One of the men had found the controls for the dome. The whole upper section was rotating on its base, like some kind of gigantic artillery emplacement or a missile silo bearing towards the direction of its target. There was a muted rumble that resonated through the whole dome as the huge fibreglass construction swivelled around on roller tracks inset into the rim of the perimeter. The rumbling continued for several seconds, then it stopped.
What was he doing?
Then Ben heard another click, and he knew the answer.
Shit.
The man had activated the control to open the roof. The electric motor kicked in again, and this time the mechanical sounds came from directly overhead as the cables and pulleys bore on the sliding section of ceiling that could be pulled right back for observing the sky. A bright crack of daylight appeared, three metres in length and growing quickly wider. The pale afternoon sunlight flooded the inside of the dome, dazzling in its suddenness.
The cover of darkness was suddenly gone. Ben blinked, feeling as naked and exposed as a fugitive caught in a search beam.
Then it got worse.
Chapter Twenty-Two
Cook had listened to the whole thing unfolding through his headset, but he hadn’t moved from his vantage point in the rocks overlooking the front of the house.
Their opponent, this Hope guy, had proved even tougher to kill than they’d anticipated. The Boss was tearing his hair out and ready for an apoplexy on the other end of the phone. Hope had first taken out Ruddock, then Nicholson. Now, as the dome opened like the top of a giant egg and filled with light, Cook could see through his rifle scope the bloodied corpse of Phil Dean sprawled in a chair that was part of the astronomical telescope mounting. Three men down. Half their force. But now the show was over, because nothing could compete with what he was about to bring to the deal. His field of fire was laid wide open. A sniper’s delight.
Cook panned the rifle to the left and his crosshairs picked out the fleeting shape of a man who wasn’t one of his team, and wasn’t Raul Fuentes. Hope.
Cook didn’t need to call it in this time. As fast as he locked his sights on target, he squeezed the trigger.
Ben felt the shockwave of the incoming rifle bullet before he heard the thunderous crack of its report. It missed him, but not by much as it slammed past and punched a clean round hole through the fibreglass wall behind him. Ben caught a momentary glimpse of the sniper eighty metres away among the rocks, about level with the roof of the house and angling his rifle up at the dome.
As another shot cracked out, Ben was already diving out of the line of fire. Moments ago, he’d been groping about in darkness. Now every detail of the dome was lit up bright and clear. He retreated behind a metal table covered in computer equipment. He had lost sight of Raul, and that worried him. What worried him even more were the sniper outside, and the two enemies still in the house. Four rounds left. He could afford a single miss. The rest had to count, one for one.
A deafening blast came from inside the dome. A spread of twelve-gauge buckshot blew the computers on the table to pieces and showered Ben with debris. The masked man holding the shotgun was hunkered down behind the telescope mounting, and Ben didn’t have a clear shot at him. He inched around the side of the table. Too late, he saw that the sniper in the rocks had moved position, climbing higher so he could command a better view into the dome.
There was nothing reticent about their tactics now. Ben scrambled away as the sniper opened up with fully automatic fire and the high-velocity rounds chewed through the metal table as if it were made of cheese. Whatever kind of battle rifle the guy was equipped with, it could shred the whole dome apart in no time.
But the sniper could only climb so high, and the bottom sill of the dome’s aperture was higher. Which meant that as long as Ben stayed pressed down close enough to the floor, he couldn’t be seen. That couldn’t prevent him from being seen by the two heavily armed men left inside the dome, though. He wedged himself as far as he could into the side of the observatory, behind a latticework of metal struts that supported the weight of the roof. He was pinned, and he couldn’t move, and he still couldn’t see Raul.
Ben heard a harsh voice say, ‘We got your mate here. Lose the weapon and come on out.’
Ben peered out from his hiding place, and saw them. In the middle of the floor, one masked man was standing behind Raul with a pistol to his temple. The other had a shotgun.
‘Three seconds, Hope. Then we kill’m. Give yourself up, it’s over.’
