Under the heavy glare of fluorescent bulbs, the Westfield Atrium smelled of burnt sugar and cheap floor wax. Hundreds of people drifted through the wide walkways. Shopping bags bumped against knees. Teenagers crowded around a glowing fountain in the center of the ground floor.
With the stiff paper of the grocery bag digging into her bare skin, Fallon shifted the weight from her right arm to her left. A sharp cereal box corner pressed against her ribs, hidden beneath an oversized grey sweater. Her black pleated skirt brushed two inches above her knee as she walked. At the back of her head, a cheap plastic clip secured her chestnut hair in a messy knot.
She walked past a brightly lit sporting goods store. Her white canvas sneakers made almost no sound on the polished tile. It was a Tuesday. A painfully normal, aggressively boring Tuesday. She liked the boredom. It had taken her ten years to carve out this tiny, invisible life.
Up on the second-floor balcony, a man stood completely still near the glass railing.
Garret Cole held a lukewarm coffee in his left hand. His wife was two storefronts down, looking at winter coats. Garret didn't care about the coats. He stared down at the ground floor. His eyes were locked on a girl in a grey sweater.
He tracked her movement through the dense crowd. Most people bounced when they walked. They dragged their heels or let their shoulders slump. The girl down there didn't move like a civilian. Her weight rolled smoothly from the ball of her foot to her toes. A liquid, silent transfer of momentum. It was a predator's walk disguised as a lazy stroll.
Cold sweat prickled along Garret's hairline.
Ten years ago, he was a homicide detective working the capital's worst political murders. He had stood in the blood-soaked dining room of a defense contractor. No fingerprints. No shell casings. Just a single, grainy security photo of a young woman walking away in the rain. He hunted that ghost for five years. The stress eventually destroyed his heart and forced him to turn in his badge.
He stared at the reflection of the girl in the glass of a coffee shop window below him.
The angle was sharp, but he caught a glimpse of her face. The structure of her jaw. The absolute, dead calm in her eyes. It was likely her. He couldn't be totally sure, but the coldness in that stare matched the grainy photo burned into his memory.
Garret dropped his coffee cup. It hit the floor, splattering brown liquid over his shoes. He reached inside his jacket and pulled out a heavy black phone. He didn't call the local police. He dialed a twelve-digit sequence he had memorized a decade ago.
"I have a visual on the ghost," Garret said, his voice completely flat.
Down on the first floor, the air pressure seemed to drop.
Fallon stopped walking. A cold shiver ran up her spine. It was a physical warning, an old muscle memory from the capital. She turned her head just a fraction of an inch to the right.
Through the heavy glass doors of the south entrance, four men stepped into the mall. They wore plain clothes, but their postures were stiff. Black tactical vests bulged under their windbreakers. They spread out in a wide fan, their eyes scanning the faces of the shoppers.
Federal agents. Probably a CIA extraction team.
Fallon looked toward the north corridor. Three uniformed SWAT officers pushed past a janitor's cart. They carried short-barrel rifles pressed tight against their chests.
The exits were sealed.
Fallon opened her hands. The heavy grocery bag dropped. It hit the white tile with a wet thud. Oranges rolled across the floor. A glass jar of pickles shattered, spraying green liquid over her white sneakers.
She moved.
Instead of sprinting blindly, she stepped behind a large family dragging a stroller. The tactical team by the south doors raised their weapons, but they lost their line of sight. Fallon kept her center of gravity low and wove through the dense crowd.
"Target is moving north!" a voice echoed from the upper balcony.
The screaming started. Shoppers realized men with guns were flooding the building. Panic ripped through the atrium. A stampede of terrified people surged toward the side alleys and service exits.
Fallon used the chaos. A SWAT officer rounded the corner of a department store directly in front of her. He brought his rifle up.
She didn't hesitate. She grabbed the edge of a heavy metal trash can and hurled it forward. The steel cylinder smashed into the officer's shins. He grunted and collapsed, his rifle clattering across the slick tile.
