I woke up at seven in the morning. Totally awake, not going back to sleep, no way, no how. I hated that. I love to sleep. I love to sleep late. I love to lie in bed on a weekend morning with my husband and spoon. I used to love it when the kids would barge in the room way too early on a weekend and jump in bed with us – all three of them plus us in the king-sized bed; this was before Alicia joined the family. Back when they were little. God, how I missed that.
I got out of bed, trying not to disturb Alicia, although I think an earthquake wouldn’t disturb Alicia, and headed for the bathroom, hoping that what woke me was just the need to pee, and then I could go back to sleep. Of course I was able to pee – when am I not? But I was still wide awake. I wandered into the kitchen and put on the coffee, grabbed some orange juice and went to the front door to see if the Sunday Austin paper had been delivered. It had so I took it back to the kitchen with me, finished the OJ, then started on the coffee. Then it hit me: we were going to Houston today! That’s why I couldn’t sleep! I realized my face was hurting from the large smile. Why was I smiling? Because I was getting out of town? Because Luna was getting her husband back? Because Graham would be going back to school? No, in my heart of hearts, I knew the reason I was smiling was that I was back in on the chase.
God help me, that was it. I lost the smile. What kind of person was I that normal things went to the backburner when there was a crime to be solved? I wasn’t in law enforcement – not police, or a bounty hunter, or a private detective, or even a lawyer (although the bounty hunter thing had possibilities – I would look good in black lycra with crossed ammo belts). There was the added bonus of a fancy hotel with piped-in movies and room service, and as much nookie as either of us could handle. I was going to try to be more mature about this. Take a back seat to Luna and her Houston brethren. Try not to go crazy. Well, at least not bat-shit crazy. I have a tendency toward bat-shit crazy.
I opened the paper, ready to be dazzled by the daily mayhem.
‘What do you mean, you called Luna?’ DeWitt said around a mouthful of granola bar.
‘Oh, I don’t know,’ Mayfair said. ‘I think I mean I picked up my phone and punched in her number and said, “Hello, Luna, this is Mayfair.”’
‘God, I hate it when you try to be cute—’
‘I never have to try to be cute. It’s just who I am,’ Mayfair said.
DeWitt slammed his fist against the steering wheel of their car. ‘Why did you call her? You think we need the help of some yokel cop who couldn’t find these guys even in her Podunk town, much less a city the size of Houston, for God’s sake!’
‘I thought it would be nice to have someone around to bounce ideas off. You don’t bounce. On you, they just fall flat.’
‘Yeah? Well maybe it’s not me – maybe it’s your ideas!’ DeWitt said.
‘Whatever,’ Mayfair said, watching the city flash by her side window, glad once again that her parents had opted to leave Houston when she was a kid and settle in Austin instead. Coming from the gateway to the Hill Country, all this flatness made her anxious. The only hills in sight were overpasses.
‘So she’s actually coming here?’ DeWitt said.
‘Yep. She’ll meet us at HPD around noon.’
‘Again, why?’
‘Again, bite me.’
They were on their own for breakfast. Mr Jones still didn’t see Mrs Unger, and he also didn’t see Mr Green take a tray down to her. As he was alone in the kitchen, Mr Jones went to the door of the basement and turned the knob. He almost fell over from shock when it turned in his hand. As it was, he drew his hand back like the knob had been on fire. He touched it again, turned it, and pulled the door back. Looking down the stairs, he saw nothing but a black pit. Looking up, he saw a light switch on the door’s inner frame. He flipped it on and the stairs lit up. Checking behind him to make sure no one else had come into the kitchen, he stepped onto the small landing, letting the door silently close behind him.
Gingerly he made his way down the stairs, holding on to the railings. At the bottom it was gloomy and dark. He looked around for another light switch and found one. Switching it on exposed an empty basement. Well, empty of any lab-type stuff, as far as Mr Jones could tell. There was a broken chair, some lawn furniture, and a few boxes, but definitely not a lab.
