by Jeff Hirsch
“Jake!” Amy called into the dark after the boat had passed. “Jake!”
Amy searched frantically, but didn’t see him anywhere. What if he stayed in the boat? What if he’s still out there all alone?
“Jake!” she screamed.
Amy searched the darkness, growing more and more anxious until she heard a splash nearby. The surface broke and Jake appeared, gulping back air. Amy stroked toward him, putting one arm around his back and kicking to lift them beyond the reach of the swells of black water.
“You okay?”
Jake coughed and then he nodded weakly.
“Can you swim?”
“Yeah,” he said. “I’m good. Let’s go.”
By the time they pulled themselves out of the surf and onto the beach, all they could do was collapse onto their backs. Amy lay there panting, the muscles in her arms and legs buzzing with exhaustion. Jake was sitting up, draped over his knees, breathing hard and shivering despite the warmth of the night. He looked like a half-drowned puppy. Amy couldn’t help but smile.
“You were right,” she said over the crashing waves. “I was completely lost.”
Jake looked back to her, pushing the wet hair out of his eyes. She had given him a golden opportunity to rub it in. All she could do was brace herself for it.
“You were actually only about a mile or so from the museum,” he said. “You would have gotten there.”
In the wet chill, Jake’s smile felt as warm as a bonfire.
“Come on,” Amy said. “Let’s get out of here. Maybe if we’re lucky, Dan’s found that pizza.”
Amy started to go but Jake took hold of her wrist.
“Back in the medina. Going after that guy . . . it was one of the stupidest things I’ve ever done in my life. I wasn’t thinking. I just wanted to do something. You know?”
“Yeah,” she said. “I do.”
Twenty minutes after they found a taxi willing to take two sopping-wet teenagers, Jake and Amy pulled up in front of their hotel.
“Hey, look,” Amy said, pointing out the window. “It’s Dan and Atticus.”
The two of them were just coming up the sidewalk as Jake and Amy left the cab.
“Whoa!” Atticus said when he saw them. “What happened to you guys?”
“What?” Jake said, mock incredulous. “We just went for a little swim.”
Amy laughed. “Yeah, it was such a nice night we couldn’t resist. What did we miss here?”
“We found it!” Dan exclaimed. “Tunisian pizza! And you’ll never believe it. The stuff has tuna fish on it!”
“And hard-boiled eggs!” Atticus chimed in.
“At first, you think it’s a crime against the pizza gods, but then you taste it and it blows your mind.”
“We’ll have to try some,” Amy said with a doubtful look. “Att, Jake says you think we should try your father again.”
“Totally,” he said. “You guys want to change first or something?”
“Nah,” Amy said. “We’ll dry off on the way. Come on.”
The four of them set off down the streets of Tunis, Amy and Jake trailing behind while Dan and Atticus took the lead, babbling excitedly about a video arcade they found down near the medina. All around them, nightclubs and cafés were buzzing. The air was warm on Amy’s skin, and it smelled of the spicy aroma of roasting meats from the restaurants they passed.
For a wonderful moment, Amy felt like just another tourist, gliding through the town with her friends without a care in the world. She even found herself wishing Ian was there and Jonah and Nellie and Hamilton, too. Even Pony.
“It’s just up here!” Atticus said, leading them down a quaint street lit by the glow of amber streetlights. They went halfway down the block, then opened a black gate that led up to a small two-story house.
Amy knew there was something wrong immediately. The front door was hanging wide open. Even from the sidewalk, she could see a turned-over bookcase and a floor covered in papers.
“Does your dad live alone?” Amy asked.
Atticus nodded, speechless, and Amy rushed past him, up the stairs and into the house. She stood in the brightly lit front room, surveying the damage. The place had been ransacked. Coffee tables and chairs were turned on their sides and every surface was covered in papers and books and journals, all looking like they had been torn off the shelves and thrown aside randomly.
“Dr. Rosenbloom!” Amy called.
“Dad!” Jake yelled.
“I’m trying to call his cell phone, but he isn’t answering,” Atticus said.
