Authors: David Wellington
The detainee came at him roaring like an animal,
arms outstretched, big fingers reaching for Chapel's flesh.
Chapel rolled out of the way, scrabbling to get his
feet underneath him. He dashed into the darkness beyond the pool of light.
Instantly he was blind, and he stumbled as his foot caught on a pile of
two-by-fours. He went sprawling again, but this time caught himself a little
better. He rolled onto his good shoulder, then onto his back. Blinking rapidly
he fought to gain some kind of night vision so he could see through the murk.
The daylight coming in through the broken door dazzled his eyes and kept him
from seeing anything.
He heard concrete shattering again, vaguely saw
pieces of acoustic ceiling tile come cascading down from above.
“I see you there,” the detainee said, his voice
thick with rage.
DamnâChapel couldn't see his attacker at all. He
pushed himself backward with his feet, trying at least to get a wall behind him
so the detainee would have to come at him from the front. He lifted his handgun,
pointed it into the darkness.
For a second the detainee was visible in the pool
of light, moving so fast he was a blur. He was headed right for Chapel. Could
the bastard see in the dark?
Chapel got to his feet and jumped to the side just
in time. The detainee hit the wall where Chapel had been, and metal clanged as a
stack of rebar went falling and clattering across the floor.
Chapel desperately tried to make out anything in
the dark. There were shadowsâvague shapes. He took a wild guess at where the
detainee would be. He raised his weapon, aimed as carefully as he could since he
didn't know what he was shooting at. It could have been a wheelbarrow or a pile
of buckets.
But this shadow moved.
Chapel took the shot. The muzzle flash ruined any
night vision he'd gained.
But the detainee screamed.
“Stop doing that!” the detainee bellowed. “Just
give up and die already!”
Not a chance,
Chapel
thought. He backed away from the detainee, his artificial hand held out behind
him so he wouldn't stumble over anything too big. His eyes stung with dust and
darkness, so he clamped them shut.
He felt air moving over his face and his good hand.
He heard broken concrete settling, heard rebar creaking as it took the weight of
the building above.
The detainee was stumbling in the dark now, too.
Either his night vision wasn't as good as Chapel had thought or he had lost
enough blood to slow him down. Thank heaven for small favors. Chapel's
artificial hand felt a pillar behind him. He pressed his back up against it. He
listened.
He could hear footsteps. Coming closer.
He considered rushing for the light. In the dark
like this he was clearly at a disadvantage. The light was coming from the
street, though. He had to keep the detainee in the building where he controlled
the situation. If the guy got out onto the sidewalk again, he might run for it,
and Chapel knew he couldn't run him down on foot.
“You're tough, for a human,” the detainee said.
What the hell was that supposed to mean?
Chapel had no time to think about it. A piece of
concrete as big as his fist struck the pillar, just inches above Chapel's head.
If it had connected, it might have fractured his skull. Chapel ducked and lifted
his weapon, just as another chunk of concrete smacked into his leg.
He fired blind into the darkness, one shot, two. He
had no hope of hitting the detainee.
But in the muzzle flash he saw the detainee coming
toward him, saw little snapshots frozen in time as the bastard leaped into the
air, arms wheeling to smash into Chapel and crush him.
Chapel jumped to the side and ran toward the
windows at the front of the building. He kept well clear of the door to keep the
detainee from getting any ideas.
His leg hurt. Every step was a new flash of agony.
Either he'd been wounded by the chunk of concrete that hit him, or he was just
now feeling the effects of when the detainee had grabbed him back in Julia's
apartment.
He made it to the windows, but he could already
hear the detainee running at him again, charging. Chapel reached behind him and
grabbed a handful of the brown paper that covered the window. Just before the
detainee reached him, he tore it free, turning his head to the side.
Bright light burst through the uncovered glass, a
beam of it like a laser shining right in the detainee's face. Chapel had hoped
to blind the manâif his eyes were adjusted to the darkness, the sudden light
should be enough to dazzle him, at least for a moment, and let Chapel get a shot
off.
