the girl? Or had Quinn, Nate, and Orlando been successful in rescuing her? Marion wanted to believe they had, but she feared the worst.
She’d been told to stay where she was no matter what. But how could she? How could she stay when Iris’s life was still in danger?
The answer was she couldn’t.
“Hey. What are you doing?” The voice had come from behind Quinn.
He’d been crouched in front of the elevator door, just starting to pry it open. Acting like nothing was up, he released the door, then dropped his right hand onto the grip of the SIG Sauer pistol resting on his lap. He stood, keeping his back to the new arrival.
“The doors got stuck,” he said.
“Turn around!”
The man was closer now. Quinn judged fifteen feet at most. And whatever weapon he was armed with—one of the M16s no doubt—it would be aimed at Quinn’s back.
Quinn pivoted around, the barrel of his gun level with the man’s gut.
“Who ar—”
The man dropped to the ground.
Quinn kept his gun on the man as he ran over, but there was no need to pull the trigger a second time. The guard was dead.
He dragged the body over to the elevator door, then removed the M16 from the man’s shoulder and set it on the floor. He ripped the sleeve off the man’s shirt, knowing he’d need it for cleanup. After prying the sliding doors of the elevator apart, he used the guard’s shoulders to wedge them open. He then wiped up a small pool of blood where the man had fallen, and the trail of drops that led back to the elevator.
Once he was done, he dumped the man’s body and the sleeve into the shaft, slung the M16 over his shoulder, then slipped through the doors himself, and over to his waiting rope.
Tucker was pissed.
He had four Superhawk helicopters sitting on the ground, but only three with rotors turning.
“I thought you said everything was working fine,” he shouted at the lead pilot.
“Everything checked out okay when we fired them up last,” the pilot said. “I have our engineer looking at it now. Thinks he might be able to get it up and running in thirty minutes.”
“We don’t have thirty minutes.” Tucker looked back at the helicopters. “God
“We all won’t fit in three.”
“Then some people will just have to stay, won’t they?” Tucker said. “Get back to your aircraft. We go on schedule.”
“Yes, sir.” The pilot turned and walked away.
Tucker brought his radio up to his mouth. “Petersen?”
“Yes?” Petersen’s voice said on the receiver.
“Split the cargo between the three working helicopters. Just don’t put the juice and the special package with the triggering mechanism in the same aircraft. Then divide up the men. Nonessentials stay behind.”
“So the fourth copter’s out, then?”
“At least for now. Those who stay behind can take it out once it’s fixed.”
“Copy,” Petersen said. “Is Delgado with you?”
“I told him to do a final check of both floors before coming up. If he takes too long, assign him to helicopter four.”
“Copy.”
Quinn found Nate on a hill overlooking the makeshift heliport. Again the rocks played into their favor by creating several nooks from which they could observe what was going on without being seen.
“What happened to disabling the helicopters?” Quinn asked.
“Very funny. The crews were already there when I got here. Kind of think they might have seen me if I walked up and started messing with their engines.”
“What about Orlando?”
“I texted her what you wanted us to do, and said I’d meet up with her. She texted back ‘OK,’ but that was it. Haven’t heard anything more from her.”
“Let me see those,” Quinn said, motioning for Nate’s binoculars.
As soon as Nate gave them to him, he raised them to his eyes. Men were moving three-foot-long metal baskets from a truck to the helicopters. In each basket was one of the children.
“Only three of the helicopters are running,” Quinn said.
“Still?” Nate said. “I was thinking they just hadn’t fired the fourth one up yet.”
“Looks like someone’s got an access panel open and is looking inside.”
Quinn continued his scan of the landing area, stopping only when he spotted a man standing on a boulder at