Blood Will Tell (40 page)

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Authors: Christine Pope

BOOK: Blood Will Tell
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His mouth tasted gummy, and the back of his neck had developed a crick from sleeping half-propped up against the wall of the ventilation shaft, but at least Jerem felt a little less tired. And obviously the kidnappers hadn’t yet discovered that he’d broken out of the room where they’d been holding him. But Jerem knew he probably didn’t have much time. The sun was rising, and when they came in to bring him his morning meal, they’d know right away that he was gone.

Moving as quietly as he could, he went back down the ventilation shaft. He remembered passing another junction point, one about ten meters beyond the spot where he’d overheard the kidnappers discussing how they were going to kill him. At the time he’d ignored it, thinking the fresh air and sea salt he’d smelled were the ticket to freedom, but now all he could do was hope that the tunnel he’d overlooked the night before would prove to be the right one. It sloped upward and to the left. He had to press his spine flat against one side and inch his way up through it using his leg muscles to propel him. Good thing he’d spent almost every waking moment running and climbing and tumbling, or he would never have been able to manage it.

Still, it was a hard slog, and Jerem could feel his thigh muscles starting to tremble in protest by the time he got to the top. His parched mouth begged for water, but he couldn’t do anything about that. He could only dry-swallow and hope that he might be able to find something to drink if he ever did manage to get out of this place.

The last meter or so the ventilation shaft went directly upward, and for a few seconds he wasn’t sure he was going to make it—his feet lost their purchase on the slick surface, and he began to slip backward. But he shoved himself against the wall of the shaft, legs shaking with the effort. Overhead he could see a circle of pale grayish-blue sky, and that welcome sight gave him the strength for the last push. At last he half-fell, half-slid out of the shaft and onto a flat roof of gray concrete.

For a few minutes all Jerem could do was lie there, taking in deep gulping breaths of the cool sea air. The light seemed dazzlingly bright, even though he realized after a few minutes that the familiar dawn-clouds hugged the coast, and the morning was actually quite cool and dim. He rose, his legs shaking under him, and tried to take stock of his surroundings.

The building on which he stood appeared to be several stories high. On either side he saw more structures, oddly shaped and garishly painted, but familiar somehow. He frowned, trying to remember where he’d seen them before. But then he spotted the looming shape of the gravity wheel ahead of him—the ride his mother had refused to take him on—and realized that he was right smack in the middle of the abandoned Stony Point amusement park. A good place to hide someone, he supposed, considering the place had been locked up for a couple of years. At least now he knew where he was—and, more importantly, he knew how to get out of there. The park occupied most of the promontory known as Rendarlin Point, but there was a road that led out of the park and back into downtown Rilsport. All he had to do was get to that road without being spotted and make a run for it.

He’d just begun to trot over to the far edge of the rooftop, where he thought he spotted the curved railings of an access ladder—similar to the one he’d climbed back when he’d sabotaged his school’s holo-sign—when he heard the sound of someone shouting. Immediately he dropped to his hands and knees, then scuttled over to the edge and looked down.

The big Stacian—Korvan, Jerem remembered—had just emerged from the building and was yelling at a dark-haired human who had to have been fairly tall himself, since his head met Korvan’s chin. In response the man shouted something back, although Jerem couldn’t make out what he was saying. Then the rat-faced captor Jerem remembered all too well came running outside, and all three of them engaged in a shouting match for a few minutes. Obviously his escape had just been discovered, and as far as Jerem could tell, everyone was trying to blame everyone else for it.

Good. If they were distracted, maybe they wouldn’t be paying attention to the rooftop. He continued to inch along the edge of the roof, trying to keep the kidnappers in view as he headed toward the ladder he had just spotted. Then the Stacian stopped yelling and appeared to be issuing a series of orders. The two humans went off in opposite directions, no doubt to start searching the property for their lost captive.

Well, it was now or never. Jerem swung his legs over the edge of the roof and felt his feet meet the topmost rungs of the ladder. Then he skidded all the way down, not really climbing, but letting himself down in a sort of controlled fall as he gripped the handrails and prayed he could make it to the bottom before any of the kidnappers came around this corner of the building.

