"Clear," Baker said in a tight voice. "But I won't take responsibility for anything this guy does before you get there."
"I don't think that will be an issue since you are going to pick me up and we will arrive together."
"You're up in the Seventies. That'll take too long."
"I will be waiting out front," Kemel said, and hung up.
Jack used the sledge gently at first, for fear that he might damage whatever was hidden inside. But he quickly discovered that this was an old, solid, wet plaster wall, and he was going to have to put some muscle into it. It took a lot longer than he'd planned, but finally he had a good-sized hole clear through to the other side.
Alicia peered over his shoulder. "Find anything?"
"Nothing inside this wall but… wall." He turned and looked at the toy in her hand. "But then, why…?"
And then it hit him.
"Oh, hell."
Jack took the little Rover from Alicia and placed it in the hall on the other side of the wall. It wheeled across the floor and ended up against the wall on the far side of the hall.
"What's on the other side of that wall?" Jack said.
"Thomas's room."
Jack carried the truck into Thomas's room—in no better shape than Alicia's—and set the truck on the floor there. It ran across the room and butted against the far wall.
Jack watched it in dismay. "Damn thing wasn't attracted to the wall back there. It just wants to go uptown. So much for enigmatic clues in wills." And then a thought struck. "Or maybe it only wants to go as far as the front yard."
Swell. Even if that were the case, they couldn't exactly haul out picks and shovels and start digging up the front yard.
They'd already wasted too much time on that little piece of junk. But at least they had the key.
"Let's get out of here."
The truck kept running, spinning its wheels as it nosed against the wall. Jack resisted the impulse to drop-kick it down the hall, and picked it up instead.
"You're taking that with you?"
He turned off the motor and tucked it inside his coat.
"Yeah."
"Why?"
"I'm not sure."
And he wasn't. But sensed he shouldn't toss it away. Too many aspects of this crazy situation converged on the little truck—"Rover" in the will and on its hatch, and the way it always ran in the same direction, "pointing" uptown. Jack wasn't through with it yet.
At last! Alicia thought as they headed downstairs. We're finally getting out of this place.
And they'd found nothing.
She began turning off the lights as they went.
"Don't bother," Jack said. "No use trying to hide the fact that we've been here—Thomas and his Arab buddy'll know as soon as they see that smashed wall."
They stepped out the back door, and Alicia jumped and yelped as a voice barked.
"Hold it right there!"
She turned and saw two hulking figures standing at the corner of the house. Enough light filtered in from the street to reveal the guns in their hands. Then the beam from their flashlight found her face, nearly blinding her.
"Hands up—both of you!"
The guards from the car?
"Jeez, what a jerk I am," Jack muttered as he clasped his hands on top of his head. "Damn gas wore off."
"This is
"Back inside," the voice said, waggling the flashlight as he spoke. "Both of you. We've got some people coming who'll want to talk to you two."
What are they going to do to us? she wondered as fear coiled through her intestines. Torture us? What will they put us through before they believe we didn't find anything?
"Quit stall—"
The voice was cut off by a
Alicia screamed and felt Jack ducking into a crouch, pulling her down with him. She saw his pistol in his hand, aimed at the corner of the house.
"Are… are they dead?" Alicia whispered.
"Sure as hell looks like it." His gun never stopped moving, ranging this way and that.
"You shot them dead, just like that?"
He stopped moving his gun and held it up in front of her for an instant. "You see a silencer? This was holstered when those guys went down. Somebody else got them."
"Somebody
"The same."
"Then who—?"
"Damned if I know. Yesterday your brother's Arab friend mentioned being afraid of whatever it was he wanted from this place falling into 'the wrong hands.' I think this means we may have a third player in this game."
A trilling sound made her jump.
"What's that?" Alicia said, her fingertips digging into Jack's upper arm where she clutched it.
The sound repeated, coming from one of the corpses.
"Sounds like a cell phone. Someone's calling one of them."
Jack looked as if he was about to go find the phone and answer the call.
"Let's get out of here," Alicia said.
"No alley on the other side, is there?" Jack said.
She shook her head—the house was flush against its neighbor on the west side.