Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
periscope again. Yes. Another camera, just over the
door to the main floor.
He waited ten more seconds for the capacitor
to fully charge, then stuck it around the corner and
flashed the light.
“Let’s
go!”
With Chance behind him, Tommy Carmellini
went down the stairs to the main floor and used his
periscope to examine the landing on the stairs leading
down. Nothing.
On down to the landing, peeking around the corner.
“Motion detectorea”…he whispered to Chance.
Chance was breathing heavily inside the mask. It
wasn’t the exertion, he decided, but the tension. He
must be audible at fifty paces. He tried
to ignore the sound of his own rasping and listen.
were the guards coming? Two cameras were down had they
noticed? Would they come to inspect the things?
Or were the guards congregating right now, calling in
troops?
“Microwave or infrared”…”…Chance asked, referring
to the motion detector.
“One of each.”
“Beautiful.”
“Probably two independent systems.”
“Oh, Christ!”
“That’s a poor way to install them, actually. This
is old
technology,
Mission Impossible
stuff. We’ll just walk by the infrared
detectorsall this clothing will help shield
our body heat. If we move right along we should be
okay.”
“And the microwave system?”
Carmellini had already removed a device the size
of a portable CD player from his backpack.
“Jammerea”…he said, and examined the controls.
He turned it on and, holding it in front of him,
walked down to the motion detectors. The one on the
left was the microwave one, with a coaxial cable
leading away from it. Carmellini pulled the cable an
inch or so away from the wall and wedged the jammer into that
space.
“Come onea”…he whispered, and opened the door into the
basement.
The two men found themselves in a hallway.
Directly over-their head was a camera that pointed the
length of the hall, covering the door halfway down that
must lead into the lab.
Carmellini took a small battery-powered
camcorder from Chance’s backpack. He held it
under the security camera for about a minute, filming the
view down the hallway, then pushed the play
button. The device now replayed the same scene
on a continuous loop, and would do so until the
batteries were exhausted. He slid a
collar around the coaxial cable leading from the camera,
tightened it, then used a pair of wire cutters
to slice the coax away from the security camera.
The door into the lab had an alarm on it, one mounted
high.
“The alarm rings if the circuit is
brokenea”…Carmellini whispered. “It’s designed
to prevent unauthorized exit from the lab, not entry.
Won’t take a minute.”
He worked swiftly with a penknife and length of
wire. By wiring around the contact on the door and
jamb, he made the contact impossible to break.
Sixty seconds later he gingerly tried the
door. Reached for the handle and
Locked!
Now to work with the picks.
“They locked an emergency exit”…”…Chance demanded.
“Yeah. Real bastards, huh?”
Tommy Carmellini knew his business. When the
lock clicked, he put his picks back in his
knapsack, pulled the knapsack into position, and
palmed his pistol.
“You ready?”
“Yeah.”
Carmellini eased the door open, looked
quickly each way with just one eye around the jamb.
The door opened into a well-lit foyer. The entire
opposite wall of the room was made of thick
glass, which formed a wall of a large,
well-equipped laboratory. No people in sight.
And no security cameras or motion detectors.
Both men came in, pistols in their hands and pointed
at the floor. Chance pulled the ddor shut behind them.
They knelt by the long window and with just their heads sticking
up, surveyed the scene.
Row after row of culture trays, units for mixing
chemicals, deep sinks, storage cabinets, big
sterilizing units, stainless steel containers by the
dozen, analysis equipment, retorts,
microscopes …
“Holy damnea”…Carmellini said softly. “They are
sure as hell growing something in there.”
“Somethingea”…Chance agreed.
On the end of the room to their left was a large air
lock.
“That’s the way in.”
“Do we have to go in?”
“We need samples from those culture trays.”
Chance led the way. He walked, holding the pistol
down by his right thigh.
Around the corner slowly, looking first.
There were actually two air locks. After they went
through the first one, they found themselves in a dressing room
with a variety of white one-piece coveralls hanging
on nails. Each man donned one, pulling it on
over his
STEPHEN COONTS
clothes, then zipping it tightly, fastening the cuffs with
Velcro strips. Gas masks were there too, but they
were already wearing masks.
The second lock was equipped with a large vacuum
machine which suctioned dust and microorganisms from the
white coveralls.
They opened the door to the lab and stepped inside.
“The culture traysea”…Chance said, and led the way.
From his backpack he took syringes, quickly
screwed on needles.
The glass trays sat on mobile racks, three
dozen to a rack. They were readily transparent, so
he could look inside, see the bacteria growing on
the food mix at the bottom of the tray.
He selected a rack of trays, pulled one
tray from the rack and laid it on the marble-topped
counter nearby. He opened it. Used a syringe.
With the syringe about half-full, he
unscrewed the needle, deposited the syringe in a
plastic freezer bag and sealed it.
Meanwhile Carmellini had been exploring. As
Chance sealed up his second sample from this rack of
trays, Carmellini came back, motioning with his
hand. “Better come look. Looks like they are growing
several kinds of cultures.”
The second kind looked similar to the first, but the
organisms were of. a slightly different color.
Chance selected a tray, took a sample, then
replaced the tray on the rack, as he had the first
one.
He was finishing his second sample from this batch when,
out of the corner of his eye, he saw Carmellini
motion for him to get down.
He dropped to a sitting position, finished sealing the
syringe bag.
