Eliot hit the ground forearm-first, rolling along the left side of his body to spare himself as much pain as possible. Lancaster's shot went high—he heard it thud into the wall, well past the desk he'd landed beneath—but his attention was on the sound of Parker's footsteps as she broke from cover. One, two, three... The door crashed open, and Lancaster's answering shot came two seconds too late.
Parker was safe. The rest, he'd figure out.
The radio buzzed against the floor in the middle of the lobby, and he heard a muffled, "Ford, I have Parker. Come around to the front. Lancaster's still inside with Spencer."
Thank God for J.B. He really didn't know how he was going to repay him.
"Hear that?" Eliot called. "Now it's just you and me. We can still walk out of here before the police show up."
"No one's walking out," Lancaster said. "But you're right about one thing: we don't have time to play. Stand up. I won't shoot, I just want to talk to you face to face."
Eliot snorted. "Somehow, I'm doubting your sincerity."
"I give you my word."
That was as good as useless, but if Eliot wanted to keep him talking long enough to chance an escape, he had to play along. "All right," he said, sucking in a fortifying breath before straightening behind the desk. Pain lanced down his right leg, and he could feel the blood soaking into his jeans—another pair of Sunny's ruined. He'd never pay her back at this rate.
Lancaster stood across the room, his derringer aimed at Eliot's chest. "See you worked your hands free," Eliot said, rolling his shoulders. "What took you so long? We shouldn't have been able to beat you down the stairs."
Lancaster grinned. "I had to stop at my safe. Didn't want this to get caught up in the explosion."
He lifted a gun belt, and Eliot groaned. "Don't you think you're taking this cowboy thing a little too far?"
"This isn't a cowboy thing," Lancaster sneered. "This is a Colt Model 1860 Army Percussion Revolver, owned by Jesse James himself when he rode with the Quantrill Raiders. I bought it for $230,000, but I figured once I found the James treasure, it would sell for twice that."
A flicker of color outside caught Eliot's eye: police lights. Their sirens joined the wail of the alarm, and Eliot did his best to push the noise to the back of his pounding head. "Hard to dig up a treasure on someone else's property," he said.
"Well, with you out of the way, that won't be much of a problem."
Eliot eased a step backward, shuffling to keep from putting too much pressure on his right leg. "You don't know Sunny June very well."
"I don't need to," Lancaster said. "That's the beauty of money. You never have to get your hands dirty."
"Until now," Eliot said.
"Until now." Lancaster lifted the gun, sighting down his arm and closing one eye. "A fact I'm about to remedy."
Eliot braced himself to turn and run, but Lancaster didn't shoot. Instead, he bent his knees, set the gun at his feet, and slid it across the floor toward Eliot.
"Pick it up," he said.
Eliot stared at him. "You gotta be kidding me."
"Shooting at the range is one thing," Lancaster said, sliding the gun belt off his shoulder and fastening it around his waist. "But I've always wanted to know how I'd measure up in a real gun fight."
"Your gun is 150 years old," Eliot said. "And mine has a range of like seven yards. Not exactly worthy of the O.K. Corral."
"You scared?" Lancaster needled.
Eliot laughed. "That don't work on professionals, hoss. I got nothing to prove to you."
"Then put it this way." Lancaster spun the cylinder on his revolver, sliding rounds in as he spoke. "I'm shooting either way. You can pick up that gun and defend yourself, or stand there and take a bullet. Doesn't matter to me."
Fire sirens joined the cacophony of alarms, but no one was coming inside. Waiting for the bomb squad, probably—he had to keep stalling. Slowly, he lowered himself into a crouch and reached for the derringer, his eyes on Lancaster's right hand. He'd holstered the gun and stood with his feet planted wide, grinning.
"How do you see this going down?" Eliot asked.
Lancaster flexed his hands. "You pick up the gun. It's already loaded, but you'll need to cock the hammer. Stand with it at your side, and then we draw. Fastest man wins."
"Speed don't mean anything if you can't land a hit," Eliot said.
"Then I guess we're about to test your aim."
Great—Eliot had no idea if he could shoot. Probably, given his other skills, but it would be just his luck that guns weren't one of the weapons he was apparently proficient with. But even if he could shoot, even if he could manage to hit Lancaster at the edge of the derringer's range, he wasn't sure he wanted to. Whatever he'd done in the past, whoever he'd been before… he didn't want to be a killer. Parker had trusted him to follow her out, and if killed Lancaster now…
He wasn't sure how much of himself would stay behind.
"Count of three?" Eliot asked. He'd picked up the gun, frowning at the feel of the short handle in his palm, but was careful to keep it pointed away from Lancaster.
"So you can shoot on two?" Lancaster said. "You're not getting inside my head, Spencer. Just draw."
"It's not really drawing if I don't have a holster," Eliot muttered. He lifted the gun carefully, keeping it at his hip as he rose on his good leg.
"You can't talk your way out of this one," Lancaster said, sneering. "Either way, you're not getting out of this alive."
Eliot went still. "Either way?"
Lancaster's fingers twitched, and his gaze darted toward a clock on the wall over Eliot's head. "You think you're the only one who can stall?"
Alarms and sirens screamed. Eliot's heart pounded, sending stabs of adrenaline through him—but no fear. Time was up, and he was getting out.
He'd made a promise.
"You assumed I had to call to set off the bombs," Lancaster said, misinterpreting his silence. "That ain't the only way to do it. I would've taken a long lunch, only to come back and find the evil Mr. Ford had made good on his threats again. But this will work. You've got about ten seconds to decide whether you want to go out with a bang or a bullet."
Eliot fired. He aimed high, hoping to take Lancaster by surprise, make him flinch—hoping to steal an extra second while he turned for the door. Lancaster's gun clicked behind him—a misfire—the idiot had probably tried using the ammunition in the gun belt. He didn't look over his shoulder to see if Lancaster was following. He fixed his eyes on the doors—on the golden hair he could see beyond them.
The explosion started above them. Without the charges in the basement, the building shook, but held—windows burst overhead, raining glass down on the sidewalk outside. The firefighters and police flinched at the sound, hurrying to usher spectators out of the way. Eliot's leg gave out and he stumbled, caught himself on one hand, and ran on. He was ten feet away—seven, five, two.
The next charges blew as his hand hit the door, and the force of the blast threw it open, shattering glass around him. He lost his feet, crashing into the sidewalk as heat exploded against his back, and then something hit his head—
