Текст книги "Endgame (2009)"
Автор книги: David Michaels
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She tried to ignore her eyes. The burning. The old aches and pains. The guilt of taking from him what she shouldn't have, and still hoping that somewhere, deep down below all those shields against emotion, there was a man who would, at the very least, remember her.
She once again smelled the chicken they'd roasted that night, tasted the wine–too much wine–and listened to him speak softly in that near whisper that at once captivated and drove her insane with lust. And for just a moment, she was back there, feeling his lips on hers, and then . . .
"This was a mistake," he'd said afterward. "You were my student."
"And now I'm your lover."
He shook his head. "I'm sorry this happened. You can do better. You deserve better."
"Relationships are about people, not numbers on a calendar."
"It's not the numbers I'm worried about. It's me."
Gillespie's foot came down and snapped a branch. Loudly.
She mouthed a curse. Froze.
Then she waited a few breaths more and crossed to open ground, heading west now.
Had she heard something? Breathing? She thought for a moment that he was close, watching her, his gaze warm on her cheek. She wanted to call his name, beg him to turn himself in, to end the game here and now. She could help. She would do anything. She imagined him emerging from behind the trees, hanging his head, reaching out to her.
She heard herself, "Sam, come home. Just come home."
Then she shook free the thoughts, willed herself back to the task. She scanned the trees. That's right, back to work. Get rid of the baggage.She'd made a promise to Hansen. All right. If Sam had cut to the north instead of crossing the road . . .But she couldn't abandon the plan or the others. She had to keep moving. It was all part of small-unit tactics. She could still hear his admonishments as she continued, carefully measuring her steps, wincing at the crunch of twigs.
Her pulse began to slow, and then, reaching out with all her senses, she tried to detect him, taking her mind beyond the flesh to see if maybe, just maybe, the connection they'd had could transcend physical distances.
A cold breath washed over her.
She stopped, looked around, and something told her that Sam Fisher was already long gone.
THEYwere getting just a little too close for comfort, thought Moreau. He was alone, using the Trinity System, floating over the reservoir now and watching as Fisher neared the Esch-sur-Alzette's train station. Fisher stepped onto the dirt shoulder just as a motorcyclist came barreling toward him. Moreau winced and through a gasp cried, "Get out of the way, Sam!"
This was hardly planned. Unless Fisher had decided to suddenly check out and wanted to be run down by a motorcycle, he needed to move.
But then the guy on the bike swerved to avoid him and wound up dumping the bike in a ditch, his body tumbling off at shockingly steep angles, as though he were an action figure tossed aside by an angry kid. Fisher ran down after him. Others gathered around; then Fisher took off, northward up the road, moving another fifty yards.
Moreau checked the locations of the team, the pieces on his chessboard, as it were, and so far everything was falling into place.
"I've found some clothes here," called Valentina. "No more red shirt! He's changed!"
Of course he has,thought Moreau.
"Anything, Moreau?" asked Hansen.
"Still looking," he answered. "But we've got a motorcycle accident. That'll back up some traffic."
Fisher was now positioned between the highway to the left and a large soccer stadium to his right, its lights burning brilliantly.
Hansen's SUV was up on the north side of the road, picking up Gillespie, Valentina, and Ames, while Noboru remained behind, and he would be in plain sight to pick up Fisher. A little nudge from Moreau couldn't hurt at this point.
"Hey, Bruce Lee, you still with us? Wake up, Grasshopper."
"I'm here, Mr. Jules Winnfield. Would you like me to get you a Royale with cheese?"
Moreau laughed under his breath. "Fisher might be heading your way, just behind you."
"I'm out for a look."
NOBORUpushed forward in the seat of the SUV, grabbed his binoculars, then hopped out of the SUV and crouched down near the wheel. He trained his binoculars on the road, about a quarter mile back.
"Nathan, we're coming around, back to your position," said Hansen.
"Roger. Nothing yet . . . Wait . . ."
Noboru zoomed in toward a hurricane fence that was twisted and had fallen in all directions. The fence had once secured an ancient– looking building with towers and crumbling bricks and exposed girders and more stone, like an old fortress abandoned a hundred years ago.
Noboru lowered his binoculars, brought up the map on his OPSAT, then tapped on the building to get more data. A box indicated that the place had once been a steel foundry. Noboru raised the binoculars once more. Still nothing, but the place presented a definite point of cover, so they had to check it out. "This is Nathan. Still nothing, but there's an old steel foundry down the road. He might be going there. Let's check it out."
