Never Say Spy (21 page)

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Authors: Diane Henders

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Espionage, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Women Sleuths, #Suspense & Thrillers

BOOK: Never Say Spy
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Kane passed it over, still watching the door, and I made a slash in each side of the T-shirt, leaving two tails of fabric free.  I tied them across my boobs, securing the shirt and attempting a bit of modesty at the same time.  With my scratched, blood-caked cleavage emphasized by the tied-up T-shirt, the fashion effect was questionable at best.  Daisy Duke meets Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

Kane shot me a tense frown.  “Leave that.  Let’s go.”

I wiped my hands on what was left of my shirt, forcing my brain into action again.  “Right.  Okay.”

“Take this,” he said, holding out the gun that he’d retrieved from the fallen man.

I stared up at him.  “And do what with it?  I’m already on the hook for an espionage charge.  I’m not adding weapons charges to it.”

“Aydan, we don’t have time for this,” he snapped.  “The top priority is to get you out of here.  There will be no espionage charge.  There will be no weapons charges, even if you shoot somebody, and I expect and require you to shoot anybody who stands in our way.”

I stood open-mouthed.  “I thought you were Mr. By-The-Book.”

“I am.  Some days I use a different book.  Take the gun, dammit, and let’s go.”

I took the heavy weapon from his hand carefully.  I’d seen demonstrations, but I’d never handled a semi-auto handgun before.  I ejected the full clip, quickly noting the capacity, and snapped it back into place.  Kane reached over and worked the slide on the top, jacking a shell into the chamber.  The gun had a long silencer and laser sight attached, and the balance felt off.  I sighted, getting used to the feel of it.  My hands shook, but I’d learned from long years of competition that I could shoot despite shaking hands.

Kane was watching me intently.  “I’ll go first.  You watch our six.  Shoot to kill, no questions asked.  If anything happens to me, leave me and get out of here by any means necessary.  Do not hesitate, do not try to help me.  Copy?”

“Roger that.”  I attempted a smile at my feeble joke.  I doubted if he could see it under the layer of blood on my face, but he gave me a wintry smile.

God, what if something happened to Kane?  I’d never find my way out.  I could really use a floor plan right now...

My mouth dropped open as I suddenly stood in front of a table holding a set of construction drawings.

What the hell?  How was I in the network now, without even trying?

It didn’t matter.  I shook off my paralysis and scanned the floor plans frantically, trying to figure out where we were.  Pinpointing the most probable room, I identified a route and leaped for the portal, remembering just in time to stop and step through it slowly.  This would be a very bad time to be incapacitated.

My eyes snapped open and I ground my teeth on a groan, fighting off the pain.  A bobbing motion confused me for a moment until I realized Kane was carrying me.

“Put me down,” I said in alarm.  “You’ll give yourself a hernia.”

He stopped and lowered my feet to the floor of the corridor, one powerful arm still tight around me.  “You fainted.”

“No, I was in the network.”

His eyes bored into mine.  “I heard you swear under torture you couldn’t access the network.”

I frowned.  “Apparently I lied.  I found floor plans, and I tried to memorize the way out.  But I don’t know where we are now.”

“No time,” Kane snapped.  “Follow me.”  He took his arm away carefully, making sure I could stand on my own before handing me the gun again.  I took it from him reluctantly.

“Aydan.”  Kane gripped my shoulders and held my gaze with his.  “If we don’t get you out of here, our entire country’s security could be compromised.  And you will die.  Slowly.  These people will torture you until you give them what they want.  I need you to do this.”

I squared my shoulders and drew a deep, trembling breath.  “Okay.”

He started forward cautiously, scanning the corridor ahead.  I followed, watching behind.

Chapter 29
            
 
 

We crept through the corridors quickly and quietly.  Thank God Kane knew where he was going.  I was completely lost.  At each corner, he paused and checked in all directions.  I stuck close behind him, paying little attention to what was ahead.

