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Saint/Sinner

(An Allie Krycek Thriller)

Sam Sisavath

Chapter 1

She knew something was wrong before Walter opened the door and Lucy rushed past the two of them. It was in the air — a strange electricity she hadn’t felt in a long time. That, she told herself, was why it had taken her so long to understand what she was sensing; two years ago she would have acted without hesitation.

Before she could put feelings into words, the fifteen-year-old girl was gone in a blur of jeans and a T-shirt and squeaking tennis shoes.

Walter looked back at her with one of those apologetic smiles that seemed to appear (too) often where his daughter was involved. “I guess she’s excited. We haven’t been here in a long time.”

“Walter, there’s something—” she started to say, when Lucy’s scream froze both of them in place, and she thought, Too late. Too late!

Walter dropped their bags and disappeared through the door before she could grab him. She ran after him instead, pushing the door open before it could close on her. She skidded for a half-second against the polished foyer floor, caked in the fresh dirt Walter and his daughter had tracked inside as they’d gone through the same spots seconds earlier.

“Walter!” she shouted. “Wait!”

But Walter didn’t wait. The scream was Lucy’s, and Allie would have needed an extra pair of arms to hold him back. He was up ahead of her and moving fast. She wasn’t prepared for that kind of speed; in all the months she’d known him, he had never once moved that fast.

She had never been to Walter’s house in the country, and the newness of it temporarily disoriented her even as she attempted to keep up with Walter’s fleeting form. The house was one story but wide, with the kitchen area to her left and the living room in front of her; that left the bedrooms to her (as now, unseen) right. She got a quick glimpse of the back patio through the glass door at the back and nothing but woods on the other side.

“It’s great,” Walter had said. “It’s quiet. Out of the way. It’s private land, so it’ll just be the three of us out there most of the time. My closest neighbor is on the other side of the woods, so far away we can make all kinds of noise and no one would hear.” He had said that last part with a mischievous smile, Walter’s awkward attempt at a sexual joke while forgetting the fact that his daughter would also be there with them. “You’ll love it.”

She was sure she would love it, even if it meant leaving the city behind and coming out here. “The woods,” she had thought when Walter brought up the idea. She had sworn to herself never to venture back into the woods.

And yet here she was, trying to catch up to Walter, and gaining little by little just before he made the turn. She followed, her sneakers squeaking against the polished floor, even as her mind dreaded what she would find on the other side—

Allie slid to a stop at the sight of Walter on his knees, hands clasped over his head, while a man wearing all black stood in front of him, holding a gun to Walter’s temple.

She would have sighed if she hadn’t been so winded from the running. Christ, she was out of shape! Two years of comfortable city living had not only dulled her ability to discern danger, but it had also made her slow. How else to explain Walter outrunning her?

The man wore all black, his light brown eyes looking out at her from behind a balaclava that covered almost his entire face. The gun was black, like his clothes, and the way he held it made the object appear like an extension of his gloved hand. He had something else — a rifle of some sort — slung over his back. It was long and ugly and dangerous. All that dark color made seeing the small details difficult, but Allie’s senses hadn’t been so dampened to the point where she didn’t know, without a single shred of doubt, that she, Walter, and Lucy were in big, big trouble.

“You must be Allie,” the man with the gun said. “Do me a favor and don’t scream.”

“Private land, with the nearest house almost half a mile away,” a second voice said from behind her. “She can scream all she wants.”

Allie whirled around as a second black-clad figure wearing an identical ski mask to the first one stepped out from the kitchen. She wished she could have said she had detected him earlier — she’d even looked across the kitchen at the back patio as she was running through the foyer, for God’s sake — but that would have been a lie.

Both men wore tactical gun belts, bulky pouches tapping against one thigh as they moved. The one behind her was holding some kind of submachine gun, though it looked longer than the ones she was used to because of the smooth silencer attached to the barrel. She cycled through her memory, back to the days when guns were a daily part of her life.

There: MP5SD. Heckler & Koch. 9mm Parabellum. Thirty rounds in the magazine.

None of that knowledge was of any use to her at the moment, as the man strode across the living room and snatched the bag she had been carrying from her. It hadn’t occurred to her that she still had it, and had since climbing out of Walter’s car. Was that why she had lagged behind him as they dashed through the house earlier? Because of the extra baggage?

It definitely wasn’t because you’ve gotten slow and out of shape.

Yeah, let’s go with that.

The gunman tossed her carry-on onto a nearby loveseat and took a step back, dark black eyes squinting behind the visible wide part of his mask. “Take a picture, toots; it’ll last longer,” the man said, chuckling.

As she turned back around, she saw a second corridor, this one toward the back of the house. The angle was all wrong, and she couldn’t see what was inside it. She didn’t spend another second thinking about it, because right now her eyes were focused on what was happening behind the man pointing the gun at Walter’s temple: A third masked figure, much larger than the first two, was bringing Lucy out of the bedroom hallway. The man’s gloved fingers had a vicious grip on Lucy’s hair, and the teenager stumbled, fighting back tears the entire time. She struggled against the man, unaware that the more she fought, the stronger the man’s hold and the pain that resulted.

“Lucy, stop it, stop fighting him,” Allie said.

Maybe it was the measured tone in her voice, but it got through to the fifteen-year-old, and Lucy finally stopped struggling.

“Ask and it shall be done,” the man in front of Walter said. Then, to the one behind her, “Check the car. Make sure they didn’t bring anyone extra along with them.”

The second man left without a word.

“It’s okay, sweetheart,” Walter said, trying to catch Lucy’s eyes as she was led past him. “It’ll all be okay. I promise. Go to Allie.”

Lucy was losing the battle to hold in her tears when the man mercifully let go of her hair and Lucy ran toward her. Allie grabbed the girl in a hug, realizing with some irony that this was the first time she and the teenager had ever done more than just shake hands or exchange brief nods with all the sincerity of strangers passing on the street.

But right now that young girl, who never gave her the time of day, was trembling uncontrollably against her, thin arms wrapped so tightly around Allie’s waist that she would have felt the uncomfortable pressure if she weren’t too preoccupied with other things — like the two heavily-armed masked men in the house with them at the moment, and the third one somewhere outside.

“What do you want?” Allie asked the one in front of Walter, the one who had been giving all the orders.