twenty
I managed to get out the main parts of my message—protect Hope, protect the twins—before the line went dead. I headed to the restroom and flushed the cell. Then I left.
I got the money. Got a new cell phone. Made my tails. There were two of them—the flyer guy and a young couple that appeared when I left the restaurant.
Didn’t take me long to lose them. I knew the basics and Rhys had given me extra tips. By the time I got my new phone, they were gone. To be sure they stayed gone, I went shopping. Bought a hoodie, new shoes, and khakis. Then I trashed my clothes, in case they’d planted tracking devices. To avoid supernatural methods of detection, like clairvoyance, I stayed away from signs that would reveal my location. A lot harder to do that in a hotel, where everything seems to be branded, but I tried.
I’d picked up some food and the caffeine pills, but I really didn’t think I’d need them. I was wired. Yet after I’d eaten and laid on the bed for a couple of hours, my body and brain started begging for a break, and I almost drifted off. So I popped pills and I found a loud action movie, and I set my bedside alarm clock for fifteen minutes, resetting it every time it rang, just in case I drifted off.
When the fire alarm went off at two A.M., I thought it was the movie. Even when I realized it was real, I dismissed it. I’d had alarms go off at hotels before, to the point where I just stayed in my room and waited to smell smoke. Well, I did if Paige wasn’t with me—you could sound an alarm five times in one night and she’d still insist we clear out for each one.
I didn’t think anything more of it until I looked out the window and saw police cars and an unmarked van that might as well have had BOMB SQUAD plastered on the side. Then I realized this was a trap.
I’d locked myself in a hotel room. I wasn’t coming out. Wasn’t even ordering room service. As Rhys said, if my pursuers thought my spells worked, they wouldn’t want to confront me here where tight quarters gave me a tactical advantage.
They needed me out. What better way to get me out than a bomb scare.
Like I was falling for—
An explosion. Someone outside the building screamed so loud I heard it on the top floor. I cracked open my window as a second blast hit, blowing out windows I couldn’t see. More screaming—both in the parking lot and the halls.
Okay, not a bomb scare. Actual bombs were involved.
The blasts were small and localized. If it was me, that’s what I’d do—plant small ones to convince everyone there was a real danger.
A key card whooshed in my lock. I backed into the bathroom. The door swung open and hit the chain.
A man swore. Then, “Hello? Ma’am? We are evacuating the building. You need to come out now.”
I didn’t answer.
“Ma’am, this is a serious threat. There are bombs on the premises.”
A radio clicked. The man said, “I’ve got a chained door on twelve. Get someone up here right now. Room twelve-oh-four.”
A woman’s voice on the other end told him to continue searching for more sleeping guests.
Made it all sound so easy . . . which was why I was certain it was a trap.
When he’d gone, I crept to the door and peered through the keyhole. No sign of anyone. As I cracked open my door, the man pounded on another farther down.
“Sir? Ma’am? You need to leave the building now.”
Muffled voices replied in a language I didn’t recognize. The man swore and radioed it down, asking what were the chances of getting an interpreter.
If it was a setup, it was an elaborate one. Still, that didn’t mean my pursuers weren’t waiting right around the corner.
I opened the balcony door. Slipped out, being careful to stay out of sight of anyone watching from below. Looked down. Looked up. Went back inside.
Balconies can be useful escape routes, if climbing down wouldn’t leave you exposed to a growing mob below. And if climbing up wouldn’t put you on the roof of a building possibly rigged with explosives.
I stuffed the money from Rhys in my pockets, and eased open the hall door. The guy checking the rooms was gone. Down the corridor, a middle-aged couple leaned out their door, trying to figure out what was going on, chattering in what I now realized was French. I knew some French. Well, very little—just what I’d picked up from shopping trips to Paris—but that gave me an idea.
I hurried to their door, pointed up, toward the still-ringing alarm, then at the stairwell. I picked a few words from my meager vocabulary—ones like partir and mal and maintenant, having never had cause to learn the French term for “bomb threat,” surprisingly. When they figured it out and headed for the stairs, I “closed” the door behind them, making sure it didn’t shut all the way.
I bustled them into the stairwell, then pretended I’d forgotten something and waved them on ahead. Now to slip back inside their room. Leave the chain off and hide so when someone checked, the room would appear to be empty, as would mine, meaning they’d give the all-clear for the floor, then I could figure out—
“Hey!” a voice called behind me.
I turned to see a guy in a cop uniform coming through the stairwell door.
“Are you twelve-oh-four?”
Je ne parle pas anglais.
He swore. “Twelve-ten, huh. Okay, just . . .” He pointed at the stairwell, then raised his voice, as if I’d understand English if it was louder. “You need to leave now! Go! Downstairs!”
I considered my options. I could circle around the next floor and slip back into 1210—
He noticed the door ajar and pulled it shut. Then he looked at me and waved emphatically, shooing me away.
I feigned confusion, jabbering in a mix of French and nonsense words. Then I motioned for him to show me the way out. A few flashes of my big blue eyes and my best helpless look did the trick. He sighed, but radioed down that he needed to help the “French girl.”
Outwitting my foes by having a human cop escort me from the building. My ego might never recover. In a way, though, I was pleased with myself. It was a sensible and mature choice.
So we descended twelve stories through an empty stairwell. I stayed close, in case anyone swung out of a doorway behind me. No one did.
At the bottom, he tried to wave me out, but I feigned more confusion until he escorted me through the lobby to the front doors, where more cops were ushering stragglers into the mob gathered outside.
As I moved into the heart of the crowd, I got a few dirty looks and sniffs from the housecoat- and pajama-clad hotel guests. One woman said, “It’s a bomb threat, honey, you aren’t supposed to get dressed and do your makeup first.”
“Not everyone wears”—I surveyed her cotton pj’s—“those to bed.” I shuddered and glanced at her husband. “My condolences.”
People ignored me after that, as I’d hoped. I continued through the mob until I was deep in the middle of it, then lowered myself to the pavement beside a couple of teens who’d brought their pillows with them and had already drifted back to sleep.
I kept my eye out. No one seemed to be searching the crowd, and I began to wonder if I’d overreacted. My pursuers were probably staking out train stations, bus terminals, and car rental places, and this was exactly what it seemed—an actual bomb threat with actual bombs.
Once the building was completely evacuated, hotel staff came out with the bullhorns and announced that it was highly unlikely anyone would get back into the building that night. Buses were arriving to transport people to other hotels. Those who wanted to wait would not be readmitted to retrieve their belongings until the building was cleared.
Having left nothing in my room, I was free to go. The safest course of action, though, seemed to be to climb on one of those buses. When they arrived, I wedged myself into the thick of the crowd, and took an aisle seat beside a big guy so I couldn’t be seen through the window.
When we reached our destination, I again jostled with the crowd, fighting to get off, so I’d be surrounded by others as I disembarked. I let the mob carry me into the hotel, then slipped out the back door.
From the loading dock, I called Rhys. His answering service told me he was unavailable. He’d call when he could.
I looked around. It was four in the morning. This loading dock seemed as good a place as any to hang out for an hour or two. A little too open, though. I’d be better in an enclosed space where I could watch the door.
I poked around the dock and the valet parking lot until I found a door. I tried the handle. Locked, but it seemed a simple enough one to pick. I found a paper clip that did the job nicely.
The door led into a storage room no bigger than my bedroom, and contained nothing more valuable than empty cardboard boxes. I stepped through and—
A blow to the back of my head knocked me to the floor. I tried to scramble up, but another sent me down for good.