“It’s probably nothing,” Jake said. “You know how Dad gets when he’s working on something. I bet he just —”
“They saw him talking to us. They think he’s involved.”
Everyone turned at the sound of Amy’s voice. She was staring at the floor, hating how sure she felt.
“Who did?” Jake asked. “Amy? Who saw him?”
Amy forced herself to look at Jake and Atticus. She felt something like a lump of chalk in her throat.
“Pierce’s men,” she said. “They’ve kidnapped your father.”
This is never going to work, Nellie thought as she stood in the parking lot at Trilon Laboratories. Hundreds of her soon-to-be fellow employees were streaming out of their cars and up to the building. There were so many of them! And they all seemed so full of energy and purpose. Every scrap of conversation Nellie caught was incomprehensible, full of words like entropy and metalloids and protonation.
Nellie waited for the flood to pass, then steadied herself with a deep breath and trooped up the stairs. Once inside, she saw that the building was surprisingly small. I wonder how they get all those people in here?
As Nellie crossed the entryway, she noticed the black security cameras that hung in every corner, like nesting bats. There were guards, too, men in gray uniforms with guns on their hips and radio earpieces. It was heavy security for a little pharmaceutical plant. The place was getting more suspicious by the second.
Nellie came to a security gate that led back into the labs. Next to the card reader on the gate there was a large blue D that matched the letter on Nellie’s ID card. Nellie swiped her card and made her way through a maze of white hallways, looking for lab 237. Each lab she passed buzzed with small teams of scientists. She kept an eye out for Sammy, but she knew there was no way finding him was going to be easy.
Nellie’s stomach flipped when she finally found herself outside lab 237. A group of five scientists stood in the middle conferring with their backs to her, spouting more science gibberish.
“. . . but, Doctor, Avogadro’s law clearly states that . . .”
“Someone bring me the Eppendorf tube!!”
“— great Scott, man! Think of the neutrinos!”
Every molecule in Nellie’s body wanted retreat; she could never mix with these people. It didn’t matter that she changed her clothes and dyed her hair. She was Nellie Gomez, not —
“Dr. Gormley!”
The five scientists were staring at her. One of them, an older man with snowy hair, crossed the room with his hand out.
“I’m Dr. Wentworth! So good to have you here. We’ve heard nothing but wonderful things! It’ll be a pleasure to have someone who really knows what she’s doing take over the lab!”
Nellie’s heart skipped a beat. “Take over?”
“Yes!” Dr. Wentworth laughed. “We all heard that you came in for an assistant’s position, but George Takahashi knows talent when he sees it. He fired Dr. Carstairs and decided to give you the job!”
“Well, that’s . . . that’s just . . . it’s amazing,” Nellie sputtered, feeling her head spin. “But certainly there are people who would be better suited to —”
“Nonsense!” Dr. Wentworth hustled Nellie inside and to a desk at the front of the room. “With your credentials, you’re going to be perfect. A breath of fresh air. Now, is there anything we can get you before we start? Coffee? Dr. Assad! Coffee for Dr. Gormey!”
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br /> “Yes, sir!” One of the other scientists dashed out of the room.
“All of us here are so eager to get started,” Dr. Wentworth continued.
Nellie seized on the opportunity. “Yes! You should do that! Just go ahead and get started. Great idea!”
Dr. Wentworth stared at her blankly and then turned to a woman next to him.
“Get started doing . . . what?” the woman asked.
Nellie floundered. A huge chalkboard sat at the other end of the room, covered with equations and strange symbols. “Continuing the great work you’re already doing!”
Dr. Wentworth laughed his jolly laugh. “Oh, all of Dr. Carstairs’s projects were canceled when he was fired. Best thing that could have happened, really; his approach was getting us nowhere.”
The woman chimed in. “Mr. Takahashi said now that you’re here we can expect a radical new approach in the creation of complex dihydrate benzo protein phosphates.”
“Did he!?” Nellie squeaked.
