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But as he lifted her arm, he paused. The hand was gone. Only a stump remained, a jagged scar ru
“But why your hand? I thought your sister…”
“The whole thing went awry. It was a horrific disaster, too complicated to explain now.”
He looked back up at her. “Helen,” he said. “Why did you go along with this murderous scheme? Why did you conceal things from me — the Black Frame, Audubon, the Doane family, everything else? Why haven’t you—”
She lowered her arm. “Let’s please not talk about that. Not now. Later — we’ll have plenty of time later.”
“But Emma, your twin sister — did you know she’d be sacrificed?”
Her face turned very pale. “I only learned… afterward.”
“But you never contacted me, ever. How can I—”
She stayed him with her good hand. “Aloysius, stop. There were reasons for everything. It’s a terrible story, a terrible story. I will tell it to you, all of it. But this is not the time or place. Now, please — let’s leave.” She tried to smile, but her face was white.
She raised her other hand and wordlessly he slipped the ring onto the ring finger. As he did so, he glanced past her at the sylvan scene. Nothing had changed. Two distant joggers were approaching from the direction of the reservoir. A small child was crying, having gotten entangled in the leash of an excited Yorkshire terrier. The violinist was still sawing away industriously.
His glance fell on the last remaining yachtsman, packing up his boat, still clumsily trying to fit the pieces into his case. His hands were shaking, and despite the chill air Pendergast noticed a sheen of perspiration on his forehead.
A split second elapsed in which a dozen thoughts passed through Pendergast’s brain — speculation, realization, decision.
Keeping his movements unhurried and calm, he turned toward Esterhazy and made a casual gesture for him to join them.
“Judson,” he murmured. “Take Helen and get her away from here. Do it calmly but quickly.”
Helen looked at him in confusion. “Aloysius, what—”
Pendergast silenced her with a little shake of his head. “Take her to the Dakota — I’ll meet up with you there. Please go. Now.”
As they began to move away, Pendergast glanced toward Proctor, sitting on the bench a hundred yards off. “We’ve got a problem,” he murmured into the headset. Then he continued strolling along the edge of the pond, toward the yachtsman, still struggling with his case. As he passed, he paused, keeping one eye on Esterhazy and Helen, moving along the path ahead of him.
“Lovely boat,” he said, pausing. “Sloop or ketch?”
“Well,” said the man with a sheepish look, “I’m rather new to this, couldn’t tell you the difference.”
With a fast, easy movement Pendergast pulled his.45 and drew down on the man. “Stand up,” he said, “slowly. Keep your hands where I can see them.”
The man looked up at him with a curiously blank expression. “Are you crazy?”
“Do it.”
The yachtsman started to rise. Then, with a lightning movement, he yanked a gun from beneath his jacket. Pendergast dropped him with a single shot, the roar of the.45 ripping across the silence of the evening.
“Run!” he cried to Esterhazy and Helen.
Instantly, all hell broke loose. The two lovers on the bench leapt to their feet, pulling TEC-9s from their backpacks and firing at Esterhazy, who had taken off at a run, pulling Helen along by the hand. The automatic fire cut him down, Esterhazy clawing the air with a scream as he fell.
Helen stopped and turned. “Judson!” she cried over the commotion.
“Keep ru
Another clatter of gunfire raked Esterhazy, flipping him over onto his back.
People were ru
“Proctor!” Pendergast cried, “the homeless man—!”
But even as he spoke, the shotgun roared. Proctor, in the act of pivoting, was physically lifted off his feet by the impact and slammed backward, his Beretta clattering to the ground; he fell heavily, twitched, then went still.
As the homeless man turned to fire at Pendergast, the agent brought him down with a round to the chest, punching the man backward into the bushes.
Pendergast turned to see Helen, a hundred yards off, a low figure surrounded by fleeing people. She was still bending over her fallen brother, crying out in despair, cradling his head in her good hand.
“Helen!” he shouted, sprinting toward her once again. “Fifth Avenue! Head for Fifth Avenue—!”
The sound of a gunshot came from behind the bench and Pendergast felt a terrible blow to his back. The heavy-caliber round punched him to the ground, stu
The bench shooter fired and a bullet kicked up a clout of dirt inches from Pendergast’s face. He returned fire, heard the shot ricochet off the metal frame of the bench. Another shot came from between the slats; he felt a puff of air on his cheek as the bullet whined past his head and buried itself in his calf. Ignoring the fiery pain, Pendergast collected himself, emptied his lungs of air, and squeezed off another round; it passed between the slats this time, striking the shooter full in the face; she jerked backward, arms flinging out in surprise, and fell.
The shooting stopped.
Pendergast swept the scene of carnage with his eyes. Six bodies lay motionless around him: the two lovers, the would-be yachtsman, the homeless man, Proctor, Esterhazy. Everyone else had fled the vicinity, shrieking and crying. In the distance, he could make out Helen, still ru
Then he saw something else: the two joggers — who had paused, then altered course away when the gunfire erupted — were now making directly for Helen. And they were no longer jogging. They were sprinting.
“Helen!” he cried, hobbling past the boathouse as quickly as he could, blood streaming from his leg. “Look out! To your left!”
In the darkness beneath the trees, still at a run, Helen turned, seeing immediately that the joggers were going to cut her off at the gate. She swerved away, heading for a grove of trees off the path.
The joggers veered in pursuit. Pendergast, realizing he could not catch up, dropped on his good leg and aimed the.45, squeezing off a round. But the target was more than two hundred feet away and moving fast, an almost impossible shot. He fired again, and then in desperation fired the final round from his magazine, missing again. Helen was sprinting toward a grove of sycamores alongside the Central Park boundary wall. In a furious movement, Pendergast ejected the empty magazine, slammed a fresh one home.
A scream resounded as the two joggers caught Helen, one tackling her, the two of them wrestling her back to her feet.
“Aloysius!” he heard her cry floating back toward him. “Help! I know these people! Der Bund—the Covenant! They’ll kill me! Help me, please—!”
They dragged her back toward the gate to Fifth Avenue. With a groan of fury Pendergast staggered to his feet, stumbling forward, summoning the last of his ebbing strength, willing himself to stay on his feet. His wound was bleeding profusely but he ignored it, moving forward at a shambling lope.