He looked like a raptor about to swoop down on prey.

“What would you do to save your husband’s life?” He finally said.

“Anything.”

He grinned. “Good. I have something in mind. Let’s go to the bedroom.”

Toni felt a small surge of hope. If he wanted sex, he would have to put himself into a more vulnerable position. He would have to allow her to get close. Silat was an in-your-face art. If he let her get close, she would have a chance. A small chance, maybe.

If she had the shot, she might be able to take him.

* * *

Michaels tucked the gun into his back pocket as he slid open the garage window. He had heard the noise half a block away, and by the time he got to the garage, he had a pretty good idea of what he would see.

He was wrong. What he saw was much worse than he’d expected. Jesus Christ, how could a man built like Bershaw do this much damage with a hammer and pry bar? The Chevy looked as if it had rolled off a cliff.

He saw that the door into the house was open, and he climbed through the window, pulled the revolver out, and made his way across the floor, trying to avoid stepping on all the shattered bits of glass. A head shot. Point the gun like your finger, and pull the trigger. Hit him in the head with a bullet, and it was all over.

Michaels edged into the doorway and into the house.

* * *

In the bedroom, Tad said; “Get on your hands and knees.”

The woman climbed onto the bed and did what he said. He moved to stand behind her. “Back up a little.”

He reached out with both hands, caught the middle of her robe, and ripped it apart, exposing her bare bottom. He reached for his zipper.

* * *

Toni gathered herself as she heard the sound of his zipper going down. A twist, a hard fist to the testicles, grab and rip them off, roll to the side and onto the floor—

* * *

Michaels stepped into the bedroom, saw Bershaw’s back to him, Toni beyond him on the bed. The years of law and order training tried to assert themselves. Maybe he should give the guy a chance to surrender.

Hell with that. The bastard was about to rape his wife, he was tanked on drugs that made him the most dangerous person Michaels had ever seen. He pointed the gun at the back of Bershaw’s head and started to squeeze the trigger.

Tad heard something, or maybe he felt the air pressure in the room change. Suddenly, he knew they weren’t alone. He spun. There was the husband, with a gun.

Good! Tad lunged.

* * *

Michaels saw Bershaw spin, his speed was incredible, and leap at him. He was halfway though squeezing the trigger. Fast as Bershaw was, Michaels was ahead of him. The gun went off.

Bershaw tried to duck, but the bullet hit him. Michaels saw it plow a furrow into his skull, just under the hairline, but then the mirror on Toni’s closet door shattered.

Bershaw kept coming, but the bullet’s impact changed his angle a little, so he veered to the left slightly. Michaels dodged to his right, and Bershaw almost missed him.

Almost. His flailing hand smashed into the revolver and tore it from Michaels’s grasp. The gun flew, and Bershaw slammed into the dresser and landed on his hands and knees. But he looked up at Michaels and smiled — smiled! — with blood oozing from the head wound.

The bullet hit at an angle and glanced off, Michaels realized.

He had to get this maniac away from Toni, who was on the floor next to the bed.

Michaels grabbed the small television set on the stand next to the door and threw it at Bershaw, who reached up and batted it aside like it was a pillow. The TV set hit the floor and ruptured into three pieces.

He had to lead him out of here! Away from Toni!

Michaels backpedaled through the door.

Bershaw came to his feet, wiped the blood from his eyes, stuck one finger into the gory groove on his forehead, and looked at his finger. “Close, but no cigar.”

Michaels turned and ran for the living room. “Come and get me, asshole!”

Michaels risked a glance at his virgil. As soon as Bershaw came after him, Toni would be safe. The general’s men would be ready to hit the door when they heard Michaels yell for them.

Oh, shit! It was gone! The virgil was gone! Where had he lost it? The window?

He didn’t have time to worry about that now.

He made it to the living room, and he looked around frantically for a weapon, something to throw, anything!

He saw the little wooden case with the two kerambit knives in it. He grabbed it and jerked the lid off just as Bershaw came into the room. The man was moving a little slower, he was a little unsteady on his feet. The bullet glancing off his head must have had some effect.

Bershaw grabbed the end of the couch as Michaels ran around behind it, trying to slip the rings of the little curved knives onto his index fingers. Bershaw heaved, and the couch came off the floor and twisted, flew five feet, and landed upside down with a crash.

“You can run, but you can’t hide. Joe Lewis said that, did you know?”

Stall him! “What do you want?”

“You killed Bobby. I kill you. Even trade.”

“I didn’t kill him. He was shot by a rogue NSA agent working for the drug companies! That man is dead, too!”

“Doesn’t matter. You pointed the shooter at him. You get to pay.”

Bershaw moved in, his hands held out to grab.

Michaels had the little curved-bladed knives gripped solidly now, hidden behind his forearms and closed hands, only the forefinger rings showing. If Bershaw saw that, or cared, he didn’t give any indication, he just kept coming, moving like some Frankenstein’s monster that couldn’t be stopped.

Michaels took a deep breath and held it.

It might be his last.

40

Toni hurried down the hall. In her hand, she held the kris that Guru had given her, the wavy-bladed Javanese dagger that had been in the old lady’s family for years. Such daggers had been more ceremonial than used for a long time, but it was still a knife, when stick came to stab, and it was the only weapon in the bedroom.

She heard a loud noise, felt the floor shake as she reached the living room and saw the two men there.

Bershaw advanced on Alex.

Alex stood in a djuru stance, and Toni immediately realized he had the kerambits in his hands, even though they were all but hidden.

Even with a head wound, the man was supernaturally fast. He lashed out with one hand, and before Alex could move, he caught him with a slap that knocked him backward into the bookcase, showering him with hardbacks.

“Hey!” Toni yelled.

Bershaw turned, smiled at her. “I’ll take care of you later. Better put that down before you cut yourself, honey.”

The distraction was enough for Alex to recover a little. He grabbed several books from the shelf behind him and threw them at Bershaw.

* * *

Tad turned back to finish Michaels. He saw three books coming at him in slow motion: a red one, one with a dark dust cover, and one that opened so that the pages were flapping in the air. He dodged the dark dust covered one, backhanded the red book, and let the flapping one hit him on the chest; it was nothing.

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