kept the Colt Lawman with me, too, tucked in the back of my pants. It only had four rounds left.
John opened the door, ran into the square, dropped to one knee, andâdidnât fire. He was searching for the sniper, if there even was one. Mary ran out and crouched behind a cement planter full of yellow and red flowers. She too looked for the sniper.
The Sumerian was up from the cop, holding his pistol. I aimed at him with mine, but he was at least fifty yards away, farther than I ever trained for.
I fired twice, from a standing position, both hands on the gun. But I missed. He ducked back into a crouch and shot back at me. I dove down next to Mary, trying to catch my breath. We had them vastlyoutgunned, but they were moving with the skill and grace of Players, not wasting a motion, not ever unfocused.
I could hear the rat-a-tat of Johnâs gun. He was taking short bursts now, but shooting up into an empty window.
âShoot the Players!â I called to him.
âThere has to be a sniper. Thatâs the only open window.â
âYou canât see a sniper,â I said. âAnd we need to kill the Players.â
âI will,â Mary said, taking a deep breath and then peering up over the planter to shoot through the flowers. Petals exploded into the air as she fired the semiautomatic rifle. I dared to look out to see what she was hitting.
Nothing. She couldnât see anything through those flowers. She was firing blind.
âMary!â I shouted. âGive me the gun.â
âNo,â she said, ducking back down.
âYouâre not hitting anything. You canât see.â
âItâs suppressing fire,â she said, as she tremblingly fumbled with loading a new magazineâthe last magazine we had with us, unless there was more ammunition on Walterâs body I hadnât seen. âIâm fine. You shoot.â
Kat was using an upturned outdoor table as cover and was firing at the Sumerian, but because of her injury she was forced to use her left hand, and she wasnât hitting anything.
I took aim at the Harappan, who was still struggling against the Shang, their swords swinging and clashing, parrying and lunging. I squeezed the trigger and the gun jumped up. I wasnât good at these distances. I fired again and hit the Shang in the leg. He stumbled, and immediately the Harappan swung at his neck and practically beheaded him. The Shang fell to the ground, blood spurting out of his severed arteries. The Harappan was close to the unconscious Olmec, and he ran over to her and stabbed her in the chest.
The Nabataean was running to the Sumerian, or to retrieve his spearâI wasnât sure. I didnât even try wasting bullets on him whilehe ran. Instead I focused on the Sumerian. I tried to follow all my trainingâsight the target, pull the trigger, donât squeeze it, and let out a long slow breathâbut by the time I had let out the breath, the Sumerian was on his feet, running. I fired one shot at him and missed.
âSniper!â John called, and started firing again.
I looked all around for him, trying to see what John was shooting at.
âWhere?â I asked.
But he couldnât hear me over the noise of his gun. I turned to Mary.
âMary.â
She was lying next to me, still bent at the knees but lying on her back.
Sheâd been shot in the eye, and there was a spray of blood out the back of her head, splattered across the cobblestones.
âMary,â I said, tears immediately springing to my eyes. I reached a hand out to touch her cheek, but then recoiled. Her face was distorted and broken. The bullet hadnât gone cleanly through her eye but had hit her cheekbone and torn a hole through her face, fracturing the bones. It was too much, too horrible to see, too horrible to remember. But I knew I was going to remember this every day of my life. It was burning into my mind, searing my eyes like a cattle
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