Needle's point, and needed to be as fresh as possible after so rigorous a climb. Wasting her energy getting there could prove tactical suicide, and her next opportunity to rest would be in the sky-view restaurant, four hundred feet above her. Between here and there, it was just her and the stairs…

… and, perhaps, the other “tourist” who had come up this way ahead of her.

As she continued her ascent, she considered: the only estimate she could make about what awaited her upstairs came from the size of the vehicles— the Lexus could hold six, the Hummer maybe a couple more than that. So, that was what? Fourteen guys, at the most… and she'd already dispatched three.

That left a potential army of eleven for her to face, assuming one of them was the person on the stairs, ahead of her. If the other stair-climber was an interloper, like herself— with an agenda as yet unknown— there could be a dozen guys… a dozen guns… waiting for her.

Before she'd started this climb, the floor indicator on the lobby level had shown the elevator stopping at the observation deck; in this weather, she wondered if the art-for-cash exchange might not have reconvened to the restaurant floor. So she prepared herself for what might await beyond the door…

… but only silence and more dust and darkness greeted her. Apparently, rain and wind or not, the deal was going down where all had agreed it would— perhaps only out in the relative open, even in a storm, could these untrustworthy men trust each other.

After these additional 640 steps and four hundred feet of climbing, even Max's genetically superior muscles could feel the burn. She paused to lean against a wall.

Now, five hundred feet above the street, the storm still raging outside, the X5 found herself in a room so dark even she had to strain to make details out of the murk. She could see elevated booths— these would have allowed even those dining in the center of the restaurant to enjoy a magnificent view of the city— and maple paneling, accented with other light woods, giving the room a classy air and probably, during the day, a natural radiance. Although covered in dust, the seat cushions revealed their original light yellow, which would have added to the daytime brightness.

She used one gloved hand to wipe sweat off her brow, her breathing easy, regulated; she felt fine, damn near fresh, ready for a final round with that last twenty feet, to end this thing, and take down Sterling and Kafelnikov… and maybe, just maybe, Lydecker himself…

“Christ, do a sit-up once in a while, why don't you?”

It was a youngish male voice, off to her right. Wheeling toward it, she dropped into a combat stance.

From the darkness, the voice said, “And your skills are rusty as hell… Damn, you didn't even know I was here.”

Furious— with herself, because that voice was right— she said, “Quit the hide-and-seek, then— come on out and test my combat skills, firsthand.”

The young man stepped into the shadowy light— a figure in black, from his fatigues to the stocking cap that didn't quite conceal the military-short brownish hair; the narrow, angular face, the green eyes, were the same, though he'd grown into quite a man. Max felt every muscle in her body go weak, and the climbing had nothing to do with it.

Seth.

Not Zack, but Seth… who had not made the escape that night, with the rest of them… was he Lydecker's X5? Or the rebel SNN made him out to be?

Relaxing out of her combat stance, but staying alert, Max demanded, “What the hell are you doing here, Seth?”

“I'm flattered you recognize me,” he said. “Which one are you? Jondy? Max, maybe?”

“I thought you

knew

me… ”

“Your barcode was showing, when you leaned against the wall, sis. I'm gonna say you're Max.”

She nodded, and the wave of emotion— some sort of bittersweet warmth, at being recognized by her brother— rolled unbidden through her.

Seth's eyes tightened and he pointed a gloved finger to the ceiling. “Do you

realize

what's going on up there?”

She nodded.

He was still so serious, his face a vacant mask, his eyes empty of emotion— only Zack had had a harder game face than Seth. “That's my last chance to get away from Manticore— forever.”

“Get away?” she asked.

“That's right. Maybe we could go together.”

More emotion surged, but she said, tightly, “How do I know you're not with Lydecker?”

The game face dissolved into confusion— hurt, sullen confusion. “Why the hell would you say such a thing?”

And now the accusation blurted from her: “When we ran, you didn't go!”

A defense was blurted back: “They

caught

me!”

“That's right… they dragged you back. Did you graduate with honors, bro?”

She took an ominous step toward him and he dropped into a fighting stance that mirrored her own.

But he did not attack; he said; “I escaped that same night— two of them thought they had me, but I flipped the bastards, and got out in the confusion. I've been running ever since, just like you must have been.”

Even as she eyed him suspiciously, she wanted with all her heart, every fiber of her being, to believe him. If she, and others, had escaped that night, why not him?

Despite the genetic tampering and military training, she had an impulse within her, an impulse that had been fed by Lucy and her mother (if not that terrible foster father) and, yes, by Moody and the Chinese Clan, who lay dead because of her. That impulse— which made her want to believe Seth more than she had ever believed anything— cried out for family, for someone like herself whom she could call sibling…

That thought was interrupted by the squeal of tires in the parking lot below— a sound that only she… or someone like her… could hear in the squall. Responding, both she and Seth went to the edge and looked down through the slanting, slashing rain. A flash of lightning aided them, turning the world white, and they both saw the black Manticore SUVs pulling in at odd angles, TAC squad pouring out.

“Lydecker,” Seth breathed.

“Damn it!” Max said, fury mingling with sorrow. “I should have

known

you were in his pocket!”

She spun and thrust a kick toward his chest, but he blocked it; she maintained her balance, but allowed him time to launch a flying kick of his own, which she expertly ducked…

… and then the two of them came up facing each other, in combat stance.

Seth was shaking his head, and his eyes seemed desperate. “Max, I swear— I'm

not

with him. I don't know

how

he found us.”

Her voice dripped sarcasm: “I

bet

it's a mystery.”

“Sis— we

both

need to get out of here.”

She jabbed at him with a left, but he leaned back, the blow glancing off his chest, and as he went backward, he grabbed her arm, using her own momentum against her, flipping her over him onto a table that smashed beneath her impact.

Вы читаете Dark Angel Before the Dawn
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×