Page 32 of The Sixth Man


  Bunting almost smiled. “Believe me, that one I know. But let me tell you something else. Even if we prove Edgar is innocent, this may not end.”

  “Why?”

  “Because that’s just not how the game is played.”

  “It’s not a damn game,” retorted Sean.

  Bunting gave a weary smile. “You’re right, it’s not. But some people still think it is. And they play it for all it’s worth.”

  CHAPTER

  57

  SEAN QUICKENED HIS PACE. There were only a few people on the street as the weather had deteriorated; rain was now falling and the wind was gusting.

  A voice came into his right ear through the bud he’d placed there.

  Michelle’s voice was tense. “Sean, there’s a black Escalade, tinted windows, out-of-state plates coming on your six.”

  “Doesn’t have to be connected to me.”

  “It’s moving fast and cutting through traffic for no apparent reason.”

  “Did Bunting call anyone?”

  “Not that I saw, no. He’s still walking back to his place, hands in pockets. But they might have followed him and waited till you two split up to go after you.”

  “Okay, what’s the best move?”

  “Go into the park at the next entrance. Pick up your pace. Now.”

  Sean started to walk as fast as possible without actually breaking into a sprint and drawing unnecessary attention. His hand moved to his coat pocket and curled around the pistol Kelly Paul had given him earlier. He chanced a glance behind. He saw the vehicle. Black Escalade, tinted windows, probably phony plates. It had a sinister look.

  He cut to his right and entered the park.

  Michelle’s voice came on again. “Keep to your left, down the path. There are a few people there.”

  “Witnesses won’t stop these guys, Michelle. They’ll flash their real or real-enough-looking badges and haul my ass away.”

  “Then turn right at the next path and run. It’ll give me time to figure something out.”

  “Where are you?”

  “Right now, up a tree where I can see everything. Go.”

  Sean did exactly as she said. He knew she was good, one of the best at stuff like this, but he also knew the other side was bringing its best. And there certainly would be more of them.

  He picked up his pace, turning right as instructed. There was a couple up ahead strolling along with their children. He passed by as quickly as possible. The last thing he wanted was a shoot-out in the middle of a bunch of kids.

  “Turn left now,” Michelle said into his ear.

  He hung a left and found himself next to a large boulder with some dying flowers planted around it.

  “Around the rock and up the path,” Michelle said. “Go. Go!”

  Sean King went.

  There were five men after Sean. They were all armed, all had quasi-federal credentials and all had one mission.

  Get the man.

  Their leader split them up and they branched out across the park, about forty yards behind where they had last seen their quarry. Two other men were patrolling the exits to the park where Sean might come out onto Central Park South.

  One man rounded a curve in the path. He had his hand in his pocket, curled around his gun. That meant he only had one hand free to defend himself.

  It wasn’t nearly enough.

  The boot hit him squarely in the jaw, breaking it. He went into a crouch and his gun came out of his pocket. The second kick shattered his forearm and the gun nosed muzzle first into the ground. The third blow creased the back of his neck an inch below his medulla, and he would awake in a few hours with an enormous headache in addition to his broken bones.

  Like a wisp of wind Michelle moved on to the next target.

  Two of the other men had hooked back up, studied the topography, and then divided up once more. The first man headed north and west and the other in the opposite direction. In the growing darkness the second man didn’t realize the person just passing by him—wearing a long black coat and a baseball cap tugged low—looked familiar until it was too late. The fist dug into his kidney. He bent over in tremendous pain and was felled by a thunderous kick to his jaw. He dropped to the ground unconscious, his shattered face already swelling.

  Michelle kept moving.

  “Sean,” she said into her wrist mic, “where are you?”

  “Coming up on Central Park South by the horse carriages.”

  “Nix that. They’ll have it covered. Head on toward Columbus Circle, but stay in the park.”

  “What’s your status?”

  “Two down, a few more to go.”

  Michelle moved, but not quite fast enough. The blow glanced across her forehead and dug into her ear. She twisted sideways, found purchase on the asphalt path, pivoted, setting her weight on her right foot, and launched a kick to her attacker’s left knee.

