Should that third option fail, the president would have no choice but to authorize what had been dubbed simply Option Number Four.
And Charlie Ogden really didnt want to think about that.
He checked his watch again. Fifty minutes. Normally hed attack as soon as the men were in position. He could still do that if he saw the need, but this time things were going to be a little different.
This time hed have an audience. A career-making audience, the kind that could move him from a colonels eagle to a generals star.
Charlie raised the night-vision goggles again and stared at the glowing construct. He hoped Murray could keep things on schedule at his end, because in fifty minutes, president or no president, Charlie Ogden was going in.
TAD, MEET MR. DAWSEY
Tads shivering brought him out of it.
He rolled on the gra.s.s, wondering if he was already dead. His shoulder hurt real bad. He didnt feel deadhe was still moving. When people jumped out of windows on TV, they hit the ground and didnt move. He rolled to his b.u.t.t. Cold water seeped into the seat of his jeans.
Tad slowly stood. His legs hurt real bad, too. He took a deep breath, the rain and bits of ice splashing inside his wide-open mouth. He looked up, at the second-story window open to the night sky. Weirdit seemed like such a big drop from up in his room, but from down here it was about as high as a basketball hoop.
It didnt matter how high it was or it wasnt. He was out. Out of the house.
Okay, so he wasnt dead . . . but he wasnt going back in there, either.
Tad ran. His legs hurt, but they worked, and that was enough. He sprinted out to the side of the road and turned left. He pounded down a sidewalk cracked by tree roots and slick with slush.
He sprinted hard. He looked up just before running headlong into a man.
A huge man.
Tad stopped, frozen on the spot. The man was so big that Tad momentarily forgot about the house, his mom, his dad, his sister, even little Sam.
The man stood there, lit by a streetlamp that formed a cone of mist and light and wind-whipped, streaking rain. He looked down out of glowering blue eyes. He wore jeans and a wet short-sleeved, gray T-shirt that clung to his enormous muscles like a superhero costume. Long blond hair matted his head and face like a mask. A big, baseball-size twisted scar marred the skin of his left forearm.
The giant man spoke. Are you . . . ? His voice trailed off. His eyes narrowed for a moment. Then they opened, like hed just remembered something very cool. Are you . . . Tad?
Tad nodded.
Tad, the man said. Do you feel itchy?
Tad shook his head. The man turned his right ear toward Tad, tilted his head down a bit, as he might have done if Tad was whispering and he was trying to hear.
This is important, the man said. Are you sure? Are you really, really sure youre not itchy? Not even a little?
Tad thought about this carefully, then nodded again.
The man knelt on one knee. Even kneeling, he still had to bend his head to look Tad in the eye. The man slowly reached out with a giants hand, placing his palm gently on Tads head. Thick fingers curled down around Tads left temple, while a thumb as big as Tads whole fist locked down on his right cheek.
Tad kept very, very still.
The man turned Tads head back and to the right.
Tad, what happened to your eye?
Tad said nothing.
Tad, dont p.i.s.s me off, the man said. What happened to your eye?
Daddy hit me.
The mans eyes narrowed again.
Your daddy hit you?
Tad nodded. Or tried tohe couldnt move his head.
The man stood. Tad barely came up to his belt.
The man let go of Tads head and pointed back the way Tad had come. Is that your house?
Tad didnt need to look. He just nodded.
How did you leave?
Jumped out the window, Tad said.
Run along, Tad, the man said. He reached behind his back and pulled out a long piece of black metal, bent at one end. Tad recognized it from when he and his family were on that trip to Cedar Point last summer, when Dad had to fix a flat.
It was a tire iron.
The man walked down the road, heading for Tads house.
Tad watched him for a few seconds. Then he remembered that he was running away, and what he was running away from. He sprinted down the sidewalk.
He made it one block before he stopped again. Who knew that running away would have so many distractions? First that great big superhero man, now a car accident. A fancy red and white Mustang and a little white hatchback, smashed head-on. The Mustangs trunk was open. The little white cars drivers-side door was also open. The inside light of the hatchback lit up a man lying motionless, his feet still next to the gas pedal, his back on the wet pavement.
The man had blood all over his face.
And he was holding a gun.
There was another man in the pa.s.sengers seat, not moving, leaned forward, face resting on a deflated air bag.
Over the pouring rain and the strong wind, Tad heard a small voice.
Report! the voice said. G.o.ddamit, Claude, report!
Tad knew he should just keep running. But what if his parents came after him? Maybe he needed that gun.
Tad walked up to the man lying on the pavement. Rain steadily washed the blood off the mans face and onto the wet-black concrete.
Baum! Where are you?
The voice was coming from a little piece of white plastic lying next to the mans head. It was one of those ear receivers, just like they used on Frankie Anvil, his favorite TV show. Maybe this man was a cop, like Frankie.
Cops would take him away, protect him from Mom and Dad.