and that man was taunting you on the intercom.’
She watched him, still paused in her ammo count.
‘I’ve thought about it,’ he said. ‘But right now, I don’t want to do anything else. I’m not leaving it to another person to fight people like this for me.’
‘You can’t win forever,’ she said. ‘Eventually you’ll die.’
‘We all will. And if that happens, at least I died for something.’
‘That’s enough?’
‘It is for me.’
Pause. She observed him in the dim apartment. For the first time today, she noticed a different look in his eyes. He fixed her gaze.
‘When they come, I’ll be right beside you,’ he said. ‘That’s a promise. I’m not going anywhere.’
Silence. She watched him, bloodied and bruised, blood leaking from a cut over his eyebrow, his hand holding the makeshift bandage to the wound on his torso.
‘Can I ask you something?’ she said. He nodded. ‘If you could go back, would you still have intervened on the street?
He grinned. ‘In a heartbeat.’
‘You’re that sure?’
‘Otherwise I wouldn’t have met you.’
He’d replied instinctively then paused, realising what he’d said. Watching him for a moment, Vargas smiled.
She went to respond but paused, frowning. There was a noise coming from the sitting room; Archer heard it too. It sounded like Carson was calling for them.
He got up and followed her as she opened the door.
‘Oh shit!’
Isabel was on the floor, fitting, her body jerking and spasming, her eyes rolled back in her head. Vargas dropped down and went to hold her but the girl had stiffened out. Archer threw his towel bandage to one side and dropped down to try and help.
‘What’s wrong?’ he asked.
‘She’s epileptic!’
In the office building directly south of the tenement block, Marquez and Josh were still searching each floor. It was painstaking and tedious work. Josh had always trusted Marquez’s hunches but that’s exactly what this was, a hunch. Foster could have been capped off by a lucky bullet inside the building.
They met by the north windows on 12. Both of them looked out at the building eighty yards away. Smoke was still streaming from the destroyed apartment on the 8th floor. There was a fire crew on the west side of the building, having finished hosing down the wreckage of the ESU chopper. Josh looked down at the mass of people on the street; he wanted to get back down there and re-join Shepherd and Hendricks. He and Marquez had been gone for a while. Peering closer, he saw the Marshals task force were gathered close, poised for action.
‘This is a waste of time,’ Josh told her.
She shook her head, looking around the dark building.
‘There’s someone here,�
�� Marquez said. ‘I know it.’
‘How can you be sure?’
She pointed at the building. ‘Look at that. It’s like range practice. And where’s the guard?’
‘Where we should be. Outside. We need to get back downstairs.’
‘And do what? Stand there and watch.’
He looked at her for a moment. ‘I’m leaving, Marquez.’
She turned on him.
‘There’s someone here, Josh.’
‘No. There isn’t.’
He turned without another word and walked towards the stairwell, pushing open the door and disappearing, the sound of his footsteps fading and leaving her alone.
Isabel’s fit had just subsided, her body softening, the muscles relaxing after the fit had contracted and locked them tight. She was lying on the floor, her head on Vargas’ lap; she seemed confused, blinking and looking at them, not saying anything.
‘Stay still, honey,’ Vargas said, reassuring her. She checked her watch. ‘Shit.’
‘What is it?’
‘She missed her medication. She takes it twice a day, morning and night. The flashes from the gunfire must have triggered a reaction.’
‘Does she have any medicine with her?’
Vargas thought for moment. ‘It’s in my bag. I left it downstairs in Helen’s apartment.’
Archer looked at her, then at the little girl. Vargas was holding her head either side as she recovered. ‘What happens if she doesn’t take it?’
‘These attacks will come and go. They could go on all night.’
He looked down at her and took a deep breath.
‘I have to get it then. The moment we fire a gun, it could happen again.’
Archer pulled the mag of his M4A1, checking there was ammo inside, and slid it back into the rifle. Helen’s apartment was on 5.
Seven floors down.
And this time, he was going out there by himself.
FORTY ONE
Moments later, he was back in the corridor on 12, alone, his M4A1 in his hands. He focused his hearing as hard as he could; the close-proximity gunfire had left a dull ringing in his ears which wasn’t helping at all. Clearing both ways, he moved down the corridor. He slid into the south stairwell, immediately checking up and down, already missing Vargas’ protection watching his back.
He started moving down as quietly as he could, looking out for any tripwires or hidden Claymores. When he got to 11, he stopped by the door then swept across, making sure there was no-one lying in wait.
No-one was there.
He did the same on each floor.
10, 9, 8.
Then 7.
Then 6.
When he made it to 5, he paused, then eased out into the corridor. It was empty. He moved slowly, constantly checking behind him, his heart racing. If he got ambushed right now, he’d be vulnerable from both sides. Any unexpected or sudden gunfire would shred him to pieces.
He arrived beside the doorway to Helen’s apartment, their first hideout hours ago. Well aware the sniper was surely still out there somewhere, he dropped to the floor and inched into the apartment slowly, making sure not to move the door and alert the sharpshooter that there was someone inside. There was enough of a gap for him to crawl through as he wriggled along the floor.
The fridge was still on its side; behind it were the two dead bodies of the men in fatigues who’d followed up the sniper fire. Two dirty cops, Archer thought. No wonder their moves had been so practised. He crawled past them, trying to avoid the blood and milk pooled on the floor but getting some on his jeans, feeling it soak into the fabric. He made it to the doorway to the sitting room. Staying close to the wall, he worked his way inside, trying to ignore the throbbing pain from the cut just above his waist.
