He could see figures grouped around a podium. One of them had to be Lee, with the dark head of hair and blue suit. Red tie. Yes, that was definitely Lee.

There was a woman next to him. Long hair. Tight black dress. Kimmy.

He didn’t recognize the short, sour-faced man next to her, or the few behind Lee. He waited. Lee hoisted someone small to his hip. Tommy saw the white blouse and the way she held her head and how it canted her hair just so. He couldn’t breathe.

It was Grace.

He had waited long enough. He scurried across the plaza, curving to the west, heading for the back of the stage. Twenty yards to go. He skirted around the fountain and stayed low by a broad cement planter for a couple of stunted trees. From there, he could be on them before they saw anything, and so when their attention was taken by Sam, then Ed and Qween, he would slip in behind and take Grace. He waited for Sam’s signal.

It never came.

Instead, a solid slab of light thumped out of the sky and slammed him into stark relief against the flatness of the plaza.

Ahead, more lights speared him from a couple of Strykers along the western edge of the plaza. They’d been waiting there the entire time. Soldiers burst out of the light and rushed him, a vicious rugby scrum of guns, boots, and elbows. They surged over Tommy and he went down swinging. He caught a quick glimpse of more searchlights stabbing out of the sky, and then it was all over.

CHAPTER 74

9:05 PM

August 14

Phil couldn’t keep the grin off his face. It had worked just like Dr. Reischtal had said it would. Who knew that crazy CDC fucker could have been still useful? Not just useful, but necessary. If what he said was true, then they had to get out of the city as fast as possible. And they most certainly would need Dr. Reischtal’s help.

Phil prided himself on always, one way or another, being ahead of the curve, on knowing more than the general public, and therefore, being in a position to take advantage. In the past, he had used this talent to gain traction in elections, to blackmail his enemies, and spot opportunities that would benefit him, often financially, later down the line. Now it would get him out of the city alive.

And not just that—his useless handsome nephew had found a scapegoat.

Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I give you the man who bombed Soldier Field.

Tommy didn’t look so scary. He looked crushed. He sagged in the soldiers’ grip, blood trickling from his scalp down into his right eye. He’d puked earlier, when one of the soldiers had kicked him in the stomach. He looked like a man who was finished, someone who could barely walk. He’d been carrying a handgun and two unwrapped hazmat suits. The soldiers had tossed them onto the stage.

Phil wanted anybody and everybody to post pictures on the Internet. He had no idea how to do it himself, but he was nothing if he couldn’t recognize the most effective way to communicate since the first written word. He wanted the world to know that this was the bombing suspect, and that later, the suspect would attempt to escape and be killed in the process.

“Daddy!” Grace screamed, and ripped out of her mother’s clutch. That dumb whore. He’d told her to keep a tight hold on her daughter, and she’d listened about as well as his idiot nephew when he’d told Lee that Kimmy was nothing but trouble, and wouldn’t help advance his career. “A single mother? Are you fucking kidding me?”

Phil was not a man burdened by sentimentality. Or gentleness. As Grace ran past, charging toward her father, Phil simply reached out and caught a fistful of her hair. He yanked her back, and her feet flew out from under her. She fell backwards, hanging in midair, hair snared in his fist. Her surprised, sharp scream echoed around the plaza.

Tommy drove an elbow into the nearest soldier’s chest, and Phil heard the crack even fifteen feet away. The rest of the soldiers surrounding him responded with a flurry of blows. Some of them even used their rifle butts. Tommy’s knees buckled and he went back down.

Kimmy rushed forward, but Phil stopped her with a single index finger, jammed up into her face. “Get the fuck back, you stupid bitch. You might be along for the ride, but you’re nothing but scenery. And that’s easy to replace. Remember that.”

Lee, the dumbshit, couldn’t resist taunting Tommy. Lee ambled over to the group of soldiers and squatted on his haunches in front of a barely conscious Tommy and said, “Told ya, asshole. Told you I’d make you wish you’d never been born. Told you I’m the man here. All this over some dumb cooze that hates your guts.”

Phil said, “Lee. Let’s go.” Fucking idiot didn’t know to quit when he was ahead. Phil kept hold of Grace, because he knew damn well that this girl was the only thing that could control Tommy, and pulled out his phone with his other hand. Grace whimpered but stood carefully so he wouldn’t tear any more hair out. He dialed Dr. Reischtal.

“We got him. Send in the chopper.”

“He is alive, yes?”

“He’s alive. A little banged up, and probably isn’t in the mood to talk right now, but yeah, he’s alive.”

“And the others?”

Phil glanced back over his shoulder to where a group of four soldiers had the two detectives and the crazy homeless woman in the middle of Clark, hands on their heads. “We got ’em.”

Dr. Reischtal was silent a touch too long and Phil thought that he had hung up. Dr. Reischtal said, “Ah yes. I can see. I can also see that hell is marching up the street, straight at you. You have less than ten minutes before every infected individual left in the city is pouring into that plaza. I want the two detectives and the woman dead. When it is done, I will let the helicopter know you are ready.” He hung up.

Phil called one of the soldiers over. He knew his authority as an alderman with the soldiers carried about as much weight as a flustered nanny, so he started by saying, “Just talked to your boss, Dr. Reischtal. You know who I’m talking about, right?” The soldier nodded. “Good.” Phil pointed at Tommy. “This fuck here, he’s the one responsible for Soldier Field. Dr. Reischtal does not want him harmed. But those fuckers over there, they helped him. Execute them. Dr. Reischtal’s orders.”

The soldier cocked his head and gave Phil a look like he’d just stepped in dog shit and was trying to be polite about it. He walked over to inform the soldiers guarding the three. They pushed the two detectives and the homeless woman around one of the military trucks and disappeared.

Phil still couldn’t wipe his grin away. Everything was falling into place. First off, they now had a guaranteed safe passage out of the city, but they also had someone to blame everything on, and on top of everything else, he might get to watch soldiers blast the living shit out of a couple of detectives who had always been a pain in the ass.

A deep throbbing sound reached him and he looked up. A gigantic Sikorsky CH-53K Super Stallion appeared over the buildings to the east, the rotors slapping the air with a relentless, inhuman beat. The two Apaches slowed and hovered at a higher altitude, giving the larger helicopter all the room it needed as it settled into the plaza.

“Go, go!” Phil yelled into the storm of dust and vibration. The soldiers dragged Tommy across Clark, Lee took Kimmy under his arm, hustling her off the stage past the subway stairs, and Phil pulled Grace along by a fistful of hair. Once they passed the tree planters, they crouched along the sandbag wall and waited for a signal.

As the chopper landed, none of them heard the almost liquid pops under the street. White wisps began to curl out of the holes in the manhole covers and the grates of the storm drains along Washington across Clark. Thick gray smoke wafted out of the subway steps at the northeastern corner of Clark and Washington. More rats fled up the subway steps and cringed in the sudden light, then bolted into the shadows of Clark or Washington.


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