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He lifted Franco and tensed his muscles to hurl him into the light.
"Get ready to burn, Franco," he whispered.
"No! Please—!"
Just then an elevator chimed to his left. The doors slid open and his heart sank when he saw Carole. He didn't want her to have to watch his death throes. But panic and rage exploded within him when he saw the grinning face hovering behind her shoulder.
Barrett.
The head Vichy propelled Carole ahead of him into the atrium. The doors whispered closed behind them.
"Well, well," he said, still grinning. "What have we here? I guess this is what we call a stand-off."
"Carole, are you all right?"
She shook her head. A thin stream of blood trickled down her temple from her scalp. Her eyes filled with tears.
"Joseph, I'm so sorry."
"It's all right."
He made a silent promise: I'll get you out of this, no matter what it takes.
He noticed that her arms were pulled behind her, which meant her hands were bound. In a way, that was a relief. Barrett had no idea how lucky he was. If Carole were able to get her hands into her pockets, she might have blown them both to pieces by now.
"Let her go, Barrett," Joe said.
His eyebrows lifted. "You know my name? You have the advantage over me, sir. And I'm sure I'd not forget a face like yours."
There wasn't time to get into that.
"Just let her go."
"And why would I want to do that?"
"It's the right thing to do."
"For you maybe, but not for me. I'm willing to make a trade, though. Her for him." He pointed to Franco. "Hear that, Bossman? I'm saving your ass. And I expect something in return—big time. After I straighten this out, I want to be turned. Immediately. We waive the ten-year clause. Agreed?"
"Yes," Franco rasped. "Of course."
"And I don't want to be turned by some low-level drone, either. By you or, better yet, by the guy who turned you, if he's still around. I want wings."
Franco nodded. "Yes. Anything. Anything you want."
"You want to be like them?" Joe pointed to the undead guards who were continuing their inching crawl toward him. They'd be within striking distance in a minute. "Look at them. Slithering along the floor. They're vermin!"
"But they're the vermin who're running the show."
"Not for long. And then where will you be?"
"It's over for us, Mister Melted Face. The New World Order has arrived, and though it's not what anyone imagined, the choices come down to predator or prey. I've never seen myself as prey." He smiled. "So . .. how do you want to work the trade?"
"Joseph, no!" Carole cried.
Barrett grabbed a fistful of her hair and yanked her head back. "No one asked you! You're nothing but merchandise, so keep it zipped. I do the negotiating here!"
Joe took a step toward him. He wanted to kill Barrett, but slowly. Twist his head around an inch at a time until it was facing the other way.
"Uh-uh!" Barrett said. He held up an old-fashioned stiletto, pressed the button, and out snapped a gleaming four-inch blade. He pressed the point against Carole's throat. "Don't make me damage the merchandise."
LACEY . . .
Lacey stared at the Observation Deck feed. Joe's lips were moving and he was looking away from the camera.
"Who's he talking to?" she said.
Considine shrugged. "Maybe Franco, maybe your friend. She should have arrived by now."
The scars made Joe's face all but unreadable, especially on this small, grainy screen, but something about his body language set off warning alarms throughout her brain.
"Do you have other cameras up there?"
Leland grabbed his mouse. "One other that catches the atrium." Windows opened and closed on his computer screen, menus dropped down and rolled up. "Here we go."
The scene that flickered to life on the screen froze Lacey's heart. Carole ... held prisoner by a Vichy.
"Barrett!" Considine said over her shoulder. "Fucking Barrett. How'd you miss him?"
"Who's he?"
"Chief rat."
Lacey pulled her pistol from her belt. "I'm going up there."
"Not alone, you're not," Considine said.
"Stay here," she said. "We need that tape."
"These guys can handle that. Going alone is what got your friend in trouble." He was already heading for the door. "Let's move."
Lacey followed him out into the hall. They were almost to the elevators when one of them chimed. The UP light glowed over the second set of doors. Considine went into a crouch and motioned her toward the near wall. Pistol fully extended, he hurried forward and flattened himself against the wall immediately to the right of the doors.
When they slid open and a scraggly-haired head peeked out, Considine shot him in the face from six inches away. Lacey heard someone inside the car shout "Fuck!" as the shot man went down in a spray of red, landing in the doorway. The doors tried to close but the body blocked them.
Considine knelt and, without turning his head, motioned Lacey down to the floor. Seconds later another Vichy burst from the car with a hoarse cry, spraying the hall with an assault pistol. As the bullets screamed over her head, Lacey returned fire along with Considine. She didn't know who hit him but suddenly he went into spin, falling one way while his weapon sailed in another. He ended up huddled against the wall, clutching his shoulder.