brand.
âI got him,â John said, letting out a long breath. âI got the bastard.â
âWhere?â
He pointed up at the roofline. âBehind that chimney.â
âAre you sure?â
Kat answered. âI saw him fall. Heâs over there. By the Olmec.â
âWhere did they go?â I asked, numbly noticing that the Players were gone.
Mary was dead.
âThe Sumerian ran, and the Nabataean followed. The Harappan, calm son of a bitch, stabbed an extra time into all of the bodies. Made sure they were dead.â
âIâm sorry,â Kat said, eyes wet. âI tried to shoot him. I really tried. But my hand. I couldnât hold the gun steady. Iâm so sorry.â
âItâs okay,â I said.
âWe donât outnumber them anymore,â John said, dropping his gun. âWe need to move, and fast.â
âDonât we have to follow them?â I said.
âOf course,â John said, visibly shaken. âWho has bullets?â
âI have some,â Kat said, standing. âI wasnât counting my shots.â
âIâve got three or four,â I said.
âHide your guns,â John said. âIâve got a Walther. One full magazine.â
âThen weâre going to have to figure this out. But first we need to follow them. Hopefully theyâll kill each other.â
I took Maryâs hand and squeezed it one last time. I didnât care what she had done to me at that point. She didnât deserve to die, and not like this. And she deserved more than my just leaving her on the side of the road for some paramedics to find.
But like so many things in my life lately, I had no choice.
We ran after the Players.
CHAPTER SEVEN
I helped Kat check her magazine and saw she had four bullets left.
She was bleeding through the bandage on her armâit was dribbling down her wrist and handâbut there was nothing we could do about it. We needed to follow the Players, and we needed to stay away from the cops.
All of us concealed our pistols.
âWill they split up?â Kat asked.
âNo,â John said, speaking softly. âThey were expecting the beginning of the game. But they didnât get any direction, any puzzle to solve, any answer to look for. So all they have as an objective is to kill each other. They have to do it now, today, because thereâs nothing else.â
âAnd we canât let them get away because weâll never track them down again,â I said.
âAnd theyâll stick together, because thereâs nowhere else to go.â
We heard a whistle, and John stopped running. Kat and I did too. I took her good hand in mine. Moments later two policemen jogged past us toward the plaza.
âAre we still in this?â I asked. âI mean, do we even have a chance anymore? Weâve lost everybody. Kat canât shoot because of her hand. We are almost out of bullets, and weâre going up against these guys? Did you see how they fight?â
âIt was unbelievable,â Kat said. âWho can move like that?â
âAnd what if they have more backup, like that sniper?â
John took a deep breath. âWe knew it was going to be hard.â
âWhat?â I asked, incredulous. âWe knew it was going to be hard. Wedidnât know that it was going to kill us all.â
âWalter and I tried to prepare you,â he said, but the words sounded hollow. âWeâre trying to save the world, remember? We trained all summer. Were you expecting this to be easy?â
âWe trained all summer as a group. We were hunting as a team, in everything we did.â
âWeâre still a group.â
I rolled my eyes. âI meant we practiced as if we were outnumbering them. Like there were going to be more of us, like this morning when Kat and I went after Raakel. We only beat her because there were two of us.â
âGuys,â Kat
MacKenzie Cadenhead
Lyn Andrews
Roger MacBride Allen, David Drake
Lorhainne Eckhart
White Rosesand Starlight
John A. Adam
Richie Tankersley Cusick
Sebastian Faulks
S.A. McGarey
Edmund Crispin