Authors: Matthew Reilly
Without her.
Empty.
Meaningless.
And with that, he looked down at the Desert Eagle pistol in his holster . . . and he drew it.
âHey there, champ,' a voice said from behind him. âWhatcha planning on doing with that gun?'
It was Mother.
Standing right behind him.
Schofield didn't turn around when he spoke. âNobody cares, Mother. We could save the world and nobody would give a shit. People would go on living their lives, completely unaware of soldiers like us. Like Gant.'
Mother's eyes were locked on the gun in his hand. Rain dripped off it.
âScarecrow. Put the gun away.'
Schofield looked down at the Desert Eagle, seemed to notice it for the first time.
âHey,' Mother said. Solely to distract him, she asked a question that she already knew the answer to. âWhat did she mean when she said, “Tell him, I would have said yes”?'
Schofield looked away into the distance, spoke like an automaton.
âShe could read me like a book. I could never keep anything secret from her. She knew I was going to propose in Tuscany. That's what she was gonna say yes to.'
He shifted his grip on the gun. Bit his lip. Another tear streaked down his face. âJesus, Mother. She's dead. She's fucking dead. There's nothing left for me now. Screw it. The world can fight its own battles.'
With a quick move, he placed the gun under his chin and pulled theâ
But Mother moved faster.
She tackled him just as the gun went off and the two of them went rolling in the mud by the cliff edge.
And they foughtâMother trying to pin his gun-hand, Schofield trying to push her clear.
Taller, stronger and far bulkier, at first Mother had the jump on him. She pinned him underneath her great weight and punched his gun-wrist. The Desert Eagle dropped out of his hand. Then she smacked him hard in the faceâ
The blow had a strange effect on Schofield.
It seemed to focus him.
With almost disturbing ease, he grabbed Mother's left wrist with two fingers and twisted it. Mother roared with pain and Schofieldâwith perfect centre-of-gravity manipulationâthrew her clear off him.
And they both stood.
Facing each other on the wind-lashed cliff, squaring off in the driving rain.
âI won't let you do it, Scarecrow!' Mother yelled.
âI'm sorry, Mother. It's too late.'
Mother moved.
She advanced quickly, unleashing a bone-crushing right, but Schofield ducked it, hit her back, square on the nose. Mother swung again, but Schofieldâperfectly balanced in the mudâavoided that blow too, and hit her again.
Mother staggered back to a standing position. âYou're gonna have do more than that to get rid of me!'
She lunged at him again, driving into him with her shoulders, tackling him linebacker-style, lifting him off his feet and sending them both crashing to the earth.
Over by the
Black Raven
, Aloysius Knight and Rufus just stood there in the rain, watching the fight like stunned spectators.
Rufus took a step forward, making to interveneâbut Knight stopped him with a light hand to the chest, never taking his eyes off the battle.
âNo,' he said. âThis is for the two of them to sort out.'
Schofield and Mother rolled in the mud, struggling.
Mother seemed to have him pinned when suddenly Schofield landed a short sharp elbow to her jaw andâagain with surprising strengthârolled her clear.
He stood.
She stood.
Both were dripping with mud.
Mother staggered slightly, tiring, but she re-engaged anyway, swinging blindly.
Schofield parried every blow easily now, martial-arts-style. Mother roared in frustration just as he spun on one knee and swept her legs out from under her, and Mother fell unceremoniously onto her butt in the mud.
Having won for himself the distance he needed, Schofield walked back over to his gun, picked it up.
âScarecrow, no!' Mother called, tears welling in her eyes. âPlease, Shane, don't . . .'
Â
And for some reason, that stopped him.
Schofield paused.
Then he realised what it was.
For as long as he could remember, Mother had never called him by his first name. Not even in situations outside the Marine Corps.
He lowered the gun an inch, gazed at her.
She looked pathetic: on her knees on the ground, covered in mud, tears streaking down her face.
âShane,' she called, âthe world may not care. The world may not know that it needs people like you and Gant. But I care! And I know that I need you! Shane, I have a husband and some beautiful niecesâthey're thirteen years old and they all dress like Britney fucking Spearsâand I have a mother-in-law who hates my guts.
âBut I love them all, love 'em to death, and I don't want to see them living in a world of suffering and death that is run by a bunch of billionaire motherfuckers.
But I can't stop that from happening
. I can't. No matter what I do, no matter how hard I try, in the end I'm just not smart enough, not quick enough, not good enough. But you are. You can beat them. And do you know why? I do. I've always known it. And my little Chickadee knew it, too, and that was why she loved you.
It's because you can do things that other people can't
.'
Mother was on her knees in the mud, eyes filled with tears.
âShane, I ain't the smartest kid in the class, but I know this: people are people. They're selfish and they're self-centred, they do stupid things and they have absolutely no idea that there are heroes like you out there looking after them every day.'
