his mind recognized that the man was wearing some kind of armor. And a helmet. Dan was an expert shot. The range wasn’t more than thirty feet. He fired. Fired again. The .40-caliber rounds practically severed the man’s neck. He flopped backward, out of sight.
Dan swung his pistol to the left. The other man was still standing on the wall, doing something with his weapon. He, too, was wearing armor. But he had no helmet. Dan fired. Fired again. Fired again. Three shots, in less than two seconds. The head which absorbed those rounds was nothing but a ruptured ruin. The man collapsed to his knees, dropping his weapon. A second later, both the man and his firearm were sliding over the wall. The firearm landed on the pavement with a clatter. The body landed with a sodden thump.
Dan felt himself slumping. He sensed that his arm—his whole body—was soaked with blood.