With his hand still on the pipe, he craned himself down to get a look through the peephole, the escaping light flooding his face.
It was no use: He couldn’t control the leak.
Drip … drip … drip
… It started up again.
Through the hole in the ceiling panel, he could make out a pair of large boxes the size of small refrigerators, and the corner edge of a desk. Directly below him was vinyl tile flooring. As he was peering down through the hole, he saw the first drop of water, like a small jewel, cascade from the ceiling to the floor, where it exploded.
Another. And another.
Dart worked his hand on the pipe furiously, to try to stop it, but the break was worse, the flow greater. The cold water seeped through his fingers and down to the room below.
Ironically, Alverez came over to inspect the leak. It was as if Dart had issued the man an invitation. And in a heartbeat, Dart understood what had to happen. There was no time to plan, to organize, to waste. Zeller would have called this a
hot spot
—an instant in time that demands reaction, not thought or consideration, one of those opportunities that comes around only once, and to think about it is to lose it.
Alverez stepped beneath the leak.
Joe Dart let go his grip, and jumped.
Alverez looked up toward the ceiling.
Dart understood intuitively that this moment of surprise was, and would be, his only advantage over an ape like this. He anticipated his landing, the gun coming out of the holster, and firing into the man’s legs if necessary.
He landed on his bad ankle.
The room swirled in a thick blue haze as nausea erupted inside him. He lost his balance and went down onto his back.
Alverez stood there, fighting to get pieces of acoustical tile out of his eyes.
Dart glanced over and saw a bank of computer equipment. He searched for the gear that Ginny had described. Plain vanillia box … He didn’t see what she had described to him. A good deal of the equipment was down an aisle behind the bank of keyboards.
Between Dart and that aisle stood Alverez.
Dart dared not use his gun, for that would alert Proctor—if his fall through the ceiling had not already done so—and, more important, bring the ERT team through the door, locking up the computer.
Alverez was big and stocky, and yet lightning quick. He attacked Dart as a boxer would, cagey and shifting side to side, light on his feet, ready to tangle. Enjoying this.
Dart came to his feet, woozy. Despite his reasoning, he reached for his gun and brought it out aimed at the man’s huge thighs.
“Better make it count,” the man said, grinning, “‘cause I’m going to take it away from you.’”
He faked to his right—Dart pivoting to follow—and then cut left so quickly that Dart never saw him coming. One second Dart was holding the gun, not wanting to fire it; the next, the weapon was skidding across the vinyl floor and Dart’s wrist felt extremely hot and limp.
Alverez body-punched Dart low and on the side, below the ribs, stinging a kidney and buckling the detective over in agony.
Dart swung his bad foot wildly and connected the instep with the side of Alverez’s knee, as if pushing a door shut. He heard something snap, and the thug’s eyes went wide, and Dart kicked the same spot again, and Alverez leaned away like a tree from the wind. And then he grimaced, showing off his brown, ugly teeth like a mean dog.
His arms were apelike, unexpectedly long for such a compact body. He punched out at Dart, ramming a ball of hard knuckles into the center of his chest, stunning his diaphragm and stealing his breath.
Dart staggered back and smacked into a desk, knowing instantly that to allow himself to be pinned by a gorilla like Alverez was the end—the man would pick him to pieces, breaking bones and taking him apart like a turkey carcass after the feast. Dart’s right hand wouldn’t respond—it flapped at the end of his arm like a rag; he couldn’t feel it at all. His left landed painfully on something cool and hard, and Dart seized it and lashed out at Alverez who, preparing to step closer and finish Dart, mistakenly anticipated Dart’s attempt to come from his right. The detective smashed the stapler into the man’s jaw like a set of brass knuckles, breaking the joint and leaving the man looking like a Halloween mask, his jaw grotesquely distorted.
Buying himself a moment, Dart flung himself off the desk and hobbled awkwardly around the bank of keyboards and monitors, and down the aisle. There, not ten feet away, its red lights flashing, was the exact box that Ginny had described.
A couple of minutes,
he remembered Ginny saying.
