ac1 48 ac2

I stood at the entrance to a huge cavern whose walls and ceiling were lost in vast, arching shadows. The floor was as smooth and as dark as a frozen pond. My footfalls echoed against the unseen walls as I walked slowly across the floor. There was no other sound and nobody in sight. I walked holding the Sword in front of me, thinking maybe there was another passage somewhere and I’d knocked out Mike too soon. Then I heard Mogart’s voice. It seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere.

“Mr. Kropp. You never cease to surprise me.”

I stopped. I slowly pulled the gun out of my pocket and held it loosely in my left hand, more to comfort myself than anything else.

“To have come this far, with so little experience and even less intelligence . . . I salute you, sir.”

“Where’s Natalia?” My voice sounded small and tinny, almost like a little kid’s.

“Here.”

His voice sounded right by my ear. I whirled around and saw them coming toward me, Natalia in front of him. He held the back of her neck with his left hand. In his right he held a tapered dagger.

They stopped about twenty feet away and Mogart smiled.

“I’m glad to see you have taken care of Mr. Arnold,” he said, nodding toward the gun. “I never cared for that man.”

Natalia’s eyes were dry, but very red; she must have been crying. Her dark hair was tangled around her face and there was a large bruise near the hairline.

“I’m sorry,” I told her. “Are you okay?”

She nodded, cutting her eyes at Mogart. I said, “I brought the Sword, Mr. Mogart. Let her go.”

“First the gun, yes? It’s hardly necessary, Mr. Kropp, and you might make a terrible mistake. You might strike the wrong person.”

I thought about it. If I refused, he might stab Natalia before I had a chance to get off a shot, a shot that would probably miss. But I’d still have the Sword and he knew if he killed her there’d be no reason for me to let him live. But that didn’t really matter to me, since Natalia would be dead.

I threw the gun and it slid across the smooth floor into the shadows.

“Very good,” Mogart said. “Now, the Sword, please.”

“Let her go first.”

He laughed. “My, how bold we’ve become! But boldness, Mr. Kropp, can never be a substitute for intelligence.”

The dagger pressed into Natalia’s side. Her eyes went wide and she cried out, “Kropp!”

Mogart said, “Decide now, Alfred Kropp. Throw down the Sword or watch her die.”

Natalia was just one person and, like Mike said, what was one person when the whole world was at stake? If I refused to give him the Sword he’d kill Natalia; if I gave him the Sword he would probably kill her anyway and my sacred vow—and the only vow I ever made—would be broken.

I knew whatever decision I made would probably turn out to be wrong, as wrong as every decision I had made since this whole thing started. I kept screwing up and then just kept coming back for more. Maybe to fix it I needed to decide what the best thing to do was, and then do the opposite.

Looking at Mogart, I realized the plain truth was that he wasn’t my greatest enemy. My greatest enemy was the fifteen-year-old homeless loser holding the Sword of Kings.

“Choose, Mr. Kropp,” Mogart said softly.

I chose.

I tossed the Sword toward him. It clattered to the ground about halfway between us. I expected him to throw Natalia to the floor and dive on the Sword, but he didn’t move. He wasn’t even looking at the Sword; he was looking at me and I got that sinking feeling I had in Uncle Farrell’s apartment, right before Mogart rammed the Sword into his body.

“Don’t, Mr. Mogart,” I pleaded. “You don’t need to do that now. Don’t hurt her, please.”

“Oh, Mr. Kropp,” Mogart answered. “After all that has happened, have you learned so little?”

And with that he plunged the dagger into Natalia’s side.

The Extraordinary Adventures of Alfred Kropp
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c0_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c1_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c3.1_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c2_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c3_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c4_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c5_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c6_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c7_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c8_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c9_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c10_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c11_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c12_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c13_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c14_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c15_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c16_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c17_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c18_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c19_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c20_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c21_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c22_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c23_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c24_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c25_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c26_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c27_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c28_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c30_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c31_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c32_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c33_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c34_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c35_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c36_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c37_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c38_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c39_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c40_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c41_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c42_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c43_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c44_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c45_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c46_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c47_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c48_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c49_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c50_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c51_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c52_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c53_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c54_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c55_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c56_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c57_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c59_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c60_r1.html
Yanc_9781599904122_epub_c61_r1.html