He put the samples into his knapsack, reached
up on the countertop for his pistol.
Carmellini was creeping along below the counter with his
pistol in his hand.
Someone was in the air lock. By looking down the
aisle
between the counters Chance could just see the top of his head as
he pulled on the gas mask in the dressing
room.
Whoever it was was coming in.
Carmellini looked at Chance, lifted his hands in a
query: Now what?
Chance made a downward motion. Maybe this person
would just come in, get something, then leave.
It would be impossible, he decided, to sneak out
while the person was in the lab. Although the lab was
large, at least a hundred feet long, anyone in
the air locks could be seen from anywhere in the lab
unless the viewer was behind a piece of large
equipment.
Shit!
Well, the Cubans were about to discover that their lab was
no longer a secret. That was not a disaster;
unfortunate, perhaps. Perhaps not.
The person coming in wore a complete protection
suit and mask. Not a square inch of skin was
exposed.
Large for a woman. A man, probably. Almost
six feet. Hard to tell body weight under a bag
suit like that, but at least 180 pounds.
He checked the safety on the pistol. On. With his
thumb he moved it to the off position, checked it
visually.
Now the person was coming out of the air lock, walking
purposefully down the aisle between the counters and
trays of cultures.
William Henry Chance stood up, pointed the
pistol straight in the face of the masked person
walking toward him.
The man froze. If it was a man. Stopped dead
and slowly raised his hands.
Out of the corner of his eye Chance saw Tommy
Carmellini moving toward the Cuban.
“Find something to tie him withea”…he said loudly, hoping
Carmellini would understand his muffled voice.
Carmellini seemed to. He held up a roll of
duct tape. He
moved toward the man, who turned his head so that he
could get a good look at Carmellini.
Garmellini had his pistol in his hand. His holster was
under the white coverall, as was Chance’s, so both men
had carried their pistols with them in their hands.
Now Carmellini placed the pistol on a counter,
well out of the man’s reach. He walked behind him.
The man pushed backward, slamming Carmellini
against a counter.
Damnation! Chance couldn’t shoot for fear of hitting
Carmellini. As if the .22-caliber
bullets in the Ruger would drop a big man at this
distance.
Chance walked around the counter, up the aisle, intending
to shoot the Cuban in the head from as close as he could
get.
Carmellini kicked violently and the Cuban went
flying back into a rack of culture trays.
Three or four of the trays fell from the rack and
shattered on the floor.
The man launched himself at Carmellini, who ducked
under a right cross. The man kept right on going,
heading for the pistol lying on the counter.
Carmellini caught him by the back of his coverall and
swung him bodily around. With a mighty punch he
sent the man reeling backward, straight into the rack
of culture trays he had already bit. The man
slipped, fell amid the broken glass.
Without sights, wearing the silencer, the Ruger was hard
to aim. Chance squeezed off a round anyway. Where
the bullet went he never knew.
Before he could fire again the man screamed in agony.
All his muscles went rigid. He bent over
backward, screaming in a high-pitched wail.
“Let’s goff”…Carmellini yelled.
The man got control of an arm. He
tore at his mask, trying to get it off, all the
while screaming and thrashing around on the floor amid
the broken glass.
“Holy shit.”
The stricken man finally just ran out of air. All
motion stopped. He was bent over backward, almost
double, his head within a few inches of his heels.
Careful not to step on the broken glass, Chance bent
over the man. He carefully took off the gas
mask.
Eyes rolled back in his head, every muscle taut
in a fierce rigor, the man seemed almost frozen.
“He must have torn his suitea”…Chance muttered to himself.
The Cubans must have vaccinated everyone with access.
Why didn’t the vaccination protect him?
“Let’s get our asses through the air lock and get
the fuck outta hereea”…Carmellini said loudly.
They stood in the vacuum room for the longest time,
neither man willing to be the first to leave.
“We must goea”…Carmellini said at last, after almost
ten minutes of suction, after using a high-pressure
jet of air from a hose to blast every nook and fold
of the coverall.
They hung the coveralls on the nails. Stood in
the next air lock, were vacuumed again, then
they were out, still wearing their gas masks.
“We might kill everyone in Havanaea”…Chance said.
“We’ll never know itea”…Carmellini shot back.
“We’ll be in hell before they are.”
“Can’t figure out why the vaccination didn’t
protect him.”
“Later. How the hell are we going to get out of
here?”-
“The easiest way is to just walk out the front
door, shoot both the guards, and walk around the
corner to the van.”
“They’ll see us going up the stairs.”
“The elevator. We’rl use the elevator.
Keep the pistols where they can’t see them.”
“You are fucking-A crazy, man. One crazy
motherfucker.”
The elevator was right there with the door open. Chance
walked in. When Carmellini was aboard, he pushed
the button to take it up.
With their pistols down by their legs, they walked out
of the elevator, straight for the guard shack at the
front door.
Only one man was there, reading something. He looked
up as they approached. Now he stood.
“Que
pasa”…”…he began, and Chance shot him in the forehead from
six feet away.
The guard toppled over backward.
Chance and Carmellini kept going, out the door at a
walking pace, down the sidewalk under the
streetlights looking like two refugees from a flying
saucer, and around the corner. They jerked open the rear
door of the van and jumped in.
Chance ripped off the mask.
“Let’s get the hell outta hereea”…he roared at the
driver, who was as surprised at their sudden