The night was eerily silent, filled with nothing but the soft sounds of their uneven breathing and Deacon’s rumbling, arcane verse. Not even the passive swishing of cars on the street could penetrate the fog that separated Shadow Team from the world. It was like the city had become nothing more than a tomb, a new age Roanoke Colony, an abandoned sprawl of hidden sarcophagi with decrepit mummies awaiting discovery within. Rook shivered at the thought. It had made him uncomfortable, this long settled silence. That and what Boss had said.
They were trained. They were strong. They were armed to the teeth. What more protection did they need?
“
All eyes opened.
“Let’s move.” All eyes fell on Boss. He flashed a determined finger at the rusted door and the team made huddled moves towards it and stacked around the frame, first he and Mouth, then Deacon and Cypher just behind. Rook lagged a moment before stacking behind Deacon.
Boss thought it over a moment; he didn’t want Rook at the back. Not a good idea.
“Rook, move up.” Deacon let him pass. The kid’s eyes were wide, he was breathing heavy and he looked like the mouse that saw the hawk. “You stay with Deacon. Watch his back. He’ll watch yours.”
“Yes, Boss.”
Deacon patted Rook on the shoulder. “And you watch Boss too, Rook. We watch our front
Boss wasn’t sure that this one would last, but he did know Rook would be fine with Deacon. He had no doubt about that.
With that settled, Boss tested the door knob. Locked.
Mouth looked to Boss; placed a hand on his Mossberg.
Boss shook his head in answer to the silent query. “Cypher, you’re up.”
She pulled a small drill from her vest, attached a drill bit and stripped the lock. The door popped open slightly, fragments of metal falling from the holes where tumblers once rested. She fell back in line.
Boss pushed the door softly and glanced through the opening. He shook his head and opened the door fully, waiting for his eyes to adjust. Its metal hinges squealed their complaints and the red flakes of rust and decay that had set in was soon lost in the gloom of the night.
They moved into the darkened stairwell together, Mouth and Cypher shadowing close behind him, and Deacon covering the rear. Rook was lost somewhere in between. Boss popped his flashlight on and looked over the railing. Stairs spiraled jaggedly down the corrupt walls of the building and into the fast-approaching darkness below. He could see no living thing on the stairs, but that didn’t mean he believed the façade. He had been here before, a few too many times in fact. He knew the difference between still air and dead air. That kind of quiet that was
This was dead air. And the whole damned city seemed to be filled with it.
“PK-EM is strong here, but no heat signatures, Boss,” Cypher said, hovering her arm over the stairwell as if reading his mind.
“You trust that?” Mouth blurted.
Boss raised a fist. Talking ceased. Then he signaled to move forward.
They spread out along the stairwell, moving down step by step, flashlights bouncing on wall and stair alike. As Boss spiraled downwards, he watched the dingy walls for any bad signs. He didn’t see any recognizable writing amongst the symbol-laden scrawl – well, nothing more than the standard, illegible, black spray-paint graffiti that should be expected of a shithole New York apartment – or any signs of struggle. No blood. No scratches. No charred marks. No holes that seemed to have tunneled themselves open out of nowhere and lead on and on and on. Just the usual grit, grime and decay of a needle-supported residency.
Floor after floor, they continued down towards a growing question mark, and on every landing Boss looked to Cypher who checked her computer.
“We just went down five floors and you’re telling me you haven’t picked up a single signature?” Mouth whispered hoarsely.
“Not one,” she said icily.
“And that doesn’t strike you as fucked up?”
“Not one? Not even like a cat or something?” Rook chimed in, the kid’s voice wavering.
“Nope.” Cypher gripped her MP5.
Boss could see the nerves setting back in on the kid. Normal. But he needed Rook to have his head in the game, not in the clouds. That’s the tough part of the job. Stopping the
“Cut the chatter. Now. We’re moving.”
When they reached the 6th floor, Boss took to the doorframe and signaled to stack up once more, realizing now, for the first time, as he turned and looked back up the stairs just how dark it had become on their descent. He watched his team slowly materialize like ink blots out of the solid black that had swallowed them. All except one.
“Where is Deacon?”
Rook looked back over his shoulder. “I-I don’t know, Boss.”