Sarah watched for less than two seconds before revising her answer.

Yeah, her instincts were good. Not just the tactics, either-the objective, too. Because nothing was going to save any of them as long as Hort still had a chance to recover Obsidian. Christ, if only he'd realized what was really going on when they were back at the hotel. Alex and Sarah could have done their thing, and Hort's op would have ended right there.

He looked at Sarah. She glanced up at him and gave him a tiny, sad smile. The smile did nothing to conceal the fact that she was scared shitless. She hadn't said a word since they'd disarmed him and loaded him into the van next to her. She was smart. She probably knew they were all going to die. She was probably right.

Now they were driving southeast on Foothill Expressway. Ben didn't know why-they'd told Alex to meet them in Palo Alto, the opposite direction, and apparently Alex had agreed.

He'd had time to think, and understood at least some of what had happened. Hort must have given him up to the Russians. But why? Live or die, he was going to try to find out.

“How did you know it was me?” he said. “You knew he was my brother, but how did you put it together?”

There was a long pause, long enough so that Ben thought Hort wasn't going to answer. But then Hort turned and said, “I wanted to keep you out of it, for everyone's sake, including yours. But then you put in that weapons request for San Francisco, after I'd told you to stay put in Ankara. It was a concern. Just being cautious, we got into some of Alex's communications. He'd called Military OneSource, and the army personnel center, and then we checked his e-mail, and we knew he'd been in touch with you. And why else would you be coming out here, if not to help him?”

“It's not as though I had a choice.”

“That's exactly the point. There was nothing else you could have done. Blood is blood. But I didn't have a choice, either. I was responsible for a mission. And as understandable and inadvertent as your actions were, you made yourself a threat to that mission. For what it's worth, it was the hardest call I've ever had to make.”

“So you gave me up to the Russians?”

“What difference does it make how I decided to get it done? Yeah, I was taking heat from the usual suspects for your killing that damn Russian in Istanbul. Some people wanted to hang you out to dry.”

“So you did it for them.”

“Like I said, what difference does it make?”

Ben imagined Hort contacting some Russian counterpart, telling him, Hey, we found the rogue who killed your guy in Istanbul. It wasn't sanctioned. He's yours, if you want him. And here's where you can find him.

It made a kind of twisted sense. You placate the Russians, appease the bean counters, eliminate Alex's protection, and create a cutout and a diversion from what's really going on with an op that's spiraling out of control.

“I guess you're right,” Ben said, fighting back a bitterness that felt like the leading edge of despair. “But I should have seen it coming. You know why I didn't? I thought you were as loyal to me as I am to you.”

Hort looked down for a moment, then met Ben's eyes again. “I am loyal to you, son. I'm loyal to all my men. But my first loyalty is always to the mission. You know that.”

“Well, I know it now.”

“I wish it hadn't had to happen this way, Ben. I really do wish that.”

They came to San Antonio Road in Los Altos. One of the guys in back said, “Turn here.”

They made a left. What were they doing in Los Altos? And then he realized.

They were tracking Alex's cell phone signal. They must have had the equipment in back. Alex, goddamn it, I told you they could track you this way.

“This is it,” the guy behind him said. “Last place before the signal cut out.”

“Drive around,” Hort said. “We might spot his car.”

Ben let out a long breath. Thank God, Alex had thought to turn the damn thing off when he realized what was happening.

But all it meant was that Hort wouldn't be able to take him unawares here. Presumably, Alex was still going to show up at the parking garage.

They drove along Los Altos's grid of streets, swinging in and out of parking lots. Every time they slowed in front of a dark M3, Ben felt his insides tighten with fear, but each time it wasn't Alex's.

After twenty minutes, the guy behind him said, “Wait, he's back online. In… Mountain View. Go down San Antonio and get on El Camino.”

What the hell was he doing? He'd turned the phone off; why would he turn it back on?

“Wait, he's moving,” the guy in back said. “Stay on San Antonio. Go to 101.”

“Where's he heading?” Hort said.

“Palo Alto is my guess,” the guy in back said. “The garage. Looks like he's heading toward 101.”

Ben's phone rang. Hort picked up and said, “Hello.” There was a pause. “Good, we're on our way, too. Thanks for checking in. A half hour from now, we'll have this whole thing sorted out and you'll all be good to go.”

He clicked off. Alex must have gotten spooked that they'd been out of touch, and turned on the phone again to make sure everything was still copacetic.

“No, wait, he's taking Alma,” the guy in back said. “Still heading toward Palo Alto.” They swung off San Antonio onto the entrance ramp.

What the hell? Why wasn't Alex turning off the phone again?

Because he's driving. Jesus Christ, he thought they couldn't track him if he was moving? Ben tried to tamp down his anger. He couldn't expect Alex to know something like that. It wasn't his world. But goddamn it, they were going to take him by surprise, force him over to the side of the road, pull him into the van… If he'd been planning anything, anything at all tactical for the garage, they weren't going to give him the chance.

They headed west on Alma, two lanes of traffic in each direction. The midday traffic was light, but there were enough cars to provide plenty of concealment for vehicular surveillance even against someone who was tail- conscious, which Alex most definitely was not.

“That him?” the driver said.

Ben leaned left and looked through the windshield, his heart thudding. It looked like Alex's car, but he wasn't sure.

“Get a little closer,” Hort said. “Just a little now.”

The license plate came into view. Ben recognized it just as Hort said, “It's him. Back off now. Keep a few cars in between.”

The thudding in Ben's chest got stronger. Adrenaline surged through his system. He flexed his thighs, his calves, his toes. He glanced left, right, ahead, measuring distance, calculating odds. He wanted to rotate his neck but didn't. He didn't want any sign that he was anything but resigned.

The only hope he saw was to disrupt them when they tried to take Alex. If Alex could see they weren't interested in bargaining, maybe he would understand his only hope was to disseminate Obsidian. If he could get away, if he figured things out, if he disseminated it… Jesus Christ, he thought. He had never tried to execute a plan so entirely composed of ifs and mights and maybes.

They followed Alex right onto Addison, a bucolic street of perfectly kept bungalows. Alex slowed for the traffic circle at Bryant. Hort said, “Take him.”

The driver cut clockwise into the circle and accelerated into the street on the other side alongside Alex. He cut the wheel right and slammed into Alex's car. Metal whined and Alex went up on the sidewalk and straight into a tree. The driver hit the brakes and they screeched to a halt just ahead of where Alex's car had stopped.

The driver hit a switch and the passenger-side door slid open. The guy behind Ben moved up alongside him and braced to leap out. In one smooth movement, Ben spun in the seat, planted the back of his head and neck against the side of the passenger-side seat, brought his knees to his face, and blasted both heels into the guy's lower spine. The guy cried out and went flying through the door, smacking his face into the overhead jamb on the way.

Ben let the momentum of the kick bring him to his feet. He dove through the open door, hit the ground on his shoulder, and rolled to his side. He brought his knees up and shoved his arms down, getting the cuffs over his ass. He straightened his legs and pushed lower, getting the chain past the backs of his knees, his calves…

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