Gunfire erupted.
Bullets chewed into the plaster wall to her left. A massive display window for a jewelry store exploded outward. A storm of shattered glass rained down on the walkway, slicing into the drywall.
Too loud.
Over the wooden bench, her sneakers found traction for a split second before she sprinted for the escalators. At the top of the moving stairs, a second tactical officer appeared. He braced his boots against the metal grating and aimed his weapon down at her.
No hesitation.
Grabbing the thick rubber handrail, Fallon vaulted her entire body over the side. Fifteen feet of empty air rushed past her ears.
She hit the floor of the lower promenade. Bending her knees deep to absorb the brutal shock, she rolled over her right shoulder to protect her neck. She popped back onto her feet in one fluid motion. Her black skirt snapped around her thighs as she broke into a dead sprint.
Sirens wailed outside the heavy concrete walls. Red and blue lights flashed frantically through the high skylights.
Underneath the escalator, she paused for a fraction of a second. Her breathing was even. Her heart beat with a steady, hard rhythm.
She needed to break the perimeter. The west loading dock was fifty yards away. Just a pair of steel double doors leading to the open alleyway. If she reached the street, she could melt into the city grid.
Pushing off the concrete pillar, Fallon darted past a row of abandoned massage chairs. A man in a black windbreaker stepped out from an intersecting hallway. He drew a sidearm.
Fallon dropped into a hard slide across the waxed floor. Her left foot hooked behind his ankle. As the agent fell backward, his gun fired a wild shot into the ceiling.
She planted her palm on his chest and shoved her weight upward, driving her knee squarely into his jaw. A sickening crunch echoed. The man went entirely limp.
Fallon stepped over the unconscious body. Thirty yards to the steel doors.
High above the atrium, metal shrieked.
The wild gunshot from the falling agent had punched through the ceiling. It hit the main suspension cable of a massive steel art installation hanging directly over the central floor. The sculpture was a tangled mess of heavy iron pipes and thick glass panes.
The sound of snapping steel wires filled the massive room. It sounded like a freight train grinding its brakes. A second thick cable broke and whipped wildly through the air.
Directly below the swaying iron monster, a little girl stood frozen.
She wore a bright pink raincoat. A stuffed rabbit lay on the wet tile next to her boots. The crowd had completely abandoned her in the crush to escape.
Fallon looked at the steel doors. They were ten feet away. The path was wide open. She could push through the emergency bar and leave the capital, the blood, and the ghosts behind her forever.
She looked back at the kid.
The final tension wire snapped with a noise like a cannon blast. Three tons of iron and glass dropped out of the air.
Fallon pivoted. Her sneakers squeaked violently against the tile. She sprinted back toward the center of the atrium, ignoring the tactical teams rushing up behind her.
She lunged. She threw her arms out wide and tackled the little girl just as the air above them turned black. They flew over the low brick wall of an indoor fountain.
Cold, dirty water exploded over Fallon's face. They hit the shallow pool a split second before the massive iron sculpture obliterated the floor where the girl had just been standing.
The impact cracked the foundation of the mall. A shockwave of pulverized tile, drywall dust, and glass shards blasted over the brick fountain. Jagged chunks of debris rained down into the water.
Fallon gasped. Chlorinated water rushed into her mouth. Blinding, white-hot pain flared in her right shoulder. The impact had ripped the joint entirely out of its socket.
Coughing up water, she shoved the crying girl against the inner brick wall of the pool.
"Keep your head down," Fallon told her. The kid just sobbed, burying her face in the dirty water.
Fallon gritted her teeth. She grabbed her right wrist with her left hand and dragged herself out of the pool. Her grey sweater was heavy and soaked. She slumped against the outside of the brick wall.
Before she could brace her arm to pop the shoulder back into place, a red laser sight hit the center of her chest.
Then another.
And a third.