To the right of the stairs was a door that opened into a large laundry room. Straight across from the stairs was another door, with a padlock. Mr Jones went to this door and knocked. And again, shock: someone answered.
‘Hello?’ A woman’s voice.
‘Mrs Unger?’ Mr Jones asked.
‘Yes?’ she said, her voice closer to the door now.
‘Are you OK?’ he asked.
‘Please let me out of here,’ she said.
‘The door’s padlocked,’ Mr Jones explained.
‘You’re the big guy, right? The big American guy? Can you kick it in?’ she begged.
‘I probably shouldn’t do that. Mr Big would get real P.O.’d if I did that.’
‘Who’s Mr Big?’ she asked.
‘You know, that Russian guy who runs this,’ Mr Jones explained.
‘Oh, Vlad,’ she said, derisively. ‘I’d call him Mr Bald.’
Mr Jones laughed. ‘Yeah, he is pretty bald, huh? How come you know his name?’
‘He was our financial backer. In case you get away and I don’t, know this: his name is Vladimir Andronikov. This is his house—’
‘What street are we on? I called my friend and left a message, but I didn’t know what street to tell her.’
‘Dalton Lane,’ Mrs Unger said. ‘Who did you call? Are they on their way? Did you call the police?’
‘Well, now, no, I didn’t call the police. I don’t know any police. But I called my friend – she’s this girl we kidnapped, but she likes me because I helped her get out of it, and she’ll help us, I swear.’
‘A girl? Are you being sexist or is it really a girl? How old?’
‘Like sixteen, seventeen, hard to tell.’
‘Shit! A girl! How can she possibly help?’ Mrs Unger asked.
‘She’s real smart,’ Mr Jones said.
Mr Jones heard the door open above. ‘Gotta go!’ he said and scooted quickly into the laundry room, and hid behind one of the machines.
From above he heard someone say something in Russian. Then someone else answered him in Russian. Had to be Mr Big – Mr Bald! Ha! He liked that – and his henchman Mr Green. Mr Big’s voice, higher in octave, was screaming at Mr Green, who’s deep, throaty voice sounded defeated. Their voices grew louder as they came down the stairs.
Mr Big said something else in Russian and then Mr Jones heard the hasp of the lock being withdrawn and the door to the room where Mrs Unger was being held opened.
‘Ah, Elizabeth,’ Mr Big said in a bright voice.
Mr Jones moved to the door of the laundry room and opened it a crack to listen.
‘How are you this morning?’ Mr Big said.
Mrs Unger didn’t answer.
‘Are you hungry?’ Still no answer. ‘Mr Green, please fix our good doctor some breakfast. With a lot of hot, hot coffee, eh? You Americans love your hot, hot coffee. I prefer tea, but as you Americans say, “Different strokes for different folks.”’ Mr Big laughed.
‘Actually,’ Mrs Unger said, ‘no one has used that reference since the mid-eighties. You’re behind in your slang, Vlad.’
‘Please, Elizabeth, don’t try to make me angry. You know what I’m like when I’m angry. We don’t want to see that again, do we?’
Mrs Unger said nothing.
‘So, Elizabeth, how does it go? Were you able to accomplish anything last night? I hope that flash drive was all that you said it would be.’
‘The flash drive is fine. What I need are those notebooks from my lab. Do you have them?’
‘We’ll try again today to get them for you. The police are watching your lab.’
‘Too bad they weren’t watching my house,’ Mrs Unger said. ‘Maybe then they could have killed all of you.’
‘What is that word? Oh, yes! Spunk! You are showing spunk today, Elizabeth. What has changed that makes you feel you can disrespect me as you are now doing? Do I not still have you as my hostage? Do I not have the ability to tear off the rest of your fingernails at my whim? Can I not still kill you with a wave of my hand?’