Scuttle, pause, scuttle.  Our rhythm continued through seemingly deserted corridors.  My heart vibrated somewhere in the vicinity of my back teeth.  Jesus, we had to be getting close to the exit.

A gunshot blasted through the corridor and Kane jerked back, swinging an arm around to push me behind him.  I risked a quick glance in his direction and saw him lunge forward to return fire.  He ducked back beside me, covering behind the corner of the wall.

I snapped my gaze behind us again, trying to control the adrenaline surging into my bloodstream.  More shots exploded, and the tang of gunpowder scented the air.  Two men ran around the corner behind us, guns in hand.

I had been holding my weapon in ready position.  Their arms jerked up, but I was already in motion, sheer reflex kicking in.  Lead the target.  Just like trap shooting.

I fired once.  The gun kicked in my hands, and one man fell.

The other snapped off a shot that went wide and dodged behind a projecting wall.  His shadow stretched across the floor, marking his position.

Drywall partition.  It only looks solid.

It’s not.

I jerked the laser dot onto the wall at chest height.  It zigzagged wildly in my shaking hands, and my tournament instincts took over unbidden.  I eased out a long, controlled breath and squeezed the trigger.  A dark hole appeared in the wall and the body toppled over into the corridor.

I felt Kane move beside me and spared a quick glance his way.  He was giving me that intent look again.  “Clear,” he hissed.  “Run!”

We dashed down the corridor, my injuries screaming protest.  Kane had been efficient.  Three bodies sprawled across the corridor.  We dodged around them.

“Door!” Kane barked, pointing.  We burst through it and charged across the parking lot.

I gasped for air that didn’t seem substantial enough, my heartbeat thundering in my ears.  I stumbled on jelly-like legs, tripped and fell.  I struggled frantically to my knees.

Shots rang out behind us and Kane lunged between me and the building, dropping to one knee.  Firing one-handed, he fumbled his keys into my hand.

“Run for the truck.  Leave me.  Go!”  He jabbed his chin in the direction of his SUV and fired toward the warehouse again.

The vehicle was only about a hundred yards away, but it might as well have been a hundred miles.  I tried to scramble to my feet, but my knees wouldn’t hold me and I fell helplessly to the ground.

I rolled over beside Kane, straining to raise the heavy gun, and fired toward the building from prone position.  It was extreme range, and I was trembling so much I couldn’t aim any more, but at least I could provide some covering fire.

“Is there a Plan B?” I yelled over the gunfire.

He ejected the empty clip from his gun, slamming home the fresh one he’d taken from his pocket.  “Get to the truck!” he shouted.  “Go, dammit!”

A stinging shower of asphalt sprayed us as a bullet ricocheted off the pavement only a few yards away.  I squirmed backward toward the SUV.  Kane moved with me, keeping his body between me and the warehouse while he returned fire.

More men rushed out the warehouse door, spreading out to fire on us.  I couldn’t move fast enough.  We were going to lose.  The SUV was too far away.

The icy pavement numbed my exposed skin.  It was only a matter of time.  Kane would get shot.  It was a miracle he hadn’t been hit already.  And I would either die with him or be taken and tortured.  I fired a couple more rounds, barely able to control the recoil.

“Move!”  Kane bellowed.  “We can’t let them take you!”

With the clarity of despair, I realized there were no alternatives left.  My mind refused to consider what would happen to me if I was captured again.  Some things are worse than death.

I gulped back pure terror.  “They won’t take me.”  I gestured with my shaking gun.  “Six shots left.  Five for them.  One for me.  If it comes to that.”

Kane spared me a fleeting glance.  “Wait as long as you can.  Backup’s coming.”

He fired and a man fell.  I pulled the trigger again, and again.  My world shrank to the task of counting my remaining bullets.

Four.

Three.

I heard a vehicle approaching fast from our right, but couldn’t spare it a glance.  Kane was still shooting, and I fired again.

Two.

