Ahern, Jerry – Survivalist 05 – The Web

come back here with John Rourke. There is no other way.”

“Come back here with—”

“You must, child—and when Rourke reads the letter I have sent him, he will

want to come. If he is the man I think he is—that you think he is … he

is the only one.” Varakov stepped back, holding his niece at arms’ length.

“You look lovely—a beautiful dress; that coat—real fur?”

“Yes.” She looked down.

“I fear where you are going you’ll have to change

aboard the aircraft. I know little about survival retreats,

but I don’t imagine one reaches them in high heels and

silk stockings.”

‘They are nylon—silk stockings are—”

“Yes. Nylon. Be careful.” He folded his arms around

her. There was a possibility, he knew, that he would

never see her again.

The noise of the rotor blades was uncomfortable, despite the protective

muffs on his ears, and there was always the distraction of the radio

chatter coming from other ships in the squadron. But he didn’t wish lo

lurn it off.

Rozhdestvenskiy looked at the ground beneath him, the shadows there. Could

Bevington, Kentucky, be far away? Could glory be much farther?

He reviewed the plan. Land the small armada in Bev­ington, Kentucky.

Ground troops from . . . The name of the officer? Major Borozeni. Ground

troops from Borozeni close into the valley. Locate Morris Industries.

Empty the factory and load the equipment aboard the cargo helicopters

coming from the west.

“Pilot, how long until we reach the staging area for the rendezvous with

ground forces?”

“Twenty-three minutes, Comrade Major Rozhdest­venskiy.”

“Twenly-three minutes,” Rozhdestvenskiy repeated. The staging area, then

Bevington, then glory—and then life, all but eternal.

He leaned slightly back in his seat. He was perfect for the role, he

thought; he had always looked the part of a hero of the Soviet Union.

Rourke opened his eyes, his breathing easier, his muscles aching, his body

tired.

When he tried to move his arms, he could feel the aches in his forearm

muscles. “Muscle relaxant,” he whispered.

‘ He tried to move his head; it raised, and he felt the dizziness, the

light-headedness. “Morphine,” he rasped, coughing. He remembered. Martha

Bogen had given him the muscle-relaxant block, and reduced the shot of

morphine. Death—because he couldn’t have breathed.

He assumed he had awakened earlier than the other times—had he? He doubted

his own ability to gauge time. He started to move his feet, his bound

ankles, to flex his knees up. There was pain in his muscles, stiffness; he

needed the pain and he moved his legs more, twisting his aching head from

side to side, his neck hurting as he did. He breathed deeply—but not too

deeply. He couldn’t afford to pass out again, not with this his only

chance.

It was as though, he realized, he were watching him­self from a distance.

His mind was clear enough—though holding a long train of thought was

difficult. But his body was what seemed drunk, uncoordinated. He had

stepped

outside of himself, he felt. He started moving his arms up from his

abdomen and chest and into the airspace above his head.

He heard the door, the key being turned, the woman coming.

“No—too soon,” he rasped, thick-tongued, his voice sounding odd to him.

He could see her, coming toward him, the little black leather case in her

hands.

“John, looking much better. I think I’ll have to give you the full shot of

the morphine this time or else you’ll get out of hand. We wouldn’t want

that.” She smiled as she bent over him, the needle in her right hand.

She squirted a little into the air, then lowered the needle toward him.

He slammed up his knees toward her stomach, both his fists bunched

together and hammering against the right side of her head.

There was a short gasp like a scream and she disap­peared below the level

of the cot. He rolled over, half-falling on top of her. He raised his

hands to break her exposed neck; but sank forward instead, across her

body, the rope tightening around his neck.

He closed his eyes. . . .

He had to urinate. He opened his eyes. She would have been evacuating him,

he realized. She? He looked under him; Martha Bogen was stirring but still

unconscious.