Foster was still slumped against the wall, the bullet hole in his forehead, in the same position that he’d been in when they left him. Archer noticed with anger that both his weapons and his badge were missing. He looked at the dead Marshal, the first of their group to be killed. They’d all been caught completely off guard, no idea then of the lengths the other side were prepared to go to in order to kill Vargas. They could never have suspected a group of professionally trained men armed to the hilt and with a sniper were coming here to take her out.
Although he hadn’t known Foster before tonight, in that brief time he’d been hugely impressed by him. His response to the ambush on the street and his actions inside the building had been instrumental in saving their lives. At least he’d gone out on his shield, protecting the group and doing his job.
From the few intense hours he’d known him, Archer guessed that’s how he would have wanted it.
He crawled forward and saw Vargas’s black bag across the room on the floor. He reached over, taking hold of it. He opened it and found the box of tablets inside. Carbatrol was printed on the box, along with a white prescription sticker just below.
Miss I Lombardi. 200mg x2 daily.
Sliding them into his pocket, he left Vargas’ bag and shuffled back towards the doorway the way he’d come.
Moving back into the kitchen, he stayed low and headed towards the door, wanting to get the hell out of here.
Then he heard someone coming.
Moving out of the stairwell, Knight and Bishop turned and headed towards 5B, the apartment where Joker had killed Foster and where Markowski and Patterson had been whacked soon after. Arriving at the door, they tried to push it back further but the frame jammed against the refrigerator lying on the floor inside. The two men slid through the gap in the door, moving into the apartment.
Aside from the bodies, the place was still. Looking down at Markowski’s body at his feet, Knight shook his head. Knight’s real name was Sergeant Ben Denton, an eleven year man with Miami PD and Calvin’s oldest friend and police partner. Thirty three years old, he was one of the original ringleaders of their operation along with Calvin, Fowler and Markowski. During the course of his career he’d personally acquired over two million dollars in dirty cash and had beaten several charges of misconduct and one of sexual harassment.
Denton had a special dislike for Vargas. He’d made a move on her once outside the locker room at the station, having had his eye on her for a while; she’d given him a black eye and almost broken his arm. He was the man who’d seen her on the television eight days ago when he’d got home from a grilling at the Department. Tonight, although he knew he could never go back to Miami, he was more than invested in killing her out of principle and revenge. He wasn’t leaving this building without making sure she was dead. After that, he’d stay with Calvin, laying low and getting over the border into Canada. Denton had screwed over a lot of people over the years, both police and criminal. If he went down, he knew he wouldn’t last a week in the joint, shacked up with a load of guys he’d busted.
Failure tonight wasn’t an option.
There was only one way this was going to end.
He watched Bishop, aka Fowler, across the room rummaging through Patterson’s overalls, searching for what they were after. Pools of blood were starting to dry under both bodies, colleagues of theirs and close friends. Denton swore. Fowler looked up and knew what he was thinking.
‘Rather them than us, right,’ he said, as he frisked his way through the dead man’s fatigues.
‘That bitch is going to pay for what she’s done. I swear to God.’
Fowler nodded, continuing his search. After a few moments, he found what he was looking for.
‘Bingo,’ he said, holding up the item he’d pulled from Patterson’s vest. ‘Unharmed.’
‘Good.’ Denton paused. ‘Let’s get out of here and get moving.’
Fowler rose and pointed to a black holdall slung around Denton’s shoulder.
‘Might as well dump that shit. You’re not gonna need them anymore.’
Denton thought for a moment; he had a point. The contents were heavy and he’d been carrying the bag around all night. He slipped the holdall off his shoulder, l
eaving it on the floor.
Fowler rose, scooping up his M4A1, and the two men ducked back out of the door.
Inside the bath, Archer didn’t move, his M4A1 resting on his thigh, pointing down between his feet. He heard the two men exit. He shifted to one side to sneak a glance over the rim. The bathroom was half-destroyed, the walls torn apart from the gunfire.
His movement disturbed a piece of tile from the wall above him.
He saw it, almost in slow motion, drop away from the ruined wall.
It fell towards the floor.
Outside in the hallway, Denton and Fowler heard it.
They stopped in their tracks.
The two men swung round and doubled back, looking through the sights of their M4A1s. They re-entered the apartment, looking left and right silently. They cleared the kitchen and sitting room, ending up with their weapons aimed at the bathroom.
Denton examined it; the room had been half-destroyed by gunfire. The bathtub was against the far wall, standing on a step, riddled with dents. The wall above had taken most of the onslaught, with few tiles remaining.
He pushed his pressel down. ‘Joker.’
‘Yeah?’
‘You see any movement in the apartment on 5?’
‘No. Nothing.’
The two men stayed still for a moment, listening.
As they stood there, a small piece of tile above the bath fell off the wall, smashing to the rim of the tub, mirroring the noise they’d heard from out in the corridor. Both men smiled.
‘What a dump,’ Denton said.
‘Think they improved it,’ Fowler joked, pointing at the half-destroyed wall. ‘Let’s go.’
Inside the bath, flat on his back, his fingers curled around the grip of the M4A1 and ready to fire, Archer held his breath. He heard the men leave the room but didn’t move for at least a full minute, making sure they’d actually gone and weren’t lying in wait. Then, hearing nothing, he exhaled.
Taking the utmost care, he climbed out slowly.
This time, no pieces of tile fell.
FORTY TWO
Archer made it back to the 12th floor apartment safely and without incident, re-joining a relieved Vargas, Carson and Isabel in the sitting room. The girl had taken a dosage of the medication under Vargas’ watchful eye and was now curled up in an armchair, still recovering from the seizures. She’d been sick a couple of times during Archer’s absence and was pretty out of it; Archer had never encountered anyone with epilepsy before, so he followed Vargas’ lead and left the child alone, giving her some room and letting the aftermath of the seizure run its course. Apparently that was the best thing to do.