The Sixth Day (A Brit in the FBI 5) - Page 111

dows to the left, “And ask that lying bitch why she let my brother die?”

Mike’s hand went immediately to her weapon. Roman Ardelean said very quietly, “Don’t even think about it.” But she didn’t pause and she was fast, her Glock out in instant. Even as she opened her mouth to tell him it was over, he said in that same quiet voice, “Tsk,” followed by a strange word that sounded like Obtine.

Mike felt a flash of air and a sharp sting in her hand. Her Glock clattered to the ground, and the tail of a falcon disappeared into the tree-lined street. She started to duck toward the weapon, but the bird took the corner at speed, turned in her wings, and shot between her and her Glock like a missile.

The voice from the shadows called out, “Stop. Arlington does not approve of weapons. She’s been trained to take down drones, but she sometimes acts on her own where handguns are concerned.” He turned to Nicholas. “Wise of you to stay still, Drummond. I believe she would go for your eyes.”

Nicholas said nothing, stepped quickly to Mike to see her hand was bleeding. He said to Ardelean, “A handkerchief to staunch the bleeding,” and he slowly pulled one from his breast pocket. As he did, his other hand reached the gun under his arm.

“Now, Drummond, do be careful where you put your hands.”

Nicholas didn’t move. “Are you too afraid of us to show yourself? All you have going for you is a killer bird?”

Ardelean stepped from the shadow. He was wearing dark jeans, a black T-shirt, and leather jacket, and on his wrist sat a falcon. He held no weapons, only the bird. Nicholas knew he could pull his Glock and kill the bird in a heartbeat.

Ardelean said, “You invaded my home and you killed my brother. However, you have given me what I wanted, so treat this as a warning. Stop. Go home.”

Mike said, as she pressed Nicholas’s handkerchief to her hand, “If we stop, will you stop? Murdering people for their blood, killing Dr. Marin’s fiancé for no reason at all, killing Alexander and Vittorini, Hemmler and Donovan, not to mention sending your drone after us and the train?” Her hand throbbed and burned. The talons had dug deep.

Ardelean said, “Your brains are so . . . limited. You see and understand so very little. Yet again, I have found that true of so many of my fellow human beings. Then there are the corrupt greedy ones, like Barstow. You may leave now, talk to Isabella, ask her why she failed to save my brother.

“Drummond, if you take one more step, Arlington will tear out your eyes and then your throat. She’s hungry. We took down a rabbit earlier, but she’s at her flying weight and fast, and I need to feed her more.” He paused, looking back and forth between Nicholas and Mike. “Will you never learn—”

Nicholas sprang. Ardelean tossed the bird forward, right at Nicholas, but the falcon didn’t go for Nicholas’s face, it veered off.

Ardelean was ready. He slammed Nicholas’s leg with a roundhouse kick, smooth, fast, deadly.

So he was trained in martial arts. But Nicholas was, as well.

Could Mike get her Glock before the falcon attacked her again? She had to try. She grabbed it off a patch of flowers and turned to shoot, but Nicholas had already fought him back into the trees, his hands a blur, his fists hitting Ardelean’s forearm, his leg striking down toward the man’s thigh with such force he almost lost his balance when Ardelean managed to jerk out of his way. He punched Ardelean in the breastbone with his palm, making the man stagger backward, but he was on Nicholas again, his fist in his kidney.

They were well matched. Mike was afraid to move closer—the bird was perched on a limb right above her head. They were too close: she couldn’t take a chance shooting Nicholas.

Mike suddenly had a clear shot. She brought up the Glock, and the bird, screaming, hit her arm as she fired. The shot went low, splitting a branch from the tree. The bird turned on Nicholas.

Ardelean disappeared into the trees. The bird screeched and flew after him.

“There, there!” Mike called to Nicholas, pointing.

Ardelean was in a full-out sprint, heading west, through the gardens, past iron benches, the bird circling back to cover his retreat. They gained on him. Ardelean suddenly turned and shouted out that strange word again—obtine. The falcon whirled into motion in front of them, wings out, attacking with a shriek.

Mike threw up her arms to protect her face and lost sight of Ardelean as she fought off the bird. Nicholas grabbed it by a tail feather, going for its jesses, but its sharp feet were no match for his flesh. The bird dug in, launching herself into the air off Nicholas’s battered hands, wings beating hard as she flew away.

They were suddenly surrounded by silence, the city around them holding its breath. “I don’t know which way he went,” Nicholas said, turning in a full circle, then stopping and listening. Nothing.

Mike was bending over, panting. “I should have shot it, but I just couldn’t make myself do it. I’m an idiot.”

A heartbeat later, a motorcycle roared to life.

“There, he’s on a bike. Go, go.” She started to run, but Nicholas grabbed her arm. “No, Mike, we can’t get him now.” She looked up to see his nose was bleeding, and he had a small cut above his right eye. Mike’s hands were bloody, her arms cut from tree branches and the bird’s talons.

“I should have shot that wretched bird, I should have—”

He lightly touched his finger over her mouth. “It’s all right. Ardelean’s already too far away. We’ll never catch him.”

“Nicholas, what did he mean that this was just a warning because we gave him what he wanted?”

Nicholas felt fear ice his belly. “Listen.”

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