Sam closed his eyes again, but stayed on the floor – at least he couldn’t fall any further. The image from the soldier’s camera flickered back into vivid green life.
The side of the building turned into a blur and the rope slithered through the fingers in front of his face. He could hear a zizzing sound and realised it was the rope. He was on full audio, as well as video feed.
A voice shouted, “Go! Go! Go!”
Large glass sliding doors approached rapidly, leading in from the balcony.
Ranger’s voice in his head, “Glass crusher, now!”
There was a loud explosion and the doors shattered into a thousand tiny fragments, a rain of strange green confetti in the night vision colours.
From inside the apartment came flashes of lightning and a sound of thunder that Sam could hear with his own ears from across the street, as well as through the neuro-set.
Then he was on the balcony and rolling forward through the pulverised doors, rising up, a pistol at eye level seeking targets.
More voices all around him.
“Clear left!”
“Hallway clear!”
“Friendlies to your right.”
There were two figures in this room, lolling backwards in their chairs, as if unconscious, knocked out, surely from the stun of the flashbangs.
The computers in front of them were on, the screens glowing greenly in the night vision viewer, but the figures made no attempt to reach for the keyboards.
There was something about the shape of their heads though … neuro-headsets! Just as Sam had predicted.
Cut the cables, he willed the soldiers. Kill the connections before they can wipe the computers. One of the figures appeared large in his view and a glint of metal flashed from the end of a pair of cutters as the cables at the back of the headset were disconnected.
From the terrorist there was no movement, no sign of resistance. Nothing, in fact, at all.
“Room one clear,” a voice sounded, then, “Room three clear, two tangos neutralised.”
Why had the terrorists not moved?
The soldier secured the man’s hands behind the chair with PlastiCuffs. He moved to the computer and began scanning the case with a hand-held device. Sam didn’t have to be told to know he was looking for explosives.
“Something’s wrong.” It was Ranger’s voice, and Sam opened his eyes to see him looking at them. “Someone’s beaten us to it.”
“What do you mean?” Dodge asked.
“The terrorists were already down before we got here. They’re unconscious. They’re barely alive. Someone’s been here before us.”
“What happened to them?” Sam asked.
“We don’t know yet,” Ranger replied. “They’ve been gassed, poisoned, something. Ten to one, whoever did this has also been into the computers. Get in there now and see if they left us any scraps.”
The lights were back on by the time Dodge and Sam entered the apartment. Faded wallpaper peeled back from the walls. There might have been carpet once, but it was long gone, and grimy floorboards were covered only by a hard-knotted, but threadbare, rug.
Some jackets, and other indeterminate clothing, hung from a row of wooden pegs inside the door and a faded photograph of a sailing ship hung lopsidedly in front of the door.
The two dark figures they had seen were stretched out on the ground receiving medical attention from the soldiers. Their computers were in pieces on the table.
“Any explosives?” Dodge asked the first soldier he saw.
“None,” the man said.
“I thought we sniffed out ammonia?” Dodge said.
“We did, but it wasn’t explosives,” the man said, and didn’t elaborate.
As per his instructions, Sam cloned the drive before starting the computer up and analysing the hard drive.
It took him just a minute to confirm the extent of the disaster. The computer was wiped clean. The operating system was there, and some basic programs, but nothing else. It was as if it had just been taken out of the box. There was a scattering of code fragments near the boot sector of the disk, but it was garbage.
“This has been wiped,” Dodge said.
“Same here,” Sam murmured.
“Bleedin’ hell, what’re we going to tell Jaggard?” Dodge asked in a loud voice, then leaned over, talking quietly for Sam’s ears only. “Who else knew the location of the terrorists, do you think?” he asked.
“The insider!” Sam realised with shock.
“And who knew we were on our way here?” Dodge pursed his lips and answered his own question. “Same person.”
“You think the insider did this?”
“If it is an insider, then it all adds up,” Dodge said. “They would have done this to clean up any traces that might have led us back to them.”
“Then it’s not just one person,” Sam said. “They must have had people on the ground here in Chicago.”
“Not only that,” Dodge said, “but they were able to get in here right under the noses of the Chicago PD, and get out again without being seen.”