Boiling Point
The phone cracked, alerting me to how tightly I was gripping it. I dialed again—no answer. Every number I knew, all with no response. Each failure ratcheted my fear up another notch. My stomach twisted a bit tighter until all that existed was a frozen knot of fear.
Noah took the phone and clasped my hands between his. I hadn’t heard him come in. “Dahlia, what?” he asked.
“Hey, guys!” Jimmy shouted. “Get in here!”
We thundered into the living room. Jimmy pointed at the television screen. King had closed in on the set and turned the volume up. On the black-and-white monitor, a news anchor sat primly behind her desk with an inset photograph of Gage over her shoulder.
“. . . to our continuing story,” she said, voice tinny and devoid of emotion. “The former Ranger known as Cipher has been arrested and officially charged in the attempted murder of a Los Angeles city police detective.”
My mouth fell open.
“Detective Lieutenant Peter Pascal was reported missing this morning by his partner when he failed to show up for a joint operation with the former Ranger Corps members.” The inset of Cipher disappeared, replaced by a frozen image of the escaping food truck. “This was the scene earlier this morning.” The image began to play. Our truck sped toward the exit ramp, taking bullets from half a dozen hidden cops.
“The escaping truck was thought to contain two suspects wanted in a series of horrific murders. One patrolman was injured by returned gunfire—”
“That’s a lie,” Noah roared. “We never shot back, Goddammit.”
The video switched to a long shot, taken from the opposite side of the parking structure. In it, Cipher could be seen arguing vehemently with Detective Forney. Both appeared to be shouting, using wide hand gestures to make their points.
“The sting did not go as planned,” the anchor continued. “The Ranger known as Ember was active in drawing out the two suspects. Once believed to have been taken hostage by the fleeing suspects, we are now told that she is, in fact, aiding the fugitives. If you have any information . . .”
A buzzing sound filled my ears as my image appeared on the screen—a freeze-frame shot from the night of the warehouse fire, out of uniform and streaked with ash and soot. My knees wobbled. Noah’s arm slipped around my waist, and I didn’t fight him.
“. . . Detective Pascal was later found in the back of a sport-utility vehicle owned by Cipher, bound, gagged, and presumed dead. However, EMTs managed a miraculous resuscitation on scene, and Detective Pascal is now listed in critical condition at Cedars-Sinai Hospital. The remaining Ranger team members are being sought for questioning in the Twenty-second Street fire that left two people injured and caused hundreds of thousands of dollars in property damage. Police have offered a hotline if you have any information regarding the—”
“This is bullshit,” I said. “Gage did not beat that detective nearly to death, and I am not in collusion with murder suspects.” Three heads swiveled toward me. “Okay, kind of, but they make it sound like we’re all a bunch of criminals. And what fire on Twenty-second Street? Shit.”
The newscast switched to regular programming. King turned the set off. The bungalow vibrated with the sudden, intense silence.
“On the upside,” King said, “sounds like most of your friends are still out there.”
“I lost contact,” I said. “I was talking to Ethan, and then we got cut off. No one’s answering.” I told them what I knew about the parking garage and was met with matching stares of disbelief—or what King’s blank face managed as disbelief.
“Didn’t you say that Detective Forney’s name came up in one of your leads?” Noah asked.
“Tangentially, yes. The video clue you left led to a man named Alan Bates. He was arrested last week for beating up his ex-girlfriend, Detective Liza Forney, and another guy. Bates has a hearing today. He’s been in jail almost since this thing started, so he isn’t involved. We were going to start looking at additional people from the video, but then other stuff happened.”
Like escaping from police in a bullet-riddled food truck. Taking care of an injured man. Stealing a car and assaulting a salesperson. Letting friends get arrested for things they didn’t do. That sort of other stuff.
“Why did you send me that video footage?” I asked. “What am I supposed to see in it?”
“We aren’t sure,” Noah said. “Dad said that during one of his phone calls with the kidnapper, they mentioned the incident in an offhand way. It made him wonder, so he got the file. He couldn’t make heads or tails of it, and we were honor bound to not talk about it, so he compromised. He thought you would see something in it he couldn’t.”
I blew out through my teeth. “I think I just made everything more complicated by finding connections where they don’t really exist.”
“Are you sure?” King asked.
“About what?”
“No connections.”
“I’m not sure about much of anything right now, actually. I don’t even know the name of the other man Bates beat up.”
