CHAPTER EIGHT

Mai held on tight as Dahl swung the minivan around a final corner and powered hard toward the battered gates that fronted the Russian timber yard.

“Bastards!” he cried as he burst through, hyped up to the max, as they all were at the thought of one of their friends being held behind enemy lines. There would be no respite, no quarter given, until Drake was safe.

The gates smashed apart, crashing against the side walls of the building and buckling. These were most likely the same gates that Drake and Romero had breached, bent and damaged even before Dahl sent them to a rusty heaven.

The minivan screeched to a halt in the middle of the yard. Dusk was setting behind the high overladen timber racks, but there was still enough light for the strike team to see their way. A cabin stood in front of them, spilling bright light, the only door at the top of a set of concrete steps. Dahl raced ahead, gun held high. Even Mai and Alicia had to hurry to keep up with him.

The door was flung open. Dahl didn’t hesitate. He shot the man who stepped through in the stomach and waited a moment as he tumbled down the steps and hit the yard, face first. His groans of agony told them he was out of the fight, but still useful for torturing information out of. Dahl stepped over him, Mai now at his back. She had experienced no after-effects from the tasing, at least not physically. The actual knowledge of being beaten and losing Drake had hurt far more than any electrical charge or bullet.

“Move, little sprite!” Alicia said, at her back. “Stop dawdling!”

Around the corner of the cabin came the sound of gunfire. Hayden and Kinimaka stayed to take care of that, whilst Mai sped after Dahl. The Swede had cleared the counter in a single bound, wounded the man crouched beneath it, and was advancing on the main cabin. He slowed at the arched entrance. A bullet crashed into the big frame.

Mai planted herself against the wall opposite him. They counted to three, then peered through the doorway, firing twice, once to confuse and once to kill, at the same time evaluating their enemy and the room.

Alicia crouched beside them. “How we looking?”

“Two at my side, both under cover,” Dahl said.

“Two at mine. Exposed,” Mai whispered.

They counted to three again and fired. Dahl cursed, “Still two.”

Mai turned back, smiling. “One left.”

“Damn, we aren’t playing that bloody game again are we?”

“Not if you can’t keep up, Torsten.”

Mai fired blindly around the corner. The sound of a man groaning, and the crash as he toppled to the floor brought another tight smile to her face. “That’ll be zero.”

Dahl sniffed. “Well, mine are hidden behind desks.”

A man suddenly appeared behind them, coming through an inner side door that had to lead to a storeroom or toilet. Alicia swiveled her aim with godlike reflexes, spraying his knees and double-tapping the top of his head as he hit the deck.

“Ah, bollocks to this,” Dahl said, and let the gun rip on full auto as he stepped around the frame. Mai backed him up, springing to the opposite side of the main cabin in one bound and presenting a different deadly target. Bullets slammed into the desks, ripping splinters away from their edges. Timber, plastic and hot lead exploded across the rear of the cabin in a devastating mushroom cloud. One man screamed as shards of wood speared his face. Another had his head so close to the floor his ass was visible over the top of the table. Mai winged it, just once.

Dahl ran forward, staying low, and kicked the table aside. At that moment another man popped up from the office beyond, but Mai took him out like a tin duck at a shooting gallery. His body flew back against the cabin’s rear window, shaking the whole structure.

Alicia stepped in, closely followed by Hayden and Kinimaka. “All good?”

Mai nodded. “We should interrogate them separately. Make sure they’re telling us the truth.”

Alicia produced a steel hammer. “On it.” She crouched beside the nearest fallen Russian, brandishing the weapon.

“What’s your name?”

“V… Vladimir.” His eyes were wide with fear, hands creeping automatically to his scalp.

Alicia eyed him closely. “You been hit by one of these before, Vlad?”

Mai watched as the man shuddered. She vaguely remembered the name Vladimir from Drake’s report. Wasn’t he the one running around with a hammer sticking out of his head? She left Alicia to her work and walked to the back of the cabin, finding the Russian she had winged in the ass.