Not thirty seconds later, Hansen arrived, and they pulled a couple of U-turns and headed south toward the old building.
"All right, boys and girls, better get a move on, because Bruce Lee is right," said Moreau. "I've picked him up near the foundry."
"Damn it, the traffic's backed up," said Noboru, slamming on his brakes and looking for a spot where he could rumble onto the embankment and skirt around the other cars.
Just then, the traffic moved, and they rolled closer to the foundry's main driveway and shifted into the turning lane to cut across the road.
The size and decay of the building unnerved Noboru. If Fisher wanted to lure them into a gauntlet of horrors and systematically dispose of them, the abandoned foundry presented the perfect opportunity.
23
STEEL FOUNDRY NEAR RUSSANGE, FRANCE
HANSENbarked his orders, but Valentina barely listened and deliberately partnered up with Noboru, the one man on the team who regarded her as an equal. She led him toward a vertical slit where it seemed the sheet-metal wall had been pried back enough to permit a person to enter.
She slipped inside and flicked on her light to reveal a cavernous warehouse of sweeping concrete ceilings with shattered skylights, as though bombs had been dropped through them to explode inside and tear apart the brick walls and rusting ladders and catwalks. A latticework of iron girders and concrete lintels was spanned by thick cobwebs, and dust motes trickled through her flashlight's beam.
Valentina wondered if the dust in her light had been created by their entrance or by someone else's movements. She worked the light a moment more and could almost hear the ghosts of steel workers bustling about while fires spat, water hissed, and more men shouted to get the next load ready. It was the early 1900s, and the place thrived.
Noboru suddenly cursed in Japanese behind her, and Valentina heard a splintering of wood.
She whirled and saw that one of his legs had dropped through the floor up to his knee. "Hold on, hold on. . . ."
He began falling onto his side and caught himself, groaning as his leg twisted. She wrenched her arms under his, swore, then hauled him up. . . .
Only to have both her legs plunge through the same rotting floorboards. She released him and broke her fall at midknee with a hard slap of the palms and a gasp. She hung there for a moment, legs kicking in midair, coughing as the dust billowed into her face. Yes, they'd just learned the hard way that the foundry had a basement. Noboru managed to pull his leg free, then crawled around and got behind her.
"Don't put too much weight," she whispered as he lifted, and within a few seconds, she was sitting back on the wood and inspecting her legs for cuts.
They took a quick breather, and she directed her light back toward the floor, as did Noboru. More ash, dust, and something else, silt or loam, maybe, lay across a dark avenue of broad wooden planks, and within that dust were footprints, dozens of them, some larger than others. Kids, adults, all sorts of people had ventured into the foundry to play or explore over the years. She tried to find any that looked fresher than the others. It took a moment before she finally noticed a fresh break in the floor, a place where wood and soil had given way. She crossed to it, directed her light into the hole to reveal intersecting pipes and the reflective sheen of water far below. She shifted the light to pick out a canal far below. And now, from this new angle, she looked up again.
And there they were: a fresher set of footprints leading off to a staircase. She tipped her head to Noboru, and they rose.
Valentina's foot clanged loudly on the steps, and she grimaced. Her light showed footprints clearly evident on the third step but no others. Odd.
Noboru shone his light above the staircase.
"What?" she asked; then she understood.
Fisher had gone vertical.
And now they were easy prey. She imagined him descending, inverted, like a spider, only to sink the fangs of a tranquilizer or something worse into her neck. She held her breath, and for a few seconds thought she would be sick.
GILLESPIEfound herself paired up with the little runt Ames, and as she followed him along the foundry's east-side exterior wall, she twice plotted his murder.
The first scenario involved a knife. The second had her putting a bullet in the back of his head. But then she realized those methods were too merciful and too quick. She considered slower ways that had her getting creative with water and insects and, lest we forget . . . fire.
She wondered if the others knew about his past. They were all spies, and you had to assume they had thoroughly investigated one another, both professionally and personally. Gillespie had many friends in military intelligence who could get her whatever she wanted. She'd read the news stories about Ames's family dying in the fire. The world was unfair, and Ames railed against it with much more than words. His entire personality had been shaped by two facts: the loss of his family and his height. He probably asked himself: Why did my family have to die? Why can't I be taller?Gillespie thought she had him all figured out, and there were times when she saw through his remarks and found the frightened little boy behind them. She wanted to sympathize with him, feel his pain, tell him he'd be all right, and say that if he'd just drop all the defenses, there were people who could help.