“You know your friends, Dahlia,” Noah said. “What are they doing now? Hiding from the police or turning themselves in?”
Simon would never allow himself to be hauled in for questioning. He hated and distrusted the police, and for good reason. The others I wasn’t sure about, but Ethan and Marco were in trouble. Or hurt. Maybe both.
“If they suspected Forney was setting them up, I think they would hide. I just don’t know where. Hill House is obviously off-limits. Ethan has a friend who lives in Burbank, but I don’t think he would put her in the middle of this.”
Noah furrowed his eyebrows. “What about—” The phone in his hand rang, and he nearly dropped it. He looked at the display, eyes widening. Another ring. “It’s them.”
“Them who?” lingered on my lips for a moment, until I realized. Noah knelt on the floor next to his brothers. He opened the phone and turned it on speaker.
“Yes?” he said.
“You’ve been making headlines,” an electronically filtered voice said. Impossible to tell if it was male or female. “That’s not wise.”
“It wasn’t our fault.”
“Where is the girl Ember? Is she still with you?”
Noah’s shoulders tensed. “She’s here. She was shot during our escape. I don’t know if she’s going to make it.” What was he doing?
The voice laughed, a dreadful, eerie sound. “So the police managed to do by accident what King couldn’t manage on purpose. Interesting. Do you have the money yet?”
“It’s in a safe place.”
“Good, because we’re calling in the final favor. Once it’s done, you’ll receive instructions on where to drop off your three packages and pick up your brother.”
“Three packages?” The trio exchanged confused looks (well, Jimmy and Noah did; I could only guess at King’s blank expression). I remained still, afraid to move and give myself away.
“Three,” the voice said. “The money, the person you’ll be fetching for me as favor three, and, of course, Ember’s dead body. Let her die and then bring her with you.”
I closed my eyes, staving off a wave of dizziness that threatened to flatten me. Someone squeezed my ankle. I looked down—Noah’s hand, offering what silent support he could.
“Fine,” Noah said. “What’s the favor?”
“Alan Bates has a pretrial hearing this afternoon at four o’clock. After the hearing, they’ll take him out the west-side exit. He will have two police escorts, plus one man driving the van. I want Bates removed from police custody safely. He is the other package.”
Jimmy paled, his skin taking on a sallow, stretched appearance. King hung his head.
“You want us to break him out of jail?” Noah asked, hints of anger coloring his voice.
“In a manner of speaking, yes. And make it very obvious it was done by Metas and not just some random thugs. Questions?”
“Where do we take the packages once we have them?”
“I’ll know when you have the final package. You will be called with further instructions at that time. Better get ready, kids. It’s showtime in four hours.”
The caller hung up. I dropped to my knees next to Noah. His hands were clenched, the knuckles white, arms vibrating with tension.
Jimmy reached out to turn off the phone, still deathly pale. “This is really bad,” he said.
“Hurray for Captain Obvious,” King sneered.
“Eat me.” Affection still laced the barb. The brothers were in it together, and while I was their ace in the hole, I was willing to bet no one in our little group had ever attempted to break someone out of police custody. Certainly not in broad daylight.
“So Bates really is a part of this,” I said. The kidnappers wanted him out of jail. Either to kill him or because he was in collusion with their efforts to blackmail the Changelings. The first favor was to kill me in a public manner. Could I have pissed off Bates enough that day at the construction site? Had he really hated me enough—obsessed over me enough—to want me dead? To plot something this elaborate?
Maybe.
“Wait,” I said, shifting to give Noah my full-on attention. “You never told me what the second favor was. I know one and three, plus the money. What was number two?”
Noah’s face crumpled, as if I’d just punched him in the stomach instead of asking a question. The immediate and telling response worried me; I wasn’t going to like his answer.
“The day I did the inspection of your house,” he said, each word tentative. Measured. “I planted two listening devices. One in the kitchen and one in the upstairs lounge.”
My mouth fell open. I couldn’t help it. A chill spread through my chest, tightening it. Of all the things he’d done to me, the lies he’d told and secrets he’d hidden, this one hurt the most. It hadn’t just betrayed me—it betrayed my friends. It put our enemy right inside of our most protected place.
His mouth quivered. “I’m so sorry, Dahlia, I had to.”
I pushed away and stood up, hands clenched. “Why didn’t you tell me that? Tell me so I could warn them away from those rooms? Dammit, Noah!”
