stopped to offer Rapp Reavers's M-4 rifle.
"Nope . . . no need for that down here. This is all close quarters. Get your ass up on the roof and buy us some time." Coleman started to leave, but Rapp grabbed him by the arm. "What did Mike say?"
"He said he'll get some shooters here as soon as is humanly possible."
"Call him back and tell him we'll take anything. Get a Little Bird to give us an ammo drop and maybe a SAW or two." Rapp glanced back at the front door. "Maybe some grenades, too."
"I'm on it." Coleman had his phone out and was calling Nash again. "Call if you need help."
Rapp knew he'd be making no such call. He'd hold them off as long as he could and then, if he was still alive, he'd limp his way up to the roof. What a shitty way to die, Rapp thought to himself. All of the close calls he'd had and it was going to come down to being killed by men who were supposed to be his allies. He heard Stan Hurley's gruff voice telling him to suck it up. Now was not the time to think about death unless it was the other guy's mortality that you were focused on. Hurley was fond of saying that no matter how bad things got there was always a way out. Rapp clung to that idea, as there was an ebb in the volume of shots being fired - just a pop here and there instead of the sustained blister of rounds smacking into the building.
Unfortunately, Rapp knew what that really meant. It was too soon for Nash or Sickles to have been able to call off the dogs, so it was more likely that someone in a command position with half a brain had showed up and was now getting the men ready for an organized assault. Rapp holstered his gun and dragged the two oxygen tanks into the lobby. He stopped about six feet short of the front door, laid the tanks on their sides, and then drew his gun. Lest they think no one was guarding the front door, he slid along the wall until he had an angle to shoot from. He squeezed off two shots and then two more and ducked back into the lobby. He was pretty certain the first two shots had hit one man, but the second two had bounced harmlessly off a clear Plexiglas riot shield. Rapp went back to his position in the hallway with the foreboding feeling that this might be one situation he wasn't going to be able to get out of.
Chapter 18
GOULD popped the hatch and had to will himself onto the flat roof. Somewhere out there, he feared, a sniper was still lurking. He rolled onto his side, the M-4 cradled protectively in both hands, and then crawled his way to the parapet of the roof. There was a two-foot stone parapet that provided sufficient cover. He carefully brought his head above the lip and scanned the buildings across the street. With no shooters in sight, he got up on his right knee and brought the butt of the rifle up to his right shoulder. Gould swung the muzzle over the edge of the roof, sweeping it from left to right with both eyes open, the big square EOTech aperture bringing his targets clearly into view.
The spotter in civilian clothes was standing behind one of the police trucks with his cell phone held to his left ear.
"There you are, you little prick," the assassin said with a smile creasing his lips. Gould placed the red dot right over the cell phone, let loose an even exhalation, and then casually squeezed the trigger. The rifle jumped a quarter inch, but Gould never lost sight of the target. The heavy bullet shattered the cell phone and then exploded through the man's head, spraying blood, bone, and brain matter in a mini mushroom cloud onto the men and street just past him.
Three police officers were left standing in shock, gaping at the man who had just been urging them into action, and then three seconds after that they were all lying on the street dead. Gould worked his targets methodically, keeping the rifle in single-shot mode. It took the police approximately ten seconds to realize there was a new threat on the roof, but it had cost them dearly. Seven officers had been dispatched. Gould was about to swing