In comparison, 1919 Market was neither architecturally nor historically significant. No government offices, unless you count that state supreme court justice’s pad.

So why had he been so freaked out?

Vincent decided he had to tell the boy to lay off the 9/11 stuff for a while.


What Vincent Marella didn’t know was that there were four explosive devices tucked away above the acoustic panels on the thirtieth floor. Two on the south side, one on the west, another on the north. One of the south-side devices was hanging ten feet from where he stood.

The scuff on the security door, though, was not the result of a last-minute break-in.

That really had been a FedEx guy.

In actuality, the explosive devices had been planted five years ago, shortly after David Murphy signed a ten-year lease on his portion of the thirty-sixth floor. David kept the trigger close at hand, at all times.

David liked to be prepared for all eventualities.

Even if the office were to be breached someday by a well-meaning law enforcement agency, they would find no such explosives on the thirty-sixth floor. Above, or below it.

No one would think to check six floors below.

Not until it was too late.

And when it came time to close up shop—like today—it was simply a matter of providing the right kind of accelerant. And spreading it on floors thirty-one through thirty-seven.

The kind of accelerant that could be melted into popcorn tins, and distributed to the companies on those floors.

MURPHY, KNOX & ASSOCIATES PROUD TO CALL THE CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE HOME … … 5 YEARS RUNNING!



The model David had in mind was One Meridian Plaza. He’d read about it before basing his company in Philadelphia. On February 23, 1991, a fire broke out on the twenty-second floor, engulfing and eventually gutting the eight floors above it. The building did not collapse, but remained a hulking shell of itself for more than a decade before city officials finally authorized its destruction.

A simple fire. Eight floors of destruction.

With the right kind of accelerant, it was more than enough to destroy the existence of Murphy, Knox.

Except in the minds of the fine people who enjoyed its free popcorn from time to time over the years.

Vincent Marella had no way of knowing any of this. This did not make him a bad security guard. In fact, the only piece of physical evidence that David had left behind, five years ago, was a tiny black tube of wire sheathing, cut from the wire when he patched the devices into the building’s power lines. David had missed it when he did a quick sweep of the rug to make sure he had left no traces.

Two days later, a vacuum cleaner from housekeeping had scooped it up.

It was now at the bottom of a floating landfill somewhere near South America.

Piece that together.


Vincent’s two-way beeped, snapping him out of his daydreams. If there were any terrorists hiding up here, that would have completely given away the game. Gotten his ass killed.

“What’s up?”

“You’d better come down to sixteen, Vincent.” It was Rickards, who’d been checking the lower half of the building.

“What’s going on?”

“Got a guy down here you should see.”

“Let me guess. He has cuts all over his hands from pushing through a window.”

“No,” Rickards said. “He’s unconscious and he’s got a pen sticking out of his throat.”


Nichole wasn’t sure what was worse: the fact that Molly had dropped her on her ass with one punch. Or that a drone like Jamie DeBroux had to revive her.

People in the world were divided into a few simple categories. The large majority were drones, buzzing about their daily lives, completely unaware how their contributions fit into the larger hive. They could be frightened into collective action quite easily—a terrorist threat or environmental disaster or flu epidemic. Some of these were even real. But most were engineered by the queens, or put into action by the workers.

Nichole and Molly were the workers.

People like David Murphy were the queens.

Nichole liked to believe that she was on an equal playing field with other workers. Sure, there were workers more powerful or gifted in some ways, but they were all still workers.

Molly, however, had been an extraordinarily tough worker.

Nichole was stunned by her ability to take a severe beating and still remain standing. She almost felt bad that she had to cheat at the end. But it was the only scenario available to her. Nichole knew she was mortally injured. And she knew Molly must be stopped.

“Where is she?” Nichole asked now. She sat up and felt incredibly dizzy.

“Who? Molly? She’s gone.”

“What?”

Nichole tried to get to her feet faster than she should have. The floor spun. But she had to look, see for herself.

The office where Molly had fallen was empty. Shattered glass was all over the floor, along with chunks of drywall and dust. Nichole counted bullet holes. Two in the window. One in the metal radiator. Another two in the desk. And one on the right wall, a wild shot (probably her last, Nichole thought) that probably sailed three feet over Molly’s head. Six shots fired. Six shots accounted for.

None of them had struck the Russian farm girl.

Nichole cursed and pounded her fist into the nearest available wall. Which happened to be the outer wall of the empty office.

A jagged shard of glass that had been hanging for its life at the top of the frame now fell, bursting against the frame below, and sending pieces over Jamie’s legs.

“Hey,” he said.

Nichole looked down and saw that she was missing a shoe. She carefully stepped over to it, shook out the glass, and replaced it on her foot. Then she recovered the HK P7 from the floor and tucked it in the back of her pants again.

“Come on,” she said.

“Where?”

“Off this floor.”

Nichole was lying, though. She needed to go to David’s office to recover any intel she could. Only then could she think about escape. If it came to it, she could pry open the elevator doors and make their escape down the shaft. Unless David had rigged those, too.

“Can you give me a hand?”

Nichole sighed. Drones. She held out her hand, then felt a panel of her shirt open wide, giving Jamie a clear view of her bra. Her bloodied bra. She withdrew her hand. Jamie had reached out by then, and when Nichole withdrew, his hand grabbed air. He slammed back against the cubicle wall.

“Ouch,” he said.

Nichole didn’t pay him any mind. She was looking down at her ruined shirt.

“What did you do?” she asked.

“I had to rip open your shirt to give you CPR.”

“You couldn’t do it over my shirt? What, were you hoping for a cheap feel?”

“I wasn’t thinking about that,” Jamie said. “I was trying to save your life.”

Nichole looked up the hall. “I guess I should be grateful my bra is still on.”

“Hey, it wasn’t like that.”

“Sure. I remember it from my CPR classes. Step one: If the victim is female, rip open her shirt.”

Nichole looked to see if there was a single button left standing. There wasn’t.

“Come on,” she said, “let’s go.”

Jamie slowly pulled himself to his feet.

“Where’s everybody else? Do you think Molly’s going after them, too?”

Nichole considered this carefully. How much to tell him? After all, Roxanne’s dead body was just a few feet away, around the other end of the cubicles. She would have to lead him around to David’s office the long way—and hope they didn’t encounter Molly.

At least she had two rounds left in the HK P7. If she was given another opportunity, she’d do it point-blank style.

Press the barrel right up against Molly’s forehead and squeeze.

Nichole looked at Jamie—disheveled, bloodied, battered, but still a drone.

Silence, for now, was the best policy.

“Follow me,” she said.


They found the three essentials in David’s office: bandages, booze, and a battery. AA, even. Just what the Talkabout T900 needed.

Unfortunately, the T900 had been crushed.

On their way back, Jamie had scooped it up from the floor of the office where Molly had tried to filet him. The plastic screen was gone. Now the unit refused to turn on, even with the new battery, which Nichole had found in one of David’s desk drawers.

“Let me see it,” Nichole said.

Jamie didn’t argue. He handed it over and sat down on the floor with the first aid kit Nichole had found in David’s desk. Standard company issue, purchased at OfficeMax. Six hundred sixteen pieces, with the ability to serve up to a hundred people. Handy for mornings like these, when your boss and coworker go bananas and try to shoot, slice, and poison you.

Meanwhile, Nichole was replacing the battery door on the back of the T900. She had opened it up and reinserted the batteries, just in case. She pushed a few buttons. Nothing happened.

“This thing is shot,” Nichole said.

“Told you.”

“Did you land on it, or something? Damn it.”

Okay. Jamie couldn’t put it off any longer. He had to do what he could to patch up his hand. At least something to make the bleeding stop until they made it off this floor. If he had his way, he’d wrap the fingers in gauze and slip a black leather glove over the whole thing, like Luke Skywalker wore in Jedi. Even better: Convince the Rebels to replace his hand with a cybernetic part. Start over.

Jamie looked at his fingers.

Oh, God.

He couldn’t look at them.

They throbbed hard, as if to remind him: We’re here. We’re damaged. We’re here. We hurt. Fix us. Fix us now.

Jamie pulled some gauze from the kit and tried to wrap them blind, using as much tape as possible. If Andrea were here, she’d yell at him for not using disinfectant. Of course he could argue that it wasn’t worth worrying about infection. When Jamie looked down, he could have sworn he saw bone.

“What are you doing?”

“Wrapping up my fingers.”

“You’re not doing a very good job.”

“I’m new at this.”

“Give me your hand. We don’t have much time.”

Nichole looked down at Jamie’s mangled fingers and said,

“Oh, God.”

“Yeah.”

“I’m not going to be able to stitch anything. There are no stitches in this kit.”

“That’s fine. Whatever you can do.”

“I’ll tape it best I can, try to sterilize everything with this Scotch I found in David’s desk. You can get it looked at later. Okay?”

“Seriously, whatever you can do.”

“Want a drink first? It’s Johnnie Walker Black.”

“I’m okay.”

“I think you’re going to regret that decision in about ten seconds.”

Nichole got to work. Jamie looked up at the ceiling tiles, and listened to peeling and tearing sounds of tape. He didn’t want to know the gory details. Better that he pretend she was expertly stitching up the flesh of each finger, so perfectly, in fact, that a few days later he would be able to flex his fingers and ping! ping! ping! ping! ping!—the stitches would pop out, and he’d be completely healed. Even though he knew there were no stitches.

“Here we go.”

“You haven’t started yet?” Jamie asked.

“Brace yourself.”

Jamie kept his eyes transfixed on the off-white ceiling tiles, imagining that the dimples in the material were craters big enough to hide in. He heard the quiet hollow thoooomp of a corktop being removed from a bottle.

“Cheers.”

There was no way Jamie could have prepared himself for the agony that washed down over his mangled hand. The old pain—the pain that caused the horrible gashes in the first place—was like a memory of the beaches of heaven compared to this NEW PAIN. The burning-acid molten-flesh drilled-bone torture of NEW PAIN.

“Shhhh now.”

Nichole held his wrist steady while the rest of his body writhed violently. Jamie shrank and floated up into a big crater on the ceiling.

A few minutes later, he opened his eyes. The light was harsh. He was back down on the floor.

Riiiiip.

“You passed out,” Nichole said.

“Urrrgghhhhh,” Jamie said.

“Don’t throw up. I’m halfway done.”

She continued working.

Passing out didn’t erase a single memory. There was no blissful moment of, Hey now, where am I? Why is this tall woman fussing over my hand? Why is she only wearing a bra? Jamie remembered everything. Nothing had changed. Except that he felt like he needed to throw up.

“Nichole.”

“Yeah.”

Riiiiip.

“Do you have any idea why David wanted to kill us this morning?”

She didn’t reply.

“Did he lose his mind?” Jamie asked. “I think that’s the theory I would prefer. The stress of the job, he goes postal …”

“That what you believe?”

“No.”

“Me neither.”

Riiiiip.

“That’s because you know what’s really going on, don’t you? That we’re actually some kind of secret intelligence agency.”

“If you don’t already know, then you’re not supposed to know.”

“Jesus, Nichole, c’mon!” Then he added a faint “Ow.” She had pressed down hard. Maybe even on purpose. “I almost died this morning. Along with everybody else. I deserve to know.”

“Trying to concentrate here.”

“Can you at least tell me if we’re working for the good guys?”

Nichole looked at him with a lifted eyebrow.

“You know? The U.S. government?”

She returned to her tapework.

“Reason I ask,” Jamie said, “is because if we are the good guys, then how come David Murphy was allowed to come in this morning with orders to kill us? That’s not something the good guys do, is it? Especially to people like me, who until about an hour ago had no friggin’ idea we actually worked for the government?”

“You don’t work for the government,” she said.

Jamie would have stormed out of the office had Nichole not been taping up the remains of his hand. This was not right. This was not fair. Guy in the military, he gets a draft notice, gets told, yeah, you might get a ball blown off in another country, or come home in a flag-draped box. That’s how we roll, Private. Guy puts on a police badge, same deal, only you take your risks in your own backyard. Death’s unlikely, but certainly possible. You know walking in.

But Jamie wasn’t a cop or a solider. He was a public relations guy who thought he was working for a financial services company, and did so because of decent pay and medical benefits. He didn’t sign on for anything else.

This was not right.

This was not fair.

Not to his wife and baby, who right now had no idea what was happening up here.

This was the horror of 9/11, or at least, the horror Jamie imagined whenever he thought about what it was like on one of those burning floors of the towers. The horror that your family will never know what happened in your last minutes alive. Like you were already dead.

He felt eyes. Nichole was staring at him.

“I’ve been thinking about what to say to you,” she said. “Because I do want you to live through this. And the less you know, the better. Trust me on this. I can’t speak for the rest of this company, but I’m one of the good guys. I may be the only good guy here. You probably saved my life, so I’m going to try to save yours. Fair enough?”

Jamie swallowed. His mouth tasted like death. “Yeah.”

“David is a bad guy. David sealed this floor and tried to kill us. Molly stopped David, but now she’s trying to kill us. That makes her a bad guy, too. That’s all we need to know.”

“Okay.”

“Our strategy is simple. We avoid Molly, and we try to make it off this floor alive.”

“I’m hoping you know how to do that.”

“Yeah,” Nichole said. “We ask David.”

She showed him a syringe.

“That wasn’t in the first aid kit, was it?” Jamie asked.


Thirty-five hundred miles away, Keene asked: “Find your Girlfriend yet?”

McCoy grunted, then drained the rest of his Caley. He walked back to their tiny kitchen for another can. Keene was going to have to think about fixing supper soon. Whenever McCoy reached the six-pack point, he became ravenous. And he was especially cranky when he was hungry.

Keene took over, cycling through the cameras on the thirty-sixth floor, spending barely a second on each office. In the conference room, the boss was still on the floor, the blood around his head looking like an oddly shaped pillow. The corpse of his faithful employee, McCrane, was situated across the room. Kurtwood’s dead body was still in the hallway of the abandoned section of the office. The still-alive DeBroux and Wise were in the head office. But no Girlfriend.

Where could she be?

Keene hoped she wasn’t dead. Otherwise, McCoy would be insufferable for weeks.


Girlfriend was doing her hair.

She had no choice. Six shots had been fired, and she had twisted and rolled and managed to avoid every single one … except one. A lucky shot, most likely fired when Nichole Wise really started to lose control, and was firing blind. Because there was no possible way that had been intentional. That kind of shot was the stuff of military snipers, not workaday Company watchdogs. Wise didn’t have the precision.

The bullet had sliced through the air, then the glass, then more air, and then her cheek.

It had gouged a bloody trail high across her cheekbone, and it had carried enough ground glass to make it hurt.

The pain didn’t matter, though. Her appearance did.

After cleansing her face and the wound, she reached behind her head and pulled the clips from her hair. Her hair was quite long. Paul had liked it that way. She kept it up and away from her face during the workday. Home, alone with Paul, she let it down. Home alone with Paul, she’d often wander around the house without clothes. It left him quite powerless, even if he thought he was in control.

Now she let some of her hair fall down in a wedge over the right side of her face; the rest was clipped up behind her head. She used hot water to smooth out her hair, tease some of the drywall dust and blood and ground glass out of it. After a minute of grooming, it looked passable. This was not a look she’d ever used before. Perhaps this was a good thing.

At the end, she was going to have to look presentable.

That would be the final exam.

Boyfriend would see it.

And, God willing, Boyfriend would give her the promotion she so desperately craved. No. Needed.

Good thing Boyfriend couldn’t see her now.

She had wanted him to see the pain she endured—that was part of the interview. But not the aftermath. A good operative was super-resilient, able to bounce back from any form of punishment. Most American operatives didn’t have much of a threshold for pain.

This would distinguish her from much of her competition.

She kept bandages and liquid skin in her right bracelet; tweezers and a simple stitching kit in her left. She used them now, working quickly and efficiently. Time was against her. She’d already wasted a minute on her face and rearranging her hair.

Her black skirt was fine—the color masked the blood—but her pantyhose were ruined, sliced open in a dozen places by the sharp glass. They had served her well. The pantyhose weren’t ordinary; you couldn’t buy them in a plastic egg in a department store. They were a special order, reinforced by woven Kevlar. Her legs had scratches and cuts, but no major gashes.

Her blouse was similarly reinforced. The worst damage she’d taken had been to her left forearm. She had rolled up her sleeve to access her bracelet.

Perhaps she should have rolled her sleeve back down.

Like the pantyhose, the blouse had to go. She wore a sleeveless shirt over her bra, one that didn’t look strange when paired with a skirt. It would do for the remainder of the interview.

Her legs and feet were bare, but she could easily recover her shoes before she departed.

Her hair now covered her face.

Glass had been plucked out; flesh taped, bonded, or sutured; clothes wiped clean.

Girlfriend was ready for the remainder of the morning activities.

She allowed herself the luxury of staring at herself in the bathroom mirror for a few moments. She was deep within the offices of Philadelphia Living. She’d stolen a key from the publisher two months ago. She’d followed him to a bar called The Happy Rooster—how appropriate, that name. He had been drunk and had stumbled off to sing karaoke. She slipped her hand into the bag, secreted the key, and disappeared into the shadows before he’d reached the second chorus of “Afternoon Delight.” In the meantime, she’d kept the key in a compartment in her right bracelet. She was glad it had finally been of some use.

Now she looked at herself, and was stunned by the passage of time.

Ten years ago, a much scrawnier, timid version of herself would have been looking back from the mirror.

A little girl, so eager to please.

Now she was different.

She was a young woman, much stronger, much bolder.

But still, eager to please.

Some things cannot be beaten from your soul.

Girlfriend spoke to herself in Russian. Mumbling, really. Nonsense rhymes. Things she would say to herself when she was a girl.

That was enough now. No more indulgences.

Number three was still missing. He had never shown up to the meeting, yet there was evidence he had arrived at the building.

Number three might still be hiding on the floor.

Or, Ethan had been clever enough to find a way out of David’s traps.




BACK TO WORK


If you really want to succeed, you’ll have to go for it every day like I do. The big time isn’t for slackers.

—DONALD TRUMP


Twenty floors down, somebody finally spotted him.

Well slap him and call him Susan. Weren’t security guards supposed to keep an especially keen eye on the fire towers? You know, as a potential security risk? Glad to know the Department has been in such safe hands all these years. Then again, that was probably the point. A heavily armed, man-heavy, hard-core, SWAT-style building security team would be kind of a red flag to the enemy. And what was the use of running a cover business if something like that blew the cover?

Still, Ethan knew there were fiber-optic cameras up and down the friggin’ tower. Even the lowest of the low-rent skyscrapers had ’em. He waved, then saluted each with a middle finger, on the way down. Hello, asses. Notice me.

Every couple of concrete staircases, he collapsed. He didn’t know if it was the nerve-agent blast or the pen tube in his throat or the remnants of that friggin’ French martini worming its way through his mind. But Ethan felt like hell.

So he collapsed.

He didn’t feel bad about it. As long as he fell on his back, no worries. If he ever pitched forward, however, they’d find a hung-over twenty-something with a pen tube sticking out through the back of his neck. That would be a tough one to explain to his parents.

