“I don’t trust you or anyone else.”
“I don’t blame you. I wouldn’t either.”
“Where do you want to go?”
“Someplace safe, like I said.”
“I’m not sure there is such a place,” she said in a voice that, for the first time, sounded like a kid’s. Scared.
“Me either,” said Robie.
17
R
OBIE DIDN’T JUST
have an escape plan in case something went wrong on one of his missions. He had a safe house too. Now, with someone else in tow, he had opted for Plan C.
Unfortunately, Plan C was already getting complicated.
Robie’s gaze swept the end of the alley. He’d put his goggles on. It was only a glimpse, but he clung to it, because he knew it was important: reflected light off a gun scope.
He removed the goggles, slipped back into shadows, looked down at the girl.
“What’s your name?”
“Why?”
“Just something to call you. It doesn’t have to be your real one,” he added.
She hesitated. “Julie.”
“Okay, Julie. You can call me Will.”
“Is that your real name?”
“Is Julie
your
real name?”
She fell silent, looked past him, out into the darkness. They had covered about ten blocks, so far in fact that the sound of the sirens had receded. She had not committed to go with him. They had silently agreed to leave the scene of the explosion by simply turning and walking away together.
Robie could visualize the activity surrounding the bus. The first responders would be trying to determine what had caused the explosion. Faulty gas tank? Or terrorist attack? But then he concentrated on that glimpse.
“There’s someone out there,” he told Julie in a low voice.
“Where?” she asked.
Robie pointed over his shoulder even as his gaze was running over her. “Any chance you have a tracking device on you? Because I’m good at getting away, and that was pretty fast to catch up to us.”
“Maybe they’re better than you.”
“Let’s hope not. Tracking device? How about your cell? I didn’t notice one in your pocket. But do you have one? And is your GPS chip enabled?”
“I don’t have a cell phone,” she replied.
“Don’t all kids have cell phones?”
“I guess not,” she said stiffly. “And I’m not a kid.”
“How old are you?”
“How old are
you
?”
“Forty.”
“That’s really old.”
“Trust me, I’m feeling it. How old?”
She hesitated again. “Can I lie?” she asked. “Like with my name?”
“Sure. But if you say you’re over twenty I probably won’t believe you.”
“Fourteen.”
“Okay.”
He looked the way they had come. Something in his gut very clearly told him not to go back that way.
“What did you see that made you think there’s someone there?” she asked.
“Reflection, just like yours in the bus window.”
“It could be anybody.”
“Reflection of light off a rifle scope. It’s a pretty unique signature.”
“Oh.”
Robie studied the walls on either side of them. Then he looked up.
“You afraid of heights?”
“No,” she said quickly, perhaps a little too quickly. He hustled to a construction Dumpster parked in the alley and searched through
it. He finally pulled out several lengths of rope and quickly knotted them together. There was a lenth of plywood in the Dumpster too. He positioned it so that it rested on top of the Dumpster’s rim, giving them a platform on which to stand.
“Strap your backpack down tight around you.”
“Why?”
“Just do it.”
She yanked the straps tight and looked at him expectantly.
“What are we doing?”
“Climbing.”
Robie lifted her up and placed her on top of the plywood and hoisted himself on top of it.
“What now?”
“Like I said, we climb.”
She stared up the brick face of the building.
“Can you really do this?”
“We’ll find out.” He motioned to her. “Come on. You need to stand on my shoulders.” He pointed up. “We’re aiming for that.”
It was a fire escape ladder that in its up and locked position ended well above street level.
“I don’t think I can reach it.”
“We can try. Keep your legs rigid.”
He lifted her up and onto his shoulders and then, grabbing her ankles, military-pressed her higher. Even with her arms stretched out fully she was still about a foot short of the goal. He set her back down.
Robie took the rope he’d gotten from the Dumpster and tossed it up and over the bottom rung of the ladder. He took one end, fashioned a knotted loop, and pulled the other end through it. He gripped the rope and quickly climbed up to the ladder, then freed the rope and passed one end back down to her.
“I’m not great at rope climbing. I flunked PE,” she said doubtfully.
“You don’t have to be. Tie the rope around your backpack straps. Make sure the knot is tight.”
She did this.
Robie added, “Now cross your arms and hold them tight against your body. That’ll keep the backpack from slipping.”
She did so and he started pulling her up.
As soon as she reached him, Robie knew they were in trouble. Running feet were never a good sound.
“Climb, now,” he said, the urgency clear in his voice. “As high as you can.”
She struggled up the fire escape ladder while Robie turned back and focused on what was coming
18
T
HE MAN TURNED
into the alleyway, stopped, cleared the lane by sight, and moved forward. Ten yards in he stopped again, looked left, right, and then ahead. He kept moving, his rifle swinging in precise, controlled arcs. He did this two more times. He was good, but not good enough, because he hadn’t yet looked up.
