“Those are my people,” she retorted, anger flaring within her. She put a hand back on the table, realizing suddenly that she was touching a costume-bedecked mannequin. “I can’t stay here and let them die.”
“My orders are to ensure your safety.” The Israeli put a hand on her shoulder, a firm grasp that brooked no disagreement. “You won’t do them any good dead.”
“…we’re on the phone with our affiliate, KSNV MyNews 3, in Las Vegas, Nevada, where things are in chaos and it appears that a terrorist attack has taken place. What can you tell us, Jason?”
Alicia Workman watched in disbelief, raw cellphone footage playing on-screen as the disembodied voice of the reporter began to speak. A fireball fading away into the night sky over the city.
“…an air traffic controller at McCarran, speaking off-the-record, has said that the downed flight was Southwest Flight 295 out of St. Louis, Missouri, but we have been unable to confirm that information. We honestly haven’t been able to confirm anything, Vai. There are reports of automatic weapons fire from north of the Strip and the cellphone network here in Las Vegas just went down moments ago — no one seems to know whether that is also part of the attack, or whether it was simply overloaded with calls.”
The female anchor looked up into the camera, visibly shaken. “And I’d like to thank Jason Cameron for updating us, live from a city under siege. Stay safe, Jason.”
It seemed impossible, she thought, clutching her arms to herself as she sat there on the sofa. But it wasn’t. It was happening again. America was being attacked…
Driving in Vegas could be challenging at the best of times, but it was pandemonium on this night. There’d already been accidents, causing traffic heading out of the city to bottleneck,
“I’m not reaching Thomas,” she heard Han announce from the front seat of the sedan. Another moment and he added, “No signal.”
Harry nodded. “Goin’ in blind. Good times.”
He was the professional once again, all business. As if a switch had been flipped, somewhere within him.
She could still taste his kiss on her lips, feel the fire of his touch. “Promise me.”
There had been no artifice in that moment, she thought, replaying the moment through her mind. No lies.
No walls — armor cast aside to reveal the man beneath, his vulnerability. His humanity.
A man who had cast everything aside to protect her. A man she had begun to love.
She looked out the window at the city moving past, wrestling with the emotions within her. Whatever came of the next few hours, they would see it through. Whatever came…
Footsteps outside, a door opening somewhere down the corridor. It might have been a fellow fugitive, but the steps were too measured, too purposeful.
A searcher.
“Get down,” Cohen whispered, pushing her down behind one of the tables. She could sense him moving toward the door, his form barely lit in the red glow of the EXIT sign.
Toward the danger.
And the footsteps returned, closer now, a hand testing the door. Gilpin found herself holding her breath, fear and anger roiling within her as the door came open, light spilling into the room from the corridor without.
Another step, and a figure entered the room, preceded by a rifle barrel. Where was Cohen?
Movement from the shadows as the Israeli attacked, his elbow lashing out, connecting with the terrorist’s throat. The man reeled, Cohen following him back. She could see the blur of his hands, closing around his target’s neck.
The room erupted suddenly in gunfire, the muzzle flash of an AK-47 lighting up the darkness. The mannequin on the table beside her seemed to dissolve, styrofoam showering her face as bullets whined through the air over head, the reports sounding like cannon fire in the small room…
Over twenty minutes, and their primary target was still missing. They were falling behind schedule.
Gunshots. His head came up, glancing first up toward where the college student and one of his Pakistanis were mounting explosive charges on the main doors of the theatre, then toward the hostages, separated into two groups of thirty there above the first tier of seats.
Backstage. An eerie silence followed the gunfire, an oath escaping his lips. “Status report?” he demanded in Arabic, speaking into his radio headset.
One by one the four men he had dispatched to search for Congresswoman Gilpin checked in.
And then another voice came on the network, a man’s voice growling a foul Arab obscenity. It had to be a bodyguard — to have been able to kill his man. The leader swore, his face flushing with anger. Time to end this.
He advanced on the nearest group of hostages, feeling them shrink away from him as he approached. Power.
Roving across the group, his eyes fell on a young woman in the front row, a brunette — not more than thirty, the hem of her dress riding just above her knees as she knelt there. She reminded him of someone…perhaps one of the American girls that he had known back in those early years when he had first come to this land. Before he had rediscovered his faith.
Without warning, he reached down, grabbing a fistful of her long, dark hair. She pitched forward, screaming as he dragged her out into the open on the blood-stained blue carpet of the theatre, throwing her down on her back.
“What is your name?” He bent forward, his knee pressing into her chest, the muzzle of his Glock only inches away from her frightened eyes. She seemed unable to speak and he was forced to repeat the question, louder this time — his eyes boring into hers.
“B-Brooke,” she stammered, wincing in pain. “Please…”
“I know you can hear me, Congresswoman Gilpin,” he announced, toggling his radio mike. “I want you to know this. I will see you here before me in five minutes. When the time is up, I will put a bullet through Brooke’s right kneecap and let you hear her screams. Ten minutes, the left kneecap. And I will work my way upward…it will take her a long time to die.”
“Think carefully.” Cohen listened, his face impassive, as the terrorist finished speaking. It was nothing new to the Israeli. A decade of violence in his own country…he’d seen all the barbarism mankind had to offer.
He looked over into the congresswoman’s pale face, seeing the fear, the determination written in her eyes. “I have to go out there.”
“He’ll kill her anyway,” he replied bluntly. Diplomacy was of no use to them now.
She didn’t flinch, surprising him with her mettle. “I know…but I can’t hide here while it happens.”
He glanced from the Kalashnikov in his hands down to the dead body before him, the terrorist’s neck skewed sideways at an obscene angle. Once she’s made up her mind, all hell couldn’t stop her, he thought, recalling one of Winfield’s comments the previous day. All that was left was to protect her as best as he could.
Without another word, he dropped the rifle onto the corpse, beckoning for her to follow him out into the corridor.
They had made it halfway back to the theatre when the first shot rang out…
Red. White. Blue. Harry glanced toward the Bellagio as the lights of surrounding police cars continued to wash across his face. Christmas trees filled the gardens of the resort, bedecked with the glories of the season and twinkling brightly in the darkness. A strange counterpoint to the death and destruction within.