Not Jake. Me.
A loud, ear-splitting sound rips through the air.
Thompson drops forward.
With a second crack, the stranger stumbles back. I dive for the wall before I can think.
No — I need to cover Jake.
But Jake’s holding a gun.
He’s on the ground.
He shot off two rounds while lying on his back.
The stranger’s on the ground, but he’s moving.
I blink, and open my mouth, “J-J-J…”
My God, what is wrong with me? I don’t stutter. It’s like my brain can’t process — the taser, the gunshots, Jake shooting from the ground — everything moved so fast my nervous system is trying to catch up. A sharp pain stabs my chest and I clutch at my sternum.
“Breathe,” Jake wheezes. He grimaces, curling in on his side.
I suck in air. Try again.
“Jake,” I finally get out.
“Call 911. My chest. Hurts like a fucker.”
My fingers tremble as they press against Jake’s chest, searching for the wound.
“Phone. Call.” I force myself up, fighting dizziness, and fumble for my phone in my back pocket. “First,” he grits out. “Grab his gun.”
“Is it your heart?” I ask, worried far more about Jake than the stranger on the ground.
The man groans; his gun moves; I freeze.
A bright light flashes, and a second ear-splitting crack rings out.
Jake’s head lolls back and he heaves.
“Call. For. Help.”
Right. Right.
Jake just shot the man — again — from the ground.
My legs go weak. Kneeling, I dial 911.
“Nine-one-one, what’s your emergency?”
“Shots fired,” I say, my voice shaking. “At the private hangar on Route 47, near the data center. Multiple people shot. I need an ambulance.”
“Ma’am, are you safe? Are the shooters still there?”
I glance down at Thompson and the other man — both motionless. Jake’s gun is still in his hand, but his breathing is ragged. “The shooters are down. But the man who stopped them — he’s hurt. He has a heart condition and was tased. He’s conscious, but his chest hurts.”
“Is he breathing?”