“Oh, yes! Since it was the subject of your PhD thesis.”
Nellie braced herself with her palms on her desk, fighting the light-headedness that was spreading fast. The door to the lab stood open less than ten feet away. The elevators were just fifteen feet down the hall. She could be back in her car and on the road in minutes.
No! The world is counting on you, Gomez. All you have to do is get these people off your back long enough to do some snooping. Do something!
But what? The last time she had taken a chemistry class was in the eighth grade, and she hadn’t paid the slightest bit of attention. She had just discovered cooking and couldn’t get herself to spend more than a few minutes with her nose out of Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking.
But wait, Nellie thought. Isn’t cooking just chemistry? Instead of a formula, you have a recipe. Instead of chemicals, you mix ingredients together in precise proportions until they combine and become something else. There’s really no difference at all. So what’s the secret to great cooking? Think, Gomez, think!
“Uh . . . Dr. Gormey?”
Nellie pounded her palm on the tabletop. “Salt!”
She looked up at a sea of utterly blank faces. Did I just say that out loud? Dr. Wentworth stepped forward.
“Uh . . . what do you mean salt?”
Nellie decided to go for broke. She strode to the chalkboard and picked up an eraser. She wiped away all of their equations and replaced them with SALT in huge letters. “That’s our radical new approach, ladies and gentlemen!” she declared. “Salt! Sodium!”
“You’re saying mix sodium into the formula?”
“Yes!” Nellie said. “That’s exactly what I’m saying.”
“But that doesn’t make any sense!” one of the other scientists interrupted.
“He’s right!” cried another. “If we simply add sodium to the mixture, it will destroy the whole thing!”
“And it would be highly dangerous!”
In seconds, the scientists had her completely surrounded, screeching about salt and sodium and the accepted practices in modern chemistry. The only thing to do was run. Nellie took a step toward the door just as young Dr. Assad appeared in the doorway with her coffee, a stunned look on his face at the chaos in the room.
That’s when the idea hit her. Ian! Nellie swiped the coffee mug out of Dr. Assad’s hand, took one sip, then hurled it across the room. The mug hit the far wall and exploded, sending coffee and shards of pottery flying.
“YOU CALL THIS SWILL COFFEE!?”
The angry chatter ceased immediately, as if someone had reached in and turned the sound off in the room. The doctors turned to her, mouths agape.
“Are you trying to poison me?” Nellie shrieked. “Is that instant? And powdered creamer? What do you think I am, an animal?”
Dr. Wentworth stepped forward. “Dr. Gormey, I —”
Nellie wheeled on Wentworth. “And you! Everyone back in my lab at Harvard said the scientists at Trilon labs were a bunch of monkey-brained hacks! I said no! All they need is a few fresh new ideas and the sky’s the limit. But here I am, dropping genius at your feet, and this is how you react!? Are you all blind? Are you fools!?”
“But, Dr. Gormey —”
“Don’t ‘Dr. Gormey’ me, Dr. Wayneworth.”
“It’s Wentworth actually, but —”
“I don’t have time to hold your hands! I’ve given you the answer! Do you need me to do all of your work for you?”
“N-no,” Dr. Wentworth stuttered. “Of course not! It’s just that salt —”
“No excuses! I want reports by the end of the week. We’re trying to save lives here, people!”
“Of course, Dr. Gormey!”
“And you,” Nellie said, wheeling on a quaking Dr. Assad. “I want to see a double-caff nonfat caramel mochaccino with whipped cream on my desk in ten minutes or you’re fired!”
“Yes, ma’am!”
Dr. Assad sprinted out of the room. Nellie crossed her arms and leaned against the back wall as everyone scattered to their jobs, bending over Bunsen burners. They wouldn’t look up again for hours.
Being Dr. Nadine Gormey was awesome.
“Amy! Amy, wait up!” Dan ran after his sister as she tore into the hotel lobby. “Why would Pierce take Dr. Rosenbloom?”
“To get to us.”
“But Pierce doesn’t want anything from us. He just wants us dead! Amy!”