Ben gritted his teeth. He had only one alternative. It was down to the wire now, kill or be killed.
Four rounds left.
He broke cover. Keeping his head down so the sniper couldn’t get him and moving too fast for the guy with the shotgun, he dived across the floor and landed on his shoulder and rolled and fired all at once. The guy with the shotgun staggered back and went down.
Three rounds left.
The other guy still had his pistol pressed hard up against Raul’s head, but he didn’t shoot. He aimed at Ben instead, but Ben came out of his roll in a low crouch and fired first, and the guy’s face burst red and he fell away from Raul and collapsed sideways.
Two rounds left.
Raul swayed on his feet. One side of his face was misted with blood. He gazed down at the body of the man who’d been holding the gun to his head.
Now Ben knew why the guy hadn’t shot Raul. It was for the same reason the sniper eighty metres away in the rocks didn’t blow Raul’s brains all over the inside of the observatory when he was standing there in full view.
Ben sprang up out of his low crouch and ran straight at Raul. He spun him around towards the opening in the dome with one arm clamped around his chest, pinning Raul’s body tightly against his own. Raul struggled with surprising strength, but Ben clamped him harder.
Eighty metres away, the sniper shifted his aim and then went very still. Ready to fire the instant he got a clear shot at Ben.
Ben pointed the MP5 single-handed over Raul’s shoulder. The submachine gun was no target pistol, and eighty metres was a very long shot with a nine-millimetre even if Ben hadn’t been trying to hold still a struggling man who was nearly as strong as he was. Ben fired and saw his shot skip off the rocks with a puff of dust eighteen inches from the sniper’s position.
The magazine was empty now. All he had left was that one round in the chamber.
Before Ben could pull the trigger, the sniper fired back. Maybe he’d rushed the shot, or maybe he was being over careful not to hit the wrong man. The bullet whipped past him and perforated the polished aluminium tube of the solar telescope. More than twice the velocity of Ben’s gun in metres per second. Nearly four times the muzzle energy in foot pounds. Capable of punching through a concrete block at ten times this distance. And Ben was guessing the guy had a lot more than a single round left.
Ben shoved Raul aside, leaned on the edge of the dome, held his breath and lined up his sights, said his prayer and squeezed off his last shot.
The gun cracked and jolted in his hand, and the bolt locked back empty.
He was off to the right, but it wasn’t a miss. The right side of the sniper’s head dissolved into a pink mist and he slumped across his rifle.
Ben lowered the gun, able to breathe again.
Then his vision exploded in a white flash and he felt himself falling.
Chapter Twenty-Three
He hit the floor on his back, looked up and saw Raul standing over him with a clenched fist.
‘You crazy English bastard!’ Raul yelled at him.
Stars were swimming in front of Ben’s eyes. He shook his head to clear them, and touched his fingers to his jaw where Raul had hit him. He blinked a couple of times, then through the haze he saw a black shape rise up behind Raul with something long in its hands.
The man with the shotgun staggered to his feet. Ben’s bullet had caught him too low and hit the body armour, only stunning him. He was bruised, but he was very much
alive. He clamped the shotgun’s butt into his shoulder and advanced on Ben.
Ben knew the man had him cold. There wasn’t a thing he could do, lying on his back still dizzy from the punch. This was it. He saw death coming.
Raul spun around, saw the man with the shotgun and shouted something Ben didn’t understand. The man came on another step, trying to elbow Raul out of the way to get a shot at Ben. The shotgun muzzle came up, the big black O pointed right at Ben’s face.
Raul punched him in the neck. The man staggered and fought to keep his balance. The gun went off line. Then Raul hit him again, this time with a monster uppercut that caught him square under the jaw, almost lifted him off his feet and sent him sprawling backwards towards the edge of the dome opening. The man dropped his gun and hit the edge with the backs of his legs and went over backwards with a short scream, disappearing from sight as he fell. There was a frantic slithering as he slid down the curve of the smooth fibreglass. Then a muffled crump as he hit the ground below. Then, nothing.
