19
Singh suddenly felt breath on his
neck.
He looked round - and the tiger that had followed
the scent of blood and the bleating of frightened animals into the
bunker ripped its mighty fangs deep into the throat of its
unsuspecting prey before he could even scream. The huge predator
dragged the flailing Indian across the floor, slashing at his
abdomen with its claws.
Nina had run backwards in pure reflexive fear when
she saw the tiger. Heart slamming like a pneumatic drill, she
pulled the bloodied Eddie away from the carnage. ‘Come on, we gotta
move.’
‘You’re not kidding!’ he said, seeing the tiger
tear out Singh’s throat. The fearful symmetry of its face was
marred by a gush of bright red blood. ‘Where’s my gun?’
‘Here.’ She retrieved his USP.
He was about to fire it to scare away the tiger
when someone shouted in Hindi from the stairs. ‘Cover your ears,’
he said, pulling Nina away from the exit, past the tiger and its
quivering meal. The yellow eyes stared coldly at them with the
promise that they would be next, but it didn’t move to
attack.
Nina put her hands to her head as Eddie raised the
gun. He aimed - not at the tiger, but the floor behind it. The
first booming gunshot sent stinging chips of concrete at its rear
legs. It dropped Singh’s body, whirling to face them with a snarl
of fury.
Eddie fired again, and again, each shot blasting
little craters out of the floor at the tiger’s feet. Overcome by
the noise and the painful insect-bites of shrapnel, it turned and
fled.
Up the stairs.
The shouts above quickly turned to screams. ‘Okay,
sounds like they’re busy,’ said Eddie. ‘If anyone gets between you
and the door, shoot ’em!’
They hurried up the stairs. Someone fired a shot,
only for a voice as enraged as the tiger to yell at them: Vanita.
More screams, then a loud crash followed.
Eddie reached the top to see that the tiger had
pounced on one of the guards, knocking over a table. Other people
were fleeing out of the main doors and up the stairs to the
observation level. A guard cowering behind a workbench saw him and
whipped up his gun, but a single shot from the USP sent him
tumbling with a bloody hole in his forehead.
Nina spotted Vanita halfway up the stairs,
screeching orders for someone to get a tranquilliser gun. Her
husband was higher up, watching the chaos with an unbelieving
expression - which changed to fear as he saw Nina point her gun
towards him. She didn’t know if she could have pulled the trigger,
but the threat was enough; he turned and ran out of sight to the
upper floor.
‘Nina!’ Eddie pointed to the doors. ‘Go!’ He took
down another armed guard before they both burst out into the open,
blinking in the bright sunlight. ‘Where now?’
‘We can drive out of here,’ said Nina. She ran to a
nearby golf cart.
‘In that?’
‘There’s a garage under the palace - we can get
something faster.’ She climbed into the driving seat, Eddie jumping
aboard behind her and pointing his gun back at the doors, although
another scream from the building suggested that the tiger was still
everyone’s biggest concern.
Nina stamped the accelerator to the floor. The golf
cart lurched away, electric motors whining as it powered up to its
top speed of twenty miles an hour. ‘It’s not exactly a Ferrari, is
it?’ Eddie complained.
‘It’s better than running. Just.’ She guided the
cart down the road to the palace. Even at its less-than-scorching
pace, it still covered the distance in just over a minute. The ramp
to the garage was off to one side - but she swerved away from it,
heading for one of the doors into the huge house itself.
‘Where are we going?’ Eddie demanded.
‘The Codex - we need to find it.’
‘Oh, for fuck’s sake!’
‘I know where it is,’ she insisted, stopping and
jumping from the cart. With a noise of frustration, Eddie ran
ahead, kicking open the door and darting through with his gun
raised.
The hallway was clear. They hurried inside.
‘Where’re we going?’
‘The infotarium.’
‘The what?’
‘Khoil’s name, not mine.’ They reached the
high-tech room, where Nina held back again as Eddie burst in,
confirming that nobody was inside before nodding for her to
enter.
The lights were low, the sphere of screens
displaying stylised clouds. Nina ran to the desk where her hand had
been scanned, seeing the Codex in its open case. She slammed it
shut and picked it up. ‘Okay, got it.’
She turned to leave, but Eddie’s attention was
caught by another piece of equipment beside the laser scanner. A
rapid prototyper . . . with something in the tank. He snatched it
out, finding that unlike the silicone liquid he had used in New
York, the medium this time was extremely fine grains of plastic.