More footfalls on the stairs. Mr Jones nudged the laundry room door a little closer to totally shut, and watched as Mr Green came down with a tray and walked into the lab room. He never looked anywhere but straight ahead. Mr Jones opened the door a little wider.
‘Ah, Elizabeth, see what we have for you! Scrambled eggs – Misha, did you use butter and cheese?’
‘Yes.’
‘Good. Doesn’t that sound yummy, Elizabeth? And some bacon, and wheat toast! What a good breakfast! Oh, and look, Elizabeth, orange juice and a carafe of coffee. Is it the good kind, Misha? The kind with lots of caffeine so that our good doctor will have plenty of energy to work for us today?’
‘Yes,’ Mr Green said.
‘There! You see, Elizabeth, I am still your friend. What happened to James was an accident, as I’ve told you so many times. And my Misha will handle getting your notebooks for you, right, Misha?’
‘Yes,’ Mr Green said.
‘So, dear friend, eat up, and before you know it we will both be billionaires! Won’t that be fun?’
‘I don’t want your blood money!’ Mrs Unger screamed.
Mr Jones heard the sound of a slap and heard Mrs Unger cry out. It took all his strength to keep from leaping out of his hiding place and bashing in a few skulls. He was afraid that if he tried it, Misha, or Mr Green, or whoever, who was definitely bigger than Mr Jones, would be the one bashing in his skull. And what good would that do Mrs Unger? She’d be on her own.
‘See, Elizabeth? You made my Misha nervous. When he’s nervous he lashes out. Raising your voice to me is one thing that makes Misha very nervous.’
He saw them coming out of the lab room and pulled the door in, only leaving enough room to see the lab door itself. He watched as Misha reset the padlock and followed Mr Big up the stairs.
We decided to ride to Houston in Luna’s car – me in the back seat, of course – with the plan for Willis and me to return by Am Track, which had a station in Codderville. I’d always wanted to take a train – it was just unfortunate that Houston is only a few hours away. I’d like to do the whole compartment overnight thing. Pretend Willis was Cary Grant and I was Eva Marie Saint, get a little North by Northwest action. That would be cool. Elena and Eddie would drive her car back to Codderville.
Since this was half work and half vacation, Luna was driving her personal car and would turn in the mileage which would be half paid – a portion by BCRPD and a portion by Codderville PD. All the fractioning was boggling my mind. I am not a friend of math. Her personal car was a 2001 Lincoln Town car, in pristine condition. Since she usually drove her unmarked, the Lincoln had very little mileage on it and was gorgeous. It’s interesting that as I age, cars I used to make fun of – like Cadillacs and Lincolns and those enormous Chryslers – I now look at and go ‘ahhh.’ Is it just me? Of course, I wouldn’t trade in my two-seater Audi for all the big luxury cars in the world. But Luna’s Lincoln had plenty of legroom in the backseat, which put me too far away from the front seat to hear clearly what Willis and Luna were discussing. So, after trying to pull my seatbelt up enough to lean forward and listen, I finally gave up and sat back in the plush seat and thought about the past few hours.
It had been a lovefest when Graham packed his car around ten this morning, ready to take off for Austin. There was a tearful scene at breakfast when Megan and Graham made up – she was crying, not my macho son – and as he packed his car, Megan and Bess were all over him, hugging and kissing him, telling him to buy them things that could only be found in Austin – what, I don’t know. Then Willis and I took our turns, hugging and kissing him, and telling him to study, study, study. Then the four of us went back into the house by the kitchen door to leave Graham and Alicia alone. I’m not saying we didn’t all peek through the window. Graham finally got in the car and started it, then, with one last long kiss from Alicia through the window, he took off. Alicia headed for the kitchen door and the four of us headed to the sofas, Willis quickly turning on the TV.
When she came in the door, she was crying. I’d decided it would look more natural if I was in the kitchen, which was my usual spot when not in my office, so I was closest to her when she came in. Seeing her face, I engulfed her in my arms, took her to the bedroom and sat her on the bed.