Fat chance
, Dart thought, wondering if he could even buy himself thirty seconds.
He placed his weight onto his bad ankle, fell down, and reached out with his broken wrist, crying out loudly with the impact.
They heard that
, he thought.
Alverez spun around, his broken jaw preventing any perverse grin, his nose bleeding profusely, his eyes damp and seething with fury.
Dart had never seen that look, but it had been described dozens of times, and it registered into his core that Alverez would either kill him or change him forever. This was a hot spot, a defining moment.
Alverez charged like a wrecking ball—but the wrecking ball owned a switchblade.
The knife sank into Dart’s left shoulder. Alverez removed it just as quickly with a sickening sucking sound and lowered it again, but Dart rolled hard. The switchblade punched the floor, broke the springed hinge, and folded up on the man’s fingers, slicing all four to the bone. Alverez roared, released the knife, and had to shake his hand to break the blade from its grip. Blood flew like water from a hose.
Dart lunged for the communications box.
A vertical row of red lights
… The button marked
MASTER
was at the bottom of the device. Alverez growled. Dart punched the red button, and it immediately changed to green.
The system was on-line.
Alverez crawled across the floor.
The gun!
Dart realized as Alverez reached for it.
Dart kicked out and caught the man’s jaw with the toe of his shoe. A loud
crack
filled the room, like a gunshot, and Alverez slumped to the floor, his wounded hand bleeding badly. He was down, but not finished.
Dart rolled painfully to his left; the button remained green. Perhaps twenty seconds had passed; it felt to Dart like half an hour. He fished for his handcuffs and got one end around the wrist of Alverez’s bleeding hand and, dragging the man across the floor, the other to the foot of a giant piece of computer machinery.
Dart heard the chaos out in the hall, reacting to it before he gave it any thought. He dove for the bloody gun and took hold of it just as the door swung open.
“Freeze!” one of the three uniformed guards shouted excitedly, training a weapon on Dart.
Dart, lying on his back, held his weapon with his left hand, aiming toward the man but knowing he couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn. “Police,” Dart said, attempting authority.
The look of surprise that swept over the man’s face convinced Dart that they had no idea who he was; his only hope now was to separate Proctor from his own employees.
“Bullshit,” the guard snapped, checking furtively over his shoulder. “Drop the fucking piece!”
Rent-a-cops were notorious for shooting widows, and dogs, and children. They had no excuse to carry loaded weapons with so little training. Dart didn’t like that barrel being aimed at him.
One minute
, he estimated. He needed to stall for several more. He felt only a swelling pain in his right hand.
“You shoot a cop and you’re dead. The building is surrounded.”
“What a fucking windbag,” the blond man said. He looked about twenty-one. He, too, held a weapon on Dart. “I say we tap him right here.”
“No,” came a recognizable voice from behind. “You’re in a bad situation here, Officer Dartelli,” Proctor said, confirming to his subordinates that Dart was in fact a cop. It struck Dart as a curious move. “Don’t do anything stupid. Anything we’ll all regret.”
Proctor showed himself then, stepping past his uniformed guards, his hands in the air. “I’m unarmed and defenseless,” He took another tentative step forward. “Are you going to shoot me?” His eyes wandered over Dart’s shoulder, and he gave away that he had spotted the green button. He knew more about the computer system than Dart would have given him credit for.
“Back!” Dart challenged, waving the barrel of the weapon slightly.
Two minutes,
he thought.
“Are you really going to shoot me?” Proctor asked, hands still out away from his body. His forehead was beaded with sweat, his suit pitted below the arms.
Dart felt a dizzying drain to his system as he paled and felt cold. His shoulder was losing blood badly.
“I’m not armed,” the man reminded. He smiled, as if to calm Dart. He kept walking, sliding one foot tentatively ahead of the other. He wasn’t interested in reaching Dart, he wanted the mainframe.
Dart’s dulled mind could barely think. The man took another step forward and Dart said overly loudly, “Yes, I copy,” into the room.
The words startled Proctor, who stopped in his tracks. His eyes swept over Dart, looking but not finding the microphone.