Ethan’d told them he was in law school.

For seven years now.

Maybe they didn’t know how long law school took.

By floor sixteen, however, everything changed. Ethan felt an awesome weight on his head and shoulders. His eyes felt heavier than ever. When he started to pitch forward toward a cold slab of landing, it took every last bit of strength to buck himself backwards. Must … land … on … back….

Absurd, wasn’t it, how your most basic needs could change within an hour?

Must … eat … Big … Mac.

Must … land … on … back … so … pen … tube … doesn’t … kill … me.

Ethan’s wish was granted.

He landed on his back.

And gurgled loudly before he passed out.

Maybe it was just his nerve-agent-riddled imagination, but as he drifted into unconsciousness—and Ethan knew this was going to be one of those long-haul blackouts, not one of those wimpy pass-out sessions that lasted only a few seconds—he thought he heard footsteps pounding toward him. A fist on a steel door. Someone saying, Is anyone in there? The faint sound of a metal door latch twisting to one side. Another footstep, fainter still, on the concrete landing above.

And the final bit of sensory input, just before Ethan grabbed the heavy black curtain by the corner, folded it up over himself, and rolled over to one side:

You’d better come down to sixteen, Vincent.


Molly flipped open the compartment on her bracelet that held the ear receiver. She flipped the micro-size ON switch, then pushed it into her ear canal. The receiver was pretuned to pick up all internal radio contact. She didn’t expect to hear anything useful, but it was possible that Ethan had made it out of the building and was calling for backup. If so, she’d hear the security chatter. Not a huge worry. She’d just have to speed the assignment up. Hope that her reaction time would impress Boyfriend.

She’d been wearing the ear receiver for only a few minutes when she heard:

You’d better come down to sixteen, Vincent.

Static.

What’s going on?

Static.

I’ve got a guy down here you should see.

Static.

Let me guess. He has cuts all over his hands from pushing through a window.

Static.

No. He’s unconscious and he’s got a pen sticking out of his throat.

Ethan.

The scream made sense. Ethan must have felt something was off, and tried to flee early. Probably had enough sense to avoid the elevators—they were easier to control or sabotage or both. But he didn’t have enough sense to realize that a man who would sabotage an elevator would do the same thing to a fire tower. That miscalculation had earned him a blast of weaponized sarin.

Molly knew the effects of sarin; she’d briefly trafficked on behalf of an Afghan warlord years ago. And Ethan probably had enough sense to know what was happening. Probably felt his skin burn and his eyes bleed and his throat start to close, and he had been smart enough to attend to his throat first. Bleeding eyes will hurt—but a lack of air will kill you.

Look where that got him. On the sixteenth floor, surrounded by building security.

Ethan Goins was supposed to have been seated in the conference room-with the others. She had arranged everyone in order: Ethan was third. First, David. Then Amy Felton. And then Ethan, the hired muscle. She had even checked to make sure that Ethan was on the floor. His office door was open. His computer on. At the time, Molly had assumed Ethan stepped out to use the men’s room.

And he had.

The men’s room …

… on another floor.

It all clicked into place. The thirty-seventh floor was currently unoccupied. A mayoral candidate based his headquarters there until a dismal showing in the May primary bounced him out of the race. Now there was nothing but office partitions and rented desks that needed to be picked up and restocked. There were also two restrooms—men’s and ladies’—on the thirty-seventh floor. Unlocked. Free to anyone in the building who preferred a little privacy when attending to bodily functions.

Like Ethan.

He must have been on his way back down—the fire tower staircase was the easiest way between two floors—when David had engaged lockdown, as well as the sarin packages. Ethan had opened the doors. Ethan had received a wet surprise.

Poor Ethan.

Actually, screw Ethan. He was to have been third. This was not the way it was supposed to have unfolded.

Now building security had discovered him.

There was a good chance he was already dead. Sarin is nasty. Hard to shake the effects, even if you are tough enough to perform a self-serve tracheotomy.

But what if he were alive?

Ethan knew a lot. If he regained consciousness, he could ask for a pen and paper. Another pen, that is. Then he could make the remainder of the morning considerably more difficult.

Molly needed to make it to the sixteenth floor as quickly as possible.


Vincent waited for the elevator. He was more than a little relieved. Rickards had the culprit, who was unconscious. Vincent wasn’t sure what this “pen in his throat” stuff was all about. Rickards wasn’t a confrontational guard, and even if he was, he wouldn’t attack somebody with a friggin’ Bic.

Whatever. He knew this guy he caught had to be responsible for blowing out a window on the north side. Mystery solved. He and Rickards could escort the guy down to the lobby, call the Philly PD, ask for an incident report, then boom. Back to the world of Center Strike, where there were bigger problems than a blown-out window and a dude with a pen in his throat.


Molly flipped open another compartment on her bracelet. She removed a pair of plastic wraparound safety glasses. She unfolded the arms, and then the bridge, separating the two lenses from each other. The hinge in the middle snapped in place with a hollow click. She aimed the lenses at her face, holding them a few feet away. It was Hamlet, minus Yorick’s skull. If Yorick wore plastic wraparound safety glasses.

She waited for the camera buried in the frame and lenses to come online. Then she held up her free hand and showed the lenses three fingers.

Always have backup technology.

Straight out of Murphy’s beloved Moscow Rules.


“Hey, mate,” Keene said. “She’s back.”

McCoy had ducked out to take a leak or throw up or just stare at himself in the bathroom mirror. You never knew with McCoy. Once, Keene had caught him rubbing an issue of Vanity Fair around his neck and under his chin. Free cologne, he explained. Then he’d gone out and blown an absurd amount on a bottle of single malt.

“And I know you’ll want to see this.”

Keene heard the toilet flush.

Ah, taking a piss.

“McCoy! Your girl is back online!”

A meaty head popped out of the door.

“What?”


Molly placed the glasses on her face and then made her way to the north fire tower. Had to be that one. It was the closest to the active side of the office. No reason for Ethan to select the other. He’d be going out of his way to visit a bathroom.

Now it was time to outrun a sarin bomb, perched over a doorway.

Molly had faked a marriage to an actuary for three years. She figured she could pretty much handle anything.

It was all about the speed. Blast through the door, make it down the first concrete staircase, then vault to the left, hands on the landing, and flip down the next staircase. And so on. Hope she made it clear of the dispersal cloud fast enough. Even a little bit in her lungs could slow her down. Take root there. Potentially ruin the operation.

The door latch. That was the problem. She couldn’t hold it down and flip through the door at top speed at the same time.

She ran through the gear in her wrist bracelets. Wire. Blade. Hooks. Heroin. USB key. Poison.

Wait.

Wire. Hooks.

She fished out the gear, tied off the hook, looped the wire around the flat door latch, pulled it to the right, freeing the bolt from the strike plate, then sank the hook into the drywall to the right of the door. She let go. The wire held. All she needed was for it to hold for five seconds.

Five seconds was a generous amount of time.

Molly leaned up against the opposite wall, then launched herself through the doorway. Steel banged against the cinder block. As she sailed through the air, hands outstretched in front of her, she heard a beep beep and a pneumatic hisssssssss.

The device had been placed above the doorway, some kind of delivery nozzle pointed down—just as she thought it might be. She imagined the nerve agent coating the backs of her bare legs, her heels … but no, that wasn’t possible, she’d moved too fast. She was fine. She was fine. Her palms slapped the concrete landing below and she regained her balance and immediately twisted to the left, planted both feet on the ground, then flipped backwards down the flight of stairs, her outstretched palms waiting for the harsh slap of concrete so she could twist her body to the right this time, and then feel the concrete beneath her feet again, and flip backwards again….

This was just a vault and floor routine, she told herself. Just like 1988.

Only, no rubber foam or plywood or springs. No music. No padding on the perimeters. No choreography.

Simply cold, unforgiving concrete.

She could do this.

And her glasses were going to stay on her face the whole routine.

Because she wanted them to see everything.


McCoy, who was finally out of the bathroom, squinted at one of the laptop monitors. He settled into his chair.

“She’s stunning, isn’t she?” McCoy said, pulling the zipper up on his jeans and trying to find the buckle to his black leather belt.

“I’m dizzy,” Keene said.

“How is she taping this?”

The image on the monitor was a Steadicam nightmare: a shaky, floor-over-ceiling-over-floor blur of motion, with a cinder block wall doing a violent 180 every so often.

“Cameras in her spectacles. I saw her put them on. She showed us three fingers before proceeding.”

“Three fingers,” McCoy repeated.

“But what is she doing? She came blasting through that door like someone was after her with a gun. Now she’s trying to qualify for the Olympics by flipping down a bloody fire tower. Strange way to make a getaway. She’s not even finished her operation.”

McCoy wasn’t paying attention, though. He kept his eyes on the monitor and searched the table for the thick file Girlfriend had sent him. “Number three, number three,” he said. “Yeah, that’s Goins.”

“Odd thing was, she took time to set up the door handle before going berserk.”

“Huh?” McCoy said.

“I said, she took—”

“Oh,” McCoy said, then paused. “Oh, that’s right. You were out buying your little bottle of nursemaid—”

“Night Nurse.”

“Whatever. You missed the part of the meeting where JFK there told his employees that he’d rigged the two fire towers with sarin.”

“Murphy’s a paranoid guy, isn’t he? Why not just lock the damned things?”

“No better lock than a weaponized nerve agent. So my little Girlfriend there is trying to outrun death. That cloud of sarin is only going to make its way down the fire tower. She can beat it, but she can’t stop it.”

Keene stared at the monitor.

“Fine, sure. But what’s she running towards?”

“Why,” McCoy said, “number three.”


Ethan Goins was having a weird sex dream about Amy Felton. He had them often. They’d become so familiar, part of his brain probably believed he did share a sexual history with Amy, even though that was not the truth. Amy clearly wanted it, and so did Ethan. Usually when he had too much to drink.

But office romance was suicide in a line of work like theirs. It would be discovered in a flash. Picked apart. Exploited. Most likely by David himself. It was only when Ethan carpet-bombed his liver after work—take, for example, his recent adventures with the French martini—that he started to think that work didn’t matter so much.

And Amy did. Very much.

The most they’d ever done, physically, was hold hands beneath a small Formica table in a crowded bar on Sansom Street. They’d gone out with a gang of four from the office: Ethan, Amy, Stuart, and some intern Stuart was trying to nail. Stuart was too busy trying to make out with the intern’s right ear to notice Amy slide her hand over Ethan’s, her fingers seeking purchase in the space between his. Ethan gave her a look like, What’s the deal, Felton? She pulled his hand beneath the table and held it there, his hand cradled in hers, until Ethan became dead certain Stuart was on to them, and he excused himself to go to the men’s room. Stuart never nailed the intern. Ethan and Amy never touched in quite the same way again.

This sex dream he was having was a little bit different.

Amy was wearing an oversized hotel bath towel, which quickly slipped off.

Only problem: She was working for an imaginary boss, some Alpha Chi thickneck with just the right amount of facial hair at all times. He was wearing a bath towel, too. His was not so oversized. It kind of slipped off.

Ethan, for some inexplicable reason, was standing in the hotel room with the both of them.

(Even now, Ethan knew he was dreaming—in fact, he knew he was passed out on the gray concrete landing in the fire tower with a pen sticking out of his throat. But the idea of Amy Felton in a hotel bath towel was too much of an attraction. He wanted to stay here and linger for a while.)

Naked Alpha Chi guy said to her, “Want a poke before my meeting?”

Ethan felt true panic. He didn’t know what Amy was going to say. To his relief, her reply was friendly—

Tempting as that sounds, you have a meeting to attend, she said, in his dream.

—and curt.

Then Alpha Chi guy disappeared, and Amy was on the bed, and her towel was now slipping off again. She looked at Ethan. Ethan looked at her breasts, which sloped to perfect pink tips. He’d never seen them before—yet, in dreamworld logic, they seemed as familiar as the front door to his apartment.

She put her hand on his face, and said to him: “Look at me lovingly.”

In the real world, somebody was touching his face, then his wrist.

Ethan knew what it was; he wasn’t delusional or in some kind of fugue state. Somebody—probably a building security guard—had found him passed out and bloodied in the stairwell. The guard probably saw the pen and freaked, and was trying to find a pulse.

But Ethan wanted to keep thinking that Amy was still touching his face, imploring him to look at her.

Where was Amy?

Was she all right?

“Buddy! Are you awake, man?”

Oh yes, I’m awake. I’m back in my chemical-nerve-agent-dosed body with my bargain-basement tracheotomy. I could be spread out on a bed with Amy Felton, sans hotel bath towel. But no, I’m here. Trying to resist the urge to reach up and feel your tits.

Ethan even opened his bloodied eyes to confirm it.

I’m here, dude.


Molly flipped and twisted until all of reality was reduced to a simple series of events: concrete slapping her naked palms, concrete slapping the bottom of her bare feet. Again. And again. Somewhere, in another part of her mind, she ticked down the floors as she completed them. She didn’t focus on the numbers. She knew her mind would warn her when she was close. She focused on the concrete.

If the security guards beat her to Ethan Goins, and they’d already moved him, all was lost.

She would have let an employee escape. Operation failed.

And her mother was as good as dead.


The elevator arrived and Vincent Marella stepped in and started to push 16. But his finger hung in the air, the slightest bit of space between the tip of his index finger and the white plastic square that would light up if he applied enough pressure.

C’mon. Push it.

C’mon.

Okay, fine. He was willing to admit it to himself. He was stalling.

He knew the call was completely different from the one he’d taken over at the Sheraton a year ago. There, it was like: Calm down a domestic disturbance. This was: dude down in the stairwell, pen in his throat. Completely different.

But the terrors were back.

With, as they say, a vengeance.

“This is stupid,” he said aloud. He pushed the button.

As the elevator descended, he felt like his stomach was already a few floors below it.


Molly landed on the security guard. Or more precisely, on his back. Her feet jackhammered into him. The guard’s face smashed up against cinder block. His eyes fluttered. The rough surface of the wall gouged at his cheek as he slid down. Molly quickly regained her equilibrium. The judges may have dinged her a few points, but it was still a competitive dismount.

Ethan couldn’t believe what he was seeing.

Molly Lewis. David’s quiet little assistant, flipping down a concrete staircase and stomping a guard into unconsciousness.

Then again, look at him. He could endorse a check with his throat.

Molly checked the guard, made sure he’d gone bye-bye, and then turned her attention to Ethan.

My God, she was here to rescue him. Who would have thought.

He tried to let his eyes do the talking: Look, Molly. You see the pen. You probably know my deal. So you’ll need to kick-start the conversation.

Ethan had once sat next to Molly at an impromptu lunch; David had discovered this new Indian place down Twentieth Street and dragged whoever he could to try plates of biryani and seafood korma and chicken tandoori. Ethan had made exactly three attempts to initiate a conversation with Molly, and all three were about as welcome as the seafood korma was to Ethan’s lower intestinal tract. (Sue him; he had a sensitive stomach.) Molly just wasn’t about talking.

Apparently, she was all about flipping down concrete staircases and knocking out security guards.

“We’ve had a security breach upstairs. You were locked out when it began; David is dead. He placed me in charge before he died.”

David? Dead?

But wait. Amy was second in line.

Ethan put his hand on Molly’s forearm. He needed to find a way to ask about Amy.

It was as if Molly could read his mind. “Normally, Amy Felton would be in charge, but she’s the one who killed David. Right now, she’s missing.”

No, no. That just wasn’t possible. Amy? Killing David?


“The entire floor is on lockdown, but when I realized you were missing, I made it past the sarin bomb—which I believe was planted by Amy Felton to keep us trapped—and made my way down to you.”

Amy? A traitor?

No. No way.

I was just out with her last night, drinking French martinis, doing our usual dance of sexual frustration. I would have seen it in her eyes.

Ethan was suddenly bursting with questions. It was maddening that he couldn’t articulate a single one of them.

He needed to take Molly to a quiet room, away from building security, grab a legal pad and a pen—one with actual ink in it, unlike the one sticking out of his throat—and grill her. Gather the facts before acting. One thing was clear, though. They needed to operate privately. No outside interference.

The world was crashing down around the company, and if Amy was out of commission, he had to take the reins.

“Building security must not be involved,” Molly said, as if reading his mind. “David was explicit about that.”

On cue, there was a short and sharp rapping sound. Coming from the door at the top of the staircase. The entrance to the sixteenth floor.

Somebody knocking.

Building security, getting involved.


Vincent should have just opened the door right away, but the fear was back big-time. C’mon, Vincent—your goddamned partner is behind that door, guarding some loser who broke a window and tried to stab himself in the neck. Do your job and relieve him. Relieve him now.

But Vincent was still worried about the ape.

That ape was going to follow him around the rest of his days. Cage the ape. Do your job.


Molly needed to move now. One missing guard was enough. Two would send red flags up all over the building.

Okay, let’s hoist Ethan up. Brace him against the wall.

Wait.

That was all wrong. Anybody coming in through that door would see Ethan’s reddened eyes, the throat wound.

Turn him around. Support his weight. Think of something.

Now.

Could the people watching the scene through her eyeglasses tell that, for the first time this morning, she was panicked? Was her face shaking?

She leaned forward quickly and whispered, “Play along,” in Ethan’s ear. She said it as a confidence booster. To let the men watching know that she had this under control.

Even though she didn’t.

Another factor: the sarin. If Ethan had been dosed with it, there was still a risk of inhaling it. Her throat would close up.

There was only one option.

Molly sucked in enough air to inflate her lungs, but not to the point of bursting. Then she picked Ethan up from the concrete landing. He did not protest, even as she heaved him over her right shoulder.

Then she did the same with the unconscious guard, only over her left this time.

A three-way.

Paul would have found this kind of thing kinky, were he still alive.

She moved to the side and planted a foot on the first step going down.


Vincent opened the door and looked down the stairs.

Nothing. No sign of Rickards.

Wait.

Scratch that.

There was a sign. On the landing. And not a good sign.

A sign like blood.

Vincent opened his mouth, then thought better of it. What if Rickards were in trouble? Calling out his name wouldn’t do any good. It might embolden the creep who had a gun to his head.

Listen to him. Gun to the head. Vincent didn’t know what was going on, and already he was assuming the worst. That blood on the landing was probably from the guy with the pen in his neck. Most likely, Rickards hadn’t wanted to wait. Maybe the guy was seizing. Maybe he carried the guy down to the fifteenth floor, caught an elevator there to head to the lobby, get the guy help.

So why hadn’t he radioed him to say that? Rickards knew he was on his way.

Because he had a gun to his head, that’s why.

Stop it.

Vincent reached for the two-way strapped to his belt. Unsnapped it.


Molly was five steps down when she heard the snap. And a footstep on concrete.

What was the snap?

Not a gun being unholstered. A nightstick being removed from a belt? Guards at 1919 didn’t carry them.

Then it bumped against her cheek. It had been hanging from the unconscious guard’s belt.

The radio.

Which came alive in a burst of static.


Thirty-five hundred miles away, McCoy tried to do some math.

