The Judas Strain - James Rollins [151]
As Devesh turned, gunfire chattered, sounding distant but still loud.
He paused.
Another blast of a rifle erupted, echoing up from the floor below. “Not again,” he sighed out in irritation. “Can’t they keep these patients restrained?”
More blasts.
Devesh slammed his knife to the tabletop, rattling the other tools. He nicked himself and lifted a bloody finger to his lips. With a deep scowl, he headed again to the door.
“Surina, watch over our guests. I’ll be right back.”
The door slammed closed.
As if caught in the wind from the swing of the door, Surina flew to the table. She collected the cartilage knife and returned to the strapped child.
“Don’t hurt her,” Lisa warned, a threat in her voice, impotent though it might be.
Surina’s eyes flicked with disinterest at Lisa. She swung her attention to the child, raised the knife, and slashed out in strokes of flashing steel—the child’s bonds fell away. The strange woman scooped the child in her arms, to her shoulder, then glided to the door.
Lisa heard the quiet clicks as the door opened and closed, leaving her alone again.
Lisa frowned. She remembered Surina offering a candy to the same child earlier, a rare compassion. Lisa recalled Surina’s eyes when she first came in here, feral and wild, like a lioness. Angry. It seemed this lioness retained some compassion for the most innocent. Perhaps this rescue was some bit of grace to compensate for her other cruelties.
Either way, she was gone.
Lisa imagined Devesh’s rage when he returned, already inflamed by another breakout. There would remain only one person here upon whom he could vent his frustrations. Lisa struggled against her wrist ties. The pail bumped and clanked.
Gunfire continued, some blasts louder than others, coming from different directions. Lisa realized more than one firefight was under way. She searched around. What was happening?
Automatic fire exploded accompanied by crashes of glass, sounding just yards away. More gunshots followed, accompanied by shouts and a strange ululating war cry. The fighting went on for a long minute.
Behind her the door burst open.
Lisa froze.
A half-naked figure leaped into view, streaked in black, nose pierced by a sharpened tusk, crowned by a shock of emerald feathers. He hefted a sharpened blade, bloody to the elbow.
Lisa pressed back against the table, frozen in fear.
“In here!” a familiar voice yelled.
It was Henri.
Boots pounded behind her. A cold blade slipped between her wrists. Plastic ties snapped and popped away. Lisa slumped off the inclined table, scrabbling not to fall. A figure caught her.
He spoke in her ear. “So if you’re done just hanging around, how about we kiss this Love Boat good-bye.”
She sank into the man’s arms, shaking and weak with relief. “Monk…”
5:19 A.M.
DEVESH KNEW SOMETHING was wrong when a flurry of rifle fire exploded above his head, two decks up. It rang out from the direction of the science wing.
Devesh stood halfway down the lower-deck passage, surrounded by a group of seven guards and their Somalian leader. Blood flooded the carpet here—but they had found no bodies.
Now the gunfire above.
Devesh craned up. Before he could react, klaxons erupted, ringing throughout the ship, sounding the general alarm.
What was going on?
More gunfire blasted above. Again from the science wing.
“Back up!” Devesh yelled, and pointed his cane at the stairwell.
Turning in unison, the guards headed back—but down the hall, a short figure flashed past an intersecting passageway: bare-legged, dressed in feathers and rattling bones, his body daubed in black.
One of the island’s cannibals.
He’d had an assault rifle in his hands.
The guard leader swore.
Gunfire rattled behind them. Rounds tore into carpet and walls. One of the guards fell back as if punched. Blood coughed out his nose and mouth as he crashed to the floor. The other guards flattened to all sides, returning fire. The Somalian dragged Devesh behind him, crouching and blasting with a pistol in his other hand.
But no one was there.
A door to one side