Lightning

Von Manstein had already traced a route on the map that would take them out of Palm Springs and onto highway 111.

“We’ve got thirty-one minutes,” Klietmann said, glancing at the dashboard clock.

“We’ll make it easily,” von Manstein said. “Fifteen minutes at the most.”

“If we get there early,” Klietmann said, “we can kill Krieger before he slips away from the highway-patrol officer. In any event we have to get there before the woman and boy are taken into custody because it’ll be far more difficult to get at them once they’re in jail.” He turned around to look at Bracher and Hubatsch in the back seat. “Understood?”

They both nodded, but then Sergeant Hubatsch patted the breast rocket of his suit and said, “Sir, what about these sunglasses?”

“What about them?” Klietmann asked impatiently.

“Should we put them on now? Will that help us blend with the local citizenry? I’ve been studying the people on the street, and though a lot of them are wearing dark glasses, many of them aren’t.”

Klietmann looked at the pedestrians, trying not to be distracted by scantily clad women, and he saw that Hubatsch was correct. More to the point, he realized that not even one of the men in sight was dressed in the power look preferred by young executives. Maybe all young executives were in their offices at this hour. Whatever the reason for the lack of dark suits and black Bally loafers, Klietmann felt conspicuous even though he and his men were in a car. Because many pedestrians were wearing sunglasses, he decided that wearing his own would give him one thing in common with some of the locals.

When the lieutenant put on his Ray-Bans, so did von Manstein, Bracher, and Hubatsch.

“All right, let’s go,” Klietmann said.

But before he could pop the emergency brake and put the car in gear, someone knocked on the driver’s window beside him. It was a Palm Springs police officer.

Laura sensed that, one way or the other, their ordeal was soon coming to an end. They would succeed in destroying the institute or die trying, and she had almost reached the point at which an end to fear was desirable regardless of how it was achieved.

Wednesday morning, January 25, Stefan still suffered deep-muscle soreness in his shoulder but no sharp pain. No numbness remained in his hand or arm, which meant the bullet had not damaged any nerves. Because he cautiously had exercised every day, he had more than half of his usual strength in his left arm and shoulder, just enough to make him confident that he would be able to implement his plan. But Laura could see that he was afraid of the trip ahead of him.

He put on Kokoschka’s gate-homing belt, which Laura had taken from her safe the night that Stefan had arrived wounded on her doorstep. His fear remained apparent, but the moment that he put on the belt, his anxiety was overlaid with a steely determination.

In the kitchen at ten o’clock, each of them, including Chris, took two of the capsules that would render them impervious to the effects of the nerve gas, Vexxon. They washed down the preventive with glasses of Hi-C orange drink.

The three Uzis, one of the .38 revolvers, the silencer-equipped Colt Commander Mark IV, and a small nylon backpack full of books had been loaded into the car.

The two pressurized, stainless-steel bottles of Vexxon were still in the Buick’s trunk. After studying the informational pamphlets in the blue plastic bags attached to the containers, Stefan had decided he would need only one cylinder for the job. Vexxon was a designer gas tailored primarily for use indoors—to kill the enemy in barracks, shelters, and bunkers deep underground—rather than against troops in the field. In the open air the stuff dispersed too fast—and broke down too quickly in sunlight—to be effective beyond a radius of two hundred yards from point of release. However, when opened full-cock, a single cylinder could contami­nate a fifty-thousand-square-foot structure in a few minutes, which was good enough for his purposes.

At 10:35 they got in the car and left the Gaines’s house, heading for the desert off route 111, north of Palm Springs. Laura made sure Chris’s safety harness was buckled, and the boy said, “See, if you had a car that was a time machine, we’d drive back to 1944 in comfort.”

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