“Number three’s a big guy, probably close to two hundred pounds. And that guard looked like he was at least that. Jesus, Keene—she’s hoisting over four hundred pounds of man on her shoulders. Is that even possible?”

“Apparently not. Look.”

The view from the glasses froze in place. Then, Ethan Goins—number three—came into view. He was being placed on a concrete step. He looked confused.

“What’s she doing?” McCoy asked.

“I don’t think number three knows, either.”


Vincent heard the return squawk of Rickards’s two-way. It was directly below him.

“Andy!” he shouted, then started down the staircase, wrenching the lead sap from his duty belt. 1919 Market didn’t arm their guards. It freaked the suits out too much. They didn’t like the idea of working in a police state.

All he had was a sap. The weakest kind, too: flat sap with lead shot and no spring in the shank.

No match for somebody, say, with a gun to Andy Rickards’s head.


Molly handed Ethan the radio, hoping he’d understand. She held up an index finger. One minute. I’ll be back for you in one minute. Maybe she could get this guard stashed.

Ethan nodded.

Above, someone shouted, “Andy!”

Molly continued up, guard still slung over her shoulder. She had a decision to make. It was coming down to her mother’s life, or these security guards.

Of course, there was another way.

It would be violating her orders. It would be putting the operation at risk—somewhat. Early on, when she had first contacted Boyfriend, she asked about operational priorities. They were given: sanctions first, experimentation second. By continuing to pursue the experimentation, she was putting the sanctions at risk.

If they were really watching—Boyfriend and his minders—then they’d have to understand why. And they’d have to approve.

Molly stopped midstep, then bench-pressed the guard off her shoulders and flung him down to the next landing. Her back cried out in relief. She wanted to collapse to the staircase and hoped the spasms would go away.

But there was no time for that now. She walked back down a few steps and knelt next to Ethan, who was looking at her with wide-eyed wonder. He was probably wondering what she was doing. Wasn’t she supposed to be stashing the guard somewhere while he distracted the other guard?

“Ethan,” she whispered. “I want you to know something.” She gently placed her hands on the sides of his head.

Maybe she could salvage part of the experiment, after all.

Maybe that would count as extra credit.

A voice behind her said, “Miss, step away from that man.”


The flat sap in his hand was useless, Vincent realized.

Not because he was squaring off against a gun. But because it was a girl.

A young girl.

In a skirt and long hair and bare feet, she didn’t look more than twenty-one. Hell, Vincent’s son would be dating girls like this in a few years.

Here she was, doting on her fallen man—and yeah, Rickards was right. The guy did have a pen sticking out of his neck. What was that about?

But in an instant, Vincent had a pretty clear picture of what was going on. The shattered glass, Rickards’s message, these two kids, this fire tower … all of it. It was a low-budget office burglary gone wrong. Plain and simple. She probably worked here, in an office on the thirty-first floor or higher. Just a secretary, or an assistant or something. She was certainly dressed like it—skirt, blouse. Got by on a little better than minimum. Lived with her parents maybe. Dated this dopehead here—a real sweetheart no-account type. One day, Dopehead decides he needs cash to score ecstasy, or maybe finance a deal of his own, talks his young girl into helping him break into her office. Steal a few laptops, raid the petty cash, whatever. Maybe it was heavier than that. Maybe she had the combo to a safe.

But somewhere along the way, something bad goes down. Something spooks Dopehead; he accidentally shatters a window. She freaks. They fight. He has a seizure, because he’s an X-poppin’ Dopehead. She knows enough to know she has to open an airway. She gives him a quick-and-dirty tracheotomy, saves his life. The unthankful creep makes her carry him down the fire tower steps, hoping to get away clean. They run into Rickards. She pleads for help. Rickards calls Vincent. Vincent agrees. The girl, desperate, pushes Rickards down the steps, still hoping they’ll be able to get out of this one without her parents finding out.

And there’s Rickards now, still out cold, at the bottom of the landing.

And here they are, Girlfriend and Dopehead, realizing they’re done for.

“Miss,” he says in the most reassuring tone he can muster, “I really need you to step away from that guy so I can help him.”

Detain him.

But yeah, help him.

Dopehead deserves jail time, but he doesn’t deserve to die.


Molly ignored the guard, because what she had to say to Ethan was important.

“Amy’s hanging for her life outside her office window,” she whispered. “She’s waiting for you to save her.”

Molly pulled back slightly. She wanted the fiber-optic camera in her glasses to capture everything—his reaction, her words. Maybe it would still prove useful.

Maybe these few seconds of video would be enough to get her back on track with Boyfriend.

Ethan’s reaction was worth the effort. He seemed to rage against his own body. Blood seeped out of the hole in his neck, and there was a phlegmlike rattle in there. He was actually trying to talk.

“Miss, please, step away and let me help him.”

Molly continued, “I’ll let her know you were too busy to come up.”


Ethan wasn’t sure if this was another dream, because none of it made sense. What made it seem like a dream was the fact that it centered around Amy. But it all felt real. His fingertips were pressing down on the smooth concrete.

And it was the wrong woman. It was Molly here, touching him. Molly’s bare hands, touching his cheeks. Now caressing his head, her fingers sliding behind his skull, stroking his chin with her palm.

Molly?

Molly Lewis?

A second before she pulled and pushed at the same time, Ethan realized this wasn’t about sex.

It was about snapping his neck.



The girl did exactly as Vincent asked, stepping back away from Dopehead. But something was wrong. Dopehead’s head lolled to one side. It might have been his eyes playing tricks, but Vincent thought he saw him seize his girlfriend’s hands on his face.

“Move away,” he said. He needed to get in there, do CPR. Vincent wasn’t quite sure how you did that with a sloppy tracheotomy thrown into the mix—what, do you press your thumb down on the hole in the neck? But that didn’t mean he wouldn’t try.

The girl stood up and seemed to be moving away.

Right until the moment she turned on Vincent. One of her hands grabbed his neck and drove him back into the cinder block wall. She squeezed hard.

For Vincent Marella, it was the worst possible kind of déjà vu. A little over a year ago, in the Sheraton. Wide awake, knowing what was happening to him and powerless to do anything about it. His mouth open, silently screaming for air that would not come. Consciousness being stolen from him, one oxygen-deprived brain cell at a time.

Good evening, kids, his strangler had said. He had been talking to the couple in the room. The people who had later disappeared. All because Vincent had been choked into unconsciousness, and had failed to protect them.

And it was happening again. Not by a muscular thug, but by a young girl. A girl who looked like a mild spring breeze would blow her over.

But her grip was steel. Vincent was already seeing gray spots dancing in his vision.

Then he remembered the sap.

He’d snapped it back onto his duty belt, hadn’t he?

He had.

Grab it. Unsnap it. Forget she’s a girl. She’s trying to kill you, Vince. Unsnap it and get to work. Do your job, already.

Vincent unsnapped it.


Molly did not see it coming.

She had been paying half attention to the security guard, waiting for the loss of oxygen to knock him out. She kept the other half of her attention on Ethan’s corpse, wondering where she could stash the body while she finished the rest of the operation. But wait; she couldn’t do that. The fire. The fire was supposed to burn up everything, including the bodies, and if he were down here, he could be discovered. Fingerprints could be lifted. And someone with enough incentive could—

Her face felt like it exploded.

It exploded again, this time from the opposite side. Her cheekbone shattered. Her broken camera glasses flew off her face, skittered across the concrete and down three steps, landing facedown.

The security guard had a sap.

The potential skull fractures didn’t worry her as much as the idea of trying to look presentable at the end of her operation. Her long hair could cover the slash trail of a bullet. It could not cover a battered face.

A battered face would not impress her employers.

Molly squeezed tighter. The guard twitched and then smashed the sap down on her forearm, numbing it instantly from the wrist to the shoulder. But she refused to let go. Molly tried to snatch his weapon from him, but the lead cracked her knuckles.

Then he brought it up again at her face, savagely. Her lips burst. A tooth shattered in her mouth.

She squeezed even tighter, careful not to kill him. Even though she wanted to. But security guards weren’t part of the operation; such a sanction would be seen as sloppy.

Oh, but the urge was strong. She hadn’t felt this kind of bloodlust since …

Since 1996.

The Olympic Games.

The bitter sting of loss.

Molly Lewis—whose birth name was not Molly Kaye Finnerty, but Ania Kuczun—tried to resist her basest instincts and stick to the operation.

Ania Kuczun not only would have crushed this man’s windpipe in a matter of seconds. She would have severed and mailed his head, in a plastic-lined box, to the man’s family. She would have researched and found the person who cared about him the most. She would have sent it cash on delivery.

Ania Kuczun had spent many years trying to become Molly Lewis.

She couldn’t give it up now, when it mattered the most.

The life of Helen Kuczun depended on it.


Thirty-five hundred miles away, the monitor showed nothing but an extreme close-up of a concrete slab. Then, gray static.

“What’s going on?” McCoy barked. He slapped the side of the table, as if that would do something.

“I’m trying another camera.”

“Damn it! Tap into building security. You can do that, can’t you?”

“I don’t know. I’m not a tech guy.”

“Get a tech guy!” McCoy caught himself. “I’m sorry.”

“It’s fine,” Keene said, “but I’m not finding anything. What we have are access codes to the cameras on the thirty-sixth floor and not much beyond. Guess we never thought we’d need anything else.”

McCoy cursed.


Vincent Marella felt his skin burst with sweat and his muscles start to flutter. He assumed this was it. In his last conscious moment he thought about his boy, and all his wild conspiracy theories. If he could be with him one last time, Vincent would place his hands on the boy’s shoulders—which he remembered his own father doing to him, when it was about something important. And Vincent would tell him: You were right. The deck is stacked against the common man, and God bless you for asking the right questions. Keep asking them as long as you can.

Then Vincent was out.


Molly, Ania, Girlfriend. She answered to them all.

But as the guard fell to the floor, she took a few steps back, and she heard one name the loudest: Victim.

She felt like a victim, once again. No matter the personae she created. No matter how hard she trained. No matter how many things she learned. At her very core was the word imprinted on her DNA: Victim.

Bruised.

Battered.

With another busted lip. Swallowing her own blood. Feeling it burn a hole in the lining of her stomach.

Stop it. Take stock of yourself.

Ania rested on the lower step, next to Ethan’s body. Her tongue found another shard of tooth; she pulled it loose with her tongue, sucked the blood from around it, then spit it at the wall. It bounced from the cinder block and landed on the guard’s chest. There you go. A souvenir.

From Ania.

Forget Victim; she could reclaim her birth name now. Molly Lewis was dead. She was dead the moment she poisoned her husband, mixing the potato salad while he slept. And “Girlfriend”? After this grievous setback, she wasn’t sure the name still applied.

Ania Kuczun lives.




EARLY LUNCH!


You can’t get a pay raise when you’re angry. People will react to the negative energy and will resist you.

—STUART WILDE


Thirty-five hundred miles away, McCoy walked away from the monitors and opened the fridge. It was an American-style fridge—oversized, with a ridiculously large freezer. Neither McCoy nor Keene had ever frozen anything. It contained one item: ice cubes. McCoy scooped some out now and put them in a rocks glass, then filled it with single-malt Scotch. He put the glass to his mouth and drank steadily, as if consuming a sports drink.

In the living room, Keene stared at his partner. He hated seeing him disappointed.

Keene wanted to go over to him now, try to untangle the tight knots of muscles in his back and shoulders. That was where the stress hit him.

But Keene knew better, from experience. Best to leave the man alone.

“I’m going out for a bit,” he said. McCoy didn’t seem to hear him. He was busy pouring himself another Scotch.

How about you drink a Scot instead? Keene had once said, in a light moment.

Now was not the time for that.

Keene took his valise with laptop and cell, along with notepad and paper. He could work on some of the Dubai operation in a secluded booth at the pub just as well as he could in the apartment. He didn’t need to start surveillance for another hour and a half.

The barman nodded to him, brought him a bag of crisps and an ice-cold orange juice. Keene was probably the only Scot within ten miles who didn’t touch alcohol or red meat. He liked to keep his mind clear, his body lean. When he first started in his line of work, back when he had another name, he told himself that the drink was necessary; it kept the darkness contained in a lockbox. Slowly, he realized that the alcohol only strengthened the darkness—emboldened it. Eventually, the alcohol locked him inside the box, along with the darkness. He didn’t need that again.

When Keene first met McCoy, it had boggled the man’s mind.

“You’re a Scot? And you don’t even drink beer?”

Keene shrugged.

“So much for a drunken shag,” McCoy had said.

Their relationship was a complicated one.

Keene tried to work on some of the trickier details of Dubai, but his mind kept wandering out the pub door, down the block, and four flights up. To McCoy, and his “Girlfriend.” He wondered idly: Why did he pick that code name?

What puzzled him the most, however, was the former operative known as David Murphy.

McCoy had told Keene about him some time ago; Murphy was famous for stopping a 9/11-style plot a full two years before the original 9/11. Clinton was still in the White House; the United States was still reeling from Columbine. The plan was a hybrid: suicide bombers in twelve American cities, armed to the teeth, with bombs jacked into pulse-checking wristwatches. The bombers were told to choose the most crowded location. Reveal weapons—preferably assault rifles. (The jihadists had been paying careful attention to Columbine.) Take out as many people as you can, stopping only to reload. When law enforcement or armed civilians come to take you down, rejoice in Allah, for the watch will tell the bomb your pulse has stopped, and the bomb will do its job on the police and emergency technicians.

Anyway, Murphy caught wind of it through an informant, arrested one would-be bomber, then extracted the entire plot—along with names and addresses—through a method of interrogation that still had not been revealed.

In uncovering the plot, Murphy erased many, many sins.

After 9/11, Murphy had joined an organization without a name. Some wags called it “CI-6.” This was a joke—a mutant blend of CIA and MI-6. Neither intelligence organization had anything to do with it, or knew much about it beyond rumor. CI-6 was another beast entirely. The blackest pocket of the blackest bag—in no visible way was it attached to any official budget line of any government.

The way Keene had heard it, CI-6 had started as a joke in the crowded upstairs bar at Madam’s Organ on Eighteenth Street in Washington, D.C.

The more the story was retold, the more the details were simultaneously obscured and embellished. One current version had it that the whole thing started as a bet, much like the Vietnam War. But this much was certain: a person of political influence met up with a person of lobbying influence, had way too many pints of Pabst Blue Ribbon one night—hell, it was a blues bar, what were you supposed to do, sip Johnnie Walker Black among the civilians?—and started talking about what to do about all these goddamn terrorists. Though in the smoky haze, the word was pronounced terrizz. As in, We gotta stop the got-damn terrizz.

On a car ride to a houseboat party on the Potomac, a loose plan was formed. Secret financing secured. Types of operations determined.

“It’ll be like the CIA and MI-6 got drunk and went to bed together, then didn’t tell anybody the next day.”

Hence, CI-6.

Pickle your brain in enough Pabst, it’ll seem funny to you, too.

There was no official name for the covert offspring of that drunken evening.

Those parents weren’t around to see their child take its first step; the political fixer found himself caught up in a Capitol Hill scandal soon after and was drummed out of the city posthaste. The lobbyist, too, was caught in the vacuum pull of the tidal pool. But other men were in place to handle the birth, education, and development of this fledgling life-form. The baby grew fast.

The baby grew so fast, it quickly forgot its parents.

The baby grew so large, it forgot parts of itself, like a toddler running through an antique shop. Such a baby doesn’t realize that swinging its arms out willy-nilly will shatter rare teacups and serving plates. All of that is boring anyway. The fun thing is to run.

Guys like David Murphy were a vital part of the baby.

On the outside, Murphy had surprised his fans within the conventional intelligence world by retiring and starting a financial services company. Like, what?

He called it Murphy, Knox.

Even the name was a gag: Knox=NOCs, CIA slang for “nonofficial covers.” Murphy and his NOCs.

Murphy had quickly become a key player in CI-6.

So had Keene, once he saw how useful he could be. How much more power he could wield working for an outfit like this.

But what was Murphy mixed up in that, suddenly, he had to wipe out his front company? Along with more than a few of his employees, including several operatives?

This was the problem with the baby that was CI-6. An invisible structure meant a hazy sense of self. Lack of accountability.

Could a guy like Murphy just go and wipe out his own front company on a whim?

Sure he could.

But why?

And did everyone else know about it?

McCoy wouldn’t be much help in this department. He was too distracted by Girlfriend. He was more about recruiting—“nurturing talent,” he was fond of saying—than running operations. Keene couldn’t complain; it was how they’d met. Keene had liked being wooed. But now, he worried that his man didn’t have his eye on the full picture here.

Keene fired up the laptop and hit the phones. Told the barman to keep the OJ coming.


David was imagining he was inside a Wawa, and he was browsing the aisles, and he had an unlimited operational budget.

He was able to procure microwaveable hamburgers, Italian submarine sandwiches—Philadelphians called them “hoagies”—tubs of cottage cheese, ooh, cottage cheese. That suddenly sounded good. If he could get himself up off this floor, and take care of everything that needed taking care of, he’d fix the elevators and ride down to the lobby and walk out to Twentieth Street. Just a block south … okay, two half blocks south, if you counted the stupid little side street below Market … there was a Wawa, right at Twentieth and Chestnut. He sneaked down there at lunch, sometimes. A man in his position was expected to dine at one of the Market West hot spots. Truth was, he hated those places. Gimmicky names, nine-dollar cheeseburgers. He preferred to buy lunch in some common place, bring it back in a brown paper bag, feast behind his closed office door. And Wawa was one of his favorites. The refrigerated dairy section was along the right wall. He could see the stacks of 2 percent cottage cheese, blue plastic containers, stacked in the middle. Oddly enough, the whole-milk cottage cheese was too cloying, while the 1 percent skim version was too acidic. Two percent was perfection. Perfect chunky creamy goodness …

Someone touched his face.

“I know you’re still there.”

A female voice.

Someone he recognized. Sort of.

“I’m going to bring you around. But a bit of warning: This is going to hurt.”

Hurt?

Hurt was fine.

As long as he woke up to a blue plastic container of Wawa 2 percent cottage cheese, already open, white plastic protective layer already peeled back, white plastic fork gently shoved into the side.

And crackers. Plenty of Nabisco saltine …


Nichole held the adrenaline shot two feet above David’s chest, then stabbed down and thumbed the plunger.

A supersize dose of epinephrine—the so-called fight-or-flight hormone—pumped into David’s heart and made a lightning tour of his circulatory system.

The reaction wasn’t immediate. It took a few seconds.

But soon David was spitting blood and convulsing.

Then he said, “… crackers.”

Jamie realized that he’d been holding his breath for a full minute.

Nichole didn’t waste a second. She flung the empty syringe across the conference room and placed her left foot on David’s throat. She applied enough pressure for him to start squirming slightly, even though he was still in the process of regaining consciousness.

“Tell me everything,” she said.

“Can’t … breathe …”

Jamie touched Nichole’s shoulder. “Hey, you might want to ease up—”

Nichole slapped Jamie’s hand away. “Don’t.” Then, she said to David, “Everything, or I snap your neck.”

“Ffffffine.”

