The Blue Nowhere
that.
Yes! Bishop suddenly turned from Shawn and looked frantically around the room. There it was! He ran to a small gray box with a red button in the middle—the dinosaur pen’s scram switch.
He slammed his palm against the button.
A braying alarm sounded from the ceiling and with a piercing hiss, streams of halon gas shot from pipes above and below the machine, enveloping the room’s occupants—one human, one not—in a ghostly white fog.
T actical agent Mark Little looked at the screen of the computer in the command van.
RED CODE:
This was the go-ahead code for the assault.
“Print it out,” Little said to the tech agent. Then he turned to George Steadman. “Confirm that Mapleleaf green-lights us for an assault with Level 4 rules of engagement.”
The other agent consulted a small booklet with a Department of Justice seal on the front cover under the word CLASSIFIED written in large block letters.
“Confirmed.”
Little radioed to the three snipers covering all the doors. “We’re going in. Any targets presenting through the windows?”
They each reported that there were none.
“All right. If anyone comes through the door armed, take them out. Drop ’em with a head shot so they won’t have time to push any detonator buttons. If they seem to be unarmed use your own judgment. But I’ll remind you that rules of engagement’ve been set at Level 4. Understand what I’m saying?”
“Five by five,” one of the snipers said and the others confirmed that they understood too.
Little and Steadman left the command van and ran through the hazy dusk to their teams. Little slipped into a side yard to join the eight officers he was leading—Alpha team. Steadman went to his, Bravo.
Little listened as the search and surveillance team reported in. “Alpha team leader, infrared shows body heat in the living room and parlor. The kitchen too—but that might just be from the stove.”
“Roger.” Then Little announced into his radio, “I’m taking Alpha up the operation-side right of the house. We’ll saturate with stun grenades—three in the parlor, three in the living room, three in thekitchen, thrown at five-second intervals. On the third bang Bravo goes in the front, Charlie in the back. We’ll set up crossfire zones from the side windows.”
Steadman and the leader of the other team confirmed they’d heard and understood.
Little pulled on his gloves, hood and helmet, thinking about the stolen cache of automatic weapons, hand grenades and body armor.
“Okay,” he said. “Alpha team forward. Go slow. Use all available cover. Get ready to light the candles.”
CHAPTER 00101101 / FORTY-FIVE
I nside the Papandolos home—the house of lemons, the house of photographs, the house of family—Wyatt Gillette pressed his face against lace curtains that he remembered Elana’s mother sewing together one autumn. From this nostalgic vantage point he saw the FBI agents start to move in.
A few feet at a time, crouching, cautious.
He glanced into the other room, behind him, and saw Elana lying on the floor, her arm around her mother. Christian, her brother, was nearby, but his head was up and he looked with bottomless anger into Gillette’s eyes.
Nothing he could say to them by way of apology would even approach adequacy and he remained silent, turned back to the window.
He’d decided what he would do—decided some time before actually but he’d been content to savor these last few minutes of his life in proximity to the woman he loved.
Ironically the idea had come from Phate.
You’re the hero with the flaw—the flaw that usually gets them into trouble. Oh, you’ll do something heroic at the end and save some lives and the audience’ll cry for you. . . .
He’d walk outside with his arms up. Bishop had said they wouldn’t trust him and think that he was a suicide bomber or had a hidden gun. Phate and Shawn had seen to it that the police were expecting the worst. But the officers were human too; they might hesitate. And if they did they might trust him to call Elana and the others out.
But you’ll still never make it to the final level of the game.
And even if he didn’t—if they shot and killed him—they’d search his body and find that he was unarmed and might think that the others would be willing to surrender peaceably too. Then they’d discover that this was all just a terrible mistake.
He glanced at his wife. Even now, he thought, she’s so very
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