A dark van rushed into my peripheral vision and a din of automatic weapon fire erupted.  The volley continued while the van skidded to a halt between us and the building.  A hoarse voice bellowed, “Kane!” and the side door of the van slid open.

Kane scooped me up like a sack of potatoes.  His shoulder slammed into my bruised stomach and my face smacked against his back.  My cry of pain was drowned out by the gunfire.

Then we were inside, the square figure in the other side of the van still firing continuously at the building from the open side door.  The vehicle accelerated hard.

Blessed silence fell as the weapons fire stopped and the door slid closed.  I sprawled across the back seat, my ears ringing while I choked and sputtered blood from my freshly injured nose.

A tidal wave of relief threatened to sweep away my control.  I was with the good guys.  All my body parts were still intact.

I was safe.

I allowed myself the luxury of a couple of silent sobs in the darkness before clamping down hard again.

A beating sound thundered so close overhead that I ducked reflexively.  A brilliant light flashed through the van, fading as the sound diminished.

“That’ll be JTF2,” Germain said as he turned, slinging his sub-machine gun across his broad chest.  He moved up to sit in the passenger’s seat, extracting his phone from his pocket.

Kane bent over me in the dark.  “Aydan?”

“I’m okay,” I panted.  I struggled to sit up, groaning, and his strong arm supported me into sitting position.  “Goddamn son of a
bitch
,” I whimpered, then choked again on the thick metallic taste and wiped at my throbbing face with the tattered remains of my T-shirt.  “I am never, fucking
never
dressing up again!”

Kane‘s arm tightened around my shoulders.  “You’re going to be all right.”

“Where to, Cap?” rasped a voice from the driver’s seat, and I realized that Hellhound was the driver.  Friend with a non-disclosure agreement, indeed.

“Hospital,” Kane barked.

“Don’t bother on my account,” I said.  “All I need is some food.  And I need to wash my face.”

“Hospital,” Kane repeated firmly.

I subsided.  Germain talked quietly on his phone in the front seat.  Kane still had his arm around me, and I leaned closer, shivering against his warm bulk.

A few minutes’ driving brought us to the hospital.  Instead of going around to the Emergency entrance, Hellhound parked beside an unmarked but well-lit door at the back.  The door swung open, and an orderly wheeled out a stretcher.

Hellhound swung out of the driver’s seat to open the side door and Kane carefully helped me out of the van.  When I finally stood unsteadily in the bright light, Hellhound’s eyes widened.

“Aw, darlin’,” he rasped as his fingertips grazed my matted hair.

“I’m fine.  You should see the other guys,” I joked.

My trembling knees buckled again and Kane and Hellhound each caught an arm, making me grunt at the jolt to my bruised stomach muscles.

I recognized B Wing as I was wheeled in.  Doctor Roth appeared immediately, taking in my appearance with a practiced eye.

“Hi again,” I said as she examined my head and face without comment, lifting my blood-caked hair to check for injuries.  “I’m fine,” I added.  “I just took a couple of hits to the face and my nose bled.”

“If that’s so, why is your forehead covered with blood?”

“I was upside down for a while.”

She frowned.  “It looks like you took a couple of hits to the stomach, too.”  She indicated the purpling bruise showing through the tatters of my bloodstained shirt.  “And somebody used you for a Tic-Tac-Toe board.”

I picked at my T-shirt, peeling the sticky, stiffening fabric away from my skin.  “Just one hit to the stomach.  And the others are just scratches.  All I really need is a facecloth and a bottle of orange juice.”

“I’ll be the judge of that,” she replied.  “Linda!”

Linda appeared, her eyes widening with horror when she saw me.  “Aydan?  Oh my God!” she cried.  Dr. Roth gave her a stern glance, and she went quiet, her face pale.

“I don’t see any serious injuries,” Dr. Roth said.  “Linda, bring a basin and let’s get this mess cleaned up so I can get a better look.”  She eyed my shivering form.  “And bring a hot blanket.”