But he was such an ass that he made helping impossible.
"Slow down," she told him. "You're not going in there alone."
"You worried about me, sweetie?"
"Well, if something happens to you, I want to make sure it's permanent."
"Great. I got your back, too."
"And remember, we're taking him alive."
"So you can have your little reunion?"
"Sure. You want to watch?"
He snorted. "Look, there's the door." He yanked open the bent metal, and they entered a stairwell. Her flashlight's beam raced up toward the distant ceiling.
HANSENhad opted for a classic Sam Fisher entrance by coming in from the roof. He felt a bit wistful about that. Here he was emulating a man who should have been his mentor but was his target. The assumption was that you had to think like Fisher to capture him, but, then again, he knew you'd be doing that, so perhaps he'd be engaged in some very un-Fisher-like maneuvers. . . .
Maybe that was thinking too hard and second-guessing himself, Hansen thought–which was, of course, thinking. Again. Mr. MIT Education needed to turn off the big brain.
Hansen startled a group of sleeping pigeons, which nearly knocked him off his feet as he reached the top of an exterior staircase running along the foundry's west side. He waved them off, then slipped quietly toward a rooftop doorway. The door itself was long since gone, lying near the opposite wall, and Hansen eased himself down the metal stairs, one hand clutching the rail. He reached the top floor, the floorboards of which had been torn up here and there, perhaps by looters, and carefully worked his way toward the center of the vast room.
"We think he's gone up to the second floor," said Valentina.
"Roger that," said Hansen. "I'm above." Hansen glanced down through a rectangular opening in the floor, lost his balance, and reached toward the wall, but his hand came up empty. He slipped down onto the floor, landing across a piece of broken pipe and breaking off several chunks of concrete that went tumbling down through the hole. He bit back a curse, stood, and then carefully chose his next path, across sturdier-looking boards, and searched for a way down to the second level.
He spotted a wrought-iron spiral staircase off to his left and stepped toward it.
Even as his foot came down, he realized the floor plank would not hold him. Yes, he was a fine judge of sturdy-looking wood, all right. The plank suddenly split. . . .
And down he went, keeping silent in an act of utter self-discipline. His fall already betrayed his location. No need to betray anything else.
Finally, he allowed himself a breath and strained to push himself up, feeling the burn in his shoulders and triceps. His one leg had folded, so he was propped on the knee, while the other foot and leg had crashed through the floor, wedging his upper thigh deeply between two more planks. He rolled his left foot so he could sit on it and ease the pain now shooting through his thigh. He tugged. Nothing.
Some team leader. The man who'd been to Russia and back. The hero, right?He balled his hands into fists and thought of a string of epithets that would've had nuns fainting where they stood. He closed his eyes and took a deep breath. Admit the mistake and move on.There wasn't time for self-loathing.
Resignedly, he whispered into his SVT: "I'm snagged up here."
Hansen jerked his leg again, but now it felt as though he'd caught his leg on something, a power cord perhaps. "Shit!"
Oh, man . . .He'd said that much too loudly.
"Hang on. We're almost to you," said Ames in the subdermal.
Within a few seconds they were there, and Ames offered his hand. "No," Hansen told him. "I'm snagged on something from below." He looked to Gillespie. "Go down there."
She took off toward the staircase while Ames came over to him and whispered, "What're you doing, Benjamin? Taking the path of least resistance?"
"Oh, you're a funny bastard."
"Hilarious. I'm laughing so hard I'm crying as Fisher gets away."
Hansen told him where to go, and Ames rose and took a few steps back. "No respect."
"Okay, I see what's happened," said Gillespie via the subdermal. "You're ankle is . . . What the hell? There's some kind of cord tied around your foot."
"What? What kind of cord?" he asked.
"Looks like paracord."
Hansen shuddered. Oh, my God!Fisher had tied him to the pole. Fisher was that close!
AMESopened his mouth as the arm came around his throat, but before he could react he was being lifted from the floor and dragged backward into the darkness. He gasped, reached up to seize the arm, which was like a piece of steel pressing even harder against his throat.
He tried to breathe. Tried.
And then a moment of panic before . . . darkness.
"Ames? Ames?" Hansen whirled his head around as the paracord suddenly slipped off his foot.