Nichole eased up. Slightly. As far as Jamie could tell, neck-snapping was still a distinct possibility.

Jamie was still stunned, despite all that had transpired in the past thirty minutes. If you had called him at home yesterday and told him that he’d be seeing Nichole with her foot pressed against David’s neck in the conference room, with Stuart’s dead body lying in the corner, Jamie would have laughed. Okay, part of him would have hoped it was true. But most of him would have laughed.

Now here it was. Everything took on that harshly lit look of surreality. The hyperreal. The couldn’t-actually-be-true-but-here-it-was.

Nichole was saying: “Who ordered this? And why?”

David smiled, which was creepy, because his eyes were still closed. “Who do you think?” he asked.

More foot pressure. David winced.

“I’m not asking about what I think. I’m asking about what you know. Tell me now and I’ll get you the medical attention you need. Refuse and I’ll be the last thing you see.”

David swallowed. “I used to masturbate to your face.”

A grim smile flashed on Nichole’s face; then she removed her foot and straddled David’s body. Both hands on the sides of his head. She turned him so they were face-to-face. Her thumbs were at his throat.

“Who is it, David? Who wants us all dead?”

“You’re looking at him, big girl.”

Nichole shook her head. “You report to somebody.”

“At least I’m not a mole.”

“Who do you report to?”

“A mole with a wet hole. Nee-COLE.”

She dug her thumbs in deeper. David gasped, but he continued speaking anyway.

“You’re out of your league, Nichole. Why do you think it’s been so hard for you to penetrate me? But I bet I could penetrate you.”

“Tell me about Molly.”

“Oh. Yeah. Her.”

“Who is she?”

“Your guess is as good as mine.”

“Liar.”

Nichole removed her hands, then paced around the conference room.

“What about the lockdown? Tell me how to reverse it.”

“Since you’re giving orders,” David said, “let me give you one of my mine. A Big Mac. Two patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, all of that good stuff.”

Nichole drove a fist into his face.


It was an audacious move, David thought—punching someone in the face who’s already been shot in the head.

A bullet, lodged in the skull, could easily loosen and work its way into brain tissue, making him a drooling side of beef on a conference room floor.

Perhaps Nichole didn’t care.

Maybe the crack about the “hole” was a step too far.

Maybe it was his Big Mac order.

Thing was, David wasn’t trying to be difficult. Well, maybe a little, but it was mostly the truth: He was absolutely ravenous. He’d been starving for months now, the hunger inside him mutating into a constant, sentient, insatiable thing. Telling his stomach no would be like telling his lungs not to crave air.

He didn’t know how or why it had begun, but he realized that something was amiss when he drove home after work one night, pulled into a Bertucci’s off Huntingdon Pike, ordered two large pizza pies, fully loaded, along with three orders of garlic-and-butter breadsticks, then transported his bounty to his kitchen table and methodically consumed everything—every shred of dough, cheese, sun-dried tomato, shiitake mushroom, red pepper, black olive, and crumbled sausage—within an hour. No TV. No newspaper. No thoughts about the workday. Nothing to distract him but the pizza and breadsticks.

And at two in the morning, David had risen from his bed and eaten six Snickers bars he’d stashed in the freezer.

This had been in early June.

Since then, his binges had come at unexpected times—along with his sex binges. Always with hookers or strippers, in his car or the champagne rooms of allegedly upscale sex clubs. David had to call his bank to ask that his ATM max withdrawal be raised from seven hundred dollars to a thousand dollars. He never knew when the urge would overwhelm him, and somehow, seven hundred dollars just didn’t go far enough in the champagne rooms.

Nobody at work suspected; his employees didn’t usually make the rounds at suburban delis, chain restaurants, or brick-oven pizza parlors—or downtown strip joints or fetish clubs.

You couldn’t tell by looking at David, either. His frame was still finely muscled and compact—essentially the same as the day he entered freshman year at Penn. His metabolism, always efficient, had shifted into overdrive to accommodate the influx of calories.

His penis was raw, but even that seemed to heal quickly.

David began to suspect he was losing his mind.

It had been known to happen in this kind of business.

By late July David decided to purge himself of the hunger. It was stress-related, he’d decided, and he needed to detox his body and mind. After a few quiet inquiries, he settled on an ayurvedic spa in southern India, where a radical panchakarma treatment might be what he needed to shake the cravings. He’d booked the flights and the package and told Amy Felton to take care of things; he had suddenly been called away. It was monsoon season in India. Tourists avoided areas like south India this time of year, but for David’s purposes it was perfect. The harsh conditions were what he needed. As well as dinners of rice gruel. Intense early morning yoga sessions. Forced vomiting. Leeches. Pummeling. Herb steam baths. And finally, shirodhara, in which warm oil was poured over your forehead in a slow, steady, and potentially maddening stream. It was the panchakarma version of Chinese water torture, and it was exquisitely painful.

Fourteen days later—the required minimum stay—David emerged from the resort trembling but hopeful.

On his way home, he made a pit stop in Austin, and ate five pulled-pork sandwiches along with fries and enough frosty pints of Shiner Bock to require an extra night’s stay in an airport hotel to sleep off his drunkenness. In the morning, he consumed four egg-and-bacon breakfasts, with croissants and extra-strong coffee.

His hunger was bottomless. Hopeless.

A few days later, he’d received instructions.

And then he understood.

Somehow, his body had anticipated all of this. His labor of five years, building Murphy, Knox, needed to be destroyed. And he, along with it.

So it made sense. His body was merely trying to experience every last sensory detail it could before his eyelids closed a final time, and the heavy black curtain covered his face, and the data bank that was his brain flickered into nothingness.

Whether or not Nichole Wise cared if he lived or died, there was something more important. He didn’t care either, beyond finishing this final operation.

And the longer David kept them here, on this floor, the more likely that would be.

His need for one last success was as sharp as the hunger.


Ania’s palms and soles still burned and ached from racing down to the sixteenth floor of the north fire tower. But that was nothing compared with the pain of the return trip to thirty-six.

The events of the past thirty minutes had taken their toll on her body, already weakened from the soft years of living as “Molly Lewis.” She’d tried to maintain her core strength, and she had, to a large degree, thanks to regular visits to the franchise gym closest to their home. Paul had been very supportive, renewing her membership every year for Christmas, even though he’d allowed his own waistline and chin to lie fallow. In bed, he constantly complimented her body—its compactness, its suppleness. Paul would suggest positions, and she’d agree to them, just for the exercise. The trick was having him hold steady. Often, it was over before her heart rate even peaked. But this meager regimen was no match for the long hours in front of the plasma television, or the constant barrage of carbs and sugar and fat that were the main ingredients of the meals Paul preferred. Pizza. Chinese take-out. His beloved Polish potato salad.

As a result, her battle with Nichole Wise—not so much a battle as a chance to flex muscles she hadn’t used in a long while—left her more winded than she would have expected.

And the abuse she’d taken in the past ten minutes—hurtling her body down endless sets of concrete staircases, hoisting two male bodies on her shoulders, snapping a neck, enduring a beating with a lead sap—had weakened her severely.

Ania, what has become of you?

Ania, potential Olympic gold medal winner?

Ania, whose body was both the source of her greatest pain and the key to her escape?

But walking up the south fire tower stairs with the corpse of Ethan Goins over her right shoulder, endless staircase after endless staircase, every weakness pronounced itself.

She’d made her way across the elevator bank to the south tower—away from the sarin. But it didn’t make the flights up any easier.

Perhaps the worst thing about it was how Ethan’s head rocked from side to side, like a bowling ball in a sack slung over your shoulder. Gravity pulled it one way. Then another. Then an entirely different way. It was unpredictable.

Ania took comfort in what would happen once she reached the thirty-sixth floor. If those watching had been satisfied with her performance on the landing, then there was not much left to accomplish.

She needed only to release the belt buckle holding Amy Felton in place, and drag her back into her office. She suspected she’d be dead from fright. If not, another neck snap, and she could finally join her beloved Ethan.

David was in the conference room, paralyzed, awaiting final interrogations. There were three questions she needed to ask, and then she could end his life, too.

And then it would be time to collect Jamie.

Most likely, he’d passed out, and was still in the empty office where she’d left him. If he’d wandered away, he’d find nothing but horrors. Either way, she would find him somewhere on thirty-six, docile, awaiting rescue. Her rescue. Repairs to his hand would need to be made, but that wouldn’t take long. Ania had made clean, precise cuts down the lengths of his fingers. When they’d healed, she’d kiss the scars. Her lips would be the first sensations he’d feel. She’d encourage him to write again. Write what he wanted. Not press releases.

In Europe, he’d be free to write whatever he liked.

She hoped he’d get along with her mother.


Nichole decided to start with the fingers. Maybe he was paralyzed for real; maybe he wouldn’t feel a thing. But she’d make him tell her what was going on. Whoops, David, there goes your ring finger. And most of the pinkie. Want to try for a thumb? After a while, he had to start caring.

And start telling her how to bring this floor out of lockdown.

“God, what are you doing?”

Jamie, the drone. Watching her hold the gun to David’s hand, placing the barrel at the spot where the index finger met palm.

Jamie, cradling his own hand protectively.

“You can’t do that,” he said.

“You want to get out of here, don’t you?” Nichole asked. “I need him to start giving me answers.”

She pulled the trigger.

Almost at the same time Jamie said, “No!”


David appreciated the concern from Jamie; he really did. But there was no need. He was more or less numb from the neck down.

As a result, his body was vaguely aware of the loss. A finger was nothing to take lightly. Especially his index finger—one of the more useful digits of the human hand. But it wasn’t as if David could move his hand anyway. He told his body this, and his body shrugged and said, Hey, it’s your body.

David gritted his teeth and pretended to be in some kind of pain. He even winced. Showmanship to the end.

What did the Moscow Rules say?

Use misdirection, illusion, deception.

“It’s your thumb next,” he heard her say.

Sure, that would be natural.

Maybe she planned on doing all ten fingers, which would be wonderful. The more time Nichole spent torturing him, the less time she had to make it off this floor. That was the only thing he cared about now; everybody staying on the floor until the explosives did their job.

“Two seconds to decide, David.”

His glanced at his hand, and saw Nichole had a gun pointed at the base of his thumb this time. She was bringing out the big hurt early. It was best to start with a small finger, because when you feel how bad it hurts to lose, say, a pinkie, the pain of losing a thumb or index finger seems unfathomable.

But hey, it was her show.

David was finished being her mentor.

Meanwhile, Jamie looked sick to his stomach.

“Jamie,” he said, “if there’s still champagne and orange juice on the table, I suggest you mix yourself a drink.”

David would rather see Jamie fall asleep than burn up alive. Or worse—try to leap from the windo—

BLAM!

Ah.

The thumb.


Thirty-five hundred miles away, McCoy finally figured out how to tap into the building’s security cameras. There was nothing of interest in the north fire tower. He found what he wanted in the south tower.

Girlfriend.

Dragging the corpse of Ethan Goins up one flight of concrete stairs after another, which had to be a real pain in the ass. But McCoy knew—and Girlfriend knew—that leaving his body in the fire tower wouldn’t work. It needed to be on the thirty-sixth floor. Burned up with the rest of the bodies. That was the operation.

He also knew Girlfriend must be bitterly disappointed—she’d had other plans for Mr. Goins.

She must be a little worried. Her audition, so far, was more than a little shaky.

And she had started out so strong.

The arrangement had been simple: Execute Murphy, then demonstrate her skills on those present. One by one, over the course of an hour or so. Nothing terribly fancy, but demonstrating her varied abilities, knowing she was being observed on the network of fiber-optic cameras covering the office.

If Girlfriend’s demonstration was impressive enough, she would receive the tools to escape the floor. Everything above thirty would burn. She would be extracted from the city, and given her reward: a promotion.

The pay hike wasn’t enough to retire to a life of coconuts and limes and backrubs on some tropical island, but it was enough to change your perspective on life. Many people coveted leadership positions within CI-6, even though the agency had no official name or structure. Faith in CI-6 leadership was much like the nation’s faith in the American dollar: powered by sheer will and absolutely nothing tangible like a congressional mandate. (Hah!) Still, the power and resources available to leadership were astounding.

For Girlfriend, ascending the ranks had more practical appeal. A promotion meant she could choose her location. In this case, Europe. She desperately longed to return to the continent. McCoy had enjoyed reading her screeds about the state of the American city, particularly Philadelphia, encoded in their communications over the past few months. They murder the young here, she once wrote. But most people care more about the sports teams.

It also meant she could afford to take her mother out of the assisted-living hellhole in Poland and put her somewhere to die with dignity. Maybe even prolong her life by a few months, or as much as a year.

Girlfriend wasn’t about the coconuts and backrubs.

Or was she?

That was the puzzling thing about the events of the morning. It had gotten off to a rocky start, with one of David’s younger reports … who was it … ah, Stuart McCrane, actually drinking the poisoned mimosa with little to no prompting. Stuart must have been a Boy Scout or an altar boy.

Then there was Ethan Goins, who had failed to report to the conference room on time.

In her defense, Girlfriend had tried to salvage the situation at the last minute:

Should I look for him?

No, no. We can start without him.

Are you …

I am.

Once Stuart was dead, it was too late to search for Ethan. The operation had begun.

This had radically altered Girlfriend’s operational plan. She’d been saving Stuart and Ethan for later. In fact, she’d ranked the direct reports, from hardest to kill to easiest:

Murphy

Felton

Goins

Wise

Kurtwood

McCrane

DeBroux

Murphy had been the real worry. Miss your opportunity with this guy and watch out. Girlfriend would have spent the rest of the morning running throughout the office, ducking and hiding, fighting for her life. And, most likely, would have lost.

McCoy should know.

So killing Murphy instantly was a necessity. Girlfriend had to lay the groundwork for weeks to pull off that kind of surprise. And she did.

Not only that, but she’d pulled off a daring move that strained credibility when it was first pitched:

I will shoot him and paralyze him. Not kill him.

And right before the end, I will interrogate him.

He will tell me everything.

The last part remained to be seen, but as far as McCoy could tell, Murphy was paralyzed, and not yet dead. Props to Girlfriend.

And at that moment, Girlfriend’s prospects seemed bright, despite the McCrane and Goins snafus.

Girlfriend immediately proceeded to Amy Felton, and carried out her neutralization as planned.

McCoy liked that one a lot.

Tip to employees everywhere: Never tell your boss you’re afraid of heights. Especially if he’s the kind of guy who’ll write it down on a performance review.

But then came the problem: Ethan was missing. He was supposed to be next. In fact, the whole thing with Amy Felton depended on Ethan being next.

Big bad Ethan was sweet on Amy.

Aw.

Ethan Hawkins Goins, former Special Forces, had carried out some of the grisliest and most creative executions of Afghan warlords in the early days of Operation Enduring Freedom. His skill under extreme duress had brought him to the attention of CI-6. A loner by nature, he happily joined, using Murphy, Knox as a cover between operations. Ethan was a fierce warrior. Physically, Girlfriend was no match for him.

The thing was, Amy Felton looked a lot like the high school girlfriend who’d dumped Ethan’s butt senior year, right before going off to Ivy League school in Rhode Island. McCoy even had someone in research dig up a yearbook; the resemblance was striking.

What was funny about the nonaffair—painstaking surveillance had revealed that Ethan and Amy had never kissed, let alone done the deed—was that both assumed such an affair would be against the “rules.” As if an agency that didn’t officially exist could have a policy on employees dating each other?

Such a situation, however, could be seen as a source of weakness.

Girlfriend, too, had glommed this from one of David Murphy’s performance reviews.

The way to break through Ethan’s defenses, Girlfriend reasoned, was to show him his beloved hanging upside down, thirty-six stories above the sidewalk.

Stun, then kill.

Then finish off Felton.

With Ethan gone, though, weakened by the sarin blast in the fire tower, dispatched by Girlfriend in a spectacularly uncreative fashion—did anyone snap necks anymore?—that plan was gone.

Girlfriend, though, was clearly trying to salvage what she could of the plan. Maybe she wanted to show off Ethan’s limp body to Amy, right before she killed her. Maybe she thought that would count for something.

McCoy leaned back in his chair, thinking about that.

Would it?


Ania reached the south fire tower landing on thirty-six on the verge of collapse. Then she remembered: the sarin bomb.

Oh, the work never ends.

She had not planned on going near the sarin bombs. They were Murphy’s idea of fun, not hers.

And she thought her plans would circumvent the need to deal with them.

Not so.

Ania dropped Ethan’s corpse on the landing and flipped open a compartment on her wrist bracelet and removed a tiny pair of spring-loaded scissors. She’d found them in a freebie corporate gift—a Swiss Army “card,” slim enough to fit in a wallet, but illegal to carry on airplanes—that had arrived at Murphy, Knox. It had been intended for Murphy; she kept it for herself. It came loaded with miniature versions of useful, simple tools. Toothpick. Nail file. Pen. Scissors. Her bracelets were full of ordinary tools like these. They tended to be the best.

It was difficult to see the device from her perspective. Ania rarely thought her height was a problem—until situations like these. There were no stepladders, no boxes. She had to improvise.

Ethan, from shoulder to hip, would be just about the right height.

She dragged him across the landing, propped him against the metal door, then leaped onto his shoulders. There was the slightest moment of adjustment, of balancing. Then she stood tall. Perfectly poised. Ethan’s shoulders felt bony beneath her feet.

For a moment, she imagined Ethan’s corpse coming to life, grabbing her by the ankles, and flinging her body down to the concrete steps. Then he’d be on her, teeth gnashing at the flesh of her throat, breath hot, and eyes closed.

Even as a child, Ania suffered from an overactive imagination. It was what she possessed instead of toys. Now, she reassured herself: Ethan would not be waking up. She had snapped his neck cleanly. Thoroughly.

Focus on the task at hand, Ania.

She gave the device a proper examination. It seemed fairly simple: wires running to a power source, another to a sensor on the door, and a few others probably meant as decoys.

But there, on a yellow wire, David Murphy’s perverted sense of humor manifested itself. Printed on the side of the wire: CUT ME.

Murphy delighted in mind games. His performance reviews were just one outlet. Every casual encounter in the office turned into a psychological battle in miniature. Murphy’s tools were the cruelest of all: questions designed to both raise your defense and open a weakness simultaneously, forcing you to defend a position or statement while sowing the seeds of doubt in your brain. Over the course of the past few months, Ania had detected a pattern:

There was no pattern.

The correct answer was, almost without fail, the most obvious one. And the ones that weren’t obvious actually revealed themselves to be obvious later, with a little hindsight.

You went scrambling around, trying to outrun him, outthink him, and usually the right answer was your gut instinct, the first answer on your lips. The one he tricked you out of.

Ania wondered if the same would be true with these wires. Was the CUT ME a note to himself? Or did he expect someone to make it out here and try to disable the device, and knew that a message like CUT ME would drive that person mad?


Thirty-five hundred miles away, McCoy turned his attention to the other monitor. The one showing the increasingly weird scene in the conference room. Where Nichole Wise was torturing her boss by shooting his fingers off, one at a time.

Such a waste.