I lay wrapped thankfully in the blanket while Linda and Dr. Roth cleaned away the caked blood.  When they were done, the doctor looked down at me, her expression relieved.  “That’s better.  You’re going to be sore for a while, but you’re fine.  Your nose isn’t broken, and we shouldn’t have to pack it.  The bleeding has stopped.”

“Good.  Can I get something to eat?  That’ll fix the shaking.”

“Do you have hypoglycemia?”

“No, I just need food.”

“Okay,” she agreed.  “We’ll start you with some juice and see how it goes.”  She turned to Linda.  “Could you bring it, please?”

“Sure,” Linda replied, her smile buoyant with relief.  She touched my shoulder.  “I’m so glad you’re okay.  You looked so awful when you came in.”

Dr. Roth waited until she was out of earshot before turning to me.  “I’m going to give you the name of a psychologist who has experience helping torture victims.  I hope you’ll consider calling her.”

I glanced up at her, startled.  “I just have a few scratches and bruises.  It’s nothing serious.  This was just the warm-up act.”

She frowned.  “You were hung upside down.  You have ligature marks on your wrists and ankles.  You were beaten and deliberately scratched.  That looks like torture to me.”

I shrugged, trying to hide the long tremors that still rippled through my body.  “I’ll be fine.”

“Nevertheless.”  She handed me a business card, and I stored it in my waist pouch.

Linda returned with a glass of orange juice and a straw.  I extricated one arm from the warm blanket to take the juice, and she propped up the head of my bed.

“Ready to meet your public?” she asked, pulling the cubicle curtain aside to reveal Hellhound, Kane, and Germain standing in the corridor.

“Come on in,” I invited.

Hellhound and Kane sat in the two available chairs while Germain stood at the foot of the bed.  I attempted to sip my juice, but my hand shook so much I couldn’t get the straw in my mouth.  Hellhound took the glass away and held the straw to my lips.  I sipped thankfully, smiling at him.  The other two watched in silence.

“So this is the spook wing of your hospital,” I said.  Kane and Germain twitched in unison.

“We need to debrief in a secure area,” Kane said.  “Until we do, nobody says anything.  Clear?”  We all nodded.

“Once I get something to eat, I’ll be good to go,” I said.  They all regarded me doubtfully.  “Jeez, I just need food,” I insisted.  “Arnie, give me some more juice, please.”

As I sipped again, a sudden thought hit me, and I jerked up, wincing at the pain.  “Shit, I forgot to ask.  Is Wheeler okay?”

“He’ll be fine,” Germain replied.  “They hit him with a stun gun, but they also injected him with an overdose of sedative.  He’s barely conscious right now, but Dr. Roth says we found him in time.  He’ll probably be released in the morning.”

I sank back onto the pillow with a long breath.  “Thank God.  I’d feel awful if he’d been hurt.”

With the juice in my system, I felt better almost immediately.  I begged Linda to find me some food, and after clearing it with the doctor, she brought me a steaming plate of lasagne.  The spicy smell made the saliva rush to my mouth, and my stomach rumbled.  “That’s the best looking hospital food I ever saw.”

Linda smiled.  “It isn’t actually hospital food, it’s my supper,” she admitted.

I grinned at her.  “You are such a sweetheart!”  My hand tremor had diminished to a manageable level after the orange juice, and I helped myself to the lasagne, shovelling it into my mouth with no attempt at daintiness.

Germain’s brown eyes crinkled with humour.  “My God, she was starving.”

“You have no idea,” I assured him around a mouthful.  I felt mildly embarrassed as the three of them silently watched me stuff my face, but I wasn’t embarrassed enough to quit.  At last, I set the empty plate aside with a sigh.  “I owe somebody a really good lunch.  When can I go?”

Linda fetched Dr. Roth, who shooed the men away so she could examine me again.  At her request, I unfolded myself carefully, gradually stretching my sore stomach so I could stand upright.  I walked back and forth in the cubicle a couple of times for her approval.

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