Still nothing. The Iranian wasn’t a lightweight. But then, Reilly had known that already.
He pressed ahead, through a curving stairwell and across another chamber, and was about to go up what felt like a tight tunnel when he heard her.
“Over here,” Tess whispered, from his right.
She reached out and pulled him to her.
“He pass you?”
“Yes,” she replied. “When you were calling out to him. He stopped to listen to you, but didn’t see me.”
“Any idea where we are?”
“No. But we’ve come up a bit. I’d guess we’re maybe a couple of levels underground?”
“There’s no point trying to get him in here. It’s too dangerous,” he said. “We’ve got to get out of here.”
“We need to get this belt off me first,” she told him. “There’s no signal in here. I can’t go go back outside, not while I’m wearing it.”
Reilly’s insides knotted. “How’s it locked into place?”
“There’s a padlock. On the back.” She took his hand and guided it around her back.
He felt it. It seemed heavy and solid. He gave it a tug to test it, more out of frustration than with any expectation that it would give. “Can you turn it around so the padlock’s on your side?”
“Sure, it’s not on that tight. Why?”
“I can try to shoot the padlock off. But I need light.”
Tess exhaled heavily. “You sure?”
“If you stand right up against the corner of the opening of the tunnel, I’ll angle the shot away from you and into the tunnel. Even if it bounces off the metal, it’s not going to hit you.”
“You sure?” she repeated. She didn’t sound convinced.
“I want it off you,” Reilly insisted. “Trust me. But I’ll need you to flick the light on. Just for a second. On and off, that’s all. Okay?”
He’d rarely, if ever, heard her scared. Hadn’t really known her to fear much.
She was scared now.
He helped her position herself right against the edge of the opening into the next tunnel. She tilted her waist out as much as she could and tucked her arms behind her back, out of view. Reilly held the padlock out so it was peeking out from the corner of the doorway. He brought the barrel of his gun right up against its body, pushing it even farther away from Tess.
“Ready?” he asked.
“You ever done this before?”
“Not really.”
She shrugged. “Not the answer I was hoping for.”
“On three. One. Two.”
She flicked the light on at three and Reilly pulled the trigger. The padlock exploded with an ear-splitting crack and a flurry of sparks—and just then, several rounds punched the tufa around them.
“Back,” Reilly hollered, pulling Tess away from the tunnel opening as rock sharpnel flew wildly around them.
Then he heard it—the dead snap of the handgun’s slide locking back after it had belched out its last round.
“He’s out of ammo,” Reilly yelled as he pulled the belt off Tess and flung it into a far corner, then grabbed the flashlight and charged out after him. “Come on.”
He raked the beam ahead of him and spotted the Iranian ducking out of the tunnel and crossing another cavernous room.
He chased after him, his legs flying now, closing in on his prey, the taste of the imminent catch coursing through him.
ZAHED GROUND HIS TEETH as he hurtled through the honeycomb.
He cursed the American woman—cursed her for luring him down here, cursed her for taking his rucksack, cursed her for leaving him out of ammo.
It was time to cut his losses and get the hell out, assuming he’d be able to. He didn’t know what was waiting for him aboveground. He knew Reilly had to be bluffing about there being any troops there, but he couldn’t be sure of that. Even though the canyon hadn’t been swarming with tourists, someone was bound to have heard their earlier gunfight. They might have called the cops. The area could soon be seriously hostile, and slipping away from it wouldn’t be easy, given the limited number of ways in and out of the canyon.
He had to make it out first.
He stormed through a large communal room and dove into a sweeping passageway, the chasing light flickering in and out of view. It was helping him, bouncing off the walls, lighting up passages, giving him glimpses of clarity, but as long as it was there, he was the deer in the headlights. He had to get out of its range. He was moving frantically, as fast as he could, and didn’t know where he was going. It didn’t matter right now. All he could do was follow the cabling, hoping it led back to the entrance.
He could hear Reilly keeping pace, not far behind. He needed to lose him. He glimpsed a narrow stairwell and took the stairs, two at a time. They led both left and right. He chose right and hunched through the passageway, moving quieter now, hoping to confuse his pursuer and buy himself some time.
He had to do something. Delay him somehow.
And then he saw it.
At the mouth of the tight tunnel. A rounded edge, sticking out from the side of its wall. He’d spotted it on the way in.
It was a millstone-like trapdoor. A circular, one-ton piece of rock, with a diameter of around four feet. It was designed to keep invaders out and could be rolled into place quickly just by releasing a couple of timber wedges that held it back.
“Freeze, asshole.”
Zahed turned.
Reilly was there, at the other end of the tunnel. The American had both gun and flashlight aimed at him, the beam making him squint.
He glimpsed Tess appearing behind the agent. His eyes looked for her belt, but it didn’t seem to be there, and from the defiant glare in her eyes, he gathered she was no longer wearing it.
“I should have killed you back in Rome,” Zahed called out to Reilly, buying time.
“Too late now, dickhead. Put the gun down.”
Zahed’s eyes darted across to the base of the millstone and back. The timber wedges that would have been used by the early villagers were long gone. Instead, a rusted piece of iron bar, a far more recent addition, stuck out from the side wall and held the stone in place. It looked like a crude fitting that had been put in decades ago, before the canyons had been condemned and evacuated. There were hardly any tourists visiting Cappadocia then, so safety hadn’t been a paramount issue for the local, self-appointed custodians of the underground cities.
Which was just as well.
“I can’t walk out of here with you, you know that,” he yelled out as he flicked quick glances at the iron rod, processing his options, evaluating his chances.
“It’s your choice, pal. Walk out with me, or be carried out in a black zip bag,” Reilly shot back. “I’m easy, either way.”
“On second thought, you know what?” He paused for a second, then shouted out, “Fuck you,” briefly enjoying the confused look on the agent’s face—and moved like lightning. He darted to his right, the edge of the millstone shielding him from harm, and flipped the gun around in his right hand so he could use its grip like a hammer.
And slammed it against the base of the iron rod.
The angle was perfect.
The bar moved, crumbling the soft rock it was sittting in. A second strike jarred it further.
Tess yelled something out, and Reilly was already rushing toward him, firing.
The third strike did the trick, loosening the bar—just as a round from Reilly’s gun exploded straight through his exposed hand.
REILLY SAW THE IRANIAN LUNGE sideways and raise his gun like a hammer.
He didn’t understand what he was up to—but he knew it wasn’t good. He couldn’t get a clean shot at him, not with that protruding disc of stone blocking him. All he could see of him was his hand, gripping the empty weapon.