The Venetian Betrayal

 

STEPHANIE NOTICED THAT THE SICKENINGLY SWEET AROMA WAS not as strong in the back passages, but nonetheless lingered. At least they weren’t trapped any longer. Several turns had led them deeper into the house and she’d yet to see another open exit.

 

“I’ve seen how this concoction works,” Thorvaldsen said. “Once Greek fire ignites, these walls will burn quickly. We need to be out of here before that happens.”

 

She was aware of their dilemma, but their choices were limited. Lyndsey was still anxious, Ely amazingly calm. He had the countenance of an agent, not an academician, a coolness she admired considering their predicament. She wished she possessed more of his nerve.

 

“What do you mean by quickly?” Lyndsey asked Thorvaldsen. “How fast will this place burn?”

 

“Fast enough that we’ll be trapped.”

 

“So what are we doing in here?”

 

“You want to go back to that storage closet?” she asked.

 

They turned another corner, the dark hall reminding her of a corridor in a train. The path ended just ahead at the base of a steep stairway, leading up.

 

No choice.

 

They climbed.

 

 

 

 

MALONE STEADIED HIMSELF.

 

“Going somewhere?” Viktor asked.

 

Cassiopeia stood behind him. He wondered about Zovastina’s location. Was the dancing light merely a ploy to draw them out?

 

“Thought we’d leave.”

 

“Can’t let you do that.”

 

“If you think you can stop me, you’re welcome to—”

 

Viktor lunged forward. Malone sidestepped the move, then locked his attacker in a bear hug.

 

They dropped to the floor and rolled.

 

Malone found himself on top. Viktor struggled beneath him. He clamped a hand onto the other man’s throat and sank his knee deep into Viktor’s chest. Quickly, with both hands, he yanked Viktor upward and slammed the back of his skull into the rocky floor.

 

 

 

 

CASSIOPEIA READIED HERSELF TO LEAP INTO THE POOL AS SOON AS Malone broke free. At the same instant Viktor’s body went limp beneath Malone, movement out of the corner of her eye drew her attention to the doorway where they’d been hiding.

 

“Malone,” she called out.

 

Zovastina rushed toward her.

 

Malone sprang off Viktor and found the water.

 

Cassiopeia dove in after him and swam hard for the tunnel.

 

 

 

 

STEPHANIE TOPPED THE STAIRS AND SAW THERE WAS A CHOICE OF routes. Left or right? She turned left. Ely headed right.

 

“Over here,” Ely called out.

 

They all rushed his way and saw an open doorway.

 

“Careful,” Thorvaldsen said. “Don’t let those things out there spray you. Avoid them.”

 

Ely nodded, then pointed at Lyndsey. “You and I are going after that flash drive.”

 

The scientist shook his head. “Not me.”

 

Stephanie agreed. “That’s not a good idea.”

 

“You’re not sick.”

 

“Those robots,” Thorvaldsen said, “are programmed to explode, and we don’t know when.”

 

“I don’t give a damn,” Ely said, his voice rising. “This man knows how to cure AIDS. His dead boss has known that for years, but let millions die. Zovastina has that cure now. I’m not going to let her manipulate it, too.” Ely grabbed Lyndsey by the shirt. “You and I are going to get that drive.”

 

“You’re nuts,” Lyndsey said. “Frickin’ nuts. Just go up to the green pool and drink the water. Vincenti said it worked that way. You don’t need me.”

 

Thorvaldsen watched the younger man closely. Stephanie realized that the Dane was perhaps seeing his own son standing before him, youth in all its glory, simultaneously defiant, brave, and foolish. Her own son, Mark, was the same way.

 

“Your butt,” Ely said, “is going with me into that lab.”

 

She realized something else. “Zovastina went after Cotton and Cassiopeia. She left us in this house for a reason. You heard her. She purposefully told us those machines would take a little time.”

 

“We’re insurance,” Thorvaldsen said.

 

“Bait. Probably for Cotton and Cassiopeia. But this guy,” she pointed at Lyndsey, “him, she wants. His babbling made sense. She doesn’t have time to be sure an antiagent works, or that he’s being truthful. Though she may not admit it, she needs him. She’ll be back for him before this place burns. You can count on it.”

 

 

 

 

ZOVASTINA LEAPED INTO THE POOL. MALONE HAD BESTED VIKTOR and Cassiopeia Vitt had managed to elude her.

 

If she swam fast she could catch Vitt in the tunnel.

 

 

 

 

MALONE PLANTED HIS PALMS AND PUSHED HIMSELF UP FROM THE pool. He felt a rush beneath him and saw Cassiopeia surface. She deftly sprang from the warm water and, dripping wet, grabbed one of the guns that lay a few feet away.

 

“Let’s go,” he said, retrieving his shoes and shirt.

 

Cassiopeia backed toward the exit, gun leveled at the pool.

 

A shadow clouded the water.

 

Zovastina’s head found air.

 

Cassiopeia fired.

 

 

 

 

THE FIRST EXPLOSION STARTLED ZOVASTINA MORE THAN FRIGHTENED her. Water cleared from her eyes and she saw Vitt aiming one of the guns straight at her.

 

Another bang. Unbearably loud.

 

She plunged beneath the surface.

 

 

 

 

CASSIOPEIA FIRED TWO TIMES AT THE ILLUMINATED POOL. THE gun seemed to jam so she worked the slide, ejecting a cartridge, loading a new round. Then she noticed something and faced Malone.

 

“Feel better?” he asked.

 

“Blanks?” she asked.

 

“Of course. Rounds stuffed with wadding, I imagine, so there’d be enough kick to at least partially work the slide. But not enough, obviously. You don’t think Viktor would have given us bullets?”

 

“I never thought about it.”

 

“That’s the problem. You’re not thinking. Can we go now?”

 

She tossed the gun away. “You’re such a joy to work with.”

 

And they both fled the chamber.

 

 

 

 

VIKTOR RUBBED THE BACK OF HIS HEAD AND WAITED. ANOTHER few seconds and he’d roll into the pool, but Zovastina returned, breathing hard as she emerged from the water, and rested her arms on the rocky edge.