‘You can cry here all you want. Either alone or with me.’
She reached up and pulled me by the hand down to the bed. And laid her head on my shoulder and we both cried. In about three minutes both my other girls poked their heads in the door to my bedroom, saw what was going on, and jumped on the king-sized bed, both bawling, and holding on to Alicia and me. And I thought maybe I shouldn’t wish to go back in time like I had earlier. I was very uncomfortable physically – they weren’t little kids anymore. Somewhere during all this musing my early morning rising got to me and I fell asleep.
When I woke up we were pulling off the freeway in search of Reasoner Street – home of the main Houston cop shop.
Today would be the close of the convention. A big breakfast event with a church service while we ate. I thought that was sacrilege, but I’m just an old woman and no one cares what I think. Gerald was going to do a solo, as was that Louisiana woman, and there was a quartet from the Atlanta choir also performing. And then we had to check out before noon.
Luckily none of the drinkers from the night before were going to perform today – I could see a few of them dotted among the tables, bleary-eyed, drinking coffee like crazy and holding ice water glasses to their foreheads. There’s a reason we Baptists, as a rule, don’t drink. And I was seeing it right before my very eyes. Not to mention it’s a sin. And don’t start with that old saw about how Jesus drank wine. That’s all they had. I’m sure the water was polluted.
There were so many preachers at this convention that they had to take turns giving the sermon and everybody wanted to one-up each other. Luckily Brother Joe wasn’t one of them. It might just be me, but he’s a piss-poor example of a Baptist preacher. The first preacher to speak really knew his fire and brimstone, only he went on a little too long, like forty minutes, which left the second and third guys only ten minutes each, but I’ve never known a preacher who could say hello in less than half an hour. It was near on eleven in the morning before we got out of there.
Once in my room, I remembered I hadn’t sent E.J. those pictures of Brother Joe. I glanced through them. Three pretty good shots. And one with Gerald in the background. I bet I could blow that up, crop out Brother Joe, and I’d have a very nice picture of Gerald. If I wanted one, and I’m not saying I did. It was just a possibility. I hit send on all three pictures and started packing up the last of my things – I’d packed most of them the night before – when there was a knock on my door. I opened it to find a bell hop standing there. As I hadn’t called for one to help me with my bags – I’m perfectly capable of handling my own bags, thank you very much, and don’t feel like it’s worth a dollar a bag just to have them taken downstairs! – all I could say was, ‘Yes?’
‘Ma’am,’ he said, flourishing an envelope addressed to Rachael Donley. I took it, smiled and said thank you. I didn’t tip him. I suppose I should have, but I forgot.
After Mom and Dad left, Alicia headed for her room. ‘No!’ Megan said, grabbing her by the arm. ‘You’re not going to mope around all day, right, Bess?’
‘Absolutely!’ Bess agreed. They dragged her toward the back door. ‘We’re going to go do something.’
‘I’m not in the mood—’ Alicia started.
‘Who cares?’ Megan interrupted. ‘He’ll be back on Friday. Get over it. Now, movie, fast food, or bowling?’
‘Miniature golf,’ Alicia said.
Megan and Bess looked at each other, shrugged and Bess said, ‘Sure. Miniature golf it is.’
No one knew whose turn it was to drive, so Megan declared it hers and no one argued with her. Arguing with Megan often got tiresome. It was while they were driving to Codderville, the location of the nearest miniature golf course, that Alicia decided to check her messages.
We were sitting at a round table in a conference room on the second floor of the main police station, simply called Reasoner Street, as it resides on a street called Reasoner – clever, these Houstonians – waiting for the lieutenant in charge of homicide, Buddy Nixon, to show up. There were the three of us – Willis, Luna, and me – plus the Hatfields and McCoys, aka Mayfair and DeWitt from Austin, and the Houston detectives in charge of the case, Larry Mann and Dave Marshall, known in the squad as ‘Marshallman.’ Larry looked like Paul Newman in his later years – in his sixties, trim build, blue eyes, gray hair and a wicked grin. Dave was thirty years younger, small in stature, and totally unremarkable.
