by Jude Watson
They’d been played. By a tuba!
Amy grabbed her backpack. “Come on. We’ve got to get off this train.”
Location Unknown
“It hurts,” Nellie said.
“I know,” Reagan said. “No pain, no gain.”
“Do you think they made that expression up for bullet wounds?”
If Nellie expected Reagan Holt, Olympic-level triathlete, to lighten up on her, she was dreaming. Nellie and Reagan were two hostages standing in a bare concrete bunker, but they might have been in an expensive health club for all the focus Reagan was bringing to the session. She’d refused to acknowledge that Nellie’s bullet wound was any big deal (“Oh, please, it was more like a graze.”), refused to concede that without proper equipment they couldn’t train (“We’ve got a wall and a floor, don’t we?”), and dismissed the idea that Nellie could be too weak to try (“There is no try. Only do. Yoda said that, and he was awesome.”).
“Pain is pain,” Reagan said. “Gain is gain. If you don’t rotate that shoulder, it will freeze up, and you’ll be no help to anybody.”
Nellie wanted to rotate it into Reagan’s chin for a nice, satisfying sucker punch, but she knew her tormentor was right. She rolled her shoulder, letting out a hiss of pain.
Fiske Cahill winced and looked over at her sympathetically. In his jumpsuit he looked so pale and thin. She was used to seeing him in black jeans and sweaters, an elegant bohemian. Natalie Kabra stared vacantly at the same spot on the wall she’d been looking at for the past twenty minutes. Nellie was still waiting for Natalie’s natural gifts as a schemer and a fighter to kick in. So far, no such luck. Alistair Oh lay back on the sofa, his eyes closed. In some ways, Nellie thought, the isolation and deprivation were hardest on Alistair.
No … they were hardest on Phoenix Wizard. Phoenix sat on the floor cross-legged, only a few feet away. He stayed close to Nellie now. He was only twelve years old and he missed his mother. He wouldn’t say it out loud, but Nellie could see every bit of the sorrow and fear he was experiencing in his liquid brown eyes. She winked at him, then made a face behind Reagan’s back. He grinned.
“You’re doing great, Gomez!” Ted Starling cheered her on. He couldn’t see her, but he could hear her grunts and hisses, Nellie knew. Ted had developed phenomenal hearing since he’d lost his sight. He always sat in a chair near the door, just in case he could pick up noises from outside. It was Ted who had determined that they must be underground.
“That’s it. Gently now,” Reagan said to Nellie. “We’ll move on to the hard stuff tomorrow.”
“This … isn’t … the hard stuff?” Nellie spit out through gritted teeth.
Reagan grinned. “You really hate me right now, don’t you?”
“Immeasurably.”
“Good. Give me ten.”
Nellie sighed. Her shoulder felt stiff. It ached. Her stomach felt empty. Whoever was preparing meals for the hostages had a rudimentary grasp of cooking. Peel potatoes. Boil. Serve. Nellie’d been enrolled in a cooking course in Paris when she got seized. She’d been about to enjoy a crisp, buttery croissant and a café au lait at her neighborhood café …
Do. Not. Think. About. Food.
Nellie pushed against the wall. She straightened her arms, then went forward again in a modified push-up.
“Excellent,” Reagan said.
“Ow,” Nellie grunted.
“Only nine more and you’re done.”
Reagan had dropped to the floor and was doing push-ups.
“Five … nine … ten!” Nellie said. She sank down against the wall, resting her head against it.
“I think,” Reagan said as she moved up and down like a piston, “we should all have a plan to keep in shape.” She jumped up and clapped her hands. “Okay, listen up, people. It’s time we set up an organized schedule for exercise.”
Alistair opened his eyes. “My dear, I haven’t exerted myself in years.”
“Then it’s way past time to start, old man.”
“I think it’s a good idea,” Ted said. “We need to keep our muscles active. And our minds. They’re trying to play with our heads. Classic stuff. Strip us of our identities, not let us know what time it is …”
“Feed us carbs,” Natalie said.
Nellie rolled her shoulder again. She felt perspiration break out at her hairline. She hated to admit it, but Reagan was right. They had to be prepared. There were things they could do.
“I’m going to work on individualized training plans for each of you,” Reagan said. “This is going to be awesome!”
Alistair closed his eyes. “I was right,” he said. “This is hell.”
Amy and Dan moved quickly through the train, adapting their gait to the gentle swaying motion. They passed through the doors into the next car and then the next. Amy glanced behind nervously. The conductor was moving swiftly. Behind him she saw the inspector. Had he seen them? Was he following them?
“We’ve got to find a place to hide!” she hissed to Dan. “He’s gaining on us!”
Dan pointed to a door marked BAGAGLIO. “Remember that the guy said there was a place for oversized luggage?”
“But it’s got to be locked.”
Dan was already fishing in his backpack. He took a long, slender piece of metal and slipped it between the lock and doorjamb. He leaned in and wiggled it.
“What are you doing?” Amy hissed. “And whatever it is, hurry!” She glanced over her shoulder. The inspector was only a car away.
