ZOVASTINA AND VIKTOR EMERGED FROM THE FISSURE AND STUDIED the scene a hundred meters below. Malone and Vitt were rushing from the helicopter carrying two assault rifles.
“Are those loaded?” she asked.
“No, Minister. Blanks.”
“Which Malone clearly knows, so they’re carrying them for show.”
Gunfire from inside the house caused her alarm.
“Those turtles will explode if damaged,” Viktor said.
She needed Lyndsey before that happened.
“I hid loaded magazines for the pistols and clips for the rifles on board,” Viktor said. “Just in case we needed them.”
She admired his preparedness. “You’ve done well. I might have to reward you.”
“First we need to finish this.”
She clasped his shoulder. “That we do.”
Malone 3 - The Venetian Betrayal
NINETY
BULLETS RICOCHETED OFF THE THICK MARBLE RAILING. A WALL mirror shattered, then crashed to the floor. Stephanie sought cover past where the balustrade began, the others huddled behind her.
More bullets obliterated plaster to her right.
Luckily the angle gave them an element of protection. To obtain a clearer shot, the soldiers would have to climb the stairway, which would also give her an opportunity.
Thorvaldsen came close. “Let me.”
She stepped back and the Dane sent a salvo from the AK-74 down to the ground floor. The rounds produced the intended result. All shooting from below stopped.
A robot reappeared behind them from another of the bedchambers. She paid it no mind until the whine from its electric motor steadily increased in volume. She turned her head and spotted the mechanism approaching the spot where Ely and Lyndsey stood.
“Stop that thing,” she mouthed to Ely.
He stuck out his foot and halted the machine’s advance. It sensed an impediment, hesitated, then sprayed Ely’s pants with mist. She saw him wince from the odor, strong even from her vantage, six feet away.
The thing turned and headed in the opposite direction.
More shots rang out from below as the second floor was peppered with bullets. They needed to retreat and use the concealed passages, but before she could give the order, ahead, on the other side of the railing, one of the soldiers rounded a corner.
Thorvaldsen saw him, too, and before she could raise her gun, he chopped the man down with a burst from the AK-74.
MALONE APPROACHED THE HOUSE WITH CAUTION. HE GRIPPED the pistol in one hand, the assault rifle slung over the other shoulder. They entered through a rear terrace into an opulent salon.
A familiar smell greeted him.
Greek fire.
He saw Cassiopeia register the scent, too.
More gunfire.
From somewhere on the ground floor.
He headed toward the ruckus.
VIKTOR FOLLOWED ZOVASTINA AS THEY DREW CLOSER TO THE house. They’d stayed concealed and watched as Malone and Vitt entered. Lots of rounds being discharged from inside.
“There are nine militia inside,” Zovastina said. “I told them not to use their weapons. Six robots are trolling, set to go when I push this.”
She produced one of the remote controllers he’d many times used to detonate the turtles. He thought another warning in order. “A bullet into any one of those machines that disables it will trigger an explosion, regardless of that controller.”
He saw that she did not require a reminder, but also she did not react with her usual arrogance. “Then we’ll just have to be careful.”
“It’s not us I’m worried about.”
CASSIOPEIA WAS ANXIOUS. ELY WAS SOMEWHERE IN THIS HOUSE, probably trapped, with Greek fire everywhere. She’d seen its destructive force.
The layout was a problem. The ground floor wound around itself like a labyrinth. She heard voices. Straight ahead, beyond another parlor dotted with gilt-framed art.
Malone led the way.
She admired his courage. For someone who complained all the time about not wanting to play the game, he was a damn good player.
Into another room oozing baroque charm, Malone crouched behind a high-backed chair and motioned for her to head left. Beyond a wide archway, ten meters away, she saw shadows dance across the walls.
More voices, in a language she did not know.
“I need a diversion,” Malone whispered.
She understood. He had bullets. She didn’t.
“Just don’t shoot me,” she mouthed back as she assumed a position adjacent to the doorway.
Malone shifted quickly behind another chair that offered a clear view. She drew a breath, counted to three, and told her pounding heart to stay calm. This was foolish, but she should have a second or two of advantage. She leveled the rifle, swung around and planted her feet in the archway. Finger on the trigger, she let loose a volley of blank rounds. Two soldiers stood on the other side of the foyer, their guns pointed toward the second-floor railing, but her shots produced the desired effect.
Startled faces stared back at her.
She stopped firing and dropped to the ground.
Then came two new bangs, as Malone shot both men.
STEPHANIE HEARD THE PISTOL ROUNDS. SOMETHING NEW. HENRIK was crouched beside her, his finger ready on the rifle trigger.
Two more of the soldiers appeared on the second floor, beyond where their comrade lay dead.
Thorvaldsen instantly shot them both.
She was beginning to form a new opinion of this Dane. She’d known him to be conniving, with a disappearing conscience, but he was also cold-nerved, clearly prepared to do whatever needed to be done.
The soldiers’ bodies flew back as high-powered rounds ripped through flesh.
She saw the robot and heard the pings at the same time.
One of the machines had turned the corner, behind the two dying soldiers.
Bullets had pierced its casing. The motor stuttered and jerked, like a wounded animal. Its funnel retracted.
Then the whole thing erupted in flames.
Malone 3 - The Venetian Betrayal
NINETY-ONE