Ben struggled to his feet and went to the edge, looked down and saw the twisted body lying in the yard in front of the house. His neck looked broken. Ben looked up at the hillside. The sniper was immobile across his rifle, leaking blood over the rocks.
‘Think I broke a knuckle,’ Raul said.
Ben rubbed his jaw. It was tender and beginning to swell. ‘On him, or on me?’
‘You were going to let them shoot me, you bastard. I can’t believe you would do that.’ Raul was ashen and his voice sounded like that of a man who had just woken up, badly shaken, from a horrible nightmare.
‘No,’ Ben said. ‘That wasn’t going to happen.’
‘How can you say that? You can’t know that.’
Ben said nothing. He picked up the fallen pistol and stuck it in his belt, then checked its former owner. The dead man had voided his bowels. The stench mingled with the smell of the blood pooling over the floor and trickling between the cracks in the rubber matting. Ben knelt beside him and searched him for ID, found only a phone that he switched off and pocketed. He removed the guy’s mask and studied his face. Then went and did the same with the body of the man who’d been holding the pistol to Raul’s head, and again with the dead guy in the observation chair. He found two more phones. Switched them off, like the first, and slipped them in his pocket. Aside from that, zero. All three men were nameless, with anonymous faces. They could have been anyone.
Ben listened hard and could hear no sounds from down below. Just the ringing in his ears, the thud of his heart and the exaggerated silence that comes in the aftermath of battle.
‘It’s over,’ Raul said, leaning against his sister’s ruined solar telescope. He looked weak and faint. Shock was kicking in, in the aftermath of the adrenalin rush. Ben had seen it happen a thousand times before.
Ben shook his head. ‘It’s only just beginning.’
‘I killed a man.’
‘You saved me, you saved yourself. Now it’s time to go and save Catalina.’ He took Raul’s arm and found that Raul was shaking. Ben led him back to the hatch and down the steps.
Raul paused to gaze sadly at Kazem’s body, while Ben went through to the living room and checked the two dead bodies there. He wasn’t surprised to find that they had no ID either. Two more phones, making five. He switched them off, like the first three, and added them to the collection in his pockets. He was pretty certain that the headsets the men had all been wearing were keeping them in touch on an open line with whoever had sent them here. Who that might be, he had no idea.
He stepped outside and lit a cigarette. His jaw was aching and he had his own nerves to settle in the aftermath of the fight. He looked at the wrecked Kia, then headed up the slope to where the sniper’s body lay.
Like the others, the sniper had been carrying no ID, just a thick roll of banknotes in his back pocket, and his phone. Number six for Ben’s collection. It was identical to the others, apart from a small dent in the casing where Ben’s first shot had kicked up a stone that had bounced off it. But something about the man was different; the dissimilarity became obvious the moment Ben plucked the ski-mask off his head and saw his face. Even with half his skull blown away by Ben’s last shot.
A few moments later, Raul walked outside, looking stricken. Ben called him over. ‘Come and see this.’
Raul walked reluctantly up the slope and then peered at the corpse with a disgusted frown. At first he didn’t understand what it was Ben had summoned him over to see. Then he got it.
‘I think I know him. Haven’t I seen him before somewhere?’
‘Yes, you have, and so have I,’ Ben said.
The sniper had pale features and receding straw-coloured hair. He was the book-reading stranger from the bar in Frigiliana that Ben had thought looked Danish.
‘They’ve been following you all along,’ Ben told Raul. ‘Since before you left Spain, since before I even met you.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘Nor me, not yet.’
Ben walked back to the Kia and ran his eye along its bullet-riddled bodywork, thinking. He dropped flat on the ground and peered underneath the car. Then reached under a torn wheel arch, feeling around in the recesses. He walked around the car and tried the other three. There it was. ‘Damn. I should have known,’ he muttered to himself.
‘What are you looking for?’ Raul asked, joining him and looking even more baffled.