She crouched down, whispering in his ear, “I don’t need tools. I can make you scream and die with only my hands in less than a minute. Would you like to try?”

The Russian shook his head vehemently, rolling on to his side and groaning with the pain. Mai took hold of his windpipe between two fingers and gave it a little squeeze. “Alright then. I want the address of the jail. The one connected to Zanko. You have five seconds.”

Kinimaka stayed with Hayden, watching the cabin whilst Mai, Alicia and Dahl completed their work. It only took a moment for Hayden to notice the charts and maps pinned to the nearby wall; the same ones Drake had momentarily scanned.

“Mano,” she said, pointing. “Take a look.”

Kinimaka followed her example. He still couldn’t quite shake Kono’s disturbing phone call from out of his mind — she was vulnerable living in LA — and he did know some people who lived out that way and would be willing to look out for her. But for how long? He couldn’t seriously ask colleagues to watch over her indefinitely. Besides, he was sure Aaron Trent would have better things to do.

His contact with Kono and the occasional calls were always kept a secret from their mother. Kono had walked away from the family home years ago, brash, rebellious and disrespectful, not the way the Kinimaka family had been brought up. The split had almost put his mother into therapy, especially coming so soon after the unexpected death of his father.

Now Mano tolerated his sister because, deep down, he loved her. Any layer above that was still raw, exposed and full of hate.

“Mano?”

“Sorry.” He squinted at the place where Hayden was pointing. It was an ancient map of the city of Babylon, complete with the eight gates, including the Ishtar Gate — the main entrance — with an added notation — Ishtar was the Babylonian Goddess of sex and love — the assumed site of the enormous Ziggurat and the Tower of Babel, the mound of which can still be seen today, and a very interesting highlighted sentence at the bottom.

Babylon literally means, ‘Gateway of the Gods’.

Hayden stared at Kinimaka. “Oh no.”

“I thought we were done with those freaky tombs. They’re so small, you can barely swing a cat inside one.”

Hayden shrugged. “Not while they’re still translating most of the gods’ language. Not whilst the doomsday device still exists. You gotta remember, Mano, they’re discovering new stuff nearly every day.”

“The Ishtar gate seems to be a prominent landmark,” Hayden said. She snapped a few photos on her phone. “Look. Here’s a map of how Babylon looks now.”

Kinimaka studied it. “Big difference.”

“And what’s this? The Dance of the Seven Veils. The Saber Dance. Sounds kinky. Want me to learn it for you?”

Kinimaka tried to pretend he hadn’t heard. He respected his new girlfriend too much to talk that way within earshot of others.

“And the pit of Babylon. Wow, it’s the original foundation of the original city. Quite the landmark.”

Kinimaka let his eyes wander over a few more details. He hadn’t realized Alexander the Great — the man said to be the greatest king and one of the wisest men of all time — had died in Babylon. He mentioned the fact to Hayden.

But his girlfriend wasn’t listening. She was staring, eyes wide, at a third map. “Crap.”

Kinimaka leaned forward. It was a map of Germany, marked by a big red circle and a set of coordinates. “Shit,” he echoed. “That… that’s Singen.”

“The location of the third tomb. What the hell’s going on?” There was a thick red line linking tomb three to the pit of Babylon.

Mai listened hard as her prisoner whispered the location of the prison to her. She had to listen hard because his voice was croaky due to a bruised windpipe. But the address still came, eventually.

She looked over at Dahl. “Got it?”

“Yes. It’s just outside the city.”

“I have the same.” She shifted to Alicia. “You?”

The Englishwoman grunted. “Damn, Vladimir, you really want this hammer back where it belongs? You do? Okay.” She brought the hammer slicing down, claw end first, halting a millimeter from the man’s skull, so close the curved blades parted hair.

Vladimir screamed out the address.

Mai smiled. “They all match. We know where Drake is.”

Dahl jumped to his feet, face like thunder and fury. “Let’s roll.”

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