Now able to remove the clothesline wrapped tightly around his neck, Rourke

rolled away, pushing himself up on his hands to his knees. He rocked on

his haunches for a long moment. He shook his head. “Morphine,” he rasped.

He tried pushing against the floor to get his feet

under him, but fell flat onto the concrete.

He couldn’t stand.

He looked up. There was a paper cutter in the far end of (he library

basement. Using his hands to pull himself, and his knees to push, he

crawled toward it.

It seemed too far; he wanted to close his eyes. “Narcan,’ he murmured

again. The morphine was taking hold.

She would have the Narcan to counteract it. “Antag­onist,” he murmured.

Narcan was the antagonist for morphine.

“Paper cutter.” He looked up. It was on thesmall table above him. He

rolled the full weight of his body against it; the table turned over, the

paper cutter clanging to the floor, the blade partially opened. He dragged

himself toward it. Rourke reached out his wrists toward the blade and

began to saw at the ropes. . . .

Naked, he sat on the floor; his body smelled of soap. She had apparently

bathed him, he realized. He tried standing, getting to his feet, falling

forward but catching himself on the end of the cot. Martha Bogen was

mur­muring something now, starting to come around. The basement door was

unlocked; he remembered that it should be.

Where was the key? He could lock her inside.

He dropped to his knees, picking up the small leather case in his

thick-feeling fingers. “Narcan,” he murmured seeing the hypodermic needle.

He hoped it was Narcan— not something else.

He took the syringe; he wanted a vein for the fastest action possible. He

plunged the needle into his flesh. He started counting the seconds. It

should take—how

many? He tried to remember. Thirty—thirty seconds or so before he felt it.

Rourke dropped the needle and slumped back on the cot, nausea and cold

flooding over him as he closed his eyes. . . .

Rourke opened his eyes to see Martha Bogen, her hair mussed, her face

bruised, standing over him, a needle in her right hand held like a dagger.

“No!” Rourke punched his right fist upward into her jaw. He sat up, his

back aching, but his hands reaching out to catch the unconscious woman

before she hit the concrete floor.

He swept her up into his arms, staggering for a moment under the added

weight.

He walked the step toward the cot and, heavily, set her down.

“Martha,” he murmured. He still had to urinate. He looked around the

basement. There was a small door and he walked toward it, opened it—a

bathroom. He stepped inside and relieved himself.

He felt the cold and the nausea coming. “Narcan— more Narcan,” he

murmured, already staggering. He reached the cot, found the package of

syringes, opened the small leather case and took a fresh syringe.

He squatted on the floor, controlling his breathing so the Narcan wouldn’t

make him pass out. It shouldn’t have been that way, he realized. It wasn^t

theNarcan, hut the build-up of morphine in his system. He carefully found

a spot and gave himself the injection, watching as the liquid dropped

along the scale markings beneath the finger flange. Removing the needle,

he sat quietly fora moment, feeling the dizziness start to subside.

He waited what he judged to be a full five minutes,

then tried getting to his feet.

Unsteady—but he could stand. He walked over to the small kit. There was

one more syringe of Narcan. He closed the kit and took it with him as he

started— shakily—toward the basement door. The thought occur­red to

him—break the blade off the paper cutter, in case more crazies were

outside, waiting.

He didn’t.

Rourke opened the door, then stepped through. The stairs were dimly lit, a

stronger light glowing from the top. He leaned heavily against the wall of

the stairwell as he started up, tired still, his muscles aching.

“B complex,” he murmured. If he could reach his bike, he could give

himself an injection. Another injection. “Shit,” he murmured.

He reached the top of the stairs, the library empty through the open door,

a light under a green shade glowing from the glass-partitioned office.

He lurched toward it, knocking over a large dictionary stand. He glanced

back at it, then stood up straight, catching his breath. He reached the

glass partition, then turned the knob of her office door. There was a

small closet at the back, behind her desk.

As he opened the door, he started to feel his strength returning. Inside,

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