Are you sure—Marco, what’s that?
Something had happened. Something bad.
“Where would your friends go?” King asked.
“I don’t know.” Someplace safe, where they could regroup and rethink. Familiar, maybe. A place everyone could get to, if they were separated. And suddenly, I did know. It made perfect sense. “I need to go.”
“You can’t,” Jimmy said.
“My friends need me. They’re in trouble because of you three. I can’t contact them, and I need to know if they’re okay.”
“What about Aaron?”
I shook my head. “I’m sorry, Jimmy.”
“Can’t we compromise here?” Noah said. “The same person or people are hunting us. We have a common enemy, so let’s fight them together.”
“No.”
“Why not?”
I narrowed my eyes; he clenched his jaw. I planted hands on hips; he stood up, keeping his ground. Point for point, he matched me. Not backing down. Not this time. I didn’t want to hate him. I didn’t want to challenge him. I just didn’t know how much longer I could keep trusting him, when he seemed intent on breaking me at every turn.
“Please, Dahlia,” he said.
“We both know you can force me to stay. Will you?”
“Of course not.” He seemed offended by the question. Too damned bad. “Please, just work with us.”
I resisted because I desperately wanted to hurt him, wound for emotional wound, the way he’d hurt me—intentional or not. Just not with so many lives at stake. I had watched my mother get sicker and sicker until cancer had all but eaten her away. Caliber died because I was afraid to try to stop the fire from spreading. Teresa almost died, and now Abram Kinsey . . . no one else. Not because of me.
“No,” I said. Noah looked crushed until I added, “This time, you’re working with me.”
“Okay,” he said without hesitation.
“I need to get across town.”
“We dumped the car,” Jimmy said.
“No kidding. Thoughts?”
“We could take a bus,” King said.
“A bus?”
He had no face at the moment, so I couldn’t tell if he was joking or serious. Noah, though, seemed to think the latter. “Are you nuts?” he said.
“No one will be looking for us on public transportation,” King said.
“He’s got a good point,” Jimmy said.
“You don’t get to vote on this, because you’re staying here.” I raised my hand to silence the protest about to issue from his open mouth. “Someone needs to look after your dad, and we can’t haul him across town in his condition.”
Jimmy glared at me without protesting further. He understood his role. I hated leaving any of them behind, but Kinsey’s wound meant he had to stay immobile. He needed time to heal, and he couldn’t be left alone.
To King, I said, “You’ll need a face if we’re going out in public.”
He tilted his head to the side, thinking. His entire body shimmered, going out of focus. Smaller, thinner, darker. He refocused, wearing the illusion of Nadine Lee. The same skirt and tank top I remembered from two days ago, hair long and straight. It was effective. Until he spoke in his mechanical, not-quite-right voice, and said, “How’s this?”
“That’ll do,” I said. “Noah?”
He shimmered immediately, someone already in mind. I watched him morph into a completely different person. Not just anyone, but the gum-smacking, pink-haired waitress from Mallory’s Table, wearing the same outfit I’d worn to the restaurant, all the way to the sandals. He didn’t miss a detail.
Noah squeezed Jimmy’s shoulder. “We’ll call when we know something.” To me, he said, “Are you sure about this?”
“No,” I said. “But we don’t have a choice.”
King sashayed over to us, “her” heels clicking on the wooden floor. “Where are we going?”
“Century City,” I said. “Apparently on a bus, unless anyone has a better suggestion?”
No one did.
Noah and I sat together, with King in the seat in front. Passengers boarded and disembarked the bus at steady intervals, providing us with a rotation of grins and winks from the men (and the occasional woman).
The bus approached our stop and slowed. I nudged Noah, who smacked King on the shoulder, and the three of us exited the bus. So far so good.
I led them to the corner of the next block, glad the city streets were relatively quiet. The neighborhood was seeing a growth spurt, with many older buildings being torn down in favor of low-rent housing, which meant most of the activity was construction related. We had to disappear fast.
Another block away, our destination came into view—the high security gates of the old Ranger Corps Headquarters, itself a renovated movie studio lot. Beyond the twelve-foot, razor wire–lined fence, I saw the rising edifices of the Housing Unit and the Base. Two of the three buildings to survive January’s battle with Specter.
“Are you sure they’d come here?” King asked.
“No,” I said.
“Great. How do we get inside?”
“There’s only one way in.” I started across the street. “We try the front door.”