  Michelle Maxwell loved attacking knees. It was the largest joint in the body where four bones—the patella, the femur, the fibula, and the tibia—all came together like a highway interchange and were held together by an array of ligaments, muscles, and tendons. It is one of the most intricate parts of the body and critical for mobility.

  Michelle destroyed it.

  She pushed through the grouping of bones, ripping muscle and tendons and ligaments, which unraveled like sprung springs, cracked the patella, and torqued the femur and fibula backward to angles they were never intended to go. The man screamed and crumpled to the ground, holding his ruined leg.

  When you took out the knee, you took out the fight. Men, even trained ones Michelle knew, often aimed for the head, believing their superior strength would make it a knockout blow. But the head was problematic. The skull was thick, and even if you broke someone’s jaw or nose they would not necessarily be incapacitated. Not so with the knee. No one could fight effectively on one leg, and no one could fight at all when in that much pain.

  Michelle used her elbow, cocked at a forty-five-degree angle where it was at its strongest position, to deliver the putdown blow to the man’s head. She dug out the man’s cred pack and earbud and jerked the power pack running to the bud from his belt. Last, she ripped open his shirt. All she saw was white skin. No body armor. That was good to know.

  She put the bud in her free ear and listened to the stream of chatter as she kept moving forward. It was clear they were on to her presence. Reinforcements had been called in. She heard some names go back and forth, none of which she recognized. And no one identified what agency, if any, they were with. She looked at the ID card and the badge she’d taken from the man. They seemed official but it was an organization she’d never heard of. There were so many now, and when you introduced the staggering number of private contractors into the equation, things got very confusing very fast.

  She turned off the power box and spoke into her own mic. “Sean, three down, but they’ve called in reinforcements. What’s your status?”

  “Coming up on Columbus Circle. Where are you?”

  “Somewhere behind you. Once you get to the circle, get in a cab and go.”

  “And you?”

  “I’ll meet you at the train station like we planned.”

  “Michelle, I’m not leaving you out here—”

  “Sean, don’t play the gentleman. We don’t have time. See you in twenty.”

  Then she heard the click of the hammer on the gun being pulled back. And then another. One at four o’clock, the other at seven. One foot away, max. They had screwed up with their tactical positioning. Too close to her. Way too close.

  Michelle closed her eyes, framed it out in her head.

  Four o’clock target was to her right, her natural path of movement. Pivot on left foot, bend her torso downward in the same direction, as her right leg delivered a side kick to the man’s right knee, effectively crushing it. Then reverse her pivot, duck, roll, while the man is going down, flailing, screaming over his ruined limb and unwittingly providing cover for her ag
ainst the other shooter. Gun out, one-handed shot, pistol held sideways, aiming between the gap of her human shield at the other man, who would have instinctively moved to his left as his partner crumpled in the same direction from Michelle’s strike. No body armor, so torso shot to incapacitate, then one to the head for the kill. Elbow to the neck of four o’clock, who would get to live, and she’d sprint on to Columbus Circle.

  It was all doable. Fifty-fifty, maybe sixty-forty her way if she hit all her marks at the exact right moment.

  Calculation was complete, except for one variable. Sean would be safe by now. Had to be. Safer than she was in any event. She opened her eyes.

  Before she could move, however, the pistols fired.

  CHAPTER

  58

  SEAN HEARD THE SHOTS and turned back toward the park and away from the cabstand at Columbus Circle. Panicked, he spoke into his mic. “Michelle? Michelle, are you okay?”

  No answer.

  “Michelle!”

  Silence.

  Sean turned to run back into Central Park.

  People seized him.

  “What the—” He grabbed his gun.

  There were two men.

  “Move, move,” one said into his ear.

  “Who the hell are—”

  “Kelly Paul,” the second man hissed into his ear. “Now move.”

  “But my partner—”

  “No time. Move.”

  They hustled him back into the park through another entrance.