“Video
and
audio,” Dart lied, unsure if either was working any longer. He watched as the color drained from the man’s face. “Anything that you’d like to say to the command van?”
“If that were true,” Proctor said, taking another step forward, “they would have long since come to your help. Nice try.”
Dart couldn’t tell him why they
couldn’t
come, so instead he said, “I haven’t given them the signal.”
“I don’t think so,” Proctor said, taking yet another step.
“Don’t,” Dart warned.
“Put the gun down,” the unsteady guard cautioned. His arms were tiring from holding the weapon, Dart noted. His aim would be off because of this.
Three minutes … How much longer?
All the lights failed at once, leaving only the computer’s tiny lights ablaze.
Dart saw a white flash as the guard fired and missed. Through ringing ears he heard the unmistakable sound of glass breaking and metal ripping as the ERT team set off explosive charges at five entrances.
They’ve ruined it!
he thought, angry that Haite had authorized the raid, knowing as he did that this would jeopardize their evidence.
Not knowing where the strength or reserve came from, Dart lunged in the dark to block Proctor from reaching the computer, every muscle, every tendon screaming. He collided with the man and went down hard just as the first glow of the emergency lighting seeped into the room from the wall sconces. Proctor pushed away hard and struggled to his feet.
Dart raised the weapon and slipped his finger inside the trigger guard.
The blond security man trained his weapon on Dart.
There was a loud pop that occurred just before Dart went blind with pain. His face seemed to explode at the same time as his ears failed him, and he wailed into the room along with the others. He screamed for Zeller, and lost friends; for his mother, and lost souls. Consumed by an overpowering white light, and deprived of his hearing, he folded into a ball and fell away from the world, as would a man thrown from a cliff. Weightless, and sublime.
A dusty image of Haite loomed above Dart wearing a look of concern, and Dart wondered why his first experience of death should be an image of his former sergeant, a man with whom he had never been particularly close. He would have preferred an image of Abby. A conversation with Zeller. A bronzed and naked body, perhaps. Anything but Haite.
He felt as if he were at sea, rocking in a light chop. He found the sensation comforting and pleasant.
“Can you hear me yet?” the sergeant asked loudly.
He remained cloudy, a vaporous apparition.
“Go away,” Dart said, wanting a dream, not a nightmare. “Leave me alone.”
“Stun bombs and phosphorus grenades,” the sergeant explained in an apologetic voice. “ERT toys,” he said.
The rocking, Dart realized, was the stretcher being carried up the stairs by a couple of paramedics with buzz cuts. He still couldn’t see very well.
“Your hearing will come back,” Haite said loudly.
And then the pain hit, a headache like a ton of bricks.
“Your head may hurt,” he heard a voice suggest from behind him.
“No shit,” said Joe Dart. He blinked away some of the pain and tried to identify which orb was the sergeant. He picked the one leaning over him. “Why? Why after all that did you abort? Jesus….” His thoughts trailed off with his voice. Rage surged through him, but without any physical energy to support it, it dried up, defeated. He felt on the verge of tears. Exhaustion. Self-pity.
“No, no,” Haite said.
“For me? You did it to save me? You’ve
wrecked
me,” Dart said. He wanted Haite to hurt for this; he wanted someone to pay. He wanted to be left alone to cry.
“Ginny solved it,” Haite said.
“She couldn’t download the file as long as it was in the buffer,” a techie’s young voice explained from behind him. It took Dart a moment to identify it as the voice of the command van technician. “When you cut the text, it was captured in RAM. You
had
to do this to keep the other person attempting access from deleting the files. There it was, this chunk of text, floating in the computer’s memory—but in a buffer, not on disk, not somewhere that Ginny could grab it.”
Haite said, “He should rest.”
The techie added excitedly, “The mainframe was set up to save all buffers to disk in the event of a power failure. Ginny realized this—realized the only thing to do at that point was to cut the power.”
They cleared the stairs, and Dart felt the legs of the stretcher released, and suddenly found himself being wheeled. The bumps hurt every inch of him.