In the second monitor: Wise was straddling Murphy, contemplating another finger. It was hard to tell, but it looked like it was two fingers gone: index finger and thumb. Murphy wouldn’t be snapping his fingers to the oldies ever again.

Meanwhile, speaking of the digitally impaired, DeBroux was standing in the corner, clutching his injured hand to his chest. Another of Girlfriend’s clumsy little dismounts.

Her own weakness.

Girlfriend was supposed to save him until the end. Like, hello, #7 on the list? Instead, she sliced open his fingers, distracting her from Wise, who was able to exact some punishment before being taken down. Even then, it was only temporary.

The impromptu torture of DeBroux also prevented Girlfriend from dispatching #5, Roxanne Kurtwood. Granted, she was a low-level target, but she was supposed to have been used for the audition, not accidentally neutralized by her own partner.

All told, Girlfriend could boast only one and a half kills out of a potential seven: Ethan (and that was a sloppy, old-school kill) and Murphy, her first. Time was running out. And one of her remaining targets—the one she had failed to kill—had access to two weapons. Not exactly a résumé-builder.

Maybe Keene was right. He did fall in love way too fast.


Ania held her breath, closed her eyes, and then cut the wire that read CUT ME.

Not that these measures would do a thing to protect her from a burst of weaponized sarin. It was human reflex. Over the years she’d learned to keep many things under control, but sometimes, humans needed to flinch. She allowed herself the luxury.

The device did nothing.

Murphy, again.

She leaped from Ethan’s shoulders. Without her to balance it, the corpse slid off to the right, his head smacking against a red water main before spinning around and face-planting onto the concrete slab.

Sorry, Ethan. One more stop before you can rest and await your cremation.

Inside your girlfriend’s office.

That was the only way to salvage a small part of the original plan. Haul Amy Felton back inside, and allow her to gaze upon the corpse of her beloved. Wait for the reaction, which would be captured on the fiber-optic cameras.

Ania hoped she had enough left in her for a decent scream.

Then … execute her. Whatever method came to mind would be fine. Maybe Felton would kill herself when confronted with the corpse of her beloved. Wouldn’t that be something?

It was coming down to the end, anyway, and thanks to Ethan’s adventures in the fire tower, security was blown. She needed to wrap up.

Prepare for travel—herself and Jamie.

Then move on to the conference room, and complete her final transaction with David Murphy.

Ania opened the fire tower door quickly, scanned both sides of the hallway. Clear. She propped the door open with her foot and dragged out Ethan’s corpse.

She was too weak to heave him over her shoulders again. Her trapezius muscles had been worked beyond failure; even Paul’s kinky demands had not been enough to keep her body in the shape she desired. Another reason to leave America, and its slothful lifestyle, as quickly as possible.

Just a little longer now, she told herself. Down the hall, through the door, a quick left—and if all was clear—three doors down to Amy’s office. Then no more carrying bodies. No more physical exertion, beyond strapping the escape gear to her body.

And plucking David Murphy’s eyes from his face.

Crushing his skull.

Running her fingers through his brains.

Hearing the sound of the boom, hot and furious, below them all.


Keene was on his second glass of orange juice when his source called back.

“Working on a Saturday, are you?” said a male voice with a Geordie accent.

“Oh, is it Saturday?”

“Funny. I have what you need.”

They were speaking through a VoIP connection, scrambled and rescrambled a half dozen times between their two locations.

Ordinarily, VoIP was about as a secure as a college sophomore with two roofies at the bottom of her pint glass. Unless, that is, you had encryption and cryptographic software not available to the general public. Which could make VoIP remarkably secure, especially when considering that most intelligence agencies would no sooner tap a VoIP connection than tap a set of two soup cans and string.

Keene was a bit of a VoIP fanatic. It was his favorite way to communicate, short of encrypted e-mails. He hated cell phones.

“Shall I send you a research packet?” his source asked.

“Yes. But how about some highlights.”

“Now?”

“I’m insanely curious.”

“Fine. Your boyfriend there …”

Keene chuckled.

“What?”

“Nothing. Just your choice of words. I’ll tell you later.”

“You say that as if we’ll ever be in the same room again.”

“So bitter. Please continue.”

“Your man? He’s not telling you everything about Philadelphia.”

“Really.”

“If someone gave the order to dismantle that company, it didn’t come from us.”

“The orders mentioned a bit more than dismantle.”

“I know.”

“Who could authorize something like that?”

“Who couldn’t?”

Just as Keene had suspected. You try keeping a chain of command together in an organization that didn’t exist.

“What else can you tell me?”

“This will all be in the research packet, but it appears that our company in Philadelphia flew a bit too close to the sun.”

“How so?”

“Financing something they really shouldn’t have. A kind of weapon and tracking device rolled into one.”

“Which we didn’t authorize.”

“It didn’t come from us.”

Damn it.

“Look,” his source said, “if you’re planning on going to Philadelphia, don’t. There are already alarm bells going off. If I were you, I’d stay by the sea.”

Keene thanked his source, made vague plans about meeting up for a drink in Ibiza one of these years. “Sure, Will, I’ll be here holding my breath while booking the plane ticket online,” his source replied. Keene pressed the cold glass of orange juice to the side of his face. He felt feverish.


Ania dropped Ethan in front of Amy’s door. Inside her bracelet was a master key for every office on the floor. She’d made it her first day of work. Turned out to be relatively useless. For an intelligence organization, people here had a funny way about not locking their doors. Too many of them were probably raised in the American Midwest.

Mainline Protestants. Way too trusting.

Once inside, she dragged Ethan’s body into the office, closed the door behind her. Locked it, just in case, even though there was nobody left on the floor to check on her. Unless Jamie had regained consciousness.

Even if he had, that would be fine. This could be part of his education.

Ania walked over to the window. No point in arranging Ethan’s body if Amy had already died of fright. She gripped the leather belt. It lifted far too easily.

Ania peered over the edge of the window.

Amy was gone.


The conference room door slammed open. Amy Felton staggered inside and dropped to her knees.

“Where is she?”

“Amy?” Nichole said, lowering her pistol. “Where were you?”

Jamie was just as surprised. For a moment, he forgot about his throbbing hand and considered this new development. Good God—Amy was still alive. Had anyone else made it, too? Like Ethan?

“Where is she?” Amy repeated, and this time it was a bit of a shriek.

“Who?”

“That bitch.”

“She got to you, too, huh?”

“We need to kill her. Now.

Amy was pale and trembling, but also looking like she could tear a person in half—the long way. She leaned against the conference room wall and allowed herself to ease down it, gently touching down and placing her palms against the floor. Her fingers clutched at the carpet.

Nichole left David and, pistol still in hand, approached Amy.

“We need to show our cards,” Nichole said. “We all know what this place is, but I’m not sure whose side we’re playing on.”

“You know who we work for,” Amy said.

“No,” Nichole said, then swallowed. “I’m CIA.”

If Nichole was expecting a look of surprise, she didn’t get it.

“Well,” Amy said, “I’m not.”

“I know. You’re CI-6.”

“There is no CI-6.”

“You’re right,” Nichole said. “After today.”

“Look, forget this for now. What we have is a homicidal she-bitch out there, trying to kill us all.”

“One of yours, no doubt,” Nichole said.

“There are only two sides here. Hers and ours. Help me take care of her, we’ll sort this out later.”

“Either you’re against the terrorist, or you’re with her.”

“That’s funny.”

Nichole thought it over. “What do you have in mind?”

“There are at least two guns in here, right?”

“Three. David’s, Molly’s, and my own.”

“Ammo?”

“Mine’s almost spent. I used two bullets on David’s hand. But Molly only used one, as far as I can tell.”

“Then we go out there, flank her, then kill her. Jamie here can guard David.”

Jamie, who had been listening to this exchange and trying to exact a single shred of sense from it, cleared his throat. “You know, um, this Jamie guy? He’s still in the room.”

Nichole ignored him, and asked Amy, “Is he one of yours, too?”

“What do you mean?”

“He claims to be a civilian. Is he?”

Amy looked at Jamie. “Yes. As far as I know.”

“Wonderful.”

On the floor, David started to place another food order. Burger King this time. Two Whoppers, extra onions, plenty of pickles, along with fries. He started murmuring about Burger King allegedly cooking the best-tasting fries of all the fast food chains, but that was bull, because none could hold a salt shaker to McDonald’s.

“What’s wrong with him?” Amy asked.

“You were there when he was shot in the head, weren’t you?”

“I didn’t know that made you hungry.”

Amy and Nichole eyed each other. They looked like two college students stuck in a group project who both clearly hated group projects.

“I’m not sure about you and a gun,” Nichole said.

“There’s two of us. One of her. It’s simple.”

“You don’t understand. About thirty minutes ago, I fired six shots at her, point-blank, and they went through her like she was a ghost.”

“She’s flesh and blood. She can be killed.”

“Hey,” Jamie said. “You don’t need to kill anybody.”

Nichole ignored him.

“You even field-rated?” she asked Amy.

“I can shoot.”

“Hey!” Jamie shouted. “She’s our co-worker. She’s confused. She needs help. You can’t just go and kill her!”

Had everyone gone insane? Why weren’t they even responding to him?

Nichole sighed.

“I can do this,” Amy said. “I have to do this. Even if I die doing it.”

“Fine. We do this, we come back here for answers. If you cross me, you will die.”


Amy knew death.

Hanging upside down, it was easy to spot death.

It was right there. Thirty-six stories below.

Death was a city sidewalk.

Or maybe death was the space between. Even after the fact, it was hard to decide.

Obsessed with heights, Amy had read about the jumpers at the World Trade Center. Oh, so many hours fixed on the image of the infamous “Falling Man”—the anonymous human being who had leapt from one of the burning floors and had been captured by a photographer at a particular moment in time: 9:41:15 A.M. on September 11, 2001. In that moment, all looked strangely ordered, composed. The lines of the building, the lines of his body. One leg, tucked up slightly. The Falling Man looked like he was floating. Frozen in space, as if he were in complete control. If I just spread my arms and will it, I will stop falling. This, of course, wasn’t the truth.

The more Amy read, the more she understood the true horror. The photograph, which appeared on the front pages of a dozen newspapers on the morning of September 12, 2001, was a piece of freak luck. Photographers were trained to look for symmetry, shapes. At that moment, the Falling Man was in perfect harmony with his surroundings. But the outtakes from the same sequence—snapped almost robotically—reveal the truth. There’s nothing symmetrical about falling to your death from a height like the 105th floor of the North Tower. It is a fast and horrific and chaotic death—death at 9.8 meters per second.

That’s what death looked like.

That’s what Amy Felton stared at for the better part of an hour.

No, that wasn’t quite true. She had passed out for much of it.

What brought her back was Ethan.

He was alive in this building. She had no doubt about that. He was smart—so smart. He saw this coming somehow. Showed up to work, just like her, put his bag down, fired up his computer, but noticed something off. A little detail. Which was just like Ethan.

Hanging upside down, she remembered going to the door before being distracted by Molly. Calling out to see if anyone (Ethan?) was there.

It was Ethan behind that door. She knew it now.

And she left him behind.

Yes, death was there. Thirty-six floors below. But it wasn’t up here with her. Not yet.

She was closer to Ethan than to death.

Amy sucked in warm air and prepared to sit up, that’s it, just think of sitting up, just once, and grabbing hold of the window frame. You only have to grab it once. Pull yourself inside. Kill that murderous cunt. Find Ethan.

Now, standing in the hallway with a gun in her hands, she was ready for the next part.




CLEANUP


Outstanding leaders go out of their way to boost the self-esteem of their personnel. If people believe in themselves, it’s amazing what they can accomplish.

— SAM WALTON


Down the hall, Amy saw a blur of motion. No. Not a blur.

Molly.

Amy squeezed the trigger. There was a spray of wood trim and drywall. Molly spun with the blast and bounced off the wall behind her, then dropped out of sight.

“Get down!” Amy cried.

They fell to the floor, guns pointed away from each other.

“Think I got her.”

“You sure?”

“We need to look.”

“I’ll do it,” Nichole said.

She crawled on her hands and knees to the edge of the hallway. Glanced around the corner, then ducked her head back in.

“I see legs.”

“Molly?”

“I think so. The woman up there is not wearing shoes. When I encountered Molly an hour ago, she didn’t have any shoes.”

“That’s her, then.”

“Whoever it is, I’m going to cripple her. A bullet in the ankle will slow her down. We stand up, flank her, it’s over.”

“We need to kill her.”

“No,” Nichole warned. “She has to answer for this.”

Amy gave her a crooked smile. “You’re the CIA agent.” She said it in a tone that sounded more like, You’re the idiot.

“That’s right,” Nichole said. “I am.”

Nichole held up her gun, then flung herself into the hallway. Arm extended, lining up a shot. Looking for that leg. Looking for that piece of ankle.

Instead of firing, she cursed.

“What?” Amy whispered.

Nichole pushed herself off the carpet and back to her original position. Amy didn’t need her to say anything, really. She knew what had happened.

The legs were gone.


Ania was lucky in a way. The bullet had passed straight through skin and muscle of her left shoulder. No bone. No joints. No place that couldn’t be endured, and later, repaired.

But she was spectacularly unlucky in that the bullet spun her and smashed her against the wall. Muscles that had already been in extremis now refused to function. She lay on the teal blue carpet, partially writhing in agony—this bullet hurt—and unable to execute a simple bodily command, such as: You must crawl away from this hallway—NOW.

Someone out there in the hallway had a gun.

Her guess was Amy.

Oh, how she’d underestimated that woman.

Amy Felton was a database warrior, an operations center soldier. There was no evidence she’d actually ever handled a gun before.


But it was entirely possible she’d had years of field experience, under a different name, before taking a job with Murphy, Knox. In which case, Ania’s job became considerably more difficult.

Flipped over on her belly, Ania was able to use her elbows and knees to clear the hallway in a matter of seconds. She rolled over into the assistants’ area, nudged the door closed as quietly as she could.

This bought her a little time.

Ania hated the assistants’ area. It was a multipurpose part of the office meant for transcribers, researchers, and other assorted temps. David hired based on a tit-to-hip ratio, as well as eyes. Men rarely set foot in the assistants’ area; the domain belonged to women David could conceivably fall into bed with easily and without future entanglement.

Not that David ever did. Far as Ania could discern, he kept his office alliances limited, seeking release elsewhere in the city—usually from personal ads in the back of local alternative newsweeklies. She’d once found a ripped-out square of newspaper tucked in his DayMinder: “Let me swallow your Tastee Throat Yogurt.” There was a number printed on the ad. Someone—presumably David—had underlined it twice.

Ania was glad she would be killing David later.

But now it was Amy’s turn.

The assistants’ area was utterly devoid of weapons. Used PCs sat on top of Formica cubicle desks. Roll-out chairs. Plastic wastebaskets. Ceramic coffee mugs emblazoned with MURPHY, KNOX: PROUD TO CALL THE CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE HOME … 5 YEARS RUNNING! Black plastic in-boxes. A wall of cork, painted pale blue, with pushpins grouped in one corner. A paper trimmer.

A paper trimmer.

Ania quickly examined the handle, the blade, the joint.

Her left arm was useless for the moment.

But her right …

She flipped open a compartment on her wrist bracelet and produced a mini Phillips-head screwdriver. She immediately set to work.

She could hear someone approaching.


Nichole motioned to Amy: the assistants’ area. Amy nodded. There were two ways into the assistants’ area: the entrance closest to David’s office and another entrance near the central cubicles. Amy took the one near David’s office. Nichole covered the other.

A thin trail of blood led to the door closest to Nichole.

Molly was shot.

Molly was bleeding.

Molly was trapped.

Molly was screwed.


Ania loosened the fourth screw and flicked it away. The blade was heavy in her hands, the edge sharp. It would take effort to swing the blade with only one arm. But the exertion would be worth it: The weight of the steel would drive the edge even farther into whatever it encountered.

Maybe a human neck.

A face.


They didn’t plan it, but Amy and Nichole opened both doors at the same time.

First thing that moved, Amy decided, was getting shot to hell. Even though she had precious few bullets in her gun. But all she needed was one. One shot could flush out her quarry. And once she showed herself, Amy would wrap her hands around the bitch’s neck and squeeze and spit in her face until she …


Ania heard footsteps to her left.

And to her right.

The ones to the left sounded closer.

She held the heavy blade high.

Stared at the carpet. Waited for a shadow to appear.


Nichole used the classic two-hand stance, gun out in front, ready to blast away at anything hostile. This morning, Molly Lewis certainly qualified.

She’d ducked away once before. She wouldn’t this time.

Nichole was thinking about a particular button on Molly’s perfect white blouse. It gave her a target. The button that rested a few inches to the left of her heart. Aim for the button, drift right, then blast away. She fixated on that button.

She fixated so much, she didn’t fully notice when something cold and wet lashed across her wrists.

Ow.

What had hit her hands?

Oh God.

No.

Nichole staggered backwards.

Where …

… were her hands?


Ania felt the gunmetal on the nape of her neck. Heard the click.

“Freeze,” Amy said.

Still another mistake, Ania realized. Up until a minute ago, she thought she only had one person stalking her. There had been two. Nichole Wise. And Amy Felton.

Nichole had been easy—one swing. Now she was either in shock or busy searching the floor for her hands.

But that had left Ania wide open.

From behind.

And Amy had taken full advantage.

The blade in Ania’s hands was too heavy. By the time she swung it even a quarter of the way, Amy could blast her spinal cord to pieces.

“Drop it.”

Ania did. The floor of this part of the office, a shared workspace, was covered in linoleum. The heavy blade landed with a dull thud.

“Hands above your head. Lock your fingers together.”

Then, she called out, “Nichole? You with me?”

This was all wrong. Somehow Nichole Wise survived her deathblow, and Amy Felton had overcome her fear of heights. Two more disappointments in a long string of them. Had they caught all of that on-screen? Nichole’s miraculous resurrection? Amy’s courageous climb?

What were they saying now?

It was unacceptable to kill someone only partway. With Amy Felton, it had been calculated. Nichole was different. Nichole was supposed to be dead. Ania should have gone for an insurance shot. But in that moment—when escape to the other office seemed paramount—it hadn’t been a priority. Nichole had stopped breathing, thanks to a paralyzing blow to her diaphragm. She should not have been able to draw another breath on her own.

What were they saying about Ania now? Gun to her head, forced to surrender her weapon?

“Let’s go,” Amy snarled, then grabbed the collar of Ania’s shirt, spun her around and pushed her forward, back in the direction where Amy had come from. A few feet down the hall, Amy gave her a violent push, and Ania’s head bounced off the drywall. Amy yanked back on Ania’s shirt, then pushed her forward again.

“Move it,” Amy said. “You’ve got a date with a window, bitch.”


Nichole leaned up against the nearest available wall, intending to ease herself down to the floor, nice and easy. Instead she stumbled. She tried to catch herself with her hands, but no. That couldn’t be right. Her arms usually had hands attached to them.

Look. There was one. On the floor.

The other was still attached.

Sort of.


Ania smiled.

… smiled.

Ah yes, Amy.

Let’s go to your office.