"All right, you're free," said Gillespie from below.
Hansen wriggled a moment more, then finally turned his hip and his leg broke free of the wood. He rolled to his left and disengaged himself from the floor.
Gillespie rushed up the stairs, looked around, then said, "Where's Ames?"
"I don't know. Ames?"
They waited. He did not respond through his SVT. "See if he went up top."
She nodded, ran off.
"Oh, man . . ." Hansen checked his OPSAT.
A message had come in, and the OPSAT's ID number told Hansen the note was from Ames:SVT MALFUNCTION. INOPERABLE. MOVEMENT ON LOWER FLOORS, NORTH SIDE. INVESTIGATING.
Ames had switched the team's comms from VOICE to VOICE AND TEXT TRANSCRIPTION in view of the SVT problem, which in and of itself was suspicious. Why he'd suddenly slipped off alone would be a discussion they'd have later–of that Hansen was certain.
"We're already in the subbasement," reported Valentina. "Nothing yet."
The OPSAT transcribed her report, and Gillespie chipped in her own regarding the third floor north being clear.
"Ames, report," Hansen ordered. "Say position. Ames, respond. . . ."
Nothing.
In the distance came the bend and creak of the floorboards, both from above and below, and then the pattering of boots and a slight groan from a pipe somewhere behind him.
Hansen took a step forward, directing his light toward a hatch he hadn't seen before and a pile of fallen bricks. And just behind the pile a boot was visible. He started over there, holding his breath, and then he turned, looked down, and there he was: Ames, lying on his back, dead or unconscious. His rifle was lying beside him, but the magazine had been ejected, and the holster for his SC pistol was empty. Fisher had taken his weapon.
With a start, Hansen dropped to his knees and checked Ames's neck for a carotid pulse. Strong and steady. Damn!Fisher was a goddamned ghost–perfectly silent.
"This is Hansen. I–"
He cut himself off as a loud crash–the crunching of rock and snapping of more floorboards under heavy weight–echoed through the foundry.
"Who was that?" cried Hansen. "Report!"
24
VALENTINAwas jogging toward the west side of the foundry when she stopped short and looked back over her shoulder a split second after someone had crashed through the floor.
Not a heartbeat later, as the broken wood continued to crash down, a loud splash echoed up from somewhere below.
"Nathan, did you hear that?"
"Yeah, I'm coming back to you," he said.
She and Noboru met up in the center of the ground floor, and their lights led them to where a man-sized hole had been punched through the floorboards. Pieces of wood jutted up from the crossbeams, and Valentina knocked a few out of the way and directed her flashlight below, while Noboru appeared beside her, scanning with his rifle.
The slimy black canal lay below, shouldered by smooth concrete walls rising a few feet above the murk. More important, a trail of disturbed algae, oily puddles, and bubbles wound off into the darkness.
"There he is," cried Noboru; then he dropped to one knee and fired his first Cottonball.
Valentina brought her rifle around and launched one herself, as he fired again, then switched to live rounds, firing to Fisher's left and right to bracket him.
"What're you doing?" she hollered.
"He's getting away!"
"Is your name Ames? Hold fire. Jesus, stay here. I'm going out to see if we can cut him off."
She rose and dashed back toward the slit in the metal wall where they had first entered.
NOBORUhad already decided that if he could anesthetize Fisher, he would; but if he had to, he'd fire to wound him. There was only so much you could do with Cottonballs, Sticky Shockers, ring airfoil or CS gas grenades, and wall-mine stunners–especially when your prey had intimate knowledge of each and every one of those less-than-lethal weapons.
Admittedly, he hadn't been able to clearly see Fisher in the water, but he'd rather shoot first and apologize later. That was, perhaps, the only thing he and Ames would agree upon. It was readily apparent that taking Fisher alive would be like capturing a tiger with your bare hands–and that wouldn't be fun for you or the tiger.
Fisher wasn't going to double back. Noboru felt certain of that, but he had to remain on overwatch just in case. Valentina had just taken him out of the pursuit. He could ignore her, but, then again, he thought that, maybe, just maybe, there was a spark there. If he gave her a little power over him, she'd probably find that very attractive. He chuckled to himself. That logic was faulty, to be sure, but when you're thinking with your libido, logic, of course, has nothing to do with it.
A sound like a dull clap came from below, followed almost instantly by a louder, closer thump from a piece of wood not twelve inches from his elbow.