The door popped open and they quickly slipped inside. The small space was crammed with items: bulging overlarge suitcases, trunks, boxes, and a pet carrier with an orange cat that hissed at them angrily.
Amy leaned against the door and waited for her heartbeat to slow. “Since when can you pick a lock?”
“Remember when you paid that security expert to give a seminar at our summer gathering?” Dan asked.
For the past two summers, Amy had gathered together the Madrigals, the under-the-radar branch of the Cahill family, at their mansion in Attleboro. After the race for the 39 Clues, the cousins who had been with Amy and Dan at the end — who had stood together to stop the Clues from falling into the wrong hands — all became Madrigals.
Amy had taken it upon herself to train them. She had also invited experts in all kinds of fields — rock climbers, computer software engineers, race car drivers, cryptologists — to give short seminars. She’d presented it in the spirit of fun, but she had a deeper purpose. For the past two years, she’d been preparing them for this. She and Dan had tangled with the Vespers before, and she’d known in her bones they’d be back. She’d dreaded it.
Only a few months after they’d returned from the Clue hunt, Fiske and Nellie had told them about a ring that the Madrigals had protected over the centuries. They’d gone to Switzerland with Fiske to pick up the ring from Grace’s Swiss bank. There, the Vespers had stalked them. One of them, Casper Wyoming, had almost killed them. She never wanted to look into his cold eyes again.
She touched the black-faced Swiss watch on her wrist. The watch face now contained the ring. Hidden in plain sight. At least she could keep that safe.
“I remember,” she said. “Lawrence Malley. He was an expert in security systems.”
“Aka Lightfinger Larry.” Dan grinned. “He was also wanted in five states.”
“Great,” Amy groaned. “I sent you to a tutorial with a crook.”
“It got us in here, didn’t it?”
“I guess I’m grateful to him, then,” Amy said doubtfully.
“Don’t be,” Dan said. “The first lock I opened was on your diary. Don’t worry, I read two pages and fell asleep.”
Suddenly, they heard voices outside. Amy and Dan froze. A voice spoke in rapid Italian. The doorknob rattled. Amy looked a
round frantically, but there was no time to hide.
More Italian. Amy heard the word chiave — key.
A smack against the door, as if someone had slapped it in frustration. Then footsteps heading away rapidly.
“We’d better get out of here!” Amy whispered.
“Sure, but they can do the heavy lifting.” Dan pointed to the large leather trunk of the fashionable Italian lady they’d seen at the station. “Are you thinking what I’m thinking?”
“I hope not,” Amy said. “Because that would be a huge problem for me.”
Dan was already using his metal device on the lock. It sprang open, and he lifted the lid. He began to toss out piles of ski clothes, shoes, dresses, and sweaters.
“What are you doing?” Amy asked. “This place looks like the mall during prom week.”
Dan dug into his pack and came up with a multi-tool gadget. It had a hammer/pliers device on the top and a variety of knives and cutters concealed in the handle. “I bought this baby while you were looking for a charger for the DeOssie phone,” he said. He began to use a tool to drill discreet holes in the trunk. “Nice trunk, but it’ll be better with breathing holes.”
“Both of us are going to fit in there?” Amy asked. “I don’t think so.”
“No, you’re going in that,” Dan said. He indicated a long nylon bag. Amy unzipped it and saw a snowboard.
“In here?”
“It’s just until we get on a luggage cart. Then we’ll get out. It’s the only way. Look.” He shook the luggage tag with the printed destination at her. “‘Engelberg.’ These are both getting unloaded at the next stop.” Amy swallowed. Suddenly, the long black bag looked like a coffin.
Just then they felt it: the smooth deceleration of the train. There was no time to think of something else. Quickly, they stuffed the clothes behind a pile of suitcases. Dan climbed into the trunk.
Amy stuffed her pack and Dan’s in the bottom of the bag, then quickly slipped into it.
She felt the snowboard digging into her back.
“But what if — ”
He shook his head. “We don’t have time for what ifs. We haven’t for a long time.”
She looked into his intent green eyes. He was right. They had burst through all their what ifs long ago, starting with the worst one of all.
What if Grace dies?
What if we can’t find the clues?
What if we get caught?
What if we get killed?
Either things happened or they didn’t. All you could do was deal with it.
Dan closed the trunk lid and Amy wiggled one hand out and latched it, then zipped herself into the bag. She closed her eyes and breathed. The air felt stuffy and she placed her mouth as close to the hole as she could. She felt the train come to a smooth stop. Footsteps approached in the corridor outside. She heard the door open.
She heard someone enter the car and circle it. Even the footsteps sounded careful … like the person would miss nothing… .
“Niente,” someone else said impatiently.
Niente … nothing. She was relieved to hear the train conductor argue something about the schedule. She could pick out random words in Italian, that was all.
She felt herself being lifted and tossed onto the luggage cart. The impact shuddered through every bone. Suddenly, she realized that other suitcases might be tossed on top of her. Maybe even the trunk! She panicked and reached for the zipper just as the cart began to move.
Her heartbeat tripped double-time. She was rolling now, and a bump told her she was off the train. She felt the rumble of the wheels. Then the cart stopped.
