The dark blue of the ninja’s balaclava suddenly blossomed with a damp purple patch around his mouth and nose. Even with his eyes screwed shut, he still tried to attack again. The
Hitting nothing. Eddie had ducked.
Now it was his turn again — and with a roar he thrust the imperial sword with his full strength, transfixing the ninja through the stomach all the way to the hilt. Donatello gasped, mumbling in Japanese before collapsing face-first into the broken glass of Kusanagi’s shattered display case.
‘Cowa-fucking-bunga,’ Eddie rasped, forehead throbbing from its impact with the ninja’s nose. He straightened and looked round. Michelangelo was still alive, on all fours and clutching his truncated staff. But the way to the door was now clear — and his gun was just outside.
He ran. The last ninja scrambled up, but Eddie was already past him. The Makarov had landed about ten feet beyond the door. He crossed the threshold, bending to snatch up the weapon—
Something shot past him just before he reached it. The
Eddie looked back at Michelangelo, who was now searching for something on the ground…
Leonardo’s
‘Oh, fuck!’ Eddie ran himself, racing after the gun. The doors had been closed when he dropped down from the vent; the ninjas must have entered through them. Beyond was a traditional Japanese dining room, rows of low tables with tatami mats on which the diners would sit lined up along the polished wooden floor.
Where was the gun? It had skittered over the slick wood — and ended up beneath one of the tables.
But which one?
He reached the first table and flipped it over. No gun. Next table. Still nothing. The ninja’s padding footsteps were rapidly closing. Third table, nothing. He grabbed the next in the row and flung it back towards the door. Still no sign of the Makarov, and from behind came a crack of wood as the
He threw another place aside — and saw the glint of steel beneath.
The ninja was almost on him—
He dived for the gun, grabbing it and twisting to bring it to bear. The blade flashed down — and the ninja took two bullets to the chest as Eddie fired at point-blank range. The Englishman rolled to avoid the bloodied corpse as it fell, the
‘Jesus,’ Eddie gasped, regaining his breath as he shakily stood. ‘Fucking ninjas, they’re like cockroaches!’ He checked the room, trying to get his bearings. There were two exits: the one to the gallery and the vault, and another opening on to a windowed hallway. He hadn’t seen the direction Takashi had gone, so a split-second instinctual decision sent him towards the latter.
At the hall’s far end to his left was Takashi’s private lift, an illuminated indicator showing that it was stationary at the penthouse level. Takashi hadn’t taken Nina and the statues out that way, then. In the other direction was a set of imposing oak doors. The industrialist’s inner sanctum?
He ran towards it, gun at the ready.
The case in her hand, Nina raced into the gallery. ‘Eddie?’ she cried, uncertain — fearful — about what she might find.
She discovered corpses, which in some grim way was hardly a surprise, but to her relief none was her husband. Three in the strongroom, and a fourth in a dining room through another doorway. Eddie must have gone that way. She ran after him.
More doors led into the hallway to Takashi’s office. She went through them. Beyond the windows, Tokyo was now a glittering sea of lights beneath the twilight winter sky. She looked round. The elevator was to the left; to the right—
‘Eddie!’ she called again, running after him. Her husband slowed, turned, saw her…
And raised his gun.
9
Nina froze, shocked — and afraid. Eddie’s expression was one of pure hatred. ‘What are you…’ she started to say, but her mouth had gone dry.
Then she realised that he wasn’t looking at her, but something behind her. ‘Nina, move,’ he growled.
She whirled. Stikes had just come from the dining room — and also had a gun raised. She was directly between the two men, blocking their lines of fire. A standoff.
‘Yes, step aside,’ said Stikes. ‘I should have known you’d turn up sooner or later, Chase. It’s a bad habit of yours.’ A smile of cruel anticipation twisted his mouth. ‘One I look forward to breaking.’
‘Move, Nina,’ Eddie repeated. ‘I’ve been hunting this shitbag for three months. He’s not getting away this time.’
‘Why don’t you just shoot, Chase?’ taunted Stikes. ‘I gather you’ve been having marital problems — it would save you the cost of a divorce.’
Eddie clenched his jaw angrily, about to risk darting sideways for a clear shot in the hope of catching the other man by surprise… before a thought struck him. Why didn’t
Nina started to step aside. ‘Wait!’ Eddie snapped. ‘Stay still.’
‘Uh, Eddie,’ she said with a nervous glance between the two guns, ‘what’re you doing?’
Eddie’s gaze remained fixed on Stikes, whose eyes began to betray his frustration. For whatever reason, he couldn’t risk killing Nina, even if that cost him the chance to eliminate one of his enemies.
Now it was Eddie’s turn to smile slightly, confusing Nina and infuriating Stikes. ‘Nina, come over here. Trust me,’ he added, seeing her hesitancy.
‘I dunno if you noticed, but the guy who hates us both is aiming a gun at me,’ she pointed out.
‘He won’t shoot. He
‘Alive isn’t the same as unharmed,’ said Stikes as she started to move.
Nina cringed. ‘Oh, I was so hoping he wouldn’t say that.’
‘He wounds you, you fall, I kill him,’ Eddie told her. ‘He loses.’
‘I don’t exactly come out a winner either!’ She was now two-thirds of the way between the former SAS men.
A faint sound from the other end of the hall. The elevator was descending. ‘That’ll be more of Takashi’s security,’ said Stikes, his arrogance returning. ‘You can’t get away. I’ll tell you what — just drop your gun and I’ll make it painless. One bullet, right in the forehead. For old times’ sake.’
‘How about I give you one bullet right in the bollocks? For old times’ sake.’ But Eddie knew Stikes was right — he was rapidly running out of time before reinforcements arrived. He needed to break the deadlock…
A bright light suddenly filled the hallway.
From outside.
Eddie looked round in alarm as an approaching helicopter’s spotlight swept over the penthouse. He whipped back to face Stikes, but the mercenary was just as surprised as he was—
The windows shattered as gunfire raked the building.
Nina shrieked and ran to Eddie, who dived on top of her to shield her from the flying glass and bullets. Stikes also threw himself to the floor. Wood panels splintered, the drywall behind erupting with great sprays of fragmented plaster as more shots carved through the hallway.
The firing stopped. Eddie raised his head, seeing the helicopter hovering about fifty metres from the skyscraper. The glare from its light meant that he couldn’t identify the type, only that it was painted black — and