‘This looks familiar.’
Nina grabbed it from him. ‘It’s from the Codex’s
cover - the key! He’s made a copy of the key!’ One side of the
thick and surprisingly heavy circular object bore the faces of the
five Hindu goddesses, their husband Shiva at the centre. She opened
the Codex case and shoved it in, slotting it into the impression in
the orichalcum cover before snapping the case shut again. ‘We’ve
got to delete the pattern so he can’t make another—’
‘No, we don’t,’ Eddie countered at the sound of
pounding feet outside. ‘What we do need is to get out of
here before we get killed!’
The footsteps came closer. Eddie brought up his
pistol—
A man bearing an MP5 sub-machine gun rushed into
the room - and took two shots to his chest. Eddie ran to him,
shoving the USP into a pocket and picking up the MP5, then glanced
at the display cabinet containing Khoil’s first computer. ‘A
Spectrum, eh?’ He smashed the glass with the gun’s stock, making
Nina jump, then did the same to the little computer inside
it.
‘What was that for?’ she gasped, startled by the
petty vandalism.
He grinned. ‘I was a Commodore 64 kid. Now where’s
this garage?’
They ran from the infotarium, Nina directing them
to the elevator. Another guard charged round a corner ahead - and
took a burst from the MP5 across his chest. Shouts echoed behind
them; more people were coming.
A short side passage led to the elevator. Nina
pushed the call button, but Eddie booted open the door beside it
and waved for her to go down the stairs. She took them two at a
time, the heavy case banging against her legs, and emerged in the
basement.
Eddie arrived a second later, eyes widening in
admiration as he took in the gleaming cars. ‘Wow. This lot’s nearly
as good as Kari Frost’s collection.’
Nina was in no mood for comparisons between
maniacal billionaires past and present. ‘All I care about is: does
he have anything fast?’
‘Oh, yeah.’ He indicated a two-tone slate and
charcoal-grey hunk of sculpted, purposeful curves - the Bugatti
Veyron. ‘Fastest production car ever built. Well, except for one by
some little American company—’
‘We don’t need the Guinness World Records, just
start it!’
A glass-fronted cabinet near the elevator contained
numerous keys, each with the fob displaying the manufacturer’s
logo. Eddie searched for the distinctive ‘EB’ of Bugatti, then
smashed the glass with the MP5 and snatched out the keys. He tossed
them to Nina. ‘Your turn to drive.’
‘Me? But—’
‘Unless you want to shoot.’
‘I’ll drive,’ said Nina quickly, running to the
Veyron. She threw the gun and case inside and lowered herself into
the low-slung, luxurious interior as Eddie rounded the supercar,
the MP5 raised.
A chime as the elevator arrived—
Eddie fired before the doors had even fully opened,
a guard thrashing backwards into the confined cabin. He glimpsed
Tandon and released another burst, but the Indian squeezed himself
flat against the side wall. For a moment Eddie considered running
across to finish him off, but then the Veyron started with a growl
from its massive sixteen-cylinder engine. He swung into the car.
‘Go!’
Smoke belched from the screaming tyres as Nina
pressed the accelerator. ‘What the hell’s with this gearstick?’ she
cried, trying unsuccessfully to shift into second gear.
‘It’s a sequential - push it forward to change up!’
Eddie leaned out of the door, seeing Tandon running for cover
behind the McLaren. He fired another burst - just as Nina figured
out the gears and upshifted. The car leapt forward, throwing off
his aim. The McLaren’s windscreen shattered as Tandon dived behind
it. Eddie cursed and pulled himself inside the Veyron, lowering his
window as the supercar shot towards the ramp.
Nina kept accelerating, the engine note thunderous
in the underground space. There was a horrible crunch as the
Bugatti’s front air dam scraped the foot of the ramp, then they
powered towards the square of daylight ahead—
One of the Range Rovers skidded to a halt at the
entrance, broadside on to block their escape.
Nina fought her instinct to brake, instead jamming
the accelerator all the way down and bracing herself . . .
The Veyron reached the top of the ramp - and went
airborne. It smashed into the Range Rover at window height, slicing
off the 4x4’s roof in an explosion of glass. The driver ducked just
quickly enough to avoid decapitation, the supercar’s underside
clearing his head by an inch as it arced over him and smashed back
down to earth.
Airbags fired, punching Eddie and Nina back into
their seats. Dazed, Nina tried to straighten out, and found that
the Bugatti wouldn’t be breaking any more speed records: the
suspension was wrecked, one of the rear wheels loose and bashing
against the bodywork. Despite the damage, she still managed to
wrestle the car towards the gate.
