Max studied the firearm. “Grace’s position was easy enough to fill, but I’m going to need her weapon back.”
A laugh, a tiny turn of the head. “Sorry…what? You think I’m going to hand over the gun and let you walk out of here?”
“I think nothing of the sort,” Max said. At the same instant he spoke, he moved, like lighting. He may have had thirty years on the scrawny young man, but Max was in good shape. His bulk made him look lumbering and slow. It was easy to underestimate him, as many had found to their cost. He pulled his hands from his head and darted forwards, ducking at the same time. His open left hand came up, palm connecting with the hands that clasped the pistol, forcing them upwards. His right hand, balled into a fist, powered into the skinny man’s belly. The black t-shirt, and the body inside it, folded in two. The gun fired, ripping a tiny hole in the ceiling. As the youth doubled up, Max pulled the firearm free. The boy was down but not out. He staggered backwards, winded, then — to Max’s amazement — came at him again. Max had plenty of time to prepare his defence. A well-aimed kick to the knee snapped the black-marketeer’s leg. He fell to the floor, howling in pain.
“Thanks for the gun,” Max said. He put on the safety catch, and shoved it into his empty back pocket. “Now to sort out your heavy mate.”
He turned back towards the door, but where he had expected to see the muscle of the operation on the floor, he saw only empty space. It wasn’t empty for long. Two feet stepped into view. He looked up to see who they belonged to just in time to see a golf club swinging at his head.
“Zhang!”
The club met its target, and everything went black.
• • •
There was light ahead. Narrow slits of light that bent around the curved sides of the pipe.
The classroom.
Lucya was almost there. Adrenaline flowed, giving her the energy to move faster than ever, but now was not the time for speed. Now was the time for grace, dexterity, and above all, silence.
She needed to get back onto her front before getting any closer. With her arms pushed back up over her head, she rolled over. In the almost total darkness it was easy to become disoriented, and for a few brief seconds she wasn’t sure which way was up. Then common sense kicked in, and she evaluated the effects of gravity on her body, and got herself turned round properly.
The ventilation pipe narrowed as it approached its destination, but Lucya was determined. She had one shot, and having come this far, she didn’t want to take any chances. The cold air blast, although very much evident, had lost its edge so far along. It was imperative that the virus escape through the correct grille, into the occupied room, and not get blown to the end of the pipe which was — she hoped — by now blocked off. And so, pushing herself with her toes, she advanced so far forwards that her hands were able to reach out and touch the grille.
The voices of the Koreans drifted into the tube. They were difficult to hear against the ever-present sound of the cold air. Not that it mattered; she didn’t speak a word of Korean.
She did speak English though, and understood perfectly when one of the children, voice quivering, asked to be allowed to go to the toilet. His request was met with a torrent of what sounded like verbal abuse. When it ended, she could make out the sound of the lad sniffling, and then the voice she most wanted to hear in the world: Erica’s.
“Shh, it’s okay, Tommy. We’ll be out soon, I promise.”
More Korean, this time directed at her. Then, a slap, a noise that filled Lucya with rage, spurring her into action.
She pulled her hands back, away from the grille, and retrieved the tiny plastic container of virus that was connected to a band wound around her throat — the only part of her body that was almost guaranteed not to touch the sides of the pipe during her expedition.
Vardy’s words echoed in her mind. Take a minute before you release the virus. But she didn’t have a minute to spare. It had taken far longer than anticipated to reach the room. A minute spent waiting was a minute less for the virus to get to work. Still trembling with anger, she unscrewed the cap on the container, and reached forwards again with both hands.
The container was a miniature atomiser, the kind used for dispensing air freshener, or perfume. With it lined up against the openings in the pipe, Lucya took a deep breath, and squeezed. She pumped four times, emptying the contents completely. In the narrow shafts of light that entered the grille like rays of sun, she could see the liquid turn to mist. The blown air from the ventilation plant did its job, carrying most of the fine spray out into the classroom. Some of it escaped further up the pipe, to be lost in the dead end. She knew that some might even be sucked back towards her as the airflow bounced and returned. It was a risk she had to take.
Lucya counted forty-five seconds before she had to take a breath. Not bad, she thought, but not great, either. One breath wasn’t enough though. The pent-up anger still held her in its grip, and she found herself panting, short, shallow breaths. A thin wisp of moisture blew back into her face. Instinctively she shut her mouth and her eyes, but her shortness of breath meant she couldn’t help but draw in air through her nose, minute droplets of liquid entering her nostrils along with the precious oxygen she so desired.
It happened before she could even think about it. A body’s natural reaction, an automatic reflex designed to expel the foreign invader. Her eyelids pulled themselves shut, and she sneezed.
Twenty-Nine
“WHAT’S THAT?” JAKE was on his feet, circling an area of the screen with his index finger. “It moved, right? It’s not my imagination. That moved!”
Bodil twisted a knob and the image on one of the monitors zoomed in on the spot Jake had highlighted. There was a frustrating wait while the sonar sent out its next pulse of energy and the screen updated.
Bodil shook her head. “It’s a shoal of fish. Big one, too.”
“But it looks like one object. You said this sonar could detect individual fish. Why aren’t we seeing them as dots or something?”
“At this resolution they appear as a single mass. We are looking for large objects. We can cover more ground at this lower resolution.”
Jake walked back to his chair. He looked at his watch again. Twenty-two minutes. He thought about Lucya, wondered if she had delivered the fatal dose. Wondered if the men were succumbing to the effects. Wondered if Erica was okay.
“I think I’ve made a terrible mistake,” he said, staring at a blank wall. “I shouldn’t be here. I should be back there, ready to negotiate more time.”
Bodil said nothing, remaining fixated on her monitors.
“This was a ridiculous idea. We’ll never find them in time. What was I thinking? Erica was in danger, now Lucya too. And if we can’t get that antidote, anyone who tries to help them is in danger.”
“We’re all in danger from the submarine, Jake.” Bodil didn’t look up. She tapped at keys, scribbled notes on paper, but her eyes never left the all-important screens. “You have others on the ship. Others who will take care of your loved ones, no?”
“Yes, but—”
“If we cannot find the submarine, their efforts might be for nothing.” She leaned forward, examining her monitor closely.
Jake felt something had changed. He turned to watch her. “What is it? You see something?” He took three steps back to her and squinted at the image. It still made little sense to him.
“More fish,” Bodil said calmly. “Sorry.”
Jake studied where she was looking. A darker patch among the circle of colour.
“Bodil, how big is that shoal? What scale are we looking at here?”
“It’s a small one, a few metres across, four or five. I could measure more precisely, but I’d have to stop watching the main screen.”
Jake rubbed his cheek with his right hand, and lifted his head to the ceiling, deep in thought. “Why would you think a shoal of fish four metres across was a hundred-metre-long, seven-thousand-odd-tonne submarine?”