The detainee laughed. He squinted his eyes shut,
then opened them again.
Exceptâthey were different now. Chapel was
flummoxed by what he saw. The detainee's eyes had turned black, solid black,
from side to side. No white was visible at all.
BROOKLYN, NEW
YORK: APRIL 12, T+9:17
“What the hell are you?” Chapel demanded.
The detainee didn't answer. As Chapel watched, the
detainee's eyes changed again. The blackness slid away from his eyes, like an
eyelid drawing back. Like an extra eyelid.
Chapel thought of lizards and snakesâdidn't they
have an extra eyelid like that? Some kind of membrane to protect their eyes from
the sun?
This made no sense. It made no sense at all.
Chapel was so surprised he failed to take the
obvious shot.
The detainee grabbed up a piece of rebar from the
floor.
He
wasn't surprised, and he was more than
ready to end this. The length of ribbed steel bar swung through the air,
slamming into the window right by the side of Chapel's good arm. Chapel managed
to duck as it came around for a second strike.
Damn, the guy was fast. Weird eyes notwithstanding,
his speed and strength were beyond any limit of human strength. This just kept
getting harder and harder to understand.
Chapel had to jump to the side to avoid a third
swing. The detainee switched his grip on the bar and jabbed at Chapel, hard
enough to star the tempered glass of the window behind him.
Before Chapel could even move, another jab came,
and another. One clipped the side of his head and bright lights burst behind
Chapel's eyes. He lurched wildly, suddenly unable to stand up straightâwhich was
all that saved him from being impaled as the bar came right at his chest.
If this kept up much longer, Chapel knew he would
be beaten to death, his bones crushed by that length of steel. He brought up his
weapon and firedâthey were close enough together now he barely needed to
aim.
A bright spot of blood appeared on the detainee's
chest, just a little to the right of where his heart should be. It was the kind
of shot that might kill a human being or might just incapacitate himâeither way
it would leave him down on the floor, bleeding out.
It knocked the detainee back maybe half a step. His
arms went wide, the rebar whistling through the air, still clutched in one big
hand.
Chapel had bought himself a split second. His head
was swimming and he really wanted to lie down, but his work wasn't finished.
He raised the pistol again, this time aiming at the
maniac's eye. He might have too many eyelids, but Chapel doubted they could stop
a 9 mm slug.
Before he could take the shot, though, the rebar
connected with Chapel's hand and sent the handgun flying. Pain lanced up
Chapel's arm as far as his shoulder, like a vein of magma had opened under his
flesh. He cried outâhe couldn't help itâand brought his hand up close to his
chest. It didn't feel broken but it was starting to go numb, which was never a
good sign.
Not that it mattered, particularly.
He was face-to-face with a superstrong madman. He
was unarmed. The lunatic had a length of steel bar hard enough and heavy enough
to stove in a human rib cage.
Anyone else would have known that was the moment of
his death.
Anyone without Chapel's training might have been
forgiven for breaking down then and begging for his life.
But Chapel had trained with the Army Rangers. Some
of the most elite warfighters on earth. And that training had included an
intense course in hand-to-hand combatives.
“Bye, bye,” the detainee said, and he brought the
rebar around in a swinging arc.
Chapel shot out his good hand and grabbed the rebar
in midair, not trying to stop it or even slow it down. Just getting a grip,
letting his arm be carried along by its momentum. His artificial hand shot out
and grabbed hold of the detainee's elbow.
The Rangers had taught Chapel that when he had a
pistol in his hand, that was his best weapon. But when he didn't have a pistol,
his best weapon was his enemy's own weight. Swinging the rebar forced the
detainee to commit to the bar's inertia, shifting his own center of balance away
from his feet. Chapel yanked him forward, adding all his own strength to the
moving bar.
The detainee went somersaulting forward, carried
along by his own follow-through, and went down face-first into the floor. Chapel
heard the peculiar wet snap of cartilage breaking and knew the detainee's nose
had shattered on impact.
The detainee moaned like an injured cow.