Let’s have a date.


On the way to her office, Amy smashed Molly’s head against dry-wall three more times—which was impressive for a journey no more than a dozen feet. The third time, the wall actually shattered, paint chips and dust drizzling down to the carpet.

Amy’s office door was slightly ajar. Amy knew she had closed it tight when she had escaped. She hadn’t wanted to tip Molly off.

“Why is my door open?”

“Your boyfriend’s waiting for you,” Molly said, then turned to offer her profile. A crooked creek of blood ran down from her hairline. Her lips were curled into a tight little smile.

Amy pushed Molly’s head forward so that it slammed on her door, which had the curious effect of both punishing Molly and causing the door to open all the way.

A second later, Amy wished it hadn’t.

Ethan was perched behind her desk, his hands hanging—palms up—off the metal arms of her chair. The delirious smile on his face would have caused Amy’s soul to leap, if the smile didn’t look so … unnatural.

“Ethan?”

Ohgod.

Ethan couldn’t be …


Ania dropped to the ground, then swept Amy’s legs. Amy’s face hit wall. The gun tumbled out of her hand.

Those sixteen miserable floors of hauling Ethan Goins up the fire tower were suddenly worth every step.

Look at her suffer.

Ania fixed her blouse the best she could, then walked over to Amy’s desk and snatched a pile of Kleenex from a box that was adorned with sunflowers. Stopping the bleeding was key. Lose too much and she’d become light-headed. She needed to finish off Amy, then David, then talk to Jamie. It was almost over.

But Amy was up a lot faster than Ania had predicted.

“I’m going to hurt you,” she said, spitting blood from her lips.

Quickly, Ania ran through her mental repertoire. What hadn’t she used yet? What could she do to impress the men at the other end of the fiber-optic camera? How could she save this abortion of a morning?

Amy lunged forward.


Nichole had only one idea in her head: Crawl back to the conference room and do something indescribably nasty to David to force him to reveal the lockdown code. Ideally she needed a torture she could accomplish with little strength, because she didn’t know how long she was going to last. And something she could do with no hands. Maybe she could crush his face with her heels.

She couldn’t bring herself to look at her severed wrists. She could feel her remaining hand there, hanging by what felt like the thinnest strand of flesh. She knew it wasn’t good. Knew she was losing more blood than she should.

Didn’t matter. She would crawl with two good knees. Crawl faster than she was losing blood.

No, she couldn’t.

She was being stupid. She needed to tie off her wrists. Then continue crawling.

But how?

You can’t tie off anything without hands, can you?

She’d try anyway.

Nichole would be damned if she would pass out from blood loss before a final encounter with her nemesis.

Her boss.

She rolled over onto her back, then angrily ripped at her shirt with her teeth. Fine. Let him see me in my bra. As I squeeze my blood into his face. Let that be the last thing he ever sees.

Tastes.

Then the solution came to her:

Kitchen.

Electric range.

A dial that could be turned with her teeth.

Yes.


Keene needed to stop with the orange juice. He was drinking it compulsively now, and the acid was tearing up his stomach. The old habits were slowly creeping back. Only now with Florida’s best, rather than the smoky nectar of the Scottish highlands.

But what he was reading … well, it would have driven anyone to drink.

Keene had worked another source.

Keene’s second source was high-placed; it was rumored that she was the one who currently acted as a director of CI-6, or whatever you wanted to call their thing. She certainly knew enough. Keene never walked away from one of their conversations disappointed.

If this intel could be trusted, then “Murphy, Knox” was not what his good buddy McCoy had claimed it was:

A cover for CI-6 operatives. Fixers. Sleepers. Black baggers. Accident men. Killers. Professionals, mixed in with civilian support, to complete the illusion of a working financial services company.

Nope.

It was a financial services company.

Granted, it was a financial services company that was designed to infiltrate and destroy terrorist financial networks. Or for that matter, anyone whose finances needed destroying, international or domestic.

According to Keene’s second source, the funding worked both ways. Money poured out of Murphy, Knox, too. Funding training. Weapons. Research. Operations. Anything that you didn’t want attached to an official budget line? Simply run it through a guy like Murphy.

So why had McCoy lied to him? He clearly had to know this. He acted like he knew every intimate detail of that office.

And for God’s sake—why were more than a half dozen people going to die there this morning?


Jamie stared at the back of the chair he’d been sitting in about … oh, what was it? An hour? Two hours? Jamie was bad at noting the passage of time. Whenever he poured himself into his writing, it was as if the digital clock on his computer played tricks on him. He had an arrangement with Andrea during his parental leave: Every morning, he could devote some time to his freelance career, pitching stories to men’s magazines.

It was the only way, Jamie had explained, he’d ever be able to quit Murphy, Knox. Leave the Clique behind.

But by the time Jamie felt like real work was being accomplished, time was up. Chase needed his attention. Andrea needed a break. He was glad to give it to them. They were his family. His everything. But every minute away from his desk felt like another minute the dream was delayed.

And now this, stuck in the conference room with his half-dead boss, was like that. Being in that strange place where the clock seemed to be actively working against you.

“Jamie,” a voice said. “Are you there?”

God.

It was David.

Amy and Nichole had left clear instructions about what to do if someone—who was not Amy or Nichole—tried to enter the conference room: Aim for the head.

“I’m not going to kill anybody,” he’d told them.

“You want to see your kid again?” Nichole had asked.

“You can’t make me,” he said, feeling like a third-grader the moment the words left his mouth.

Nichole stuffed the third gun in his waistband.

“Do it for your family,” she said.

And then they’d left.

They had not told him what to do if David started talking to him. David, the man who started all of this when he tried to force everyone to drink poisoned champagne.

“Jamie … please.”

“Yeah, I’m here.”

“Could I ask a favor?”

“What?”

“May I have a cookie? I’m starving.”

As much as he wanted to ignore him, Jamie couldn’t. This was a man who’d been shot in the head, asking for a cookie.

Never mind that a man who’d been shot in the head shouldn’t be asking for a cookie.

A few weeks before Chase was born, Andrea purchased a children’s book from a store near work. “To start his library,” she’d said. It was called If You Give a Mouse a Cookie. Late one night, Jamie read the book. The point was cute and simple: Give a mouse a cookie, and he’ll want something else. And then something else. And something else still, until finally, you’ve surrendered your soul to a rodent.

Okay, maybe that wasn’t exactly the point of the book. But that’s what it felt like now. David would ask for a cookie. Then a gallon of milk. Then a gun. And then …

“Do you mind?” David asked.

“What kind?” Jamie heard himself saying.

“Anything but a Chessman.”

Of course.

Chessmen were for losers.

The conference table was frozen in time. Napkins with cookies stacked on top. Moisture-beaded bottles of champagne. Notebooks. Pens, some uncapped. Molly’s white cardboard bakery box—the one that had been holding doughnuts and a gun. Snipped string.

Jamie fished a Milano from the bag and carried it over to David, whose eyes were closed. Jamie knelt down next to him. His head swam with options. He had to proceed carefully.

If you give a boss a cookie …

“I have your cookie,” he said.

David’s eye fluttered open. “Thanks.”

“You want it?”

Jamie dangled the cookie above David’s open mouth. His boss looked, somewhat absurdly, like a baby bird, waiting to be fed a worm.

“Yes.”

“Well, not yet.”

David’s eyes narrowed. “Really.”

“First you’re going to tell me how to disable the lockdown so I can get off this floor.”

David smirked. “And then I get the cookie?”

“Then you get the cookie.”

Jamie felt like he was engaged in a real estate deal with a toddler. Maybe he could throw in a sippy cup, sweeten the offer.

“I like you, Jamie, I really do. You’re unlike anybody else in this office. I didn’t want you to come in this morning, but my bosses insisted. Said you had to go. I couldn’t understand it.”

“Then help me.”

“I still don’t understand it.”

“If I can get out, I can call an ambulance for you. You don’t have to die.”

“Especially with you having a newborn baby at home.”

“Goddamn it!” Jamie cried. “Tell me how to get off this floor!”

“I wish I could. But the answer is no. You’re going to die up here, just like the rest of us.”

Jamie felt his blood burn. He was overcome with the urge to smash his fists into David’s face, force him to cough up the secret code or pass key or the friggin’ Omega Project—anything to help him leave this building. Now.

Instead, he tightened his fist and pulverized the Milano. The crumbs rained down on David’s face. Some of the crumbs landed in the streaks of blood and hung there.

Jamie opened his hand. It was smeared with chocolate from the center of the cookie.

Here he was, trapped on a floor, faced with certain death, and his hands were smeared with blood and chocolate.

Oh, was life absurd.

“That was mean,” David said, then flicked his tongue out and caught a cookie crumb that had landed near the corner of his mouth. “Mmmm.”

Jamie stood up and walked back to the conference table. The champagne bottles were still lined up, beaded with moisture. Maybe he should force-feed David a mimosa. Shut him up permanently.

Uh-uh.

Everything else had gone to hell.

But he was no killer.

Besides, Nichole had kept David alive for a good reason: information. If there was the slightest chance they could beat an escape plan out of him, it would be suicide to throw it away.

But he couldn’t stay in here with him any longer. Because he would kill him.

“You’re not going to leave this floor alive.”

“I’ll find a way,” Jamie said.

“No, you won’t,” David said. “Even if you could, trust me, you don’t want to leave. You think you can just walk away from something like this? You think there aren’t people out there who want to make sure you’re dead? Along with your family?”

“It would be the last thing you’d ever do.”

“Tough talk from a tough guy,” David said. “No man wants to ever admit he’s powerless to protect his family.”

“Oh, suck it.”

“Whip it out, faggot.”

Jamie took the gun from his waistband and aimed it at David’s face.

“Oh, oh, please. Do it. Pull the trigger. Show me how tough you are.”

Nichole had said there were only two bullets left in this gun. But at this range, it would be a sure shot.

“Pretty please.”

This is what he wants, Jamie thought. Just like the cookie. The freak wants to die here on this floor. Why are you so eager to please him? He’s not your boss anymore. You don’t have to listen to him.

“With sugar on top.”

Jamie threw the gun on the floor, and headed for the conference room doors.

“Hey.”

David was clearly not happy. But Jamie didn’t care. He was almost at the doors.

“Hey! Come back here!”

Through the doors.

“I’m going to put the word out!” David screamed. “I’m going to make sure they rape your wife nice and good! They’ll skin your son alive! Right in front of her!”

Out the doors.

“They’ll like doing it! They live for this!”


The wall collapsed far easier than Amy would have imagined. The space around them swirled with atomized plaster dust. It was hard to tell the ceiling from the floor. But Amy trusted her hands. Which were wrapped around Molly’s neck and slowly, steadily crushing the air out of her. Her hands were the only thing that mattered now. Her strong hands. They had to be strong for Ethan.


The hallway to the conference room was long. Ridiculously long on elbows and knees and smelling your own cooked flesh. Nichole might as well have been crawling to Harrisburg.

But she just needed to make it to David.

And she would.

If she endured the searing agony of the electric range to stop the bleeding, she could endure the rest of this.

She longed for David in the most physical way possible.


Jamie tried the elevator button, simply because he had to, because wouldn’t it be hilarious if all this time David had been lying about the bypass?

He hadn’t been lying.

He pressed the button again, mashing his thumb into the plastic key as if he could override the bypass by sheer strength.

Damn it!

The fire tower doors were the only other option. He walked to the one closest to their offices, and was surprised to see a hook and wire hanging from the door handle. Had someone already opened this door and dismantled the nerve gas bomb?

Did he want to take that chance?


Only now, lying on the carpet and being strangled to death, did Ania realize her miscalculation. She’d thought the sight of Ethan’s corpse would incapacitate Amy. But it had the opposite effect. It had energized her. For the first time since childhood, Ania thought she might actually die.

Her left hand, attached to her left arm and damaged shoulder, was completely sapped of strength. Her right hand alone was not powerful enough to overcome the concrete grip of Amy’s hands. The awful press of Amy’s thumbs into her trachea. The tips of Amy’s manicured nails hooked into the back of Ania’s neck, as if probing for the place where the brain stem met spinal cord.

Her light-headedness was real now. Reality was being washed away in waves of gray. Not the plaster dust. Ania saw the gray when she closed her eyes.

Ania held her breath and squeezed Amy’s wrists with her one good hand. It wasn’t much of a defense.

This was not something she had anticipated.

How was Amy doing this?

By thinking of her true love.

It was something out of fairy tales, and Ania loathed fairy tales—at least the few she’d been allowed to read. But perhaps there was true magic in thinking about your true love.

So she thought of Jamie.


Jamie put his hand on the gleaming silver door handle. If he pushed it down, maybe he’d hear the click of the bomb in time. He could jump out of the way, find another way.

But there are no other ways, are there, Jamie?

Andrea, if you can hear me, know that your dumb husband tried the best he could, and this was the only way he could think of to make it back home to you….


On the floor, David heard a noise.

He couldn’t turn his head to see, but knew the sound well enough. The swishing of the conference room doors. Ah, Jamie was back. He must have seen the futility of his escape. Now was back to kill his boss.

Thank Christ.

“You left your gun here,” David said.

“I know,” said a voice.

It wasn’t Jamie.

But David, from his supine position on the floor, couldn’t see anybody. Was he now hearing things? Wouldn’t surprise him. He had been shot in the head and was completely starving. Nothing to eat all morning but the crumb of a Milano. Cruel tease that was.

“Hello, David,” said the voice.

A female voice.

Nichole.

He turned his head, and it hurt. But he could see her now. Crawling toward him, with red paint covering her hands. David couldn’t even see her hands, there was so much red paint. Why was she nudging the gun with her face? Pushing it toward him. Nosing it so that the barrel was pointed at him? Why didn’t she pick the goddamned thing up and get it over with already?

He just wanted to finish his mission and go home.


When Ania was Molly, she thought herself immune to America. And she was. Except for Jamie. He listened. He truly listened. He didn’t see her as a disposable part of a larger machine. He didn’t see her as a life support system for a pussy and a pair of tits—not that she showed them at work. For some reason Jamie put her at ease so much that she had to be careful not to slip into Russian. Jamie felt that much like home.

She wanted to touch him, just hold his hand, ever since the moment she met him.

The only distraction this morning was the thought of Jamie, and the opportunity to hold his hand, even if it meant giving him pain.

The pain would teach him, and serve as a reminder to her, as well.

Everything beautiful can be destroyed.

She was thinking of Jamie, but no surge of adrenaline followed. Only a strange melancholy.

She could be strangled to death here, and Jamie might not even know or care.

Jamie.

With his mangled fingers.

There she found the answer, and knew it was time to simply let go.


Jamie pushed down on the door handle.

For a moment, there was nothing.

No telltale click.

Or hiss.

Or beep.

He pushed the door open a few more inches.


Nichole was straddling him now, and David saw that it wasn’t paint on her arms at all. She had bloody stumps where her hands should have been. Okay, there was one hand, kind of just hanging there. Her skin smelled like Chinese food. The sickeningly sweet aroma distracted him from the fact that Nichole wasn’t wearing a shirt, and that her pussy was pressed up against his chest. Clothes separated their flesh—and there were those mangled hands—but still, she aroused him. David never thought he’d experience this kind of intimacy with Nichole, who’d been out to destroy him ever since she’d started working for him. Which was a shame. He’d always found her deliciously screwable.

“You have one chance,” she said, a tiny bead of blood hanging from one corner of her mouth. “Tell me how to get off this floor.”

“I could so eat you out right now,” David said.

Nichole’s eyes widened, and then she leaned forward. For a moment there, David thought she was going to give him a little kiss. Right there on his forehead.

But she was reaching too far up and behind.


Nichole pressed her elbow against the grip of the gun that she had positioned next to David’s head. She stuck out her tongue.

I quit, she thought, and thrust her tongue hard against the trigger.


David Murphy died not knowing his mission had been accomplished.

He was still thinking about what Nichole’s pussy would look like. He was thinking well-trimmed, but a little loose. Used. He’d heard she’d been messing around with the mail guys for years. Which she had been. He’d watched some of it. Got off on it.

David wore a waterproof watch he never removed, even during sex or masturbation. Lovers would tease him about it. What, are you going to time me?

He had worn it ever since he first rented the thirty-sixth floor of 1919 Market Street, and installed detonating devices on the thirtieth floor. And installed the trigger in his wristwatch.

The watch was one of those that monitored your pulse. Constantly, quietly, efficiently.

But it wasn’t exactly one of those kinds of watches. He’d had it modified so that it had room for the trigger. If his pulse stopped, a signal would travel to the detonating devices six floors below. If David Murphy was to go, everything was to go.

And so it went.


The moment the door opened, there was an explosion.

Jamie screamed and hurled himself backwards, slamming against the opposite wall, then slid to the ground and tried to scuttle away like a crab.

Jesus H….

That wasn’t a chemical bomb.

The crazy bastard, he rigged a real explosive to the door.

But not here. There was no fire or smoke. The explosion sounded like it was somewhere else in the building.

Was the bomb set somewhere else?

Christ, was David planning on bringing the whole place down?


Twenty floors down, Vincent Marella dreamed he heard an explosion. He woke up to find that his eyes were bleeding and he could barely breathe.

He also heard a man scream.


Amy released her grip momentarily—there was an explosion, somewhere, and it seemed to puzzle her.

That was all that Ania needed.

The lid of one of her wrist compartments flipped up easily. The blade slid down and landed in her palm. She had taken a chance, releasing her grip on Amy’s wrists to dig out her weapon. But what was true love without risks?

Ania used her injured arm to brace Amy’s body and her right hand to slide the blade into the hollow of Amy’s neck.

Then she sliced down, directly between Amy’s breasts and down her stomach to where her belt used to be.



The bullet that had ripped through David’s brains also struck one of the large conference room windows, spiderwebbing it. That was a nice bit of luck, Nichole thought. It wouldn’t take much to push the rest of it through. Not to call for help. She was too high up to seriously entertain that. And with the explosion down below, well, attention would be scattered, to say the least, for the time being.

Nah. Nichole Wise, code name Workhorse, was thinking long-term.

If she could sever the stubborn piece of flesh attached to her hand—and a jagged edge of the conference room window might do the trick—she could drop her hand out the window. Thirty-six floors down, wave good-bye. It might take a while, but at some point, some investigator would stumble across it, bag it, and eventually do a fingerprint check. Langley would pop up. Questions would be asked. And maybe the story would finally be told. The story of her miserable years undercover at Murphy, Knox.

Maybe she’d end up a black star, chiseled into the slab of white Vermont marble that was the CIA’s Wall of Honor:

IN HONOR OF THOSE MEMBERS


OF THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY


WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES


IN THE SERVICE OF THEIR COUNTRY



Buddy, you don’t know the half of it, Nichole thought.

Then she died.



Keene paused by the sea to watch the waves. He wasn’t looking forward to the conversation he was about to have.

