“You got your pal here in the building, Van Ness? You have another contact in here? Who is it?”
“Why should I tell you? You going to shoot me? Then they come up here and find you shot a Brigadier General. And they find those bodies…”
“How about if I just shoot you in the—don’t go for that!”
But the Graywater already had the Mack 10 out, was spraying metal toward Wolfe—who fired the .44 as he threw himself back.
Machine pistol rounds tore up the doorframe and thudded into the dead men behind Wolfe. Then Van Ness gasped, fell back, spitting blood.
Wolfe wasn’t sure who’d hit Van Ness, him or the Graywater.
The mercenary was running across the other office, and out into the hallway. He was heading toward the roof. And even from here Wolfe could just hear the sound of chuffing rotors.
Wolfe got up, and saw that the mercenary had dropped the plastic sack. Maybe hoping to implicate Wolfe in the execution of the two men in the office. And it might work.
There wasn’t time to chase the Merc down—the shots would’ve been heard. The marshals would be up here in a minute.
Wolfe stuck the gun in his waistband, turned to the window behind Doolin’s body, and unlocked it. The old style office window opened fairly easily. He could hear shouting from the hallway. Pretty soon, the sirens would start.
He looked out the window—he was three stories up. Cold wind cut at his face; the air smelled of snow, and car exhaust.
Below him was a parking lot, mostly full. To his right, about six feet away, was a drainage pipe. To his left were rows of windows. No easy way down.
He probably should surrender. But…
It wasn’t going to look good. And they weren’t going to be in the mood to listen to crazy stories about drones and planes.
Then, in his mind’s eye, he saw himself taking off his belt earlier, when he went through the metal detector.
He removed his belt, and slung it over his neck, and then climbed through the window. Placing his feet carefully on the ledge, and holding to the inside of the window frame with his left hand, he closed the window with his right. Then he edged toward along the slippery ledge, balancing carefully, holding on with the tips of his fingers along the tops of the granite blocks…
One slip, he’d go over backwards, probably shatter his spine on one of those cars down there.
He heard voices from the window to his right. They were looking at the bodies, in there. No one seemed to have checked the window yet. The door would be open from the adjoining room to the hall. With luck that’d draw them that way.
The chopper on the roof was about to take off. He could hear its engine roaring… Distant sirens approached…
He kept moving, crabwise, step by excruciatingly careful step… and then he wasn’t careful enough. He slipped. He swayed, near falling back…
But the drainage pipe was in reach. He grabbed the pipe with his left hand, and steadied himself. With his right he slipped the belt off his neck, threaded it behind the pipe. He took hold of the pipe with his right hand, then grabbed the belt on both sides—and slid down, rappelling down the side of the building with his own belt.
It was a fast trip down—Wolfe was able to slow it some by braking on the wall with his boots, and his hands burned as he struggled to keep a grip on the belt.
Then he struck the asphalt with both feet. He sucked air through his teeth at the pain, but it didn’t feel as if anything was broken.
He pulled the belt free, and hurried away, weaving past cars to get quickly out of the parking lot.
The sirens were loud, now. And overhead, the helicopter was taking off.
“General Van Ness is dead?” Pearce asked, surprise in his voice.
“Looked pretty dead to me. I didn’t stick around to take his pulse.”
Wolfe was in the corner booth of a crowded bar, talking to Pearce on his phone. He had an untouched beer in front of him.
“You kill Van Ness?”
“Not sure. Hope so.”
“You think you’re going to get blamed for that—and the other two dead men? I mean—you signed in, you went up there. And then there were gunshots…”
“I think they’ll piece together that Van Ness and the guy with him went in at the right time. There are cameras in the lobby. They had to have signed in… Eventually the feds will figure it out.”
“You better hope so. Wait… hold on… holy shit… Verrick is…”
“Pearce—Verrick is what?”
Someone put some loud music on the jukebox. Hip hop of some kind. Wolfe stuck a finger in his other ear to block the noise.
“Wolfe—Verrick’s gone out to the airport…”
“How do you know this?”
“I’ve been monitoring his movements on ctOS. What do you think? He’s heading for the cargo jet area. And—Seline uploaded everything on Bullock’s phone to me.”
“She did?”
“What do you think, she sits around and waits for you to do everything because you’re a macho badass?”
“I kind of was hoping for something like that, yeah. What about Bullock’s phone?”
“I’ve been monitoring his contacts. One of them is this Winters you were talking to. Apparently Verrick didn’t tell him what the plans were for Bullock. He tried to leave a message on Bullock’s phone.”
“To what effect, for crying out loud, Pearce?”
“To this effect, and I quote: Iceberg Project has been moved up. Head to safety zones. It’s happening tonight. In two hours.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
“There are only certain frequencies these drones are likely to be using, Pearce,” Wolfe said, as he strode into Pearce’s safehouse.
An odd, grubby little man named Morrsky had picked Wolfe up at the bar. He’d driven him in a fading 2000 Toyota Echo to pick up Seline. She’d been waiting outside the safehouse under the billiard parlor. Morrsky had taken them to the safehouse Pearce was in—an apartment in a high rise overlooking Lake Michigan.
Pearce was at a desk overlooking the lake, staring into a computer screen.
“Man,” Wolfe remarked, glancing around. “This place is way better than the safehouses I’ve been in. You’re styling in here.”
“Really,” Seline said. “I want an upgrade.”
Pearce glanced up in mild annoyance. “This is my main domicile. But it’s also a safehouse. What were you saying about the drones, Wolfe?”
“These are based on the Navy’s X-47B drones. Smaller but the same idea. Mostly they use GPS for navigation.” As he talked, Wolfe gazed out the window. He could see passenger planes out there. They could all start raining down on Chicago soon if something wasn’t done. “They can switch to a kind of manual with guidance from the operator, via camera, but it’s not as reliable. They use a set of frequencies they can get away with here, without FAA approval. And I know what those would have to be. I’m going to have to go out there. I need you and Seline here to work on the drones from this end. If they’re launched, you might be able to override the GPS and control them manually… Starling might have blocked direct GPS control from outside, by now. Probably has. Pearce—do you have any hand grenades?”
“Nope. Nothing like that. Take me an hour or two to get any decent explosives. We don’t have time. You thinking of just finding this plane and chucking a grenade into it?”
“Thought about it. But sounds like we’re going to have to do this the hard way.”
“Wolfe,” Seline said, sinking onto the posh sofa—she was sitting now but there was no relaxation in her posture. She was tense with worry. “We need to call Homeland Security… I can go out and call them… but they need to ground every aircraft in Chicago. And detour the planes that are coming in!”