Maybe I got lucky and cracked
his skull, too,
Chapel thought.
Maybe I got
really lucky and dazed him for a second.
Chapel had never been that lucky. “Are you ready to
talk?” he asked the detainee, just in case. He moved around behind the fallen
maniac, his eyes scanning the floor.
“I'm ready to kill you,” the detainee said, his
voice distorted by his broken nose. “I'm ready to tear you a new asshole, you
littleâ”
“Yeah. I kind of thought you'd say that,” Chapel
said. He found his pistol on the floor. He picked it up, took careful aim, and
put two bullets in the back of the lunatic's head.
BROOKLYN, NEW
YORK: APRIL 12, T+9:19
Chapel's legs felt like they were made of
Jell-O. He really wanted to sit down.
He wanted to close his eyes and go to sleep.
“Uh-oh,” he said. “I think I might have a
concussion.”
He was suddenly on the floor, looking up at the
dark ceiling. He couldn't remember how he got there. His head was ringing like a
bell. The detainee had smacked him in the head with the rebar, he remembered.
He'd taken a blow to the head.
That didn't fill him with confidence.
“Chapel!” Angel shouted in his ear. “Chapel! You
have to stay awake, honey. You have to! If you go to sleep now, you won't wake
up!”
“I'll be okay,” Chapel told her, not because he
believed it but because he wanted to reassure her. “Don't you worry about me,
sexy ghost voice.”
“You're losing it,” Angel said. “Your pulse is all
over the place, and your blood pressure is falling. I'm calling the
paramedics.”
“No!” Chapel said. “This is a secret mission. No
para . . . no doctors, no hospitals. They'll have too many questions.
I just need to walk this off.”
“Captain Chapel?” someone asked. Someone new.
This voice wasn't in his head.
“Captain Chapel? Can you open your eyes?” A soft
hand was on his cheek. Fingers pried his eyes open. He looked up into a
beautiful face, the face of . . . well, not an angel. He didn't know
what Angel looked like. He knew this face, though. It was surrounded by red
hair.
Voices were clamoring near his ear, but he could
barely hear them. The earpiece had fallen partially out of his ear, he realized.
He tried to reach to put it back in, but his arms felt like they were made of
lead.
“Captain Chapel, you need medical attention,” Julia
Taggart said.
“You should see the other guy.”
“The man who killed my mother? He's dead.
Definitely dead. Not much left of his cerebrum, it looks like. I suppose it's
funny to say this, but thank you. I appreciate it.”
“Sure thing,” Chapel told her. “Will you help me
up? I'm having trouble standing, and I need to get out of here.”
“You need to go to a hospital.”
“I can't do that. Just get me into a cab or
something.”
He saw Julia bite her lip. “Maybe I can do better
than that,” she said.
BROOKLYN, NEW
YORK: APRIL 12, T+9:31
Arash Borhan did not need this shit. No, not
at all.
Earlier that day he'd gotten a call from some
sexy-sounding woman who said his cab was needed for a special fare, and that he
stood to make a lot of money if he went to some address in Brighton Beach.
Normally he didn't work that far south in Brooklyn, but the money the woman
promised him would more than make it worth his while. So he drove down there, he
picked up a man and a woman who were arguing on the sidewalk, and he drove them
to Bushwick. That had all been fine. The man got out to go into a house there,
while the woman stayed in his cab and the meter kept ticking away.
Then everything had gone to hell.
Some crazy mother had come rushing out of the house
and jumped in the back of the cab, and when Arash demanded to know what was
going on, the maniac had nearly ripped his ear off. The maniac told him to
drive, to break so many laws. And then this other maniac, the man who was his
original fare, had driven him right off the road.
Now his cab was wedged into a wooden construction
barrier. The paint was scratched to hell, and he was missing a wing mirror. He
would be lucky if the front fender could be saved at all.
He touched the side of his head. He was still
bleeding, too.
“Motherfâ” Arash shook his head. He would not say
the swear out loud. He was a decent man. But this was just too much.