Farther down on the beach Keene saw another dog—not a three-legged one this time. It was a fully equipped black Lab, and he was running into the crashing waves. A young red-haired mother, no more than thirty, was standing there with two preschoolers, both with reddish-blond hair. They were jumping and laughing at the dog, who rushed into the waves, stopped to relieve his bowels, then raced out of the water again before another wave could wash over him. Speed defecation. Keene had to admire that. The owner needed to be commended. He wondered if the children were trained that way, as well. Go on. Run into the water, kids. Go potty.

Keene’s mobile rang. It was his second source.

“I didn’t think I’d hear back from you,” Keene said.

“I didn’t think I’d be calling.”

“What’s going on?”

“There’s a lot of activity here on my end.”

“Oh?”

“Yeah.”

There was a pause.

“Look, just come out with it. Can’t be any worse than what I’m already thinking.”

“Your man is behind it all.”

“What do you mean?”

“David Murphy is a straw man. A burnout case. Your man McCoy plucked him from the wreckage, started to run him. Build him up again. But McCoy was behind everything. Including the financing of a particular tracking device that has been causing us much trouble as of late.”

“I see. You just find this out now?”

“That’s not fair.”

“It’s not fair that I’ve been stationed with a traitor. For months now.”

“We’re a big dumb animal, Will. You know that. Big and strong, but dumb nonetheless. The important thing is you helped us uncover him. If you hadn’t asked questions, we wouldn’t know. That’s the important thing.”

“Is it?”

The dog bounded up the shore. The mother and children raced after it. Nothing like a good run after voiding your bowels.

“There’s something else.”

“You need me to kill him, of course.”

“We need you to kill him.”

“Uh-huh.” Keene swallowed. “I’ve got a really bad cold, you know.”

“I’m sorry, Will.”

“Not looking for sympathy. It’s just … well, it’s really a pish day for this.”

The mother, children, and black Lab were all headed away from the beach now, the dog’s transaction with Mother Nature complete. If Keene were to return to the same spot tomorrow, he would probably see the same event replay. He wondered how much of this dog’s shit was in his sea.

“Yeah, I know. But is it ever a good day?”

“You’ve got a point there.”

“What about the other people on that floor in Philadelphia?”

There was a pause.

“That’s not something we can embroil ourselves in right now.”

“I see.”

“I’m sorry.”

“No, no. I understand. Hey, it’s a lousy day all around then, isn’t it?”

“Will …”

“Talk to you in a bit. Cheers, now.”




CLOSING TIME


Success seems to be connected with action. Successful people keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don’t quit.

—CONRAD HILTON


Vincent Marella tried to ignore the symptoms, hoist his pal Rickards up, get him out of the fire tower. He grabbed his partner under his arms, but he couldn’t resist. He touched the sensitive skin below his eyes, and his fingertips came back bloody. Jesus Christ. He couldn’t be checking out now. Not after last year. Not like this. Not like Center Strike.

It was so, so hard to breathe.

And look.

There was a bloody human tooth on the floor.

Wonderful.

If that explosion up top was real, and he wasn’t dreaming it—and well, you know, the high and loud clanging of the fire alarm seemed to indicate that this wasn’t an event confined to la-la land—then he was seriously screwed. Because in the event of a fire, all elevators shoot down to the lobby level and stay there. The fire towers are the only way out.

Like the fire tower they’d just left, which was apparently full of some kind of nerve agent.

It made him choke.

And it certainly wasn’t goddamn Lysol.

Somewhere downstairs in the security office, up on the fake maplewood shelves, there was a thick paperback manual called Terrorism and Other Public Health Emergencies. A nice little handout everyone received about a year back.

The manual had first aid tips. Vincent couldn’t remember a damn one of them, except wash your skin like crazy. And you could be sure that was the first thing he would do.

If he could get down to that manual, he and Rickards might have a shot here.

After that, he was seriously leaving the goddamned private security business for good, end of story. Did people still sell aluminum siding?

But with the north fire tower out of commission, and the elevators gone, there was only one other way out. The south tower. Unless the terrorists had released the same nerve gas in there, too.

Was that part of their plan? Dose the fire towers and then blow up the building, so everybody inside would die, one way or the other? But why pull this shit on a Saturday, when the building was mostly empty? Didn’t make any sense. The broken glass, his run-in with that psycho broad, none of it.

Forget it for now. He’d have plenty of time to scratch his nuts and ponder the myriad possibilities after he quit. Now he needed to drag Rickards to the south tower and pray it was clear.

“You’re heavier than you look,” Vincent said.

Rickards said nothing.

“Yeah, that’s what I thought you’d say.”


Get yourself up off the floor, Jamie. C’mon. You’re not going to solve anything by sitting here. Try the other fire tower. Try the elevator button again. Try something. Maybe that explosion you heard canceled the bypass. Maybe it made things worse. But you won’t know unless you get up and do something.

Jamie rounded the corner, back into the elevator bank. Sprinklers were gushing. White lights were flashing. The fire alarm was clanging violently.

And Molly was standing there.

Covered in blood.

From her neck to the tops of her thighs, which were bare. Somehow, she’d lost her skirt. Or she’d taken it off to show off her plain panties, which would have been bone white had they not been soaked with blood. She looked like Carrie White, modeling for Victoria’s Secret.

The sprinklers were washing away some of the blood, but not nearly enough.

“We need to talk,” Molly said, loud enough to be heard over the alarm.

“What happened to you?” Jamie asked. He meant it literally, but as he spoke the words, he realized he’d meant mentally, too. Where was the Molly he’d known? Was she gone for good? Or was she back?

“You have a choice to make in the next minute, and it will be the most important one you’ll ever make.”

She moved closer to him, one foot in front of the other, making a single, bloody trail up the middle of the carpet.

“Where—?”

“Shhhh. Let me speak. Then you can ask as many questions as you want.”

Jamie swallowed.

“Okay,” he said.

But he was thinking: I have no weapon. Damn it. He should have taken the gun from the conference room. If only to keep Molly at bay for a few minutes, until he could figure out an escape plan.


“David was going to kill you. I wanted to save you. This is why I’m doing all of this. You may not believe me, but it’s all for you.”

“You’re right,” he said, almost shouting. “I don’t believe you.”

“I cut your hand to convince my superiors that you could withstand pain. And you did. You did as well as could be expected. Now look at you. Seeking a way out. Many men would have curled up and waited to die. That’s what Paul would have done.”

Paul.

Her husband.

Would have?

She was closer now, which made it easier to hear. Jamie could see that she’d taken a beating, too. Her left shoulder had a wound that looked like it could have been made with a bullet, and her neck was torn and bruised. Her face might have been beaten, too, but it was hard to tell, because her long hair was wet and hanging down in her face. Molly never wore her hair down at the office. It looked strange. Almost as strange as the lack of clothes and the dripping blood.

“I want you to come with me.”

“Where?”

“Away.”

“What are you talking about?”

“Europe. We can be happy there. You can write. You can spend all of the time you want writing. I know that’s what you want to do.”

“Europe? Molly, I’m married. And you’re …”

Insane.

She reached out her hand to touch his cheek and he flinched.

“Shhhh,” she said, more quietly now. “Molly Lewis was married, yes. But I am not Molly Lewis. My name is Ania Kuczun.”

Anya who?

“You can be whoever you want, too. As easy as a snake shedding skin.”

Jamie had watched Molly survive a beating at the hands of Nichole. Watched her shoot David in the head. Felt the agony as she paralyzed him with just one simple move, then cut his fingers apart. Who was this woman? And what was she capable of? What did she really want?

Europe?

Wash away the blood, brush her hair, put it back in a conservative ponytail, get her dressed, and Jamie could almost see the old Molly. His office spouse. A quiet, thoughtful, pretty woman who was Andrea’s polar opposite.

Sometimes, though, it’s the opposites that get you. Draw you in, when you least expect it.

Like a few months ago.

On a walk home from an after-work happy hour.

Hey, I’ll walk you to your car. Well, here it is. Nice SUV. Guess I’ll be going. Yeah, good hanging with you, too … and that’s when it gets you, when you find yourself leaning forward to give her a kiss on the cheek but really you’re aiming for her lips, and she pulls back, a little startled. And you console yourself by saying, Hey, that would have been stupid. I have a pregnant wife at home.

Still, in that drunken moment, you really wanted that kiss.

The look on her face slides from puzzlement to embarrassment, and then she climbs into her car, and you walk home, and it’s really not that far away. The humid night air gives you time to think about what you narrowly avoided.

It’s not different in work the next day, or any other day, except maybe she sometimes looks at you oddly or warmly or knowingly. You forget about it. You’re about to have a kid.

You have a kid. You come back to work.

On a hot Saturday morning in August.

Those lips you momentarily wanted to kiss are now spotted with blood.

And she’s talking about shedding your skin.

“There’s something you need to leave behind,” Molly said.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Jamie said. “This building is burning. We need to leave. Now.”

She moved closer to him. Her lips. Smiling a little. “I have another way out. If you come with me.”

“How?”

“It won’t hurt much.”

Did she really know another way?

It didn’t matter. Jamie had trusted her before, and she’d ended up slicing his hand open like a roasted chicken. He wasn’t going to fall for the same ploy twice. He might be a public relations flack, but he wasn’t brain-dead.

Molly was closer now. Even with the spraying water, he could smell her. The copper penny scent of blood.

So Jamie did the only thing he could think of. He pushed her. Hard. Like they were schoolchildren in a playground.

She stumbled back to the ground.

Jamie bolted.


Keene opened the hall cupboard and lifted the false plywood bottom. Beneath it was his backup gun. A silver Ruger, Speed Six .38 Special. He never thought he’d need one here in Porty. Went through a lot of trouble to get one. Bought it from a fat guy from Haddington named Joe-Bob, as unlikely as that sounded. But he’d planted it months ago, nonetheless. It was hard to shake the Moscow Rules, even though he hadn’t been CIA in many, many years.

Build in opportunity but use it sparingly.

He stuffed the gun in his waistband, near the base of his spine. And as he headed up the stairs he recalled another old espionage chestnut:

Everyone is potentially under control of the opposition.

And as he put his hand on the doorknob and thought about killing McCoy …

There is no limit to a human being’s ability to rationalize the truth.


It wasn’t an entirely bad trip down; Vincent fell only once and dropped Rickards twice. If Rickards asked later, Vincent planned on shrugging his shoulders. I don’t know how you got those bruises, man. His muscles were trembling and it was hard to breathe. But there was no sitting down and taking a breather. The longer they stayed in this tower, the more likely they were going to die.

The guys from the Philadelphia Fire Department had begun to arrive by the time Vincent hit the ground floor. They were scurrying in the lobby and on the sidewalk outside the building. Crap. Two guys in full gear with pickhead axes and Nomex hoods came up to them, tried to take Rickards off his hands.

Vincent pulled back and warned them: “We’ve been dosed with chemical agents. We need a hazmat team or Homeland Security or whatever you guys are supposed to call out for this stuff.”

“Where?”

“I was up on sixteen, the north fire tower. Tell your guys now before they go charging up.”

“What about the other one?”

“No idea. And hey—there are people up there. I heard someone yell.”

“What floor?”

“I don’t know. Up higher than I was. Could be anywhere.”

“All right, let’s go, move, move!”

There, warning done … now he had to get Rickards back to the washup room and find that goddamned Terrorism manual. No telling how long it would take for the scientists to show up and analyze this stuff. If he lived through this—if it wasn’t blood he felt streaming down his cheeks, though Vincent kind of suspected it was—he was sure he was looking at weeks and weeks of blood tests and cheek swabs and anal pokes. His son would be fascinated. Ask all about it. Question is, does a dad tell his kid about stuff like this? Is it educational?

Vincent Marella was going to do two things after all this was over.

He was seriously going to quit.

And he was going to put Center Strike in a garbage can, piss on it, then light it on fire.


Jamie keyed the door code with his good hand, then yanked open the door. He ran down the short hallway and was immediately confused. Why was it dark outside? He couldn’t open the nearest office door—it was locked—but he looked through the slats of the window to the outer windows.

That wasn’t darkness. It was smoke.

And that was because the building was on fire.

He could see the flashes of red in the sky. Fire trucks.

Goddamn David Murphy.

Hang on now. Worry about that later. Jamie needed somewhere else to be, away from Molly. If he could circumvent her, he could make it to the other fire tower. Maybe it was rigged to explode, too. Maybe not. But it was his only option.

That’s not true, DeBroux. Molly told you that she has a way out.

Yeah, and she also said it wouldn’t “hurt much.”

Uh-uh.

But if Molly knew a way out, then there was another way out. Maybe he could hide long enough to find it. Watch Molly take it, then take it himself. Or do both.

Point was, keep moving.

Jamie moved to the right. If he could make it to the abandoned offices and cubicles, he could duck in and out of those, listening for her footsteps (bare feet on carpet, good luck) and eventually make his way around to the other door, then to the elevator bank, then to the other fire tower.

Besides, the other way—toward David’s office—was a dead end.

There was nothing else he could do except move to the other side of the floor. That, and try to control his breathing. His lungs were pumping too hard. He had to slow it down. In through the nose, out through the mouth. In through the nose, out through the mouth.

On the other side of the office, Jamie saw the white box with the little cartoon heart on it.

Wait. There was something else he could do.

He opened the front panel. Read the instructions quickly. Took the paddles in his hands, even his sore one—he could deal with it for a little while—and used his good thumb to hit the charging button. There was a high-pitched whine.

Sixty seconds to go.

Jamie put his back to the panel, paddles behind his back.

Molly was standing in the hallway.

“You never answered my question,” she said.


Keene opened the door and fired the Ruger.

There was no need to play it cute. Keene had a feeling that McCoy would spot a ruse in a microsecond.

But the bullet struck bare wall. Something sliced at his forearm, ripping through skin and muscle. A butcher knife.

“Ah, you cunt.”

The gun tumbled from Keene’s hand. Keene threw his weight into the door. It slammed into McCoy. Keene pivoted, then booted McCoy in the testicles so hard, it sent him staggering backwards. He smashed his head into the corner of an oak bureau.

Keene, the pain in his forearm overpowering, fell backwards. Landed on his ass. A simple slash across the arm shouldn’t hurt so much.

McCoy either had braced himself or didn’t actually have testicles, because he recovered quickly. He opened the bottom drawer next to him. Reached below a stack of six T-shirts. Always with his T-shirts. The one on the top said the bad plus.

He’d hidden a gun under there. It was a Ruger, too.

Build in opportunity but use it sparingly.

They were both students of the old school.

“Have a nice walk?” McCoy said, then shot Keene in the chest.


“Come with me,” she said.

“No,” Jamie said. Trying to keep his breathing under control.

“You don’t have to pretend,” she said. “I can give you everything you want.”

How many seconds had elasped? Ten? At most?

Keep yourself calm.

Keep her talking.

Molly started walking toward him. “Come with me and we can leave this building. Right now.”

“No,” Jamie said. “Not until you tell me what this is about. Why everyone on this floor had to die.”


“What does it matter? You going to write a book about it?” She smiled.

Jamie could hear the high-pitched whine. Could she?

“I want to know.”

Molly was just a few feet away. Jamie pretended to lean back against the wall, frightened. Which was not too difficult to pretend.

Had a half a minute gone by yet?

“This is just a company. We’re just employees. I’m going for a promotion. Not just for me. For both of us. And now I want to know if you’ll come with me.”

“How can I just leave my life behind?”

“Is it really a life you’ll miss?”

Behind him, something clicked.

She touched his chest.

Smiled.

Jamie pressed the defibrillator paddles against Molly’s chest and squeezed the plastic handles. Prayed it had been enough time.

It had.

There was a loud pop.

She yelped. The shock blew her body back across the hall. Down there on the floor, she looked like a puppet with her strings cut.

Jamie droppped the paddles. God bless OSHA, which had started to require these devices in buildings over twenty stories in downtown Philadelphia. Even the abandoned floors of buildings.

The shock wouldn’t be enough to kill her. Even from this distance, he could see her chest moving. But it would buy him time until he figured a way off this floor.

Even if he had to lift a desk and hurl it through the glass. Let the firemen below know that there were people up here in need of rescue.

The conference room was his best bet. Maybe he could use that gun to shoot out the glass. Ah, damn it! He kicked himself for not thinking about that before. Shoot the glass and start heaving office furniture out. A chair first, to get their attention. Then the conference room table itself, if he had to.

Jamie started down the hallway but stopped when he felt something on his pant leg.

Fingers.

Yanking the material downward.

“You,” Molly said, “never answered my question.”


The wound was mortal; Keene knew that. There wasn’t much time. The bullet must have nicked quite a few arteries. He could imagine the inside of his chest with miniature leaking hoses, and an imaginary coronary engineer throwing his hands up, exasperated. What am I supposed to do now? I can’t fix this.

He also had a pain in his arse.

Literally. Something hard, jabbing him in the soft, fleshy part of his cheek.

“You just find out, or have you known for a while? I’m thinking you just found out.”

Keene looked at McCoy. His lover had a smirk on his face. Ordinarily, Keene took great pleasure in that smirk. It made him horny.

“I’m not going to sit here and explain it all to you,” McCoy said. “I hate that.”

“Yeah,” Keene said. At least, he thought he said it. It might have been in his mind.

“I will tell you this, though. And this is more of a personal note, though it does cross over slightly into the business end of things.”

“Yeah?”

McCoy. Always drawing things out. Forcing you to ask “what?” or “yeah?” or something. Even as he sat here, dying.

“I’m not even gay.”

Keene’s fingers found the Ruger, under his arse. He had the strength to lift it. So of course he had the strength to squeeze the trigger. Repeatedly. He blasted off the five remaining shots.

Most of the bullets hit McCoy. There was just one miss, making for a grand total of two bullets the next occupant of this flat would have to pry out of the walls.

If they were being observed—which was absurd, but still—people would be tempted to think it was all about the gay comment. But as he felt his lifeforce ebbing away, Keene mentally denied it, saying he was just being a professional to the end.

Doing his job.

Like always.

After all:

There is no limit to a human being’s ability to rationalize the truth.


Molly hurled him against the wall.

She tried doing that paralyze-you-with-your-own-fingers thing again, but her hands were slick with blood. Jamie slipped away and tried to crawl across the floor. He felt her hand on his waistband. Jamie kicked backwards, caught her on the leg. She exhaled, then grabbed his ankle, flipped him, and kicked him in the chest with her heel.

It felt like someone had flipped a valve in his chest. Jamie’s breath was trapped in his lungs. He couldn’t breathe in. He couldn’t breathe out. His fingers clawed at the carpet involuntarily, sending fresh waves of agony across his injured hand.

But he wasn’t really thinking about that, because more important, he couldn’t breathe.

Then Molly started dragging him across the floor.


Forty-three hundred miles away from Edinburgh, in a quiet rooming house on the outskirts of Madison, Wisconsin, a woman in a T-shirt and jeans watched the video image of another man shooting his lover to death.

A few minutes later, the shooter—an operative using the name Will Keene—appeared to die, too. It was a sudden and shocking end to months of surveillance. She wasn’t sure what this one was all about; her superiors never told her. Just watch them, they said. So she did. As often as she could. They were an interesting pair to watch. Kind of like an old married couple. She never thought it would have ended like this. They genuinely seemed to care about each other. But boom, there it was—the fight, the knife, the guns, and the short conversation before the final, repeated coups de grâce.

