The Coffin Dancer (Lincoln Rhyme 2)
Page 47
Amelia Sachs saw a faint glimmer and she knew where the Coffin Dancer was.
In a small g
rove of trees about three hundred yards away. His telescopic sight caught the reflected glint of the pale clouds overhead.
"Over there," she cried, pointing, to two county cops huddling in their cruiser.
The troopers rolled into their car and took off, skidding behind a nearby hangar to flank him.
"Sachs," Rhyme called through her headset. "What's--"
"Jesus, Rhyme, he's on the field, shooting at the plane."
"What?"
"Percey's trying to get to the hangar. He's shooting explosive slugs. He's shooting to draw her out."
"You stay down, Sachs. If Percey's going to kill herself, let her. But you stay down!"
She was sweating furiously, hands shaking, heart pounding. She felt the quiver of panic run down her back.
"Percey!" Sachs cried.
The woman had broken free from Jerry Banks and rolled to her feet. She was speeding toward the hangar door.
"No!"
Oh, hell.
Sachs's eyes were on the spot where she'd seen the flare of the Dancer's 'scope.
Too far, it's too far, she thought. I can't hit anything at that distance.
If you stay calm, you can. You've got eleven rounds left. There's no wind. Trajectory's the only problem. Aim high and work down.
She saw several leaves fly outward as the Dancer fired again.
An instant later a bullet passed within inches of her face. She felt the shock wave and heard the snap as the slug, traveling twice the speed of sound, burned the air around her.
She uttered a faint whimper and dropped to her stomach, cowering.
No! You had a chance to shoot. Before he rechambered. But it's too late now. He's locked and loaded again.
She looked up fast, lifted her gun, then lost her nerve. Head down, the Glock pointed generally in the direction of the trees, she fired five fast shots.
But she might as well have been shooting blanks.
Come on, girl. Get up. Aim and shoot. You got six left and two clips on your belt.
But the thought of the near miss kept her pinned to the ground.
Do it! she raged at herself.
But she couldn't.
All Sachs had the courage for was to raise her head a few inches--just far enough to see Percey Clay, sprinting, race to the hangar door just as Jerry Banks caught up with her. The young detective shoved her down to the ground behind a generator cart. Almost simultaneously with the rolling boom of the Coffin Dancer's rifle there came the sickening crack of the bullet striking Banks, who spun about like a drunk as blood puffed into a cloud around him.
And on his face, first a look of surprise, then of bewilderment, then of nothing whatsoever as he spiraled down to the damp concrete.