Incoming fire!
Noboru jerked backward, tripped, and landed on his rump, heaving a cloud of dust.
Fisher had returned–or maybe he was trying to make them believe he had. . . .
"I'm taking fire over here," he reported into his SVT.
Three more shots ripped into the wood, blasting up splinters and streaking on toward the ceiling, where they ricocheted across the concrete. From the corner of his eye, Noboru saw sparks dance off the stone and steel.
Then . . . silence. He edged back toward the hole, balancing his rifle and light. If Fisher wanted to play with live fire, he'd come to the right place.
Noboru swallowed. He imagined the old spy sitting down there, one with the shadows, watching as Noboru shifted his head just far enough into the hole–and then, bang! The bullet would tear through Noboru's forehead, and his last thought would be that he'd been shot for being stupid.
He set his teeth, took a breath, then winced and stole a peek below.
But down there, the waters of the canal had grown deathly still.
"STAYwith him! Stay with him!" Hansen ordered as Ames slowly opened his eyes, coughed, tried to swallow, and made a face registering pain.
Hansen just shook his head. "He's got your pistol and your OPSAT–and he disabled the OPSAT's GPS so we can't track it. What the hell happened?"
Ames's voice was low and blurred. "What're you talking about?"
"What do mean, 'What am I talking about'? You're lying here on the floor. It was Fisher. . . ."
"It wasn't him."
"You know what we used to say at MIT? He took you out of the equation like a math professor with one swipe of the eraser. Whoosh. Just like that."
Ames sat up and rubbed his throat. "It wasn't him. I'm positive."
"How do you know?"
"Because this guy was much bigger. I mean, he was huge. Arms like my thighs. He would've dropped you like a bad transmission."
"Don't lie to save face."
Ames took a deep breath. "I'm not."
Hansen looked at him.
"All right. The son of a bitch got me . . . and I never heard or saw a thing."
"Fisher. Well, if you're ready, get up. Let's move. Kim, Maya, where are you guys? You got him?"
KIMBERLYGillespie slammed her shoulder hard against a rusting fire-escape door in an attempt to get outside. A small courtyard lay below, and Valentina had just told her that Fisher might be headed there.
The door finally gave way. The wings of the main building jogged off to her left and right, lined by dozens of windows. A long hedgerow stood below and rose maybe twelve feet as it wrapped around the corner. Fisher had 101 places to hide, and she had only one pair of eyes.
Somewhere outside, far off, a crowd roared, and she glimpsed the soccer stadium's lights reflected in the clouds. If he saw those lights, he might get the idea to lose himself in the crowd. Yes, that could work, because he'd be surrounded by innocent civilians, making him much harder to apprehend without causing a panic or a riot.
If she were him, she'd head there.
She raced down the stairs, reached the courtyard, but something, she wasn't sure what, made her turn back toward an archway for a second look.
And there he was, crouched near the wall! He was still wearing the red shirt? He'd changed, hadn't he?
Two sets of identical clothes? Well, isn't that clever.
"In the arch! Three o'clock low!" she reported.
As she bolted toward him, Fisher charged back through the arch and sprinted out of sight, back into one of the building's side wings.
Gillespie entered through the same side door and took another stairwell down to a subbasement, finding herself directly below the section where Valentina and Noboru had first entered.
She'd been right behind him . . . but he was already gone? How? That was impossible.
She stopped. Behind her, through a busted-out window, she spied two people running across the courtyard, probably Valentina and Noboru. They entered the building above her.
The basement was much larger than she expected, perhaps larger than a football stadium. Catwalks were suspended over the main canal and a half dozen stone staircases led back up to the first floor.
A chill fanned across her shoulders.
He was close.
Suddenly, three rounds from somewhere just above punched into the water, sending her diving for the ash-covered floor.
"Kim, you all right?" asked Valentina. "Where are you now?"
"I saw the shots," she whispered. "He's above me. Very close! He's shooting to kill!"
"Try to take him alive," Hansen interrupted through her subdermal.
Gillespie pushed back up to her feet and sprinted toward the nearest stairwell. At the top she found herself in a maintenance tunnel barely wide enough for a person and spanned by conduits, pipes, and more wall-mounted ladders.
Her light picked out footprints in the dust. She stopped, examined them. They looked fresh. She followed the prints to the first ladder, whose rungs were rusty and revealed clear signs of his ascent.
