The Chemist

Kevin was in place before the guard came around the corner. The guard ran right past him, gun in hand but held low by his side, pointed at the ground. Kevin’s gun was high. He shot the guard in the back of the head. The man crumpled to the floor. Kevin stepped forward and put one more bullet into his head to be thorough.

The hallway was too narrow to maneuver the gurney around the body. Kevin grabbed it with both hands and lifted it over. Alex did what she could to help, but she knew Kevin was taking most of the weight. She didn’t know how he was still performing at this level, and she was afraid he was going to kill himself trying.

There was no other guard.

“Get him to the car,” Kevin commanded. “Let me finish up here.”

No one tried to stop her; no one shot at her from a darkened window while she ran into the parking lot. The sky was completely black now. The single streetlight near the front door cast only a dim yellow circle toward the parked cars. She fumbled in Daniel’s pockets till she found Carston’s keys. She popped the trunk and ran for her souped-up first-aid kit.

She knew exactly where the blowout gear was. She’d expected either she or Kevin—or both—would be shot, and she’d prepared accordingly. She didn’t need the tourniquet or the QuikClot gauze, but she had several HALO seals, and they would work better than her plastic sandwich bags. She also had a Mylar survival blanket, more saline, and some strong intravenous antibiotics. Bullets were dirty things, and infection would be a concern… if she could keep Daniel alive that long.

She knew she couldn’t. Maybe for twenty-four hours at most with what she had here. Despair made her hands shake as she ripped open the packages.

Then Kevin was right beside her. He threw a heavy black-and-silver square into the trunk.

“Hard drive the cameras recorded to,” Kevin explained. “I’ll get him into the back.”

She nodded, filling her arms with stopgap measures.

When she crawled into the foot space of the backseat, she could see that Kevin had done everything right. Daniel was on his left side. His head was propped up on the driver’s headrest, which Kevin had ripped out of place—violently, it appeared. She checked Daniel’s airway again, his pulse. She could still just make it out in his carotid. The ketamine would keep him under for a while. He couldn’t feel any pain. His system would remain as unstressed as possible under the circumstances.

The car started to move. She could feel Kevin was trying to keep the motion smooth for her, but it wouldn’t be smooth enough.

“Stop,” she said. “Give me a minute to get things in place.”

He hit the brakes. “Hurry, Ollie.”

It took only seconds to switch her makeshift seals for the real thing. She got the IV in quickly and then pinned the bag to the top of the seat back.

“Okay.” As she spoke this time, she could barely recognize her own voice—she knew there wasn’t anything more she could do, and the despair was starting to suck her down. “You can drive.”

“Don’t quit on me now, Oleander,” Kevin growled. “You’re stronger than that. I know you can do this.”

“But there’s nothing more I can do,” she choked out. “I’ve done everything. It’s not enough.”

“He’s going to make it.”

“He needs a level-one trauma center, Kevin. He needs a thoracic surgeon and an operating suite. I can’t clean his wounds or put in a chest tube in the backseat of a damn Bimmer!”

Kevin was silent.

Tears streamed down Alex’s cheeks, but she didn’t feel grief yet. Just rage—at the injustice, at the limitations of their situation, at herself for this ultimate failure.

“If we dropped him off at an ER—” She sobbed.

“We’d be handing him over to the bad guys. They’ll be looking at the hospitals.”

“He’s going to die,” she whispered.

“Better that than he end up in a room like the one you just busted me out of.”

“Didn’t we just kill the bad guys?”

“Pace is still in charge, Ollie, till he slaps the right patch on, and given the current stress level, he might just start smoking again. If he doesn’t die… even without his partners, he has no shortage of muscle at his command. The hospital is out.”

She bowed her head, defeated.

The seconds ticked by. She marked them by the faint, steady pulse in Daniel’s neck. She should probably be driving. She didn’t know how Kevin was still going, but he didn’t even seem fazed by his ordeal, not slowed in the slightest by his myriad of wounds. He was a machine. At least Daniel shared the same iron constitution… But finding any excuse for hope right now was kind of stupid.

“If…” Kevin began thoughtfully.

“Yes?”

“If I could get you to an operating space… if I could get you the things you needed… Could you fill in for the thoracic surgeon?”

“It’s not my specialty, but… I could probably handle the basics.” She shook her head. “Kev, how could we get a suite up and running? If we were in Chicago, sure, I might know a guy, but—”

Kevin laughed once—more of a bark, really.

“Ollie, I’ve got an idea.”

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