He landed with a thud in an overgrown
maranita
bush. There wasn’t time to worry about the scratches he’d collected—he rolled over and got back on his feet, then hurried over to the corner of the building and risked a quick glance around. He didn’t see anyone, but what he did see, he didn’t like much—there was no cover between him and the next building, a low shed that had once housed the holographic freak show (yet another attraction his mother wouldn’t let him near). Once there had been a low-walled planter filled with exotic off-world bushes, but they had mostly all died from neglect, and the bare earth left behind didn’t offer much in the way of protection.

Still, if he loitered here much longer, he was going to get caught. He had to run now, while the kidnappers were off someplace else. Even though his heart pounded and he was almost sick with dread, he forced himself to take off toward the freak-show building. Fear lent him a speed he didn’t think he was still capable of, and he covered the distance in far less time than he thought he would. No rough shouts stopped him; no guns fired in his direction. He flattened himself against the wall and moved along a few centimeters at a time, trying to breathe through his nose so his panting wouldn’t give his position away.

Then the sound of a pulse pistol cracked through the air, and Jerem fell to his hands and knees once more. It was only after he had lain there for a few minutes, shoulders hunched against the pain of the bolt he was sure he would feel at any second, that he realized no one was shooting at him. Puzzled, he crawled along the ground, using the shelter of some more scrubby bushes to hide him, until he was able to peer around the corner of the building to see what was going on.

The Stacian was nowhere in sight, but Jerem could see the rat-faced kidnapper and the tall dark-haired man trading pot shots with a pair of intruders who had apparently taken shelter inside one of the abandoned ticket kiosks. At first he thought it might be his mom and dad, but then he caught a glint of pale blonde hair from one of the unknown shooters and realized it had to be someone else. Well, if it wasn’t Thorn and his mother, then it didn’t really matter who it was—what mattered was that they had the kidnappers busy, giving him the perfect chance to slip away.

Jerem stood and turned. Then he stopped dead at the sight of Korvan pointing an ugly-looking pistol right at his head.

“Going somewhere, kid?” the Stacian inquired.

XVIII

The chime of the comm woke her. Miala sat up in bed, feeling groggy and disoriented. It had taken her a long while to fall asleep. She didn’t dare take anything that might have helped her, since the last thing she wanted was to feel drugged and slow whenever the kidnappers did end up calling.

She glanced over at the chrono next to her bed. About half-past 0600, which meant she’d probably been asleep for only three hours or so. It could be Thorn, but somehow she doubted it. Pushing the covers aside, she stumbled out of bed and pushed the button on the comm unit to take the incoming call.

The screen remained dark. She heard a rough voice ask, “You’ve got the money?”

“Yes,” she said. Her brain seemed to start firing, adrenaline coursing through her veins and giving her the energy she so desperately needed. “I want to speak to my son.”

“No,” said the kidnapper. “You can talk to him when you’ve brought us the money.”

Miala had been halfway expecting something like that. Trying to remain calm, she replied, “Then how do I know he’s even still alive?”

Without pausing, the kidnapper said, “You want him back? Bring the money to the Stony Point amusement park. Be there in fifteen standard. If we see the merc, the kid dies.” The flat buzz of a disconnected line followed, signaling that the kidnapper had hung up.

Damn
, she thought.
Damn, damn, damn
. But she knew there wasn’t anything she could do at this point except follow the kidnapper’s instructions. Thorn had left her a small signaling device the night before; all she had to do was press the button, and he would know that she was on her way to rendezvous with the kidnappers. He didn’t want her using a comm, in case outgoing transmissions from her hotel room were being monitored, but he’d told her the signal from the tiny unit he’d given her was nearly undetectable. Exactly what he was going to do after he received the signal, he hadn’t told her. She supposed that, once again, he’d kept her in the dark for safety’s sake. If she didn’t know anything, she couldn’t give it away.