That was totally about the gay crack, she thought.

The woman picked up the phone and called her director. People would have to be sent.

As she waited on hold, she idly wondered who’d she be watching next, then thought about pizza.


“If you want to come with me,” Molly said, “nod your head once.”

Jamie had no choice. Jamie had no air.

She hadn’t dragged him far. They were in the conference room. He recognized the ceiling. The floor was hot beneath his back. Smoke was curling and rolling outside the large windows.

“You’re going to lose consciousness any second now.”

Jamie nodded.

She jammed a palm into his chest. The mystery valve released. Air tried to gush in and out of his lungs at the same time. Jamie turned to the side, curled up, and then vomited.

“There, there,” Molly was saying. “Just breathe. The feeling will pass.”

The ground was so hot now, Jamie could imagine his own puke sizzling within a matter of moments. Reheating his breakfast. Those Chessmen.

She was rubbing his back now. Jamie opened his eyes and saw two people lying on the floor. It was a woman, topless except for a bra. She was slumped over a guy in a suit. Nichole … and David?

Molly rolled him back over, dabbed at his lips with a napkin she must have picked up from the conference room table.

“No offense, but I don’t think I’m going to kiss you until after you brush your teeth,” she said.

Jamie’s mouth and throat burned, and his lungs still felt like they were on the verge of exploding. The rest of his body seemed to be in retreat mode. Sensation dimmed—the normal sensations you feel every second of the day. His skin chilled. His legs went numb. A cold sweat broke out on his forehead. Was he going to die anyway, after all of this?

“One last thing, Jamie,” Molly said. “We’re going to need to leave something of you behind. Something the investigators will be able to use to harvest some DNA. Blood won’t be enough. It burns up too quickly. We need a part of you. Something they’ll find, so they won’t come looking for you.”

Screw you. Let them find me. And David. And Nichole. And Stuart. And Amy. And Ethan. Find everyone who was brought up here this morning to die and figure it out. If he was to die, Jamie wanted Andrea and Chase to know what happened. He didn’t want Chase to grow up thinking, Daddy just didn’t come home one day.

“I’m thinking your hand,” she said.

“What?” Jamie croaked.

“It’s already injured. And yes, you’re a writer. But I’ll be there to help. You can dictate. I can transcribe.” Molly smiled. “After all, I am an experienced executive assistant.”

“No.”

“I can numb your arm. I can’t say it won’t hurt, but it won’t be as bad as you think. You can close your eyes. I’ll take care of everything.”

“No.”

“We have to act soon,” she said, and stood up. “If you can think of another body part, tell me quick.”

Molly turned to face a corner of the conference room. She pushed her wet hair out of her face, best she could. She straightened her bra and panties, as if adjusting a business suit after a ride on the regional rail lines. Then she did the strangest thing of all: She addressed a ghost in the corner of the room: “Boyfriend, I’m ready.”

She’s insane, Jamie thought.

Truly, truly insane.

“You’ve watched a demonstration of my abilities,” she continued. “You’ve seen my skills, and how I quickly and decisively respond to evolving circumstances. In the end, despite setbacks, my objectives were achieved. I hope you’ll find that I am a creative and determined operative, able to deal with any challenge placed before me.”

Who the hell was she talking to? The imaginary voices inside her head that told her to kill, kill, kill?

“In our discussions, you promised escape and refuge at the completion of my demonstration, if you found my performance satisfactory or greater. I ask you now. Do you find me worthy?”

Jamie rolled over, looking for another pair of legs. Maybe someone else was in the conference room. Maybe there was a helicopter floating outside, waiting for them to grab hold of a rope ladder and be taken away to safety.

But there was nobody else in the room. Just the two of them, and their dead coworkers. Stuart hadn’t moved an inch since dropping dead a few hours ago. David must have finally died from his head shot. Or something else. Maybe Nichole had finished him off. But then who had killed her?

“Do you?” she asked the corner of the conference room.

Molly, of course. Molly had killed them all. One by one. Why was she sparing him?

Because of an attempted kiss one drunken night a few months ago?

“Please answer me,” she pleaded.

Jamie made it to his belly and used his good hand to push himself up to his knees. He could see Nichole and David more clearly now. More important, he could see the gun on the floor, under her face. The grip was showing.

“PLEASE ANSWER ME!”


Thirty-five hundred miles away, there was no one who could answer her.


The question was, could Jamie do it?

Could he shoot a woman?

No, not just a woman. Molly Lewis. Crazy as she was—and that was another consideration, her being clearly mentally incapacitated—was it right to shoot a woman you wanted to kiss just a few months ago? Especially if she’s not in her right mind?

But Jamie wondered about that. Maybe she was in her right mind. There were bigger things than him at play in this office this morning. Nichole had told him as much. Unless Home Depot was running a sale on chemical weapons, explosives, and poison champagne … wasn’t it possible that this was something larger and stranger than Jamie would have imagined?

And Molly was at the center of it?

Jamie looked at the gun. Looked at Nichole, who knew what was going on, but refused to tell him.

If you don’t already know, then you’re not supposed to know.


This was a betrayal beyond reason.

Ania couldn’t understand it. Granted, her audition was technically shaky. Nothing had proceeded as planned. But she had improvised her brains out. And in the end, the mission had been accomplished. Her coworkers were dead. Every single one of them—save Jamie. The explosives had been detonated. Again, not according to plan, but the cleansing fire was under way nonetheless. Things had worked out. She’d proved her worth. She deserved a response.

Couldn’t they acknowledge her with a simple response?

Was she not worth a mere syllable?

A yes?

Or a no?

The silence was maddening.

Ania thought of her mother in that dreadful place, hanging on to the promise of a better life. Don’t worry, Mama, I’m coming back for you, she’d told her.

Ania had lied.

Lied to her mother.

Not a single syllable, and now here she was, in the place of her own nightmares, burning alive, torn apart, covered in blood, trapped with the only man she cared about. The man she’d promised to introduce to Mama.

You’ll like him. He’s a writer. Just like Josef.

And they were both going to die.

She tried one last time. One last beg for a response. She was owed that much.

She’d put too much into this job for it to end this way.

With nothing.


Could he do it? The gun was right there, on the floor.

Pick it up.

This is a woman who could take a full blast from a defibrillator and pop right back up.

Think about it being the right or wrong thing to do later.

You need to stop her.

Do it.

Do it now.


The conference room doors slammed open and two firemen, decked out in helmets and face masks and pickaxes, stormed in.

“I need an answer!” Molly screamed at the corner of the room.

“Relax, miss,” said the taller one. “We’re here to help.”

Molly turned around, hands clenched at her sides. She looked strangely lost, even for a woman who was nearly naked and drenched in blood.

“No,” Molly said. “You are here for me to punish.”

She looked back at the corner of the room, told her invisible friend: “I will show you I am worthy.”

Then she cleared three paces and jumped at the taller one, her foot in the air.

Her heel shattered his plastic face mask, sending him staggering backwards.

The other one, his partner, who was shorter, charged forward with the handle of the pickaxe and pinned Molly against the wall.

That didn’t last long. She worked a leg up, pressed her foot against the firefighter’s chest, then flung him across the room. His back struck the edge of the conference room table. The champagne bottles jolted and tittered. Cookies slid off their plates. The firefighter landed on his face, hands splayed on the floor.

By this time his partner, with a broken face mask, had regained his senses and charged forward.

Molly kicked him in the face again, shattering the rest of his mask. He screamed.

Jamie climbed to his feet and gripped one of the conference room chairs. The chair rolled beneath him, and was heavier than it looked.

He picked it up and swung it at Molly anyway.

Aiming for her back.

She needed to be stopped.

But Molly sensed him. Kicked sideways. Hit the chair. Jamie went tumbling backwards, over the dead bodies of Nichole and David. Jamie kicked out, trying to clear himself of the corpses.

The firefighters, by this point, had enough screwing around.

They remembered their pickaxes had blades.

The shorter one swung at Molly, aiming for her chest. She lifted her forearm to block it, and the blade cut through her metal bracelet. It slipped from her wrist and fell to the floor. The blow had connected with her flesh, though. Molly cried out. Grabbed her wrist. Bent forward.

The taller one took advantage, hurling his pickaxe into Molly’s back, high and to the left. She took a few wobbly steps forward, then dropped.

No one spoke for a few moments. Smoke continued to roil around the building. The air in the conference room itself was beginning to look wavy.

Molly lay with her check pressed against the carpet, staring at Jamie.

He thought about that night a few months ago, that drunken night when he walked her to her car. She had stared at him the same way.

But now something was different.

Now she was pursing her lips.

Blowing him a kiss.

Before her eyes closed.

The shorter firefighter knelt down beside her. Took off his glove. Pressed two stubby fingers to her neck. Shook his head.

“Okay, c’mon,” his partner said. Then he turned to Jamie. “Buddy, you okay?”

“Yeah,” Jamie said, automatically.

But he wasn’t, of course.

“We’ve gotta get out of here. Now.”

“Buddy. You with us?”

Jamie stood up. It all had happened so quickly. Then he remembered what he had been reaching for.

The gun.

Even though the man was dead—his body was right there on the floor, his head covered in a messy halo of blood—his boss’s words echoed.

You think you can just walk away from something like this? You think there aren’t people out there who want to make sure you’re dead? Along with your family?

I’m no killer, Jamie had told David.

But the truth was, he could be.

If it was for his family.

Jamie bent over and took the gun out from under Nichole’s face. The metal was hung up on her skin, and she was still warm. Then again, everything in the room was superheating.

He lunged for Molly’s body. He needed to be sure.

He needed to put a bullet in her brain.

“Hey hey, come on, man,” said shorter firefighter, catching Jamie in his extended arm and holding him back. The firefighter didn’t see he was holding a gun. “She’s gone.”

“Smoke’s getting real bad in here,” his partner said. Jamie could see his eyes and nose beneath the shattered mask. He looked young.

“I have to,” Jamie said.

“No you don’t.”

“She …”

“Buddy, she’s gone. There’s another team behind us. They’ll get her. Along with everybody else.”

Jamie dropped the gun to the carpet.

They all left the building.




OUT OF THE OFFICE


I just want to spend more time with my family.

—POPULAR SAYING


The walk down the south fire tower felt like forever. Jamie had never felt such heat. He was sure he’d passed out at least once. Maybe twice. But he was supported by the arms of the firefighters, whose names he didn’t even know. He thought about asking them, but his mouth couldn’t form the words. He’d have to find out later. Write them. Thank them. Buy them beers. Introduce them to Andrea, Chase. Cook them meals.

The endless repetition of staircase, turn, staircase, turn also felt like it lasted longer than physically possible.

Eventually, though, they reached the ground floor, and Jamie was being placed on a stretcher, and he reached his hand out to thank his rescuers, high-five them, anything, but they were already headed back into the building.

Someone jabbed a needle in his arm and put a mask over his face and rolled him into the back of an ambulance.

He started to drift off, even though it was only the middle of the day. Hard to tell, with the sky outside so black.

He wanted to drift off. Maybe he would snap awake and find himself in his usual position in bed: left arm tucked under Andrea’s pillow. Her hair, fanned across her pillow. Her scent intoxicating, even in the middle of the night. His hand, resting on her hip. Or if the mood was right, up around the front and higher.

So Jamie drifted a bit, fantasizing that he was home already with Andrea. With Chase in the other room, monitor on, so that the moment he fussed, even a little, they’d hear it, and they could be in there to comfort him in a flash.

He could smell her hair.

Or imagine he could.

Wait.

No.

He couldn’t drift off, not yet.

He had to reach Andrea, tell her he was okay. A phone call, something. News of the fire was probably all over TV. God, she could probably see the smoke from the front steps of their apartment building. She’d wonder. Check the news. Hear about 1919. Panic. He couldn’t do that to her.

Jamie sat up on the stretcher. Pulled the mask from his face. Yanked the needle from his arm.

He reached around to his back pocket to see if he’d put his wallet back there, or left it upstairs. Maybe he could hail a cab, be home in seconds.

Instead he found a card.

And on the front was the cartoon of a duck in little boy pants.


Later, investigators clearing out the floors would discover something odd on the thirty-sixth floor: a badly burned single parachute harness-container containing a Dacron parachute. The brand name was consistent with harnesses and parachutes used for BASE jumping. The pack was found on the floor, but it appeared to have been stuffed over the drop-ceiling tiles on the thirty-sixth floor, just outside the office of Murphy, Knox, CEO David Murphy. As the tiles had burned away, the pack dropped to the ground.

Investigators were at a loss to explain the gear, other than an office thrill-seeker stashing the equipment for a future jump.

But that didn’t explain the typewritten note, found inside an envelope deep within the pack:

CONGRATS, it read.


The body of Paul Lewis was discovered that afternoon, when police officers arrived at the Lewis home to inform him that his wife was missing. They were surprised to find him dead, with half-chewed pieces of potato salad in his mouth.

Blood screens came back negative; the death was ruled accidental.

Somebody tipped off a reporter. By the end of the week, over forty-seven newspapers were running the short wire story of one couple’s freakishly bad luck.

Names withheld to protect the innocent.


Jamie raced up Twentieth Street, hunting for a pay phone. He seemed to remember one at the corner of Arch Street, near a diner that had recently gone upscale—charging nine dollars for hamburgers and adding seven martinis to the menu.

He glanced back. The top of 1919 was a raging inferno now, with so much smoke pouring from the top, it looked as if all of Center City were on fire. That it all had been sold to the Devil.

Everybody had been so busy, no one noticed that he had just stepped out of the ambulance and started walking.

Toward home.

There was a phone on Arch Street, just as he’d remembered it. The steel line connecting the handset to the box looked badly damaged, but there was still a dial tone. Jamie punched in his calling card number, then his home phone. Three rings, then the machine picked up.

Hi, you’ve reached us. If you’re calling, you know who we are. Leave a message, and one of us will get back to you. If we feel like it.

Jamie, being funny.

Beep.

“Honey, it’s me, if you’re there pick up. I don’t know if you saw the news, but I’m fine, I’m out of the building, so you don’t have to worry. Are you there?”

Nothing.

“Sweetie, if you’re there, please pick up.”

No Andrea.

“Okay … I’m walking home right now. I’ll be there in five minutes. I love you.”

Jamie paused another few seconds, just in case. Their apartment was oddly shaped: hallway, kitchen, living room, and office on one floor, then a semi-subterranean floor with two bedrooms and a small space connecting the two. Andrea could easily be downstairs, changing Chase’s diaper. It happened enough.

But usually she picks up by now….

Forget that. Hang up, walk home, hug your wife and kid. Start to tell her the story you’ll probably be telling her the rest of your lives.

Then tell her—in as serious a voice as you can muster—that you think it’s time you quit your job.

Andrea would crack up at that.

Wouldn’t she?

You think you can just walk away from something like this? You think there aren’t people out there who want to make sure you’re dead? Along with your family?

Stop it.

Jamie quickened his pace, blasting by the Franklin Institute, then the main branch of the Free Library, then Starbucks, then the old Granary Building and Spring Garden and the long-closed bodega and then finally the dry cleaners, which told him he had reached Green Street. The path from Market to Green was a gradual uphill. Most days that Jamie walked home from work, he ended up a sweaty mess.

Today, none of that mattered. Not the humidity. The sun. The fire. None of it.

Jamie reached the front door and remembered: his keys.

Damn it! His keys. In his bag, back on the thirty-sixth floor.

Jamie hammered the button next to his name. Please, Andrea, hear the buzzer and answer. Let me hear that click. Your voice on this cheap-ass plastic brown box. Jamie pressed the button again.

Nothing.

He couldn’t stand this.

He pressed other buttons. His neighbors, whom he hardly knew. It wasn’t exactly a social building. Having a kid didn’t make them very popular, either.

C’mon, somebody answer. Give me a click.

C’mon.

Forget it. Jamie walked back down the front stairs, found a large stone in a square of dirt next to a tree, then walked back up and hurled it through the glass. He reached in, unlocked the door, and proceeded back to his apartment. He’d pay the damage. He’d pay it gladly. Smile as he wrote the check.

Their apartment was down the hall, toward the back. He was about to apply the same technique—kick in it, pay for the damages later—but saw it was already ajar.

Andrea never, ever left it open.

She was afraid of Philadelphia.

I’m going to make sure they rape your wife nice and good! They’ll skin your son alive! Right in front of her!

He rushed down the hall past the kitchen into the living room where the TV was on, and it was local news, covering the fire with helicopters and reporters on the street, asking inane questions about what had happened, but Jamie didn’t care about that. He wanted to see Andrea and Chase now. He hurled himself down the creaky wooden stairs that led to their bedrooms.

It was dark down there, which wasn’t unusual. Andrea kept the lights low while Chase napped.

“Andrea!” Jamie shouted.

He heard something coming from the baby’s room.

A small cry.

A tiny little wah.

Oh, thank Christ.

Jamie rounded the bend and looked into Chase’s room. Andrea was there in the wooden rocking chair, holding Chase in her arms, humming to him. Only Andrea looked different. She was only wearing underwear.

“Andrea?”

The room was dark. He needed to see them. Touch them. Smell them.

His hand found the light switch. But before he could flip it, she spoke.

“You didn’t tell me he looks just like you.”

Jamie turned on the lights.

And he screamed.

Acknowledgments

The creator of

Severance Package

would like to single out the following staff members for exemplary service:

Executive Officers:

Meredith, Parker, and Sarah Swierczynski, Allan Guthrie, Marc Resnick, David Hale Smith, Angela Cheng Caplan, Danny Baror, and Shauyi Tai.

Corporate Benefactors:

Matthew Baldacci, Bob Berkel, Julie Gutin, Sarah Lumnah, Lauren Manzella, Andrew Martin, Matthew Sharp, Eliani Torres, Tomm Coker, Dennis Calero, and the entire team at St. Martin’s Minotaur.

Silent Partners:

Axel Alonso, Ray Banks, Lou Boxer, Ed Brubaker, Ken Bruen, Aldo Calcagno, Jon Cavalier, Nick Childs, Michael Connelly, Bill Crider, Paul Curci, Albin Dixon, Father Luke Elijah, Loren Feldman, Ron Geraci, Greg Gillespie, Maggie Griffin, Paul Guyot, Ethan Iverson, Jon and Ruth Jordan, Jennifer Jordan, McKenna Jordan, Deen Kogan, Terrill Lee Lankford, Joe R. Lansdale, Paul Leyden, Laura Lippman, Michelle Monaghan, H. Keith Melton, Karin Montin, Edward Pettit, Tom Piccirilli, Will Rokos, Greg Rucka, Warren Simons, Kevin Burton Smith, Mark Stanton, David Thompson, Andra Tracy, Peter Weller, Dave White, and all my friends and family.

About the Author

DUANE SWIERCZYNSKI

is the author of

The Blonde

(St. Martin’s Minotaur) and the writer for the Monthly Marvel Comics series

Cable.

Until recently he was the editor-in-chief of the

Philadelphia City Paper,

and almost never wanted to kill his employees.

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