  A minute later he was pushed under a blanket on the floor of one of the horse carriages that was making a slow meander through the park. The two men disappeared and the driver, wearing a shabby, old-fashioned top hat and long black rain slicker, flicked his whip and the horse increased its pace.

  When Sean started to pull the blanket down, the driver said, “Keep it on, mate. Not out of the woods yet.”

  That was when Sean felt a body next to him. He gripped a leg and then a hand and then what felt like a breast.

  “Wow, your timing really sucks.”

  “Michelle?”

  He maneuvered the blanket around until he could just make her out in the dark.

  “What the hell happened back there?” he asked.

  “Tight spot. Probably wasn’t going to make it, but turns out we had some reinforcements in Central Park too.”

  “It’s Kelly Paul.”

  “Figured, yeah.”

  The horse clip-clopped through the park and back out onto the street.

  “So much for a fast getaway,” said Michelle.

  The driver heard this and said, “Sometimes slow is best. The other side just hightailed it after a decoy we sent out. You can come up for air now.”

  They both slid up in the seat and pulled the blanket down at the same time.

  The driver turned sideways and looked at them. “Cut it close.”

  “Yes we did,” Sean agreed. “So you know Kelly Paul? How?”

  “Not going there.”

  “That’s a big favor you just did us.”

  “You’re lucky she’s on your side.”

  “What about the guys in the park? The shots?”

  “Your friend here disabled three of them. Bones busted, all out cold. The shots you heard were the pistols of two others going off right when we hit them. Apparently they had orders to take your lady out. Their shots missed, obviously, though not by much. Our equipment didn’t. They’ll live. The scene will be cleansed. The police report will never be filed. Never happened. Officially.”

  “Lot of weight behind them,” said Michelle.

  “Obviously.” The man turned back around.

  Sean said, “So Kelly had planned for this?”

  “She plans for everything. She said you two were the tip of the spear. But a spear also has a handle.” He tipped his hat. “We’re the handle.”

  “Thanks,” said Michelle. “We owe you.”

  Over his shoulder the driver said, “You two ever took the full carriage ride?”

  “No,” said Sean. “And I don’t think we have time to do it now.”

  “We’ll take a rain check, though,” said Michelle quickly, snatching a glance at Sean.

  The driver slowed the carriage near an intersection.

  “Straight down that street. There’s a car waiting, red four-door Toyota. Bloke at the wheel is named Charlie.”

  Michelle shook his hand. “Thanks again. I’d be dead right now if it weren’t for you guys.”

  “We’d all be dead if it weren’t for some guys,” said the driver. “Just stay alive so we didn’t waste the effort.”

  They stepped down from the carriage, walked off in the gloomy rain, found the car, and were soon on their way to Penn Station.

  They retrieved Michelle’s Land Cruiser from a nearby garage, gassed it up, and were on their way north before midnight. Michelle had changed the license plates on her SUV, replacing them with a pair of sterilized ones, just in case.

  As they left Manhattan behind them, Sean reached out his hand and gripped Michelle’s arm. “Like the guy said, we cut it close. Way too close.”

  “But we’re alive. That’s what counts.”

  “Does it?”

  She glanced at him as she changed lanes and accelerated. “What do you mean?”

  “Can we both really keep doing this until it comes to the point where way too close instead becomes, ‘If she’d just not gone through that other doorway’?”

  “We both take risks. It could be you too.”

  “You take far more risks than I do.”

  “Okay, so what?”

  He removed his hand, looked away, and watched the wink of big-city lights in the side mirror until they disappeared from view.

  “Okay, so what?” she said again.

  “I don’t know where I’m going with this.”

  “I think you do know.”

  “Okay. If it were just the two of us, you’d be dead.”

  “You did the best you could. And the alternative was what? Do nothing?”

  “Maybe that would’ve been the smart thing to do.”

  “Smart for our safety maybe, not so good for trying to solve the case, which happens to be our job.”

  When Sean didn’t say anything she added, “We’re in a dangerous business. I thought we both understood that. It’s like playing in the NFL. Every Sunday you know you’re going to get your ass kicked but you do it anyway.”

  “Well, players retire too, before it’s too late.”