The Man in the Black Suit
The Gunman
The
man in the black suit was no longer a tourist.
Now he was a fugitive. The world
screamed trap.
Leather shoes scuffed on muddy brick
as he sprinted toward the alley’s end.
He’d been trying to lure his followers into a choke-point. Instead, he’d placed himself in one.
Instinct
was what saved him. Some subconscious
part of his brain – the professional part – analyzed what was about to happen
an instant before it occurred.
As his foot hit the last brick of
the alley before he abandoned cover, instinct forced him to hurl himself to the street.
He’d never come so close to death. A brick shattered as a bullet
struck it. No sound, of course. But a sniper had been waiting for him to
panic and run.
He rolled off his shoulder and
staggered back to his feet, allowing the momentum to carry him across the
street. Now the fugitive was zigzagging
through more alleyways, and there wasn’t a chance in the world that the sniper
would take him down from a nest. His
attacker needed to go mobile.
There were shouts: his two tails
breaking out in pursuit. He sprinted
through a backstreet, turned a corner, and ran down another. Yells and the sound of shoes pounding
pavement emanated from behind him.
Both
exits from his alley led onto the main street.
Ahead, an industrial garbage bin sat against the back wall of a
shop. Racing towards it, he did some
quick analysis, but his next move was ultimately a gut reaction.
The
garbage bin’s lid gave him enough spring to leap up and catch the edge of the
building. Feet scrabbling for purchase,
he hoisted himself onto the roof. At a couching run,
the fugitive made his way across the gently sloping surface.
His
shoulder blades itched in expectation of a sniper’s bullet, but this was a
calculated wager. The gunman had likely taken
to the streets already.
Leaping
the twelve-foot drop of an alley, he landed on another roof and kept running,
this time daring to rise a little higher.
Quickly surveying the immediate area below, he spotted none of his
pursuers. More importantly, several
unoccupied vehicles were parked at the street’s edge.
Reaching
the end of the roof, the fugitive hung from its sagging rain gutter and
dropped. Concrete rushed to meet him as
he landed in a crouch and rolled onto one shoulder. He ignored the stinging in his heels. Vanishing among the pedestrians was his next
move. Straightened the cuffs on his
black suit, he walked casually from the alley.
That man in the
black suit is good. A real professional, Aakil
decided. But there was one primary
difference between that man and Aakil himself: the black suit was in the
crosshairs, and Aakil was behind them.
Aakil
was short, and he lay on his stomach in the bed of his truck. The gunman’s rifle was mounted, trained on the
alley from which his target would appear.
Taking to the rooftops to avoid his followers;
that had been an intelligent tactic.
Aakil had been climbing down from his nest when he’d noticed the figure
clambering onto a roof. The time was not
sufficient for Aakil to reassemble the rifle and take a shot. However, a bird’s eye survey of the rooftops
had allowed him to predict with reasonable certainty the spot from which his
quarry would exit. Aakil had been close,
and his vehicle had enabled him to arrive first. The high sides of the truck bed prevented his
being noticed by pedestrians. Now, it
was just a matter of patience.
The
gunman’s patience was unwavering.
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