Then I stopped to take a break. Cooled down and rubbed my hands together to supple my fingers. Only then, and with infinite patience, did I trust myself to withdraw the infrared projector. Slowly, slowly-done! The rest was child’s play.

Relocking the door and then restoring all the alarms to working order.

One last trip back in the storeroom, where I carefully hid the bonds among the stationery. I slid some ancient forms in front of them, then I was done. The bonds would be safe there until I came to retrieve them. Or, depressingly gloomy thought, they would remain concealed forever if I made any mistakes.

The next hours dragged slowly by: I worked hard not to think about the thermite bomb. If the thing went off before it should? Don’t even think about thinking about it. Then the last ashtray and the last shredder. Down to their underground lair where my metallic aides were tucked away and sucking happily on their electrical teats. I washed the traces of soot off my hands. When the shift ended I left with the others.

There was more than a little tension as I exited the building. If I had not set the thermite timer correctly-I would have to make a run for it. My stomach stayed in a knot until I was safely in the street outside. I walked slowly to the appointed corner. The van was not there.

Was something wrong? Before my thoughts ran away with themselves Kaia’s black car pulled up beside me.

“Get in,” he said.

“Where’s Igor?”

“That is no business of yours,” he said as we drove away. “Everything go as planned?”

“Yes.”

He smiled and licked his lips. Then drove with one hand as he pushed a notebook with a stylo attached over to me. “Write down all the details about the storeroom. Where the bonds are. The name of the stationery company and driver…”

“I don’t think that I should do that.”

“Don’t play games with me diGriz. And you know very well why are going to give me that information.”

“I know. But my wife comes first. And your threats against her life. That is what I want to talk about. What happens to her after I bring you the bearer bonds?”

“Why she joins you, of course.”

Joins me. In the grave.

“And what guarantees do I have that that is what will happen?”

“My word, of course.”

“Not good enough. You are too much of a liar, Chaise.”

He gave me a quick, cold look, but did not respond.

“Look-let us make a deal. I’ll get the bonds for you-if you release her first.”

He was quiet as he drove. Then shook his head. “No, I can’t do that.”

“Then I can’t give you the information that you will need if you attempt to get the bonds yourself.”

Nothing more was said after that. The warehouse door opened as we approached, swung shut behind us. Igor and his truck were not there. Chaise got out first, opened the rear door of the car and reached inside.

“Look at this,” he said.

I looked-and desperately tried to leap aside. He was faster.

The two metal prongs of the electric stunner slammed into my side. The high voltage washed pain through my body. My muscles spasmed uncontrollably as I fell to the floor.

I was conscious but could not move. He dragged me through all the ancient filth and litter on the floor, then rolled me onto the cot. I still could not resist as he locked one pair of handcuffs on my wrists, then secured my leg to the metal bed frame with the other. The numbness was beginning to wear off as he dragged the bed with my limp body across the room and slammed it against the wall.

He went into the other room and came back with another pair of cuffs. I saw what he had in mind and struggled to roll away, kick out, kick him. My free leg barely twitched as he pulled it out. Then cuffed my ankle to a metal pipe that ran along the wall. He was breathing hard, his face twisted with anger. The sophisticated multimillionaire had vanished; he punched me in the face again and again. Stopped only when he hurt his knuckles on my jaw.

“No one goes against my will, no one.” He rubbed his hand over his bruised knuckles. “You, a common criminal, seek to dictate terms to me. I will have none of this.” The cruel smile was back, his heavy breathing slowed. The painful kick into my ribs was not done in anger, but was carefully calculated to drive his convincing argument home.

“You are helpless. So I can do what I want with you. What I want to do now is to leave you here for a few days without food or water. I am sure that when I return you will be eager to tell me how I can obtain those bonds. If you talk, why then I might let you live.”

This was the real Chaise, unmasked.

“You will let me live just the way you let Iba live? In the lake in the park.”

He was turning away when I shouted this after him. Turned back, his face livid. Why had I let my own anger carry me away? I realized that I had signed my own death certificate.

“You are lying in your grave,” he said. Then he went out, slamming the door behind him. I heard the car start and the squeaking of the garage door as it opened. It closed again and I was alone.

“Someday, Jim, you will have to learn to keep your big mouth shut,” I said aloud. This was sage advice. I wish I had given it to myself earlier. Now-how could I get myself out of this mess?

Not easily, I realized, after a good deal of tugging and twisting and rasp of hard metal against soft skin. I could reach the cuffs on my legs and rotate the dials on their locks. But I was never going to find the combinations by random twisting. And the pipe along the wall was securely in place. I lay back, panting with the effort. With that, and the night’s stressful events, despite my perilous position, I fell sound asleep.

Something woke me up. How long had I been asleep? It was still morning by the light in the window. My face hurt where it had been battered. As did my ribs. A sound outside the door, a thin scratching. Someone there. I shuffled about as best I could, saw the door handle. Saw it slowly turn.

Chaise? Igor? Nothing good I was sure. At this instant I felt just about as low as I had ever felt. Or lower. The door slowly opened. A dark figure slipped through. I started to shout, thought better of it. Waited until he had finished the traditional bug search and sealed away his trophies in the radiation-proof bag. Then I let my breath out in a rush.

“Bolivar! “

“No, James. Bolivar is still checking the planning permission and building records.”

“Get me out of here!”

He pulled at the cuffs and shook his head. “Easier said than done.”

“Are you driving?”

“Yes.”

“Tool kit. Pliers, hammer.”

“You got it!”

The pliers were wrecked cutting the cuffs that held me to the pipe. But the bed frame wasn’t that strong and Bolivar hammered it apart to free me. Helped me to my feet.

“You don’t look so great, Dad,” he said. “What with the fake scar and the real bruising, handcuffs and all.” He shook his head unhappily.

“Get me to the car and your first-aid kit. Then to a shop that sells cutting tools. I guarantee that I will feel better then.” I hobbled from the room, cuffs rattling and clattering. “And thanks for the sudden appearance.”

“I thought it was about time. You never phoned when you said you would. I decided to stake this place out. And that big thug who was driving the truck should be getting to Sunkistby-the-Sea by now. I followed him until he drove onto the payway headed in that direction.”

“And Chaise?”

“He is probably still at his bank. His car is still parked in its slot there. I checked that out before I came back here. I figured that I could at least look in, find out what was going down.”

“Everything…”

His phone rang and he answered it. “On the way, both of us,” he said, and closed the phone. “James has the plans to the house. He wants us there as soon as possible.”


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