Amy barreled past a trio of stunned tourists and took the stairway two steps at a time. When she got to their floor Amy ripped their hotel room door open and stomped inside, heading straight for the telephone.
“Who are you calling?”
“The police!”
Dan slapped his hand down over the receiver before Amy could pick it up. “Whoa, Amy. You know how this works. If we call the police —”
“We can’t just sit here while Pierce does who knows what to their father, Dan. That’s the game we played with Damien Vesper, and I’m not playing it this time.”
“Amy —”
“We went to Dr. Rosenbloom for help, Dan.”
The pain in Amy’s voice was heart wrenching. As much as Dan hated to admit it, he knew she was right. They’d lost people before, and were still trying to cope. How could they take that chance again, with Atticus and Jake’s own father? Dan let his hand slip off the phone and Amy grabbed it and started to dial. Before she could finish, the phone was ripped off the table and out of Amy’s hand. They turned to find the phone cord clutched in Jake’s fist.
“Calling the police will get him killed,” Jake said. “Pierce taking him means he wants to bargain, and that gives us an opportunity. We wait to see what he has to say and then we pull one over on him.”
“Jake —” Amy started.
“That’s how this works,” Jake said. “You know that.”
“Att,” Dan said. “You on board with this?”
Atticus was standing behind his brother, arms crossed over his chest, head down so his dreadlocks shadowed his face. He nodded slowly.
“So what do we do in the meantime?” Dan asked.
“Our job,” Jake said with a deep, shuddering breath. “We still have to find the silphium. Atticus, go through Olivia’s notebook line by line in case we missed something. Dan, see if you can find anything on the web. Amy, help me look for places in the area with a Founders Media connection. Maybe we can narrow down the places they might be holding Dad.”
“We won’t find him,” Amy said.
“Come on, Amy,” Dan said with a pale smile. “Our record for outsmarting homicidal madmen is the best in the league!”
“But Pierce is smarter than any of them,” she said, looking from Dan to Jake to the still-unmoving Atticus. “Isn’t he?”
The four of them spread out through the room and worked silently, hunched over papers and computer screens. Dan craved the usual chatter of their research sessions, but even he was too tense to kick it off. He couldn’t stop looking over at the
phone. Why didn’t Pierce just call and end the waiting?
When Dan wasn’t staring at the phone, he was watching Atticus. Someone who didn’t know Att would probably think he was as focused as ever, but Dan saw the truth each time Atticus fumbled his pencil and on every page his friend lingered over just a second too long.
“That’s it,” Jake said, sitting back and rubbing his LCD-burning eyes. “I’ve done it. I’ve reached the end of the Internet.”
“What’s there?” Dan asked.
“Pretty much what you’d expect,” he said. “A lolcat.”
Jake had the right idea. Dan was fried, too. He reached across the table and flicked the TV on to an English-language news channel.
“Dan,” Amy said.
“What? I just want to see how my Sox are doing. You find anything on Founders Media?”
“Nothing,” Amy said. “Despite owning every other media outlet in the world — along with pharmaceutical companies and Internet start-ups — Founders Media has nothing in Tunisia.”
“That can’t be possible.”
“It’s true,” Jake said. “We even had Pony do some digging back home. Pierce doesn’t have any reach here. Not one that leaves a trace anyway.”
“Atticus?”
“Zilch,” he said, rubbing at his bloodshot eyes. “I mean, there’s all kinds of stuff in here, but it’s hard to figure out what’s important and what’s a four-hundred-year-old shopping list.”
“Uh-oh!” Dan sat up in his chair and fumbled for the remote.
“What?” Amy said. “Dan, what is it?”
“Nothing!” Dan snapped the TV off. “Don’t worry about it. Hey! Who wants to go break into the Tunisian national archives?”
Amy tore the remote out of his hands.
“No, Amy, wait —”
The TV came back on, showing two highly polished talking heads at a massive chrome-and-glass desk. Amy took a seat behind Dan and dropped the remote by a large crystal ashtray on the table next to her.