Traffic was heavy and he fancied that Beau might be able to outrun a pushbike, so Webb settled on something else. The motorbike rider was sat astride his red and silver machine, studying a map at the side of the road when Webb barged him aside without warning. The man flew, the bike crashed to the floor.
Webb glanced back and saw Beau breaching the gang of onlookers and locking on to him so fast he might be giving off a halo, or something similar. He struggled with the bike, ignoring the moans of the man who looked like he’d broken an arm in the crash. Webb kicked him in the stomach. That helped untangle the idiot and felt rather good. Webb hefted on the handlebars, hauled the heavy lump upright. The keys were there, the engine just ready for ignition. Webb concentrated on getting it started and then squeezed the throttle. Beauregard couldn’t be too far behind; no time to waste.
He accelerated hard, felt a hand brushing his ribs and an icy flash of fear. No! Not now! The front wheel rose as he twisted the throttle wide open, engine roaring. Beau had no choice but to fall away. Webb arrowed it between two slow moving cars, not caring about a woman trying to pass through, laughing as he almost clipped her shoulders with the raised front wheel. The meek passed in his wake, as they should. He was a whirlwind, born to rule and destined to become their absolute master. They would live and die like weeds before him, unless he chose to cut them down first.
The bike leveled out. Webb swung it past front and rear fenders, in between vehicles, scratching metal where the gap was tight and not caring. A car-free but pedestrian-filled crosswalk provided a chance to open her up again, and to laugh as the weak and the fearful scattered like terrified sheep. No way could Beau or the Drake crew live with this. Webb was a god amongst men yet again, heading for…
He paused the self-acclaim in his head. Crap, where am I heading? Is this the right?
Sabrina had done her research previously, and then told him the location of the place he sought — a deep-rooted, long-standing college that Germain had frequented in his heyday. More important, and led by the clue he discovered, Webb had told Sabrina of the library inside the college, which he sought.
Germain had used this library almost as his own resource room, studying there for days at a time and allowing none within to join him as he worked. Webb had previously known of the library since it was listed as one of the many European haunts the Count frequented, but until now knew nothing of its underlying importance.
The Count had been seen at so many places, his movements so well documented by local dignitaries and kings and queens, it was hard to pick them apart. Sabrina had pinpointed the place and told Webb how to reach it — the doors to use and windows to avoid, passages to use and places through which to creep. He’d thought about making her come along, but remembered she might have the guile to see his brilliance and attempt to steal all his glory. Still, if all went as planned he would need her impeccable services at least once more.
Webb read road signs and tried to make sense of them. The college was at least a half hour from here, but the traffic was so thick it steered even him in but a single direction. He considered cutting across several lanes of traffic, but thought he might end up with something broken. Behind, he saw figures approaching, more than one, and felt just a small niggle of despair.
Tenacious bastards. Why couldn’t they have died at Niagara Falls? Or Tokyo or Arizona? Didn’t they have anything else to do? All he asked for was a nice, quiet life, enjoying the freedom to destroy others. It was his gift, a birthright. Briefly, he wondered if he could talk to them about it. Explain. Surely…
Reality kicked in again as a horn sounded. Webb glared at its owner, then tried to memorize the license plate for later amusements. He shot by, seeing the instruments of his downfall fast approaching. Gaining hard. Nowhere to go. Webb joined another stream of traffic that appeared to be moving faster, leaned over the front of the bike and urged it on. He could hear them shouting now, urging him to stop.
Wait…
To his right came more hunters, these ones terrifyingly familiar. Aboard motorcycles and toting guns they swerved and veered and plowed toward him. Back at the Camp Nou he’d been expecting the group, it was why he’d chosen the crowded venue — more bodies to put between himself and the guns — but out here, in the crawling traffic, he was intensely vulnerable.
Webb gunned the motor, firing forward. Black shapes darted across from the side and shots started to ring out. Pedestrians stared in disbelief, then scattered. The stupid sounded their horns at the passing bikes. Others cracked open their doors and raced for cover, adding to the traffic jam that already clogged Barcelona’s streets.
Webb hunkered down as far as he could, guiding the bike with vigorous abandon and trusting to his inbred, godlike ability to survive. As if by magic the answer emerged from the haze of light ahead.
Webb opened the throttle, taking the bike up onto the sidewalk.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Drake saw Webb steal the motorbike and Beau’s last lunge to try to stop him. The Frenchman fell short and hit the road; Webb roared away.
Drake cursed. “Shit, Webb has more lives than Mario on freeplay.”
Yorgi nodded. “Beau is not on his game today.”
“Webb’s clever,” Kinimaka admitted. “We know that.”
“Stop blabbing,” Hayden said. “And help chase him down.”
They chased their prey down, reckless through the traffic, skirting cars and avoiding pushbikes and pizza delivery cycles. Drake found the delivery guys and the locals the worst, all darting in and out of spaces to gain half a car’s length and making everybody else’s lives that much harder. He bounced off a Prius, came back off a 4x4’s tall tire and darted past a dangerously weaving motorcycle. Pedestrians slowed him down; Alicia and Mai finding a quicker route along the sidewalk. Dahl picked the weaving motorcycle up, complete with rider, and placed it out of the way, facing the wrong direction. Kinimaka stumbled against a white Range Rover, pulling an apologetic face at the shocked driver. They caught up to Beau as the Frenchman slowed for them.
“Bit slow there, mate,” Drake observed breezily. “Unlike you.”
“He was lucky.”
Ahead, Webb drove recklessly, arrogantly. It was Hayden who noticed the new team coming in from the left, weapons as visible as their helmets, bikes all a uniform pitch black, intentions as clear as their intended quarry.
“Heads up!”
But Drake and Dahl had already seen them and were angling their runs accordingly. Drake wrenched a pizza storage box off the back of a bike and threw it at the first rider. It smashed into the man’s arm, exploding, sending plastic and pizza everywhere. The bike wobbled, crashed against a car before righting itself and shooting off again.
Drake targeted the next before he could bring his gun to bear. The bike zoomed past just a few inches away and the Yorkshireman yanked on an arm. Both bike and man went skidding through the traffic, ending up piled against the wheel of a Nissan pickup. Dahl collided with his man like a charging rhino, both of them crashing to the floor and scraping along for several feet. The difference was that Dahl took the man’s gun and rendered him unconscious before then stealing his bike and gunning the throttle.
“Hop on,” he said to Drake.
“I’ll catch the next one,” Drake replied.
The third to pass their position received a flying kick to the ribs that sent his gun zipping away, and even his helmet clattering down the street. Drake hefted the bike, its wheels spinning, and righted it before motoring hard after the Swede. Kinimaka and Smyth were mopping up behind, giving the front runners freedom to close the gap.