Eddie sat up, raising his gun - and seeing a
potential target. Mahajan and another man were driving a golf cart
towards the palace, the Khoils on the rear seats. He fired at them.
Khoil and Vanita flung themselves out of the cart as bullets caught
the guard and sent him flailing to the ground. Mahajan ducked and
swerved the little vehicle to put it between the gunman and his
employers.
Nina headed for the long drive - only to see a
second Range Rover brake to block it. With its low ground clearance
and damaged suspension, the Veyron had no chance of negotiating the
grass verges to get round it. She instead made a hard turn,
bringing the supercar on to the runway.
Eddie glanced back at the golf cart. Vanita had
snatched up the fallen guard’s MP5 and was pointing it at the
Veyron. ‘Down!’ he shouted as she opened fire. Bullets puckered the
Bugatti’s bodywork, but none reached the cabin; the Veyron’s engine
was mounted behind the seats, the huge block taking the clanging
impacts. There was a loud hiss and a gush of steam as one of the
radiators was punctured, adding to the wounded car’s woes.
Nina skidded past the parked jet and the now-closed
container holding the smaller aircraft, aiming along the length of
the runway and slamming up through the gears. The Veyron had
all-wheel drive; even with one of them crunching against the
wheelarch the response was still frightening. In the mirror, the
golf cart was suddenly reduced to a dot as the car blasted through
the sixty mile per hour mark in barely four seconds, thundering on
towards a hundred. ‘Jesus!’ she yelped.
‘Bloody hell,’ said Eddie, pushing himself upright.
‘I’m jealous that you’re driving now!’
She was not as thrilled with the experience. The
collapsed suspension was making the steering wheel judder like a
jackhammer, even holding the car in a straight line becoming harder
with each passing moment. Dashboard warning lights started flashing
- the radiator was not all that had been damaged. The speedometer
passed one hundred . . . then dropped back down. ‘I think this
thing’ll need more than an oil change at its next service,’ she
warned.
Eddie looked back. The steam had been replaced by
greasy smoke, swirling in the Veyron’s slipstream. The second Range
Rover was now in pursuit.
Ahead, even with the Veyron slowing, they were
rapidly running out of runway. Beyond the poles of the landing
lights at its far end, Nina could see the estate’s boundary wall.
She brought the car into a sweeping, shuddering turn on to an
access lane leading to the main drive. Only a short distance to the
main gate, and freedom - if they could get through it.
If they could get to it. The engine rasped
alarmingly, the stench of burning oil filling the cabin. Even with
her foot to the floor, their speed was still falling. Sixty miles
an hour, fifty. Nina straightened out as they reached the road,
seeing the gate ahead. Guards ran to block their path.
Armed guards.
‘Go through them!’ Eddie shouted. ‘Crash the
gate!’
‘There’s no power!’ Nina protested. Forty miles an
hour and still slowing, even as she dropped through the gears in a
desperate attempt to maintain speed. The vibration from the wrecked
wheel was getting worse, the Veyron’s back end starting to weave.
‘We’re not gonna make it!’ Thirty . . .
A huge metallic bang shook the car as the broken
wheel finally sheared off its axle, tearing off the Veyron’s back
quarter panel and bouncing down the drive. The already low-slung
supercar’s ground clearance was reduced to zero as the unsupported
body hit the road like an anchor. Grinding over the asphalt, it
screeched to a stop.
The guards ran towards them, guns raised—
And whirled at the sound of another vehicle behind
them.
The barrier shattered as Kit crashed his car
through it. One of the men was hit by a length of broken wood and
bowled off his feet to smash through the guard hut’s window. The
other two leapt out of the car’s path, bringing their guns to
bear—
Kit spun the steering wheel and yanked on the
handbrake. The car fishtailed, its rear end swinging round and
swatting away one of the guards with a thump of flesh against
steel.
The remaining man dived aside in the nick of time,
rolling and bringing up his gun—
Mac kicked open the passenger door. It hit the
crouching guard just as he fired, knocking the gun downwards. A
semicircle of red sprayed over the tarmac as the bullet hit the
luckless man’s kneecap. He fell on his back, dropping the gun as he
screamed and clutched the wound.
Mac tossed the fallen weapon out of his reach, then
waved to the occupants of the crippled Veyron. ‘Well, come on! We
haven’t got all day!’