CHAPTER 19

2015, Texas

Liam identi ed Chan among the students. It wasn’t as obvious as he’d thought it would be. There were about seven or eight who looked oriental to him, and most of them were younger than the other students. But he knew Edward Chan was the youngest here and he zeroed in on a smal boy at the front, gaping wide-eyed at the zero-point energy reactor. Seemingly entranced by it.

Becks gently tapped Liam’s arm and leaned towards him. ‘Information: according to the mission data, Edward Chan only has four minutes and seven seconds left to live.’

Liam nodded. He looked around the chamber, trying to identify what or who could possibly pose a threat to the boy. If they were down to four minutes, then presumably the lad’s kil er was right here, right now, get ing ready to make his move. His eyes darted from Mr Kel y, explaining the machinery and instrumentation, to Mr Whitmore, stroking his sparsely bearded chin thoughtful y, to the two technicians manning a couple of data terminals. One of them?

His gaze shifted to the students, al of them stil marvel ing at the interior of the chamber and some of the incredible-sounding statistics that Mr Kel y was reeling o . incredible-sounding statistics that Mr Kel y was reeling o .

‘… equivalent to al of the energy produced by coal, oil, natural gas … over the last one hundred and fty years …’

One of them? One of the students?

Why not? It could just as easily be one of the students. After al , Liam was the same age as the oldest of them and an assassin would probably have a bet er chance smuggling himself in as a student than he would a member of sta . After al , that had worked for him and Becks. His gaze wandered from face to face, looking for a nervous tic, darting eyes, lips moving in silent prayer, someone clearly agonizing over the precise moment to strike. Becks gently tapped his arm again.

‘What now?’ he hissed.

‘I am sensing precursor tachyon particles in the vicinity.’

He looked at her. ‘Uh?’ Their return window wasn’t due yet, not until ten minutes after Chan’s supposed moment of death. That was the arrangement. ‘Are you sure?’

Becks nodded towards the reactor. ‘There. They are appearing …’ Her eyes widened, and her lids ut ered and blinked rapidly. ‘DANGER!’ she suddenly barked at the top of her voice.

Howard was almost beside Chan, his nger on the trigger inside his bag ready to pul the smal weapon out and re it at his back. He wanted to be right beside Chan, right next to him, to know as an absolute certainty he wasn’t going to miss. Too much rested on this. Everything rested on this. He was just a couple of yards from him when a on this. He was just a couple of yards from him when a tal girl with distinctive red hair at the back of the knot of students suddenly started shouting.

Mr Kel y stopped mid-sentence. ‘Excuse me?’

‘DANGER!’ shouted the girl again, her voice loud and urgent.

‘Excuse me, young lady,’ replied Mr Whitmore, ‘this is not the place for some sort of stupid prank!’

Howard turned to look at the girl.

Something’s wrong. Someone knows!

‘DANGER!’ shouted the girl again, but her nger pointed directly at the reactor, not him. ‘Tachyon interference with the reactor! The reactor wil explode!’

Howard had no idea what the hel she was on about. Perhaps it was just a coincidence, perhaps she was just some aky goth girl making some sort of a protest against experimenting with zero-point energy. He was with her on that, but now was not the best time. He wasn’t going to be distracted. He pushed his way forward towards Chan as the other students began to step back warily from the reactor in response to her outburst.

At last, standing beside the smal boy, he looked down at him, his nger poised on the trigger, ready to whip the gun out and re.

Chan turned to look up at him. ‘What’s the girl at the back saying?’

Howard found himself shrugging. ‘I … uh … I guess she’s having some kinda t.’

‘Now stop it!’ snapped Mr Whitmore, pushing his way

‘Now stop it!’ snapped Mr Whitmore, pushing his way through the bemused students towards the girl. ‘Nothing is going to explode!’

Chan grinned up at Howard. ‘Crazy girl, huh?’

And Howard found himself smiling back at the kid, somehow not quite ready … not quite ready to pul out the gun and re at point blank range. He real y hadn’t expected to be looking down into a friendly face at the very moment he pul ed the trigger on Chan.

Without a warning Becks grabbed Liam roughly by the shoulders and man-handled him back from the reactor towards the walkway leading to the sealed exit.

‘Becks! What the hel are you doing? What’s going on?’

‘Imminent threat of explosion,’ she said crisply and calmly, and a lit le too loudly. Her voice spooked the other students nearby who quickly began to join them backing away from it.

‘Everybody, calm down!’ shouted Mr Kel y. ‘Nothing is going to happen!’

Liam looked up at Becks. ‘Are you sure it’s going to –?’

Becks suddenly stopped dragging him. ‘Too late to escape!’ She yanked Liam’s arm downwards to the oor and he dropped to his knees.

‘Ouch! What are you doing?’

She knelt down in front of him and wrapped her arms round his shoulders, shielding him from the reactor. Liam peeked over her shoulder and saw the reactor’s thick metal casing suddenly start to ripple like jel y and a moment casing suddenly start to ripple like jel y and a moment later begin to col apse in on itself.

‘What the –?’

Becks reached out one hand and grabbed his nose painful y. ‘You must lower your head,’ she ordered, yanking him roughly down until he was almost doubled over, his head in her lap. Then al of a sudden he felt the oddest tugging sensation. As if he and Becks and the world around them was being sucked into a gigantic laundry mangler, stretched impossibly thin like elastic strands of spaghet i towards the reactor … fol owing the col apsed metal casing into some inconceivable pinpoint of in nity.

‘Ooooooohhhhh Jaaaaaaaaaayyyyyy-zzzzzzussssssss!’

Day of the Predator
titlepage.xhtml
index_split_000.html
index_split_001.html
index_split_002.html
index_split_003.html
index_split_004.html
index_split_005.html
index_split_006.html
index_split_007.html
index_split_008.html
index_split_009.html
index_split_010.html
index_split_011.html
index_split_012.html
index_split_013.html
index_split_014.html
index_split_015.html
index_split_016.html
index_split_017.html
index_split_018.html
index_split_019.html
index_split_020.html
index_split_021.html
index_split_022.html
index_split_023.html
index_split_024.html
index_split_025.html
index_split_026.html
index_split_027.html
index_split_028.html
index_split_029.html
index_split_030.html
index_split_031.html
index_split_032.html
index_split_033.html
index_split_034.html
index_split_035.html
index_split_036.html
index_split_037.html
index_split_038.html
index_split_039.html
index_split_040.html
index_split_041.html
index_split_042.html
index_split_043.html
index_split_044.html
index_split_045.html
index_split_046.html
index_split_047.html
index_split_048.html
index_split_049.html
index_split_050.html
index_split_051.html
index_split_052.html
index_split_053.html
index_split_054.html
index_split_055.html
index_split_056.html
index_split_057.html
index_split_058.html
index_split_059.html
index_split_060.html
index_split_061.html
index_split_062.html
index_split_063.html
index_split_064.html
index_split_065.html
index_split_066.html
index_split_067.html
index_split_068.html
index_split_069.html
index_split_070.html
index_split_071.html
index_split_072.html
index_split_073.html
index_split_074.html
index_split_075.html
index_split_076.html
index_split_077.html
index_split_078.html
index_split_079.html
index_split_080.html
index_split_081.html
index_split_082.html
index_split_083.html
index_split_084.html