She eased down the zipper and tried to peer out. All she saw was hard blue sky. She felt the chill of mountain air. She eased the zipper down a bit more.
The train attendant was stepping back onto the train. A porter exited the Engelberg station, hurrying to meet the fashionable older woman surrounded by her suitcases. A young guy in a bright nylon jacket jumped off the train behind her — the snowboarder, Amy guessed.
The inspector stood on the step of the train, coolly surveying the station. Waiting to see if they’d dis-embark, she guessed. Any moment the porter would head this way to collect the bags.
Amy dared to unzip the bag a bit more. She could feel the sharp gaze and the stillness of the man just standing, looking … waiting.
Some late-arriving passengers hurried to board the train. The fashionable lady pulled out her cell phone and then pointed to the luggage cart, signaling to the porter that the large trunk was hers.
The train whistle blew. Go. Go. Go …
The train began to pull out, its speed way too slow for Amy.
She lifted her head slightly so that her eye was just above the zipper. The inspector still gazed out at the platform. At last he turned away and slipped back inside the train. With trembling fingers she unzipped the rest of the bag and wriggled out, then grabbed the packs and quickly zipped it back up. She was shielded from the porter by the stack of suitcases. She eased over to where the leather trunk lay and flipped the latches.
The trunk didn’t open.
The lock in the middle had been clicked. The porter must have done it on the train.
“Dan!” she whispered frantically. “Can you hear me?”
“Open it!” She heard a thump as he kicked the top.
“I can’t! It’s locked!”
“Stick it!”
“Stick it?”
“Not stick it! Pick it!”
Amy glanced over quickly. The lady in the hat gestured for the porter to hurry. The young man had stopped at a vendor and was paying for a sausage roll. She had seconds before the porter would come for the trunk.
She dove for Dan’s backpack. The slender piece of metal lay right on top of his rolled-up T-shirts. She stuck it in the lock and wiggled it. Nothing happened.
“It’s not working!”
“Wiggle it!”
“I’m wiggling!”
Desperately, she reached for Dan’s multi-tool. She shoved the metal pick between the lock and the trunk. She held it steady, then brought down the hammer with all her strength.
The lock blew. Springs rolled along the platform. The lock pinged as it hit the concrete.
Dan peeked out. “That’s one way to do it.”
“Come on!” Amy yanked on his arm, pulling him out, and slammed the lid shut. In another ten seconds, the porter would be there. “As soon as he sees the broken lock, he’ll start asking questions. They could arrest us for stealing those clothes!”
Dan looked around quickly. “We’ve got to cross the tracks to the other platform.”
They heard the sound of a whistle as a train began to roll into the station.
Amy paled.
“And we have to do it right now!” Dan grabbed his pack and shoved Amy’s at her. She felt the vibration of the oncoming train under her feet.
A train began to slide into the station. They jumped onto the track. Amy felt as though she were moving in slow motion. All those months and months of hard training didn’t seem to help her legs move when fear was draining her of strength. The people on the opposite platform turned slowly to look, their mouths open.
Dan pulled at her hand hard and she leaped the last few inches onto the next platform as the train roared into the station. The blast of air against her neck made her shudder.
She bent over double, catching her breath. The waiting passengers stared at them, shaking their heads.
“Guten tag,” Dan said cheerfully, and waved.
“We’d better get out of here before we attract any more attention,” Amy murmured.
They quickly left the station and walked toward the center of town. “Let’s contact Sinead and Ian,” Amy suggested. “We c
an circle back to the station and catch a commuter train to Lucerne in a bit.”
“Don’t forget Evan.” Dan batted his eyelashes at her. “Oh, Evan, I missed you so… .”
Amy ignored him, but inside she felt the instant flood of warmth that was caused by just hearing Evan’s name. On the train, she had resisted the impulse to type I miss you.
Mostly, she missed talking to him and texting him without other people hearing and reading what she said. All of their text messages to each other were now public property. Evan was no longer just her boyfriend. He was practically an honorary Madrigal. He’d been enfolded into the group because of his tech knowledge, and he’d been invaluable so far.
They found a wooden bench under a stand of pines and sank onto it gratefully. For the first time, Amy realized that they were in an astonishingly beautiful place. The mountains rose above them, already white with snow. The town was picture perfect, with timbered buildings and roads free of cars.
“Why does Switzerland look like one big cuckoo clock to me?” Dan asked.
“Because you have no soul,” Amy answered. “One of these days I’m going to come to a place like this and actually enjoy myself.” She tugged at the blond wig on her head and stuffed it in her pack. “Wow, I’m glad to get rid of this.”
Dan took off his glasses with fake lenses. “So who do you think that Vanessa Mallory was?” he asked. He fished out an apple from his pack and bit into it. “A cop?”
“She could have been working with the guy in the raincoat. It’s hard to say.”
“Better contact Attleboro. They might have a clue for the clueless.”
Amy put her phone on speaker with the volume low and added a video feed so that they could see each other.
Sinead’s face appeared on the screen. “Ames! I’m so glad you called. We weren’t sure what happened to you.”
“Sorry. We fell asleep on the train. Then we ran into a little trouble.”
Sinead frowned. “Where are you now? Are you all right?”