Schofield didn't say a word.
The rain smacked against his cheeks.
But Mother had broken the spell.
Life was coming back into his eyes.
âI don't call you Shane,' she said. âYou probably know that. But do you know why?'
Schofield was rooted to the spot. Frozen.
âNo. Why?'
âCause you ain't a regular fucking fella. You ain't a “Brad” or a “Chad” or a “Warren”. You're the Scarecrow.
The fucking Scarecrow
.
âYou're more than just an ordinary guy. Which is why I've never treated you like an ordinary guy. You're better than all of them. But if you off yourself now, if you take the easy way out, then you're taking the path that Brad or Chad or Warren would take. That ain't you. That ain't the Scarecrow. The Scarecrow is made of tougher stuff than that. Now, I ain't saying living is going to be easyâI don't know if any normal person could bounce back after hearing what you just heardâbut if anyone can, it's you.'
Schofield was silent for a long time.
Then at last he spoke.
âI'm going to kill them all, Mother,' he said. âThe bounty hunters who caught her. All the bounty hunters involved in this hunt. Plus everyone on Majestic-12 who made this happen. And when it's all overâhowever it turns out, whether the world survives this crisis intact or whether it goes to hell on a handcartâI'm going to find Jonathan Killian and I'm going to blow his fucking brains out.'
Mother smiled through her tears. âSounds good to me.'
âBut Mother,' he added somewhat ominously, âI won't guarantee what I'll do
after
that.'
âThen I guess I'll just have to fight you again,' Mother said.
And at that, Schofield blinked.
Life had fully returned.
Mother nodded. âScarecrow. Nobody else may ever say this, so I'll just say it for me . . . and for Ralph, and for the six Britney clones and my bitch from hell mother-in-law. Thank you.'
Schofield came over to her, extended his hand. Mother clasped it and let him haul her up.
Before he could move off, however, she embraced him in a mighty hug, engulfing his body in her massive frame. Then she kissed him on the forehead and guided him back to the
Raven
with one arm around his shoulders.
âI miss her already,' she said as they walked.
âMe, too,' Schofield said. âMe, too.'
They walked together.
âMother, I'm sorry I hit you.'
âHey, it's okay. I hit you first.'
âThanks for fighting me. Thanks for not letting me go.'
Â
UPPER NEW YORK BAY, USA |
Exactly eleven minutes after his Concorde had touched down on the tarmac at JFK, Book II was sitting in the back of a Marine Corps CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter, blasting over the Statue of Liberty and Upper New York Bay, the mighty steel-and-glass mountain range of New York City spread out behind him.
Seated in the hold with him were twelve fully-armed Force Reconnaissance Marines.
âYou found
terrorists
at the plant?' Book shouted into his mike, puzzled. He was talking to the leader of the Department of Defense team that had checked the Axon plant earlier, a man named Dodds.
â
Yes. All from Global Jihad, includingâwait for itâShoab Riis. Looks like it was a hell of a fight there,
' Dodds said.
âGlobal Jihad,' Book said. âBut that just doesn't makeâ' He cut himself off.
Suddenly he understood.
Majestic-12 needed someone to blame for all this. And who better than a terrorist organisation?
For, really, how could Axon Corp help it if Global Jihad terrorists stole their missiles and ships. But where could Majestic-12 find a team of genuine Global Jihad terrorists?
âFrance,' Book II said aloud. âIt's always fucking France.'
Dodds said, â
Book, what the hell is going on? Everyone here is scared shitless. This could be the biggest terrorist attack in history and they're going to use our own missiles against us.
'
âThis isn't a terrorist thing, Dodds,' Book said. âIt's a business thing. Trust me, the terrorists were already dead when they got to that plant. I'm starting to think that the French Secret Service has been giving Majestic12 some quiet assistance. I gotta go. Book, out.'
Book turned his gaze back toward the container ships and supertankers resting at anchor off Staten Islandâa pack of leviathans awaiting permission to enter the Hudson and East Rivers.
Thanks to the Kormoran project, each one of them was a potential missile launch vessel.
âSo which one is it?' the pilot asked.
âJust go to GPS co-ordinates 28743.05â4104.55,' Book said. âThat's where it'll be.'
The pilot adjusted his dials, flew by his GPS locator.
Book checked the launch list on his hand-held computer for the hundredth time. After he had spoken with Schofield earlier, he and Scott Moseley had calculated the GPS locations of the last two Kormoran tanker-launchers:
After that, he and Moseley had then plotted
all
the boats on a map of the world:
The sum of it all?
In addition to the three tankers set to fire their nuclear-tipped missiles on America, England, France and Germany, there were two extra Kormoran ships out there: one in the Arabian Sea, ready to fire on both India and Pakistan, and another in the Taiwan Straits, aiming cloned Taep'o-Dong ICBMs at Beijing and Hong Kong.