other door, it’ll be either me and Olga, or the bad guys. I’ll knock first. Back in a second.”
Miriam dashed for the hall and took the stairs two at a time. “
“Here.” Olga stepped out onto the landing. Her goggles made her look like a tall, angular insect—a mantis, perhaps.
“Come on. We’ve got visitors.”
“Where do you want to hold out?”
“In the scullery passage and kitchen—the only direct way in is via the front window, and there are fun surprises waiting for them in the morning room and dining room.”
“Right.” Olga hurried downstairs, a machine pistol clutched in one hand.
“Brill,” Miriam called, “we’re coming in.” She remembered to knock.
Once in the kitchen she passed Brill a walkie-talkie with hands-free kit.
“Put this in a pocket and stick the headphone in. Good. Olga? You too.” She hit the transmit button. “Can you both hear me?”
Two nods. “Great. We’ve—”
“—That’s the living room.
“Dining room,” Miriam whispered. “Right. Let’s go.”
“Let’s—what?”
She switched her set to a different channel and pressed the transmit button.
“What—”
“Smoke bombs. Come on, the doors are locked on the hall side and I had the frames reinforced. We’ve got them bottled up, unless they’ve got demolition charges. Here.” Miriam passed Brill a pair of handcuffs. “Let’s go. Remember, we want to get the ringleader alive—but I don’t want either of you to take any risks.”
Miriam led them into the octagonal hallway. There was a muffled thump from the day room door, and a sound of coughing. She waved Olga to one side, then prepared to open the door. “Switch your goggles on,” she said, and killed the lights.
Through the goggles the room was a dark and confusing jumble of shapes. Miriam saw two luminous green shadows moving around her—Brill and Olga. One of them gave her a thumbs-up, while the other of them raised something gun-shaped. “On my mark. I’m going to open the door. Three, two, one,
“Stop! Police!” Whistles shrilled in the garden. “
“That’s the south wall! What the fuck?” Miriam whispered. She keyed her walkie-talkie. “Status!”
“One down.” Brill, panting heavily. “Olga’s got the guy in the hall on the floor. They tried to shoot me.”
“Listen.” Whistles loud in the garden, flashlight beams just visible through the smoke. “Into the hall! Brill, can you drag the fucker? Get him upright? You take him and I’ll carry Olga.”
The sound of breaking glass came from the kitchen. Miriam darted back through the doorway and nearly ran straight into Olga.
“Quick!” Olga cried. “I can’t do it, my head’s still splitting. You’d better—”
“Shut the fuck up.” Miriam pushed her goggles up, grabbed Olga around the waist, and mashed a hand against the light switch. She fumbled with her left sleeve, saw the blurry outline clearly for a moment, tried to focus on it, and tightened her grip on Olga painfully. “Brill?”
“Do it!” Brill’s voice was edgy with tension and fear. More police whistles then a cry and more gunshots, muffled by the wall.
Miriam tensed and lifted, felt Olga grab her shoulders, and stared at her wrist. Her knees began to buckle under the weight:
Facing The Music
Miriam was freezing. She had vague impressions of ice, snow, and a wind coming in off the bay that would chill a furnace in seconds. She stumbled to her feet and whimpered as pain spiked through her forehead.
“Ow.” Olga sat up. “Miriam, are you alright?”
Miriam blinked back afterimages of green shapes moving at the far end of the room. She remembered her hot determination, followed by a cry of pain. She doubled over abruptly and vomited into the snow, moaning.
“Where’s the hut?” Olga demanded in a panicky voice. “Where’s the—”
“Goggles,” Miriam gasped. Another spasm grabbed her stomach.
“Oh.” Olga pulled them down across her eyes. “Oh!”
“Miriam?” Brill’s voice came from behind a tree. “Help!”
“Aaarh, aarh—”
Miriam stumbled over, twigs tearing at her face. It was snowing heavily, huge flakes the size of fingernails twisting in front of her face and stinging when they touched her skin. Brill was kneeling on top of something that thrashed around. “Help me!” she called.
“Right.” Miriam crashed to her knees in front of Brill, her stomach still protesting, and fumbled at her belt for another set of restraints. Brill had handcuffed the prisoner but he’d begun kicking and she was forced to sit on his legs, which was not a good position for either of them. “Here.”
“Lay
“We’re going to have to make him walk. It’s that or we carry him,” Olga commented. “How big is he?”
“Just a kid. Just a goddamn kid.”
“Watch
Miriam stood up and pulled her night-vision goggles back down. Brill and the prisoner showed up as brilliant green flames, Olga a hunched figure a few feet away. “Come on. To the cabin.” Together with Brill she lifted the prisoner to his feet—still moaning incoherently in what sounded like blind panic—and half-dragged him toward the hunting blind, which was still emitting a dingy green glow. The heat from the kerosene heater was enough to show it up like a street light against the frigid background.
It took almost ten minutes to get there, during which time the snow began to fall heavily, settling over their tracks. The prisoner, apparently realizing that the alternative was freezing to death slowly, shut up and began to move his feet. Miriam’s head felt as if someone was whacking on it with a hammer, and her stomach was still rebelling from its earlier mistreatment. Olga crept forward and hunted around in the dark, looking for signs of