Joe glanced at the GPS map, said to me, “Hold on,” and took the turnoff to Airport Road at near sixty.
I was holding on, but the Audi’s wheels hit a rut. The steering wheel bucked under Joe’s hands and the car slewed hard to one side, then the other. I may have screamed.
Knightly was on speaker and he was saying, “We’ve lost her.”
The word her was just out of his mouth when the connection shattered into squawks and static hissing.
Joe yelled, “Knightly! Knightly, can you hear me?”
No, he couldn’t. We had lost our connection with our lead car and had no idea where in the world Alison Muller was.
“Well, this is just perfect,” said Joe.
And then, just ahead of us, another turn branched out under overhead lines. Joe took the turn at way too fast and our tires slid on gravel. The car rocked onto two wheels; then, as before, the tires grabbed and we shot on ahead under an endless, gunmetal-gray sky.
CHAPTER 91
AS WE TURNED onto the airport road, the Coast Mountains, which had formed a forested and impenetrable wall off to our right, were now dead ahead. In front of us and as far as we could see was flat meadowland, rectangular in shape, like five football fields placed side by side and divided by a ten-foot-wide rut of a road.
As we took that dirt road, our headlights hit a cluster of lightweight aluminum sailplane trailers parked haphazardly up ahead and to our left. Peering into the dark, I could just see a small airplane hangar at the far end of the road and off to the right. I could make out several cars to the right side of that hangar, their headlights illuminating a pair of small, stationary airplanes on a landing strip. The runway appeared to be at an angle to the hangar, heading east-west and parallel to the mountains.
Joe doused our lights, eased his foot off the gas, and slowed the car to a crawl.
“That’s got to be her,” he said. “See if you can raise Knightly.”
I reached over to the phone and pressed the Redial button, but as before, there was only static.
I clicked off, then tried again.
I heard bursts of Knightly’s voice, and I shouted, “We’re at the airfield. They’re here.”
Only crackling came over the speaker.
“You’re breaking up. Please repeat,” I said, but the connection failed again.
Joe muttered, “It wasn’t supposed to go down like this.”
As I understood it, the original plan was to surround Muller’s safe house, call her out, and bring her in. This situation had no boundaries. Not even the sky was the limit.
Joe slowed the Audi, and a handful of people exited the cars parked by the hangar. For a moment, they were frozen in our high beams: four Asian men, a hulking white man, and the woman who had to be Alison Muller. She and the hulk ran toward one of the planes, which looked to be a de Havilland Beaver. I knew it to be a sturdy bush plane.
At the same time, the Asians, now positioned behind their vehicles, opened fire.
Joe wrenched the wheel hard to the left and stepped on the brakes, and the Audi skidded in the grass before coming to a stop in the midst of the small trailers. I had my 9mm Glock in my hand, a solid and dependable service gun but no match for the automatic-weapon fire ripping across the meadow, pinging like a hailstorm into the trailers’ aluminum hulls.
It was riskier to turn and run than it was to stand our ground and fight. I’m a good shot, even under pressure.
I was ready.
CHAPTER 92
I FELT UNREASONABLY invincible.
Even then, I knew that what felt like courage was an adrenaline surge fueled by present danger and all of the fear, confusion, and rage I’d repressed over the last weeks.
Joe yelled at me, “Stay in the car!”
Too late for that. My loaded gun was in my hand and my feet were on the ground. I crouched behind a trailer, which was all that stood between me and the people who were strafing us with automatic-weapon fire.
I didn’t have a death wish. I just didn’t expect to die. I was rationalizing. We were thirty yards from the shooters. Everyone was firing into the dark.
Joe said, “I don’t like our odds.”
Then he bounded out of his side of the car and took a position at the butt end of the trailer I was using as a barrier at the front. We aimed and fired on the shooters and reloaded.
When there was a momentary break in the gunfire, Joe yelled, “Alison, give it up! The cops are on the way. No one needs to die. Put down your gun.”
Muller laughed. It was a lovely laugh, both throaty and merry.
“You’re too funny,” she called back.
I saw the flash of Muller’s blond hair as she sprang out from behind a car in a crouch. Her bodyguard followed, the two of them running for the open hatch of the closest plane. My attention was on Muller, but there was something about that bodyguard that rang a tinny bell. I knew him, but I couldn’t place him at all.
And I didn’t have time to think about it.