Ghosts In the Heart. Michael J.D. Keller
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Название: Ghosts In the Heart

Автор: Michael J.D. Keller

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Зарубежная фантастика

Серия:

isbn: 9781456607128

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ flickered intermitedly as if undecided whether to give up the struggle and burn out entirely.

      Mckenzie could hear the loud, harsh male voices coming from his right, out of sight beyond the long shelf running toward the front of the store. He could not quite make out the words but he could clearly discern an angry demanding tone that was growing in intensity. His first impulse was to move toward the voices. No, he thought, you don’t know where Peter and Brenda are. You have to be sure they are not in the line of fire. Reversing his direction, he moved with a feline grace toward the rear of the store. Circle around, he told himself. Come up the far aisle, approach from a direction the robbers wouldn’t expect.

      At the end of the long shelf, he peered carefully down the aisle. Peter and Brenda were standing almost squarely at the end of the corridor formed by the grocery laden shelves. Peter was holding his hands up, palms out in front of his chest. It looked less like an expression of surrender than an attempt to placate the angry voice coming unseen from Mckenzie’s left while shielding Brenda who was standing only slightly behind him. Mckenzie could clearly grasp what Peter Stewart was doing. He was trying to edge further to his side, to place his body entirely in front of his wife. Amazingly enough, Brenda was not letting him do it. She was moving with him, unwilling to let her husband surrender his life for hers.

      Mckenzie crossed the aisle in one quick stride. The Stewarts must not see him. They might react involuntarily and alert their still unseen captors. He had to get much closer before this drama played out. Peering down the next aisle, Mckenzie saw the remaining participants. Behind the counter, near a large cash register, a young man, perhaps Vietnamese or Korean, stood, pale and trembling with fright, his hands clasping and unclasping in front of him. To one side a shabbily dressed, skinny man, not much older than the clerk, was pointing or waving a small pistol at the store employee. From his expression and the high pitched tone of his voice, he appeared as nervous as the clerk.

      The big man Mckenzie had first seen as he entered the store stood with his back to the aisle. Unlike his companion, he did not appear nervous. He was angry and becoming angrier with each passing second. Something was not going well. In his right hand a pistol was pointed in the direction where Peter and Brenda were standing and the weapon did not tremble or waver. With his other hand, he was gesticulating toward the clerk, toward his companion, toward a situation that seemed to be fueling a building rage.

      There was a benefit in the big man’s fury. It kept the attention of everyone in the little tableau of terror focused on the front of the store. Once again, Mckenzie crossed an aisle unseen and began to move down the last corridor.

      Mckenzie’s read of the situation was correct. Things were not going well. Or at least they were not going to Petey Strelkski’s satisfaction. Scarborough had promised him that there would be a cash register and a safe. It was going to be a nice easy score - enough money to hold him for a few days - maybe even longer if he beat Scarborough’s share out of him. Now the punk at the register claimed that he couldn’t open the safe and there was only a couple of bucks in the register. He could have done better snatching purses down at the wharf.

      If it needed to get worse, these customers that Scarborough had said wouldn’t be here had accomplished that. From the moment Strelkski looked at Peter Stewart, he recognized him, and he was sure that Stewart had recognized him. This guy was a fucking prosecutor for Christ’s sake. He had been in the court room when Petey appeared on a probation violation charge. They had looked right at each other. Donnie dumbass had gotten him into a situation where an eyewitness could conclusively ID him. He was looking at a strike three rap, a life sentence, on a score that wouldn’t pay his liquor bill for one night. As his fury escalated, the curses snarled in his heavily accented English became louder and louder still.

      Creeping silently down the aisle between the grocery shelves on his right and an aged faded white freezer on his left, Mckenzie neared the front of the store. All the voices were clearly audible now. He could hear Peter trying to calm the situation, the high pitched whine of the Russian’s accomplice denying that anything was his fault, and over it all, the mounting rage in the big man’s accented rant. He was psyching himself up. Mckenzie had heard this type of escalating fury before. The man was letting his emotions push him toward some desperate resolution, convincing himself that he couldn’t leave a witness behind. Mckenzie suddenly remembered Carl Delanty, an instructor at the policy academy, a sour and cynical old street cop delaying retirement for at least one more year. Delanty once told his fresh faced probationary candidates that when they got out into the real world they would experience violent situations where the available alternatives were bad, very bad, and “Oh my God, I’m going to die.” Carl had smiled humorlessly when he said “I recommend that you try to avoid the last one.”

      I may not have that luxury, Mckenzie thought. Looking to his right, he picked up a glass jar of some kind of vegetables. Holding it in his left hand and his 38 grasped firmly in his right, he took one last step toward the front of the store, stopping just short of the end of the aisle. His next move would bring him into full view of everyone caught in this twisted sequence of mindless coincidence.

      Now, he thought as he hurled the jar at a large faced electric clock hanging on the wall just beyond the counter. The impact shattered both the jar and the front of the clock. The thunderous burst of explosive force coming from a completely unexpected direction momentarily stilled the voices and drew all eyes toward the shards of glass raining down to the floor.

      Mckenzie knew that he had only bought a second or two in which to act. He stepped around the corner exposing himself to full view. The whiner was just to his side, the cheap pistol in his hand actually pointed toward the floor. Instinctively, Mckenzie knew that this one was not the main threat. The man with the roaring, heavily accented voice was almost fifteen feet away, standing between Mckenzie and the Stewarts. His weapon had been aimed at them but the crash of breaking glass had distracted him, causing him to half turn and point his gun off into space.

      “Peter!!” Mckenzie shouted. “Get her down, now!!”

      Existence went into slow motion. Peter wrapped his arms around Brenda as he pulled her to the floor and rolled until his body covered hers. Behind the counter a terrified young man also dove toward the fragile security of the floor. Donnie Scarborough stared in amazement at this latest shock to his master criminal scheme, while Strelkski turned to face the unexpected threat.

      “San Francisco Police” Alex shouted. “Drop your weapons.” What had a second before been slow motion switched to fast forward. Donnie Scarborough completely forgot the gun in his own hand and ran past Mckenzie toward the door. His panicked dash produced a collision with Strelkski just as the big Russian tried to fire a shot. The bullet sailed off harmlessly into space as Strelkski furiously pushed Scarborough away. The force of the shove threw Donnie crashing into the far wall where he slid stunned to the floor.

      This looks like the third option, Mckenzie thought. He and the big man were the only ones still standing and from the madness gleaming in his eyes, Mckenzie knew that the Russian was not going to surrender. The Stewarts were temporarily out of the line of fire, but they would only be safe if he could bring his opponent down.

      CHAPTER 7

      The gunfire began as a staccato rhythm that merged into a thunderous roar. Lying prone on the floor, his arm wrapped around Brenda, his head pressed against her, Peter resisted a fierce urge to look up. The best protection he could give her now was his body, interposed between her and the murderous specter who had come raging out of the night. Only Alex, who seemed to have conjured himself into existence, could stop the threat.

      Peter heard the scream - an animalistic wail of pain and then the crash as a heavy body fell back against a metal rack of snack foods. The unexpected silence felt as ominous as the crash of gunfire it had just replaced. He was able to hear a gasp, a desperate quest for oxygen that СКАЧАТЬ