33
Rafael flew down the corridor with no idea where
he was headed, opening doors at random. His priority was to find
Sarah. They found each other quickly, at a nook in the
hallway.
“I told you to run. If they’d caught you, you’d be
completely fucked.”
They ran blindly. The light was minimal, but their
eyes eventually adjusted. The interior of the British Museum was an
immense labyrinth.
At the end of the hallway was a door providing
access to one of the stairways. They descended to the floor
below.
When they got to the lower landing, Rafael opened a
door and cautiously peeked through.
“Let’s go. Stick close to me.”
Barely visible signs pointed to the emergency
exit.
They came to an enormous hall, the King’s Library,
and stopped in front of a huge door, leading to the museum’s
covered grand atrium. The large annex was a recent addition, with a
rotunda in the center that housed the Reading Room, various shops
on the ground floor, and a restaurant on the floor above. On the
other side, facing the exit, were numerous tables and chairs
anchored to the floor that belonged to the snack bars that offered
fast food to the thousands of daily visitors.
Sarah and Rafael hugged the wall of the grand
atrium, quickly moving toward the exit. The stretch that remained
before them was like an open, barren field. The moonlight, now
visible through the glass dome, gave the area a grayish white
tinge.
A flash cut through the shadows and Rafael was
hurled against the wall by an unknown force: he’d been hit. Sarah
instinctively knelt and tried to lift him. He groaned, but the
wound didn’t appear to be too serious.
Two shadows darted out from the bar area, moving
toward them.
“Take the pistol.”
“Are you crazy?”
“Shoot two or three times, at random,” Rafael
insisted.
Sarah looked back. The shadows were gaining ground.
Finally she took the gun Rafael was handing her, and fired three
times without turning her head to aim. They were both barricaded
behind the museum reception desk. Rafael took off his overcoat and
ripped his clothes in the area where the bullet had grazed him,
almost by his shoulder.
“I was lucky.”
“Really? I thought you were going to die in my
arms.”
“That could still happen.”
“Jack,” boomed a voice from somewhere in the
atrium. It was Barnes.
Rafael got up and roughly pulled Sarah to his
side.
“What are you doing?” she asked in a low voice. Her
heart seemed to be stuck in her throat.
“You can’t kill her because you don’t know what
she’s done with the papers. She’s the only link you have to them.
What’s gonna happen if she dies now?” He raised his gun and pointed
it at Sarah’s temple.
“What are you doing?” Sarah thought she was about
to faint.
The cards were stacking up against Barnes.
“C’mon, Jack, are you really capable of taking an
innocent’s life?”
“Barnes, you know me very well. I’m made of the
same shit as you.”
“What do you want?” he asked, already guessing the
answer.
“Pay attention. I’m going to leave here with her,
and you’re going to tell your men to put away their guns and let us
go. You’re going to tell the guys with you and the ones you’ve got
posted outside.”
“Let’s be reasonable, Jack.”
“Even more reasonable?” Rafael tossed back
sarcastically.
Barnes had no choice but to accept.
“Abort the operation. Lower your guns. Let them
go,” he said, turning his head to the tiny microphone on his
lapel.
Rafael dragged Sarah out from the protection of the
counter, backing toward the exit.
The cold night air wrapped around them. They went
downstairs and to the giant doors bearing the Queen Elizabeth II
coat of arms. The gun was still pressed against Sarah’s temple.
From there to the car was a very short stretch.