‘This,’ Ben said, showing him the small black box he’d found clamped under the wheel arch. ‘It’s a GPS homing tracker. They must have tagged us with it last night, while the car was parked outside Catalina’s place.’
‘They followed us from Spain, to Munich, to here?’
‘Without breaking a sweat,’ Ben said. ‘These boys were professionals. We didn’t spot them behind us on the road, because with this thing they could hang right back out of visual range and still know our exact position to within a metre.’
‘So where’s their car?’ Raul asked.
Ben turned and gazed down the track, then started walking.
The vehicles were parked just out of sight around the corner. A metallic grey BMW 6-Series, a blue Opel Insignia and a black Fiat van. All three vehicles still had the keys in their ignitions. All three had German registration plates. Very likely stolen. Ben checked the two saloons first, but the interesting stuff was what he found inside a zippered bag in the back of the van.
‘That makes sense,’ he said.
‘What do you mean?’ Raul asked, trying to see inside the bag.
‘I mean that there’s a hell of a lot more to this than either of us thought,’ Ben said. ‘First, it suggests they know who I am. Nobody sends out a hit team so well kitted up to take down one man, unless they’ve reason to believe he might give them their money’s worth.’
‘One man? There’s two of us.’
Ben showed him the contents of the bag. ‘Three rolls of duct tape and a bottle of chloroform. I told you they weren’t going to shoot you. It was obvious from the way they attacked us that they were under strict orders not to harm you. The guns were for my benefit only, to put me out of the way so they could get to their real target.’
‘Their real target?’
‘You, Raul. They were planning on taking you alive.’
Chapter Twenty-Four
Raul blanched. ‘Madre. Why?’
Ben replied, ‘Why do you think? Did you piss off the wrong people back in Spain? Do you owe money to the mob?’
‘No. None of that. Of course not.’
‘I didn’t think so. Then there’s only one possible reason. They want you because they believe you probably have information about Catalina’s whereabouts. Twin siblings are about as close as it gets. They must reckon if she’s in contact with anybody, it’s you.’
‘You’re saying—’
Ben nodded. ‘It pretty much proves that Kazem was telling the truth. Your sister’s still alive and we’re not the only ones looking for her.’ br />
Raul thought about it and realised what it must mean. A glow of hope, intermingled with anxiety, spread over his face. ‘Then … they don’t know where she is either?’
Ben shook his head. ‘But they’re very committed to finding out. Whoever sent these guys after you wants her pretty badly.’
‘If they don’t know where she’s gone, if they haven’t found her … it means she must be safe. She’s okay.’
‘Maybe,’ Ben said. ‘For the moment, at least. But only if we find her before someone else does.’
‘What will they do to her? No. I don’t even want to think about it.’
‘You should think about it,’ Ben said. ‘That’s what makes it so important you get to her first.’
‘Who are these people? What do they want with my sister?’
‘They’re not celebrity stalkers, that’s for sure,’ Ben said. ‘But that’s not the only question. Think about it the other way around. Who is she to them? What is it about her that they’re so interested in?’
‘The same thing that made her run from them,’ Raul said.
‘Right. And according to Kazem, she believed it was connected with her work on the sun.’
‘That’s insane,’ Raul said. ‘It’s just, I mean, it’s just … the sun.’ He looked up and spread his hands out at it, just a pale orb giving out little warmth on that cool afternoon, and gradually sinking into the clouds.
Ben had no reply to offer Raul, because as far as he was concerned, it was insane too. To them, but evidently not to everyone. He walked to the lead vehicle, the dark metallic grey BMW, and climbed behind the wheel. He fired up the engine, leaned over and pushed open the passenger door and called to Raul, ‘Get in.’
Back up at the house, Ben retrieved his green bag from the Kia. It had been nestling down low in the space behind the seats, and had only taken a couple of bullet holes. It had had worse in its time. He slung it over his shoulder and walked into the house, overstepping the dead man with the red hole where his eye used to be, and went into Catalina’s study. While the living room and the observatory either side of it were badly wrecked, the study had been barely disturbed in the attack.