Part 23 (2/2)

The sounds of the shot fired, the broken gla.s.s, and my shoulder barreling into Owen's rib cage all rolled into one piercing crack! as a second breeze hit my left ear, this one courtesy of the bullet that had just barely missed me.

By an inch or two.

Owen and I crash-landed on the linoleum floor of the kitchen. Immediately, he had it figured out-the mistake we'd made ignoring the windows. Just because the blinds were closed didn't mean the shooter was blind.

Two words. ”Thermal imaging,” he said.

The next sound was the blinds being violently yanked down, followed by more gla.s.s breaking. We scrambled to our feet.

”He's coming in,” I said.

”No, but something else is. In five seconds, it's going to get real smoky in here.”

Actually, it was more like two seconds.

The canister landed with a thud, the sound of it rolling to a stop quickly overtaken by the hissing of the tear gas. I couldn't help stating the obvious.

”We've got to get out of here,” I said.

”Not quite yet,” said Owen.

Not quite yet?

The gas was pus.h.i.+ng toward us, filling the hallway. Our eyes and throats were about to get scorched. All I knew was that staying put gave us no chance. The fact that we were armed gave us at least a fighting chance.

But Owen didn't even look at the SIG I'd given him, still gripped in his right hand. In fact, he put it down.

”What are you doing?” I asked.

But he was too busy doing it to answer. He was searching the cabinets above the counter, opening one door after another.

Until he found it.

Owen turned back to me, holding another large Styrofoam cup, this one empty. I had no idea what he was thinking.

”Please tell me that cup has something to do with our getting out of here,” I said.

Owen nodded. ”It does,” he answered. ”Now take off your socks.”

My socks?

CHAPTER 72.

THERE WAS no time to ask why, not with my eyes feeling the first sting from the tear gas filtering into the kitchen. The first cough couldn't be too far behind.

I quickly took off my socks and gave them to him. h.e.l.l, if he had asked me to stand on one leg and clap like a seal, I probably would've done that, too. Anything to speed things along.

”Now I need some cover,” he said.

But Owen didn't pick up his backpack as if we were leaving. And when he stopped just shy of the doorway, waiting for me to line up behind him with my Glock, he wasn't looking left toward the door. He was looking right. As in, right into the line of fire.

That was when I knew. He was getting that chlorine stuff, the CTF.

Not that either of us could actually see it by this point. He'd left it on the island in the middle of the room, but the cup holding it-along with the island itself-had disappeared in the cloud above the canister.

Owen lifted the neck of his T-s.h.i.+rt over his nose for a makes.h.i.+ft mask. Clearly, I'd picked the wrong day to wear a b.u.t.ton-down.

”Go!” I said.

I squeezed off a few rounds through the shattered windows as Owen flung himself toward the island. For better or worse, whoever was out there, singular or plural, knew we were armed.

But there was no red stream of light aimed our way, no return fire.

Meanwhile, the coughing officially kicked in. Owen was doing the same. On the plus side, it was the only way I could get a read on where he was.

I was waiting for his signal so I could spray a few more bullets as he came back. He didn't bother, though. Next thing I knew, he was crawling into the kitchen on his hands and knees.

Or, at least, one hand. In his other were my two socks. I didn't need to ask what was inside them; Owen had put a cup containing some of the CTF in each one.

In fact, I was pretty sure I had it nailed, especially when the first thing he did was grab a lighter from his backpack. What he'd created was akin to a couple of Molotov c.o.c.ktails straight out of the MacGyver school of impromptu weaponry. Light the fuse, aka my dirty socks, and let her rip.

Turns out, I just got the chemistry backward.

I knelt down with Owen, the only breathing room left being a foot off the floor. We were coughing up our lungs now, our throats burning. Tears were streaming down our cheeks.

Which made the question he managed to get out all the more bizarre.

”You ever play cornhole?” he asked.

Once, at a tailgate party before a Yankees game. Though I never could bring myself to call it that. It was beanbag toss, as far as I was concerned.

I nodded. ”Yes.”

”Good. Because it's not the fire, it's the water,” he said. ”Fire's just the accelerator.”

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