We’d talked a little bit – all small talk – and were quietly awaiting the lieutenant’s arrival when my cell phone made an urgent sound. Worried about my kids for all sorts of reasons, I picked it up to see a text from my mother-in-law. Who in the world taught her to text? I’ll have their heads! The text said, ‘Sending you pic. Bro Joe. Get Luna to ID.’ And sure enough a picture came on my screen of two men, one young, one old.
I showed the picture to Luna. ‘Vera wants you to ID this guy.’
‘Which one?’ she asked.
‘The younger one, I think. It’s her preacher. She suspects him of having murdered her roommate.’
‘Like I have time for this?’
We were still looking when the lieutenant walked in, crossing behind Luna and me.
He stopped short and grabbed the phone out of Luna’s hand. ‘Where did you get this?’ he said, his tone gruff.
‘My mother-in-law just sent it,’ I said. ‘It’s her preacher. She wants an ID on him.’
‘Oh, I can ID him all right!’ the lieutenant said. ‘He’s the prick who killed my brother-in-law.’
I opened the letter addressed to Rachael. It was postmarked from some town I’ve never heard of in Florida. Inside was a note: ‘Rachael, here’s that picture of your uncle Thomas. That’s your me-maw he’s standing with. If you did find him, honey, stay away! He’s very dangerous! Call the police immediately! Love you, Mom.’
I looked at the picture. Two people standing in front of a barn, looking at the camera, a young man with his arm over the shoulders of an older woman. She was scowling; he was smiling fit to beat the band. The older woman was wearing a housedress from the fifties, maybe, her hair in pin curls, wearing shoes and socks, with a sweater pulled over her shoulders. The young man was wearing blue jeans with cuffs, motorcycle boots and a motorcycle jacket over a white T-shirt. He had a hairstyle I remembered from my youth, called a DA – the top slicked back with Brill Cream – and, I’m sure, even though the picture didn’t show it, the back was combed into a duck tail. Hence the term DA: duck’s ass. The picture was in black and white. He was a good-looking young man, I thought.
Did Rachael run into this man, her uncle Thomas, here at the convention? Is that what happened to her? Her mother said he was dangerous: did he kill Rachael? I sat down on my designated bed. This was getting real. I think maybe I was just playing at this, pretending to be E.J. in my head. Thinking in my heart of hearts that it was just as likely that Rachael had run off with some man or something. But maybe she didn’t. Maybe she really was in trouble, or worse, already dead. Uncle Thomas was a dangerous man. Her mother said so. What she didn’t say was why.
Well, the picture certainly wasn’t of Brother Joe. He was barely older than the young man in the photo. I still didn’t like him, but maybe he wasn’t a mass murderer like I’d hoped he was.
I finished packing, put the picture of Uncle Thomas in my sweater pocket and headed out the door, taking the elevator to the lobby. I’d just finished checking out when I saw Gerald walking my way. I smiled and walked up to him. He was grinning back at me.
‘I got us two connecting rooms at a small – they call it boutique – but very nice hotel in Georgetown,’ he said, still smiling.
‘Well, I don’t know that we need to stay, Gerald. Whoever did away with poor Rachael, it wasn’t Brother Joe. Looks like it was her uncle,’ I said, pulling the picture out of my pocket.
It wasn’t until the picture was in my hand and I was looking at it, then at Gerald, that I realized that the good-looking boy had turned into a good-looking old man. Gerald grabbed the picture out of my hand.
‘Brother Joe?’ I said, standing up. ‘How did he’ – I said, pointing at Brother Joe, ‘kill your brother-in-law?’
