The Venetian Betrayal

“I forgot about the guns. They have us trapped. The only way out is guarded.”

 

 

Viktor’s head hurt from the pounding and he fought an irritating dizziness. “Minister, the guns are loaded with blanks. I changed all the magazines before we escaped from the palace. I didn’t think it wise to give them loaded guns.”

 

“Nobody noticed?”

 

“Who checks rounds? They simply assumed the guns aboard a military chopper were loaded.”

 

“Good thinking, but you could have mentioned that to me.”

 

“Everything happened so fast. There wasn’t time and, unfortunately, Malone gave my skull a good pop on these rocks.”

 

“What about Malone’s gun from the palace? That was loaded. Where is it?”

 

“In the chopper. He changed it out for one of ours.”

 

He watched as her mind rolled through the possibilities.

 

“We need Lyndsey from the house. He’s all that’s left here now.”

 

“What about Malone and Vitt?”

 

“I have men waiting. And their guns are loaded.”

 

 

 

 

 

Malone 3 - The Venetian Betrayal

 

 

 

 

 

EIGHTY-NINE

 

 

STEPHANIE STARED OUT THROUGH THE OPEN PANEL INTO ONE OF the mansion’s bedchambers. The room was elaborately furnished in an Italian style and quiet save for a mechanical whir from outside an open door, which led to the second-floor hall.

 

They stepped from the back passage.

 

One of the Greek fire machines whizzed passed in the hall, spewing mist. A pall hung heavy in the room, evidence that the robots had already visited.

 

“They’re quickly basting this house,” Thorvaldsen said as he moved to the hall door.

 

She was just about to caution him to stop when the Dane stepped out and a new voice—male, foreign—shouted.

 

Thorvaldsen froze, then slowly raised his arms.

 

Ely crept close to her ear. “One of the troops. He told Henrik to halt and raise his hands.”

 

Thorvaldsen kept his head toward the guard, who apparently was positioned to their right, without a way to see inside the room. She’d wondered about the troops, hoping that they’d been evacuated when the machines started their patrol.

 

More loud words.

 

“What now?” she whispered.

 

“He wants to know if he’s alone.”

 

 

 

 

MALONE AND CASSIOPEIA CLAMBERED DOWN THE INCLINE IN their wet clothes. Malone buttoned his shirt as they descended.

 

“You could have mentioned that the guns were duds,” Cassiopeia said to him.

 

“And when would I have done that?” He hopped over rocks and hastened down the steep slope.

 

Breaths came fast. He certainly wasn’t thirty years old anymore, but his forty-eight-year-old bones weren’t totally out of shape. “I didn’t want Viktor to even sense we knew anything.”

 

“We didn’t. Why’d you give up your gun?”

 

“Had to play his game.”

 

“You’re an odd bird,” she said to him, as they found level ground.

 

“I’ll take that as a compliment, coming from someone who traipsed around Venice with a bow and arrow.”

 

The house lay a football field away. He still saw no one roaming the exterior and no movement inside, past the windows.

 

“We need to check something.”

 

He raced toward the chopper and leaped into the rear compartment. He found the weapons locker. Four AK-74s stood upright, ammunition clips stacked beneath.

 

He examined them. “All blanks.” Barrel plugs had been carefully inserted to accommodate the phony rounds and allow the cartridges to be ejected. “Thorough little cuss. I’ll give him that.”

 

He found the gun he’d brought from Italy and checked the magazine. Five live rounds.

 

Cassiopeia grabbed an assault rifle and popped in a clip. “Nobody else knows these are useless. They’ll do for now.”

 

He reached for one of the AK-74s. “I agree. Perception is everything.”

 

 

 

 

ZOVASTINA AND VIKTOR EMERGED FROM THE POOL. MALONE AND Vitt were gone.

 

All the guns lay on the sandy floor.

 

“Malone’s a problem,” she made clear.

 

“Not to worry,” Viktor said. “I owe him.”

 

 

 

 

STEPHANIE LISTENED AS THE TROOPER IN THE HALL CONTINUED to bark orders at Thorvaldsen, the voice coming closer to the doorway. Lyndsey’s face froze in panic and Ely quickly clamped a hand over the man’s mouth and dragged him to the other side of a poster bed, where they crouched out of sight.

 

With a coolness that surprised her, she locked her gaze on a Chinese porcelain statuette resting on the dresser. She grabbed it and slipped behind the door.

 

Through the hinge crack she saw the guard enter the bedchamber. As he stepped clear, she planted the statue into the nape of his neck. He staggered and she finished him off with another head blow, then snatched the rifle.

 

Thorvaldsen darted close and retrieved the side arm. “I was hoping you’d improvise.”

 

“I was hoping these men were gone.”

 

Ely brought Lyndsey.

 

“Good job with him,” she told Ely.

 

“He has the backbone of a banana.”

 

She studied the AK-74. She’d learned about handguns, but assault rifles were another matter. She’d never fired one. Thorvaldsen seemed to sense her hesitation and offered her his gun. “Want to switch?”

 

She did not refuse. “You can handle one of those?”

 

“I’ve had a little experience.”

 

She made a mental note to inquire more about that later. She approached the doorway and carefully spied into the hall. No one in either direction. She led the way as they crept down the hall toward the second-floor foyer, where a staircase led down to the main entrance. Another of the Greek fire machines appeared behind them, darting from one room into another. Its sudden appearance drew her attention momentarily away from what lay ahead.

 

The wall to her left ended, replaced by a thick stone balustrade.

 

Movement below caught her gaze.

 

Two soldiers.

 

Who instantly reacted by leveling their rifles and firing.

 

 

 

 

CASSIOPEIA HEARD THE RAT-TAT-TAT OF AUTOMATIC WEAPON fire from inside the house.

 

Her first thought was Ely.

 

“Just remember,” he said. “We’ve only got five good rounds.”

 

They leaped from the chopper.