She climbed another ten feet, becoming enclosed in a narrow shaft, and then another twenty feet took her toward a door with a rusted knob. She assumed she'd reached the first floor. The knob looked dusty. She kept on, finding another door on the second floor–again no signs of exit–and then yet another door on the third floor: it, too, untouched. But the ladder betrayed his passage, and there was no clever way to conceal that.
"Kim, where are you?" asked Hansen.
"I'm in some kind of shaft. Check me on the map. I think he came up here."
"Hey, it's Maya here. Kim, I think I know where you are. Nathan and I just checked that out, but we didn't climb up."
"Well, I think he came this way."
The ladder terminated at a small hatch. She opened it, set the prop-arm into place, then climbed out, finding herself on an expanse of patchy gravel and peeling tar paper that extended across the wing's E-shaped roof. In some areas the roof had collapsed: Exposed ceiling planks and the remains of the skylights created dangerous voids promising injury or death below. Several brick chimneys stood in various stages of decay, a few resembling teeth in silhouette.
Out to the west, three towerlike structures made her feel as though she were atop a medieval castle, and off to the north and west the courtyard was enclosed by the two wings of the E-shaped building. She was up pretty high; correction, make that damnedhigh, probably close to a hundred feet, and while she had no serious fear of heights, standing atop a dilapidated structure, with just the pale beam of her flashlight to help her find a safe path, wasn't exactly comforting.
She thought she heard a shuffling sound to the north, then directed her light to the exposed beams and thought, perhaps, she saw footprints. She followed them slowly, gingerly, toward the north wing.
With her gaze focused on the roof, she failed to see the tree as she came around the side one of the chimneys. Before her was a colossal oak whose heavy boughs and thick branches overhung the roof like the claw of some beast ready to devour the stonework and steel.
She took a few more steps, lifted her flashlight. . . .
And there he was, standing at the ledge, facing away, about to climb into the tree.
Surprised by his sudden appearance, she could barely speak, and when she did, her voice sounded unrecognizable, even to her. "Don't move a muscle."
She wanted to say, " Sam, please, don't do this. Come with me now. It's all over. This is for the best. . . ."
But only that order came out, cued by instinct, reaction, her time spent in the military listening to hundreds of people issue thousands and thousands of orders. Commands. Do this. Don't do that.
Don't move a muscle.
And the expectation was compliance.
But if your name was Sam Fisher and you were on the run, orders meant little, even if they were issued by a former lover, by someone who still cared very, very much. . . .
And so Fisher did not turn back. He did not obey her.
He simply jumped.
25
HANSENwas at the exact opposite end of the foundry from where Fisher was escaping, and it might as well have been on the opposite end of the universe. Hansen's competitive nature and jealousy had boiled up to the surface; hewanted to be the operative who captured Fisher. Maybe that sounded immature–something Ames would no doubt admit and not apologize for–but the desire was there and Hansen needed to wrestle with it while maintaining control of his team and always putting the mission first. But it was damned hard.
He and Ames were in a full sprint, racing along the wall toward the next corner as the others issued their breathless reports.
"He jumped through the trees! He just jumped right through," said Gillespie. "I think he caught himself. Wait! He's on the ground now! I need to find a way down."
"We're coming to you," said Noboru. "Almost there."
"Don't lose him," said Valentina. "Do you hear me, Kim? Don't move–just maintain surveillance."
"But now he's already gone," she cried.
"Moreau, you got him?" Hansen asked.
"I had him coming out of the tree," said the operations manager. "Zooming in again. Aw, I've lost him now."
"The side street! The side street!" cried Gillespie. "I think he's heading for the stadium."
"Ames, go!" Hansen hollered, then waved him on.
"Boys and girls, listen to me," began Moreau. "I think he's definitely crossed the side street, but I've got multiple pedestrians down there. I'll see what I can do, but you need to close with this target!"
As Moreau continued his satellite-fed commentary, Hansen slowed to a stop. It was time to act like a team leader and not a glory-seeking operator. It was time to hold back and let his people do their jobs while he kept them organized and on task. He lifted his wrist to view his OPSAT and thumbed to the map. On the other side of the street lay a maze of alleys and intersecting roads, and Hansen estimated that a three-minute run would get Fisher to the stadium–if they didn't cut him off first. "Moreau, I needyou to pick him up."
"I'm on it, cowboy. What the hell do you think I'm doing over here, sipping Coke and eating French fries?"