Right before she had gone to bed, Miala had laid out her clothes in preparation for the meeting with the kidnappers, and she threw them on now, fastening the tunic with shaking fingers and sliding her feet into the low-heeled, comfortable boots she’d gotten the day before. After that she pulled her hair back into a clip, then knelt and retrieved the satchel which contained the ransom from its hiding place under the bed.

It was early, but she should still be able to catch a mech jitney without too much trouble, as they tended to congregate outside the larger hotels. Clutching the satchel in one hand, she took a breath, then pushed the button on the signaling device Thorn had given her. He already knew where to go, of course—now she just had to get there as well.

She left the hotel room and didn’t look back.

“So how’s your power pack doing?” Jessa inquired, sounding as cool as if they were parked in an unmarked car performing routine surveillance instead of trading potshots with a couple of thugs who apparently had an unlimited supply of charges for their guns.

“Not good,” Creel replied, risking a quick glance at the glowing readout on the butt of his pistol. He had three, maybe four shots left. “How about you?”

“The same,” she said, and squeezed off another blast before ducking down behind the countertop once more. At least this time her shot elicited a gasp and an outraged curse. Apparently she’d connected this time. “Any bright ideas?”

“Not really,” he admitted. Things had gone from bad to worse in such a short period of time that he hadn’t had much of a chance to stop and analyze what had gone wrong. It had seemed like a simple enough plan—head over to Rendarlin Point, do a quick survey of the perimeter of the property, try to get a read on how many perps might be involved. He’d even performed a quick scan with the equipment in their patrol car to see if the place had any security systems online.

Unfortunately, whoever these guys were, they seemed to be well-backed and -supplied. Their equipment had obviously been designed to fool standard-issue detection devices, and snoop sensors had gone off almost the second he and Jessa had alighted from their vehicle. They’d been forced to run for the dubious cover of the ticketing kiosk in which they now hid, since it was the only unlocked structure they could find. While Creel hadn’t been able to determine exactly how many attackers they faced, it had to be at least two and possibly as many as three or four. He thought he’d wounded one of them in the first volley they traded, and now it sounded as if Jessa had done the same, but with their power packs about to die on them, he knew they probably wouldn’t be lucky enough to take out all of their attackers with the few shots the two of them had left.

“Maybe they don’t know we’re cops,” Jessa said. She was wedged under the counter that fronted ticket window, her face looking pale in the shadowy half-light of the coming dawn.

“You think they’ll let us go if we tell them that?” Creel inquired, not bothering to keep the derisive edge from his voice.

“I wish.” Taking advantage of a small lull in the firefight, she popped up from her hiding place, got off two more shots, then slipped back into position under the ticket counter. “But there might be a greater chance of them taking us captive instead of just shooting us outright. Anyone who knows anything about RilSec knows that we take cop-killers very seriously.”

That much was true. Of course, crime was far from nonexistent on Nova Angeles—or he and Jessa would have been out of a job—but much of it involved high-stakes industrial espionage, embezzlement, or just good old-fashioned theft. The last time a RilSec officer had lost his life in the line of duty, a gang of off-world smugglers had turned out to be the culprits. They’d been tracked across ten systems by a task force specially assigned to that purpose, and brought back to Nova Angeles for justice. All parties involved had been found guilty and executed. Capital punishment still existed on the books here, but as far as Creel could recall, those cop-killers had been the only ones he could remember facing such final justice. No, anyone with two brain cells to rub together would probably think of a good reason for trying to avoid taking down one RilSec officer, let alone two.

He hated the idea of just giving up, but they didn’t have a lot of options. Of course the vehicle they’d left behind at the entrance to the amusement park had its normal transponder signal activated, and probably after a while someone at HQ might notice they hadn’t checked in and send out a team to investigate, but Creel doubted that would happen quickly enough to save their asses. Stupid of him not to have signed out more guns, but taking anything more than their usual sidearms would have sent up a lot of red flags. He’d thought they could do this quickly and quietly, then send out for backup if the situation warranted it. After all, there had been a distinct possibility that he and Jessa wouldn’t find anything here at all.

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