‘Not him!’ the lieutenant said. ‘Him!’ And he pointed to the older man. ‘I’d recognize that scumbag anywhere! Old man now or not!’
I took the phone back from him and handed it to Willis. ‘Who is that?’ I asked him.
Willis shook his head. ‘I don’t know.’ Then he stood up and looked at me. ‘Ah, you don’t think that could be Gerald, do you?’
‘Oh my God!’ I said. I turned to the lieutenant. ‘What did this guy do?’
‘He’s a real winner,’ he said, sitting down at the head of the table. Willis and I took our seats next to each other, holding hands. ‘His name is Thomas Gregory, a white supremist who was hording guns back in ’seventy-two, I think. An ATF agent came on his land to deliver a warrant to search the property for illegal firearms, and Gregory shot him dead. The FBI got him and he was arrested. A year later he was standing trial at the federal courthouse here in Houston. On the day the trial was to end and the verdict come out, I guess he didn’t like his chances. So he killed one of his guards, severally wounded the other and made it out a window. He was never seen again. My little sister’s husband was the wounded guard. He ended up in a coma and, after six months, she had to make the decision to pull the plug.’ The lieutenant’s hands were balled into fists, the knuckles getting whiter and whiter, his face getting redder and redder. ‘Gale, my little sister, was a widow and single mother of two toddlers when she was only twenty-five. So, yeah, I know who this guy is and I want to know where that picture was taken and how to get him.’
Willis and I looked at each other. ‘Oh, shit,’ he said, and grabbed my phone, still out on the table, and called his mother back. It went to voicemail. ‘Mom! Call me! Now! It’s urgent,’ he said and hung up. He looked so terrified I almost burst into tears. I had no idea what to do now. We were in Houston – she was in Washington, D.C.
I turned to the lieutenant and said, ‘She’s at the Hyatt in D.C. at a convention. This man is there with her. It’s a church choir thing. Can you call the D.C. police? Her name is Vera Pugh, from Codderville, Texas. She’s five foot one, gray hair, thin—’
I turned to Willis. He shook his head. ‘I don’t know if she has any birthmarks or anything,’ he said.
Luna was on the phone before the lieutenant had even pulled his out of his pocket. ‘We’ll find her,’ she said to Willis and me. ‘Don’t worry, we’ll find her!’
‘OMG!’ Alicia shouted from the back seat. ‘Listen to this!’ She held up her phone and pushed the speaker button. ‘Hi, Alicia, it’s Mr Jones. I’m in Houston at Mr Big’s house. He’s Russian, I think. Anyway, they’ve got this lady here against her will and I think it’s that guy’s wife, the one who fell off the Driscoll? Anyway, they’re torturing her! The house is in River Oaks, but I don’t know what street—’ And then there was a dead line.
‘Shit!’ Megan said.
‘Oh my God!’ Bess said. ‘Call Mom! Quick!’
‘You call her!’ Alicia said. ‘I don’t know how I can call her and play this back at the same time.’
‘Well,’ Bess said, ‘what you do is—’
‘Jesus, Bess!’ Megan shouted. ‘Just call Mom, for God’s sake!’
‘You don’t have to get all uppity about it!’ Bess said, pulling out her phone. She hit the button for her mom’s cell and waited. Three rings and she picked up.
‘Can’t talk now,’ Mom said.
‘Don’t hang up!’ Bess shouted. ‘We have big news from Mr Jones!’
Alicia grabbed Bess’s phone. ‘Mom, listen! I just got a call from Mr Jones—’
‘Oh my God! How did he get your number?’ Mom demanded.
‘Later, Mom! He called me. Listen!’ And she played Mr Jones’s message.
‘Let me put this on speaker and then play it again. OK, go.’
After she’d played the message for a fourth time, Alicia asked her mom, ‘Now what?’
‘Just sit tight. We’ll get back to you,’ and she hung up.
‘What did she say?’ Bess asked.
