fallen angel, who was #1 on pretty much everybody’s beat-down list, and the Wilson edition of Vishous, up and disappeared.
Butch spoke into his shoulder communicator as to his ETA and then he jogged off down the corridor. He’d gone about ten feet when he realized . . . he had no clue how the fuck to get out of the goddamn building. Lock-and-key expert Vishous was gone.
And with that pissed-off genius, went the exit Butch needed.
As Jo stood behind Syn and gripped the heavy gun he’d given her, she grunted through the pain between her temples. Something was rising within her consciousness, a memory that was inexorable even against the barrier that was blocking it. Parting her lips, she breathed in a shallow way, her pounding heart and tingling limbs, the present danger in front of her, everything including even Syn, giving way to a desperate need to know just one thing.
One fucking thing—
Like spring rain bubbling up through the crack in the foundation of a basement, all at once a sliver of memory broke free and made itself present.
She saw herself at the security chain in front of the mall’s barren promenade. And she recalled being convinced that things were going to change forever if she continued forward.
Then she remembered lifting her running shoe up and over the links. And moving forward with a heart that beat as fast as hers was now.
“I was right,” she mumbled as she had to let the recollection go because of the pain.
Giving up her hold on the image, the thought, the piece of her past, the semi-answer that explained nothing sank below the impassable void that seemed to be consuming events and emotions, the black hole disappearing so much of what was so vitally important.
“Get behind me,” Syn said. “And be prepared to shoot if they come through that door.”
“I’m ready.” Liar. She was shitting her pants.
As they stood together, him in front, both of them poised to use their weapons, she remembered running from the police helicopter with him. That had been the warm-up for this showdown—and none of this should have made sense, but it did. Somehow, this was where she had been heading these last months.
As much as her brain didn’t understand anything, her instincts got it all—
The gunfire was not like it was in the movies. It was not some grand explosion.
And it was not inside the corrugated building.
It was outside. Pop-pop-pop-pop—
“Are they shooting at each other?” she whispered into the darkness. Even though she didn’t know who the “they” was.
“Gimme the gun back now—”
“Wait, what?”
Syn snatched it out of her hand. “I can’t run the risk of you killing my reinforcements.”
The door to the facility swung open and light pierced through the pitch black. Just before the illumination hit them both, Syn yanked her out of its path—and meanwhile, figures stumbled into the interior, nothing but black outlines that scrambled, slipped, and fell to the concrete floor.
The stench of them made her cough and gag. Just as it had on the train.
As the door slammed shut, there was a shuffle.
“Bolt it from the inside!” a male voice said. “Fucking bolt it—”
“I will! Christ—”
“Who has a weapon?”
Outside, whatever battle was going on continued, and given the echoing sounds of metal-sliding-on-metal, the men had found a way to buttress that metal panel shut.
“Stay here,” Syn whispered.
“No!” Jo grabbed the sleeve of his arm. “Don’t go—”
“I need to know where you are.”
“What are you going to do?” Even though she knew. He was going to kill them by hand. “Don’t leave me!”
There was a split second of a pause. And then his lips somehow found hers in the darkness. The contact was too swift—
The explosion registered first as blinding light. Second as a shock wave. Third as a sound so loud that her ears felt like nails had been driven into them.
Jo was thrown back against the wall, her head hitting the metal with a clang, her vision conking out. As she struggled to recover her senses, the smell of the gunpowder or whatever had been combusted was like lead shavings in her nose, and she reached out blindly, trying to find Syn.
He was gone.
Rubbing her eyes, she—
The growling sound about five feet in front of her was not human. It was that of an animal, a wild animal . . . something massive and powerful, the kind of predator that thought of every other living thing as prey.