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The moment he let go of the plunger, another unit came on the air: ‘Charlie-21, we’re already at Hastings and Windermere. Ten blocks out.’

Felicia looked at Striker. ‘They’re way closer,’ she said, relieved.

Sgt Rothschild gave the order: ‘That unit is authorized. Code 3.’ Then he directed his question back to the dispatcher. ‘Which unit is supposed to be riding with the ambulance?’

The dispatcher paused for barely a second. ‘Alpha-13 . . . but they’re not answering their radio and their emergency button’s been pressed.’

Rothschild: ‘Do we know the nature of the injury?’

‘Unknown,’ the dispatcher replied. ‘We can’t raise the ambulance crew either.’

Striker pressed the radio plunger one more time. ‘Mike,’ he said. ‘They were transporting Billy Mercury, the war vet who just tried to burn us down in the complex.’

Rothschild heard that and wasted no time. ‘Does Burnaby have any units closer?’ he asked.

‘Burnaby is negative for units,’ the dispatcher replied.

‘We’re on scene,’ Charlie-21 broke in. ‘Mercury has escaped. Repeat: Billy Mercury has escaped.’

Rothschild made a frustrated sound. ‘Give them the air. Charlie-21, update their status when you can.’

The radio went quiet for almost a half-minute; the seconds were excruciating. And when Charlie-21 got back on the air, the man’s voice was jittery.

‘Jesus, we got two paramedics down on scene. And two officers, too. One of their guns is gone!’

‘I want more units there now,’ Rothschild ordered.

Bravo-15 broke in: ‘We’re already on scene, Mike. So is Bravo-73.’

Charlie-21 took control of the air one more time, and the voice was fast and frantic:

‘Oh Christ, both cops . . . both medics . . . they’re dead, they’re dead. They’re ALL DEAD.’

Fifty-Three

Striker hammered the gas and raced north on Boundary Road. By the time they’d passed 1st Avenue, the Taurus was nearing one hundred and forty kilometres per hour. By the time they reached Napier Street – and Striker heard there were now more than six patrol units on scene – he hit the brakes and slowed down. Far up the road, a mass of blue and red emergency lights flashed in the daylight.

‘Go,’ Felicia said. ‘What are you doing? Go. Let’s get there!’

But Striker did the exact opposite. He pressed his foot even harder down on the brake and swerved over towards the grassy meridian. Once there, he drove into the middle of it and stopped.

‘Jacob, what are you doing?’

He ignored her question and grabbed the radio mike. ‘Do we have a direction of travel?’ he broadcast.

When units on scene replied, ‘Negative’ and dispatch also replied, ‘Negative,’ Striker scanned the road ahead of them. The intersection where the ambulance had crashed was only a mile or two up the road. Striker’s heart told him to race to the scene with every kilometre of speed the cruiser was capable of.

But his instincts told him otherwise. Billy Mercury was fit. And their location was within running distance for the man.

‘Jacob?’ Felicia asked again.

‘They got tons of units on scene,’ he explained. ‘Mercury was being escorted by police and ambulance back to Riverglen. So when he escaped, there’s only two places he’s gonna run to.’ He pointed ahead, northwest. ‘Mapleview Clinic is right there on the left side. And six blocks behind it, in the north lane of Pender, is where Mercury lives.’

‘That close?’

‘That close. We need to cover both of them. If Mercury’s got any brains, he’ll run in the opposite direction, but I doubt that. Not in the state of mind he’s in. My bet is he ran right for his nearest place of comfort – and that would mean he’s barricaded himself in his apartment.’

Felicia already had her gun in her hand and was scanning the roads ahead, looking for any sign of movement. ‘He’s awfully close to the clinic, too,’ she worried. ‘The doctors need to be warned; the place needs to be shut down.’

Striker agreed. He hit the gas and peeled off the meridian, tearing up the earth and sending waves of dirt and grass into the air.

Destination: Mapleview.

Even though the address of the Mapleview Clinic was in the thirty-six hundred block of Adanac Street, the only entrance to the facility was off the main stretch of Boundary Road. The building sat way back from the roadside, nestled behind a large cement roundabout, which was filled with flowers and barren trees. Flanking the facility grounds was a wooded park to the south and an old folks’ home to the north.

Another place of possible escape.

Another place of vulnerable victims.

Striker spotted the facility and slowed his speed. He scanned the road ahead, then the entranceway, and finally the entire lot. Safety was his foremost concern right now. Their safety. Billy Mercury had just killed two cops and two ambulance attendants.

He would surely kill again if given the chance.

From the east side of Boundary, the lot appeared empty of people. Unfortunately there were tons of hiding spots: a passenger van sat by the roundabout, its side door open, its interior lights off. Just ahead of the van, an outdoor patio area was sunken and fenced off, providing additional cover. And opposite that, the trees of the park offered numerous spots of concealment. All in all, it was a bad place for police entry. Had time not been so pressing, he would have waited for some extra units and a dog.

But not today. There was no time.

Billy was gone. Billy had killed. And Billy would kill again.

Striker gave Felicia a quick glance. ‘Be ready for anything,’ he said. Then he drove into the entranceway of the compound.

Straight ahead sat the three-level facility that was Mapleview Clinic. It was a relatively new building, with lots of tinted glass and clean beige stone. With the fountain and garden centred out front, the place looked more like a spa retreat than a clinic.

Striker reached the roundabout, considered driving around it, then opted not to. Any further ahead and they’d be dead centre between the park, the old folks’ home, and the medical clinic.

A perfect target section for any sniper.

At least now they were behind the cement wall and the foliage of the roundabout.

Striker rammed the steering column into Park, opened the door and hopped out. Getting free of the car felt good. When Felicia did the same, Striker pointed to the old folks’ home. ‘Lock it down,’ he said.

She raced across the lot without so much as a word.

With her gone, Striker turned back towards the clinic. He kept his gun at the low-ready, passed the concrete roundabout, and ran up the stairs. He kicked open the front doors, and they banged against the wall, releasing a loud hollow thud in the high-ceilinged foyer of the entrance. The wired window glass rattled.

At her desk the receptionist let out a sharp gasp.

‘Vancouver Police!’ Striker announced. ‘Has Billy Mercury been in here?’

The woman placed a hand over her heart. ‘Well, yes, yes, yes . . . he has.’ She looked at him in bewilderment, realizing something bad was going on. ‘He left here not twenty minutes ago. With the other officers.’

‘In the ambulance?’

She nodded emphatically. ‘Yes, in the ambulance. He was sent to Riverglen. He’s been . . . he’s been sectioned.’

‘Well, he’s escaped,’ Striker said. ‘And he just killed two cops and a couple of paramedics.’

The receptionist’s pale face turned even whiter and her mouth tightened into a straight line. She looked stunned. And then Dr Ostermann suddenly appeared from the back room. He walked up to the front counter and met Striker with a look of concern.