‘She said to sit tight,’ Alicia said.
‘What does that mean?’ from Megan.
‘Go home?’ Alicia suggested.
‘Hell, no,’ Megan said, hitting the accelerator. ‘She can call us just as easily at the miniature golf course as she can at home.’
‘You think I should call Mr Jones back?’ Alicia asked.
‘You have his number?’ Bess said, turning around in her seat to gape at her sister.
Looking hang-dogged, Alicia said, ‘I should have told Mom that, huh?’
‘Only if you want Mr Jones arrested!’ Megan said. ‘Me? I don’t care. But he did save your life, Alicia.’
‘True,’ Alicia said. ‘I’ll call him when we get to Codderville.’
‘I want it on record that I think you should tell Mom that guy’s phone number,’ Bess said.
All in agreement, they headed to Codderville.
Mr Jones made his way back to the door of the lab. ‘Mrs Unger?’ he said quietly.
‘Yes?’ she answered.
‘You OK?’ he asked.
‘No,’ she said.
‘I mean, did he hurt you bad?’ Mr Jones thought she might be thinking he meant about the whole situation, rather than just the slap on the face.
‘The slap?’ she said. ‘No. I’ve had worse from his precious Misha before that.’
‘Look, I’m going to try to get out of the house today at some point. I haven’t heard back from Alicia, my friend, and I called her yesterday. I guess she hasn’t checked her messages—’ His phone vibrated in his pocket. He pulled it out and saw Alicia’s name on the screen. He smiled big. ‘Hey! Speak of the devil! Here she is now!’ He punched the phone on and said, ‘Hi, Alicia!’
‘Oh my God, Mr Jones! Are you OK?’
‘Yeah, physically, but Mrs Unger’s being tortured. They pulled off one of her fingernails!’ Mr Jones said.
‘Oh, yuck!’ Alicia said. He could hear her repeating what he’d said to others.
‘You with your family?’ he asked.
‘Just my sisters. My parents went to Houston with our neighbor, Mrs Luna. She’s the pol—’
‘Yeah, the police lady. I sorta met her,’ Mr Jones said.
‘They’re looking for you,’ she said.
‘Well, I’m no friend of the cops, but I think they need to come here with a warrant. Mrs Unger is in the basement in a locked room. There are three other people in the house – wait, what day is it?’
‘Sunday,’ Alicia said.
‘Right. No maids or gardeners on Sunday. So upstairs is Mr Brown, I don’t know his real name, but Mr Big’s real name is— Mrs Unger, what’s Mr Big’s real name?’
‘Vladimir Andronikov. And the address here is 410 Dalton Lane.’
Mr Jones repeated that information, getting the correct spelling of Vlad’s last name from Mrs Unger.
‘And the last guy is Misha, aka Mr Green. He’s bigger than me and a lot meaner. He’s Mr Androno— Whatever, Mr Big’s henchman. So tell them to take him down first.’
‘What about you, Mr Jones?’ Alicia asked, her voice sounding worried.
‘Don’t worry about me, sweet girl. I’ll find a way out of here. Mr Jones always lands on his feet.’ He hung up the phone and turned to the locked door. ‘You hear all that, ma’am?’ he asked.
‘Yes, I did, Mr Jones. By the way, what’s your real name?’
‘Aw, ma’am, I’m not gonna tell you that. I could get in a lot of trouble. But somebody’s coming to help you, OK? You hang in there.’
He’d heard Mr Green throw the deadbolt on the door at the head of the stairs, so he knew there would be no way to get out, and even so, they were probably in the kitchen and if they caught him they would more than likely kill him. And he was afraid it wouldn’t be fast. He was afraid he’d give out Alicia’s name, and start the whole nightmare all over again for her and her family.
But over in the corner, opposite the door to the laundry room, was a window. Big enough, he hoped, to get his shoulders through. Exit Mr Jones, he thought. Ernie Stanton was heading home.