When he finally did it was just in time to see the bottom of Robie’s feet rushing at him.
Robie’s size twelves smashed into the man’s face and drove the rest of the attached body violently to the asphalt. Robie landed on top of the man, rolled, and came up in an attack posture. He kicked the rifle away and looked down. He didn’t know if the man was dead. But he was certainly unconscious. He took a few seconds to search him.
No ID.
No phone.
No surprise.
But no official credentials either. No gold badge.
He did find an electronic device with a blinking blue light in the man’s pocket. He crushed it underfoot and threw it into the Dumpster. He felt near the man’s ankle and pulled out a .38 S&W throwaway. He slipped it into his jacket pocket, turned, and leapt on top of the plywood. He grabbed the rope, made his way up, snagged the rung of the ladder, freed and pocketed the rope, and climbed.
Julie was already near the top of the building when he reached her.
“Is he dead?” she asked, looking downward.
She had obviously been watching.
“I didn’t check. Let’s go.”
“Where? We’re at the top.”
He pointed upward, to the roof. It was about ten feet farther up.
“How?” she asked. “The stairs don’t go that far. They stop at the top floor.”
“Wait here.”
He found a handhold on a windowsill, and then another in a crack in the brick. He climbed. A minute later he stood on the roof. He lay on his stomach, uncoiled the rope, and fed it down to her.
“Tie it to your backpack straps, like before, lock your arms together again, and close your eyes.”
“Don’t drop me,” she said, her voice panicky.
“I’ve already lifted you once. You weigh nothing.”
A minute later she was beside him on the roof.
Robie led her across the flat, graveled terrain, reached the opposite side, and looked down and then around. There was another fire escape on this side. He used the rope to lower Julie down, then slipped over the side, hung from the building for a few seconds, and let himself drop. He hit the metal of the fire escape, grabbed her hand, and they started down.
“Won’t we have the same problem if someone is out there?” said Julie.
“We would if we were going all the way down.”
They reached the third floor of the building and Robie stopped and peered in. He used a knife he carried in an ankle holder to defeat the simple locking mechanism.
He lifted the window.
“What if someone lives here?” hissed Julie.
“Then we’ll politely leave,” answered Robie.
The apartment was empty.
They slipped through quietly and ran down the hall to the interior stairwell. A minute later they hustled down the street in the opposite direction from where they had come.
Robie finally pulled up and said, “They were tracking you. You must have a bug on you somewhere.”
“How do you know that?”
“Piece of equipment I found on the guy. I busted it up, but we have to cut off the source. Open your bag.”
She did and Robie quickly went through it. There were some clean clothes, a toiletry bag, a camera, some textbooks, an iPod Touch, a small laptop, notebooks, and pens. He popped the back off the iPod and examined the laptop but didn’t find anything that shouldn’t have been there. The pens were clean too. Robie looked through the toiletries methodically but found nothing. He closed the bag up and handed it back to her.
“Nothing.”
“Maybe you’ve got a bug on you,” she said.
“That’s not possible,” Robie said.
“Are you sure?”
He started to say yes, but then stopped. He pulled out the pinhole camera he’d thrown into his pocket. He popped the cover and underneath was the second blinking blue light he’d seen tonight.
“See, it
was
you. I was right,” Julie said triumphantly.
He tossed it and the earwig and power pack in a garbage can.
“Yeah, you were,” he conceded.
They did not see a single cab. In fact, a cab was not on his wish list right now. He didn’t want a third party whom someone could interrogate to find out where his safe house was.
Robie broke into and then artfully sparked the ignition of an ancient pickup truck parked in front of a gas station. He got in the driver’s seat. Julie did not follow. He looked at her across the width of the front seat.
“You decide to go it alone?” he asked.
She didn’t answer. She fiddled with the straps on her backpack. He reached in his pocket, pulled out something, and handed it to her.
It was the pepper spray.
“You might need this, then.”
She took it but then climbed in the truck, shutting the door firmly.
He put the truck in gear and drove off slowly. Squealing tires in the middle of the night could attract attention he did not want or need right now.
“Why the change of heart?” he asked.
“Bad guys don’t give weapons back.” She paused. “And you saved my life back there. Twice.”
“Fair enough.”
“So people are after me. Who’s after you?” she asked.
“Unlike you, I know who they are,” he said. “But I don’t have to tell you. And I won’t. It would not be good for your future.”
“I’m not sure I have much of that anyway.”
She settled back in her seat and grew silent, staring ahead.
“You thinking about somebody?” asked Robie quietly.
She blinked back tears. “No. And don’t ask me again, Will.”
“Okay.”
Robie now drove fast.
As shockingly bad as tonight had been, he had a strong feeling it was only going to get worse.