She absorbed his insult. “A disgraced agent, who gives a damn about two kids in trouble.”
“Ian Dunne is a witness to an SIS murder. One, here, on British soil. Which, as you noted at Queen’s College, violates the law.”
“Quite a scandal for you and the prime minister. Tell me, does he know all that you’ve done.”
His silence was her answer.
“Let us say that I am dealing with it, Miss Richards. This must end here. It must end now. For the good of the nation.”
“And for the good of you.”
She’d heard enough.
“Give me the key to that door.”
Sixty-one
Malone’s nerves jangled with rage, His eyes watching Antrim’s every move. “Was all this worth it?”
“Damn right. I have plenty of money. And in a few minutes you’ll be dead.”
“So sure of yourself.”
“I’ve been around a long time, Malone.”
“I’m not one of your exes. You might find beating up on me a bit more difficult.”
Antrim shifted to the right, closer to the open sarcophagus. The gun lay ten feet away from them both, but Antrim seemed uninterested, moving in the opposite direction.
“That what this is about?” Antrim asked. “Defending the honor of your ex-wife? You didn’t seem to care much about her sixteen years ago.”
He refused the bait. “You enjoy beating up women?”
Antrim shrugged. “Yours didn’t seem to mind at the time.”
The words stung, but he kept his cool.
“If it’s any comfort, Malone. The boy means nothing. I just wanted to see if it could be done. Pam pissed me off a few months ago. She thought she could tell
Gary heard more of what Antrim said.
A wave of revulsion and anger welled inside him.
He moved to rush into the chamber, but Ian again grabbed him and shook his head.
“Let your dad handle it,” Ian breathed. “It’s his fight right now.”
Ian was right. This was not the time. Him suddenly appearing would only complicate things. Let his dad handle it.
“You okay?” Ian breathed.
He nodded.
But he wasn’t.
Antrim was taunting Malone, pushing every button, goading him into a reaction. But he wasn’t lying, either. Not about Pam or Gary. Neither mattered anymore. He would have to take Malone down, then flee out the other entrance, detonating the explosives as he left. Fifty feet would be more than enough protection, considering the dirt walls that surrounded him. The resulting heat and concussion would surely crack the stone and collapse the chamber, providing a proper grave for ex — Magellan Billet agent Cotton Malone. All he had to do was get through the doorway ten feet away.
That meant incapacitating Malone for a mere few seconds.
Enough for him to bolt and press the detonator in his pocket.
Careful, though.
He could not engage in too much jostling, as he did not want the button jammed accidentally.
But he could handle this.
Malone leaped, his arms catching Antrim around the waist.
He and Antrim pounded to the stone floor.
But he held tight.
Ian heard bodies thud and a grunt from one of the two men. He risked a look and saw that they were fighting, Antrim flipping Malone off him and springing to his feet. Malone, too, was up and swung his fist, the blow blocked, a counterpunch delivered to the stomach.
Gary watched, too.
Ian’s gaze raked the chamber and located the gun, to the right of the entrance, at the base of steps that led down into the room.
“We need to get that gun,” he said.
But Gary’s attention was on the fight.
“Antrim has explosives.”
Gary saw that Ian was surprised by what he’d revealed. “In that pack on the floor. The detonator is in his pocket.”
“And you’re just now mentioning this?”
He’d seen what those packs of clay could do to bodies.
He recalled that Antrim had been around fifty feet away from the carnage in the warehouse and had been unharmed. If he could toss the backpack out the doorway on the other side of the room, that might do it. He doubted Antrim planned to blow anything as long as he was still around.
But the detonator.
In Antrim’s pocket.
It could accidentally be pressed in the fight.
His dad was in trouble.
“You get the gun,” he said to Ian. “I’ll toss that backpack.”
Malone dodged a right jab and swung hard, catching Antrim in the face. His opponent staggered back against the chamber wall, then charged.
More blows rained down.
One caught him in the lip. A salty taste filled his mouth. Blood. He landed more blows to the head and chest but, before he could punch again, Antrim reached for one of the metal pitchers on the shelves and propelled it toward him.
He ducked the projectile.
Then Antrim was on him, slamming something heavy into the nape of his neck, which hurt. He grabbed hold of himself and joined his hands together, sweeping his arms upward, the double fist clipping Antrim below the chin.
A bronze flask clanged to the floor.
His head spun, the throbbing in his temple became a blinding ache. A kick to his legs twisted him sideways.
He turned, pretended to have lost his breath, and readied himself to attack.