shoulder.
“McGlade, get off the—”
I was halfway to the stairs when I paused, wondering why the voice on the headset had gotten so clear.
It took me a moment to realize the radio reception hadn’t gotten better—I could hear it better because there was no background noise.
The low, droning hiss of the SCBA had stopped.
I was out of air.
CHAPTER 10
I DIDN’T THINK. I moved.
I made it through the gas and to the stairs in less than three seconds, and then I slid down the first few on my belly like I was sledding.
The suit proved to be slipperier than I thought, and I picked up speed.
I stuck my hands out in front of me, trying to stop my momentum, but my gloves couldn’t get a purchase on the carpet. My chest felt like I was getting repeatedly kicked, and my head bounced around on my neck in whiplash jerks.
BUMP BUMP BUMP BUMP
. The ground floor rushed at me, blurry and off center.
And then I remembered the nails on the bottom step.
They were less than a body length away. No time to turn. No time to stop. I arched my back, reaching out my hands, palms up, trying to grab the shoulders of the dead cop slumped at the bottom of the staircase. I hit him, hard, my elbows bending from the impact, holding my chest a few inches above the deadly nails.
I did a push-up off of Buhmann, got my feet under me, and eased myself over the trap. Fresh air was only a dozen yards away, out the front door. I got ready to sprint for it.
“. . . help me . . .”
I didn’t move.
Stryker was still alive. It had to be him, because the only SRT members I hadn’t seen yet were him and the woman.
I took a last, longing look at the door, then headed toward the rear of the house, to the kitchen, the only room I hadn’t yet seen.
“Jack, are you still there?”
“I’m here, Rick. I think he’s in the kitchen.”
I concentrated on slowing my breathing. I don’t know what poisons were clinging to me, or if anything had gotten in through the holes. Plus, the air inside the space suit was quickly becoming stale, since no new air was being pumped in. The less I breathed, the better.
Two steps into the kitchen, I found the female cop. I had no idea what killed her, but whatever it was made her eyes pop out of their sockets.
“Stryker, dammit, where are you?”
Static, then,
“. . . base . . .”
“Who’s got a floor plan? Where’s the basement?”
It was more talking than I wanted to do, and it emptied my lungs. I took a shallow breath.
“I have the floor plan, Jack.”
Rick.
“There’s a door in the back of the kitchen.”
I spun my shoulders, taking in the room, and saw the refrigerator was open. I also noticed, sitting on a plate in the fridge, something horrible.
“The bomb squad is here, they’re coming in.”
Passing the refrigerator, I saw the basement steps, Stryker clinging to the top. His gas mask was also caked in vomit, but his chest was rising and falling.
I grabbed his belt and pulled.
It was like hauling a bag of bricks, but the tile floor helped, and I was able to yank the groaning SRT leader across the kitchen, toward the back door.
Three feet away, my vision began to cloud. My legs had become two sacks of jelly that could barely support my weight.
Two feet away. I felt hot and cold at the same time. A wave of dizziness swooped down on me, and I fell to my knees. Everything started to get dark.
A foot away. Beyond that doorway, fresh air. No more deadly traps. No more poison gas. Twelve inches away was Herb. Latham. Life.
I reached the jamb, straining from the effort of pulling Stryker, and then felt the floorboard shift beneath my hip.
I froze. My eyes followed the floorboard to an electrical outlet, under the sink. Attached to a cord, atop the loose floorboard, was a metal sphere the size of a golf ball. Surrounding it, like a jail cell, were metal bars. Next to the contraption was a fire extinguisher, its nozzle pointing at my face.
Even in my oxygen-deprived brain, I knew what
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