and climbed aboard, but the key was gone, and when he realized it he jumped off and pulled a pistol out from a pocket in his coveralls.
âDo you want to spend the rest of your life in jail, you stupid bastard?â Egan shouted. He pointed back toward the rise. âMoose is dead, you saw his body. And no one inside the power plant will survive.â
âYou shot Ada.â
âThe bitch would have died trying to find her friend. They were dykes. What does your religion say about that?â
Kemal shook his head in despair. âThey were ready to convert. I gave them a Quran.â
âGo back and get them, if thatâs what you want,â Eagan said, and he tossed the key over. âBut youâll die trying, and we wonât wait for you.â
âGive me ten minutes,â Kemal said, and pocketing his pistol he turned to get back aboard the ATV.
Egan unslung his carbine and fired a short burst, catching Kemal low in the back, knocking him forward, the second and third shots taking the back of his skull off.
âItâs a tough old world,â Egan mumbled.
Gordy came back to the door, his eyes wide. âHoly shit, you wasted the doc.â
âHe was getting stupid on me.â
The two of them carried Kemalâs body into the motor home and dumped it on the floor in the rear compartment. Egan went back outside and disconnected the ATV trailer from the hitch, undid the chains, and let the tongue drop to the ground.
He checked his wristwatch and looked up toward the crest of the rise. The next explosion, this one just behind the wellhead would occur within the next five minutes, and as much as he wanted to wait around to hear it, he wanted to be well away before the cavalry arrivedâwhich would happen at some point this evening.
If the final phase of the operation went as heâd planned it, he would be drinking a cold beer heâd left in the mini-fridge in his room at the Radisson in Rapid City sometime before midnight. Tomorrow morning he would fly to Chicago aboard United 6190 at six oâclock. Just another businessman trading in coal futures. Which he thought was actually a good joke.
From Chicago he would lay low in Michiganâs Upper Peninsula until the dust settled and he found out about his payment from Kast.
Gordy was behind the wheel when Egan climbed back aboard. âSouth,â he said. âTwelve miles to White Butte where weâll ditch the rig and pick up our Chevy. Remember the way?â
âJust the two of us now,â Gordy said nervously.
Egan grinned. âYup, itâs a tough old world out there, son, but look on the bright side. Now we just have to split the money two ways, not six.â
Gordy suddenly grabbed for something inside his white coveralls, but before he could turn in his seat, a pistol in his hand, Egan flipped his PDW off his shoulder and pulled off one shot at point-blank range to the side of the kidâs head, slamming his body against the side window.
It took a couple of minutes to manhandle the kid out of the driverâs seat and clean up the blood splatter before Egan got behind the wheel and headed south on the dirt road, twenty minutes or more before any communications to or from the Initiative would be possible.
And in the following confusion it might take an hour or more before the Air Force Rapid Reponse team made it up from Ellsworth in Rapid City.
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15
ASHLEY FELT NO pain in her right hip, which she didnât think was right. Jim Cameron was lying half on and half off her and Dr. Lipton, the woman who wasnât supposed to be here, was sprawled on her side under some piping, their faces inches apart.
âI think we need to get out of here before the place comes down around our heads,â she said, but she was whispering and Whitney shook her head.
Cameron rolled away, his pistol in hand and he fired off two shots toward a section of the upper part of the furnace that was
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